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- Essay Name : 959.txt
- Uploader : john smith
- Email Address : smith@no.com
- Language : english
- Subject : Religion
- Title : trinity
- Grade : 100
- School System : college
- Country : us
- Author Comments : great reading, written by knowledge
- Teacher Comments : great
- Date : 11-09-96
- Site found at : searchin' searchin'
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- "Black Gods of the Inner City"
-
-
-
-
- by Prince-A-Cuba
-
-
- Fall 1992 / Gnosis Magazine
- pp. 56-63.
-
-
-
- Minister Louis Farrakhan of the Nation of Islam is a figure as current as
- today's headlines, but the movement of which he is a nominal spokesman has a
- continuous history of over sixty years in this country. The Nation of Islam
- (NOI), as it is officially known, came to the attention of the general public
- in the 1960s as the "Black Muslims." (1) It is well-known for its doctrine
- that the White Man is a devil. but what is probably less well known is another
- part of its teaching - that the Black man is god.
-
- Outsiders have done little in-depth research to trace the NOI's doctrinal
- predecessors. The NOI itself has denied its connections with previous
- movements, specifically the Moorish Science Temple of Noble Drew Ali. Ali,
- who was born as Timothy Drew in North Carolina in 1886, taught, among other
- things, that Blacks are descended from the ancient Canaanites. Legend has it
- that he was the reincarnation of Muhammad, the Prophet of orthodox Islam.
- Eventually relocating to Chicago, Ali built an organization that numbered
- perhaps 30,000 adherents at its peak. (2)
-
- On March 15, 1929, Ali was arrested after factional violence resulted in the
- death of a rival, Sheik Claude Greene. Arrested and held in the county jail,
- Ali was eventually released on bail, but died July 20, 1929, under mysterious
- circumstances. (3)
-
- Master Fard Muhammad
-
- The story of the NOI itself starts with a man variously known as Wali Farrad,
- W.D. Fard, Wallace Fard Muhammad, and Farrad Muhammad, but who is best known
- as Msater Fard Muhammad. (4) According to his sucessor, Elijah Muhammad,
-
- He came alone. He began teaching us the knowledge of ourselves, of
- God and the devil, of the measurements of the earth, of other planets,
- and the civilizations of some of the planets other than the earth.
- He measured and weighed the earth and the water; [he gave] the
- history of the moon; the history of the two nations that dominated the
- earth. He gave the exact birth of the white race; the name of their
- God who made them and how; and the end of their time, the judgement,
- how it will begin and end. (5)
-
- According to the same source, Fard had said, "My name is Mahdi; I am God."
- And according to another source, Fard, when asked who he was by the Detroit
- police, responded: "I am the Supreme Ruler of the Universe." (6)
-
- Master Fard Muhammad is officially noted by the NOI as having arrived in
- Detroit on July 4, 1930, and departed on June 30, 1934. (There is an older
- tradition of an earlier arrival twenty years previous as well as attendance
- at the University of Southern California.) (7) In the interim, Fard
- established temples in several cities and created a hierarchical organization
- composed of a men's military training unit called the Fruit of Islam (FOI), a
- ministers' corps, and a women's auxiliary called the Muslim Girls Training and
- General Civilization Class (MGT-GCC). (8) This infrastructure was built upon
- Fard's ideological foundation known as the "Secret Ritual," which, arranged in
- a question-and-answer format, became better known as the "Lost-Found Muslim
- Lessons" or simply as "the lessons."
-
- Within these lessons were the basic elements of an ancient mystery school. It
- involved secrecy from outsiders; an esoteric ritual containing keys for
- recognition between fellow members; a cohesive world view; and a tradition that
- could be explained only to initiates. Central to these teachings were the
- knowledge of self and the Black man's godhood. (9) According to these
- teachings, the Black man was by nature divine, and in fact was the original
- man, ancestor of the human race (antedating Louis and Mary Leakey's discoveries
- of early human remains in Africa by nearly thirty years.)
