- Letter from Birmingham Jail
-
The Letter from Birmingham Jail or Letter from Birmingham City Jail, also known as The Negro Is Your Brother, is an open letter written on April 16, 1963, by Martin Luther King, Jr., an American civil rights leader. King wrote the letter from the city jail in Birmingham, Alabama, where he was confined after being arrested for his part in the Birmingham campaign, a planned non-violent protest conducted by the Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights and King's Southern Christian Leadership Conference against racial segregation by Birmingham's city government and downtown retailers. He gave bits and pieces of the letter to his lawyers to take back to movement headquarters, where the Reverend Wyatt Walker began compiling and editing the literary jigsaw puzzle.
King's letter is a response to a statement made by eight white Alabama clergymen on April 12, 1963, titled "A Call For Unity". The clergymen agreed that social injustices existed but argued that the battle against racial segregation should be fought solely in the courts, not in the streets. They criticized Martin Luther King, calling him an “outside agitator” who causes trouble in the streets of Birmingham. To this, King referred to his belief that all communities and states were interrelated. He wrote, “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly… Anyone who lives inside the United States can never be considered an outsider…”[1] King expressed his remorse that the demonstrations were taking place in Birmingham but felt that the white power structure left the black community with no other choice.
There were further disapprovement of the immense tension created by the demonstration. To this, King affirmed that he and his fellow demonstrators were using nonviolent direct action in order to cause tension that would force the wider community to face the issue head on. They hoped to create tension: a nonviolent tension that is needed for growth. King responded that without nonviolent forceful direct actions, true civil rights could never be achieved.
The clergymen also disapprove of the timing of the demonstration. However, King believed that, "This 'Wait' has almost always meant 'Never.'"[1] King declared that they had waited for these God given rights long enough and that “justice too long delayed is justice denied.”[1]
Against the clergymen’s assertion that the demonstration was against the law, he argued that not only was civil disobedience justified in the face of unjust laws, but that "one has a moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws."
Extensive excerpts from the letter were published, without King's consent, on May 19, 1963 in the New York Post Sunday Magazine. [2] The letter was first published as "Letter from Birmingham Jail" in the June, 1963 issue of Liberation[3] the June 12, 1963, edition of The Christian Century,[4] and in the June 24, 1963, issue of The New Leader. It was reprinted shortly thereafter in The Atlantic Monthly. King included the full text in his 1964 book Why We Can't Wait.
The letter includes the famous statement "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere," as well as the words attributed to William Ewart Gladstone quoted by King: "[J]ustice too long delayed is justice denied."
References
- ^ a b c King, Martin Luther. "Letter from a Birmingham Jail". http://www.africa.upenn.edu/Articles_Gen/Letter_Birmingham.html. Retrieved 13 May 2011.
- ^ Blessed are the peacemakers, S. Jonathan Bass, p. 140
- ^ Liberation: An Independent Monthly. June, 1963 (page 10-16, 23)
- ^ Reprinted in Reporting Civil Rights, Part One - (page 777- 794) - American Journalism 1941 - 1963. The Library of America
External links
- Letter from Birmingham Jail full text
- Letter from Birmingham Jail pdf format
- "Statement by Alabama Clergymen", referred to above as "Call for Unity"
- Letter from Birmingham Jail article at BhamWiki.com
- Letter from Birmingham Jail article, Encyclopedia of Alabama
Martin Luther King, Jr. Speeches and sermons · Writings · Movements and protests SpeechesWritingsLetter from Birmingham Jail · "What Is Man?"
Movements and
protests1955 Montgomery Bus Boycott · 1960 Nashville sit-ins · 1961 Albany Movement · 1963 Birmingham campaign · 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom · 1965 Selma Voting Rights Movement · 1965–67 Chicago Freedom Movement · 1968 Memphis Sanitation Strike · 1968 Poor People's Campaign
People FamilyOthersAssassination James Earl Ray · William Francis Pepper · Loyd Jowers · Funeral
Media Film and TVSongsRelated topics Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) · Martin Luther King, Jr. Day · Lee–Jackson–King Day · Season for Nonviolence · National Historic Site · National Memorial · National Civil Rights Museum · Eponymous streets · Authorship issues · Letter to an Anti-Zionist Friend
Categories:- United States historical documents
- 1963 in the United States
- Prison writings
- Open letters
- 1963 works
- History of Birmingham, Alabama
- Works by Martin Luther King, Jr.
- 1963 in Alabama
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.