How Did Martin Luther King Impact Society

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Martin Luther King was born on 15th January 1929 and died on 4th April 1968. He studied in segregated public schools in Georgia and completed his high school at the age of fifteen years. In 1948, he graduated with a B.A degree from Morehouse College. This is the same college that his grandfather and father graduated. His studies at Morehouse, Boston and Crozer University provided the basis for the great speeches that he gave. It is also during his studies that he learned how to relate with the white people, guided his decision making and others that made him to be a great civil rights activist. He provided sermons and writings that were founded from the secular philosophy that he had read before. Martin Luther King universalized his fight for…show more content…
The movement would have existed even if King was not there, but the impact would not have been the same the way it was with the efforts he made to make the civil rights movements meet some of its goals in the American Society. The occurrences that happened in the 1950’s and 60’s gave Martin Luther King the basis for his fight for the rights of the African Americans. His uniqueness from other leaders occurred due to his readiness to risk his life to make the life of his fellow African Americans better (Ling,…show more content…
His main goal was to enlighten the Americans that the true identity of their nation lay in the love and diversity but not hate or in color. He took over the reign of the civil rights movements from those who had started earlier and made great impacts that were not made before. He gave motivational sermons and speeches that the country has ever heard. He had a great vision that the United Sates of America would one day be free from the problems of racism and other social ills that existed as a result of the difference that existed as a result of the differences that existed among people because of their color. He envisioned having a world in which conflicts would be resolved in a peaceful manner and a world in which wealth would be shared among all people (Frady,
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