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Letter To The Birmingham Jail

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Members of my audience include: Mr. Brett Romine, Gavin Bowling, and Brian Reagan. Mr. Romine is forty-six years young. He is a highly educated man and has a Masters Degree in English. He is a white Caucasian man who speaks English. He enjoys and is interested in reading other people's writing. Gavin Bowling is a sixteen year old teenage,Caucasian male. He is working on his third year of achieving a high school education. He is interested in.... well... he is not a very open person. Finally, Brian Reagan is also a sixteen year old, White, Caucasian teenager. Like Gavin, he is working on his third year of achieving a high school education. He is interested in being a translator later in life for a career, but he is uncertain. Mr. Romine has a high knowledge of the topic, a "Letter to the Birmingham Jail", and has more knowledge of the topic than I have. Whereas, Gavin, Brian, and I have a similar and basic level of understanding of the topic. For …show more content…

Trying to recollect the feelings, the officers and others left shattered on the ground. The bruises on his body continued throbbing, as his eyes blurred with warm tears. “What did I do to deserve this?” he prayed. While looking through the bars of his jail cell he sees a man of old age. Watching as the tears stream down the face of the man who has lived a life of pain and anguish. Due to a world that took everything away from him. A man who has many things to say, but is speechless and not able to express himself. As he watched this man, he realized that unlike the man in the other cell, he was able to express himself and others. Picking up his pen, Martin Luther King Jr. started writing. In the “Letter from Birmingham Jail”, Martin Luther King Jr. portrays his attitude toward the white clergymen, while also depicting the everyday tribulations and hardships of many African Americans in the U.S., longing for the voice of equality to be

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