-
- White people, on the other hand, were produced out of Black people by a
- scientist named Yacub approximately six thousand years ago. (10) Discovering
- a recessive gene in the Black man, Yacub used a system of eugenics on a
- group of sixty thousand people on an island and, after six hundred years, was
- able to create a biological mutation: the White man. Of course Yacub did not
- live to see his creation, but he left behind an infrastructure to propogate
- his system, as well as the ideological basis for White supremacy. Bleached
- of the essence of humanity, Whites were "without soul." Nonetheless the race
- was destined to rule for an allotted period extending to 1914 A.D, though, as
- Fard's messenger Elijah Muhammad put it, "a few years of grace have been given
- to complete the resurrection of the Black man, and especially the so-called
- Negroes whom Allah has chosen for this change (of a new nation and world).
- They (so-called Negroes) have been made so completely mentally dead ... that
- extra time is allowed." (11) It was also taught that the supreme god amongst
- this mighty nation of Black gods commanded the name of Allah. (12) This title
- was claimed by Master Fard Muhammad himself.
-
- Fard's deification of man can hardly be considered an aberration in light of
- historical precedents. The ancient pharaohs of Egypt, the Aztec emperors, and
- the Peruvian Incas who traced their ancestry to the Sun God are well-known
- examples. More recently, there are claims of divinity for emperors Hirohito
- and Haile Selassie, the Dalai Lama, and Kushok Bakula. (13) And even these
- should hardly turn any heads in the light of the tradition of Jesus of Nazareth
- as God incarnate. The Hindu avatar tradition would also be right at home in
- such company.
-
- The teaching of the divinity of the Black man specifically (a doctrine known as
- "incarnation") is said to go back to ancient Egyptian mystery schools; in fact
- Khem (and its variants Cham, Ham), an ancient name of Egypt, means "land of the
- Blacks." Nor did the doctrine of incarnation start with Master Fard Muhammad
- and the NOI; according to Fard's messenger and succesor, Elijah Muhammad, the
- knowledge of man as god had been long known but "was kept a secret from the
- public." (14)
-
- "The Lost-Found People of Islam"
-
- Prior to Fard's appearance in 1930, Noble Drew Ali's Moorish Science Temples
- of America were in decline. After the loss of its founder in 1929, the movement
- had fallen into three separate schisms. Sheik John Givens El claimed that
- Noble Drew Ali had become reincarnated into him, Givens El, on August 7, 1929.
- in Chicago. This was publicly announced in Chicago's Pythian Hall on August
- 19 of that year. (15)
-
- But, according to scholar Ravanna Bey, W.D. Fard, known at the time as Abdul
- Wali Farrad Muhammad, and two other Moorish Scientists, Mealy El and Charles
- Kirkman Bey, contested the authority of Givens El. The latter two went on to
- establish their own independent Moorish Science Temples, while Fard converted
- a Detroit Moorish Science Temple and renamed it the Temple of the Lost-Found
- People of Islam (a story that has been hotly contested by NOI leadership). (16)
- A wartime memo claimed W.D. Fard was one Sheik Davis El from Kansas. (17)
- According to yet another source, Fard had declared himself the reincarnation
- of Noble Drew Ali. (18) With so many stories in circulation, confusion has
- been the norm.
-
- On November 21, 1932, Robert Karriem, a member of Fard's Detroit temple, was
- arrested for the murder of J.J. Smith, another temple member. The police
- arrested thirty seven members in what they characterized as a case of "human
- sacrifice" with religious overtones. They labeled the incident as the "Voodoo
- Murder," and the media followed suit. (19) The organization was referred to as
- the "Voodoo Cult," and Fard as "Chief of the Voodoos" by the detractors.
- Karriem, also known as Robert Harris, was found insane and ordered to be
- confined to the State Insane Asylum at Ionia, Michigan, on December 6, 1932.
