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Chapter 6 Martin Luther King & Malcolm X on Violence and ...

Page 29 Thomas Ladenburg, copyright, 1974, 1998, 2001, 2007 Chapter 6 Martin Luther king & Malcolm X on Violence and Integration artin Luther king , Jr. and Malcolm X are probably the two best known African-American leaders of the last century. Since their deaths in the 1960's no one has replaced them. Both men were ministers and victims of assassination. They became famous about the same time. But they represented very different philosophies. king "looked forward to the time when blacks and whites would sit down together at the table of brotherhood." Malcolm X was interested "first in African-Americans gaining control of their own lives." They differed on the use of Violence to achieve their goals, and they differed on the roles of whites in the Civil Rights movement. king was a Baptist minister; Malcolm X rejected Christianity and became a Black Muslim.

jail sentence. While in prison Malcolm came under the influence of Black Muslims who taught him that ... 18 Martin Luther King, Jr. Letter from Birmingham Jail. Quoted in Lynne Inniello, ed., Milestones Along the March.,1966, pp. 71-72.

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