Rather those that believed in inclusion and the coming together of all races. Also, those who fought for and defended those of the LGBTQ community. Although I can not exactly identify with most civil rights groups, I do sympathize, and admire everything they fought for and worked for over the years. The main reason I want to become a teacher is to bring people together, and create a loving and safe environment to flourish and thrive. How would any of this be possible if we were still fighting for simple rights (same bathrooms, drinking fountains, same classrooms, etc.,) to be given to every single human being? I couldnt imagine the energy and darkness that was around classrooms and schools during this point in time. Obviously there are still people, even though we are in 2018, who have yet to accept that things have changed, and they need to start acting the right way. Brown versus board was a huge step, and gave every child and person the opportunity to equal education and all around equality in the school place. It was a huge step towards taking this approach towards restaurants, bathrooms, and even drinking fountains. According to the textbook, the 1954 unanimous decision of the Supreme Court in Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka established that the segregation of races in the public schools violates the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment(Ford, Page 120). This created opportunity and inclusion for those previously being segregated from others. It angers me to even think of people being racist, or acting out in hateful racist ways to people, and it is something I will never fully come to understand. Even more so, how can people be that way towards children, when we are all children of god.#2
Which group’s civil rights struggle from Chapter Five do you most identify with? Why do you feel this personal connection with their struggle? The group I mostly Identified with in chapter five of the civil rights was the Hispanic Group. I am of Salvadorian nationality. Both my parents were born in a small rural village in El Salvador. My parents came to this country in search of a better life for themselves as most immigrants do. At the time my mother was seventeen and she was attending school, which is not free like it so graciously here in the United State. As my mother was preparing to advance on to college my grandmother pulled my mother aside. She explained to my mother with a heavy heart that she could no longer afford to send her to school. It was understandable since my mother came from a fairly large family, two brothers and five sisters, a total of seven. At the young age of eighteen my mother made one of the biggest decisions of her life. She would start her journey to travel to the United States. My father also came here when he was only nineteen. He came to this country so he could work and make money for his family back home. The American Government and Politics today shows two table with a table that represent how many legal and illegal immigrants we approxately have in this country. The table shows that 436,000 Salvadorian immigrants are here as illegal aliens. The table also shows that 19,273 Salvadorians do have proper documentation (Bardes, B. A., Schmidt, S. W., & Shelley, M. C. 2018). rovide our children a better tomorrow. I am a child born of two immigrants.
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