-
- Meanwhile Detroit was being turned upside down in pursuit of Fard, who was
- proving to be elusive. After seven months, the police finally arrested him at
- Detroit's Hotel Fraymore on May 25, 1933. Held overnight for "investigation,"
- he was photographed and fingerprinted. On the following day he was ordered out
- of the city. Traveling to Chicago, he was again arrested. According to Elijah
- Muhammad, Fard "came to Chicago in the same year [1933] and was arrested almost
- immediately on his arrival and placed behind prison bars." (20) According to
- FBI sources, Fard was thought to have been arrested in Chicago on September 26,
- 1933, without disposition, photo, or fingerprints taken, for "disorderly
- conduct," a police euphemism for the harassment of undesirables. This is the
- last official record of Fard. Unsubstantiated rumors lay his disappearance at
- the door of the Chicago police department; but according to NOI tradition, Fard
- continued to visit Detroit surreptitiously into 1934.
-
- Fard The Man
-
- Who was Fard? Official NOI teachings state that he was born in Mecca, Arabia,
- February 26, 1877. The offspring of a Black father and a White mother, he was
- "able to go among both black and white without being discovered or recognized."
- (21) His mission was to teach freedom, justice, and equality to the members of
- the "lost tribe of Shabazz in the wilderness of North America." He had
- recieved the finest education in preparation for his mission; "he could speak
- 16 languages and write 10 of them. He could recite the histories of the world
- as far back as 150,000 years and knew the beginning and end of all things."(22)
-
- However, different sources contribute their conflicting versions of the man.
-
- Fard was also described as a "Palestinian Arab who had participated in various
- racial agitations in India, South Africa, and London before moving on to
- Detroit." He was also thought to be the son of an African Jamaican mother and
- a Syrian Muslim father. (23) Another report claimed that he was born of a
- Maori mother and a British sailor father in New Zealand. (24) Still another
- states that he was a Turkish-born agent for Hitler. (25) A recent account
- somewhat incoherently describes Fard as a "Jewish Nazi Communist," and says he
- was an agent of the CIA in 1930 (seventeen years before that agency came into
- existence). (26) One more recent writer has constructed the tenuous
- hypothesis that Fard came to Sufi mysticism by way of Theosophy. (27) There is
- even an account (complete with transcript) of a supposed ecncounter between
- Fard and Albert Einstien at a Detroit radio station in 1932.
-
- While the oral histories of Moorish Science adherents claim Fard as one of
- their own gone astrary, NOI initiates say that Fard, arriving in the
- "wilderness of North America" as early as 1910, taught Noble Drew Ali, Father
- Divine, Daddy Grace and Sufi Abdul-Hamid (28) the concept of Black godhood,
- though all of these later went on their own way. There is also a tradition
- that in Egypt Fard taught Duse Muhammad Ali, the mentor of Marcus Garvey
- (founder of the Universal Negro Improvement Association), as well as Garvey
- himself, whom he met in London.
-
- Fard was described as having an "oriental cast of countenance," (29) a
- description which a 1933 police photo seems to bear out. Police sources
- describe him as five feet six inches in height and weighing 133 pounds. His
- eye color is given as "maroon," his hair as black, and his complexion is
- described as "dark" or "swarthy." One entry described him as looking like a
- "dark complected Mexican." Only two photographs remain from Fard's three and
- a half years in Detroit: the police photo and a "glamourized" (i.e. touched-up)
- portrait of a sort popular in the late 1920s, taken at a forty-five-degree
- angle by a professional photographer. The latter became the official portrait
- of Fard, and was later reproduced in a painted portrait at the Muhammad family
- mansion in Chicago.
-
- The Departure of Fard
-
- Other accounts circulated after Fard's disappearance. According to Elijah
- Muhammad, Fard was "ordered out of the country" and caught a flight to Mecca.
- (30) It was also reported that he sailed to Austrailia and New Zealand, and
- that he was last seen "aboard a ship bound for Europe." (31) A suspect source
- claimed that Fard was interviewed in Germany but denied ever being in the
- United States. (32) A recent report in an orthodox Muslim newspaper claimed
- that Fard is alive and living in California and is now himself an orthodox
- Muslim. (33)
-
- In addition, there were rumors to the effect that Fard "met with foul play at
- the hands of either the Detroit police or some of his dissident followers," or
- that he was the victim of "human sacrifice" himself, thereby accounting for
- both his disappearance and his title of "Saviour." (34) Another
- unsubstantiated story said that, afflicted with an incurable illness, he died
- and was buried under another name, and "no man knows of his grave to this day."
