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ML
King Study Guide
As a companion to this Web site, the following study guide is intended to
prompt further discussion about King's life and legacy, and particularly
about how the society has changed (or not changed) due to the civil rights
movement. The Internet can be a powerful tool for learning. Educators and
parents may want to use the following questions as a way of talking about
these critical social issues, and of exploring this and other Web sites.
Suggestion: As a special exercise, consider doing some of the research
using the Internet and some using traditional off-line sources. Then
compare the results, and discuss the strengths and weaknesses of both
approaches.
- Why was Martin Luther King Jr. attracted to the philosophy of
Mohandas Gandhi? Research Gandhi's life and philosophy and discuss how
the two men's approaches and beliefs were similar, and how they might
have disagreed.

- Julian Bond writes: "The civil rights movement, enjoying its widest
national support at the Edmunds Pettis Bridge in Selma, Ala., in 1965,
was actually preparing to self-destruct, its demands increasing and its
public support diminishing." In what way was it preparing to
self-destruct? What happened with the civil rights movement in the next
ten years after 1965, and why did its course change so dramatically?

- What examples of a movement similar to the civil rights movement
exist today, either in America or elsewhere in the world? What are some
of the strategies people are using to win those rights?

- What did King mean when he said, in 1965, "I'm much more than a
civil rights leader"? See the discussion by Julian Bond, and try to
imagine what King might have done in five years or in 10 years had he
lived.

- In his article about the King holiday, Paul Andrews writes: "King is
the only American besides George Washington to have a national holiday
designated for his birthday." What were the reasons people argued FOR
and AGAINST creating the holiday? Do you think it was a good idea? Why,
or why not?

- Is the King holiday important mostly to African Americans? Why or
why not?

- If King were to come to your school one day, and look around and
listen, what would he say about the nature of race relations there now?
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