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名人轶事33:Reverend Martin Luther King Junior(1)

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https://online2.tingclass.net/lesson/shi0529/0008/8887/33.mp3
https://image.tingclass.net/statics/js/2012
By William Rogers

Broadcast: January 16, 2005

ANNCR:

People in America - a program in Special English on the Voice of America.

Martin Luther King Jr. Civil Rights Activist

(Theme)

Today, Warren Scheer and Shep O'Neal begin the story of civil rights leader,

Martin Luther King, Junior.

(THEME)

VOICE ONE:

It all started on a bus. A black woman was returning home from work after a

long hard day. She sat near the front of the bus because she was tired and

her legs hurt. But the bus belonged to the city of Montgomery in the southern

state of Alabama. And the year was nineteen fifty-five.

In those days, black people could sit only in the back of the bus. So the

driver ordered the woman to give up her seat. But the woman refused, and she

was arrested.

Incidents like this had happened before. But no one had ever spoken out

against such treatment of blacks. This time, however, a young black preacher

organized a protest. He called on all black citizens to stop riding the buses

in Montgomery until the laws were changed. The name of the young preacher was

Martin Luther King.He led the protest movement to end injustice in the

Montgomery city bus system. The protest became known as the Montgomery bus

boycott. The protest marked the beginning of the civil rights movement in the

United States.

This is the story of Martin Luther King, and his part in the early days of

the civil rights movement.

VOICE TWO:

Martin Luther King was born in Atlanta, Georgia, in nineteen twenty-nine. He

was born into a religious family. Martin's father was a preacher at a Baptist

church. And his mother came from a family with strong ties to the Baptist

religion.

In nineteen twenty-nine, Atlanta was one of the wealthiest cities in the

southern part of the United States. Many black families came to the city in

search of a better life. There was less racial tension between blacks and

whites in Atlanta than in other southern cities. But Atlanta still had laws

designed to keep black people separate from whites.

The laws of racial separation existed all over the southern part of the

United States. They forced blacks to attend separate schools and live in

separate areas of a city. Blacks did not have the same rights as white

people, and were often poorer and less educated.

VOICE ONE:

Martin Luther King did not know about racial separation when he was young.

But as he grew older, he soon saw that blacks were not treated equally.

One day Martin and his father went out to buy shoes. They entered a shoe

store owned by a white businessman.

The businessman sold shoes to all people. But he had a rule that blacks could

not buy shoes in the front part of the store. He ordered Martin's father to

obey the rule. Martin never forgot his father's angry answer:

"If you do not sell shoes to black people at the front of the store, you will

not sell shoes to us at all. "

Such incidents, however, were rare during Martin's early life. Instead, he

led the life of a normal boy. Martin liked to learn, and he passed through

school very quickly. He was only fifteen when he was ready to enter the

university. The university, called Morehouse College, was in Atlanta.

Morehouse College was one of the few universities in the South where black

students could study.

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