Examples Of Nonviolent Resistance

Words: 581
Pages: 3

We the students of the United States of America face difficult obstacles every day. Students face peer pressure, sexism, and most of all racism. These issues should not be faced when segregation was supposedly outlawed over 50 years ago. However, segregation will not ever be extinct; the best way to overcome it and deal with it today is to use peaceful resistance. Peaceful resistance positively impacts a free society when these issues arise on everyday basis. In order to form a more perfect union we must understand the past uses of nonviolent resistance. Martin Luther King Jr. and Rosa Parks are phenomenal examples of leaders who practiced peaceful resistance. Peaceful resistance, also known as nonviolent resistance, is defined as, “refusal to obey a law considered unjust.” In “A Letter from Birmingham,” King defines an unjust law as, “a code that is out of harmony with the moral law [the bible],” and a just law as, “a man-made code that squares with the moral law.” With all of this said, King and his followers showed nonviolent resistance time after time. In order for something to be considered a nonviolent campaign, there are four steps that must be included; “collection of the facts to determine whether injustices are alive, negotiation, …show more content…
He did not react with violence to the threats on his life, or to the bombing of his house; instead, he held a peaceful protest and came to realize it as a way of life. Peaceful resistance “seeks to create a crisis…to dramatize the issue that it can no longer be ignored.” This is simply one example of how positively impactful it can be on society. For example, a situation could be happening without the community even noticing it until public attention is brought to it. Not reacting to disrespect and rudeness actually brings attention to the situation in many