Context: Jackie Robinson (1919-1972) was a professional baseball player and the first African American to play in the Major Leagues. This informational text discusses Robinson’s life and accomplishments, and the impact his role in baseball had on the Civil Rights Movement. As you read, think about the different ways that Jackie Robinson fought back against racial discrimination and segregation throughout this life.
FIGHTING RACISM
Even early in his life, Robinson confronted racism head on. In 1938, while still at junior college, he was arrested after disputing the police’s detention of one of his black friends. He managed to escape a long jail sentence, but this and other run-ins with the police earned him a reputation of being very combative against racial oppression.
When the U.S. entered World War II, Robinson enlisted in the army. He never saw direct combat, but his military career was marred
by racial problems. While stationed in Texas, Robinson boarded a non-segregated bus, but he was instructed to sit in the back anyway. He refused, and military police took him into custody for his insubordination. Fortunately, one month later, an all-white jury acquitted him, but the situation foreshadowed only more of the same prejudice he’d face later in life.
The subheading of this section of the text is "Fighting racism". What might this section summarize?