Martin Luther King Research Paper

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Martin Luther King, Jr. was born January 15th, 1929, in Atlanta Georgia. His father was named Martin Luther King, Sr. and mother was named Alberta Williams King. King Jr.'s father was a Baptist Minister and a leader in the African American community of Atlanta. King's parents brought him up stressing the importance of having a good education. As a child he attended a local, segregated public school and was dedicated a very dedicated student (Haberman). At the age of 15, King attended Morehouse College. After he graduated in 1948, King went on and continued his education at Croezer Theological Seminary and later graduated with honors only to further his education by getting a doctoral degree in Systematic Theology. While in school King learned …show more content…

as leader, activist, and spokesman for the civil rights of colored people. With an acute insight, King declared that there was something seriously wrong with the social classes in our nation and around the world; however, some of his greatest speeches and sermons were not delivered in front of millions, but from a little podium in his hometown at the Ebeneezer Baptist Church. King had once said in his “Why Jesus Call A Man A Fool” sermon, "before I was a civil rights leader, I was a preacher of the gospel. This was my first calling and it still remains my greatest commitment.” This commitment is what gave King his strong character and drove him to be the great civil rights activist that he …show more content…

Although, King David did not live to see the day that this great temple was finally completed God knew that it was in David's intention to do so. In God's eyes David's accomplishments were right. King goes on to relate David's dream to the shattered dreams of Mahatma Gandhi who dreamed of independence and unity in India as one great nation moving toward a higher destiny. Gandhi fought for years through nonviolent revolution hoping that one day everyone would realize his dream. Gandhi’s dream was destroyed when the nations that Gandhi wanted so badly to unite were riddled with conflict between the Hindus and Muslims. He also, related David's dream to President Woodrow Wilson's dream of a League of Nations which like David did not come true until after his

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