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Malcolm
X
This handout should give an overview on Malcolm X's life and doctrines. It
is based on Malcolm's Autobiography ("The Autobiography of Malcolm X" Malcolm X,
Alex Haley) and on some information gathered from the Internet.
The authors: Alex Haley who assisted to write the book is a black
journalist and novelist. The book was written with the agreement of Elijah
Muhammad, whose organisation also got the money earned by this book (as wished
by Malcolm X). The book was first published in 1965, after Malcolm's
death.
His Life: Malcolm Little was born on 19th May
1925 in an hospital in Omaha. Soon after his birth little Malcolm went with
his family to the village of Lansing, Michigan. His father - Reverend
Earl Little - was a Baptist preacher and a member of one of the early Negro
organisisations, the U.N.I.A. (Universal Negro Improvement Association)
founded by Marcus Aurelius Garvey. Malcolm's mother - Louise Little - was born
in Grenada, Caribbean Sea, and was a coloured woman, thus Malcolm did not have a
shiny black skin, but a reddish brown skin. Malcolm was the
7th child of his father, he had got two half sisters, Ella and Mary,
and one half brother, Earl, and his full brothers and sisters Wilfred, Hilda,
Philbert (who were all older than him) and Reginald, Yvonne, Wesley and Robert
(who all were born after him).
His father often was disriminated against by members of the Ku
Klux Klan and was "found dead" when Malcolm was only six. After this, his
mother and his oldest brother Wilfred tried to earn the family´s living,
but didn´t suceed, especially in the time of the great depression (the
years after 1929/1930).
Around this time Malcolm's mother started going mad and the state´s
welfare agents began to visit the Littles. Finally, Malcolm was sent to another
black family, and later to the Swelins a white living family in Mason, six miles
from Lansing. At the age of fifteen Malcolm, who never finished any
school, was visited by his half-sister Ella and not long after he moved to
Roxbury, the black district of Boston, to stay with her.
In Boston Malcolm earned his living on dirty jobs like shoe shining. Here
he also met his best friends for the following years, named Shorty. Soon Malcolm
dropped into the criminal scene. After a year and a half he moved to Harlem,
New York. Malcolm here gor his money from small robberies and from working
for pimps.
At the age of 21, in the year 1946 Malcolm and Shorty were
caught by the police after commiting a robbery. Both of them were
sentenced to ten years in prison.
Malcolm was jailed in Charlestown State Prison, a dull building from 1805.
While he was in there, his brothers and sisters, especially Philbert and
Reginald discovered the world of Islam, preached by Elijah
Muhammad. They brought their new knowledge to Malcolm, who, at first,
strongly disagreed with the new religion, but after a time converted. In
prison he had lots of time, so he read some of the holy writtings and also wrote
every day a letter to Mr. Muhammad. After Malcolm was paroled in 1952, he
started to preach in the buildings of Muhammad's Islamic church, and soon
became famous for his open-minded, direct speeches which often were
misunderstood as offense against the whites. Malcolm helped the Black Muslim
Movement to establish in New York, Los Angeles and Detroit and soon was seen
as a threat by the white population. Under the influence of Elijah Muhammad he
also changed his surname from Little to "X". In 1958 Malcolm met and soon
married another member of the Black Muslim Movement, Betty X. Even after the
dismiss of his brother Reginald he stayed with the teachings of
Muhammad.
After the 1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy, Muhammad ordered
all brothers and sisters of the movement not to give any comments, but Malcolm X
unwillingly was quoted in a newspaper the next day. Muhammad suspended him for
90 days.
Malcolm X decided, under the influence of Cassius Clay alias Muhammed
Ali, to leave the Black Muslim Movement and to found his own protest group,
the Organisation of Afro-American Unity.
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