Simon Wendt's God, Gandhi, Guns: The African American Freedom

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It is difficult to imagine the brutality facing African Americans as they began their strenuous fight towards achieving integration. Although African Americans confronted tear gas, beatings, and slander from white oppositions, they remained widely nonviolent in their efforts to achieve this goal. Nonviolent protesting is a central theme in both Simon Wendt’s “God, Gandhi, Guns: The African American Freedom Struggle in Tuscaloosa, Alabama” and Ted Shine’s Contribution. Each in his own tone, the authors highlight important factors and differing strategies in the endeavors to achieve equality. Leaders of the Civil Rights movement realized early on that responding to violence with violence would not accomplish what they were trying to achieve.

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