YTread Logo
YTread Logo

Why Malcolm X Was Killed (1995) | Complete | Zak A. Kondo Conrad Tillard Khalid Muhammad

Jun 06, 2021
because the only ones who have benefited from that brutal murder have been our enemy who keeps us apart and we had an immense commemoration that made us feel that it is our responsibility to do everything possible to bring you all the information. the scholars, the learned people who have analyzed and who have researched this issue have written book articles that hopefully we will generate enough interest and enough concern that there will be a groundswell among our people to allow us to get to the root of this. find the answer in find the answer last year we put up a forum titled powers mountain kill this year the title is why did they kill

malcolm

.
why malcolm x was killed 1995 complete zak a kondo conrad tillard khalid muhammad
However, keep in mind that you can't separate the two questions from last year that would still be important here tonight, how was he? that and they

killed

and why that was going to kill and we hope that, from that wave of desire on their part that it be given to us, we will be able to demand that some type of tribunal be established to make an impartial evaluation and have a hearing objective or to carry out an unbiased and unbiased theory, we are not asking that the United States has to do this, that would be like asking Fox to defend the wolf against the chickens and when we know that they are both interested in breaking into the chicken coop we want that hearing if we can get that to happen in the black community so that we can resolve the differences the problems that we face and we are facing because of the death of brother mountain and we can move forward with our liberation struggle.
why malcolm x was killed 1995 complete zak a kondo conrad tillard khalid muhammad

More Interesting Facts About,

why malcolm x was killed 1995 complete zak a kondo conrad tillard khalid muhammad...

Thanks, Martin. I just want our speakers to briefly introduce their messages to you. We want to give you the opportunity to ask questions from the floor, and when you do, when we open the floor to present, we hope that your presentation will be informative to the point and targeted to specific people here on the platform. He said I'd like to go ahead and introduce our moderator for the evening, as they always say, the cliché doesn't really need an introduction and it doesn't. Mrs. Tiradores, who is the program director of the WBA. I would be our moderator for the evening and I'll turn the microphone over to you at this time.
why malcolm x was killed 1995 complete zak a kondo conrad tillard khalid muhammad
Thank you very much Brother Ferguson, let me first thank all of you in the audience who allowed us to come earlier. tonight and we are grateful that despite the distractions in this city, particularly the holiday weekend, you were able to set aside time to come here and listen to us, discuss what is indeed an extremely important topic for all of us, said Brother Herman. We are here today to commemorate, if we are honest, we are here to commemorate death. It is essentially the reason why we are here the 30th anniversary of the death of el-hajj Malik Shabazz Malcolm The past and many of us have been a little annoyed by having to come together around issues like this, on occasions like this because it seems to us that too often our leaders who were most important to us, not only nationally but internationally , they are removed from us at a very early point in their lives, so here, for two basic reasons, one, of course, the lack, the death, the passing of El-Hajj Malik Shabazz Malcolm to unravel the conspiracies they tried to understand what happened so that maybe we can clean the wounds and heal them and maybe move on and hopefully today our speakers will begin to begin that process if it hasn't already been done one of The things that bother me sometimes as these are said when looking at the history of our people, not only in this country, because one thing about the MEC brothers, nothing we did was provincial, nothing you will hear here, is not for me and certainly.
why malcolm x was killed 1995 complete zak a kondo conrad tillard khalid muhammad
Not because most of the panelists are in a provincial context, but one of the things that always saddens me is that when we look globally at the problems of African American people and African leadership. African people in general find that there are some disturbing historical parallels between what would happen at the mass level if you were the type of fratricidal violence in which we destroy each other at the grassroots level and, of course, all that means is that we complain. of what is happening to our people, but then there is always an explanation? We said well they don't know better they are not aware they are not educated they are not informed but again, we look among the supposedly most enlightened sector, the most relevant progressive ones, so what do you see if you look historically in our lifetime? the great African leaders who have been assassinated in the prime of their lives, whether we are talking about Malcolm empty, it's endless, we find some disturbing parallels that invariably, with very few exceptions, the killer's hands always turn out to be one of us and we have to deal with that reality and unfortunately it's terrible.
We, who claim to be about who was supposed to be the person who would have

