Malcolm X
May 19, 1925 – February 21, 1965
Also known as: Detroit Red, El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz, and Omowale) was an
American spokesman for the Nation of Islam. Malcolm X was the founder of the
Muslim Mosque, Inc. and the Organization of Afro-American Unity.

During his life, Malcolm went from being a street-wise Boston hoodlum to one of
the most prominent black nationalist leaders born in the United States. As a
militant leader, Malcolm X advocated black pride, economic self-reliance, and
identity politics. He ultimately rose to become a world renowned Pan-Africanist
and human rights activist. Malcolm X was assassinated in New York City on
February 21, 1965 on the first day of National Brotherhood Week.

He explained the name he chose by saying:,

"To take one's 'X' is to take on a certain mystery, a certain possibility of power
in the eyes of one's peers and one's enemies ... The 'X'; announced what you
had been and what you had become: Ex-smoker, Ex-drinker, Ex-Christian,
Ex-slave."  

The 'X' also stood for the unknown original surname of the slaves from whom
Malcolm X descended, in preference to continuing to use a name which would
have been given by the slave owner. This rationale made many members of the
Nation of Islam choose their own surnames.

Malcolm X was born in Omaha, Nebraska to Earl Little and Louise Little (née
Norton). His father, an outspoken Baptist lay preacher and supporter of Marcus
Garvey, was believed to have been killed by the Black Legion, a white
supremacist group in Lansing, Michigan in 1931. Malcolm and his siblings had
been split up and sent to different foster homes when Louise Little was
declared legally insane. In 1939, she was formally committed to the State
Mental Hospital at Kalamazoo, Michigan, and remained there until Malcolm and
his brothers and sisters got her released twenty-six years later.

Malcolm graduated from junior high school at the top of his class, but dropped
out when his favorite teacher crushed his dream to be a lawyer by saying that it
was "no realistic goal for a nigger". After enduring a series of foster homes,
Malcolm was first sent to a detention center and then later moved to Boston to
live with his older half-sister, Ella Little Collins. He found work as a shoeshiner
at a Lindy Hop nightclub.  In his biography, he says that he once shined the
shoes of Duke Ellington and other notable black musicians. After some time, he
moved to New York City, where, in Harlem, he became involved in drug dealing,
gambling, pimping, racketeering and robbery.  When he was examined for the
World War II draft, military physicians found him to be insane, barring him from
military service; he claimed to have feigned insanity to avoid being drafted.
Malcolm became a small time hustler and was known on the street as "Detroit Red", due to his naturally red hair. He was arrested in Boston on January 12, 1946 at the age of 20
and sentenced to eight to ten years imprisonment on charges of breaking and entering, carrying firearms, and larceny. He later earned the nickname Satan in the Charlestown
State Prison for his constant cursing, especially of God and the Bible. While in jail in 1948, he received letters from his brother Reginald, asking him to join the Nation of Islam.
The NOI defined itself as a militant Islamic sect that preached that most African slaves were Muslims before they were captured and sent to the Americas. They argued that
Blacks should reconvert to Islam to reclaim the heritage that was stolen from them. The NOI considered itself to be a black nationalist group which supported the idea of a
separate Black nation within the United States. The NOI also considers non-Blacks as subhuman, in particular Jews and Anglo-Saxons whose existence is owed to an experiment
by a black scientist named Yakub gone wrong.

Malcolm diligently studied the teachings of founder and leader of the Nation of Islam Elijah Muhammad. His sister Ella helped to transfer him to the lower-security prison colony in
Norfolk, Massachusetts where he became an avid reader and found justification for the teachings of Elijah Muhammad and the Nation of Islam in history and philosophy. He
participated in the colony's weekly debates, and copied an entire dictionary from the colony's library to expand his knowledge and to improve his handwriting. His first contact with
Elijah Muhammad was in prison, where he corresponded with Muhammad by mail. As he progressed in his self-education, he began to write to the leader daily. After his release
on parole on August 7, 1952, he bought a suitcase, eyeglasses, and a watch, later saying that these were the items he used most in his later life.

In 1952, after his release from prison, Malcolm went to meet Elijah Muhammad in Chicago. It is here that he received the iconic X, meant to symbolize the rejection of his slave-
name and the absence of a proper African Muslim name. The "X" is also both a reference to the name given to the slaves by the Anglo-European slave owners, unwilling and un-
wanting to learn their African names; and is also the brand that many slaves received on their upper arm.

In March of 1953 the FBI opened a file on Malcolm, supposedly in response to an allegation that he had described himself as a Communist; according to the Church Committee,
the FBI had long been used to monitor, disrupt, and repress radicals like Malcolm. Included in the file were two letters wherein Malcolm uses the alias "Malachi Shabazz". In
"Message To The Black Man In America", Elijah Muhammad explained the name Shabazz as belonging to descendants of an "Asian Black nation".

