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Malcolm X vs. Dr. King: Passive vs; Aggressive. Africans were brought to
America by Europeans, not of their own volition, but in ...
... movement was the 1954 Supreme Court decision Brown vs. ... fame to a reverend named Dr.
Martin Luther ... Front runners like Malcolm X and other influential faces such ...
... beast of secrets exposing the organization's founding 6 members, one being dr. ... inform'
massa of any Marcus Garvey's, Queen Tiye's, Malcolm X's, or Queen ... vs. ...
Submitted by MissEducation05 on April 13, 2005
Category: Book Reports
Words: 1838 | Pages: 8
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Africans were brought to America by Europeans, not of their own volition, but in chains, without the knowledge that over the next several hundred years, generations and generations of our people would be brutally and unjustly treated as nothing more than property or animals. The era during which slavery flourished, Africans were bred, overworked, beaten, lynched, and stripped of any positive identity or self respect. When slavery was abolished in 1865, Africans, or former slaves, were left without a “place” in America. Where did they fit in? What was the role that they were to play as, so called, American citizens? Some, undertook the role of “leader”, and preached and taught what they felt was the best process by which, blacks could achieve equality. From the beginning, however, there were conflicts concerning the nature of how this was to be accomplished. This discrepancy over passive and aggressive attitude concerning the advancement of blacks in America has permeated, and at times, divided the black community from the time that Africans were brought here in chains, until the present. Malcolm X’s philosophies, which centered more on blacks accepting themselves, and loving themselves, and creating their own sense of pride, was deemed racist by the media and he was portrayed as militant/violent by the Civil Rights Activists, when in fact Malcolm X’s teachings contain the exact remedy that we “victims of America” (Malcolm X uses this term to distinguish the fact that blacks were not brought to America out of their own volition) need in order to live the best lives in the conditions that we have been forced into by whites.
Booker T. Washington, born in 1856, was a prominent leader of the black community during the years following the abolishment of slavery, who believed that equality and respect for blacks would be gained over time. Washington preached to his followers that they should work on bettering themselves, not through liberal education, but by...
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