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Malcolm X Civil Rights Activist

Decent Essays

Malcolm X
Hunter Apodaca
7th Grade ELA

Malcolm X was a Muslim minister and was part of the civil rights movement. He helped show that black people were the same as white and should not be treated differently. He believed that black people should have the same rights and laws and be treated the same under those laws.

[www.biography.com] Malcolm X was born Malcolm Little on May 19, 1925 in Omaha, Nebraska. Malcolm's dad got threats from a white supremacist group called Black Legion. They relocated twice before Malcolm’s fourth birthday. Even though they relocated, their Michigan home was burnt down in 1929. Malcolm X tried to save black people “By any means necessary.”— Malcolm X He was really devoted to that quote. Malcolm X had a friend named Malcolm Jarvis, and together, they got arrested on burglary charges. While Malcolm X was in prison, he studied the teachings of Nation Of Islam (NOI) leader Elijah Muhammad. …show more content…

Among other goals, the NOI fought for a state of their own, separate from the one inhabited by whites. By the time he was paroled in 1952, Malcolm was a devoted follower with the new surname “X” (He considered “Little” a slave name and chose the “X” to signify his lost tribal name.) The crowds and controversy surrounding Malcolm made him a media magnet. He was featured in a weeklong television special with Mike Wallace in 1959, called “The Hate That Hate Produced.” The program explored the fundamentals of the NOI, and tracked Malcolm’s emergence as one of its most important leaders. Malcolm X’s Speech had changed the way people had looked at African-Americans. Tragically, just as Malcolm X appeared to be embarking on an ideological transformation with the potential to dramatically alter the course of the Civil Rights Movement, he was

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