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A summmary
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On August 28, 1963, one of the most influential leaders of the Civil Rights movement, Martin Luther King Jr., stood on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, and delivered a speech that is now known around the world. His speech, “I Have a Dream”, has become a symbol of the Civil Rights movement. It was written more than forty years ago as America struggled with the problems of how to create racial equality for all of her citizens. This address is still recognized as one of the most powerful speeches of the Civil Rights movement. In the early nineteen fifties, thirteen years before he stood on those steps, Martin Luther King Jr. was a seminary student. For one of his classes he was required to write “An Autobiography of Religious Development.” His thoughts give us some insight into the life of this amazing man, and how religious influences molded him into the person he was to become. In his essay, King wrote, “Religion for him is life, and that the two cannot be separated,” (81). He explains how his family, church, and two events that took place in his late childhood and early adolescence, were unquestionably the three most positive influences that occurred during his religious development.
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Title: A summmary
Words: 971 Rating: None Pages: 3.9 submitted by: wildflower
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