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How Did Malcolm X Influence The Civil Rights Movement

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How Did Malcolm X Influence The Civil Rights Movement
The apex of Ku Klux Klan (KKK) activity in Nebraska came in the mid-1920's, not knowing the boundaries of social class, Klan numbers reached into the tens of thousands. However, in the year 1925, the annual KKK state convention was going to collide with Nebraska's state fair on May 19, bringing over twenty-six thousand members together. It was also this day that Earl and Louise Little, gave birth to Malcolm Little, bringing him into a family that consisted of six other siblings. Malcolm Little, later known as Malcolm X, then El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz, would later become one of most influential African American Muslim minister and human rights activist, as told by Manning Marable's "Malcolm X: A Life Of Reinvention". Manning elaborates on every part of Malcolm's life, explaining furthermore his influences and the backing of how he is influenced. Inspirational sparks arise and form his unique mix of his ideologies from Garveyism, the Nation of Islam, Pan-Africanism, Civil Rights Movement, and Black Nationalism, all from various stages in his lifetime. Manning begins to depict the passionate aftereffects made and …show more content…
His preaching of pride and meaning of black Islam, which contributed greatly to the Black Power Movement and Civil Rights Movement of the 1960's. He also sought to instill racial pride in black people by glorifying African black history and blaming the distress of the American Negroes due to the mistreatment at the hands of the white man. Malcolm was a man blessed with wit, charisma, and intelligence therefore wherever he went he got plenty of attention, and the words he spoke gloried African Americans. Manning gave insight that Malcolm was an not an advocate of violence but rather that of self-defense. He also encouraged black people to help themselves through enterprise and overcoming their vices, thus influencing the past, present, and future African Americans communities for

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