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Muslim, a mobilizer, a musician, a male role model, and in many ways a
mystery. His role as organizer of the Million Man March and leader of
the Nation of Islam makes Louis Farrakhan one of the best-known
African Americans today. Though a 62-year-old grandfather,
Farrakhan’s healthy countenance and vigorous output allow him to
pass for a man 20 years younger. He is a father of nine children and
an accomplished violinist with a taste for Mendelssohn, and aides say
he can bench press 400 pounds. Born Louis Eugene Walcott in 1933 and
converted by Malcolm X in 1955,
Louis Farrakhan has led the Nation of Islam (NOI) since 1977.
His dynamic speeches strike a responsive chord in tens of thousands of
young black men who promote his message with missionary zeal, making
the NOI a social force to be reckoned with. The NOI does not release
statistics, but informed estimates place its following at 25,000 to
100,000 or more. A well-advertised lecture by Louis Farrakhan can draw
60,000 people.
Farrakhan’s
following is to be reckoned not simply in numbers but also in its
composition. NOI adherents largely come from the margins of society:
reclaimed drug addicts, former gang members, and directionless or
fatherless men who have found a new identity. According to long-time
NOI observer and black pastor Dr. Jerry Buckner, while the traditional
black church is about 60 percent female, the NOI’s membership is
about 80 percent male. Young American blacks are in a crisis today (30
percent will be imprisoned or under court supervision by age 29), and
the NOI offers economic and religious solutions.
Early
Days. The NOI traces its history to 1930 with the appearance of
Wallace (or Wali) D. Fard in the black ghetto of Detroit, Michigan.
Claiming to have come from Mecca, Fard taught a small circle of black
followers that their problems stemmed from the machinations of a
Caucasian-dominated society, and that the whites are “blue-eyed
devils” who have used Christianity to enslave them. The true
religion of black people, he affirmed, is Islam, and their book is the
Holy Qur’an, although Fard actually taught a conflicting blend of
Islam, Freemasonry, and his own ideas. After Fard disappeared in June
1934 without explanation, one of his earliest disciples, Elijah Poole
(who by then was renamed Elijah Muhammad), took over, strengthening
the movement’s radical emphasis on black racial pride and teaching
that the departed Master Fard was an incarnation of Allah.
Elijah
Muhammad reigned until his death in February 1975 of heart failure,
nearly 10 years to the day after the death of Malcolm X, whose
repudiation of the NOI precipitated his assassination on February 21,
1965. Many blacks (not NOI members) consider The
Autobiography of Malcolm X required reading for whites who want to
understand the black experience or the Nation of Islam. One learns of
Malcolm’s disillusionment at discovering that Elijah Muhammad had
sired children with several of his teenage secretaries and of
Malcolm’s life-changing pilgrimage to Mecca, where the colorblind
character of true Islam deeply moved him.
Formerly
the chief spokesman for the Nation of Islam, Malcolm X was considered
a Judas for rejecting its racist teachings and openly discussing
Elijah’s improprieties. Buckner says that upon learning of
Malcolm’s betrayal, Elijah Muhammad told his followers, “It’s
time to close that nigger’s eyes.” In December 1964, the young
Louis Farrakhan wrote that Malcolm “was worthy of death” in a NOI
newspaper. Two months later three Black Muslim assassins gunned
Malcolm X down during a lecture in New York.
Though
Farrakhan denies responsibility for Malcolm’s death, he acknowledged
in 1994 that his rhetoric helped produce the “atmosphere in which
our brother was assassinated.” Malcolm’s widow, Betty Shabazz,
however, has often suspected Farrakhan of greater complicity than he
has admitted.
Tensions
increased in January 1995 when the FBI charged Qubilah Shabazz,
Malcolm’s daughter, with hiring an informant to kill Farrakhan.
Qubilah was four years old and present when her father was
assassinated. Though she claimed to have been joking about the murder
proposal, tape recordings reveal her fear that Farrakhan might kill
her mother for implicating him in Malcolm’s murder. A federal judge
suspended the case in May, and Qubilah was required to undergo drug
and psychiatric treatment in Texas.
Shortly
afterward, Betty Shabazz publicly reconciled with Farrakhan at a
fund-raising dinner he had organized to help pay Qubilah’s legal
fees. “We are both victims of a wider conspiracy,” Farrakhan said.
The language of conspiracy peppers Farrakhan’s rhetoric with frequent
references to “the enemy” and “the oppressor” — usually
meaning whites or Jews.
Islamic
Sectarianism.
