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Summary Of Prison Writings My Life Is My Equality By Leonard Peltier

Decent Essays

Martin Luther King Jr., an activist and leader of the Civil Rights Movement said during his I Have a Dream speech, “I look to a day when people will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.” Now fifty years after the Civil Rights Movement, and that day has not come. Everyday individuals of different race, cultures and ethnicities are judged based off of the stereotypes that come from their skin color. These individuals are not given the same opportunities, fortunes, or freedoms that Caucasian people are awarded. It is unfortunate that minorities are defined by their stereotypes. Leonard Peltier, author of Prison Writings My Life is My Sundance, is defined as a Native American, and because of that he is stereotyped and judged by society. Peltier wrote his book “to bring about a greater understanding of what being an Indian means” (44). He was trying to show that Native Americans are “not quaint curiosities or stereotypical figures …show more content…

…Free, at least, in our minds and in our hearts and in our dreams, even if our bodies are shackled and locked away” (46). Leonard Peltier is an innocent Native American man who was wrongly accused of murdering two FBI agents. He is sentenced to two lifetimes in prison, and has to suffer for his crime of being a Native American. Peltier, like most other people who are classified as a minority, is judged by the color of his skin before people judged his character or innocence. He writes in his book that he does not mind his pain and suffering in prison because he remembers the pain of the people from his tribe and it allows him to grow stronger as a person. Peltier is capable of keeping a strong morale during his imprisonment because of his ability to withstand pain, his belief system, and his hopes for his own and for others futures. Peltier is capable to survive in prison because his is a Native American, and “We Indians are survivors”

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