Sagot :
Ton prof. demande de faire un journal intime sur une personne africaine, bah, j'ai fait un truc je sais pas si c'est vraiment ça mais... Bref :
On December 1, 1955, a african black woman boarded a bus. Me, Rosa Parks. I'm sick of apartheid. So I refused to give up my seat when a white man had ordered me to get up and sit at the back of the bus. I was given a 10 dollars fine, but I appealed against the decision. If I had decided to pay, I would be declaring myself guilty. By lodging an appeal, I showed America that I was the victim of an injustice which had to be fought and vanquished. A 26-year old minister thought exactly the same: Martin Luther King. With a group of militants, he started a protest campaign, and organized a boycott of the city bus line, that was going to last 381 days and which caused the bus company to lose a huge amount of money. A feeling of resistance began to take shape.I have received numerous awards, including the Spingarn Medal, in 1979, highest distinction from the NAACP, the American civil rights organization; and Martin Luther King Sr. Award the following year. In 1994, I won the Peace Prize in Stockholm, Sweden, then in 1996 the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest distinction awarded by the American executive. President Bill Clinton then handed me over in person. In 1999, the Congress, the American legislative body, awarded me the highest honor, the Congressional Gold Medal. Listed by Time magazine as one of the twenty most important figures of the 20th century in 1999, I also received the first Governor's Medal of Honor for Extraordinary Courage by my native state in 2000.