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One day Martin and his father went out to buy shoes. They entered a shoe store
owned by a white businessman.
The businessman sold shoes to all people. But he had a rule that blacks could not
buy shoes in the front part of the store. He ordered Martin's father to obey the rule.
Martin never forgot his father's angry answer:
"If you do not sell shoes to black people at the front of the store, you will not sell
shoes to us at all. "
Such incidents, however, were rare during Martin's early life. Instead, he led the life
of a normal boy. Martin liked to learn, and he passed through school very quickly.
He was only fifteen when he was ready to enter the university. The university,
called Morehouse College, was in Atlanta. Morehouse College was one of the few
universities in the South where black students could study.
It was at the university that Martin decided to become a preacher. At the same
time, he also discovered he had a gift for public speaking.
He soon was able to test his gifts. One Sunday, Martin's father asked him to
preach at his church. When Martin arrived, the church members were surprised to
see such a young man getting ready to speak to them. But they were more
surprised to find themselves deeply moved by the words of young Martin Luther
King.
A church member once described him: "The boy seemed much older than his
years. He understood life and its problems."
Martin seemed wise to others because of his studies at the university. He carefully
read the works of Mahatma Gandhi, the Indian leader and thinker. Martin also
studied the books of the American philosopher, Henry David Thoreau. Both men
wrote about ways to fight injustice. Gandhi had led his people to freedom by
peacefully refusing to obey unjust laws. He taught his followers never to use
violence. Thoreau also urged people to disobey laws that were not just, and to be
willing to go to prison for their beliefs.
As he studied, Martin thought he had found the answer for his people. The ideas of
Gandhi and Thoreau -- non-violence and civil disobedience -- could be used
together to win equal rights for black Americans. Martin knew, then, that his
decision to become a preacher was right. He believed that as a preacher he could
spread the ideas of Gandhi and Thoreau. Years later he said:
"My university studies gave me the basic truths I now believe. I discovered the idea
of humanity's oneness and the dignity and value of all human character. "
Martin continued his studies in religion for almost ten years. When he was twentytwo, he moved north to study in Boston.
It was in Boston that Martin met Coretta Scott, the woman who later became his
wife.
Martin always had been very popular with the girls in his hometown. His brother
once said that Martin "never had one girlfriend for more than a year".
But Martin felt Coretta Scott was different. The first time he saw her Martin said:
"You have everything I have ever wanted in a wife. "
Coretta was surprised at his words. But she felt that Martin was serious and
honest. A short time later, they were married. Martin soon finished his studies in
Boston, and received a doctorate degree in religion. The young preacher then was
offered a job at a church in Montgomery, Alabama.
Martin Luther King and his wife were happy in Montgomery. Their first child was
born. Martin's work at the church was going well. He became involved in a number
of activities to help the poor. And the members of his church spoke highly of their
new preacher. Coretta remembered their life as simple and without worries.
Then, a black woman, Rosa Parks, was arrested for sitting in the white part of a
Montgomery city bus. And Martin Luther King organized a protest against the
Montgomery bus system.
Martin believed it was very important for the bus boycott to succeed -- more
important even than his own life. But he worried about his ability to lead such an
important campaign. He was only twenty-six years old. He prayed to God for help
and believed that God answered his prayers.
Martin knew that his actions and his speeches would be important for the civil
rights movement. But he was faced with a serious problem. He asked: "How can I
make my people militant enough to win our goals, while keeping peace within the
movement. "
The answer came to him from the teachings of Gandhi and Thoreau. In his first
speech as a leader, Martin said:
"We must seek to show we are right through peaceful, not violent means. Love
must be the ideal guiding our actions. If we protest bravely, and yet with pride and
Christian love, then future historians will say:
"There lived a great people, a black people, who gave new hope to civilization. "
With these words, a new movement was born. It was non-violent and peaceful. But
victory was far from sure, and many difficult days of struggle lay ahead.
You have been listening to the VOA Special English program, PEOPLE IN
AMERICA. Your narrators were Warren Scheer and Shep O'Neal. Our program
was written by William Rodgers. Listen again next week at this time, when we will
complete the story of civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Junior.