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      • Garvey believed in political and economic independence to advance the conditions of Black people globally in order to combat the lasting consequences of the trans-atlantic slave trade and ongoing anti-Black racism.
      www.museumoftoronto.com/collection/marcus-garvey-and-the-unia/
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  2. Nov 9, 2009 · Garvey believed he and the K.K.K. shared similar views on segregation, given that he sought a separate state for Black Americans. He began serving his sentence at Atlanta Prison in 1925.

  3. Feb 11, 2021 · Garvey laid forth a vision for a new world — a world where all people of African origin, on every continent, were united, self-sufficient and proud. It was the manifestation of an idea known...

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  4. Feb 1, 2021 · Garvey used that image as an inspiration to succeed in this life, for African Americans needed to worship a God that understood their plight, understood their suffering, and would help them overcome their present state.

  5. Feb 3, 2021 · To all those gathered, Garvey outlined the vision for the coming days: “This convention of the UNIA is called for the purpose of framing a Bill of Rights for the Negro Race. We shall write a constitution within this month of August that shall guide and govern the destiny of four hundred million Negroes of the world.”

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › GarveyismGarveyism - Wikipedia

    According to the scholar of African-American studies Wilson S. Moses, the future African state which Garvey envisioned was "authoritarian, elitist, collectivist, racist, and capitalistic", [27] suggesting that it would have resembled the later Haitian government of François Duvalier. [47]

  7. Garvey held a Pan-African vision in which he aimed to connect black people around the world in a struggle for liberation against white supremacy and colonialism.

  8. Feb 25, 2021 · Black empowerment and Pan-Africanism were a part of his vision for the future. And Colin Grant says that Garvey remains alive because his ideas live on through the people who still aspire...