Interesting question. The Malcolm X that I recall from the 1960's was disenchanted with Martin Luther King's brand of passive-resistance Civil Rights Movement. read more
“I believe Malcolm would have had a tremendous impact (on the United Nations) because it was he who was leading the charge,” said Michael McLaughlin, an expert on Malcolm X. “It was Malcolm X who announced proudly, boldly that he was going to the U.N. relating to America’s treatment of African-Americans. read more
Though he did not support King’s nonviolent tactics or believe that integration was a real possibility according to the late historian Manning Marable (“Malcolm X: A Life of Reinvention”) he wanted to work with King in Selma on voting rights and had even been invited there by the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. read more