Mathew Ahmann

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Mathew_Ahmann an entity of type: Thing

Mathew H. Ahmann, né le 10 septembre 1931 à Saint Cloud et mort le 31 décembre 2001 à Washington, est un militant politique américain. Il est l'un chef de file de l'engagement de l'Église catholique dans le Mouvement afro-américain des droits civiques. Il participe à la Marche sur Washington pour l'emploi et la liberté. rdf:langString
Mathew H. Ahmann (September 10, 1931 – December 31, 2001) was an American Catholic layman and civil rights activist. He was a leader of the Catholic Church's involvement in the Civil Rights Movement, and in 1960 founded and became the executive director of the . rdf:langString
rdf:langString Mathew Ahmann
rdf:langString Mathew Ahmann
rdf:langString Mathew H. Ahmann
rdf:langString Mathew H. Ahmann
rdf:langString Washington, D.C., US
xsd:date 2001-12-31
rdf:langString St. Cloud, Minnesota, US
xsd:date 1931-09-10
xsd:integer 41055142
xsd:integer 1059261950
xsd:date 1931-09-10
rdf:langString Matthew Ahmann
rdf:langString Ahmann in 1963
xsd:integer 6
xsd:date 2001-12-31
rdf:langString Activist
rdf:langString Margaret C. Ahmann
rdf:langString Mathew H. Ahmann, né le 10 septembre 1931 à Saint Cloud et mort le 31 décembre 2001 à Washington, est un militant politique américain. Il est l'un chef de file de l'engagement de l'Église catholique dans le Mouvement afro-américain des droits civiques. Il participe à la Marche sur Washington pour l'emploi et la liberté.
rdf:langString Mathew H. Ahmann (September 10, 1931 – December 31, 2001) was an American Catholic layman and civil rights activist. He was a leader of the Catholic Church's involvement in the Civil Rights Movement, and in 1960 founded and became the executive director of the . By initiating the 1963 , Ahmann worked to establish the civil rights movement as a moral cause. He was one of four white men who joined the "Big Six" to organize the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. He gave a speech during the march that preceded the "I Have a Dream" speech of Martin Luther King Jr. Following the Civil Rights Movement, he directed several civil rights and Catholic service initiatives. He is not commonly thought of when thinking of the civil rights movement but has been said to have acted as a catalyst for the Catholic Church's involvement in the movement.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 13265
rdf:langString Matthew Ahmann
xsd:gYear 1931
xsd:gYear 2001

data from the linked data cloud