NASHVILLE (AP) - Civil rights leaders say Nashville's lunch counter sit-ins were instrumental in ensuring that student demonstrators across the south would embrace nonviolence.
Speaking at a forum on Thursday to honor the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., civil rights leader James Lawson said that after the success of the Montgomery bus boycott there was a real question as to whether nonviolence could work again.
Then in 1960, Lawson successfully led the Nashville sit-ins after a series of nonviolence workshops for black student leaders.
Later that year, students from across the south met for a conference to discuss how to move forward. At the time, Nashville was the only city that had desegregated its lunch counters, and it had done so nonviolently.
Nonviolence became a part of the movement's mission statement.