In the civil rights movement from the 1950s to the 1960s, there were many leaders such as Martin Luther King, Rosa Parks, Malcolm X, but King was the only conspicuous. His purpose is to equalize all races. On August 28, 1963, Kim made a speech he wrote at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, DC. In the king's "I dream", he not only inspired and touched the African American, but also touched white. The world and the crowd His speech sent a powerful message in folk movements through the use of rhetorical means.
The king 's "I am dreaming" speech held in Washington DC in August 1963 marks the annual king's holiday every year. However, Kim 's dream eventually evolved into a voice calling for fundamental redistribution of economic power and resources. That is why he was in Memphis and was supporting the strikes of garbage workers when assassinated in April 1968. This kind of memory is more important than ever. Many states are adopting or considering measures to make it more difficult for many Americans to exercise basic voting rights. It will suppress the phenomenal increase in the political participation rate of ethnic minorities given by the Voting Rights Act of 1965. At the same time, there is an ongoing gap between the rich and the poor among blacks and whites.
Let's think about Martin Luther King's dream of equal rights. This is a very beautiful dream. But what is its beauty? Not only is it necessary for everyone to have equality rights. But everyone should be entitled. Therefore, Martin Luther King is a supporter of nonviolence. He himself does not want to deny his dream of peace ... demands a violent revolution. Such a dream will inevitably collapse before it is realized. This is the beauty of it. Means and purpose are equally desirable
It is a dream. Martin Luther King is dreaming. Dream of freedom, full brotherhood food, true American dream, perfect equality dream. Kim is one of the most influential racial justice leaders in history. The king organized parades, speech, etc. and encouraged American Africans to fight for their rights. His political philosophy and firm beliefs have helped our country move toward today's racial justice. Yumeji spoke about American dreams in almost all speech. This ... the American dream is Martin Luther King, a small speech, I have a dream. Dr. King's speech is more like a testimony of the truth than a speech. In the speech, African Americans are not free, and the Declaration of Independence states that everyone is equal. Dr. King's movement laid the foundation of the American dream concept. Someone can become an idea of someone they want to be. This idea is still useful in the United States.