-
- Rumors aside, there has been no reliable report of his death. The FBI, which
- initiated an investigation of Fard in 1942 that was to last more than thirty
- years, could not substantiate or verify his name at birth, birth date, place
- of birth, port of entry, exit, or present whereabouts, despite exhaustive
- inquiries. There are even indications that bodies were exhumed in the search
- for Fard.
-
- The Messenger of Allah
-
- It was Elijah Muhammad who was almost single-handedly responsible for the
- deification of Fard as "Allah." (35) Elijah Muhammad was born Paul Robert
- Poole in 1897 on a tenant farm in Sandersville, Georgia, the seventh of
- twelve children; he was given the name Elijah by his grandfather. Later on,
- Fard would give him the name Muhammad. (36) Elijah married the former Clara
- Evans and migrated to Detroit in 1923. Working at a variety of jobs until the
- Depression hit in 1929, he went on relief until 1931. It was in that year that
- he first met Fard, but says that "it was not until 1933 that he [Fard] began
- revealing his true self to us." (37)
-
- After Fard's disappearance, the struggle for succesion commenced. Elijah's own
- brother fell in the bloody internecine warfare that developed. (38) Rivals in
- the Detroit temple made necessary Elijah's hegira to Chicago, which was
- destined to become the headquarters and power base; but from 1935 to 1942, he
- was on the run. In 1942 he was arrested in Washington, D.C., by the FBI on
- charges of sedition. At roughly the same time, more than eighty members of the
- Chicago temple were taken in under the same charge by FBI agents working with
- local police. One of the arrested temple members said the officers "tore the
- place apart trying to find weapons hidden, since they believed we were
- connected with the Japanese." (39)
-
- The sedition charge was based on the temple's anti-draft stance and was applied
- for blatantly political reasons. The arrest of Elijah and his followers, and
- their subsequent incarceration until the end of the war, greatly enhanced their
- status as martyrs for the cause.
-
- Like other leaders jailed for their activities, Elijah brought forth innovations
- for his movement when he was released. Prior to his imprisonment, the movement
- was based entirely on its theological teachings and traditions. In 1946 it
- numbered in the hundreds, just possibly the thousands. But that was to change.
-
- Upon his release, Elijah stated, "We have to show the people something - we
- cannot progress by talk." And so, as his son Wallace later explained, Elijah
- "changed from preaching his mysterious doctrine to doing something practical.
- He said, 'We have to have businesses.' So he began to promote the opening of
- businesses. He said, 'You have to produce jobs for yourself'." (40)
-
- Quietly growing through the 1940s and '50s, the NOI came to enjoy phenomenal
- growth in the 1960s owing to media exposure and the charismatic gifts of its
- national spokesman, Malcolm X. As Elijah's chief minister, Malcolm was known
- in Black inner cities for his dynamic presence and speaking ability. He gained
- national exposure through Mike Wallace's 1959 television documentary, "The
- Hate that Hate Produced." The program shocked Middle America, while at the
- same time grim-faced FOI members met with admiration from inner-city audiences.
-
- Elijah Muhammad, Malcolm X, and the NOI had arrived on prime time. Recruitment
- skyrocketed.
-
- Born Malcolm Little in Omaha, Nebraska, in 1925, Malcolm X had been introduced
- to Elijah Muhammad through family members while in prison in Massachusetts. In
- the early 1950s he converted and took his "X." (41) Upon his release he joined
- the organization in Detroit and subsequently rose to a position of leadership,
- eventually moving to New York City, where he was assigned Temple #7. But in
- 1965 factional rivalry and FBI activities reaped their harvest: Malcolm X was
- assassinated.
-
- After his death Malcolm X became the martyr of the Black nationalist movement.
- But for the next ten years, the various factions were just treading water, and
- no one made any waves until the death of Elijah Muhammad in 1975.
