Uyematsu And Malcolm X: Strategies Of The Civil Rights Movement

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Ebrahim Agheli Sturdivant 4 Kim-E 3 Humanities 10 29 March 2024 Strategies of the Civil Rights Movement In the 1860s, some laws enforced racial segregation and denied Black Americans equal rights in different facets of life, including education, housing, employment, and voting. Due to these unjust practices, there was a need for the Civil Rights Movement to fight against them. During the 19th century, Black Americans encountered failures of the Reconstruction Era and Jim Crow laws, while Asians experienced prejudice in society, mainly related to immigration and labor stereotypes which caused the Civil Rights Movement. Those failures and struggles caused both communities to face racial injustices. Despite this, Asian novelist Uyematsu and black activist Malcolm X both interfered in the Civil Rights Movement in an attempt to rectify racial injustices and discrimination. In Malcolm X’s “Ballot or …show more content…

At the height of the Civil Rights Movement, African Americans were facing police brutality in the North and lynching in the South due to systemic racism. Consequently, in 1964, Malcolm X delivered his “Ballot or Bullet” speech at King Solomon Baptist Church to suggest black separatism as a means to protect African Americans, and further reported that “They’ll lynch in Texas as quick as they’ll lynch you in Mississippi”(Malcolm X 30). Malcolm X’s use of repetition with “They’ll lynch”, emphasizes the lynching that happened repeatedly throughout America from the Civil War through the Civil Rights Movement, which was a horrific form of racial violence and terrorism primarily directed at African Americans. Additionally, Malcolm X mentioned multiple regions of the United States, which portrays that lynching was not a one-time event, but instead, it happened throughout the