El-Hajj Malik el-Shabazz - Malcolm X
by Sulayman S. Nyang, Ph.D.
from Message Online
El-Hajj Malik el-Shabazz, or Malcolm X as he is better known
among countless non-Muslim Americans, was a man of great intelligence and charisma.
His life story goes back to his days as a young man. The son of a Garveyite
(a follower of Marcus Aurelius Garvey) who remembered throughout his life the
brutal manner in which White racists killed his father.
Mr. Shabazz was born
Malcolm Little in Omaha, Nebraska on May 19, 1925, the fourth of eight children
of Rev. Earl Little, a Baptist preacher from Georgia, and his wife, Louise,
a West Indian woman who was light skinned enough to pass for White. Because
of his background Malcolm Little imbibed much of the rage of suspicion of White
America which his father felt before his murder.
Condemned to live in a hostile
American society without wealth or effective parental direction, Malcolm Little
got lost in the wilderness of sin and crime. He got involved in a number of
illegal activities which eventually landed him in jail. In his now famous autobiography,
ghostwritten by Alex Haley of Roots fame, Mr. Shabazz paints a gloomy picture
of life for a Black youth in those days of racial bigotry and Black victimization
in American society. He tells us in the book that his life changed after his
brother had introduced him to the teachings of Elijah Muhammad. The message
from this leader of the Nation of Islam was designed to de-inferiorize Blacks
in the US who had been told repeatedly that their color and race condemned them
to eternal damnation in Americas social system. According to Ron Karenga,
the prominent African-American activist and essayist during the Civil Rights
struggle of the 1960s and 1970s, there are six aspects to the doctrine of the
Nation of Islam, as advocated by Elijah Muhammad.
The first and most fundamental
"is the posing of Islam as the true religion of Black people and Christianity
as the religion of their opposite and enemy, the White people."
The second
"is the contention that Allah (God) is in reality a Black man and the Black
man is God." The third is that Black people "are a Chosen People who
are righteous by creation and righteous by nature." The fourth is that
"the White man is the devil himself." The Fifth is that "separation
on the social and political level from White was a divine imperative."
The sixth aspect of Elijah Muhammads theory stresses "the need for
racial and Islamic solidarity throughout the world." He argued that, inspite
of Euro-American machinations, people in the developing countries are destined
to unite because they all belong to the Original People.
In an attempt to understand the spiritual journey of Malik Shabazz,
we must examine how he related to these ideas of Mr. Muhammad and the manner
in which his life changed following his encounter with the orthodox Islam.
Malcolm Little, the convert to the Nation of Islam, changed
his name to Malcolm X and became a strong and forceful champion of Mr. Muhammads
philosophy. His efforts at proselytization took the message of the Nation of
Islam to every nook and corner of the Black community in the United States.
Malcolm X, as the national spokesman of the Nation of Islam, was perhaps the
most potent force behind the publicity of the Black nationalist religious body
in the United States and overseas. His speeches in colleges and universities
and on television and radio galvanized a large number of young Blacks in American
ghettos. Many of these Blacks would later embrace the NOI philosophy and become
active defenders and promoters of their adopted faith.
Malcolm Xs activities
on behalf of the NOI created a tense atmosphere in the late 1950s and early
1960s. At the time in US history the civil rights movements was bent on desegregating
American life and society. In order to do so a coalition of Blacks and Whites
was needed. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP),
the Urban League and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference formed by
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and others, were the advocates of change. They had
earlier scored a victory over the segregationists when the US Supreme Court
struck down racist laws which mandated separate educational facilities for 40
percent of US school children located primarily in the southern states.
Entering
the field of struggle around this time, Malcolm X taught Black Americans his
masters message: "Blacks and Whites cannot live together and agitation
for integration is suicidal." This message reverberated in the firmaments
of Black debates throughout the lifetime of Mr. Muhammad.
Although the followers
of the NOI were not prominent in Black leadership circles, the visibility and
dynamism of Malcolm X gave the NOI more attention than its members warranted
at the time. Many analysts of the civil rights movement saw the message of Malcolm
X and the NOI as an alternative to Dr. Kings message of change without
violent struggle. Infact, on many occasions the White liberals reminded conservative
Whites of the ominous future of American should the two races settled their
differences violently. This perception of the NOI and its national spokesman,
Malcolm X, gave the followers of Mr. Muhammad a bad name and a bad press. The
liberal White press such as The New York Times, The Chicago Tribune and The
Washington Post dismissed Malcolm X as a "hatemonger," and a "troublemaker."
This image of Malcolm X underwent a change only in the last
two years of his life. In November 1993, following the assassination of President
John F. Kennedy, Malcolm X made a statement which soon drove a wedge between
him and Mr. Muhammad. He was reported in the US press as saying that the slaying
of the US President was a clear case of "the chickens coming home to roost."
To Malcolm X the US was a violent society and violence had for long been unleashed
against Blacks. When the President himself could be gunned down in cold blood
by an assassin you have nothing else to say in defense of America.
