Option D is the right answer.
The Montgomery Bus Boycott was a major success of the Civil Rights movement. This boycott was a social and political protest campaign against the doctrine of racial discrimination in public transportation. The boycott began when an African- American lady was imprisoned for denying to quit her chair to a White man. And this protest resulted in the Supreme Court's verdict that claimed the Montgomery and Alabama laws that segregated buses were illegal.
Despite the Great Depression , culture in the 1930s both commercial and funded by New Deal programs as part of the relief effort, flourished
Answer: Because it showed that change is possible
Explanation/context:
The medieval era had been one in which the Roman Catholic Church dominated the culture of Europe, and it was thought that no one could successfully challenge such a deeply ingrained institution. However, the Reformation movement by Martin Luther and other Protestant figures showed that even something as entrenched and enduring at the Catholic Church could be challenged, and changes could be accomplished. Even during Martin Luther's lifetime, this idea that change was possible motivated people to launch efforts toward other major changes to powerful systems. The Peasants Revolt that occurred in Germany in 1524-1525 took Luther's push for reform in the church and applied it to make a push for change in feudal society. Martin Luther himself didn't agree with that and opposed the Peasants Revolt, but as Schaff points out, the momentum of the Reformation was a "propelling force" inspiring other "forward movements" to make changes in society.
Answer: true
Explanation:
this statement is true; however the colors on their clothing are the same