8.02.2020

John Lewis and Bryan Stevenson : The fight for civil rights and freedom

John Lewis and Bryan Stevenson·TED Legacy Project
The fight civil rights and freedom
Summary
The interview was recorded in November 2019. The speaker, John Robert Lewis, was an American politician, a civil-rights leader, and not only worked for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee but also spent his life fighting for freedom and justice for everyone. 
He died this July. I've just seen the news that his body covered with the American flag crossed the Edmund Pettus Bridge before reading the article. The bridge is known as Bloody Sunday. 

In the past, there was violence to fight civil rights and freedom, however, Dr. King had taught him to love while enduring some of the brutalities. It requires the philosophy and the discipline of nonviolence that are to respect the dignity and the worth of every human being and never give up on anyone. The speaker's work must be redemption to tell the history. 

Two black men were told in this story. The fight is continuing. As a society, still, there is something that the country hasn’t embraced. They also said that they haven’t really wanted to acknowledge the legacy of slavery and the history of lynching and segregation. People want to skip over the apology part. This is the most shocking story for me as a Japanese, so...

We have to reject something with courage and respect when we face it that was wrong. It’s not resistance, not hatred, and not ignoring, but it's for our civil rights and freedom. We have to catch it with our own hands. It's not given. 

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