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Letter From Birmingham Jail Analysis

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Many barriers can evolve from people who grow up with no formal education, who only speaking their local dialect, and who have little exposure to people who are different from them. Ethnic people who can acquire a formal education, practice biculturalism, and code switch are able to be much more successful in life. It is a well-known fact that having a formal education has a major impact on a person’s earning potential and life success. Needing to understand and navigate cultures other than one’s own culture is another critical life skill. This is common thread of Dr. King, Fredrick Douglas, Amy Tan’s and myself.

Using passages quoting the bible, religious conviction, and political equality were an integral part of Dr. King’s persuasive response to the clergymen in Letter from a Birmingham Jail. I can only imagine what those clergymen were thinking when they read “[i] have looked at the South's beautiful churches with their lofty spires pointing heavenward. I have beheld the impressive outlines of her massive religious education buildings. Over and over I have found myself asking: What kind of people worship here? Who is their God?” Dr. King spoke the clergymen’s language. …show more content…

Being resourceful by saving bread to use as incentive for children to share their knowledge was an ingenious plan to further Mr. Douglass’ education. The children felt rewarded and good about knowing more than adult, and Mr. Douglas gained knowledge that he was not able to acquire through any other traditional means. He was able to conduct himself as a slave and an unsuspecting student all at the same time (Learning to Read and Write, Fredrick

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