The Gandhi-King Community

For Global Peace with Social Justice in a Sustainable Environment

Singing is part of the nonviolence movement. Here is Dr. Bernard LaFayette Jr. singing with the participants of the International Nonviolence Summer Institute for trainers(Level I) and organizers(Level II). Singing in the Civil Rights Movement created unity, eased fears, appeared to show confidence, this created a unified group to attack not just an individual person, a form of political message through song, picketing and marches were set to the song. Everyone sings, no exceptions.
"Music was absolutely vital and central to The Movement." quoting David Hadley Finke

Views: 65

Comment

You need to be a member of The Gandhi-King Community to add comments!

Join The Gandhi-King Community

Notes

How to Learn Nonviolent Resistance As King Did

Created by Shara Lili Esbenshade Feb 14, 2012 at 11:48am. Last updated by Shara Lili Esbenshade Feb 14, 2012.

Two Types of Demands?

Created by Shara Lili Esbenshade Jan 9, 2012 at 10:16pm. Last updated by Shara Lili Esbenshade Jan 11, 2012.

Why gender matters for building peace

Created by Shara Lili Esbenshade Dec 5, 2011 at 6:51am. Last updated by Shara Lili Esbenshade Jan 9, 2012.

Gene Sharp & the History of Nonviolent Action

Created by Shara Lili Esbenshade Oct 10, 2011 at 5:30pm. Last updated by Shara Lili Esbenshade Dec 31, 2011.

Videos

  • Add Videos
  • View All

The GandhiTopia & the Gandhi-King Community are Partners

© 2024   Created by Clayborne Carson.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service