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Did Malcom X advocate 'ambitions of a 'state within a state'? and was the N.O.I. part of the black power movement? When Malcom X left the N.O.I. did he then advocate Martin Luther King type beliefs on integration? Essentially I am trying to find out whether Malcom X believed in integration or Black power / multi culturalism? thank you every one

2007-03-11 03:53:25 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Social Science Other - Social Science

7 answers

Malcolm X rejected integration and was an advocate for black power. The N.O.I. was part of the black power movement.

2007-03-11 04:03:01 · answer #1 · answered by squeegy 4 · 0 0

Malcolm X became a Bogey guy of the Nineteen Sixties, yet searching back he became a black mand attempting to haul his human beings out of the morass they were in after thousands of years of digital, and positively, easily enslavement. He became between the few human beings on the on the spot, black or white, who could see that his human beings were nonetheless in that 'black' and hence 'inferior' mind-set. comprehensible! thousands of years of slavery had to leave it truly is mark on both the enslavers and the enslaved. He became a impressive guy, yet flawed, as anybody is. His embracing Islam became more suitable an act of rejection of the religion of whites than something else.

2016-12-01 20:08:57 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

There was an excellent video made in 1993 on Malcolm X's life. I'd view it, as the other poster said, it's way too involved a story to learn on Yahoo Answers.
Good luck.

2007-03-11 05:49:34 · answer #3 · answered by Croa 6 · 0 0

Malcom X was a man with many struggles to find peace...we muslims admire the fact that after his long and debatable journey and after going to mecca he found Islam to be his salvation...i as muslim admire only the last 3months of his life...all that was prior to that was full of misinformation and had a segregational effect and as he came to find after some research might i add Islam is for all walks of life regardless of race or gender.

2007-03-12 03:13:23 · answer #4 · answered by lucky 7 2 · 0 0

He had a close friend called Decker and later it became the Black and Decker movement. It became very successful so much so that many people have them in their homes to this day.

2007-03-14 15:40:07 · answer #5 · answered by barnowl 4 · 0 0

malcom x was a tool. made alot of noise until somebody introduced a gun into the debate, of which then his noise was silenced.

2007-03-11 11:27:03 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I would suggest that you google Malcolm X. There is so much more that you could learn than from here.

2007-03-11 04:08:00 · answer #7 · answered by Afi 7 · 2 0

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