Congress of Racial Equality
Today in class we had a group presentation that covered many topics during the Harlem Renaissance. Each team member covered a certain topic during the time period. The topic or group I chose to cover is the Congress of Racial Equality also known as C.O.R.E.
C.O.R.E was a group of inneracial students founded in 1942 at the University of Chicago campus. The group started off with four founding fathers. The founding fathers were James Farmer, Georger Houser, Bayard Rustin, and Bernice Fischer. Gandhi, the Indian lawyer and biggest political figure in history, is the group's biggest influencer. Gandhi was known for his peaceful protests which C.O.R.E. would follow. For instance, they would promote sit-ins and non-violent forms of protest to get their word spread. The goal was to integrate into Chicago restaurants and businesses. In 1955, C.O.R.E traveled to the south and promoted even more non-violence training to the people in need. The group quickly became one of the leading activist organizations during the Civil Rights period. The group continued to work by focusing on desegregating public facilities like bathrooms.
C.O.R.E. also partnered alongside Martin Luther King Jr. and his organization Southern Christian Leadership Conference. The two together were able to work to integrate education systems, completed the Voter Education Project, and the Chicago Campaign. In 1961 the main goal of the group was the voter rights especially in the states of Louisiana, Florida, and South Carolina. Finally, one of the biggest things the group did was organize a freedom ride, working to desegregate transportation systems.
All in all the group was a big factor in the fight for equality during the Civil Rights era and will go down in history for the work they put in for the African American people.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahatma_Gandhi
https://kinginstitute.stanford.edu/encyclopedia/congress-racial-equality-core
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