1. The official event was called the “March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.” On June 11, 1963, President John F. Kennedy made a nationally televised address calling for a drive for more civil rights. That same night, NAACP leader Medgar Evers was murdered in Mississippi.
2. Marches had been proposed before the Kennedy speech and Evers’ killing, but the events forced the issue. Kennedy met with civil rights leaders such as Dr. King, Roy Wilkins, Whitney Young and student leader John Lewis about a proposed march. Kennedy signaled his approval publicly in July when he was assured it would be a peaceful event.
3. The March was not universally supported by activists. Prominent objectors included Malcolm X and Strom Thurmond. The organizers didn’t agree on all the issues, either, but they did agree that blacks and whites should march together at the event.
4. It also wasn’t the first threatened March on Washington by civil rights leaders. In 1941, organizers were planning a march to demand desegregation in the U.S. military as World War II approached. But President Franklin Roosevelt averted the march by signing Executive Order 8802 in June, 1941, banning discrimination in the federal government and defense industries. .
5. Almost no one could clearly hear Dr. King’s speech. An expensive sound system was installed for the event, but it was sabotaged right before it. Attorney General Robert Kennedy enlisted the Army Corps of Engineers to fix the system.
6. William Edward Burghardt “W. E. B.” Du Bois, the co-founder of the NAACP, died on the day before the event at the age of 95 in Ghana. Roy Wilkins asked the marchers to honor Du Bois with a moment of silence.
7. Of the estimated 250,000 people who attended the March, about 60,000 were white. People came from all over the country, and few arrests were reported.
8. There were 10 speakers on the official program for the public event at the Lincoln Memorial: All of them were men. Rabbi Joachim Prinz spoke right before Dr. King. There were no speakers after Dr. King, as organizers led the audience in a pledge and gave a benediction.
9. Dr. King almost didn’t give the “I Have a Dream” part of the “I Have A Dream” speech. Singer Mahalia Jackson urged Dr. King to tell the audience “about the dream,” and Dr. King went into an improvised section of the speech.
10. The person who wound up with the typewritten speech given by Dr. King is retired college basketball coach George Raveling. A college basketball player at Villanova, organizers saw Raveling in the crowd and asked him to be a bodyguard on stage. He stood next to Dr. King on stage, and decided to ask him for the paper copy of the speech. Dr. King obliged and Raveling has the speech locked away in a safe place, with no intention of selling it.
Evaluate Martin Luther King ' I have a dream' speech by giving key point, show metaphor in the speech, and anything important between the line ?
what is the meanning of the word 'justice' in martin luther king speech
D4.1 Review Martin Luther King's I Have a Dream speech Answer the following question. King’s highly metaphoric speech appeals to emotions. But it also offers reasons. What reasons, for instance, does King give to support his belief that African Americans should not resort to physical violence in their struggle against segregation and discrimination?
What makes Martin Luther King a good leader? What you perceive this person’s leadership traits, behaviours and qualities; How Martin Luther King uses power and influence to make him/her an effective leader.
Compare and contrast the views of either Martin Delany Frederick Douglass or Martin Luther King and Malcom X on the question of assimilation versus Separatism. What leads each to adopt the position he adopts? How does Cornell West think we should resolve this issue?
what influence does Martin Luther King Jr. have on the world today 2019
Do you think James Earl Ray was innocent in the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.? Was he set up by the government?
Explain the differences between breaking law and civil disobedience.(Letter from Birmingham Jail, Martin Luther King jr)
After Martin Luther King Jr's assassination in 1969 , which American writer regretfully accepted violence as the only path to racial justice for black Americans? A 60-day, 9% note for $10,000, dated May 1, is received from a customer on account. The maturity value of the note is $9,100 $10,900 $10,150 $10,000
WORDS DESCRIBE IN 40 WORDS AN ARGUMENT SENTANCE AND CLAIM ABOUT MARTIN LUTHR KING JR I HAVE A DREAM SPEECH PLEASE TYPE