Answer:
A shared goal of civil rights leaders Booker T. Washington, W.E.B. DuBois, and Marcus Garvey was to achieve equal rights between White Americans and African Americans.
Explanation:
-Booker Taliaferro Washington, born April 5, 1856 in Franklin County, Virginia, died November 14, 1915 in Tuskegee, Alabama, was an American writer and politician, known for his work on racism and slavery. Washington was himself born into slavery, but became free at the age of nine. The experiences of this are depicted in his autobiography "Up from Slavery", written in 1901.
-William Edward Burghardt Du Bois was an American sociologist and leaders of the civil rights movement.
In 1905, Du Bois founded the Niagara movement, the predecessor of the NAACP, and in 1910 left his professorship and became NAACP's director of research and editor-in-chief of Crisis. In 1934, he returned to Atlanta University until working again at the NAACP from 1944 to 1948.
The idea of black liberation led Du Bois to organize the first Pan-African Congress in Paris in 1919. At the Fifth Congress in Manchester in 1945, he met Kwame Nkrumah and Jomo Kenyatta.
-Marcus Garvey was a Jamaican pan-Africanist, black nationalist, advocate for black rights, and founder of the Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League. He is also held as a prophet in the rastafari movement. In 1924, a speech Garvey gave to thousands of people in Harlem, New York City, received worldwide attention.