Civil Rights Movement Analysis

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The Black community faced extreme challenges within the prejudice, unfair, white dominant society. Following the Great Depression everyone was in search for food, shelter, and jobs. But, as history explains the struggles for all men during this time it fails to truly capture the immense amount of pain the black community endured for so long. Split into different sections, the black community, tried to fight but it translated as meager efforts and stagnation of progress. However, soon the community grew tired of oppression, linked arms with each-other, spoke words of we instead of I, and finally as a unit contested the unjust white rule. From 1935 until 1943 the Civil rights movement merged its factions in order to fight as one solid, powerful…show more content…
They were willing to reconstruct the political scope of the Civil rights movement. The National Negro Congress’ (NCC) first president, A. Philip Randolph realized that, “without jobs, there would be no freedom. Without full economic participation, blacks would continue to be denied fundamental rights.” He felt that economic opportunity was necessary in order to achieve freedom, and “that class and race were intertwined.” The NNC aimed to “integrate and coordinate the existing Negro organizations into one federated and collective agency so as to develop greater and more effective power.” It sought out to create an organization which all African-Americans could advocate, by avoiding the bourgeois attitude that encompassed the NAACP, and creating an environment that supported a variety of backgrounds and opinions. Thus, enabling them to creating a uniformity in the mindset of…show more content…
As a direct result, blacks began to accept unions, because “there were enough black workers in key northern industries that it would be difficult to organize plant-wide or industry-wide unions without their support,” and “by the mid-1930’s, support for unionism had taken hold, even among relatively conservative black organizations.” Therefore, the collective bargaining of unions brings together both white and black workers in order to fuse control. This fresh urgency for unionism helped to enhance “the labor movement, the improvement of labor standards, brings comfort, health, and decency to black as well as white workers. The moderate blacks, who had been inspired by the logical rhetoric of their leaders and organizations, were able join together, stable, energetic, and willing to fight the status
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