A Deeper Look into Malcolm X

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Bang! Bang! One of the most argumentatively predominant civil rights leaders was murdered in the Audubon Ballroom in Manhattan on February 21, 1965 (Malcolm X Bio). Malcolm X spent his whole life contributing to African-American civil rights. You may have already heard of him in the history books; however, there is a lot of information that they do not say. Malcolm used his religion and radical viewpoints, which may be why so much information is left out of the history books, to promote the advancement of his race and to become one of the leading activists for civil rights.
Truly, from birth Malcolm was destined to lead African-Americans to the rights they believed they deserved. His father, Earl Little, was a preacher who was a member of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. The family was severely harassed wherever they went by white supremacists and the KKK due to his father’s involvement. In fact, they even tried moving out of Omaha, Nebraska, where Malcolm was born, to East Lansing. However when four-year-old Malcolm arrived, he and his family were met with even harsher racism and violence with the burning of their house. “‘The white police and firemen came and stood around watching as the house burned to the ground,’ Malcolm X later remembered.” If that could not get any worse, his father was murdered two years later, but was ruled a suicide by investigators. Sadly enough to say, Malcolm’s troubles did not end there. His mother was put into a mental institution, and he dropped out of high school when he was 15. His later reasoning for dropping out was due to being treated differently in a predominately white school. Once out of school, he turned to a life a drugs and dirty money. He went to nightclubs and parties o...

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