killed

him, sir, I don't understand, it is something that baffles me and it is also a methodology that is also quite disconcerting before they eliminate these leaders, we hear from a lot people. asking them to be removed, then a supposed murder, a kind of psychosis, it's also Buffum hitting me after being murdered, there's denial and it's a bragging thing and then there's acceptance, faith, you know, eventually we reach a point . where even those who committed the murders begin to embrace those who have been murdered.
I don't understand that we should understand it. I don't understand. There is also a methodology of brutality both in the rhetoric and in terms of the physical destruction of these leaders. If you look at what happened to brother Walter in the environment, he was impressed by an African man who professed to be a Marxist, just like Walter Raleigh, the brother was cut in half. If you look at what happened to Ed Weiler Maharani and in Mozambique he was clumsily in 1967 his head was split by a bomb Maurice Bishop in 1983 when they are lying that brother and sisters like Jasmine crawled against the wall and shot him in the stomach when they found out that she was supposed to be pregnant again the same people who killed him later of course after bragging that they had done it we have the tapes of them calling on our radio station on October 25, 1983 bragging about how the revolution proletariat had just begun and how they had emerged victorious two days later they complained that they had nothing to do with it and of course we have made progress trying to free them from prison.
If we look at other examples of this metallic Muhammad and we look at other examples, we see the same thing. pattern of destruction and brutality against our own people, so I hope that today, as we look at the realities that we find ourselves in, we find ourselves here today, but a little bit the national situation that our people find themselves in, we are not just coming here because we had nothing else to do today, we don't just come here to see our result, it's 30 years since the mountain died, we are here to look for answers to go beyond this and one of the things we are doing is also observe the moment and the context in which we meet here today.
If you look at what is happening in this country, there is no doubt that fascism is on the rise and there is no doubt. but that those who are most victims of this new fascism are people of African descent, of course, others are people of color in general, in particular, women are across the racial divide, they are victims of urban fascism, but it is a manifestation particularly brutal against blacks. a war against black women when they talk about the young single mother it is a euphemism for black women for the so-called teenage mother it is a war against the young sister against the so-called welfare mother etc and I don't have to tell you what is happening with the images of the African man in the public leader Wesley O'Jays or the Tysons or the Fergusons or the strawberries of the world, whatever, and if you look at the administration and you look at the main figures that are under investigation, one after another SP Brown in the future is always our people who are our main point of focus in this new type of harassment and that is symptomatic of a larger problem than black people as a whole, I have never had a liver that I have never seen before.
What we see now in quite some time in history is that we are seeing the trend of harassment as black people as we are witnessing now and of course internationally it is no different, our situation is no different, so today, when we We gather, as our brother Ferguson warned me. Before we come here, and we should be brief in our presentations, I would ask to be the presenter to remember that Malcolm X not only analyzed the internal problems of the United States, but he analyzed the problem of feeding our African people here in a broader perspective .
In the global context, while he was here today, he analyzed what is happening in Africa and analyzed what is happening in our hemisphere and analyzed these new economic alliances of global alliances that are bringing together massive economic powers in alliance against other massive economic blocks. . What is strikingly clear is that Africans do not fit into these new alliances. There is no Africa in NAFTA. Africa has disappeared from the European Union equation. It doesn't matter. There is no Africa in the new Asian alliances. And when the Chinese make their great revolutionary and economic strikes there is no consideration for Africa but there is no rescue plan for Africa Africa that answers what is the continent how can I have millions of square miles of the richest real estate in the world unfortunately and Tragically it is home to some of the poorest people on the planet, that is the reality that we operate with today, so our mission here tonight, our hope is that the memory of Malcolm X and our reflection on what his contributions were, What was her life about when looked at in the context of trying to heal from what happened?
After all, if we look at what happened with Nabeela a few weeks ago, how can we say this is over? Brother Wilford was here. Malcolm's brother was speaking within days. He many things that he could not say publicly but you shared many things with us, it is over and until we are honest with ourselves we begin to receive each other. I don't think we'll be here next year. 30 probe 10 your 31st anniversary talks about building a coalition which is what we should be talking about instead of looking back at what happened because there are too many ghosts in our blood that we have to deal with, we shouldn't use the positive words.
We need to exercise them, so at this point I would like to begin our program today by asking our first speaker, Brother Tony Martin, to take the ten minutes to address the audience and some of you know in your 20s have written one One of the most important books, a lot of people have a hard time with it, but I think it's one of the most important books ever written. A book titled Race First. The title is a little misleading because you may have read a lot about a lot more than it might imply. in recent months about some problems he has been having with certain authorities in the halls of the academy in Boston, I will let him tell you that, please, welcome Professor Tony Martin or foreign person, thank you very much for the trio, Orion, many thanks to the members. of the Malcolm What I had to do was not talk about my community, but this kind of outline of half of the historical background of the harassment that our leaders have suffered over the years.
America, as everyone here knows, has been at war with black leaders for several hundred years, we of our leaders, who will be considered radicals by the powers that be, have borne the brunt of this profession according to polls, without Ultimately, however, all of our leaders, whatever the delusional situation, have fallen under government and harassment to the point where they have been seen to be effective in mobilizing people, those leaders who have been eliminated by the culture, have been the master list of circle dancing, the people themselves have been under the most pressure, but even individuals, even those we consider conventional, have been under pressure. being harassed, sometimes killed at the point where they have been seen as effective, someone has 1070 was publicly Washington was actually beaten with 90 remaining, most people forget that of course in our time we have Martin Luther king jr. perhaps the most acceptable of our leaders to the powers that be in society, but he even came, but beyond being harassed, being subject to temporary harassment in court when it seemed that King, despite his relative, wasrelatively, you know, a threatening posture, however, IP was seen to modernize.
Although most of our people agree successfully now, in Gabby's case, we have one of the first examples of this escalation of harassment against our leaders and, in many ways, it is not a bad idea to deal with Gabby in a Maca context , in my opinion, maybe. None of the leaders of our people in the Black Power era came closer to God in terms of their ideas and their rhetoric, but reading not very often is almost like reading garbage all over again, and of course this is not a coincidence, since I know that what I mean by police bellows in the city can have real solidity, but as we know, Malcolm grew up in a home that was very much a home of pious eyes, his father was head of Gabby's organization, the Universal Negro Improvement Association in Milwaukee, Omaha, Nebraska, in Lansing, Michigan and also in other towns and cities around Michigan.
We know that Malcolm's mother was also Gabby's UNIA secretary in all of these places. Some of this may explain some subconscious transmission of Gavi's ideas to Markham as he was growing up. There is a fascinating connection in the context of government harassment of our leaders. There is a fascinating connection between Malcolm and Gabby and that is in the figure of J. Edgar Hoover. Most of us in this room are familiar, of course, with the COINTELPRO campaign of oppression against the black movement in the 1960s spearheaded by the FBI and particularly by J. Edgar Hoover, who as head of the FBI for about half a century century it was Jay Kumar who sent them dirty and trained tricks that may have contributed to the deaths of people like Martin Luther King Malcolm Over the years, we know, for example, that the pointer flows through his FBI agents transferred black agents into a variety of black organizations as I said that had something to do with the assassination of our leaders, we know that Martin Luther King they bugged their hotel rooms and tips were the main incentives that could work, so alleging you know misconduct with other women etc., but the fascinating connection between 60s Cohen Turner and Malcolm on the one hand and Gabi is that the same J.
Edgar Hoover of the FBI who was planning these dirty tricks in the '60s was the same. someone who was doing the same thing against Marcus Garvey as early as 1919 for half a century, practically J. Edgar Hoover, more than any other individual, was involved in this incredible harassment of black leaders and what I want to do for the next five ministers left What I want to do is just go over some of the tactics used by government agencies by Devo and his agents in 1919, this is even before the FBI was put together in 1919, there was no FBI, but there was a precursor to the FBI, something which they called Office. of Investigations of the Department of Justice, was a precursor to the FBI, there was no fed in front of the Bureau of Investigations yet, so let me give you an idea of ​​the types of evidence that their agents perpetrated against God and you will see. obviously the connection between 1010 what happened in the 60's and what will happen again if we are not careful, they say that knowledge is power and my hope is that this knowledge makes us aware of the continuing and deep tradition of harassment of our leaders in the 60's.
I hope that perhaps some strategy can be devised at some point to address this important current issue in my book career. First I have a quote from J. Edgar Hoover. It dates back to 1919. This is three years after Marcus Garvey came to this country. in 1919 and Hoover says in this quote something like, I'm quoting from memory, but he says something like this, he said Marcus Garvey is a West Indian agitator in the middle, he said, he said Garvey is an exceptional author, he goes on to say something That's what he says, unfortunately Garvey has not yet committed any federal crime, you know, which will give us a pretext to act against them and deport him, so here you have someone who in 1919 was already an important official supposedly and supported Lord or to this. country, but hopes that Marcus Garvey will commit a crime that will give him an excuse to act against Garvey and deport him over the tactics used against Garfield, which were the following: the basic issue of surveillance.
Garba came to this country in 1916 and within a year. in 1917, gobby had a large mass gathering here in holland after the east side louis rats in the summer of 1917, the white population and eastern louis illinois surrounded the black community and the meyer of saturn became more of 100 black men, women and children try to escape the flames that will cut them to pieces, they will be shot and so on. It was one of the largest massacres of black people in the era of lynching in this country. Gabby had a large mass meeting here in New York to protest and write, something that interests me in the story that Gabby wrote about At this meeting, she says that there was a very large presence in the audience of men from the Secret Service, this was within the Gabby's year and this is symptomatic of the type of surveillance that was imposed on him almost from day one of the important tactics used and he got his time for the tactic that we saw with Markham and with others in the 1960s and that we see after the game and that was the tactic of infiltrating black people and if something that Maureen mentioned a minute ago and to treat black people in black organizations to do the dirty work of those in power, of course, we saw it in many places in the decade 1960.
We know that my bodyguard came the day he was killed. They say he was an FBI agent. We know that when Fred Hampton, Black Panther, was killed. in Chicago he would have been 16 or 69 years old the man was his bodyguard he was an FBI man the drunk drunk man Hampton in the 90s the agents were supposed to come shoot at the place where Hampton was sleeping this black guy who was supposed to be his bodyguard but fact was looking for the FBI to drug Fred Hampton, the Bankim even got out of his bed when the burner began to break through the walls that in his bed he could not get out of his bed with this tactic we see in Galveston 50 years earlier.
With the same pause, the bill will perpetuate the same tactics against Marcus Garvey. When I was first doing my research on race, I found an interesting article there that must have been yours in the State Department archives from the Justice Department archives there. It was this black man and they were actually going to Congress in the place where the past is a special appropriations bill with their passage of a special private bill of some kind to get funds to pay this man and pay Baltimore and that was will pay you for never. pay him because we have hired him to go attend a meeting of Marcus Garvey's organization and to Baltimore to take shorthand notes and those days and what is the most they had electronic Bugsy I don't know so they had to get someone who was an expert in shorthand and of course not Gabby, that could give Lila's meetings so they couldn't hire a white person, they forced you to find a black person to do the dirty work and then here was this man and of course he was supposed to that this material should not do it. be diverse, but of course, fifty years later, you know people like me, historians are aware of this kind of information, there were a lot of packets and sewers.
Intuit called it the trash movement. Gavi once said that there are a large part of his advisors, etc., probably with the pain of the government some of the people now we know that the FBI opened many years later, now historians can read the past with themselves and now we know that some of these agents actually became black agents, they actually came pretty close to having people that he trusted you, you mean you haven't done it personally. I found people who bridged the gap who were able to report confidences about the idea and, of course, it raises the whole spectrum of all kinds of populists populist enough to make anyone who is trying to uplift our people by building an organization, one of the sources that tell us that we use and God, in time he has used the census will continue to use people as disgruntled employees when Gabby was put on trial in 1923 for alleged mail fraud in connection with the Black Star Line company. the powers that be sent letters to about 35,000 shareholders of the blacks of Thailand trying to find someone they knew, that the odds were in their favor if the 9,000 shareholders were also there, so many out there that they have to be upset enough to come and collaborate with them to build a case against God.
I think we have about 20 people out of 35,000, but that was enough, that's all. They needed two or three people to come to court and testify and maybe they can use disgruntled people who are Invested in God is a tip boat company like the one they were able to get for disgruntled employees who thought they weren't getting paid as much as they were. we. There was an old man from Trinidad who had basically been rescued to learn about the culture. Gavi and affected a high position and was one of those who thought he needed more Sun and two great garbage powers, this man appeared testifying against the additional government when the time came there were people who were ideologically opposed to Garvey and this is our time remains an important source of ammunition for the powers that be who want to use black against other people who had ideological differences with Gavi and, because of the differences, were willing to collaborate even with Gavi's enemies. race chart once said there is an ax even among thieves he said there is another yes about these but he said some of all a group don't even come up to the level of thieves you know they are willing to sell people out now by Brendan so and so, there were people like there was a man from what was called Basu Toland Don curled up in a bugle, so for a man who was a bat and certainly could be said in today's terminology and who actually went with the government, there are public meetings against Garvey. and so on, there was the integrationist group as a device, the same device that had an ideological difference with Garvey and that became again, you know, very easy ammunition to use against God, you had people as a device that really collaborated with the government until they reached to the secretary of state. of this country asking for money to establish a rival shipping company device that wanted money the son of a rival shipping company to compete with Gabby's Black Star Line shipping corporation when God was not active in 1922 you had eight of the major student integrations in this country whom he believed and doubly cynthia, as integration organizations, one of the main civil rights leaders, a united mohawk 22, in fact, wrote to the US Attorney General today, okay, begging them to imprison Gabby, the courts, what happened, the courts, the courts, that has now become a major behavior, you know, used by the government.
Gabby was every annual convention they were arrested at and in the middle of their convention every year to force him to pay legal fees and such in a racist manner and when they finally sent him to jail on what I gave was a trumped up charge of mail fraud they illegally deported him non-governmental agencies that ended up saying that the non-governmental agencies then and I am sure the same image now was also used by the government, the government came and our leaders, Alma was not directly like the government but sometimes indirectly through what which appeared to be non-governmental agencies in goddess so there was something an agency of businessmen known as the National Civic Federation and they were part of the mass surveillance against God there was the n-double-a-cp which was part of a campaign against Garvey during work In fact, there were some revelations in 1993 suggesting that Charles Feng GaN, the Jewish leader of the n-double a-c-p in Gandhi's time, was actually a spy not only of Adavi but from his own blessed food for the government while he was chief.
This is a Jewish boss. at the end of Mississippi using his position to spy on the same and the blessed leaders, the same devices that he was using against Garvey, he was simply spying on them materially as well from what was known as the department of military intelligence, the prison without a mongoose carpet and with justice. It was Juliette Mac, who was the head of the Zionist Organization, right, she was also the head of the American Jewish Committee, she was also the founder of the American Jewish Congress, so she had all these government agencies and one government agency moving against Garvey and, like I said, Knowledge is power, so if we are aware of the tactics and abuses, hopefully someone can use this knowledge to devise some kind of strategy to take down the newfuture, always a problem that is a black maximum in front of the light that our license numbers 19-1 and X that are blocking the front.
Could someone remove it at most 1/9 1 Ms for their moving company? We want to move things forward quickly and remind you that hopefully there will be a lengthy question, question and answer period, so anything we weren't able to address now we'll have time to do later at this point. I would like to welcome the next speaker, Professor Bill Sales, who is the author. There was also a new book about Malcolm We will also hear from him for nine minutes and then we will have the extended period to see if they pass the next person loses one thank you brother support it is a privilege for me to be here again at our annual commemoration of our brilliant Prince Malcolm has assigned I would like to do several things.
I would like to contextualize this last period in the political development of the mountains and the period of this murder. This contextualization will allow us to answer the question not only of why Malcolm was killed, but also why he was killed when he was killed. It will also tell us who objectively benefits. From his assassination, first of all, we must understand that in the period from 1963 to 1965 the civil rights movement was in a crisis. This crisis was not necessarily evident at the time in those years. What I have passed is the most important civil rights legislation. have transcendental demonstrations that are going to have dr.
King earned international recognition and a Nobel Peace Prize, but within all those victories, the seeds are serving us, they are a more fundamental defeat. Let me identify some of the things that were contributing to a crisis in the movement at this time, first of all, they were winning victories against legal discrimination when more black people were facing and a type of discrimination de facto discrimination, the reason for this was that more of half the black population in the first half of the 20th century moved out of the South and moved north. and the Western formation where the characteristic feature was not liberal discrimination, but rather the reality of the situation we face every day.
In fact, this movement of our people out of the rural south, the urban nurse was giving rise to a new class, a class. For me, having been working people of that class was a bird and seemed to be being considered, but also facing a crisis because even when they were in their early 60s we were beginning to see some of the first impacts in the post-industrial period on the African Americans increasingly. more of our people in the cities became long-term unemployed they were losing any meaningful contact with the labor market the characteristic types of oppression that we are all now familiar with but already loved along the way in the 60s the movement was following behind development we increasingly needed a national level movement to address these issues that affect discrimination, what we had was an individual regional movement that did not address those fundamental issues, so we have our people in the ghettos in crisis, right? ?
Look at the economic indices of how we were doing if we discount the blood that was just emerging in the first generations from the south to the north, the people who have been around for a while were not experiencing any improvement, they are getting frustrated and someone hit the bricks and started Rebelle and so we balance from the beginning a characteristic feature of this particular period as this was happening, the previous supporting elements of the ruling class that had supported the southern civil rights movement begin to erode and, in fact, like a movie. When it came north, people began to discover all kinds of reasons why they could no longer support the movement, until Anakena, those elements of the government who had previously been willing to support progressive civil rights legislation, we began to lose control of the nation's attention, that is not so.
No longer are the monopolized popular shipments that are the civil rights movement America's rivals with national psychology, student power with the feminist movement, of course, especially the Vietnam War movement, a movement that made that many in this country believed that a racial answer was not possible. democracy at home while waging an imperialist war abroad, it is also very important for us to understand that the civil rights movement, for all its movement in activism, had not generated a fundamental ideological critique of the American dream; It was actually growing in the ideology of the ruling class about a period from 1965 in a period when the gangs were gone and to explain all the inconsistencies, all the contradictions between what the country was supposed to be and what it was actually doing, but it needed something else in the area, ideas to fuel the struggle and, last but not least, the state security apparatus.
In the early spring of 196, we determined that the movement had objectively become a threat to the American water source and which had been most notably monitored and, in fact, had to be in some sense trusted now in all of that. because this is the social context, the environment within which Malcolm X makes his important intervention. Okay, Malcolm was one of the first to see that the American civil rights movement was in crisis. This crisis demanded a new direction instead of what we want. to make the transition from a regional reformist movement to a revolutionary international movement, this is why Malcolm Humans now on the eve of their own assassination Malcolm it is very important that we look at it the only thank you, what was it, not one's conception, okay, why was it projected as a response to the crisis facing the movement and why, as I understand it, what the RA wants, We will have a clearer idea.
Allah Malcolm X was assassinated. Oh by the way. Before dawn, I should mention that many of these crisis elements that appeared in the civil rights movement in a period from 1963 to 1965 are still with us today, thrown by this crisis, it would still be a response and that is one of the reasons why Malcolm is still relevant. today because the situation he attempted to deal with was never resolved by anyone or by any supermoon that subsequently arose and therefore the unfinished business that Malcolm probably addressed is still a power to this business that we have to address now Malcolm X envisioning organization of the African American community as an organizational vehicle to internationalize our struggle.
