“ Life’s most persistent and urgent question is What are you doing for others?”
Preview:
Citation preview
- Slide 1
- Lifes most persistent and urgent question is What are you doing
for others?
- Slide 2
- Typed 100 Words or Less 5 th & 6 th Grade Category Due
December 8th January 16 Award Ceremony at Washburn University
- Slide 3
- Peace Diversity Human Rights Non-Violence Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr. Nelson Mandela Mahatma Gandhi Cesar Chavez
- Slide 4
- What are Civil Rights? Freedom of Speech Right to Vote Equal
Treatment Be free from unfair treatment! Due Process!
- Slide 5
- Civil Rights Act Congress grants equal rights to African
Americans
- Slide 6
- Ku Klux Klan was founded
- Slide 7
- 5 all black colleges were founded
- Slide 8
- Jim Crowe segregation laws established in the southern
states
- Slide 9
- Separate everything! Hospitals Jails Churches Schools
Cemeteries Jobs Neighborhoods
- Slide 10
- Jim Crowe Etiquette
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Black Codes
- Slide 13
- Mississippi Poll Tax created Cost $$$ to vote
- Slide 14
- Plessy vs. Ferguson Separate but Equal public facilities are
legal!
- Slide 15
- Louisiana Grandfather Clause Only can vote if grandfather could
in 1867. No African Americans could vote!
- Slide 16
- Madame C.J. Walker (Sarah Breedlove McWilliams) 1 st self-made
woman millionaire Owning hair-care Denver business.
- Slide 17
- Race riots breakout due to resentment of migration Red
Summer
- Slide 18
- St. Louis Race Riots Oklahoma North Carolina Detroit
Atlanta
- Slide 19
- Most influential movement of African American literature!
Bessie Smith Josephine Baker Louis Armstrong Langston Hughes Harlem
Renaissance
- Slide 20
- African Americans move from South to North Rural to Urban Areas
The GREAT MIGRATION
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Socioeconomic Opportunities Increase in National Organizations
like NAACP Improve Literacy Uplifting the Race Great Migration
- Slide 23
- A study on the effects of Syphilis on 400 African American men
was started. The men were never told or given treatment for the
disease. President Bill Clinton will apologize in 1997, 65 years
later!
- Slide 24
- Jessie Owens Wins 4 gold medals at the Berlin games. 100 meter
200 meter 4x 100 meter relay Long Jump
- Slide 25
- Adolf Hitler refuses to shake Gold Medal winner! Nazi Party
propaganda showed Africans as racially inferior. Olympic games were
supposed to demonstrate the Aryan supremacy!
- Slide 26
- Joe Louis Boxing Heavyweight Champion First African American
athlete that broke down the sport racial barrier!
- Slide 27
- Jackie Robinson 1 st Professional Baseball Player 1 st Black
athlete to Letter in 4 sports in college Baseball Basketball
Football Track Other teams threatened to forfeit, hurled racial
slurs, plus gave him a seven inch cut on arm. He never fought back!
MLB of Year 1947 MVP of Year 1949
- Slide 28
- Jackies other Roles in the Civil Right Movement Court Martialed
from army for not moving to the back of the bus Built houses for
low income families through the Robinson Construction Co. Marched
on Washington with Martin Luther King, Jr.
- Slide 29
- RED TAILS 1948 United States Army was Desegregated
- Slide 30
- 1954 Brown vs. Board of Education Supreme court rules that
segregation of school is illegal.
- Slide 31
- Rosa Parks Montgomery Bus Boycott last one year!
- Slide 32
- 1956 United States Supreme Court rules that Segregation on
buses in Alabama is illegal.
- Slide 33
- 1962 Cesar Chavez Worked for Latino Civil Rights La Causa
Organized the Grape March 1,000 of migrant workers marched 341
miles to Sacramento His motto was "Si Se Puede "Yes, it can be
done".
- Slide 34
- Little Rock Nine US Army upholds African American Civil Rights
by escorting students to school.
- Slide 35
- John Carlos and Tommy Smith Olympic Project for Human Rights
Raise their fist in the air, to make a stand
- Slide 36
- Against the draft since they were guaranteed civil rights, why
should they have to fight? Threw Gold Medal away Joins Nation of
Islam Becomes Muhammad Ali
- Slide 37
- Helped organize March on Washington. Over 250,000 people
attended this march in an effort to show the importance of civil
rights Led the Montgomery Bus Boycott His house was bombed, and he
was arrested Believed in non-violent protests Assassinated in
1968
- Slide 38
- http://www.cnn.com/2013/08/28/us/mlk- i-have-a-dream-9-things/
http://www.cnn.com/2013/08/28/us/mlk- i-have-a-dream-9-things/
http://www.thewrap.com/tv/article/watc
h-i-have-dream-speech-video-113801
http://www.thewrap.com/tv/article/watc
h-i-have-dream-speech-video-113801
- Slide 39
- Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was the preeminent leader of Indian
nationalism in British-ruled India. He would get large groups to
refuse to work, sitting in the streets, boycotting the courts, and
more. Each of these protests are small by themselves, but when most
of the population does them at once, it can shut down the
country.
- Slide 40
- Nelson Mandela was a civil rights leader in South Africa.civil
rightsSouth Africa He fought against apartheid, a system where non-
white citizens were segregated from whites and did not have equal
rights.apartheid He spent 27 years in prison. South African
Presidentt
- Slide 41
- Frederick Douglass Helen Keller Thurgood Marshall Elizabeth
Stanton Mother Teresa Sojourner Truth Harriet Tubman Booker T.
Washington Ida B. Wells
- Slide 42
- No war or fighting
- Slide 43
- Rights inherent to all
- Slide 44
- Understanding each group is unique Respect for things
different.
- Slide 45
- Using laws to fairly judge
- Slide 46
- Nonviolence is the practice of being harmless to self and
others under every condition. It comes from the belief that hurting
people, animals or the environment is unnecessary to achieve an
outcome