In May of 1953 the FBI concluded that Malcolm X had an "asocial personality with paranoid trends (pre-psychotic paranoid schizophrenia)", and had in fact, sought treatment for
his disorder. This was further supported by a letter intercepted by the FBI June 29, 1950. In the letter said, in reference to his 4-F classification and rejection by the military
"Everyone has always said Malcolm is crazy, so it isn't hard to convince people that I am.".

Later that year, Malcolm left his half-sister Ella in Boston to stay with Elijah Muhammad in Chicago. He soon returned to Boston and became the Minister of the Nation of Islam's
Temple Number Eleven.

His active membership in the Nation of Islam led to him opening several temples around the country, of which he often became Minister. His rousing, incendiary and inspirational
speeches and spotless personal example led to the ranks of the Nation of Islam burgeoning. He was soon seen as the number two man in the movement, next to Elijah
Muhammad himself. He was largely credited with increasing membership in the NOI from 500 in 1952 to 30,000 in 1963. In 1958 Malcolm married Betty X (née Sanders) in
Lansing, Michigan. They had six daughters together, all of whom carried the surname of Shabazz: Attillah, born in 1958; Qubilah born in 1960; Ilyasah born in 1962; Gumilah
born in 1964 and twins, Malaak and Malikah, who were born after Malcolm's death in 1965.

As Malcolm worked tirelessly for the Nation of Islam, he was increasingly exposed to rumours of Elijah Muhammad's extra-marital affairs with young secretaries. Adultery is
severely shunned in the teachings of the Nation of Islam. Although this news unsettled Malcolm, he often brushed it aside. But soon he investigated these allegations and saw
that they were true, and they were eventually affirmed by Elijah Muhammad himself, who claimed that it was legitimate for him to take on wives as he was the messenger of God.
(It should be noted that polygamy, as marriage to more than one but less than five women, and when specifically recognised and accepted under Sharia, is not a transgression in
the mainstream Islamic religion. Elijah Muhammad, however, was not married to any of the women with whom he had affairs but ended in having children with each woman.) In
fact, Elijah Muhammad asked Malcolm to cover his affairs but Malcolm refused. Despite being unsatisfied with the excuses, and being disenchanted by other ministers using
Nation of Islam funds to line their own pockets, Malcolm's faith in Elijah Muhammad did not waver.

By the summer of 1963, tension in the Nation of Islam reached boiling point. Malcolm believed that Elijah Muhammad was jealous of his popularity (as were several senior
ministers). Malcolm watched the March on Washington critically, unable to understand why black people were excited over a demonstration "run by whites in front of a statue of a
president who has been dead for a hundred years and who didn't like us when he was alive." Later in the year, following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy,
Malcolm delivered a speech as he regularly would. However, when asked to comment upon the assassination, he replied that it was a case of "chickens coming home to roost" –
that the violence that JFK had failed to stop, and at times refused to rein in had come around to claim his life. Most explosively, he then added that with his country origins,
"Chickens coming home to roost never made me sad. It only made me glad." This comment led to widespread public outcry and led to the Nation of Islam's publicly censuring
Malcolm X. Although retaining his post and rank as minister, he was banned from public speaking for ninety days by Elijah Muhammad himself. Malcolm obeyed and kept quiet.

In the spring of 1963, Malcolm started collaborating on The Autobiography of Malcolm X with Alex Haley. He also publicly announced his break from the Nation of Islam on March
8, 1964 and the founding of the Muslim Mosque, Inc. on March 12, 1964. At this point, Malcolm mostly adhered to the teachings of the Nation of Islam, but began modifying them,
explicitly advocating political and economic black nationalism as opposed to the NOI's exclusivist religious nationalism. In March and April, he made the series of famous
speeches called "The Ballot or the Bullet".  Malcolm was in contact with several orthodox Muslims, who encouraged him to learn about orthodox Islam. He soon converted to
orthodox Islam, and as a result decided to make his Hajj.

On April 13, 1964, Malcolm departed JFK Airport, New York for Cairo, Egypt by way of Frankfurt, Germany. It was the second time Malcolm had been to Africa. Malcolm left Cairo
arriving in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia about three in the morning. He was automatically suspect due to his inability to speak Arabic and his U. S. passport. He was separated from the
group he came with and was isolated. He spent about 20 hours wearing the ihram, a two-piece towel outfit wrapping the wearer from the waist down with one towel and from the
waist upward with the other.