-
- Allah Comes To Harlem
-
- In the meantime, however, the doctrine of Black incarnation had not died, and
- while W.D. Fard was still invoked in prayer in the temples of the NOI, another
- cycle in the series of resurrections and reincarnations came about. The former
- FOI Clarence 13X became the founder of the "Five Percenters" in New York City
- around 1964.
-
- Born Clarence Edward Smith in Danville, Virginia, in 1928, while still in his
- teens he came with his family to New York City. Married and the father of
- several children, he served with the U.S. Army during the Korean Conflict.
- Honorably discharged in 1954, he remained a reservist until 1960, at which time
- he joined the NOI. He remained in the NOI until he was expelled by Malcolm X
- under orders from the Chicago headquarters in 1963.
-
- The leading rumor of the cause of Clarence's expulsion was his admitted love
- for playing craps. Dice playing, it was claimed, was a way of demonstrating
- the probabilities inherent in the nature of the universe. By contrast to
- Einstien's famous dictum, "God doesn't play dice," the former Clarence 13X
- Smith, who took on the attribute (or name) Allah, did claim, "I am going to
- shoot dice until I die." (42) And he did.
-
- "Allah," as he became known, took Fard's "Lost-Found Muslim Lessons" out of the
- temple and put them into the hands of the youth in the streets. Fard's
- initiation ritual related a mathematical formula for the human society, which
- was broken down into percentages. The Five Percent were those who taught
- righteousness, freedom, justice, and equality to all the human family. They
- taught that the god of righteousness was not a spirit or a spook, but the Black
- man of Asia. (Asia was viewed as the primary continent, all the others as
- subcontinents; continental drift was a facet of this teaching.)
-
- The Eighty-Five Percent, the masses, believed in a "Mystery God" and worshipped
- "that which did not exist." they believed in a spirit deity rather than a
- material man as god. They functioned on a "mentally dead" (i.e. unconscious)
- level and were easy to lead in the wrong direction but hard to lead in the
- right.
-
- The Ten Percent were the bloodsuckers of the poor who taught the Eighty-Five
- Percent that a Mystery God existed. They kept the masses asleep with myths
- and lies, catering to their superstitious nature and living in luxury from the
- earnings of the poor.
-
- The Five Percent were destined to be poor righteous teachers and to struggle
- successfully against the Ten Percent. Their job was to lead the Eighty-Five
- Percent to freedom, justice, and equality. At first a loose confederation of
- the lumpen proletariat, Allah's followers numbered in the hundreds, but that
- soon changed.
-
- The Rise of the Five Percent
-
- Allah attracted the attention of both the police and the politicians - a lethal
- combination. Mayor Lindsay's administration in New York City saw in him a
- means of keeping the Harlem streets cool through the long, hot summers of the
- riot-strewn Sixties. So Allah was put on the city payroll. Meanwhile the
- New York City Police Department's Bureau of Special Services (BOSS), who kept
- their eyes on radicals and dissidents, put him at the top of their list of
- "Black Militants." (43)
-
- For his part Allah wanted something for his youngsters. In the short time he
- was associated with the mayor's office, he was able to open an academy with
- city funds. He expanded his recruitment of youth with picnic outings and
- airplane rides. The youth in turn sensed his love for them, and it is no
- wonder that in the contempary Five Percent he is referred to as "The Father."
-
- Allah was assassinated Friday the 13th of June, 1969 by "three male negroes."
- His Death was reported on the front of the New York Times. (44) His murder
- remains unsolved. It has been rumored within the FOI circles that his death
- was the result of his "taking the lessons out of the temple." There is
- evidence, however, that BOSS instigated the assassination to create a war
- between the NOI and the Five Percent. (45) With Allah's martyrdom, legends
- again began to proliferate, and "The Father, Allah" joined the pantheon of the
- Black gods of the inner city along with Nobel Drew Ali and W.D. Fard.
-
- But Allah's story doesn't end there. Like Jesus, he taught "You are gods,"
- (John 10:34), testifying to the inherent divinity of man; nonetheless his
- followers elevated him above themselves. His biographies became tinged with
- myth, and a supernatural element was added to his teaching; the "Father" has
- been magnified in his absence, and he has become a cult personality. His
- photos adorn walls where previous generations had kept a picture of a blond-
- haired, blue eyed Jesus.
