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  1. Genius: Martin Luther King, Jr and Malcom X (Miniserie, 2024) Die vierte Staffel der mit dem Emmy ausgezeichneten Anthologieserie „Genius“. Diesmal geht es um zwei der wichtigsten Protagonisten der US-amerikanischen Bürgerrechtsbewegung der 1960er-Jahre: Martin Luther King und Malcolm X.

  2. 3. März 2021 · Malcolm X and Martin Luther King, Jr. followed essentially different paths as leaders of the black freedom movement. They did not work with. the same organizations, and they frequently disagreed with each other concer ning love and hate, violence and nonviolence, separatism and integration, and the relevancy of the Christian faith in the quest ...

  3. 27. Okt. 2009 · The civil rights movement was a struggle for justice and equality for African Americans that took place mainly in the 1950s and 1960s. Among its leaders were Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, the ...

  4. Malcolm X would remember that his father was “not a frightened Negro, as most of them were.”3 Instead the Reverend Earl Little was a dedicated organizer for the Universal Negro Improvement Association, founded by Marcus Garvey. King would similarly re-member the Reverend Martin Luther King, Sr.—Daddy King to those around him—as a

  5. Malcolm X promoted complete separation of the races, rejected any form of integration, and opposed King’s philosophy of non-violence as a means of protest. Malcolm X equated King’s non-violent philosophy to being defenseless against white racism. The two Martin Luther King delivers the “I have a dream” speech

  6. the two men still remain fixed images in the American con sciousness: Martin Luther King, Jr., an advocate of nonvio lence, delivering his "I Have a Dream" speech from the steps ofthe Lincoln Memorial, and Malcolm X, the black nationalist, encouraging African Americans to fight racial oppression "by any means neces. sary."

  7. While Malcolm X and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. started from vastly different places in society, by the time of their untimely deaths their profound understandings of historically entrenched structural inequities—tracible to 300 years of Black enslavement and more than a century of white supremacy and stark discrimination in the distribution of social and economic goods—were in close ...