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Elijah Muhammad |
Nation of Islam Leader, Elijah Muhammad had vision
This date remembers the
birth of Elijah Muhammad in 1897. He was the leader of the Black separatist
religious movement known as the Nation of Islam (sometimes called Black Muslims)
in the United States.
Elijah Poole (his original name) the son of sharecroppers and former slaves from
Sandersville, Georgia, moved to Detroit in 1923. There, around 1930, Elijah
Muhammad became assistant minister to the founder of the sect, Wallace D. Fard,
at Temple No. 1. When Fard disappeared in 1934 Muhammad succeeded him as head of
the movement, with the title "Minister of Islam." Because of dissension within
the Detroit
temple, he moved to Chicago where he established Temple No. 2. During World War
II he advised followers to avoid the draft, because of which he was charged with
violating the Selective Service Act and was jailed (1942-46).
Muhammad slowly built up the membership of the Black Muslims through assiduous
recruitment in the postwar decades. His program called for the establishment of
a separate nation for black Americans and the adoption of a religion based on
the worship of Allah and on the belief that blacks are his chosen people.
Muhammad became known especially for his flamboyant rhetoric directed at white
people, whom he called "blue-eyed devils." In his later years, however, he
moderated his anti-white tone and stressed self-help among Blacks rather than
confrontation between the races. Because of Muhammad's separatist views, his
most prominent disciple, Malcolm X, broke with the group.
Before his assassination in 1965, Malcolm X helped to lend an identity to the
group (once known as the American Muslim Mission and now part of the worldwide
orthodox Muslim community) that split from the Nation of Islam after Muhammad's
death on February 25, 1975 in Chicago. Another group, retaining both the name
and the founding principles of Elijah Muhammad's original Nation of Islam