Malcolm X: The Rise Of Malcom X

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Isabella Hernandez Mr. Salazar Period 3 7 February 2018 Malcom X : Rise up Malcom Little, also known as Malcom X is a Muslim activist who used a very unique method of dealing with discrimination towards the black community. He was very persistent with the issue, he would stop at nothing until justice was met. His methods were very different compared to people like Martin Luther King Jr. who used a more calm and non-violent method when dealing with discrimination and racism. Malcom used the opposite of these methods he was very violent and he hated white people for a great amount of time before his eyes were opened but even then his methods still remained the same. Malcoms methods didn’t come from nothing. He was this way due to built up anger …show more content…

The Lost-Found Nation of Islam is basically the Muslim religion for black civil right activist. He studied this while he was in jail and by the time he was released he jumped straight into the group and begun his movement. Malcom X was a very powerful speaker who challenged the mainstream civil rights movement and the nonviolent pursuit of integration by Martin Luther King Jr. He urged followers to defend themselves against white aggression “by any means necessary.” He continued on with this way of thinking for a very long time. The way he was going about it got him into trouble and he was later suspended from the Black Muslims in December 1963, for the way that asserted President John F. Kennedy’s assassination to “the chickens coming home to roost”. After this he traveled to Mecca where he discovered that orthodox Muslims preach equality of the races, which led him to abandon the argument that whites are devils. Malcom then began to change his ways of speaking out towards discrimination. In June 1964, he founded the Organization of Afro-American Unity and moved increasingly in the direction of socialism, he was more sophisticated than in his Black Muslim days. Sadly when he begun to change some of his old followers who didn’t accept this change grew very angry with him. This led to his assassination by a Black Muslim at a rally of his organization in New York on February 21, 1965. Malcom knew that he was going to be assassinated but he wasn’t scared because he said “I will be more important in death than in life”. His legacy and teaching then continued on after his