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Many people consider the King’s speech as a defining moment during the civil rights movement (Teaching American History n.d.). The speech "I have a dream" is chronologically crafted through the saddening history of the black people staying and living in the US. The speech begins by identifying the African-Americans as slaves. The speech also starts by celebrating the Emancipation Proclamation that set black Africans legally free. In his speech, Martin Luther King quickly reflects on the present times and points out that the black people are still in poverty and face injustices, segregation, and police brutality.
All the vices are present despite having passed the Emancipation Proclamation 100 years ago. In his "present-day" part of the speech, the King urges the people not to retaliate by bitterness, physical violence, and hatred while trying to solve the injustices he points out in his speech (Teaching American History n.d.)." I have a dream" part which is most famous, speech, the King hopes for a better future through quotations from the bible. American songs and the declaration of independence further reinstate his hopes for a better future that is to come.
King speaks poetically and with power and gives the reflection of the country where all people are equal. The white and black people work together with equal freedom.
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