King had multiple audiences in this essay; many more than just the clergymen.
He had audiences such as people living in the North, people living in the South, the White congregation, Black congregation, elected officials in Birmingham, elected officials in Washington and other smaller less significant audiences.
He wasn't writing to Birgingham jail, he was writing from the Birmingham jail, where he was being detained at the time, to his "fellow clergymen" of Alabama. To straight out answer your question, he was in Birmingham jail when he wrote the letter in question (it's called "Letter From a Birmingham Jail")
Letter from Birmingham Jail was written on the 16th of April 1963
Like a boss..
Parts of it yes.
wy u care
He wasn't writing to Birgingham jail, he was writing from the Birmingham jail, where he was being detained at the time, to his "fellow clergymen" of Alabama. To straight out answer your question, he was in Birmingham jail when he wrote the letter in question (it's called "Letter From a Birmingham Jail")
Letter from Birmingham Jail was written on the 16th of April 1963
summrize letter of birningham jail
1963
He was with a Police who was on his side
Like a boss..
Parts of it yes.
(1963) A letter that Martin Luther King, Jr., addressed to his fellow clergymen while he was in jail in Birmingham, Alabama, in 1963, after a nonviolent protest against racial segregation
wy u care
He wrote the letter. Didn't get it.
non-violant
The title is self-explanatory.