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- 1.5
- In the Sixties, black
- rage spoke with many
- voices, but the touch-
- stone for all the
- various separatist
- sects was the loving,
- integrationist message
- of the great Baptist,
- Martin Luther King.
- Malcolm X, however,
- was his own man, his
- voice both violent and
- self-doubting. In an
- age when Marxism
- seemed to hold the
- answers, Malcolm became a Muslim ahead of his time, and
- 20 years before the Ayatollah declared war on the "Great
- Satan of western imperialism". Allah, declared Malcolm,
- possesses the full "360 degrees of knowledge". After
- seven years' imprisonment as a Harlem hoodlum, this
- auto-didact emerged to preach black power and black
- separation; by calling himself X he erased his own slave
- name. "What shade of black African polluted by devil
- white man are you?" he asked his Muslim congregation.
- He described his own grandfather as a "red-headed devil",
- a rapist who "pollutes my complexion". But Malcolm X's
- Autobiography backs away from racism. During a
- pilgrimage to Mecca he had discovered that Islam is
- colour-blind. On February 21, 1965 he was assassinated
- by Muslims loyal to Elijah Muhammad's Nation of Islam,
- with which he had broken. He became a symbol of pride
- and integrity to which many African-Americans remain
- fiercely loyal
- @
- 2.2
- One of the eight children of Louise and Earl Little,
- Malcolm saw his father, a Baptist preacher from rural
- Georgia, constantly hounded by the Ku-Klux-Klan, first
- in Omaha, Nebraska, and then in Lansing, Michigan,
- where finally he was killed by being thrown under the
- wheels of a trolley; his mother, Louise, ending up in a
- mental hospital; and his brothers and sisters scattered over
- various foster homes. He was "adopted" by the white lady
- of one of the foster homes, and stayed with the family until
- he was 14. He was brilliant at school, winning straight
- A's, but was told to scale down his aspiration of a career
- as a lawyer to becoming "a mechanic or a carpenter". He
- quit school and went to Harlem, where he became a
- successful hustler. He was in and out of jail.
-
- It was during a long prison sentence in Boston, in 1952,
- that he came under the influence of the teachings of Elijah
- Muhammad, leader of the Nation of Islam. Eventually, he
- was to become the most prominent and articulate minister
- of this faith, a bowdlerized version of Islam.
- @
- 2.3
- Malcolm X became the chief spokesman of the Black
- Muslim movement in New York. Elijah Muhammad (born
- Elijah Poole) lives in seclusion at the so-called Temple of
- Islam in Chicago. Their quarrel is believed to have arisen
- from a struggle for power in the movement, whose
- membership is put variously between 50,000 and
- 250,000. It is puritan, separatist, and transcendental.
- Malcolm X's declared policy was to establish a non-
- sectarian black nationalist party. He accused the Black
- Muslims of perverting the creed of Islam.
-
- Recently he said the Black Muslims were working with the
- American Nazi Party and the Ku-Klux-Klan to perpetuate
- segregation for their own purposes. He said that in
- December 1960, he and another member of the movement,
- Jeremiah X, went to Georgia to discuss tactics with a
- leader of the Klan who "wanted to sell us a county-size
- parcel of land so that our programme of segregation would
- sound more feasible".
-
- At this time, he continued, he was blinded by his faith in
- Elijah Muhammad. The leader of the Nazi Party was
- permitted to attend Black Muslim meetings, and the Nazis
- and the Klan wanted militants kept in the Black Muslim
- movement because if they were unleashed into the civil
- rights movement "they'd get all the 'Uncle Tom' so-called
- leaders to stop talking and start doing something". The
- Black Muslims wanted him out of the way, he said,
- because he knew of these contacts.
- @
- 2.5
- By the early 1960s, Malcolm X had also emerged as a
- vehement opponent of the mainstream civil rights
- movement then being led by Martin Luther King. And it
- was this that created a body of thoughts and sentiments,
- later to be labelled Black Power.
