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James Baldwin and the Civil Rights Movement Essay

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Traditionally, examination of the black Civil Rights movement focuses on the careers of Martin Luther King and Malcolm X. Dr. King and Malcolm X had very different ideas on how to solve the racial discrimination in America. Dr. King was an integrationist who used non-violent protest to focus the media on the moral wrongs the dominant white society imposed on blacks. Dr. King believed that exposing the outrages of segregation would force the government to mend the system. Malcolm X was a separationist who believed in fighting back when attacked and advocated that the blacks in this country should take what by all means is rightfully theirs. The white system was corrupt, argued Malcolm X, and blacks should start their own system rather …show more content…

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James Baldwin was, however, an "integrationist," though he was not personally comfortable with that term (Ticket 497). Baldwin came back to the United States from France in the early 1960s to take part in Dr. King's marches and protests. Baldwin did not believe in the separation of the races. He believed that we all have to live together and love each other, not as blacks and white, but as human beings. Baldwin said, "From my point of view -- no label, no slogan, no party, no skin color, and indeed, no religion is more important than the human being" (James Baldwin, film). He also said, "All men are brothers -- that's the truth" (James Baldwin, film).

These two sides of James Baldwin seem contradictory, yet he passionately believed both of them. Baldwin had "a will toward love, peace, and reconciliation in spite of the rage and bitterness that racism inspired" (Foner and Garraty 75). Baldwin was an intelligent man who realized that unless we accept love we are all lost: blacks, whites, everyone. He understood the need for love because he understood what hate had accomplished. Baldwin knew that whites (and blacks) had to examine the fear and hatred that they had inside of them. The key to solving the problem, Baldwin argued, was finding out why the white society had to oppress the blacks throughout history. White society had to examine its own history of oppression and it had to come to grips with it. When the program

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