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Martin Luther King Jr's Beliefs And Transcendentalist Beliefs

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Martin Luther King Junior, a man we all know for his most famous “I Have A Dream” speech, was born on January 15th, 1929. He was raised by Martin Luther King and Alberta Williams King. He was the middle child in his family. During his childhood, he experienced depression. It started when he was just six years-old. Martin Luther King Jr. and his friend had to attend separate schools because of their race. Soon after school started, the boy’s father no longer wanted his son to hangout with King because of his skin color. King felt discontent with the whites due to the racial humiliation he, his family, and his neighbors had to live with in the segregated south. This was just one of the sparks that ignited the fire. Martin Luther King Jr. had one major belief. He wanted everyone to be able to live in a world where skin color didn’t matter. Of equal importance, he believed we should be able to treat each other like brothers and sisters because we were all human under God’s eyes. He used nonviolence and peaceful protests to express his beliefs, which were inspired by Gandhi. For example, King led the 1955 Montgomery Bus Boycott, helped organize the 1963 nonviolent protests in Birmingham, …show more content…

One major difference between Martin Luther King Jr.’s views and the transcendentalists views was religion. They believed that organized religion and political parties corrupts the purity of the individual. Conversely, Martin Luther King Jr. said, “God is not interested merely in the freedom of black men, and brown men, and yellow men; God is interested in the freedom of the whole human race”(McDaniel 19). Therefore, King was highly connected with religion and the church. Likewise, the transcendentalists believed that people are their best when they are self-reliant and independent. However, King wanted everyone to come together and unite. He needed the help of the church and all

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