4.6 • 2.8K Ratings
🗓️ 22 February 2021
⏱️ 57 minutes
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0:00.0 | Welcome to Words Matter with Katie Barlow. |
0:12.0 | Welcome to Words Matter, I'm Katie Barlow. |
0:15.0 | Our goal is to promote objective reality. |
0:18.0 | As a wise man once said, everyone is entitled to their own opinion, not their own facts. |
0:24.0 | Words have power and words have consequences. |
0:33.0 | He was born Malcolm Little in Omaha, Nebraska. |
0:36.0 | And he became one of the most celebrated, influential and misunderstood leaders of the civil rights movement of the 1960s. |
0:45.0 | Malcolm X was a Muslim minister and human rights activist, best known as a pioneer of the Black nationalist movement |
0:52.0 | and as an apostle for self-respect and uncompromising resistance to wire pressure. |
0:58.0 | By the time he was assassinated 56 years ago this week, Malcolm X had become one of the greatest and most influential African Americans in history. |
1:07.0 | He is credited with raising the self-esteem of Black Americans and reconnecting them with their African heritage. |
1:15.0 | He is largely responsible for the spread of Islam in the Black community in the United States. |
1:21.0 | Many African Americans, especially those who lived in cities in the northern and western United States, felt that Malcolm X articulated their struggle against racism and inequality better than the mainstream civil rights movement did. |
1:36.0 | He argued that if the United States government was unwilling or unable to protect Black people, Black people should protect themselves. |
1:45.0 | Although he had publicly criticized the mainstream civil rights movement for its emphasis on non-violence and racial integration, after he left the nation of Islam in March of 1964, Malcolm X declared his willingness to cooperate with that movement. |
2:01.0 | Of those civil rights leaders, he said, quote, |
2:04.0 | I have forgotten everything bad that they have said about me and I pray that they can also forget the many bad things I have said about them. Originally delivered in Cleveland, Ohio on April 3, 1964, this recorded version was delivered on April 12 into Detroit, Michigan. |
2:24.0 | Far from a call to violence, Malcolm X sought to educate his community as to the extent of their political power. |
2:33.0 | The whites are so evenly divided that every time they vote, the race is so close that they have to go back and count the votes all over again. Which means that any block, any minority that has a block of votes that stick together, is in a strategic position. Either way you go, that's who gets it. |
2:51.0 | You're in a position to determine who will go to the White House and who will stay in the dog house. While distancing himself from the nation of Islam, Malcolm X described his continued commitment to Black nationalism. |
3:04.0 | Which he defined as the philosophy that African Americans should control the political, economic, and social destinies of their own communities. Like many of the great speeches we feature, Malcolm X tied his and his people's struggle to America's founding and embraced the spirit of the American revolution. |
3:24.0 | Quote, the white man made the mistake of letting me read his history books. He made the mistake of teaching me that Patrick Henry was a patriot and that George Washington was a patriot. There wasn't anything nonviolent about old Pat or George Washington. |
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