MLK VS. Malcolm X Revolution, rebellion, revolt, uprising, riot,, these words all mean the same thing. The dictionary defines revolution as a forcible overthrow of a government or social order in favor of a new system but also claims that revolution is a dramatic and wide reaching change in the way something works or is organized or in peoples ideas about it. Revolution is the idea that you can bring about change in order to fulfill your rights as a human being. Over the course of history there is been many revolutions, such as the American Revolution. The revolution is when someone stands up for what they believe in and takes action to make change happen. There are numerous amounts of ways to go about creating change a few examples are, war, …show more content…
Civil disobedience can be used in many different forms such as protests, hunger strikes, sit in’s, marches, or even speeches. Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on the bus she didn't use Violence she just simply refused. Gandhi lead protests and hunger strikes, Frederick
Douglass fought for black rights in court. None of these influential figures throughout history use the violence as a way to gain rights, and Martin Luther King Jr. is no exception. Martin
Luther King was born January 15, 1929 the year the stock market crashed in the great depression hit, he died April 4, 1968 due to assassination. His occupations were clergy man and a civil rights activist. King was apart of SCLC which stands for Southern Christian leadership conference. Throughout his life he led many marches protests and even held speeches talking about black rights and using civil disobedience to protest the treatment of African-Americans in
America. Martin Luther King was an educated man he won the Nobel Peace Prize, the presidential medal of freedom, and Congressional Gold medal. Throughout his life he led many protests and marches, such as the Montgomery bus boycott, Albany movement, Selma to
Montgomery, Memphis sanitation strike, Birmingham campaign and more. One of the