The End of White World Supremacy Audiobook By Malcom X cover art

The End of White World Supremacy

Four Speeches

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The End of White World Supremacy

By: Malcom X
Narrated by: George Washington III
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Here in his own words are the revolutionary ideas that made Malcolm X one of the most charismatic and influential African-American leaders of the 1960s. These speeches document Malcolm's progression from Black nationalism to internationalism, and are key to both understanding his extraordinary life and illuminating his angry yet uplifting cause.

©2011 Arcade Publishing (P)2013 Audible, Inc.
African American Studies Americas Biographies & Memoirs Black & African American Civil Rights & Liberties Cultural & Regional Freedom & Security Political Science Politics & Government Racism & Discrimination Social Sciences Specific Demographics United States Inspiring Thought-Provoking

Editorial reviews

The revolutionary words of Malcolm X continue to resonate today in this performance of four of the legendary African-American leader's speeches from the 1960s. Voice performer George Washington III truly inhabits the role of Malcolm X, delivering his speeches in the same fiery diction that made him such a charismatic and compelling speaker 50 years ago. The stirring addresses in The End of White World Supremacy: Four Speeches touch on subjects including black pride, the black Muslim cause, and the black revolution that would see African-Americans freed from the oppression of white society. With Malcolm X's electrifying original words and George Washington III's skilled contemporary oration, these speeches still have the power to provoke.

Historical Insights • Educational Content • Excellent Narration • Thought-provoking Perspectives • Cultural Relevance

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I understand what he's coming from giving during that time Black America had a lot of animosity towards White America

a lot of things that he talking about is could be related today

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Liked everything about the book and I thought it was very interesting and educational for me, all of what was said was true and yes we need to come out from among them…

Best book ever

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I’m grateful to have lietrned to this book. It gives me a new pence through which to view the Civil Rights Movement and it’s leaders, what some Black people wanted in the early 1960s, the role of the church and why I’d never understood the embrace of it by enslaved people (it was straight-up
manipulation, plus, where else and when else did they have a chance to sit for a bit without having some overseer beating them? Wow. The bill of goods we’ve all been sold in history books, the mainstream media and at every turn by Conservatives and Liberals alike. I am a white woman in my sixties who, as a child in the Georgia, hated the way Black people were treated and could not square what we learned in church with how people were treated. “Jesus loves the little children” and all those words shared in songs but not acted on, as per my interpretation, by his followers.

I loved Malcom X’s treatise on history and why it is so important for us all to learn our history, but especially why it is imperative that Black people dig into their history. Learning about Islam was fascinating. The origin of white men. The creation story from the Koran. The belief that while people are the devil and are evil incarnate, the manipulation of enslaved people to teach them, in hymns and and at all turns, to hate themselves so they could better be controlled by whites, how The March on Washington in 1963 was co-opted by white leaders. Perception is reality and I know these are the perceptions and shared realities of Malcom X. AND I believe they are absolutely vital listening to better understand the arc of history. Our inability to forgive and love ourselves prevents us from seeing that we are all part of a whole that stays in turmoil because of gross systemic inequality, oppression, racism. These talks are 60 years old. How can we still be in the same situation 60 years later? What could have happened had Malcom X not been shot? I want to know more. Reading recommendations welcomed!

Wow. Loved learning this side of many stories that have been twisted a million different ways.

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Malcolm was and is still one of the most influential and charismatic black leaders our people have ever seen. His words still resonate loudly and clearly. They make one resolute in his decisions and actions.

Prolific

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Don’t hesitate to listen to this. I didn’t even know Malcolm was so deep and intelligent.

Still incredibly relevant for today

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