It was at this time he remembered the book The Eternal Message of Muhammad by Abdul Rahman Hassan Azzam and which Dr. Mahmoud Yousseff Sharwabi had presented to
him with his visa approval. He called Azzam's son who arranged for his release. At the younger Azzam's home he met Azzam Pasha who gave Malcolm his suite at the Jedda
Palace Hotel. The next morning Muhammad Faisal, the son of Prince Faisal, visited and informed him that he was to be a state guest. The deputy chief of protocol accompanied
Malcolm to the Hajj Court. It therefore was a mere formality for Sheikh Muhammad Harkon to allow Malcolm to make his Hajj (pilgrimage to Mecca). On April 19 he completed the
Umrah, making the seven circuits around the Kaaba, drinking from the well of Zamzam and running between the hills of Safah and Marwah seven times. The trip proved to be life-
altering. He had come to see Islam as the one religion that could erase all racial problems.

On May 21, 1964, he returned to the United States as an traditional Sunni Muslim (and with a new name – El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz). Along with A. Peter Bailey and others, he
then founded the U. S. branch of the Organization of Afro-American Unity. Patterned after the Organization of African Unity (OAU), Africa's continental organization, which was
established at Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, in May 1963, the OAAU resolved to establish a non-religious and non-sectarian program for human rights. The OAAU included all people of
African ancestry in the western hemisphere, as well as those on the African continent. When he returned to the U. S., he gave a speech about his visit. This time he gave a much
larger meaning and message than before. The speech was not only for the Muslims, instead it was for the whole nation and for all races. He said,

"Human rights are something you were born with. Human rights are your God-given rights. Human rights are the rights that are recognized by all nations of this earth."

Malcolm returned to New York from Africa via Paris, France, on May 21, 1964. On July 9, he again left the U. S. for Africa, spending a total of 18 weeks abroad. On July 17, 1964,
Malcolm addressed the Organization of African Unity's first ordinary assembly of heads of state and governments in Cairo as a representative of the OAAU. On August 21, 1964,
he made a press statement on behalf of the OAAU regarding the second African summit conference of the OAU. In it, he explains how a strong and independent "United States of
Africa" is a victory for the awakening of African Americans. By the time he returned to the U. S. on November 24, 1964, Malcolm had established an international connection of
brotherhood between Africans on the continent and those in the diaspora.

In 1964, Life magazine published a famous photograph of Malcolm X holding an M1 Carbine and pulling back the curtains to peer out of a window. This photograph is a popular
image on T-shirts and often appears with the slogan "By any means necessary." The photo was taken in connection with Malcolm's declaration that he would defend himself from
the daily death threats which he and his family were receiving. The undercover FBI informants warned officials that Malcolm X had been marked for assassination. One officer
undercover with the Nation of Islam reportedly had been ordered to help plant a bomb in Malcolm's car.

Tensions increased between Malcolm and the Nation of Islam. It was alleged that orders were given by members of the Nation of Islam leadership to kill Malcolm. On February 14,
1965, his home in New York City was firebombed. Malcolm and his family survived. Some say it was done by members of the Nation of Islam. No one has been charged in that
crime. A week later on February 21, in Manhattan's Audubon Ballroom, Malcolm had just begun delivering a speech when a disturbance broke out in the crowd of 400. A man
yelled, "Get your hand outta my pocket! Don't be messin' with my pockets!" As Malcolm's bodyguards rushed forward to attend to the disturbance, a black man rushed forward
and shot Malcolm in the chest with a sawed-off shotgun. Two other men quickly charged towards the stage and fired handguns at Malcolm. Angry on-lookers in the crowd caught
and beat the assassins as they attempted to flee the Ballroom. Malcolm X had died at the age of 39.
AAASM
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Malcolm's Parents
Mrs. Betty Shabazz
Betty Shabazz was born in Detroit, Michigan.
After high school, she attended Tuskegee
Institute in Alabama, and then the Brooklyn
State Hospital School of Nursing.
She obtained a Master's Degree in Public Health administration and
a doctorate in education from the University of Massachusetts at
Amherst.

Shabazz and her husband Malcolm X married in 1958 and had six
daughters together: Attilah (b. 1958), Qubilah (b. 1960), Ilyasah (b.
1963), Gamilah (b. 1964) and twins Malaak and Malikah (b. 1965
after Malcolm X's death).

On June 1, 1997, Shabazz's grandson, Malcolm, who was living with
her at the time, set fire to her Westchester County, NY apartment.
Shabazz suffered burns over 80% of her body and remained in
intensive care for three weeks, until she died on June 23, 1997, at
the age of 61. Her grandson was later sentenced to eighteen
months in juvenile detention for manslaughter.
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