-
- "Once we accept ourselves, we're acceptable to everyone",
- he once said to fellow Afro-Americans. In short, he called
- for an end to the self-hatred with which black Americans,
- conditioned by history and contemporary white European
- aesthetic and cultural values, had come to regard
- themselves. He emphasized the connexion with Africa and
- the African past not as part of the "Back to Africa"
- movement but as a source of political and economic power
- to be used by Afro-Americans in their struggle to liberate
- themselves by "any means necessary".
- @
- 2.6
- Malcolm X, the American Negro leader, spent less than
- three hours in Smethwick today and exchanged a brief
- word with two or three local people. His visit, described
- by Alderman C.V. Williams, mayor of Smethwick, as a
- deplorable attempt to create more tension, was openly
- regretted by other Midlanders in touch with the
- immigration problem.
-
- Malcolm X told a reporter: "I have heard that the blacks in
- Smethwick are being treated in the same way as the
- Negroes were treated in Alabama - like Hitler treated
- Jews." If he were a coloured immigrant, he said, he would
- not wait until the fascists had built the gas ovens.
-
- At a press conference at the Grand Hotel, Birmingham,
- Malcolm X said the English were becoming increasingly
- racialist and the Smethwick situation could develop into a
- brutally violent affair. The source of his information was
- not clear and on other subjects his facts seemed arguable -
- for instance, it became obvious that he had not realized that
- the Government's immigration restrictions also applied to
- white immigrants.
-
- Mr. Cedric Taylor, chairman of the Standing Conference
- of West Indian Organizations for Birmingham and District,
- said: "Remarks about gas ovens are, I feel, the worst thing
- that anybody could say. I am upset at this sort of thing
- when people are trying to sort themselves out. Conditions
- here are entirely different from those in Alabama. The
- West Indians are not the sort of people who would want to
- follow Malcolm X."
-
- This evening Malcolm X spoke at a private meeting called
- by Islamic students at Birmingham University. Tomorrow
- he will return to America, where he will report to a four-
- college seminar in Massachusetts on his visit to Smethwick
- and Birmingham, England.
- @
- 3.1
- Malcolm X, the Negro nationalist who was a leader of the
- Black Muslim movement until he broke with it, was shot
- dead this afternoon while addressing a rally in a ballroom
- in Manhattan. Police said two other men were injured by
- gunfire, and arrests had been made.
-
- Malcolm X, whose real name was Malcolm Little, was on
- the stage at the Audubon ballroom in Washington Heights,
- a district in upper Manhattan on the fringe of the Negro
- quarter of Harlem. Eight or 10 shots were fired altogether,
- and Malcolm X fell to the floor with three shots in the face.
- He was taken to the Vanderbilt clinic of the Columbia-
- Presbyterian Medical Centre, a few doors down the street,
- where he was found to be dead.
-
- There was immediate uproar in the hall. A man was seen
- running away with a .45 revolver in his hand, and the 300
- or 400 people attending the rally ran out into the street
- shouting and screaming.
-
- Police said later that the crowd in the hall seized two
- Negroes and fought with the police for possession of
- them. One of them was spreadeagled by one group of men
- while others punched and kicked him. The other was
- thrown to the ground and kicked. It took 10 policemen to
- get them away to a patrol car. A sawn-off rifle was
- discovered behind the stage, wrapped in a jacket.
-
- Mrs. Little, the dead man's wife, was among the crowd.
- She was escorted away by an angry group of Malcolm X's
- followers, who threatened press photographers in the
- street outside.
-
- Last week, Malcolm X's house in the Long Island
- borough of Queens was set on fire by petrol bombs. The
- house was bought for him by the Black Muslims, and after
- he left the organization he stayed on, claiming that the
- house had been given to him and resisting eviction
- proceedings. After the fire, he and his family moved out, a
- few hours before a city marshal arrived with an eviction
- order. The incident followed a quarrel with Elijah
- Muhammad, the founder and leader of the Black Muslims.