Though
the NOI embraces some Islamic beliefs and practices, such as
abstention from alcohol and pork, theologically it stands outside of
traditional Islam. Elijah Muhammad taught — and Louis Farrakhan
still believes with modifications — that Allah is a God who appears
in human form from time to time, always as a black man. While blacks
have lived on earth since antiquity, “a black scientist in rebellion
against Allah” named Dr. Yakub allegedly grafted the white race into
existence as a perverse breeding experiment six thousand years ago. In
breeding out their blackness, Yakub removed their physical,
intellectual, and moral virtues as well. With nothing left but
treachery, the white race connived to undermine and enslave black
people.
The
Institute for Islamic Information and Education, a Sunni Muslim group
in Chicago, contends that the “Nation of Islam” is a misnomer
since the NOI denies essential elements of Islam — the most
important being that Allah has never appeared in physical form and
cannot be identified in that way with any created being. For example.
current editions of the NOI’s newspaper state, “WE BELIEVE that
Allah (God) appeared in the Person of Master W. Fard Muhammad, July
1930.”
Orthodox
Muslims also believe in a literal, physical resurrection of the dead
to heaven or hell, whereas the NOI claims, “No already physically
dead person will be in the Hereafter: that is slavery belief, taught
to slaves to keep them under control.” Instead, Farrakhan teaches
that the resurrection of the dead is a mental
resurrection (understood as an awakening in one’s mind from dead
thoughts).
Mainstream
Muslims also criticize other NOI practices, which include its beliefs
about the origin of the races, the NOI’s nonobservance of the five
daily prayers, and inadequate emphasis on the hadith
(traditions) of Muhammad and the pilgrimage to Mecca.
Farrakhan’s recent statements, however, indicate that the NOI is
emphasizing some of these areas more strongly.
Business
Ventures. Economic
growth for the NOI comes via several channels (apart from donations
and sales of their newspaper. The
Final Call).
The NOI owns 1,600 acres of Georgia farmland and plans to
acquire 10,000 acres by the end of 1996, according to the Christian
Science Monitor.
The NOI has also started a commercial trucking industry with a
handful of tractor-trailer rigs.
Beauty
supply stores, bookstores, and restaurants specializing in “bean
pies” appear throughout the country. The Salaam Restaurant and
Bakery, a fully paid-for $5 million restaurant, opened in Chicago in
March 1995 with much fanfare and with menus for lower-and
upper-income patrons.
Amazingly,
since 1991 the NOI’s largest source of income has been the federal
government, which has paid about $20 million to security services
owned or controlled by the NOI. The U.S. Department of Housing and
Urban Development has awarded contracts to public housing projects in
Chicago, Los Angeles, Pittsburgh, Washington, and other cities to hire
NOI-related security firms.
These
businesses have brought safety to some housing projects. The New
York Times reported praise for NOI Security in Baltimore, where
tenants protested the cancellation of its contract. On the other hand,
an investigative series by the Chicago
Tribune in March 1995 published tenant complaints in Chicago and
Washington of inadequate, absent, or violent security guards.
Meanwhile, Farrakhan refused 12 requests for an interview by the Tribune.
Phony
Cure for AIDS.
One focus of the Tribune story
was the Abundant Life Clinic in Washington, D.C., directed by Dr.
Abdul Alim Muhammad, head of NOI’s Washington mosque. The doctor
claims to have developed a cure for AIDS. In 1988 Farrakhan suggested
that the Jews developed AIDS and deliberately gave the disease to
black children. Alim Muhammad is also the NOI’s Minister of Health
and Human Services. In 1992 he told an Atlanta audience that the AIDS
virus was “a direct consequence” of a covert policy of genocide
against nonwhites, instituted by President Bush.
Both
Farrakhan and Alim claim that an African doctor, David Koech of Kenya,
has discovered the cure for AIDS — a “miracle drug” called
Kemron. Alim Muhammad and Farrakhan’s son-in-law incorporated a
business to distribute Kemron. At the Million Man March this October,
Alim Muhammad presented a man supposedly cured of AIDS in one year and
castigated the U.S. government for suppressing this discovery in its
scheme to reduce the black population. Koech. however. did
nor discover Kemron. In fact. Joseph Cummins. its real founder who
holds a patent on it. has found it ineffective against AIDS, and this
has been confirmed by 12 controlled tests. Moreover, the World Health
Organization, the National Institutes of Health, and the U.S. Public
Health Service have rejected this drug as worthless.
Judaism
and Slavery. The NOI’s obsession with Jewish conspiracies
against blacks became evident in the publication (by Latimer
Associates) of The Secret
Relationship between Blacks and Jews: Volume One in 1991, now in
its fourth printing. Ascribed to the “Historical Research
Department, Nation of Islam,” this work singles out Jews as chief
agents in the slave trade in the New World from the fifteenth to the
nineteenth centuries.
Though
its 1,275 footnotes offer the appearance of scholarship, critics say
its substance is lacking. Winthrop Jordan, chairman of history and
African-American studies at the University of Mississippi, diced its
anonymous authors for their subterfuge, carelessness, and flawed
evidence in the September 1995 issue of Atlantic
Monthly.
