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Original JPG File | 2953 × 1961 pixels (5.79 MP) 25 cm × 16.6 cm @ 300 PPI | 1.1 MB | Restricted |
Low resolution print | 2000 × 1328 pixels (2.66 MP) 16.9 cm × 11.2 cm @ 300 PPI | 631 KB | Restricted |
Screen | 850 × 564 pixels (0.48 MP) 7.2 cm × 4.8 cm @ 300 PPI | 85 KB | Restricted |
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James Baldwin delivered a powerful speech against racism during the fourth Assembly of the World Council of Churches, Uppsala, Sweden, 1968..The scourge of racism was much on the minds of the assembly delegates. US civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr, who was to have preached the opening sermon in Uppsala, had been assassinated four months earlier. Invited in King's place, the African American novelist James Baldwin asked whether "there is left in Christian civilization the moral energy, the spiritual daring, to atone, to repent, to be born again".