Friday, October 11, 2019
Explain why Martin Luther King was considered an Uncle Tom Essay
There are a number of reasons as to why Martin Luther King was and still is referred to as an ââ¬ËUncle Tomââ¬â¢ by some. An Uncle Tom is a black man who behaves in a subservient manner to whites. Malcolm X, among many other blacks, referred to King in this manner. Firstly, many blacks at the time saw Kingââ¬â¢s non-violence practices as being overly moderate and passive. This is for a number of reasons, mainly that the Negro extremists he criticised dismissed his passion for non violence and was charged as hindering the Negro struggle for equality. Many extremists and those who hoped to go about matters more actively saw King as shying away from the real problem and not confronting matters head-on. He was perceived by many radicals as being ââ¬Ëall talk, no actionââ¬â¢ having brought high the hopes of many young blacks, such as in riot-stricken Ohio, and having done nothing to fulfil the hopes. Moreover, Malcolm X considered King as an Uncle Tom because he was adamant on using non-violence as a political philosophy. Malcolm X sat Kingââ¬â¢s insistence on using non-violence as a principle, as being suicidal and argued that he was an ââ¬ËUncle Tomââ¬â¢ because non violence only makes sense in a situation under which the person has control over. Malcolm X advocated the idea of self-defence and therefore saw Kingââ¬â¢s idea of inter-dependence as being as obsequious as Uncle Tom. Lastly, Martin Luther King was considered an Uncle Tom because he had similar methods to that of previous authority figures who were also labelled as Uncle Tomââ¬â¢s. An example is Rosa Parks who used passive methods to get her way and so was called an Uncle Tom. Similarly, King was using a moderate approach and so was given the same label as those who had previously gone about their business similarly. All in all Martin Luther King was considered an Uncle Tom due to the influence of Malcolm X, whose more confrontational methods appealed to black youths who were disappointed with Kingââ¬â¢s failure to fulfil their hopes. Malcolm Xââ¬â¢s influence resulted in many other blacks sharing the ideology that King was an Uncle Tom ââ¬â this together with the fact that previous icons had been labelled in the same way, led to the growing belief that King was an Uncle Tom.
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