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Malcolm X Incarceration Essay

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Malcolm X was arrested and sent to serve a ten-year sentence for stealing. To most, imprisonment would appear to be dark horror; however, according to Malcolm his incarceration became his freedom. His prison cell became his classroom where this would also open the door for all his future endeavors. According to Malcolm his duration in prison had been extremely beneficial to him, “ no university would ask any student to devour literature as I did when this new world open to me, of being able to read and understand.” (pg. 122) Prison a benefit? It didn’t appear to make much sense at first glance. As continued reading I became fixated with this anomalous question, that prison created more freedom and assimilation for Malcolm than if he was …show more content…

Muhammad,” and Muhammad’s teachings about how history had been “whitened.” The next several pages in the text contained many accounts of how white people were diabolical monsters to other races, even though history. Malcolm writes, “more eloquent than the books were in providing indisputable proof that the collective white man had acted like a devil in virtually every contact he had with the world’s collective non-white man."(pg.124) Did Malcolm X hold racial prejudice to whites, or, at least, did he have strong biases against whites when we wrote this? The word indisputable seems to implicate that he is vociferous about what he is referring to regarding the white race as a menace throughout history. If Malcolm did have these racial prejudices to whites, it's justifiable because of the incredibly horrible treatment by many scornful people him during his life. It fascinates me that two great rhetoricians during the civil rights movement, Like Malcolm X, and Martin Luther King faced the same exigency and came up with vastly different resolutions. Martin Luther King Jr demanding equality, to be judged superficially and Malcolm X, who embraces the idea of segregation as the best solution to the inhumane treatment of non-whites, beseeching his audience of all non-caucasians for black

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