Malcolm X: Civil Rights Activist

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On May, 19th 1925 in Omaha, Nebraska, Malcolm Little also known has Malcolm X was born. Malcolm was a Muslim minister and a human rights activist. He served as a spokesman for the Nation of Islam during the 1950s and 1960s. He was an orphan at a young age, his father was killed when he was just six years old and his mother was placed in a mental hospital when he was only thirteen years old. Malcolm was then taken away from his home, and was in many foster homes after. Over the years, Malcolm found himself constantly getting in trouble and that caught up with him when he was sentenced to prison. There he decided to get an education. While Malcolm was in prison, he converted to the Nation of Islam. In 1959, Malcolm became a representative of the Nation of Islam. He visited the Middle East, Ghana, and Sudan, and other places as well. Malcolm also began to study the teachings of Nation of Islam leader Elijah Muhammad. Elijah Muhammad wanted Malcolm to establish new mosques in cities such as Detroit, Michigan, and Harlem. Through newspaper columns, radio and television Malcolm communicated Nation of Islam’s message across the United States of America. As a result he attracted a surprising number of new members. He contributed greatly to the country not only as a civil rights leader but as a person who spoke his mind…show more content…
Malcolm than began to study the teachings of Nation of Islam’s leader Elijah Muhammad. By the late 1950s, Malcolm X was using a new name, el-Hajj Malik/el-Shabazz. Malcolm worked with newspaper columns, radios and television to express the Nation of Islam’s message across the United States of America. Malcolm was so driven and ambitious it resulted in a surprising number of new members. Using these resources, Malcolm delivered a view inside the Nation of Islam. More people became aware of it and people started to pay more attention to
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