he as a segregationist
He was a segregationist
He did not believe that equality could be achieved in the United States.
Marcus Garvey shocked civil rights leaders with his promotion of Black nationalism and his establishment of the Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA), which advocated for the economic independence and self-determination of Black people. His call for a return to Africa and support for the creation of a separate Black nation challenged the integrationist ideals of many civil rights leaders, like W.E.B. Du Bois. Additionally, Garvey's flamboyant style and controversial rhetoric, including his criticism of other civil rights movements and leaders, further polarized opinions within the civil rights community.
it is because it helps us remember our civil rights leaders
Segregationists became more violent, businesses suffered from the mass actions, and civil rights leaders were arrested
He was a segregationist
Because he was a segregationist, and supported a "return to Africa" by African-Americans.
Because he was a segregationist, and supported a "return to Africa" by African-Americans.
He did not believe that equality could be achieved in the United States.
G
Racial equality was impossible in the United States.
He did not believe that equality could be achieved
Because he was a segregationist, and supported a "return to Africa" by African-Americans.
He was a segregationist - Apex
Gilbert Marcus has written: 'The Freedom Charter' -- subject(s): Civil rights, Human rights
it is because it helps us remember our civil rights leaders
Violent resistance was not a strategy of black civil rights leaders in the South from 1955 to 1965.