Malcolm X Essay

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    To what extent were W.E.B. DuBois and Malcolm X ideologies similar? W.E.B. DuBois and Malcolm X had very similar ideologies. W.E.B. Dubois and Malcolm X both grew up in the North. DuBois was smart and went to school and was the first african american to get a PhD. Dubois did not have to deal with alot of racism when he was growing up. Malcolm X did not get an education like DuBois, he had a hard childhood, filled with violence and poverty. Malcolm X went to jail multiple times and became the…

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    equality for African Americans, and Blacks in the United States. Martin Luther King Jr and Malcolm X were two African American leaders of the Civil Rights Movement. They both instilled respect, pride, and religion into black community. Their leadership was to promise African Americans and Blacks through the 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments equality and justice. In addition to their leadership, Dr. King and Malcolm X were involved in transforming the U.S. government in the Civil Rights Bill. This…

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    or promotion to a higher level. The authors, Jimmy Santiago Baca and Malcolm X were having an illiteracy problem when they were in prison. Jimmy Santiago Baca is born in New Mexico and grew up without a proper family. Baca was caught dealing drugs when he was in his early twentie and sentenced to prison. He also gave free readings and speeches about his experiences within the country. His story “ A Place…

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    black community overcome injustice. In The Autobiography of Malcolm X as told to Alex Haley, religion appears as a portrayal as a way to unify the black community and create a sense of Black Nationalism. Through the portrayals of Black Christianity, the Nation of Islam, and Orthodox Islam in Malcolm’s life, we can see how religion unifies Black Americans by giving them a sense of self-pride and belonging. Black Religion for Malcolm X appears throughout the entirety of his life starting in his…

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    The various approaches to achieving social and civil rights were expressed by numerous writers in unit 4, however, Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X are the chosen writers for this assignment. Martin Luther King Jr.’s approach was to gather a mass of people and to speak publicly as the voice of the people, with the outcome of peace and nonviolent. Malcolm X’s approach was to speak to the youth’s allowing them to choose by giving them choice from different ends of the spectrum. These two…

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    and Malcolm X seemed to have a respect among one another, though their philosophies were quite different from each other. Malcolm X made it clear that he believed that the African Americans and the White people should remain separate but should be considered equal to each other. He told white people “work in conjunction…

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    involved with drugs, dealing and using, burglary, and pimping” (“Malcolm X”). “Malcolm learned to make a living in the hustler’s society. People began calling him by the nickname Detroit Red. This nickname came from the superstition that red-headed Negroes were sons of the Devil, quick-tempered, mean, and capable of cruel violence” (Epps 24). “The police knew Malcolm was selling drugs and were after him. He traveled on a train to keep moving. Several months later he was drafted into the army but…

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    them the satisfaction of feeling as though they are better and should be privileged. In The Autobiography of Malcolm X by Alex Haley, Malcolm experiences different situations dealing with Racism. With the teachings of Marcus Garvey’s Pan Africanism by his father Earl Little, he gets the knowledge of what people were doing to tolerate the misery they were going through. Growing up Malcolm faces racism in school and in his neighborhood. During his Trip to Mecca, he accepts that every white person…

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    Everyone Has a Little Malcolm in Them: Malcolm X’s Leadership On November 10, 1963, Malcolm X delivered his best known speech at the Northern Negro GrassRoots Leadership Conference in Detroit, Michigan. One of his most famous lines from his speech, “Message to the GrassRoots” states, “Be peaceful, be courteous, obey the law, respect everyone; but if someone puts his hand on you, send him to the cemetery.”(“Americas | Malcolm X: Key quotes”) Malcolm X was one of the most famous leaders of the…

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    Black people remained victims of discrimination, oppression, degradation, and exploitation. This blatant inequality and injustice was evidence of the prejudice against Black individuals from the government and people of authority. These issues led Malcolm X to deliver the speech “The Ballot or the Bullet” in which he endorsed ethnic, monetary and social impartiality as essential to achieve their rights and freedoms, as meant to be protected through the law. The Black community was…

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