
Today, we go to jail.b Youth in Birmingham Hated by Negro HatefulnessThough racial discrimination was widely accepted as illegal, blacks in Birmingham were still oppressed and oppressed in the 1960s. Policy makers did not allow any attempts by blacks to achieve ethnic integration, and blacks were thoroughly separated from white people in all kinds of everyday life, including schools, bus seats, restrooms, drinking water, and various festivals, parties, worship, and courts. The black people in Birmingham have struggled to regain their freedom and rights, not to mention the extreme discrimination.Among them, children like Audrey, Wash, James, Annette and 4,000 teenagers are in prison A godly march takes place. If the head of a family loses or is arrested, the whole family will be threatened, but if the children go to jail, the father will continue to be responsible for the familys livelihood. The youth filled the city of Birmingham and paralyzed the entire administration of the city, releasing the actual state of Birmingham throughout the country and even the entire world. Cynthia Levinson focused on the case and found that four students who participated in the demonstrations at that time, Audrey, 9, and 14, Wash, 15-year-old James, and 16-year-old Annette. Through a whole new perspective and a human perspective, we were able to vividly reconstruct the city of Birmingham City youth march. Their fighting and crying eventually became a struggle for justice in all parts of the world, and in 1964 they played a major role in bringing about civil rights laws that prohibited racial discrimination. The story of righteous youth gives us courage to look back on us these days when we see injustice not actively, but at the same time we can move forward to a better future.