Wednesday 16 January 2013

Dr. Martin Luther King in 1964


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Dr. Martin Luther King in 1964. (Dick DeMarsico, New York World Telegram and Sun / photographer Library of Congress)

Founded in 2000, the WNYC Archives physical link to its rich and historic past situation.

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In 1961, radio reporter named Eleanor Fischer * Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was interviewed in Atlanta, Dr. King and a documentary series produced by CBC in the southern city project called 62 she spoke again in late 1966 and early 1967. Fischer's estate by The New York Public Radio Archives of the raw interviews after he died in 2008 at the age of 73. As far as we know, this shows the complete excision without original interviews, never.

The first interview on the tape, Dr. King says, and Atlanta (taking) the reasons for the decision to join the ministry grow. He says his first awareness of racism was five years old, and his mother's efforts to why things without the inferiority or the loss of human dignity to explain the way of expressing emotion. King how they Montgomery in Alabama. It has long had concerns about racial injustice and wants to be a part of the problem in the south. The current political apathy political action committees set up to fight the Church Fathers, the NAACP and other civil rights organizations by encouraging membership and increase awareness of the details of the "social gospel."
Fisher says the 32-year-old civil rights leader and how they embrace non-violent resistance, were after the first reading of Jesus and Gandhi. They say that Montgomery bus boycott, starting with the December 1955 that he felt that the principle of non-violent resistance may practice in place. Dr. King and the civil rights movement law in 1954, which he considered to be a part of the global struggle as a psychological turning point in Brown v. Board of Education sees.




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In the interview tape, two in Atlanta 1961, Dr. King's Montgomery bus boycott and more details about Rosa Parks and the black community was a spontaneous reaction to the side about how to say it. He boycott, constant threat, and the threat faced with how to talk about his role. He admits the move was low moments, but it was always something "new energy for us."They answer the question later, Montgomery fear and bitterness and violence, Freedom Riders. But he said the movement is non-violent overnight miracle. Dr. King's non-violence is the key to change, and the benefits of the Montgomery movement in other cities, where they voluntarily integrated into the line as shown in the reiterates.

Driving without a valid license, Dr. Georgia pragmatism previous year, and the intervention of the King to talk about the arrest of presidential candidate John F. Kennedy and his brother, Robert F. Kennedy.They say that it is impossible to move such moments of doubt and frustration, but more than one person in the business, and that it was ready for Montgomery

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