Post Quiz: We Shall Overcome!
Created | Updated Jul 15, 2018
Post Quiz: We Shall Overcome!
This month's Create challenge is about independence and belonging. Protest movements are also about the need for independence and the power of belonging to a group. Answer these questions to explore humanity's protest past.
- It started on Halloween, 1517, when a noisy monk nailed a manifesto to the church door. What appropriate name does this religious 'reformation' have?
- A 1789 Paris protest march turned violent – and gave birth to a new form of government. What date is celebrated in France, and what's it called?
- In 1773, angry British colonists dumped 45 tons of tea into Boston Harbour as a protest against taxes. Sounds messy, but why was the Tea Party a big deal?
- On 2 August 1848 in Rochester, New York, Abigail Bush and some other women did something previously unheard-of in the US. What was it?
- In 1911, 80,000 people marched in New York City because they were outraged about the deaths of 146 women and girls. What had happened?
- In 1930, Gandhi led 60,000 people on a 23-day march to break the law. What did they do that broke British law?
- What form of protest did Nelson Mandela organise that made 26 June 1950 significant?
- We all know that Martin Luther King made his 'I Have a Dream' speech during the August 1963 March on Washington. But what, exactly, were the protestors demanding at this event?
- We know the protestors at Tiananmen Square in Beijing wanted democratic reform. About how many people were gathered there before the tanks arrived?
- In 1989 – 200 years and a few months after the fracas in Paris – crowds of people helped remove a hated barrier in Europe. What was it?
Whew. That's a lot of organised protest. Click the picture for answers.