In the comparison and contrast between the two films, Triumph of the Will by Leni Riefenstahl’s and Malcolm X by Spike Lee, both films are based on the lives of two notorious leaders. Adolf Hitler, founder of the Nazi Party, was known to be a great speaker. At the time of the German war, many were distraught and his words became something to look up to. Hundreds followed as he began a movement of his political and religious beliefs and the fanaticism ideas that he possessed. On the other hand, there is Malcolm X, a civil rights leader, was also known as a great speaker and an inspiration to countless African Americans today. In the state of racism against blacks, Malcolm X, along with others set out on a quest impose on others equal rights, justice, freedom and the practice of Islam. I will continue this by comparing and contrasting key elements essential to this essay: Christianity vs.…
Mansa Musa was one of the wealthiest person in human history; famous for his pilgrimage from Niani (the capital city of Mali) to Mecca. Several historians have called into question whether Mansa Musa’s pilgrimage was for religious reasons or not over the years, so was he a Devout Muslim, Or a Opportunist that used his own religion for personal gain? Mansa Musa was a preposterous sultan who used two of the Pillars of Islam as an excuse to make a journey to Mecca to increase his own personal glory in order to insult his enemies by awwing their people with vast quantities of gold and refusing to visit their leaders as he supposedly had to lead one of the largest and most wasteful caravans in human history that held no other purpose than to demonstrate the wealth, splendor, unity, and determination of the mostly non-Muslim people of Mali, in order for Mansa Musa to engrave a fake legacy throughout Northern Africa.…
Before he knows it, he is in jail for larceny (Stealing) and gets put in jail for 10 years. While in jail his brother starts going to visit him and tells him about the NOI or the nation of Islam. Once out of prison, Malcolm traveled to Detroit, Michigan. With the help of his mentor, Elijah Muhammad, Malcolm was spreading the word of the NOI. But not all good things last.…
In August 1952, the prison releases Malcolm on parole into the custody of his brother Wilfred. Malcolm replaces his last name with “X” to represent the unknown African name he would have had if his ancestors not been kidnapped and enslaved. Elijah Muhammad appoints him as the assistant minister at the Detroit temple.Malcolm soon learns Elijah Muhammad’s life story. Elijah Muhammad needs ministers for his growing nation, so Malcolm X quits his job at the Ford Motor Company and begins extensive training. When Malcolm is ready, Elijah Muhammad sends him to Boston to aid in the founding of a temple there. Early in the summer of 1954, Muhammad appoints Malcolm to found the small New York Temple. He discovers that Sammy the Pimp is dead and that West Indian Archie is dying. In 1956 a woman named Betty joins the New York temple. Malcolm introduces Betty to Elijah Muhammad, and then proposes marriage abruptly from a payphone in Detroit. They marry and settle in Queens, New York, and have four children while Malcolm is alive; a fifth child is born after Malcolm’s death. In 1958, Malcolm’s half-sister, Ella, converts to the Nation of Islam.…
In 1952, after Malcolm’s was release to freedom he meets the man who wrote and motivated him during his prison phase. It was like a lost and reformed son meeting his retuned and wise father. In a few months of introduction Elijah Muhammad felt Malcolm’s heart, intelligence, will and courage. Elijah gave Malcolm his X. Malcolm had new name, Malcolm X. “X” representing his unknown African name.…
In 1964, Civil Rights activist Malcolm X and his companion, Alex Haley enshrined Malcolm's life and legacy into the contents of an autobiography. _The Autobiography of Malcolm X_ is in narrative detail, the progression of his life from Malcolm Little to Malcolm X to El- Hajj Maalik El Shabazz. Malcolm X was a force that brought upon change in both Black America and the global community as well. His ideology of necessitating power for the black people, and no longer standing the advent of racism was a radical conception in his time. Malcolm X's contributions to the Nation of Islam, as well as Islam, his cultural renaissance and pursuit of justice in the civil rights movement are visible within the narrative of his life as well as the evolution of his perceptions throughout time.…
Malcolm decides to escape the abuse on Islam in America by embarking on the hajj, or pilgrimage to Mecca, to truly understand the core beliefs of Islam. While he is there, he encounters Muslims of all appearances and ethnicities, countering his belief that Islam is to benefit black people. Malcolm learns of the differences between Islam in America versus Islamic practices in the Middle East, and that the universal Islam deals with theological and personal questions rather than racial differences.…
