Mlk Letter From Birmingham Jail Analysis

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Pages: 3

Quarrel’s may sting, but quietude can bruise the heart. Martin Luther King Jr. evokes,“In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.” This indicates that those who are silent are the ones that we will remember because they are the people that did not speak out, or stand up for those with injustice. We do not remember our enemies who spoke because it hurts more when one's own friends and alliances refuse to stand up for you. It is not an easy choice: does one profess and stand up for his best friend, or put his head down and act like he never noticed? Does one pay more attention to those who suffer injustice, or those that are given justice? Throughout history Martin Luther King, Jr.’s Letter from Birmingham Jail, and the message in Peter Fischl’s poem To the Little Polish Boy Standing With His Arms Up, have been great reads for students to grasp what the cost is to stay silent. Undeterred by potential risks, people should stand up for those who are subdued or tormented with injustice.

First and foremost, people should stand up for those that suffer from injustice. One acumen for that is because in Martin Luther King, Jr.’s Letter from Birmingham Jail, he emphasizes, “When you are humiliated day in and day out by
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Also in Peter Fischl’s poem To the Little Polish Boy Standing With His Arms Up he conveys, “Standing with your little hat on your head, the Star of David on your coat, standing in the Ghetto with your arms up, as many Nazi machine guns point at you.” Additionally, he writes, “I would make a monument of you, and the world who said nothing.” These pieces of evidence validate my statement, because they all show how citizens are treated, and how they receive injustice. Is this how people want to be remembered by? Treating or even watching others who reap