He considered it absolutely essential for us to have the international vehicle if we were to have any ability to succeed in our own liberation. Well, what Malcolm did in this period was to channel his black nationalism directly into the pale African internationalist tradition, he recognized that a commitment to revolution was absolutely necessary if we were to be free, but his perspective on revolution deepened and broadened. In the last 11 months of his life, he began to recognize that if we were going to make a successful revolution in America that there were certain international prerequisites that we needed a high degree of cooperation and coordination across national borders between various oppressed races of people. to nationalities what was Mountain Sol that wanted to fight to give the African American people an international person as a national liberation movement so that the world would recognize that black people were in fact an internationally recognized liberation movement meant that we had to speak with one voice neither cold or bright and say one thing and be found and brought back the next night. my tanks say something else, followed by some fumes which led the n-double-a-cp to say the third thing, which happened, therefore it was necessary for him to return home from Africa and deal with the construction process of the black united front, which is what the organization of African-American unity was about, the construction of a black united front without a black united front, blacks in the United States, when it would happen for the first time with international personality and could demand the name of the nationality before international forms, so Malcolm I read his position in relation to established civil rights organizations, but it is very important for us to recognize that Malcolm did not seek unity on principle, he did not seek unity at any cost, the old AAU had to being a black man leading a black man. united front with the agenda of workers and poor and dispossessed blacks as their priority issue on the agenda in the area of ​​electoral politics Malcolm also recognized and if we were to make innovative interventions in the American political waters that my activities had to be independent of the main parties and had to be protected by internationally recognized guarantees.
I think it is very important for us to see today that if we objectively know its bipartisan politics, the possibilities of a progressive development of the party problem have been exhausted and we are thinking about independent and credible trust, then we also have to think about how we can develop some kind of international tribunal, some kind of international monitoring for that type of activity, not as recognized over twenty years ago, so what I am saying here and I know that Feeling pressure at the right time is that we have a woman in crisis and the important thing about mindfulness and he started asking the right kind of questions and now how can we overcome this crisis and build the post-liberation movement that would attract international support. the attention of the security apparatus to the American State because Matthew was more right than he was wrong and that is why my Latin Matthew was intensified when he returned from Africa to the OAU.
Jed Hoover four days later makes me circulate alone on July 2nd. Remember all the FBI offices in the 1950s saying that the OAU had been created by Dr. Mao, who was hanging around the suburbs and governments at the national and international level, was going to go to the international organizations and return to the United Nations and, therefore, we have to implement a counterintelligence operation to discredit Bastón and the organization of African American unity. It is a fact that we can document that Malcolm and his organization were subject to self-destruction after July 2, 1964. In fact, we could go back even further and it is important that in the half time I have available I will discipline myself and just leave this point , maybe a summary and I'll sit down. like Jack Gruber appearing before Kennedy's cabinet in April 1963 and saying how the battle changes have occurred in the fight for civil rights, the communists turn it around, there in front of them, intensify surveillance, it would have violated these people, even more so, I think the tabs on the situation that was his public agenda would be the main decision makers and he may be the Captain Kennedy who came down and said, "Do it right, but Looper hasn't rejected it in his mind , he was not happy, suffocated, we will never stop him." was determined to destroy the personal decision to destroy this movement in 1963, we looked at some things well and nothing was right in the case just when nothing looked at the riots and probably in 1963 saw the impact of a new social class of the situation hey, he said, did you know this could have been sent?
Choose Birmingham and the brothers walked to the brothers went out into the street and began to take care of business. He said the city was on fire. And Kennedy told the truth. Because? that neither the heart will go to 64 nor the clock for those under 65 nor Cleveland the sixties nor Detroit Newark in 67 but Bonnie Amazon is right in 1963 and gives an indication of the tremendous revolution and the potential of a new social force that was being born within the urban publication, the water now repeats that the source wanted the food data to be okay with the international revolutionary forces for change and move my black stone volatility to a different level.
Janma, who repeated that right, made a move and her film was successful. Because? This measure was successful because whatever the movement of the developer movement, there are several points in which under those parties there are changes for all the leaders through a new leadership, although the electoral districts give way to new electoral districts where the regional movements come, national and international movements, but the consensus betweenthe leaders are broken. Well, all this is necessary so that you can reconstruct who will make it strong, but in the period of this transition, your movement will be weak, it will be long and it will be subject to attacks and the state of security hypnosis. recognizes that this is the moment in which he goes on the attack because it is easier to win and it affects at this absolutely crucial point to kill Malcolm and he killed him in 1965 before he institutionalized his tools at the national level with the new social force of the brothers urban. the street people are a young argument in our community and secondly, where would we institutionalize our fight with the anti-imperialist and anti-NATO forces in the world under the leadership of economically challenged people like Kuma Gama Abdel Nasser and in the media Fidel Castro and many other people allowed me to stop there and suggest that these are the consequences that we must analyze more deeply and talk about why not, but to point out that the mere presence here of all the dangers of the main intellectuals of the world African community in this country, I would say intellectually millions of liters, but the people who follow the first order of the other 29 that I mentioned later just to move things quickly, it's fast, a couple of quick announcement tapes will be available of this program. immediately after the forum in the back, also if you missed last year's event those audio tapes will also be available and if you want today's video tapes they will also be available next week, so immediately after in the back you will be able to get the tapes. of today's program at this point I would like to introduce you to our next speaker, we move quickly because we want to do it before most of the time for an exchange with you, not to tell a bunch of speeches later, but there are the questions for me . and this is what I would like to present to you someone who took a cliché further and these from the north, so it will be very small introduction, so give this community and, in a sense, your presence here today as far as I'm concerned , although it is not. part of the Malcolm hopefully moving towards solidarity and working together, of course, I speak on behalf of our brother Minister Mohammed, who is the representative in New York of the Honorable Mr.
Louis Farrakhan, who will speak with us in the name of Allah, the beneficent, the merciful , he became the person of Master Farhat Muhammad and we always thank him for blessing us with our beloved leader and teacher, the honorable Elijah Muhammad, the messenger of Allah, the exalted Christ. and we thank these two greats again and again for giving the black man and woman in this day and time a true champion, a true leader and a true benefactor. I speak of the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan, his name I greet you slowly. It is an honor for my brothers and sisters to be here and I think because it is about brotherhood and unity and if it is about solving an issue that has been in the black community for the last 30 years as a source of tension as a source of disunity, then we are very happy to be here to help bring about unity to ease those tensions and bring the family back together, but if this is in any way an attempt to lash out or throw stones or criticize the Nation of Islam, then We're also glad to be here to clear things up.
Now a lot has been said about the Nation of Islam being involved in the death of Malcolm X and I think this is a smart way to go. The question you asked tonight is much smarter than the questions I heard, it says that I have been conscious and for the last thirty years we have not asked who killed Mountain, but why he was killed, because if you find out why he was killed, then you know we really should be last because any accusation that is laid at someone's door the accusers must go first we should not follow that but precede the condom because we already know what he plans to say we read his book we have heard him in the public charge to the nation with the number of murders, but I want to deal with it tonight because I don't have anyone.
I was a year old when Malcolm can Adama, but I follow a great leader in teaching who was closer to Malcolm than anyone else in this room, that new mountain. better than loving Malcolm or Malcolm when it was fashionable is more qualified than anyone in the country I speak of and represents the truth and facts of this topic because he not only loved the mountain but he loved his leader and teacher of the way most honorable. Elijah Muhammad and uh and he was found in the middle of these two great men, you can't avoid Farrakhan just like you can't avoid the Honorable Elijah Muhammad when you talk about the mountain, no brother, it wasn't Malcolm's internationalism that caused his death. . it was not at all Malcolm's internationalism the Honorable Elijah Muhammad teaches us that there are 196 million nine hundred and forty thousand square miles of land on the predator and no one belongs to the black man said Africa is a throne but the land said it belongs to the righteous and is the earth the home of the black man and woman, he said, don't take one continent, take all seven because you were there, you came before Columbus, so the Honorable Elijah Muhammad was not just an international teacher but a universal teacher and he took away He turned Malcolm into a thief, a con man, he reshaped his life like he did for us, he helped us see the beauty in ourselves, he cleansed us, he told us that our past goes back further than anything.
Black History Month Accomplishments. This is Black History Month, the shortest month of the year when we celebrate the achievements of our black brothers and sisters, the shortest and coldest month in the world. You have to deal with the internationalism of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad because he is the one. that put that truth and that knowledge and Malcolm's head, so it couldn't be that that mountain was murdered because he became international from the moment he got out of prison and recited his student registration and the real events and became a Muslim recorded with his name in the Lamb's Book of Life the Honorable Elijah Muhammad promised him friendship in all walks of life promised him brotherhood with his black brother in Asia his black brother in Africa you are not talking about internationalism in the years celebrated sixty The Honorable Elijah Muhammad went to prison in 1945 because he refused to fight his brother Brown, so you can't erase that from history.
The real reason Malcolm was killed. We reached an agreement tonight. What happens to black people. We applauded Dr. King, we passed Fred Hampton, Mark Clark, we lost Turner, we lost Garvey, the list goes on an arm, we have internationally lost Maurice Bishop, Patrice Lumumba and the list goes on and on, but what do the black men? What is in us? Are we afraid to point the finger at the real piece? We know that tilma is the same one that killed God. We know that although Chumby pulled the trigger on Lumumba, it was the white man's hand at the root of the gun, it was the white man's mind. in the snitch, Uncle Tom, the renegade, we are afraid to tell the truth because we say Helen Malcolm was murdered by the state and I say it, maybe they will kill me and the reason we are so afraid to accuse the real ones murderers is the same reason.
We fight and kill each other in the streets of America, but we are afraid when the white man comes in a blue uniform because you can stand in front of a black man and say kill me, but you are afraid that the right man will scream and so on . 30 years, a good man, a good organization has been criticized by many people who had the opportunity to follow Malcolm, had the opportunity to be with them, but we are not with him that day because today there is some violence because today we are like The people of Israel reject Moses because Moses is dead and God, but we do not want Jesus because Jesus is alive and in the world we are always looking back, who was the last murdered leader?
That's my clue, who was the last leader to die? he was the only good leader. I heard some fool today on TV say that Malcolm is behind today because the young people have no leadership. It is a damn lie that the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan is raising. You have to raise a man from the grave. You don't really You don't want leadership, you want, I don't worship, you want to put his picture on the wall because he's dead and he can't ask for anything greater. He can't tell you to stop smoking Kaumatua. He can't tell you that the king is yours. white woman out of bed to become your leader and some of you would be honest, you wouldn't follow Malcolm around the block just like you wouldn't follow Barbie, just like you know why we can say you wouldn't follow Malcolm. today why are you not following anyone today reading some powerful speeches not following their quotes quoting someone the speech is not following them at what point did we start dedicating our lives to the principles that the man lived by?
Some of you who love Malcolm still can't even reconcile Malcolm's religion, which is the map of Islam and contempt is religious, it wasn't socialism that got him out of prison, it got him out of a life of crime, it was Islam, it wasn't nationalism that made him great, respectable and honorable, men leaving their wives with him it was the morality taught by the Honorable Elijah ramen, we don't want to deal with that so we make Malcolm a communist and a socialist and then we say ah, that's the reason they killed him because he became international in his thinking.
We have been lying to ourselves for too long, we either lie or we don't know, and if we don't know better what is wrong, I was sitting at the feet of a man who does know better than our Minister Louis Farrakhan has been great. and that he has admitted that he was part of a climate that helped lead to the assassination of Malcolm as if someone would use his honesty as a means to attack him, but the truth requires us to be objective and even when a man is honest and admits something he did, it is up to the seeker of truth to investigate and study it and find out what the man says so as not to use the man's statements to attack him.
The fact of the matter is that Malcolm was killed because he could be killed. Malcolm was killed because we live in a society where the white man is angry and has savage power. wolves are on the prowl they are hungry and they are looking for a stray lamb Malcolm was murdered because he isolated himself from his face Malcolm was murdered because the Nation of Islam at the time represented the most formidable group in black America and the The team of Elijah Muhammad and Malcolm X was unbeatable, they couldn't kill the nation, so they had to try to do it from within.
You are probably like Parliament said and never forget this, brothers and sisters, that the white men's mode of operation is to throw the stone and then hide your slimy hand as if you had done nothing for brother to fight until brother and then he intervenes as the men of peace today can boast today they can publish FBI documents that boasted that they engineered the split of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad and Malcolm They are at the door of the messenger who did not kill well, in my conclusion, the question is who killed Matt, why was Malcolm killed, that is the critical question that would give the answer to who killed, if the Nation of Islam were a black organization at that time and the world knew that the nation and Malcolm were involved in a dispute, what will happen when Aslam has to?
Winning by killing Malcolm of the country, but with our only light, Marvin has to win by killing Mountain, since after all, he was the leader of the nation and in the nation he killed him, everyone would point to him, after all, it was the Honorable Elijah Muhammad who was scandalized by Malcolm. over the country for more than a year before his death, but when you believe in Allah, when you have faith in God, you do not seek to attack those who attack you because you understand that the Holy Quran says that this brand will be successful. polytheists may be reluctant, in this book we are guaranteed success in every righteous endeavor and the horrible Elijah Muhammad, who came from the third, is forty, fifty and sixty, facing the white man, facing the government, facing the modern British In his own home, he had nothing to fear.
Malcolm alive, you mean the horrible Elijah Muhammad defeated that now, those living, the nation would be destroyed about 30 years after Malcolm's death, the nation is not destroyed, but its today greatest, strongest and most influential, Bill Adama , it was and you say that we. murdered and those are some of you for some of these, theHonorable Elijah Muhammad was after the blacks see in the black men see in the black woman in love with them what should have killed one of the entire black family I see they disrespect our intelligence and your own when you land at the door of the Nation of Islam and you say the nation so far who or what nation and understanding when someone robs a bank did you say America robbed today when someone murdered someone do you say Christianity murdered someone? but you are like the white man, some of them want to criminalize and scandalize Islam so that anyone who is a follower of Islam does something bad, you put these Muslims at the door, but that crack addict is not a Muslim, that man who burst in. your house and broke your head he was a Muslim ask him what his religion was he brought me to tell you Christianity he probably said he was baptized he probably died he went to church in Sunday school all this life but you don't say that at the door of Christianity look, but when you have an ax to grind against my last point is this.
I think we showed that the messenger had nothing to gain by killing him now and if you really want to know the truth about what he told his followers, he leaves Malcolm. alone, so I know some of you don't read the Scriptures, but I just want to add something to: in the Bible, don't get mad at me, you know everyone heard that the King heard about King David. It happened that he was a great king. he was a little boy but he was a warrior but when he grew up and grew up Walden had a son whose name was absolutely and that son actually went astray with his father and began to scandalize his father before the nation oh yes and in a strange coincidence that It's not really a coincidence that at the root of his analysis of his father was his father's domestic life, let's say that Malcolm knew that the Honorable Elijah Muhammad had wives, but he knew that the public didn't know, so he called them secretaries, but you say you are a professional.
Century, tell me how in the country a man can have more than one wife, where is the scandal in that brother? Where is the scandal in that system? Where is Christian's scandal? When David had more than one wife, Solomon had more than a thousand wives and many concubines. Don't call them secretaries and you have a lot of girlfriends too but I'll be like mom said leave Malcolm alone and they told him now remember I have your teeth look what you know God you'll feel like a man if God put it through once They said The FBI had the courier in custody and had the gun to his head.
I'm fine with that if it's not a second. I appreciate that, but you know, I know we can attack later. Sighs, really look. I should have demanded that we go on the last bus. Moses waited for Pharaoh's magicians to do his bidding. If I had the chance, I don't need this for all the speakers because I'm talking about a specific one, I can't fear, man, he told his followers. leave him alone you know why because we believe in the redemption of the man and woman behind and just as the Honorable Elijah Muhammad did not ask mouths before a resume he did not want to know what he had done in his life in '47 when he received it and anointed him and he made him one of his great spokesmen, then he believed in the Redemption and towards the end of his life he also believed in it, but Absalom made his father point out and made his father's followers name his father that when he heard the Honorable Louis Farrakhan says that all Muslims were potential assassins of Malcolm at the time.
Why are you so surprised? You've heard Malcolm on television on videotapes speaking ill of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad. You know how you would feel if someone spoke badly about your leader, if your real father would, if someone spoke about your mother, you want to fight, right? If someone spoke about your father, you want to fight, right?, right? , if someone says something that you know is not true and you know they would do it. I know it's not true, you want to fight don't you? so don't rob us of the right to love the Honorable Elijah Muhammad because the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan said yes we would have killed anyone who opposed the messenger today and in the future no Let's say nothing, you know how we got our lead teacher. like if you love yours then the fight against the government prevails and our Malcolm someone says that now they celebrate Malcolm and they didn't want Malcolm in the nation so they incited them to leave Malcolm.
Be a great leader on your own, it's not necessary. Lie to Muhammad, but now we are Colet, the nation, he had almost no followers because many times people say they love you but they don't show it with dedication, they don't show it with their work, they don't show it. for his love and that is why most of you who are not in the nation cannot understand the relationship that the Honorable Elijah Muhammad had with Malcolm because you have never given yourself to a leader like Malcolm did and that is why when they told Malcolm is obvious. base, not only did you remove Malcolm from his source of strength, but you also put Malcolm in a position where the government could attack him, kill him, and then blame the Muslims for it.
The last point I wanted because I want to be respectful to each other as much as possible is that the condo said there were FBI agents in the country but they haven't moved on yet oh yeah we know that as the messenger said at one point rights They were a honeycomb of rotten calendars, but I asked if an agent in the nation was responsible for Malcolm's murder, how can you say the nation killed the lady? He was the head of security who gave the plans to Fred Hampton and Mark Clark's apartment. A panther. Did the Panthers kill Fred Hampton?
Mr. Clarke. I still don't know John Ollie used to work with the FBI or some government agency this is not an explosive revelation the messenger knew it the nation's followers knew that's because we don't care where you come from you can join As for us, we have a lot time to go to the mothers and after they have settled into that truth, for a few weeks they will not come to confess, they will say, well, I came in with a government, but I see what they are doing. I'm with you now, but if Charlie was an FBI agent, ask him, he's still alive, thank you around right now, it's so much more.
I want to say thank you very much. A minister named Mohammed I am glad to see that the Brotherhood respects the title and the program. In fact, we are like me. He said that they are going to have an intense, hopefully extensive period of questions and answers and that we will be able to follow up on many of these topics. He would only warn the speakers who will follow if Khalid Mohammed does not deviate from the format. of our program as has just been the case my attention when I agreed to moderate this program was that we will be conducting that this in the spirit of brotherhood in harmony no one attacked anyone no one attacked anyone san carlo has even spoken yet and I hope that you please play , so I hope the rest of the meeting is conducted in that spirit.
One of the things this would be an old saying from the '60s, you know, if you had a secret from those people in the movement still. It was put in the book and it will stay there forever because some of us have difficulty studying the documents closely and one of the things that I respect this brother because I respect his work and his conduct is the meticulousness of his research. I know your conduct and I am ready to act on those books and if there is nowhere in sight, the Cardinals book does not say that the nation is nowhere, it is tessellated just so we can be precise, you saw it so he could be honest and, as we like to say, maybe we can tell the truth.
Not all of us have read the book, maybe that's why we say that, but I'm here to tell you that you know we're in the book, that's Zack Carnal Aquiles, the Nation of Islam per se from Chile. Malcolm FBI in the state on the issue of the white man and his responsibility to do everything, etc., that is something we will address later. I don't know about you in the audience, but As an African, no one thinks for you, no one thinks for me. Hopefully that applies to those who were involved in the murder. I have relationships.
I take the Malcolm X revival issue right. I think again so we can clear things up, fool. and others, if it is the same program that the minister was referring to, but I heard that Malcolm Others of us were in the audience. I always refer to the resurgence of Malcolm , it's good, that's it. is being revived and we can't just start a man's life and in his adolescence we have to look at the whole picture of Malcolm Elijah Muhammad, I don't remember that in the first year of Malcolm Last point I would like to make clear that we are trying to set the record straight so that we can have an intelligent debate is that the question of the willingness or unwillingness of some of us to take over the US State I don't know how many more than others on this rostrum here and I want to say that everyone on this list was willing to take on the United States government to expose it on a stretcher against Africans not only internationally capable like some of us here, myself, along the graph and others, and with facts we will act if you read this work, Tony Martin, who has done an infinite amount of work elsewhere, but I am simply summarizing a couple of quick points that the minister made because, in turn, they We are arguing in a