-
- A New Era
-
- With the death of Elijah Muhammad in 1975, a new power struggle ensued in the
- house that Fard built. Wallace Delaney Muhammad, son of Elijah, was born in
- Detroit in 1933. He recieved his elementary and high-school education at the
- NOI's University of Islam in Chicago, and spent four more years studying Islam
- and Arabic at orthodox Muslim schools. He was long regarded as the logical
- successor to his father. Born and groomed for the part, he was introduced by
- Malcolm X as "the seventh son of our dear beloved leader and Teacher who is
- following in the footsteps of his father." (46)
-
- But not everything was to run so smoothly or so simply. Wallace D. Muhammad
- had in fact been expelled by his father for his refusal to recognize the
- divinity of Master Fard Muhammad. In addition, Minister Louis Farrakhan, the
- national spokesman for the organization, was waiting in the wings. Farrakhan,
- while probably more popular among hard-core militants, failed to muster the
- votes required from the family dominated inner circle in Chicago. So, despite
- Wallace's departures from NOI orthodoxy, nepotism prevailed.
-
- Wallace was careful, however. He did not challenge the sanctity of his
- namesake's coattails, to which he owed his own legitimacy. A year after his
- accension to power, Wallace claimed ni speeches to believers that he was in
- communication with the founder, saying, "Master Fard Muhammad is not dead,
- brothers and sisters, he is physically alive and I talk with him whenever I get
- ready. I don't talk to him in any spooky way, I go to the telephone and dial
- his number." (47)
-
- Within a few years, though, Wallace was moving in the direction of orthodox
- Islam. Taking the organization through a number of name changes, he changed
- his own name to Warith (meaning "heir" in Arabic). Ultimately he sold off the
- businesses that had been accumulated over the previous thirty years and joined
- the fold of orthodox Islam.
-
- The Farrakhan Facet
-
- For a while after Elijah Muhammad's death, Louis Farrakhan toed the line.
- Approximately three years later, however, the old-line NOI traditionalists
- regrouped. With a certain amount of encouragement from them, Farrakhan left
- the employ of Warith.
-
- Known in an earlier period as Minister Louis X of Boston's Temple No. 11,
- Farrakhan had joined the NOI in the mid-1950s a former calypso singer, he
- became a speaker of some note. He recieved the name Farrakhan from Elijah
- Muhammad, but neither he nor anyone else seems to know just what it means.
-
- Groomed in the shadow of Malcolm X, and sometimes hosting him in his visits to
- Boston, Farrakhan was later to fiercely denounce him in the pages of Muhammad
- Speaks, the paper that, ironically, Malcolm himself had started in New York in
- 1960:
-
- Only those who wish to be led to hell, or to their doom, will follow
- Malcolm. The die is set and Malcolm shall not escape, especially after
- such foolish talk about his benefactor in trying to rob him of the
- divine glory which Allah has bestowed upon him. Such a man as Malcolm
- is worthy of death. (48)
-
- Farrakhan later admitted his deviation from the NOI path in following Wallace.
- Others had refused to recognize the legitimacy of Wallace's succesion and had
- left earlier. In time the NOI traditionalists regrouped around Farrakhan.
- One, the former Bernard Cushmeer (now Jabril Muhammad), joined up claimed that
- Elijah was not really dead. He wrote a book to prove it. Farrakhan, after
- some hesitation, concurred; in September 1985 he claimed to have had a vision
- in which he was taken up to the Mothership and saw Elijah. (49)
-
- But there was one certainty in the air: that a era had passed and a new cycle
- had been initiated in the history of the unique form of Islam practiced in the
- wilderness of North America, complete with its own prophets, gods, saviors, and
- messengers.
