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Added on the 13/07/2009 19:47:09 - Copyright : Celebrities FR
Washington (USA), Aug 28 (EFE / EPA) .- (CAMERA: Carlos Vilas) Thousands of people gathered Friday in Washington for the anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr's speech "I have a dream."
Washington (USA), Aug 28 (EFE/EPA), (Camera: Carlos Vilas).- Groups of demonstrators will occupy the center of the U.S. capital Friday to commemorate the historic March on Washington 57 years ago, in which Martin Luther King Jr. gave his famous "I Have a Dream" speech, in a protest in which the families of Jacob Blake and George Floyd will be present. FOOTAGE OF THE PROTESTERS IN WASHINGTON.
Washington DC, Aug 28 (EFE/EPA).- Tens of thousands of people took to the streets here and in other cities across the United States for events in favor of voting rights to mark Saturday's 58th anniversary of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech.Here in Washington, a crowd estimated by local media outlets at around 50,000 joined a festive procession to the National Mall, the expanse stretching from the Capitol to the Lincoln Memorial. (Camera: WILL OLIVER).SHOT LIST: PEOPLE GATHER TO MARCH IN FAVOR OF VOTING RIGHTS IN WASHINGTON, DC, US.
Depuis le boycott des bus de Montgomery en 1955, l'une des premières actions inspirées par Martin Luther King, jusqu'à son assassinat, le 4 avril 1968 à Memphis, ce documentaire retrace les étapes cruciales de la vie du leader non violent, prix Nobel de la paix en 1964, qui prononça devant plus de 250 000 personnes un discours resté célèbre, commençant par ces mots : « I Have a Dream ».
Washington, Mar 25 (EFE).- (Camera: via Zoom) Martin Luther King III, the eldest son of the historic civil rights leader, believes that if justice is not done in George Floyd's case, it will be clear to everyone in the world that the US judicial system is "broken."INTERVIEW WITH MARTIN LUTHER KING III.
Business Insider reports that outgoing Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said "multiculturalism" is un-American. "Our enemies stoke these divisions because they know they make us weaker," he said. "Woke-ism, multiculturalism, all the -isms — they're not who America is."
In this video, we take a look back at the life of civil rights activist and American Baptist minister Martin Luther King Jr., the renowned leader of a non-violent movement in the late 1950s and 1960s to achieve legal equality for African-Americans in the United States