complete

ly different direction.
This is not our intention. We were talking about simple sexual games. Show some respect now so we can get this meeting done. It has taken our meeting in a different direction. I was hoping that wasn't the case, so I hope we can do it now by asking the brothers in the corner because I don't want Zack to launch into defending each of these points, therefore, I will try to play each one as best as I can in a limited time so that we can not get into a tit for tat and turn this into a debate between Minister Carla Marvin and some cons a condom that's not what this is not about that's not what it's about after Zack Condo's presentation then we will have questions from him and you can raise whatever you want let me see a couple of shared notes from the program.
You may have seen the name of Brother Mira's breakfast on the show. He won't be here today, unfortunately she wants to be his brother. Babita Ray announces she is on this show. Unfortunately, he won't be here either and they also saw his brother Khalid Muhammad's name on the show. He's on the list, but he won't be speaking and he won't be addressing the audience, so I just want to let you know. However, you know that the question is higher. If it is a direct question, he will answer at this point. Let us welcome you. Thank you my brothers and keep it with traditional African culture.
I need permission to speak on my behalf. I'm told that while thought protects me from the fourth row, we should be allowed to speak, assistant. I just need permission to speak. Indeed, it is an honor and a pleasure to be here. I must admit the energy here is a bit. unique, but you know, I don't really have a problem with that, I appreciate the words that my brother for the Conrad I never met, although I think we had a conversation on the radio that anyway it's an honor here and I'm also It's an honor to know the brother Kathy for the first time and then I'm also honored to see some friends.
I'm going to be

complete

ly honest with you. My instinct right now is to go board. I think I understood thirteen issues that Conrad raised. I wouldn't like to address anything, I will address them, but before I do, there are certain things I would like to address first, one of the things that bothers me right now as we address the assassination of Malcolm Frank is the energy of the Nation of Islam. It's annoying for a couple of reasons. One of the reasons is that those of us who fight for the plot, people understand very clearly that criticism is very important.
It is the responsibility of those of us who take our people seriously. those of us who take Scudder seriously to be able to criticize the mistakes we made, in fact our leaders do not have leaders who are above criticism, but unfortunately it seems that we have some organizations that have no problem criticizing everyone . positions, however, the same organization has a problem when it is critical at some point, at some point, I think we as a people should be able to deal with that, yes, Naaman was a man, he went to the bathroom, he made mistakes , but all. mistakes with them out loud to Mohammed, however, he was also a man and made mistakes, the difference, be that as it may, is that it is okay for us to talk about Knoppix's mistakes, in fact, it is okay for us, the chest, the thighs, the mouth,It's okay for us to say all kinds of negative things. things about my two parenting technologies to call

