Malcolm X's Influence On The Civil Rights Movement

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Malcom X is an inspiring figure. His complex and controversial thinking, seen through his writing, speeches and documented quotes, proves that the Civil Rights movement took many different forms beyond the non-violent movement. His sudden death in 1965, transformed the black power movement in the United States. Yet had he lived, he changes in beliefs, due to his pilgrimage to Mecca, would have been reflected on his follower and the black power movement would have made a change from volatile and destructive to a much more peaceful movement that focus on the integration between whites and blacks.
Malcom X was born Malcom Little in Omaha, Nebraska, on May 19, 1925. He then dropped the “salve name” Little and adopted the initial X (representing an unknown) when he became a member of the Nation of Islam. Malcom was the seventh of his father’s nine children, three by previous marriage and his mother’s fourth child. His father, Reverend Earl Little, was a Baptist minister an organizer for Marcus Garvey’s Universal Negro Improvement Association, a black separatist “back-to-Africa” group of the 1920s.
The top student and only African-American in his eighth grade class, Malcom dropped out of school after his teacher told him that a “nigger” could never become a lawyer (was his
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Malcom X particularly literacy sponsor was actually the dictionary as the dictionary taught Malcom the vast amounts of complex words in the English language. There was also a man named Bimbi that Malcom X envied in prison that displayed his knowledge and Malcom X attempted to emulate. Malcom X had many philosophers that he followed such as Elijah Muhammad and many Oriental philosophers and although many had a negative opinion on “white”, in a way, brainwashed Malcom into the Malcom X known