Unlike most books, The Autobiography of Malcolm X discusses a problem in the first chapter. This problem of racial segregation was a reoccurring theme before Malcolm Little was even born. The author sets up an issue when Malcolm X was in his mother’s womb to set the tone of the book. Malcolm X developed as a character from significant incidents in his life that changed him into the man that would be historically idolized. The book uses three central ideas, systemic oppression, racial identity, and separation vs. integration to graphically reveal the prevailing schism in American race relations.…
Analysis: Malcolm X seperates this story into 3 seperate portions, that all seem to play off each other. He begins with how he taugh himself to read and write in prison by using tablets and a dictionary and wrote from every night. This part was important, because as he states; he doesn't, "think anybody ever got more out of going to prison than he did" (203). In the next part Malcolm X begins to explain how he became interested in the part of history that white men left out. The history of minorites interests him greatly, and he begins to read more and more to fully understand these topics. He talks about some of these happenings in history, and his strong feelings about them. The last part of his story is Malcolm X reflecting back on how much he owed to his time in prison, and exactly what that gave him. He states, "I have often reflected upon the new vistas that reading opened to me" (202). He also calls books his alma mater, showing how he owes everything he knows to those…
Malcolm X began to fight what would be a lifelong battle of personal ambition versus the general racist perception (Religious Leaders of America, 1999). After the split from his family he moved to his aunt Ella’s house in Lansing, Michigan to find work, and explore opportunities, those opportunities led him to major trouble (Gale, 1999). Once Malcolm X found a job as a shoe shiner, he looked for new ways of making money. Those new ways were gambling, and burglary, after many accounts of burglary he was sentenced to ten years in jail (Gale, 1999). In jail, he was introduced to the ideas of Elijah Muhammad (God’s prophet), and to the Nation of Islam. Malcolm X read every book, magazine, and newspaper he got his hands on in the prison library (Gale, 1999). He gained more knowledge by reading history books with the newly-learned testaments by Elijah Muhammad (Gale, 1999). Thru Malcolm X’s reading he developed a mindset that the white history process had left out great things that black men had done for the United States, or the great “black men that gotten whitened (American Decades,1998)." He improved his leadership by copying the dictionary word for word to further his definitions, and participating in debates over justice, the law, and America in jail. He also preached independently to the prisoners about the Nation of…
Did you know that a document 800 years old can affect todays world? The Magna Carta was made and signed in the year of 1215 and has affected English laws. The Magna Carta has an interesting history, wide scope of influence, and a major impact on todays people.…
After years of study in prison, Malcolm reconsiders his racial identity in the light of history and philosophy, and discovers answers to his questions about race in the pro-black rhetoric of the Nation of Islam. His acceptance of the Nation’s belief that black people are an original and good people, and whites an aberration meant to spread evil in the world, reverses Malcolm’s understanding of blacks and whites. Later, in Mecca, Malcolm learns to see beyond America’s race problems even as he digs more firmly into his black identity. Feeling brotherhood with white-skinned Muslims, he returns to the United States with a message of racial tolerance and an impartial commitment to truth and justice. Still, he believes the most promising allies of American blacks are the…
The period of time in America before the civil war proved to bring out the specialties in each region. The West brought America true farming and allowed livestock to succeed. The eastern part of America prevailed in industrialization, creating many cities and businesses. The southern part of the United States was the dominated by slavery, plantains, and growing cotton. America had many skills but these talents were not mixed well, and each region had its very own specialty.…
Our students and youths should be made to give up their mania for jobs. They should be encouraged to…