malcolm

a genius and they call malcolm a traitor, it's okay to do all that kind of stuff, but let someone say something negative about Elijah Muhammad and a warm, the same case exists with Farrakhan.
I have a lot of respect for Farrakhan one thing I don't respect is the extent to which we have put certain people on pedestals, raised them to the heavens if they only care about something, they only care, a few years ago, during a brunette, remember what it was? teenagers, you know, the number one lieutenant, knew Mama the King better than Coretta Scott King, but the point is that Abernathy, before he died, published a book that was about this relationship with Martin Luther King, he gave us a privileged view of the market, the king that he was.
He would share information that only someone who had fought with this man lived with this man knew the complexities of this man, but Breath evidently committed the deadly sin 45 book in which he was critical of the king and not really critical, his point was to say that King was having an affair with this person, he had met this woman there, and no matter what, people forgot about the other three hundred and forty-three pages of the book. Abernathy became a Judas, he became a traitor, he became someone who at the time of his death they had bodyguards around him when he was publicizing the book at book signings and stuff because one of us could have heard that there is a man in his 70s who has perhaps been beaten most of his adult life.
He is perplexed by his people, hitting them on the head and spitting on them. and cheating on him, giving him bruises for all those years, this man had to basically die as a traitor in the eyes of many people, why? Because what he tried to do was take Martin Luther King's brain out of the heavens to make the King walk. main thing that and for that reason that man ended up dying like a juice, you know, he told us, you know, you can't criticize and this will also come back now to Elijah Muhammad, okay, you can't criticize a man, you can't criticize a god no. you can criticize a deity, we have African people who need to be able to criticize.
I'll leave where Elijah Muhammad made an extraordinary contribution. We need to understand him better to appreciate and emulate him, yet at the same time, where is Muhammad made a mistake. I need to be able to criticize it, study it, understand it and avoid it, and a tragedy here so that it doesn't take away the leadership of a big mom, it doesn't take away the leadership of a fan or it doesn't take away the leadership of a fanatic. Malcolm's origami leadership is right up there with knowing the opinions that we have and we have to be able to do that so that we can grow as people, we have to be able to do that now, one of the points that I would like you to address.
Let's make it very, very quick, now we are going to address Malcolm's murder, put in the context of the Nation of Islam. First of all, I want to make a point that my brother made in that I think he said they were agents in the Nation of Islam if you read my book you won't see that I said they were agents within the Nation of Islam what I said is that there were informants within the Islamic nation the difference between an agent and an informant was that an agent is someone who has been specifically trained by the enemy going through their caddy and all those other types of things, an informant was someone who was already there, and then That person was set to infiltrate the organization and the informant is someone who already ate the organization, who then is the enemy?
It comes down to saying yeah, man, you want to make a few bucks and stuff, you know, all you have to do is do this and then edit, that's what I talked about in the book and that's very clear as far as to the nation Islam and unfortunately about the damn organization we had in 1960, you find the same thing and that was also the case even in the cracker organizations, that's how the enemy was able to control the other thing is I'm not saying John Lee was a FBI agent, one of the questions I posed, in fact, one of my points is that if he was on someone's payroll, it was most likely military intelligence.
I used to work for the Navy Department now, but I still want to. I'll address another point he made regarding that because I think his point was to say that if these people were agents, then you know he was the agents who killed Malcolm, You know, that's been an argument I've heard for the past few years, and you know, on paper, it sounds good, so this is supposed to be just for the good of the enemy, says all the people who knew her in Goon Town. , the president who entered the Audubon Ballroom on February 21, 1965 at 3:10 p.m.
They came in and they're all agents, okay, for the sake of argument, every last one of them went to the Academy, whether you know their informants or not, it doesn't matter, okay, pages, so we don't kill them and then they come in. as Muslims there in the Nation of Islam, as far as everyone knows, but even though they are really angry at the nation because they are agents, okay and then aq and that implies that the nation of the nation did not kill Phil, that analysis I was wrong. What's wrong with that analysis is that what exactly does that say about your organization?
If you're loud, even me, to come to the organization, infiltrate your organization, kill someone the organization can't stand and then suddenly you're innocent of this. What does that say about eternal security within your organization? If that were the case, we have to address that problem and a double issue is that even if they were all enemies, they would commute if they walk, even if they were all agents. Here we are not dealing with children, but with the l4y, the rich in delegates, with some of the most organized according to the image they portray, the most organized around some of the more serious brothers, so read aloud so that the FY allow the enemy. come in here and take me the point I'm trying to make is the robbery wouldn't be solved and the question of liability that's the point just give these people opportunities there well interesting points I want to make and I want a little Now I'm going to change the energy a little.
I appreciate that I want to go now to Malcolm and the enemy. One point, although I want to make it very clear that right now we have some eternal problems that we need to deal with and obviously, I decided it was important to take some time and deal with it. I don't apologize, but at the same time we also believe that I want to lose sight of the fact that with respect to the murder of the mountains there was a secret hand whose relationship with the murder of the mountains yes. The enemy was dead and the enemy was behind closed doors and the enemy was in fact doing many things that were first designed to disrupt the national leadership of the nation in this month to B, was designed to then separate Malcolm from Elijah Muhammad, which was the The base map was made to support the base within the nation.
His phone number was a lie. Muhammad, the enemy, realized in the early fifties, in the late fifties, the enemy realized that if he allows it, Muhammad did not support anything now, that he did not have much support beyond that. So what you could see happened and what I think my book respectably documents is step by step how the enemy of the late fifties began as a series of steps designed to separate Malcolm from Elijah Muhammad and, of course, one One of the keys to that was the family of many tomorrow for different reasons and, to some extent, Mountain also had its own problems with them and the end result will be that when you get to 1963, some of the problems that existed. between Malcolm and Elijah Muhammad really started to come to the surface and when that started to happen, you could almost imagine seeing each other high-fiving each other, all they had to do at that stage, the getting was defeated and they fed, they fed him very well .
They fueled it by spreading rumors inside the mosque outside the box. They fueled it by reproducing false newspaper articles. Someone wants specific lies. You can check again. The April 25, 1963, New York Times was a good example that the goal of all disease is to be with the enemy. do something that they had done for a long time and did very well regarding the nation in Islam, they would study organizations and of course they were listening to the phone that they had also connected to the national office in Chicago was also God and what we Basically we were listening for four stops mainly between Malcolm and the National Leadership and specifically between Malcolm analyzed Muhammad and every time the radio could be through the telephone, every time through the wiring in the national office they heard a negative point, maybe Elijah Muhammad could have done it. said something or a perfect letter that said something about Malcolm's exception and that was something the enemy could then exploit a feat they did they were on the right, they focused on the left, I talked about the newspapers, the bad cover was the spread of false rumors and there will be nothing One thing is going to be the totality of all these things that are going to create more distance between Malcolm and Elijah Muhammad.
I just gave you an idea of ​​how cruel 1963 is. Lots of sympathetic things you already hear. A conversation that allows Muhammad to tell. Someone at that time was very sick, he had been vomiting blood, it hurt a lot and the other thing didn't happen. You know, one or two people watching TV were basically the only ones at the fetus farm, so he told someone on the phone. you know, he said, you know, sometimes I'm in so much pain it hurts so much, sometimes you know, I just want to, I just want to kill myself. I guess with the enemy I did it for the next week every day, two, three, four times a day, there are a series of We phoned his property and took him to commit suicide.
This is how the enemy works. We give them a little bit and they do everything they can to exploit Malcolm's tragedy. A great Muhammad situation is that we gave them a lot to exploit. The creative manager is very clear. it's - you know, I've never stayed in mathematics I had a halo on my head that wasn't an angel at the same time who wasn't the devil that my brother tried to paint him to be the same as the last Muhammad you know my mood overall he was a good man who I always respected, that doesn't mean he couldn't teach well, so anyway, in 1913, 1960 and then 1963 especially, that was really the key to all of this, the Babies contributed to things, but it was actually greater. that babies my way trade said if one more year the mountain was attacking on Mohammed no Malcolm came out first against the allies Mohammed and you can die said this is well documented Lee Jones June 30 servant at 64 who is nesting that is nine months since the time when he was actually murdered, so that's not more than a year, it wasn't even a year and then be clear about this too and you can just go check out the files of Muhammad speaks when mom finally spoke out against Allah before Muhammad, the nation is I found out through various newspaper articles through Mohammed speaks that they had declared Malcolm basically a hypocrite and a traitor and they had a press conference in March of that year in which my brother Filbert had basically said that I was sick and all these other types of things that Jordan Maddie is It's not like my most important talk for about 90 days for about three months after he had already been attacked he had said and what everyone in the nation is like that is not that saying of condo is simply to go back and read Mohammed talk to read the newspaper.
Another point I also make, since I'm a resident of the area, I was going to go too far, I won't go too far, but I also find it a little ironic that when people ask me, people appreciate it, you know, I think. our babies, do you know that we are basically dealing with issues related to dealing with leaders? I'll tell you what, as an African person who really appreciates it, you know traditional African culture, although I could also stick with that because I'm supposed to, but one of the things that I made very significant in traditional culture is ancestry and we appreciate, we appreciate ancestry and the key to being a good ancestor here evolves around the work you did and were a lot, not everyone who dies becomes an ancestor, if you did things that were worthy of being remembered by the living, that improves Well, Malcolm is an ancestor and yes, he's dead and that's fine, but the point of the matter is that just because you appreciate an ancestor doesn't mean it's you.
I know that person is an idol or even your head, don't worship them and just to remember this point, you know it's like we could make a similar argument, we have two big Muhammads, but I don't think we need to use words, I realize that Muhammad I think a big Muhammad means he is, you know? I mean, do we have to continue with this point? We need to talk? I don't think so. I think the problem here is that we shouldn't have a standard for an ancestor now. Another point about that, I just want to say something that Mowgli was fit to come back, oh but you can't turn around so I say vegetable, my students watch him dry, yes I said leave Malcolm alone on a few occasions, but you could also .
I want to return to a speech that Eliza Naumann gave inHouston in June of 1964, so he was actually talking about two people in the speech. As you saw, Wallace's son was also paying lip service and one of the points he highlighted in his speech was We have to erase hypocrites like them from our faces, now you can listen to this yourself on tape, you don't really know that there's a tape here, but the plan is that it's obviously a little different than telling someone you know to leave this man. The truth is, at best, now that Muhammad sent mixed signals regarding mathematics, I think that was one of them, one of the problems in all of that, because during this period of time and maybe today , the FOI worked and moved based on in the post suggestion, that is, you know you just give a certain amount of energy, you don't necessarily say "I want you to do this and that", you say certain things and then the FOI person picked up the energy, obviously, when you hear things like that.
You know, you run the risk of certain people picking up energy, even now he's supposed to say quietly. That's not me, no, it was just assumed that I wasn't really delivering on that, but you run the risk of people picking up on that energy, in fact, Norman Butler at At one point, you know Norman 3x Buckley was wanted, two brothers who served time at Mass number seven of which he speaks in June 1964, attended and met in Iraq before allowing Mohammed to speak at the Armory on June 28, 1964 and allowing Mohammed. I'm skinny. Hell, I lied, the agenda came forward and said, let's go, you know, I told them to go knock on his door and knock on it.
I'm not going to walk home and hit you. Do not fall. He took him down and cut out his tongue and sent it to him. He puts it in the envelope and seals it, approves it and hands it to the courier. The problem with that is that, again, if we're dealing with a publishing suggestion and we take this into account, a lot of my Virginia was the jelly seen as the voice piece of her body during this period of time, of course, that's not like that, you know, I don't think most people listen, it's certainly not Rutland.
I thought these young men were there, obviously, you know they're not going to interpret that to me, you know, leave this man alone so that the The point of all this is the saying that at best and then the last Muhammad spoke right after that the next day and it wasn't like he jumped ahead and said, "Okay, what Julia said yesterday." I want everyone to ignore that he really wasn't speaking for me, Elijah Muhammad then came forward and said things similarly, so the truth of this and the point I'm just trying to make is that at best, Elijah Muhammad sent mixed signals regarding the map now.
Another point that he said this would be the last point that I want to address is that he said that Farrakhan is the most qualified person to really address this issue and, you know, I agree, in fact, I think one of the things that has to happen and I think the sooner the better you'll know and what you know is that I think you really need to deal with this, you know, when I was in DC not too long ago, they were never interested in me debating anyone. I know about the nation as part of the mass murder and my position was, in fact, when I first contacted my hundred for my counseling work, why don't you?
Well, she just let me debate with Conrad whether that's true. I don't care, but my What I pointed out to them was that if you're going to get someone, you need to get Farrakhan, of course, at best, any of his ministers endlessly use what actually works to address these problems and you must approach them in a serious way and not rely only on ministers as eloquent as brilliant as intelligent as capable as capable as they are not only ministers should be able to address this issue and they should not necessarily address it with me you know you can deal with it, You know, with some of my other leaders and stuff, but the point is that it needs to be done and a lot of times we don't really get very far in situations like this because unless nobody had really worked hard on this and done a lot of research.
They shot him again because he was someone who was involved in it. Now, at best, all someone is going to do is because they might pass for my blue or something. a problem could arise or warn you, you know a mistake or something like that and then you know I got caught, but that doesn't address the problem, but that doesn't address the problem regarding liability it doesn't fit the problem with what we've learned from this because if that's what's bothering me right now and based on the strike and stuff is exactly what we as a people learn when we have situations like this and I will be the first to admit that yes, this is a very sensitive topic, but You know, maybe it's just a touchy subject just with the nation.
Islam is also a sensitive topic that those people who appreciate Malcolm X, but what exactly is it, we learn when we all. what we do is like the tolls in mine oh she's going to say yes, I owe the line before I get there oh you know, you know she should leave laugh because that condo is going to do this and that the problem right now is that if the goal It's really trying to deal with Malcolm's murder and stuff, so it's so set the game at some point where we get there, we'll just have to be at other times where we made mistakes, come be happy people, you know, in 1965 , the Nation of Islam, when we as people made mistakes, we need to be able to analyze those mistakes so that events think we can move forward because you know. what you're saying, so here we are 30 years later, the only reason a Camilla Shabazz situation can exist is because we haven't addressed it and what you're saying is that if this latest situation that you've known about since this happened is a indication is that we're not really doing it right now, so I guess it would be interesting for you to make sure what the 31st anniversary is.
Let's see what comes out of the woodwork. Today we can solve many of these problems. We can solve many. of these problems if we're just in the furnace of Fayette County, but your father's speeches that Farrakhan makes is bragging sometimes I'm not bragging saying they're all agents and sometimes we have fire, say yes, but but we No. It killed me to talk a lot about telling me things like that that don't help us solve this problem, so the part of all this is the same, if the goal is to solve the problem, it will basically take this.
