How Did The Nation Of Islam Influence The Civil Rights Movement

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Although the Nation of Islam is most widely known for their outspoken leaders and aggressive methods, the Nation of Islam is one of the most important black activist groups of the 1960’s. In a matter of just a few years the Nation of Islam’s members had increased from 400 to 400,000 (Taylor par.19). During the 1960’s, the emergence of the Nation of Islam constituted a change in the minds of many African-Americans. Therefore, caused a major influence in the Civil Rights Movement. Before the Nation of Islam came to its existence, there were other activist groups that influenced the Nation of Islam. Prior to the emergence of the Nation of Islam in the 1960’s, there were other successful Black Nationalist groups such as Garveyism (Talhami …show more content…

Firstly, the Nation of Islam strongly believed in self-education of African-Americans. A popular endorser of this philosophy was Malcolm X whom heightened his vocabulary and furthered his education in jail by copying the dictionary word for word (Taylor par.16). The Nation of Islam instilled that in order to conquer your future you have to first conquer your past. Many members of the Nation of Islam spent time traveling throughout America teach the history of blacks because they believe that to identify with one another, the group must share the pat and reference the past frequently for the history to be passed on from generation to generation (Tinaz 155). They brought to light a new religion to the African-American population due to the belief that “There is a close correlation between religion and identity. Religion appears to be one of the vital sources of identity” (Tinaz 153). The Nation of Islam sought out African-Americans to converge together and create their own national identity (Tinaz 152). “Rather it acts as a ethno-religious movement and attempts to contend with global forces by constructing its own interpretations of that development, in terms of its own local communities of resistance” (Tinaz 152). Blacks looking for a new identity which needed to start with a religion to call their own which was Islam (Tinaz 152). One of the main …show more content…

During the 1960’s, the emergence of the Nation of Islam constituted a change in the minds of many African-Americans. Therefore, caused a major influence in the Civil Rights Movement. President Lyndon B. Johnson said it best himself: “We have talked long enough about equal rights in this country. It is now time to write the next chapter and write it in the books of law” in a speech to congress in January of 1964. Despite the violent and radical methods, the Nation of Islam has been remembered and has gone down in history as one of the most important black activist groups that America has ever

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