Topic > Malcolm hardliner of the resistance and the spokesperson of the non-violent “bogeyman” in America. Malcolm His goal toward racial equality motivated him to appeal to all sectors of the black community and formulate a solution to the problems facing black Americans, allowing him to pursue his dream of a world where his people will walk in freedom and dignity (Clarke, Bailey, and Grant 4). Therefore, to realize this dream, Malcolm America when he proclaimed in his speech that African Americans must overcome racism and oppression by “any means necessary” (Mis 4). X reached this concept when it became the most effective spokesman and minister of the Nation of Islam, "marrying the Islamic principles and words of Elijah Muhammad" (Lee). Furthermore, his experiences in the NOI lead him to become a fiery orator who urges blacks to live separately from whites (Mis 12). When Malcolm Shortly thereafter, it returned…middle of the paper…impacted the minds of the black masses and ultimately gave rise to the most influential and revolutionary groups in America (Meier and Rudwick 23). Malcolm Works Cited Clarke, John Henrik, A. Peter. Bailey and Earl Grant. Malcolm man and his times. [New York]: Macmillan, 1969. Print.Meier, August and Elliott M. Rudwick. Black protest in the 1960s. Chicago: Quadrangle, 1970. Print. "Molcom X Biography: Life, Family, Children, Name, Death, History, School, Mother, Young." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Network. June 01, 2011. .Mis, Melody S. Meet Malcom Warner Home Video, 2005. Film.