Once we start doing that, we will get to a point very soon where this will no longer be a problem for us and you know, I just assume it works like this, the nation stops to respond more responsibly to its responsibilities because they use their vehicle to kill. Yo, okay, so this is live every week, but this was not Tibetan, if we can deal with this with serious advice, what is the basis? It just requires, okay, yeah, you know we made a mistake, yeah, it was wrong, it was wrong because one again. The contradiction in all of this is that you know, and even with the wolf tickets, you know, we always hear this and ironic things, you think that, in many ways, that someone like me, in many ways, you know it's of interest to my thirties and so many of his Brotherhood since then.
I was 12 years old for my people and right now I stood up in this hearing where it's about my safety, you know, historically, historically, their organization, historically, they're organized in many ways, but historically they're just people they've never met. It was after the story, people who look like everyone in this minimize the contradictions and what I would suggest to you, Elmas, men, speaking, three brothers in the 14y, but I suspect that we really need to minimize these contradictions and stuff, or sister who criticizes her. or even your path for the most part wasn't even born, Malcolm was murdered anyway, but the point is that just because someone criticizes you doesn't make them your enemy or give you a right that you know how to obtain.
Or to force them or threaten them or something so at least if you just know the way you start to deal with contradictions like that and my trip and the brother came with me coming here today would be worth it. We are going to change the format, a stipend, we are going to insert a kind of exchange. Brother Minister Connor Mohammed would like to have about five minutes to respond to one or two points and it will be five minutes as a condom and that condom will have an opportunity to respond in kind a reminder to those who can if we are not fasting but there is a whole heart of food in the cafeteria and sales after the show please take advantage of that keep your appetite watch brothers and sisters that's why I started By saying "I think it's an honor to be here, but clearly it's not, you can be dishonest and make it look like I change the tone of the meeting.
That's why the brother was scheduled to speak behind me. That's why there was no time." she asked him and he basically presented a complete summary of the book to him and now they want to bring him back to exchange it seems like he always has to have the last word but Allah is enough for us. I think in a few words we can clarify it. some of his nonsense, first of all, the point he wanted to make and they cut me off. I tried to respect the time as best I could and stopped before finishing saying that Absalom, David's son, angered David's followers and finally went to war against David's army David gave instructions you can catch him but don't kill him one of the captains David was so enraged by the salesmen he was so enraged by the scandalous yes I say scandalous because Malcolm knew that women were the wives of messengers and when you look at Malcolm he goes in front of the white man and talks about domestic rights from the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, what right did you have if someone came and spoke about your home right now?
You would be quick to say that the brother didn't have to go before the devil because all of us who are a skeleton are in our closet somewhere now all of us because if you are human you have some skeletons and you are so righteous then you need to throw a stone, Jesus says the that is without sin They say that no God grew, so I know we have some sin here. Now one of the generals killed Absalom, he went against David's instructions and killed him, and when the army returned, even though Israel was rejoicing, all that could be heard was David moaning and groaning. the scriptures say that the celebration turned into mourning and all you could hear David say was my son, my son, my son, look, you don't want to acknowledge the contribution that the Honorable Elijah Muhammad made in Malcolm's life and you don't you want to recognize that you don't invest in a man for 12 years and you don't love him, so when Malcolm was killed, the messenger didn't celebrate because that was his product and the other point I didn't get a chance to make o The end was that the messenger knew that it would have meant more for Malcolm to come home, humble himself, and admit his mistake than to not kill anything because after all, now that Malcolm is dead, many of you adore him if he had been alive, you still would.
They've been calling him hateful, Esther doesn't see it, now they can say what they say about Malcolm, but maybe some of you out there and instead of helping Malcolm they debated instead of helping him succeed they wanted to buy some reason not to think We can criticize the messenger, but what we were dealing with were black academics who have done nothing to close this time. We have a principle called control and we fight with those who fight with us and that's why when the police came to Mars number seven we didn't do it. Bow down, we have a brother who is going to jail right now because the whips are coming against us, we are going to fight, our religion is a little different, he teaches us to fight with everyone, to fight with us, but since you brought a little intellectual argument weak, we will fight with you.
Based on that weak historical argument, what does it say about the nation's internal security if agents enter our ranks? What does it say about God that there is a devil or does it never say that God is not God? Do you know why agents can? enter the ranks of the nation because we reject no black man. I don't care how bad you are and what condition you are in, what trials and tribulations you are in, so it is easy for a deceitful and corrupt person to come up to us and call us brother. I'm with you, what does this say now that the day he was murdered, Brother Jean, one of his trusted bodyguards was an informant agent whatever the hell you want to call him, but a new report on the depth of the devil in young people, you're an age, I don't care if you're an author, FBI, CIA or whatever you want to call it, because I want to do something more with my life and then make a case against my own people, said the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, no matter what. the black man can forgive him for any crime, even up to murder, and that's why he never looked at Malcolm's criminal record, he never cared what a black man had done, he said, come to me all of you who are loaded and if If you had the same love for black people you would not spend your entire life addressing a topic that, contrary to what this brother said, the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan is already addressing, he gave a lecture in 1979 called Diamond Among MenMalcolm that Farhad is avoiding this issue, was presented to the world. and he laid his heart bare and said yes, it helped create a climate.
Now what else can a man say? He didn't pull the trigger, if the killers came from the North, he didn't know anything about it and, by the way, the reason I endured the preaching that day is because Malcolm was the Regional Minister in this city and when Malcolm sat down James Shabazz, the minister in Newark, the highest-ranking chief minister was sent to New York and all other ministers on the East Coast were rotated at noon. to keep Muslims happy and fed, but when you don't know something and you write a book and you don't go to primary sources, you don't get the right information for three more minutes and then you rightly say there is a secret hand.
That sounds like some of that doublespeak you're talking about, that sounds like some of those mixed signals that you're accusing yourself or the nation killed Malcolm Hardee, the FBI or the CIA or the United States government, does that how long don't you try to have your cake and eat it too if poor agent men entered the Nation of Islam without the nation knowing what can be laid at our doorstep for the responsibility that after all we were involved in a fight ? I have not condemned Malcolm tonight. I respect great contributions. of the mountain Malcolm walks before me so that I can stand today, but as a follower of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad I can see where he went astray, not only in the 11 months after he left the nation, but let's go back to 1963 when the messenger told him not to make statements to the press he went to Miami Beach and his interviews right now that document that Malcolm was not complying with that instruction you don't want to deal with that but really really it's still a justification for murder, I mean, with you, the article lists the Luas smart card, you have said that we made mistakes in the past, just here tonight, saying that they took that out of us, our leader has already said it before the world and tells us today not to fight with you.
He tells us today not to seek to take the life of your brother, but what you must understand, brothers and sisters, is that while that condominium is in the universal comfortably in a white man's university within the housing projects and when I say a white man, many of his black universities are also run by the white man we are housing projects where the worst communities maybe someone that condom wouldn't even walk and we go without weapons or guns and we try to improve the quality of life while he barks and write our brothers these men you despise tonight the FOI are not thugs in the community trying to make a safe for your mother for your baby and if a man approaches us with a god I don't give a damn what color he is we will take the gun and beat up Moses went to civilize the Caucasians in Europe had to sleep in the rain the fire I see that most of you who don't really work with black people beyond an intellectual level romanticize strumming, but when go out to the trenches see Malcolm debatable and that is the hypocrisy and most of you it was Malcolm who grew Indian pipe, it was Malcolm who taught the brothers to throw acid in the faces of their enemies, so if the Muslims killed to Malcolm, Malcolm had something to do with teaching us the technique.
The last thing I won't say. The last thing I want to say is that they don't want to deal with the truth, but they are the ones that Minister Louis Farrakhan talked about and I said a book called Meaning of Information About Information (FOI), he said. Malcolm said brother, you can't change people to beat brothers and sisters out of moms and think he won't come in the house. Oh, we made a lot of mistakes, but now who was a part of that, I can only tell you that on this day, because the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan is fortunate to live in this era understanding the mistakes of the past, he does not want the mistakes to be repeated. and that is why no matter who has spoken against him, it has not freed him. the FY passes them, he hasn't told us to fight when Jesse berated him, he took it when Don King with dobutamine took it when Mayor Barry took it and not only did he send us but when they needed help, he went to their defense.
You have to recognize the redeeming spirit, but if you don't know God, if you don't have a personal relationship with God, then your hearts are filled with rank and you take this bitterness to the grave, we don't raise this issue like Always people outside the nation The ones who raised the issue throw the rock and throw it in the open and then think we're not supposed to respond. You are crazy brother. You could be writing books on how to eliminate the scourge of drugs from our community. Use some of that erudition you have to try to get the black man back in the room.
You can use your knowledge to help improve the condition of our people, but self-hatred always makes you dig a room and that is why the moon cannot. even and that's why the Shabazz village right now is in doubt - good man take it then you won't bring her back and you won't let her see that's my little master my nation if things get bad what are you afraid of the truth? The man who spoke finishes what I have to say if you want me to sit, I will sit, but I won't. You know when you know what truth to grant us.
You mention, okay, the point is you had an extra 15. minutesI wanted to suggest to you and now we are going to move into the question and answer period, it will be an additional opportunity for you to speak, okay, because we have an audience at some point, we don't have to follow the same rules. At this point, you want to take some questions from the room, of course, we don't have people who have speeches to give. I want to suggest that you wait for them to simply address the questions. Get these questions. I want to show these brothers that the idea.
So I said a few minutes ago that we didn't want to turn this into a sibling exchange, a condo on one side and Mohammed's Corner on the other. There are several other panelists, unfortunately one of them had to leave. Came. came from Boston and had to leave due to time, so let's entertain some questions now Polly prepared the makeup, it's just a moment here, okay, I'll take some questions to the room, let me remind you of that job there, Celsius's support for Sheldon's dinner. the Malcolm We are also part of the panelists and when you respond, save your answers. breathe if you know my I would appreciate it if you remain in your name or that of an organization organizational affiliation can I brother for a second please okay and so many things were said, you know there was an inaccurate reference to the nation of that time that died in 1975 and it's the misunderstanding that they should be seeing the same nature of continuation today, which is an inaccuracy and what one understands are those that it's addressed to and therefore we have a confusing right in that and you know there's many of that deception of the four that happened.
Well, I'm not afraid, so these are people, just because of the coup and the history, the point that we in business are all, white people, was murdered by the dissident and we have respect despite the disability, if not I'm supposed to be. to speak on a panel like that, none of us should be because that condo is a little older than me, but he still wrote a book on the subject because in this world you can study history and you can teach history from the study of The Messenger Said that the best subject to study is history, but I told them at the beginning that it was not there.
I told you I was a year old when Malcolm died and I'm just telling you what my leader and teacher told me, I think. I feel that, as someone who was brought to the nation by Malcolm, who loved Malcolm, who walked very closely with Malcolm, he is the most qualified to represent Malcolm and the last thing I will say our religious differences, brother Wally, yours Of the one hundred and ninety surahs of the Quran it is read in the name of Allah, the beneficent, the merciful, says to all the disbelievers, I do not serve what you, sir, nor do I serve him whom I serve, nor will I serve what You said, it is no more use to a man than Iceland is to you. as his reward and for me as my I just want to make a comment or a question, I respect everyone who is there, have great respect for all the information and tell us that in this room I am a dumbfounded young man.
I just graduated from college. I am disappointed because our mission is African liberation, the nation respectful of Islam, they have done great things, they have done things that no other black organization on this planet has been able to do. They respect that the president knows that he has an idea of ​​what's going on and he can put that at the forefront, but when we have to stop fighting, we have a mission, we have a race to save, you know, that's our vision, if we want to push forward Towards the 21st century, we have to stop these disputes and at the same time. can pay homage to the immense mountain, no one is a great man, I understand that he did, he was not a great man before he became attractive, now when the girl is enough or not, unless it was Malcolm little, the brother had to learn and the Honorable Elijah taught him.
Muhammad and we have to recognize that that is part of the story. The bottom line is: if we paid homage to our ancestors, we can pay homage to the lesson of history, unless we worship, support our leaders who here now in physical reality and also work with the common mission of freedom in a community of the 21st century. I just want to respond to one element of a statement I just made. Malcolm was certainly mentored by Elijah Muhammad, but he was mentioned by many other very important forces that we tend to forget. from earliest childhood, which meant a bite in a family of Guardians and it took races to extinguish it, but only temporarily that condition in him now Elijah Muhammad rescued him from the depths of the prison cleansed him and taught himself to respect, but the general intellectual of the house Ben He was taught to respect the world and the power of the word and I was an equally important mentor in the prison context, but Malcolm returned here to the streets of Harlem.
He became a product of a political culture. Father. He was not taught anything in the debates. Nationals boulevard mountain also encountered a radicalized intellectuality that was also based on the environment, people very close to the African American protest tradition who were Africanists who were located in the hallway and people from the Writers Guild like the murders, the work has not happened on the dot, julian. Mayfield Mountain was also mentioned by the expatriate community of African Americans and places like Ghana and Tanzania. Egypt, one of these people believes that there is a garden here tonight who wished Malcolm in general and showed him that Malcolm was also mentioned by the revolutionaries on the continent of Africa a revolutionary leadership but he was in the organizational community has a state visit In Cairo he stayed on a boat on the Nile River with representatives of the revolutionary movement that took Zanzibar, a representative of the ANC and the PLC and an Algerian revolutionary movement among others.
When he went to Ghana he was received by representatives of the revolutionary regime in Cuba and Mountain more than anything he was a powerful private soldier and reflected the mentorship of a new social force that he only caught a brief glimpse of in the city but who was the most dynamic schwartzman, Simard, that's what I call him, my book, people of the street urban, okay, so it is incorrect for any of these sources to claim that an alchemist mentored the mountain. What's important about Malcolm if he takes on all the kind of tumultuous upheaval that the community was focusing on? that individual and therefore he will be selected.
Every positive source I do now until death is to learn the lessons from this experience and move forward. This is for the day. I think it's been very beneficial in knowing where we need to look forward and how we can If we want to move forward into this world that we face starting today, we can look back and kill Malcolm and why he killed Malcolm and all the avenues of question around Malcolm, but I can say that I was: a young student, the little brother, Martin, was killed, but I want to say that during his time and his struggle I have seen a northern man.
