Martin Luther King, Jr. in his "I have a dream" Speech.
How did what help the Declaration of Independence...
No rights were won by the Civil Rights Movement. As the Declaration of Independence says, "...they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights." The movement reminded us that those rights of life liberty and property belong to all of us regardless of skin color or ethnic origin.
African Americans did not have a direct role in the making of the Declaration of Independence. At the time, slavery was still prevalent in the United States, and African Americans were not afforded the same rights and opportunities as white Americans. Nevertheless, the ideas and principles expressed in the Declaration of Independence, such as equality and freedom, would later inspire African Americans in their struggle for civil rights and emancipation.
We are all created equal
It wasn't about independence it was about states rights.
is gives israelites civil rights
The Declaration of Independence states that "all men are created equal". In the time the Civil Rights Moventent started it had been about 100 years since Dec of Independence was written. Also, black slaves was a regular thing and blacks were more of property than a "man" (as in they didn't even think about blacks in as "men" because white's were so used to not) The Declaration of Independence was brought up because that is what our nation is based on and blacks ARE still men. (and my best friend is a black!.... well girl) I don't know if that helped. It's kind of hard to explain.....
The United States of America. Another result was the American Revolution.
No. The Declaration of Independence was written after the American Revolution and announced the separation of the colonies from England and the formation of the United States of America.
The American dream can be traced all the way back to the Declaration of Independence, in which it is asserted that all men are created equal, and are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights. That is the foundation of the whole concept of civil rights. Of course, a more modern reading includes women as well as men.
No. Magna Carta.
Martin Luther King