Two major black activist leaders in the early 1950s were Martin Luther King and Malcolm X. Today these two will be remembered as 'great leaders'. However, these two individuals have completely different approaches to achieve the same primary objective. Martin Luther King and Malcolm X are fighting for civil rights, but Malcolm X also wants another black society, Martin Luther said, "I hope white and black fuse, MalcolmX is violent Believe that it is the key to his goat, and the choice of Martin Luther King to adopt a non-violent approach is one of the reasons some black activists have refused, Martin Luther King's Approach
Malcolm X and Martin Luther King, Junior African Americans are lucky to have a leader struggling to make a difference with black Americans. Martin Luther King and Malcolm X are two particularly powerful people who brought hope to black Americans. Both of them told the same message that blacks have power and strength in all the hatred surrounding them. - When Martin Luther King and Frederick Douglas compare the two papers, the reader can make judgments and opinions through various aspects. In the two articles I chose, it is MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. There are many similarities between "Letters from Birmingham Prison" and Frederick Douglas's "The Story of Life from American Slave Frederick Douglas", but there are many differences. Some of them are background, style, structure and tone
Comparing Martin Luther King and Malcolm X Martin Luther King and Malcolm X are for different individuals with two opposing personality but they accomplished freedom successfully and years after slavery was abolished The discriminatory black Americans bring equality. Martin Luther King was born in Georgia in 1929 in Georgia. Unlike other blacks in the southern states, Martin Luther King and Malcolm X talk about the suppression of the black community that defends their position and thought. Martin Luther King Jr. expressed his views very carefully in a letter from Birmingham City Prison. He used the Bible as a reference for what he did. In his letter, he refers to priests, these people are the people of God; Martin Luther King Jr. uses the Bible to defend his struggle.