
Last Saturday marks the 50th anniversary of the death of one
of my heroes, known to most of us as Malcolm X - the black, assassinated civil
rights leader.
He was a complex man – so complex that even to call him
Malcolm X is to present only a partial picture of him. In his 40 years he was
Malcolm Little, the Harlem street hustler; then he was Malcolm X, the black
civil rights spokesman for the Nation of Islam. And when he died he was El Hajj
Malik El Shabazz, the convert to Sunni Islam.
He was admirable in that even after he came to public
prominence, he maintained his tendency to discard religious or political
identities when newly acquired knowledge showed previously voiced beliefs to be
ill-founded. It leaves us to wonder what other changes his curious mind might
have undergone had he lived a longer life.
In 1992, the eponymous Spike Lee film introduced his story
to newer generations. His well-known conversion in prison and his repudiation
of his Western surname is in part responsible for the fact that Islam is the
fastest growing religion among blacks in the UK.
Many black converts go on to practice Islam in a peaceful
way but, others – as evidenced most dramatically in the cases of Germaine
Lindsay, Richard Reid, Michael Adebowale, Michael Adeboloja and Brusthorn
Ziamani – have other ideas.
The Islamist element of Malcolm X’s legacy mystifies many.
Why, fifty years on, do so many disgruntled black people still opt for the
dominant religion of the Middle East and North Africa? Why Islam rather than
Buddhism or Hinduism? If a more self-reflecting religious identity is the aim,
why not a faith that offers a black messiah – such as Rastafarianism?
In his popular autobiography, Malcolm X puts the Christian
faith of most blacks in the US down to the "white, Christian slave master
injecting his religion into this Negro." Later he states that
"America needs to understand Islam because this is the one religion that
erases from its society the race problem."
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Thomas Hagan struggles with police after assassinating Malcolm X |
Given his acute sense of historical grievance, it is fair
to assume that prior to his conversion to Sunni Islam, Malcolm X’s deprived
upbringing and the parochial Western education available to most of us, would
have made him unaware of historical facts such as the "Zanj" slave
rebellion as far back as the 9th century – in Basra, in what is now modern day
Iraq.
He would not have had access to the work of the 13th century
writer, Ibn Battuta, and learned of the contempt in which even Islamic scholars
held the black people of Africa, so apparent in their writings as they reported
on the Islamic raiders venturing south as they had for centuries, in quest of
young black women to rape and press into unpaid service as concubines and
well-built black men to castrate and press into unpaid service as eunuch guards
for their harems.
He would not have had the chance to learn that the idea of
trading black slaves had in all likelihood been introduced to 16th century
Europeans by Muslim slavers, who by then had a head start of almost a millennia
in the ungodly practice.
If by the 1960s Malcolm X had been vexed at the glacial pace
of improving race relations in the US, you wonder what he would have made of
the fact that, when he set foot on Saudi Arabian soil for his Islamic holy
pilgrimage in 1964, his Wahhabi hosts had only abolished slavery a mere couple
of years earlier.
Given his lifelong tendency towards intellectual
self-refinement, it is fair to assume that Malcolm X might have made further
alterations to his world view had he lived long enough to learn of these facts.
Fifty years on, a justice system that respects the dignity
of all citizens will provide the best means to safeguard blacks from the anger
that causes alienation and leads to what is now called Islamic radicalisation.
But as we work towards this improved system, it would benefit blacks in
temporary crisis to have a fuller and more accurate narrative in mind when
faced with superficially plausible arguments by those seeking to enlist their
disenchantment to their dubious causes.
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