Khalid Abdul Muhammad
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Khallid Abdul Muhammad (born Harold Moore Jr.; January 12, 1948–February 17, 2001) was a leading figure in the Black Nationalist movement throughout the 1990s and early 2000s. Muhammad was known prominently as the National Assistant to Min. Louis Farrakhan of the Nation of Islam (NOI) until 1993 and later served as the National Chairman of the New Black Panther Party until his death in 2001.
Muhammad often courted controversy with speeches that were anti-white, antisemitic and homophobic.
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[edit] Early life
He was raised by his Aunt Carrie Moore Vann in Houston, Texas, where he attended Bruce Elementary School, E.O. Smith Junior High School and all Black Phyllis Wheatley High School. After graduating high school, he went to Dillard University in Louisiana to pursue a degree in theological studies. At this time he ministered at Sloan Memorial Methodist Church.
[edit] Nation of Islam
Muhammad joined the Nation of Islam, which was then under the leadership of Elijah Muhammad, while attending Dillard in 1970. He changed his name to Harold Smith, became Minister Louis Farrakhan's protégé, and was active as a recruiter within the organization where his hatred of Whites and Jews came to the fore.In 1978 Muhammad was appointed Western Regional Minister of the Nation of Islam and leader of Mosque #27. In 1983, Minister Farrakhan named him Khalid after the Islamic general Khalid ibn al-Walid, a follower of Muhammad, calling him "the Sword of Allah".
By 1985, Muhammad had become one of Louis Farrakhan's most trusted advisors in the Nation of Islam. He accompanied Farrakhan on fund-raising trips to Libya, where he became well acquainted with leader Muammar al-Gaddafi. Muhammad's dedication to Farrakhan and to the message of the NOI eventually secured him the title of national spokesman and he was named one of Louis Farrakhan's friends in 1981. He served at Nation of Islam mosques in New York and Atlanta throughout the decade, and in 1991 he became Farrakhan's personal assistant.
Muhammad was notably featured by the hip-hop group Public Enemy on the intro to its 1988 track “Night of the Living Baseheads".
Muhammad's new position involved public speaking engagements, known for his inflammatory anti-white, antisemitic and anti-homosexual speeches along with notions of black self-empowerment and black separation. Muhammad's condemnation of whites and Jews extended to conservative blacks, whom he criticised for what he perceived as their self-subjugation:
“ | When white folks can't defeat you they'll always find some Negro, some boot-licking, butt-licking, bamboozled, half-baked, half-fried, sissified, punkified, pasteurized, homogenized Nigger that they can trot out in front of you.[1] | ” |
In 1993, following a speech at Kean College in Union Township, Union County, New Jersey, in which he referred to Jews as "bloodsuckers"; labeled the Pope a "no-good cracker"; and advocated the murder of any and all white South Africans who would not leave the nation subsequent to a warning period of 24 hours, the United States Senate voted 97-0 to censure Muhammad, and the United States House of Representatives in a special session passed a House Resolution. When he was also reprimanded by the NOI he subsequently left the organization. There is some question as to whether he was removed from the organization by Louis Farrakhan or if his departure was, in fact, voluntary. In 1994, Muhammad appeared on The Phil Donahue Show in an appearance that featured Muhammad in heated arguments with Jewish audience members amid an explanation of his racist remarks.
Muhammad was shot by James Bess, a former NOI member, after he spoke at the University of California at Riverside on May 29, 1994. Muhammad believed the shooting was a part of a conspiracy against him.
[edit] New Black Panther Party
After being stripped of his position as NOI spokesman, Muhammad became the national chairman of the New Black Panther Party. On May 21, 1997, he delivered a heated speech at San Francisco State University in which he criticised Jews, whites, Catholics and homosexuals and said they should be killed. He endorsed a Holocaust denial position, asserted Jewish control over U.S. policy, and alleged Jewish involvement in various conspiracies and said Jews should be killed.[2]
In 1998 Muhammad organized the Million Youth March in New York City. The march was controversial from its inception as New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani denied organizers a permit, calling it a "hate march". A court ruled that the event could go on, but scaled back its duration and size. At the conclusion of the rally just as Muhammad appeared on the stage to speak, the demonstration was buzzed by a low flying police helicopter which acted as a signal for more than 3,000 police in riot gear, including some mounted on horseback, to come in and disperse the crowd. In response, Muhammad exhorted the rally participants to attack the oncoming police and to attack and beat them with rails and to shoot them with their own guns. Dozens were arrested and 30 officers and five civilians were injured.[3] [4] Mayor Rudolph Giuliani said the march turned out to be precisely what he predicted, one "filled with hatred, horrible, grotesque, awful, vicious, anti-Semitic and other anti-white rhetoric, as well as exhortations to kill people, murder people and racially abuse everybody and anybody who was not black. The speeches given today should not occur anyplace in this country ever again."[5]
In subsequent activism, Muhammad convened a second march in 1999 that drew roughly 90 participants and no incidents with the police even though before hand he made threats that his speech would include all his beliefs including the assertion that all whites should be murdered.
In 2000, Muhammad's beliefs were introduced to a completely new demographic when it was revealed that one of the contestants on the American version of the Dutch television show Big Brother, William Collins (Hiram Ashantee), was a follower of his.
In 2001, Muhammad died suddenly of a brain aneurysm in Atlanta, Georgia, at the age of 52.
Muhammad is still remembered by some members of the New Black Panther Party and seen as the de facto best leader the movement ever had because of his belief that a race war should be ignited where whites and Jews could be killed. The organization is currently headed by Malik Zulu Shabazz. The majority of Black leaders consider him to have been a shameful figure whose racially inflammatory views have hindered black progress. Members of the original Black Panther Party have insisted that this party is illegitimate and have vociferously objected that there "is no new Black Panther Party."[6]
[edit] References
- ^ The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education, No. 3 (Spring, 1994), pp. 84-85
- ^ Adl Alerts Nation'S Academic Leadership About Virus Of Bigotry Being Spread By Khalid Abdul Muhammad
- ^ Million Youth March Ends in Clash
- ^ village voice > news > The Hunt for Khallid Abdul Muhammad by Peter Noel
- ^ Million Youth March Ends in Clash
- ^ "There is No New Black Panther Party: An Open Letter from the Dr. Huey P. Newton Foundation" [1]
[edit] See also
- New Black Panthers
- Nation of Islam
- Nation of Islam and antisemitism
- Black nationalism
- Black separatism
- Holocaust denial
- Genocide