
Reading Rosa Parks has driven me to conclude that black women really had the rough end of the stick during the fifties and early sixties. Parks and many other black women leaders simultaneously fought for women rights alongside of fighting for civil rights.
Parks tells the story of witnessing King's "I Have a Dream" speech in which she existed as a quiet member of the audience. It doesn't seem fair that an important role model of the Civil Rights movement such as Parks, should be part of the background. She, along with the other women leaders should have given the position to be part of the convention. I think that doing so would not only give these heroic women the recognition they deserve, but would have probably aided the movement in the sense that it would have attracted more female involvement. Even though Park's story seems kind of depressing on behalf of women, I am glad that after the explanation of the previous scenario, she was able to speak at the Richmond convention. Her ability to do so signals the beginnings of a change for women. I already associated Parks as Civil Rights leader, but now i am also to link her to another important movement in the history of America- the Women's Rights Movement. After facing injustice from basically all angles, it is amazing how much Parks and other women were able to influence and accomplish.