- @
- 3.3
- She was only four when she saw the bloody body of her
- father, the famous black activist Malcolm X, lying on the
- ground after being torn apart by bullets in a theatre in
- Harlem. Three decades later, the tables have turned. She
- stands accused of plotting to murder the man she thinks
- was responsible for her father's death
-
- At first it looked like a simple case of revenge, in which
- Qubilah Shabazz, Malcolm X's 34-year-old daughter, was
- so haunted by the memory of her father's murder that she
- decided to settle scores with the man she accuses of being
- one of the assassins.
-
- But it is much more complicated. Far from being the grim
- sequel to a long-running family feud, the case has had the
- surprising effect of uniting Malcolm X's family and
- supporters with the very figure they have blamed for his
- murder: Louis Farrakhan, America's most controversial
- black leader. The intended victim of Shabazz's alleged plot
- has offered an olive branch to Shabazz, saying that she,
- not he, is the real victim.
-
- Farrakhan, a flamboyant figure known for his snappy suits
- and rabble-rousing rhetoric, is accusing the government of
- entrapping Shabazz in a plot against him - intended, he
- argues, to divide the black community and weaken his
- Nation of Islam movement, which has become a potent
- mouthpiece for black American grievances. This has made
- it a potentially explosive case: the government will risk
- stoking up black anger if it convicts the daughter of a man
- regarded by many in black America as a martyr in the same
- league as Martin Luther King. She faces 90 years in jail
- and a $2.5m fine if found guilty.
-
- Malcolm X joined the Nation of Islam while in prison for
- theft and was once the foremost spokesman of its racist
- party line. But he left the movement after a bitter row,
- when he discovered that its then leader, his mentor Elijah
- Mohammed, had secretly fathered seven illegitimate
- children. The Nation of Islam could not forgive such
- treachery. Two months before Malcolm's assassination,
- Farrakhan, who took over the movement's leadership in
- 1978, wrote in the Nation's newspaper: "The die is set and
- Malcolm shall not escape. Such a man is worthy of death."
-
- Although three men were convicted of Malcolm X's
- murder, no coherent explanation of their culpability
- emerged. Farrakhan always maintained his innocence and
- apologised for creating an atmosphere of hatred. Yet he
- showed no real repentance: two years ago he sounded glad
- that Malcolm X had been killed. "And if we dealt with him
- like a nation deals with a traitor, what the hell business is it
- of yours?" he told one interviewer.
-
- But instead of igniting the old feud, the case has had the
- reverse effect, with the Shabazz family and Farrakhan
- seemingly reunited after three decades of animosity. "I
- held her in my arms as a baby," said Farrakhan last month,
- recalling happier times before his rift with Malcolm X.
- Together they have concluded that the government is out to
- pursue black activists into the next generation.
-
- The prosecution's case has been weakened by its key
- witness. Michael Fitzpatrick, an old boyfriend of Shabazz,
- is a former FBI informer who once co-operated in an
- investigation aimed at Jewish militants, for which he was
- paid $12,000 a month. He is now in trouble with the
- authorities over a charge of possession of cocaine.
-
- The FBI says that eight telephone calls between Shabazz
- and Fitzpatrick clearly show that she discussed the
- possibility of assassinating Farrakhan. But the latter's
- refusal to complain can only undermine the FBI's case. In
- addition, Shabazz's alleged down-payment to a hit man of
- $250 seems too little to provide proof of her commitment
- to murder.
-
- William Kunstler, the flamboyant New York civil rights
- lawyer leading Shabazz's defence, believes the FBI sting
- was designed ultimately to harm Farrakhan. "It's the same
- thing that happened 30 years ago with Malcolm," he said.
- "The government doesn't have to pull the trigger, but they
- create the atmosphere in which the nuts operate. There are
- people out there who love Malcolm and also some who are
- deranged, so they will kill Farrakhan thinking they will
- avenge Malcolm's death.
-
- "It's this whole threat of a black messiah - that someone
- can galvanise the black community, and it scares the
- bejesus out of the system."
-
-
-