Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X were significant beings in the civil rights movements. Although MLK is more significant in most eyes, Malcolm X did assist the movements in many ways. These men met once at a Senate debate in 1964, as King was respectful of Malcolm on this day. Although King did later say that he disagreed with most of his views. Before they could meet again they would both be assassinated. These men did stay close at heart, both had the same goal: justice and equal rights for black people in America. Dr. Marin Luther King, Jr. delivered the “I Have A Dream” speech in 1963 during the March on Washington. The speech was given at Lincoln Memorial in Washington; D.C. King was notorious for grasping hope for America. Dr. King opens his speech with letting the marchers know …show more content…
He explains all of his reasoning for why “White America” is wrong for enslaving “twenty-one million negro slaves.” Proceeding to say how those who believed in Muhammad were under the assumption that they were the “present generation witnessing the fulfillment of divine prophecies of Elijah Muhammad.” Being so head strong in the Nation of Islam, Malcolm was dead set on abiding by rules and regulations. Although as he began to further “reach out” relations between him and the Islam Nation began to fall off. After Malcolm commented on an assassination, he had then broken an order from Muhammad. Malcolm, while in Dallas called the murder of John F. Kennedy a case of “the chickens coming home to roost.” This is reasoning with the murder of JFK. Malcolm is saying the murder was justifiable. Muhammad finding out about this controversial stance of Malcolm sentences him to a ninety-day silence. During the ninety days Malcolm came to a realization that the sentence was just a merely way of the Nation to cast him off