Dr. Martin Luther King's I Have A Dream

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I have chosen the famous 17 - minute long speech of Dr. Martin Luther king “ I have a dream “ , which has been taken, as everybody knows, in front of approximately 250,000 people at the Lincoln Memorial on Aug. 28, 1963, after a protest for civil rights.( McKay, 2008). With his speech , and in particular with the words “ I have a dream “ (1963 )Dr. Martin Luther King has condensed the power of his message, entrusting it to posterity. Starting form this particular speech the fight against racism and racial segregation has changed. The fight found new strength, roots and above all a symbol. For King, the dream always served as the ideal that highlighted the shameful fact of its absence in reality. It served as a secular form of prophecy. The dream was always opposed to its nonfulfillment. When he said, "I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin," he was saying, they don't live in such a nation right now. This tacit slap at America became especially pointed toward the end of "I Have a Dream," when King imagined the day "all of Cod's children will be able to sing with new meaning: 'my country 'tis of thee, sweet land of liberty.'" Again, he was really saying, "blacks can't really sing patriotic songs right now. That land of liberty …show more content…

What stuck me was, that just a few lines at the beginning of the speech were prepared, the rest was ad-lib. This has been the strength of the speech, the emotions that came through. I have read this speech and I have watched again the videos and every time I listen to those words something moves inside me and I understand that after more that 50 years not much has changed. We are all fighting for our rights, for our freedom and for the possibility to give future generations a better

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