$9.98 DVD
In Montgomery, Alabama, Rosa Parks is jailed for refusing to give up her seat on a public bus to a white man, a violation of the city's racial segregation laws. The successful Montgomery Bus Boycott, organized by a young Baptist minister named Martin Luther King, Jr., followed Park's historic act of civil disobedience.
"The mother of the civil rights movement," as Rosa Parks is known, was born in Tuskegee, Alabama, in 1913. She worked as a seamstress and in 1944 joined the Montgomery chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).

MLK gives a speech during the bus boycott
Learning of Parks' arrest, the NAACP and other African American activists immediately called for a bus boycott to be held by black citizens on Monday, October 5. Word was spread by fliers, and the Montgomery Improvement Association was formed by the activists to organize the protest. The first day of the bus boycott was a great success, and that night the 26-year-old Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., told a large crowd gathered at a church, "The great glory of American democracy is the right to protest for right." King emerged as the leader of the bus boycott and received numerous death threats from opponents of integration. At one point, his home was dynamited, but he and his family escaped bodily harm.

MLK on the bus with fellow civil rights leaders © Corbis
Martin Luther King, Jr., and his nonviolent civil rights movement had won its first great victory. There would be many more to come.



