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I Have A Dream By Martin Luther King Jr.

Decent Essays

Freedom Promised On August 28, 1963, Martin Luther King Jr. delivered a speech of the millennia which was considered a radical revolution towards freedom. Martin Luther King Jr, also referred to as King Jr., was a Baptist minister and activist who fought for the rights of African-American. During the late 1950s and early 1960s, America was on the brinks of collapsing towards a civil right war. Leaders were across the United States creating factions of people. However, King Jr. was not an ordinary leader. He was a man with a dream. A dream that he constantly, throughout his speech, is talking about. A dream where there is no discrimination among people and freedom is equal for everyone. In his speech, “I Have a Dream”, Martin Luther King …show more content…

He is sadly mentioning the facts that over many years and a century past, the African-American are still not seen equal by the government of their country. Being the largest minority group of that time, still African-American were treated like a poor slave. He says, “But one hundred years later, the Negro still is not free. One hundred years later, the life of the Negro is still sadly crippled by the manacles of segregation and the chains of discrimination”(King Jr. “I Have a Dream”). This is the part where he wants the audience to realize and wake up. He wants his audience to realize that it is time to raise their voice and fight for their freedom. Justice was lean during those times (the early 1960s) and the African-American were always the target of this brutality.
In the second part of the speech, Martin Luther King Jr. talking about the injustice of the government. Justice was nowhere to be found. Equality did not mean equal and the colored people were seen as slaves by everyone. King Jr. was tired of this brutality. He is repeated talking about gaining the civil rights of this government, but he wants to do this with love and peace. He is portraying himself as an example to empower justice through peace and love. He wants the whites to see the black as equal and that could not be done through war and combat. He wants people to recognize his ideas as ideas about peace and equality rather than war and brutality. He then says, “And so even though we face the

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