Although Malcolm X tried to clarify the meaning of his statement,
the NOI leadership saw it as an act of disobedience to their supreme leader,
Mr. Muhammad. A 90-day suspension was imposed on Malcolm X and the conservative
elements who disliked his style of operation saw this penalty as a way of bringing
him down. Much speculation has centered on the factors responsible for the conflict
between Malcolm X and his teacher, Mr. Muhammad. Some analysts like Karenga
have attributed Malcolm X's break with NOI to jealousy and rivalry in the
higher echelon of the movement. These analysts believe that the "chickens
coming home to roost" statement of Malcolm X was used merely as a pretext
to eliminate him; that the US authorities were mindful of these internal rivalries
and they used this weakness to heighten tensions in the ranks of NOI. Regardless
of one's interpretation of events around this time, however, the fact remains,
that Malcolm X's future in the NOI was doomed because Mr. Muhammad was
no longer sure of his loyalty, and his aides in Chicago who were opposed to
Malcolm X, took advantage of their proximity to the supreme leader to separate
them from each other.
From the perspective of a student of Islam in the US, this development
in the relationship between Malcolm X and Mr. Muhammad set the state for the
emergence of a new Malcolm X; that is to say, the break with Elijah Muhammad
resulted in Malcolm X's reexamination of the entire NOI philosophy. Several
major changes in Malcolm X took place during the time.
After his break with Elijah Muhammad, he changed his name to
Malik el-Shabazz. The Muslim honorific title El-Hajj would later be added to
his name after his trip to Makkah to perform the Hajj.
The new Malik Shabazz
also chose the mainstream Sunni Islam as his religious creed. In doing so he
became the vocal denouncer of his former master and his teachings. He confessed
to several audiences around the US and abroad that his activities and speeches
gave greater visibility to the heretical teaching of the NOI. He told his audiences
that now that he has seen the light of true Islam, he would do everything to
teach, elucidate and pass on the true teachings of Islam to African-American.
This new mission of Mr. Shabazz endeared him to the small minority of African-American
Sunnis who had previously seen him as an agent of a diabolical movement and
a perpetrator of the greatest sin in Islam, shirk (associating partnership with
Allah).
By traveling to Makkah for Hajj and by perceiving the collective legitimization
of the leaders of the Muslims on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean, Mr. Shabazz
developed a new image in the Muslim world. He, in turn, also provided greater
visibility to orthodox Islam in the United States.
Although orthodox Islam was
know to many African-Americans who embraced Islam because of Mr. Shabazz's
teachings and lectures, one could argue that the transformation of Malcolm X
into a veritable orthodox Muslim leader created the atmosphere for the development
of the various African-American Muslim groups. Three of these groups that have
embraced Mr. Shabazz as a brother and a hero of orthodox Islam in America are
the Darul Islam Movement, the Islamic Brotherhood, Inc., and the Islamic Party
of North America.
In its tow publications al-Jihadul Akbar and al-Taqwa, the
Dual Islam Movement defended Mr. Shabazz from the vitriolic attacks of the NOI
and other Black nationalist groups who saw Mr. Shabazzs decision to join
the international Muslim community as a deviation from the real problems of
Black people in the US. Several articles appeared also in al-Islam, a mouthpiece
of the Washington-based Islamic Party of North America, and The Western Sunrise,
an organ of the Islamic Brotherhood, Inc. based in New York.
The transformation of Mr. Shabazz not only put orthodox Islam
in the public eye, it also heightened the subterranean conflicts that were raging
in the small community of African-Americans who called themselves Muslim. Mr.
Shabazzs embrace of orthodox Islam and the lectures he gave in his last
years, together built a bridge between the tiny fraction of Sunni Muslims inside
the African-American community and the emerging immigrant Muslim community.
Before Mr. Shabazz's trip to Makkah, the immigrant Muslim community was
neither well organized nor assertive about its faith in Islam. It consisted
essentially of two main groups, namely the assimilated early immigrant families
from the Middle East, Southern/Central Europe and South Asia on the one hand,
and the international students from Muslim countries on the other.
Indeed the early 1960s served as an important benchmark in the
history of Islam because it was during this time that Sunni orthodoxy went public
through Mr. Shabazz's mosque in Harlem, and the international students
from the Muslim world began to build up the Muslim Student Association. It was
the progressive development of these two ideas that has led to the present situation.
Today the ideas for which Mr. Shabazz is known have become concretized in the
efforts of Imam Warith Deen Mohammed, Elijah Muhammads son and successor.
Since 1975 Warith Deen Mohammed has transformed the organization of his father
into a veritable Sunni Muslim body of believers. This act of restructuring of
beliefs and practices within the NOI has led to fragmentation among the old
members. There are several successor groupings to the NOI. The first and most
important is the one under the leadership of Warith Deen Mohammed himself. Its
position on religious and secular matters is stated in the groups publication,
Muslim Journal.
The next most important group is the restored Nation of Islam
under the leadership of Minister Louis Farrakhan. The rest of the breakaway
groups are led by Silas Muhammad of Atlanta; John Muhammad of Detroit and Khalifa
Emmanuel Muhamad of Baltimore. A New York group called Five Percenters is also
a competing organization. Each of these successor groups to the original NOI
is now represented in one or more US cities. The followers of Warith Deen Mohammed
are the main link between African-American Sunni Muslims and the growing body
of immigrant Muslims in the US.
Having said it all, there are several remarkable things about
Malik Shabazz that come to my mind as we commemorate his assassination nearly
25 years ago.
He was a bold, articulate and charismatic speaker and was a
good example of a man determined to get himself out of the mire of poverty and
illiteracy that condemns a majority of American Blacks to a life at the bottom
of the society.
He was an African-American whose discovery of Elijah Muhammad's
teachings channeled his pent-up hostilities towards Whites in a manner which
led to his self-discovery; and he was a man courageous enough to accept his
mistakes, as reflected in his self reversal on the NOI view that the White man
is the devil.