I said I have to say it to get it. I have not seen any other man lift up the black bands and take to the streets to organize against the Beast like Malcolm did. and I have to say what I feel, I say that this great American of ours is definitely right, but in order for us to move forward in the heart that we want to stop this whole issue around that, frankly, we have to organize around our common interests and I think at this point we have other questions about whether Brother Zack's book is beneficial or not.
Brother Conrad's conditionit's profitable. I will pass on the question about US medical prisoners. I want to know, brother Conrad, you made a statement earlier, brother, where the brothers are in the projects I am from filling the air and I with the African to National organization also go to projects I do not see anyone raising the question as an organized trunk around the political prisoners one book is writing the other for this morning, I think the young mother is raising a son raising a son in this world and I look around me I say my goal, when will my son be willing to get confused about good and evil?
Please stand firm and take four for the liberation of our people and I want someone to tell me right now where the nation is headed at this time in the liberation of our people. You are not basically in the economic development zone because that was put very much in the foreground, but I need to know how I see that my brothers come here in such a large number I am in a very large number I do not see everyone attending like this year or where person about Mumia and Gerónimo solidarity with brother Jamar we certainly stand in solidarity with our brothers and sisters family of John Africa in the name of Angela Davis and Gerónimo prayer and I keep remembering him or hearing him speak on behalf of our people so we are in solidarity and believe me everything is doing has no national leader today who is more at the forefront of the world challenging the white man and his oppression of our people economically, politically and also by tradition, that is why we are in the solidarity system and when they need us, we will be there, we will They asked us to come here.
We are asked to attend many meetings tonight and every time we ask we do our best to be there to support whatever cause black people are fighting for, but I will leave you with this: the most important thing the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan is doing today is to teach us that knowledge that was talked about that made us wiser as Muslims even though it was beating the system to avoid prison to avoid prison and this is the knowledge and teaching that we are providing to young black men all over the country. to turn them into true revolutionaries, revolutionaries who go out on the streets working in the black community instead of revolutionaries in prison, but of course you can't always name that now, but this brother may soon be a political prisoner because he was not guilty of nothing more than being in the mosque by a son in the heart of the devil, but still they convicted a dishonest brother and now he is a criminal convicted of three charges unit, yes, so I was totally brief, so I'm going to dress , Sir.
It seems like you mentioned some things subliminally like who killed Malcolm but you never said why he didn't kill him, that's why I came here and I never heard you mention anything about why he was killed and it seemed to me that she was like blaming someone without blame. , you know, if you want to blame someone, do it, holy, okay, let's not say a few words, it's a peculiar situation for me because if you relate to my life you can't cause money, basically accusing me. not to say you know in my book and system system up here I thought I was going to understand everything but I didn't let myself say this just to make things clear you know that I have done a little more at work more for my life I just wrote the book about the murder of mountains.
I've been fighting since I was 12 and Malcolm fastens the mountains, my ex, in my seventh book and I guess I'm taking trouble because Teddy anyway, I just felt the need to let you know that Conrad isn't the only one who's been fighting for the people, there were many reasons why Mouth was killed, some of the most important reasons was the threat he posed as far as the intelligence community was concerned and let me quickly summarize the main argument of my research is that Mountain was killed as a result of three conspiracies coming together, the main conspiracy was orchestrated by the FBI, that was the secret hanging that I alluded to before and basically in Bottom line, all they simply did was exploit existing conditions.
I think I did understand that point. Yes, what exactly was your main problem with them? There were several problems. A mountain trying to internationalize the struggle of Africans. Take it from the level of civil rights to human rights if you read the FBI documents and he can, in fact, you can go back to your newspaper, it's very clear that the enemies had a lot of problems with that, plus the problems add up to all , even they also had a problem. internal radicalism you might remember if you go back to the spring of 1964, Malcolm said some things that you know really drove the enemy away, you know, for example, he talked about organizing rifle clubs, you know he also gave a speech in which he flirted All the concept of black revolution, one point we must always keep in mind is that even when we do it rhetorically, sometimes the enemy does not always interpret it just as rhetoric, but the enemy basically does it and not only looks at the real reality. but they also look at the potential reality of all of that, this of course also created a problem for Malcolm and they were also bothered by the fact that when Malcolm went to Africa especially but also to Asia, they were surprised at how other African leaders, Asian leaders. you get it from leaders who really bother you because Malcolm was pretty much the key critic who was giving, the most surgical criticism of the United States of the domestic politics of the United States during that time, they were real Bob about how so many of these African leaders are.
Opening doors and things for the mouth, I served the Asian leaders. The Islamic leaders expect them to open doors for the mountains, which also raises the problem because some of these nations were what we call meat nations of the United States, people who then maybe could exploit someone like Malcolm and I'm speaking from the From the enemy's point of view, they now felt that certain people could exploit the mouth of someone like him and then basically use him as a club to make America look bad as well. Keep this in mind because he is talking about the Cold War.
Malcolm's murder. The fighting in the mountains has to be seen within the context of the Cold War with respect to the United States was fighting a Soviet Union, you know, he was basically a war friction, but what we have to be very aware of is that when these Europeans They were in the Cold War, images meant many images and in some cases they meant everything, other reasons are. that Knox was very charismatic and I'm basing this on my research, I think I can remember the amount. Go first, there is a lot of research, they have research.
I just want to say one thing, they had research when it showed them that it can be achieved. investigation where Mountain used to listen to tapes of senator begging for forgiveness asking to be let back into the nation cling to just Minister the month I won't want to be the center of attention at all when I leave the nation Malcolm said I'm still a follower of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad he said uh I still think you have the best solution the question is a statement in the question no one should realize this especially with this thing I would compare the bands she in the first place the FBI wanted to save Farrakhan from death you know it's absurd you know What I'm saying about the match and now I'm talking about Malcolm as I, the fallen leader and the way and the medicine, the fallen, he was a leader now back then they called him that of possible role so the question is still uh when I'm joking.
The thing is that there are people who love the mountains, as if your love falls apart. When we were in this, just looking at what happened shows that, in general, it is also unifying, we talk about unity so that we unite, the only way to unite this. It's really the only way we're going to come together, like we get to the truth. I want to thank the panel and I came here, you know, expecting an answer to the question, but I didn't get it and instead I can just leave the division. and separation and anger and fighting and debate and in your own personal meeting you are not supposed to be divided and that is what I do.
I have two girls that I am raising and I would like to teach them unity, not division, if when I come to something like this and see us still divided my question is what are you going to do to unite us obviously I have something so I say it's good that these Picos are here, that is precisely what we call, let's turn it off you should know it's you, these are negative discussions, okay, the car, okay, now I've never seen Hukilau's question from X&Y. Some of us don't like metaphysics and we are tied to what the young brother said.
You see brothers and sisters again, system one. of the reasons why we get so tense with this question and that is why you have to excuse me if I jumped first I took the defense but as brother samurai said and he knew it and the organizers knew the issue in another disinterested is their confrontation because great Emotions revolve around this question and tonight's emotions show us why Malcolm was killed and it shows us that he killed Mountain. It was not in the nation's interest to kill Malcolm now that Malcolm is deeper than he ever was in life and thirty years later. they still accuse us of this who benefits from this the white man the white man benefits his brothers and sisters and he did that exactly right, but where the emotions come from is that when you see a man like the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan he apologizes for his role he admits that he helped create the climate, but now he says let's move on and others want to continue attacking you, that makes those of us who love him very angry because that does not show a spirit of forgiveness that shows those within our community that Stops the neighbor Malcolm in many cases, but I want to maintain this division, the last point I want to make links with what the brother said, unlike you, I have no interest in this argument, a personal interest.
I wasn't on the mission. At that time, whether you wanted to land on the nation's doorstep or not, you can live on my doorstep and you can't land on the doorstep, a lot of these young Muslims because we have some that had nothing to do with Malcolm's Autobiography they want. For many of us, it was the first book I read about the Nation of Islam and I loved Malcolm and in fact I hated the Nation of Islam, but when I heard the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan and he explained it like a brother, I took him at his word. . and out of the spirit of redemption in love I submitted to him and allowed him to be my teacher and I feel that that is what we all must do, allow man's recognition of his mistake to be enough and then move on, we cannot bring.
Malcolm is back and certainly Farrakhan should not commit kamikazes nor should Harry Caray whatever his name be and let me say lastly that this new nation under his leadership can close the gap. We don't hate Malcolm. We see many of the great things he did. We are inspired by many. of the great things he did, but you're not in our religion, so when you hear him say that Malcolm becomes a hypocrite, you can't judge that if you're not a member of the Nation of Islam because you don't even know what that means. Malcolm held master Muhammad as his god very well in Islam in the Nation of Islam and in all religious people when you hold God, that is not like holding and professor an intellectual where you have the freedom to say it over here swinging. you're out brother God so when you leave a religion and turn your back on that that surely qualifies you for spiritual democracy now if you don't understand that then don't try to understand it or relate to it because you don't.
You come from a spiritual background and you have to be honest and admit that you understand it, but that doesn't mean he hates me and it does mean that we can end this conflict, but I understand the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan seeing the motions because Malcolm taught. taught him to love the messenger Malcolm taught him who God was Malcolm taught him to be a vigorous defender of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad and God, so you must understand that they are brothers and sisters and do not judge unless you put on men's shoes, to unless you are If we are willing to submit to the spiritual teachings of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, then you cannot understand how we feel, but let me say publicly that we will get out of here tonight and let the word spread to the demons and agents among us who are white and blacks. sac condo will never be harmed by the Nation of Islam.
We fought a fight tonight from here and we feel very capable and prepared to do so. We should not consider any physical attacks against him because our argument has already hit him all night, so I just want you to know and God bless him and you because we believe that one day you will do good. I want to make a suggestion to those in line, those of you who have the questions that you don't ask, you know, just ask them if you have speeches to give, we ask that they take you and step aside, okay, because We have a serious crime problem and we just want to get to the questions. my sister had to show peace and blessings and onlyI want to pay tribute to the last sister who spoke because I think she is truly representative of what happens in the feminine principle is allowed to be within our organizations now I want to deal with a situation In terms of organizations and the Messiah Complex, we and the We Africans have to analyze and criticize the understanding that people are men, women, human beings and not gods, and I believe we are here in a spirit of truth and harmony to try. and find out what happened so that we can heal from the situation I am also part of a theocratic organization where there was a head and it fits they are also a fixed society there are people within that society who do not criticize me you cannot see weaknesses and you are almost damned if you say I think this is a dangerous precedent for me and I think it's about whether we come to Islam as traditional African bait revolutionary organizations I've seen the same mentality I've seen the same mentality and I call it the Messiah Complex because all of us through slavery through this type of Christianity that we have gone through a little bit - what to look for on our side and we don't want that on our side we can do anything wrong my question my question is why The sisters leave.
Did I miss something that is a finger snap that is not good for the nation of Islam? I also have another point to make in terms of the sisters and I think we have to deal with our personal eyes in terms of these. organizations is it offensive? Are you really a real brother-in-law? If you can take advantage of sisters, exploit sisters. can you have more than one wife? bedroom is fine, so what I'm saying is that you are allowed to have more than one wife in the nation of Islam. The organization that won. This is a society of sin.
The king has five wives and members of the society can enter into a polygamous relationship. If they follow the proper procedures and channels, this is a structure, so we have to deal with the situation of the men and women inside, first we ask our captain, we, the captain, dense gain, the captain of the food of the New Islamic York has been refining the almond to make it public why the sisters left, we don't want what you say, but when the brothers stood up, the captain had the sisters from MGM CT fired and those from Bautista, I think that was done from a point of view.
See security and whether you agree or not, that's why it was done, we'll make sure to take it and it really wasn't an insult to you. Well, now for the last question, which sister can you leave as you wish? We asked our sisters to leave. but if you want to stay we have the right to go to the sister school, you know that in the nation we are in an organization that we cement or discipline, this is not new, you know this about the nation, if you don't agree with it, that's one thing , but at least you know where we are and when the FOI captain, who is the head of all security, makes the decision.
As Muslims, we listen and obey, so that is our organizational policy. Honest linkie doesn't happen so understand we understand yours please try and understand us even if you don't agree now the last question sister asked no I don't have more than one wife sister I am NOT financially intellectually spiritually morally probably physically qualified no, I am NOT drawing on the fact that I don't measure up now you know, in our religion that is acceptable, but since the black man has been so destroyed, yes, it will be a while before we mature to those levels to be able to handle more than one wife, but with all our webinars here with Nora Street with our women with no guidance, no man, struggling with all our babies that some foolish brother created and walked away from, we have to start evaluating polygamy as an alternative to that reality.
The Honorable Elijah Muhammad, as our leader, was to lead us first by example towards that lifestyle and we are still trying to achieve it, so I thank you for that, yes, excuse me, I would just like to say something, to the majority of you who They are on the line and I appreciate that they were there supposedly to request the search. As a result of most of his speeches, we are losing audiences. Oh, please, those of you who have questions, would you please come forward and ask your questions? Those who would like to comment, could you please stay at the back of the line so we can? address that you can direct questions to the panel so that we can extract your thoughts to listen to what you have to say respectfully I ask you please not to waste our time anymore with comments and speeches we want questions directed to the audio to the panel here some of them would have to leave very soon .
I would appreciate it if you would do so. It's an invoice sales pad that wants to respond to something, but also before someone just wanted to address the audience years ago, the stream may track. we with cameras ran down the street father brother whose mouth I immediately recognized and he only had one brother with him he says he arrived where I was he stopped to address the press and his brother was with him he told him maybe it's better I didn't do this and Malcolm looked at the visas around him. I'm not worried, only my brother has my back a few months later, when I heard that one had been killed, I knew instantly who killed him, it was practice, I couldn't pull the trigger, I knew it. and then I committed my life to the liberation of my people.
I think it is a conflict for me to be among our people and hear them use the practical language that they impose on us to attack each other. You know we came too far, we're in fast. and powerful people we cannot destroy ourselves we are greater than what we could do was come here. I had no intentions because I'm not mostly crazy, but rhetoric in all of that. I think more than that, but my point is that I want to congratulate the committee at Hermon and make a comment to them about something they told me today that they decided to have this forum today because they did not want to have conflicts with dr.
