Martin Luther King I Have A Dream Rhetorical Analysis

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“I Have A Dream” Rhetorical Analysis Dr. Martin Luther Kings “I Have a Dream” speech created history for people in our nation. Not just any specific race, but rather for human kind. During the 1960s this speech stuck a cord with Americans, and not all were taken in a positive outlook. A good number of citizens did not support what Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. believed due to the heavy amount of prejudge that flood their heart just by the color of his skin. However, on the other side, a great amount of people where moved by his words and thoughts. Within this Speech he talks about how he hopes to see kids play together in harmony (Whether Colored or Non-colored), to see many states slowly become desegregated, and how he hopes personally for his …show more content…

Martin Luther King Jr. gave his speech he was not only discussing how non-colored and colored individuals should join peace, but rather all individuals/people from different ethnic groups could form together and live in harmony. However, he does give his main attention into the various example of the conflict and prejudice between African Americans and Caucasians. “we will be able to speed up that day when all of God's children, black men and white men, Jews and Gentiles, Protestants and Catholics, will be able to join hands…Free at last! Free at last Thank God Almighty, we are free at last!”(Martin Luther King Jr.). No matter what a person’s religion, ethnicity, or beliefs are, Martin Luther King Jr. had a dream that we are all scene equally and as one desegregated group. He spoke about harmony between everyone. He discusses about his dream for all of God’s children to be treated equal and to make justice a reality. This can imply not just black and white, but all ethnic groups as well as …show more content…

throughout his life which led him to wanting to stand up to his beliefs and dreams for the future. This dream was also connected to him as a more personal note as he was a father of four kids. He hoped to see a world where his four children would not have to go through being in a world where they are judged just by the color of there skin. Instead of being judged by the tone of there skin, Martin Luther King Jr. preferred that his own children would be judged on the contents of there character. He hoped that all kids whether black or white could join hands in harmony and

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