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Montgomery Bus Boycott & Liberation Theology

Montgomery Bus Boycott & Liberation Theology

Q Directions For your Initial Post due by Tuesday 11:59 PM: • Hit the reply button, below. • Choose the following resource to get more information about the Montgomery Bus Boycott: 1. Montgomery Bus Boycott - Eyes on the Prize video: 2. Montgomery Bus Boycott 1955 (Links to an external site.) Montgomery Bus Boycott 1955 • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2wDokWsjlfg Religion and Protest... Discuss the connection between the Montgomery Bus Boycott and Liberation theology (see pages 191-195) and explain how you think liberation theology has had an impact on society today. Write at least 2 paragraphs. For your Response to at least 2 classmates due by Thursday, 11:59 PM: • Ask for clarification (that is, ask questions) if needed. • Respond to your classmates, adding your own personal perspective. Discussion Guidelines Read and respond to others' posts as well, keeping in mind some basic rules for netiquette (Links to an external site.): • Be kind and respectful to others • Use full sentences • Don't use too much jargon • Treat others online as you wish to be treated • Use language that supports others

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The Montgomery Bus Boycott was one of the most powerful civil-rights protest in U.S history against racial segregation on the public transportation structure. A civil-rights protest during the Civil Rights Movement which took place during the 1950s and 1960s, in search for equal rights for the African Americans. The Montgomery Bus Boycott was initiated by Rosa Park’s arrest for failure to surrender her seat to a white man. Rosa Park’s an activist to the cause in conjunction with the NAACP organized a boycott to have no African American ride the public transportation as a protest to segregation.