bu bu bu Malcolm and MLK hated each other

EBK String

Better Ring String
Supporter
Joined
Nov 8, 2017
Messages
32,623
Reputation
6,344
Daps
315,049
Malcolm was in the visitor's gallery in the Senate building in Washington, D.C., listening to the heated debate on the proposed Civil Rights Act of 1964. When he returned to the gallery on March 27, he saw three rows in front of him the man he publicly ridiculed but privately admired: Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. The two men, who together symbolized the political conscience of Black America, acknowledged each other by simply nodding with a smile. Afterward, as Dr. King, the Reverend Ralph Abernathy, and their entourage walked down the steps from the gallery, they noticed Malcolm X was only a few feet in front of them. King had been tremendously impressed by Malcolm X's recent public statements urging African Americans to vote; the statements implied that Malcolm X believed that democracy could work to the advantage of America's disenfranchised minorities. But the SCLC president was probably dismayed by the proviso Malcolm X added to his endorsement of voting, which was that African Americans should combat violence with violence when necessary for self-defense.

The crowd came to a standstill at the bottom of the stairs, and Dr. King and Malcolm X were suddenly standing side-by-side. An Associated Press reporter, stunned by the sight of America's two foremost black activists conversing—in public no less—asked them if they'd agree to a brief interview. Both readily complied. The reporter asked them whether they had reached any agreements in principle on the direction the civil rights movement should take, and whether Malcolm X considered the Civil Rights Bill important. "I'm here to remind the white man of the alternative to Dr. King," Malcolm X said, flashing his trademark Cheshire cat grin. "If the white man rejects the proposed Civil Rights Bill which Dr. King supports, members of the doctor's organization—and hopefully Dr. King himself—will hopefully coalesce with the Muslim Mosque, Incorporated, in order to effect an end to the racial, social, and economic oppression of the black man here in America." "How long do you expect the debate to continue?" the reporter asked, facing Dr. King. "A month would be long enough," King answered sternly. "A creative direct action program will start if they are still talking about the bill after the first week in May." What would happen, the reporter wanted to know, if the debate continued beyond that point?

"At first," King replied, "we would seek to persuade with our words—" King paused for effect, and said, "then our deeds." The words had an ominous ring, considering that Malcolm X, the man the press often referred to as the "angriest Negro in America," was standing beside the man known as America's "apostle of nonviolence." Then, as if to remove any doubt about the import of his statement, Dr. King made a prediction. "If this bill is not passed," he warned, "our nation is in for a dark night of social disruption." As King and Malcolm X smiled approvingly at each other, with Abernathy standing in the background, photographers captured on film a moment in African American history that FBI Director Hoover interpreted as an act of treason. Malcolm X and King agreed that there was much they needed to discuss, but they understood that now clearly was not the time. For now, King was betting his dreams on the passage of the bill, while Malcolm X, who considered himself one of the "field Negroes" who always envisioned the worst fate for whites, was banking on the bill's defeat; then African Americans would realize the oner-ousness of their plight. They promised nonetheless to meet again as soon as possible, then parted ways

from

5164JT1YRNL._SX296_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg
 

DaPresident

Miami Hurricanes football fan...
Supporter
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
18,528
Reputation
7,314
Daps
87,881
Reppin
Miami Hurricanes,Dallas Cowboys, St. John's, DMV
Wow...shame that they didn't have a chance to sit and talk to one another...


But you clearly see, Hoover couldn't/wouldn't and didn't want to allow that to happen. I wonder where our people would be had they been able to stand, march and fight together?


I think our people would've been all the better for it...Not saying everything would be peachy keen, but things would SURELY have been different
 

dj-method-x

Superstar
Joined
May 21, 2012
Messages
8,503
Reputation
1,519
Daps
40,880
Reppin
NULL
King had been tremendously impressed by Malcolm X's recent public statements urging African Americans to vote; the statements implied that Malcolm X believed that democracy could work to the advantage of America's disenfranchised minorities.

buh buh but coli militants have been telling me that Malcom X said voting is useless. #NoVote2020

:damn:
 
Top