Thurgood Marshall
To some of us, Thurgood Marshall is the first black man ever to become Supreme Court Justice but to most Americans, he is more than that. His name today symbolizes complete equality and freedom, not only for blacks but also for every individual regardless of his color or race. To associate Marshall with law alone and to discuss his accomplishments in this context might be unfair to a person who devoted his whole life to the creation of a moral society where every individual is accorded equal rights and where color doesn't determine or plague civil rights. Thus Marshall was the man who taught us to value freedom and equality over 'heritage' or 'history'. He must therefore be remembered as a champion of civil rights and as someone who had the courage to reject rigid interpretations of law to create a better and more humane society for every individual.
Marshall was born in 1908, at a time when racial segregation and discrimination plagued the American society and when rejection due to skin color wasn't a rare phenomenon. Marshall wasn't exactly determined to eradicate segregation when he was young because he felt comfortable with his skin color and never had a burning desire to be treated as an equal. This is a strange discovery about someone who later came to be known as Mr. Civil Rights. Juan Williams (1990) writes: "As a boy, Marshall did not have a burning desire to fight segregation. He says he rarely felt uncomfortable about race. He lived in a nine house on Druid Hill Avenue, and both of his parents worked. His mother taught kindergarten, and his father held a variety of jobs, including working as the steward at the prestigious Gibson Island Club on Chesapeake Bay. Marshall was the great-grandson of a slave named Thoroughgood -- Marshall shortened it to Thurgood -- but both his grandfathers owned large grocery stores in Baltimore."
These circumstances gave rise to an air of indifference in his life where he didn't really care about being a black or being treated unfairly. But this apathy wasn't meant to remain intact for long because in 1930 Marshall faced cruel rejection on the basis of race when he applied...
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