Nebraska. His mother was Louise Norton Little and she was a homemaker busy with the family’s eight children. His father was an outspoken Baptist minister and supporter of Black Nationalist leader Marcus Garvey. The actions of Malcolm’s father of civil rights activism prompted several death threats from white supremacies and forcing the family to relocate twice before Malcolm’s fourth birthday. His father was found laying across the town trolleys tracks and the police ruled it as an accident, several years later Malcolm’s mother suffered an emotional breakdown because of the death of her husband and was sent to a mental hospital. Her children were separated among
Nebraska. His mother was Louise Norton Little and she was a homemaker busy with the family’s eight children. His father was an outspoken Baptist minister and supporter of Black Nationalist leader Marcus Garvey. The actions of Malcolm’s father of civil rights activism prompted several death threats from white supremacies and forcing the family to relocate twice before Malcolm’s fourth birthday. His father was found laying across the town trolleys tracks and the police ruled it as an accident, several years later Malcolm’s mother suffered an emotional breakdown because of the death of her husband and was sent to a mental hospital. Her children were separated among