-
- Another Cycle
-
- After centuries of slavery, lynchings, discriminations, miseducation, police
- brutality, and poverty, it was not difficult for semiliterate Black migrants
- in the Depression era to believe that the White man was a devil. What was
- difficult, after generations of being taught in schools, textbooks, and the
- media that Black people were inferior and had no history of achievement before
- enslavement, was for them to see the divine nature in themselves. It was not
- for Black people to rehabilitate their view of Whites, but to raise their own
- self-esteem. The doctrine of Black godhood responds to this need, and the
- Black gods of the inner city are symptomatic ot this effort.
-
- In recent years the Five Percent has grown in numbers, despite the departure of
- Allah. The doctrine of Black godhood is enjoying a renewal among inner-city
- youth of the 1990s. They are attracted by its esoteric tradition, its Black
- identity, and the symbolism of the Five Percent's Universal Flag. Its
- influence in the rap music field is evidenced by the artists who identify
- themselves with it in their lyrics: Big Daddy Kane (King Asiatic God Allah),
- Poor Righteous Teachers, King Sun, Rakim, Brand Nubian, Movement Ex, and Lakim
- Shabazz (who has done a video in Egypt with pyramids in the background). (50)
- What can you possibly think when you watch MTV and hear an attractive young
- Black woman, "cultured-down" (dressed in long skirts with here hair covered),
- announce: "Peace, this is the goddess Isis"? There's definitely a connection
- among godhood, Blackness, and Egypt.
-
- However you may view the above, the next time you hear a twenty-year-old
- youngster like Lakim Shabazz on MTV rapping about "knowledge, wisdom, and
- understanding," or saying "The original man is the Asiatic Black man," or "
- I'm God, my number is seven," you will recognize that he is reciting portions
- of a once-secret ritual that is known to be more that sixty years old and that
- traces itself back to ancient Egypt. With that knowledge, you can be assured
- that the Black gods and goddesses of the inner cities are alive and well.
-
- [ Prince-A-Cuba, born in Havana in 1962, can be reached as W. Don Fajardo
- c/o T.U.T., P.O. Box 3243, East Orange, NJ 07017. His forthcoming book is
- entitled Our Mecca is Harlem: Clarence 13X (Allah) and the Five Percent. ]
-
- ______________________________________________________________________________
- Footnotes
-
- 1. The term was coined in 1956 by C. Eric Lincoln. Cf. his Black Muslims in
- America (Boston: Beacon Press, 1961, 1973),p. xii.
-
- 2. Lincoln, pp. 53, 57.
-
- 3. E.U. Essien-Udom, Black Nationalism: A Search for Idendity (Chicago:
- University of Chicago Press, 1962, 1971), p. 35.
-
- 4. E.D. Beynon, "The Voodoo Cult among Negro Migrants in Detroit," in American
- Journal of Sociology 43 (May 1938), Republished as Master Fard Muhammad:
- Detroit History, Prince-A-Cuba. ed. (Newport News, Va.: UB & USCS, 1990).
- Page references are to the latter.
-
- 5. Elijah Muhammad, Message to the Blackman in America (Newport News,: UB &
- USCS, 1965), pp. 16-17.
-
- 6. Beynon, p. 6.
-
- 7. Ibid., p.5; cf. Pittsburgh Courier, July 20, 1957; and interview with
- Elijah Muhammad by R.Simmons of the California Eagle, July 28, 1963.
-
- 8. Temples were founded in Detroit, Chicago, Milwaukee, Cleveland, and
- Washington, D.C. The Detroit temple had a membership of 8000, according to
- NOI officials, and 5000, according to the Detroit police. Cf. Beymon, p. 7.
-
- 9. The expressions "knowledge of self" and "know thyself" are found throughout
- the NOI teachings. Cf. George G.M. James, Stolen Lagacy (Newport News, Va.:
- UB &USCS, 1954), pp. 3, 88, 92 and Anonymous, Egyptian Mysteries: An Account
- of an Initiation (York Beach, Me.: Samueal Weiser, 1991), p. 43.
-
- 10. Muhammad, Message, pp. 110-21.
-
- 11. Elijah Muhammad, Our Savior Has Arrived (Newport News, Va.: UB & USCS,
- 1974), p. 13.
-
- 12. Lincoln, p. 75.
-
- 13. India's ambassador to Mongolia, conside
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