Yet
in a curious twist, the NOI, which views slavery as an evil with
repercussions that have persisted for generations, has defended
African regimes that practice slavery. In February 1995 a series of
articles in the New York City
Sun described ongoing slavery in the African nations of Mauritania
(south of Morocco) and Sudan (south of Egypt). The U.S. State
Department estimates that Muslims buy and sell 90,000 other Muslims of
Mauritania as property, while in Sudan most slaves are Christian women
and children who are forced to convert to Islam. Many human rights
agencies have also documented chattel slavery in these countries.
The
NOI in New York responded by suggesting that Jews working for the
American Anti-Slavery Group have made these charges against Sudan.
Addressing an Arab and Islamic conference in 1995, Farrakhan mentioned
Sudan and Mauritania as being criticized by “the Western press”
for practicing slavery. He condemned slavery wherever it occurs, but
made no further reference to these two countries.
Perhaps
the most persistent criticism against Louis Farrakhan and NOI
spokespeople is for racial prejudice and anti-Semitism. Slavery
metaphors are always close at hand. Farrakhan reproves blacks who
marry whites for “sleeping with the son and daughter of the
oppressor.” (The NOI opposes interracial marriages.) He also
belittles black ministers who have visited the President as Uncle
Toms going to the slavemaster’s mansion: “As if that [going to the
White House] is supposed to make the flock happy, because you was at
‘da Big House’ with the Big Satan.”
Persistent
racist statements come from other NOI spokespeople. In 1992 Abdul Alim
Muhammad justified the shedding of blood as a “healing” process
for oppressed blacks: “When you let [your anger and anxiety] out,
there’s healing in that. And if in the process, some of your
oppressors and slave-masters die, so what? Everybody has to die
sometime, don’t they? So why shouldn’t your slavemaster die
now?”
On
November 29, 1993, Khallid Abdul Muhammad, then a top aide to
Farrakhan, gave an infamous speech at New Jersey’s Kean College,
calling for the killing of whites, including cripples and children, in
South Africa. On February 23, 1994, anti-Semitic remarks by a NOI supporter
immediately preceding a speech by Khalid at black-founded Howard
University caused its president to resign under the fallout.
(Eventually Farrakhan removed Khallid from his position.)
Origins
of the Million Man March.
Speaking at Union Temple Baptist Church in Washington, D.C., on
September 17, 1995, a month before the Million Man March, Farrakhan
revealed the genesis of the March. He said that during a vacation in
Mexico 10 years earlier, he had gone to the ruins of “a Mayan temple
to meditate and pray,” when he was taken up into a giant spaceship.
He identified the object as the “wheel within a wheel” referred to
in Ezekiel 1:15-21. “I heard the voice of the Honorable Elijah
Muhammad as you hear my voice,” he related, whose shrouded form told
Farrakhan that if he could get a million men to come to Washington,
“then you can come here again and you can see me face-to-face.”
The Million Man March would fulfill this decade-old promise.
Farrakhan
warned the marchers, “This is a life and death struggle; death is
planned for us,” beginning at the White House. “The President has
tanks right now in the D.C. Armory. It’s there for you and for
me.” He assured the audience, however, that Elijah Muhammad’s
spaceship would be there to provide protection for the marchers.
Farrakhan
said the March will tell America that “we are sober, committed,
dedicated.” He also said the March will “serve notice to the world
that the black man is ready, steady, an able man, full of
righteousness, ready to rule.”
Ultimately,
the Million Man March on October 16, 1995, took on ecumenical
dimensions far beyond its founder, making headline news across the
world. The National Park Service initially said the rally drew 400,000
people, a contested figure that was later adjusted to about 837,000.
Only one arrest occurred that day, as thousands of black men pledged
to serve their families and refrain from violence (except in
self-defense), and thousands also registered to vote. Farrakhan plans
to hold a Million Family March in October 1996.
Buckner,
a Southern Baptist pastor in Tiburon, California, told the JOURNAL he
believes much of Farrakhan’s success can be attributed to his readiness
to speak out against discrimination against blacks, and to develop
both businesses and a positive self-image among downtrodden black men.
Even those raised in Christian homes, he notes, can be drawn to
Farrakhan’s radical Islamic theology if Christian churches and
pastors fail to address the racial and social problems that blacks
experience daily. The recent release by the Southern Baptist Home
Mission Board of The Lost
Nation, a video
addressing the NOI’s theology and agenda, is one example of this
sensitivity. However, Buckner says, a video is not an antidote. This,
he says, will have to come not from a TV screen but from flesh-and
blood Christians displaying real solutions in agape
love.
—
Eric
Pement
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