Shabazz and then the black people who will have theirs on the day that Malcolm was murdered and I really opposed it, but I want to thank you and congratulate you for doing that, but I think we all owe each other one thing. We have to do something about this on the 21st. You see, this is the 30th anniversary of the brother's death, so we called everyone out on Tuesday at five o'clock for an hour to respect that moment. and then at 7:00 p.m. I flew to Brooklyn to el-hajj Malik Shabazz Elementary School where we invited you all to come and continue this, but just in the spirit of unity, peace, I still said a few minutes ago when the sister said she had come tonight and there was no Got the most fundamental question and it brought us all here answered.
I thought about the answers to that question, but what she said really worried me because, at the very least, we have to understand that Malcolm's father and his true victim seek the political Kingdom first. and everything else will be added to them that is why he was assassinated he was assassinated because he advocated that African Americans resort to Paul's African internationalism and fundamentally define their struggle as a struggle for human rights in that struggle the enemy was defined as the imperialists organize this In the North Atlantic Treaty Organization utters words that this struggle had to use any and all means: moral suasion, political action, non-violence and revolutionary violence.
Malcolm X believed that revolution was possible in the United States. Malcolm also believed that a united front had to be formed, but it had to be formed based on the principle of unity, not everyone's agenda in the black community could be the number one agenda, the United Front, if it had been the agenda of the most segments of this process of our community, any other unit would be uncomfortable now, why should I? We reiterate this view there are all kinds of goals and objectives that one can seek your loves more I have been trained in the father's laughter of American nationalism he said yes secret spiritual trap borrowed if you see Kamal going with lights up but if you think about the physical, if you think about a political goal, then you have to rally your muscles, your sweat and your tears to fight and you have to build a principled secular political movement and you have to hunker down and fight the enemy that Malcolm raised.
This is very clear to us, so clear about what is visible in that community, to understand that and that is why he is underground at the age of 39, that is why they killed him not only to kill this body but to kill that message to make us forget that. message to make us stop organizing the meta, stop believing that revolution is possible in this country and I said let the African people here be liberated, that's why they are dead, we are so pressed for time, executives, could you see how they are done to the side and approach at this very moment?
Street who was going to be here tonight and my question is for the teacher or anyone else about languages ​​or have we misunderstood the capacity for education of the United States and your question of the soul of the black illusion is your black leadership and I have the opportunity if is bankrupt. we've never had that maximum what we've had is a lot of different leaders dealing with different eccentric perspectives 77 I think what I challenge as people who do it and I think this is what my brother was referring to before and I think other powers That says and I think that such an audience is the extent to which we can work together despite the different distances that we know despite the different despite the different differences that we have as a people.
I think those have been our challenges over time. years and I think that's really what we're struggling with right now. The other point I would also say is that I think for any people and not just for African peoples, but I think for any people you should always expect conflict. expect differences the biggest challenge the biggest challenge we have is that if we can develop an agenda that the majority of us agree with because we are never going to have an agenda that we will all agree with, but if we can develop an agenda where the most of the people in organizations where the majority of the leaders were the majority of Africans the masses of people are inheriting, so I think we have the opportunity to at least forge, you know, have a unified front, but this Messiah comes along with it . and everyone is supposed to follow that Messiah thing.
I think it's mr. Gregg, better if it's true, said that he himself felt the same as I did, but the messenger ordered them to leave Malcolm alone. The house literally belonged to the nation. I visited Captain Yusef's tent. He taught me some things before Allah took him away. He never said. He told me that he had something to do with the attack and I would like to know who told him that it is easy for a white man who makes a movie to put on a trailer for a movie that before he dies a man is dead he admitted something that no one I know a new chapter, a boy like that, a great captain, I once heard him say that he knew: what is the nation in the mountains, the democratic world for him tomorrow, then we will also be dimensions, not that they have overcome this, although I will see them try . to help the black community but it's convenient or when you see it yourself don't try to talk about everything and we should all be we can't have a good night and I feel the spirit now - my question is I haven't taken progressively in Philadelphia we would like to know when we can meet with the members of the nation.
It is located twenty-five or six North Broad Street at Mohammed number 12 and to change the: what are two of them doing in this back area, let's take the next question, you know how to answer my right. I suspect we'll all say that he talked about the novel writer Mohammed and everything we know in essence, well, number one, why don't we know the identities? and why would we be wasting all this time in India, we know that we as men are supposed to answer the question for the liberation of our nation and stop with all this and all these other things that mathematically killed everyone On days, we don't think about people after the question has done what it has done.
Yes, my question is aimed at behaving and serving Islam with respect. Yes, with respect to what the Nation of Islam has been doing in the last 30 years. My question is: Will there ever be a time when the Nation of Islam is best qualified to do so? empower our black women and men as they establish subordinate institutions under the flag and fundamental principles of Islam without converting Africans, by birthright, naturally, the children of God to a religion that began in 527 AD. by Muhammad, which was not a religion and before that I am not attacking the Nation of Islam simply bringing this as a concept maybe in the 21st century, entering the 21st century with the war against us black men, there will be a time in which we can come. together maybe our religion could be slightly different, but if it is under the same fundamental principles which is no disrespect to the Nation of Islam, can we start training that question?
This is a wonderful place to end tonight's meeting, brothers and sisters, I meanBefore you go, I know what he means to me, what he has been to me, what he did for me in my life, so when I hear him attack, it's like someone attacking your father. One night I felt great pain, but I read, brothers, that condominium on the radio. let's say he couldn't absorb the Nation of Islam from the burden of the mountain, he couldn't well absorb the Honorable Elijah Muhammad from that assassination when you attack that nation that makes us evaluate, naturally we want to defend it but we want to defend it.
It's about seeking truth based on truth, so tonight was an exercise in that, but I want you to know that the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan loves each of you and he is making me love each of you. Although we sometimes agree, brother Lombe, sometimes we disagree. but I have it very respectfully and brother sunny carson viola we do not always agree but I see them as those who work for the blacks but what I do not see sometimes is the respect of those who are not religious people for our here a man takes the black men teach them to love sir - no sir - join together with seven - fool to quit drugs we will open a 4.4 million dollar restaurant this week not in the white center but in the ghetto on the south side of Chicago 17 ice creams It wasn't built on a loan from white people, it was grassroots people putting together the nickels, dimes, dollars and quarters so that when we have events that we like, we don't have to come to the right schools, we'll have our own place, Hon.
Elijah Muhammad taught us to love ourselves and not only that, but he showed us that we can do something for ourselves. We just bought a sixteen hundred acre farm in Georgia to feed them. At one time we were the largest importers of fish in the country, bringing in a million pounds of fish to help you eat better, but sometimes I don't think our brothers and sisters who are brands of Leninism were intellectuals, properly respecting the contribution of nation, they should not condemn Parker, they should be. happy that in a time when black people were not involved in the fight in large numbers, he loved a woman enough and loved the nation's work to rebuild the nation, whether you say brother Wally, he was the heir apparent or No, he tricked me and Hanny didn't plan the mission.
He probably would have been on the street smoking dope, selling drugs or working for the white man in a press backdrop, so whatever is done, please, whatever he did to lift up what was destroyed, should be directly. directly to me, he is wrong, you know, he has 40 years in the black community and that doesn't elevate him enough, so there is nothing I can say tonight because many of you knew him before me and it doesn't matter what you can say to the respect, they cannot. Let's just say it didn't mean much to virtually everyone in this room, everyone was moved by something he said and everyone loved themselves a little more based on his words and teachings over the last 40 years, so may Allah bless you in everything what they do. you feel towards him you have the right to but recognize that he is my leader and teacher and spiritual father and I think a lot about everyone and God again and again for what he has meant in my life so I thank you for listening tonight brothers the last What I want say in answer to your question is that I don't know any man who has worked hard to close the gap and bring unity among black people is God in the churches, is God in the black synagogues of the synagogues, has gone to nationalist groups and has sought to make us a more unified people than ever.
He is calling for a Million Man March. Why do you think they raised the Kabila Shabazz today? Why do you think they are raising this issue again because they want to dilute it? the strength of that market, but that condo should be that amount Sonny Carson should be in that amount we should all be there you should be there because the good that will come from that March will benefit us all the last thing he did last year he spoke to 150,000 Men from all over the country and he fought against the training of masculinity that we have in New York today.
This is an opportunity for all brothers and sisters, regardless of their religion, regardless of their philosophy or ideology, to work together for the integration of our people and the last thing that you can do. He said brother I have to correct and especially for this particular group, he makes a mistake when he says that Islam was something we had to convert to. I'm sorry, but Islam does not have an established birth record. Islam means submission to the will of God. and that's what Malcolm strove to do and that's what black people do well in this LOM.
If you go East right now they are complaining and attacking Farrakhan because he is too black because he refused to bow down to racist culture. The imperials who are actually Arabs and want to use their race to make us bow to their way of devotion, we have a way that is unique to the black man and woman of America and that is why many of our brothers and sisters in the religious orthodoxy they don't agree with us we don't like them because we refuse to be different than we are we are black men and women we are lost members of the broader Nation of Islam and we make no apologies for them we recognize a black man as our leader , we do not believe that Honorable Elijah Muhammad is dead, the Holy Quran says do not speak against them of those who are killed or die in the way of Allah, ask them why they are not dead, but you did not perceive that none of them are dead Jesus.
I have Christians all over the earth waiting for Jesus to return. I thought this was the last, but I saw and that's the last sister. Now I'll stay after if you want, but I have to say this is cool because even If you think the Honorable Elijah Muhammad is dead, he said: I'll be the winner dead or alive and you can't say we're following the dead leader because we have a living leader now. the same thing we are about to go see. in Chicago and this is the Honorable Louis Farrakhan sitting in the seat of the Messenger of Allah, the most honorable mom of the night, but we hope that he returns to the black men, so I just want to give you some friendly advice, my brother. that you try not to make as many assumptions about people as the style I will believe because we are opposed to having a different point of view than yours to become Leninist or whatever other label you have chosen to resolve this with you, it is not correct, you know, I do my research first. , second, no one attacked the Honorable Minister Farrakhan tonight, nor have I seen anywhere inside Carlos's book and he attacked him, he attacked them to survive, but I don't know yet, as I saw, maybe it's the defensive thing that I don't do .
I don't know, but it seems like it's been mentioned in part about ten times that there are people here attacking Minister Farrakhan. I don't know where this house is, what put it on the tape to make it clear that no one knows. that and no one is that what you're suggesting we could resist. I would like to ask Brother Sales if I can go all the way to first selecting Brother Sales. Your reflection on the psychological imposition instead of a young African in terms of the prison mentality that is sold so freely seduces or is interrelated in the popular culture of the brother his oversight or his observation for us please and where our young people are seen who are in the university circuit, their relationship with community work and their aggression towards young people within the community, that is my question.
I would like to ask him about his observation tonight and if there is any information that you would like to share with this group of Africans, I would like to ask our brother at the mosque. Is he there? any information that you can share with manyI am my area is the media for reflection the criticism that has occurred within the boss for the delivery of information a weight away from Dogma away from intimidation and having a more interactive community or more for the people who are inside and outside the mosque because, as I understand it, by the mandate of Islam we are all Muslims, we must question the relevance.
I guess the gangster mentality psychologically conditions African men in this country. I think what we want to say about Malcolm is that he represents a model of transformation given the image that has been imposed on our young black men and women and that it's not so much that Malcolm, you know, legitimizes the notion that one can be in the prison, that we are all in prison, but what is more important. It is also very important that he transcends the penitentiary, he transcends that land force model. Now one thing that worries me is that in a certain way he transcends it and this is what is not really being delivered to our angry unit, the Mita. argue and defend each other in a sense, but there are certain other things and some of you came out well tonight.
Malcolm respects intellectual effort as an integral part of liberation at this time. Who wouldn't come to a place like here tonight and talk about who? academics don't know what's going on what happened the mouth respected the power of the word they respect them to spit the power study analysis in action this is some aspect of mathematics that has not yet been penetrated it is used the way it should secondly Malcolm said that you have to go after angry you have to unite and you have to fight there is a concrete in the asset that is a second, you know, something that we must bring to our user that they do not have, that is called a psychological man, he says and the third thing that the The process of counterattack is not simply domestic, but requires an international perspective that we reach and that we reform ties across the waters, but force the continent to be well and that we counterattack.
This is relevant to mapping them up there for the last time. period and I'll take a step back, there has been a lot of talk about black men as an endangered species and this, close to my mind, I walk strongly, like most crackheads, that older black women are fine If I go to the hospital, most people. where the data ends because young people are young women if I walk down the streets most people are being brutalized most people are being brutalized a young black woman it's okay and what's very important think about virtual things from Malcolm even sorry acclimatized organization meaning incorporated Muslim mosque Malcolm returned South African said there has to be a new role whether he should be given an equal role in his presence African community what does it matter brother said well it's time for us to go Malcolm has lost his mind he put a sister in debt in charge of his African American organization, her name was Lynn Shipley and I won't name any brother.
I had great difficulty with that, okay, and that's how it seems to me when we talk about black men in their psychological emancipation. we have to continually emphasize them: there is no black more liberation without black. I said I will try to address your question regarding the education system and absolutely the people as quickly as possible. The first book I wrote, black students got the positive education I actually covered this topic, one of the points that I think we need to constantly understand is that the education system in this country a is not designed for us B is really designed to control our minds Carter Woodson said it is better to miseducate the black man in 1933 if you control the man's he thinks you don't have to worry about his action you don't need to tell him not to stay here who is there he will find this appropriate place and stay there you mean I need to send him through the back door he will leave without being told in fact there is no back door he will cut my face off in a special way for a special benefit in quotes the problem we run into as African people is that sometimes we think that education is objective sometimes We think that education is impartial.
Sometimes we think that education is, you know, the only thing that matters is that children matter. Education is one of the most powerful weapons that the enemy uses against us. The other thing is that education, by its design, is designed to teach us. hate ourselves despise ourselves believe in white supremacy believe in the inferiority of blacks be capitalists etc etc. The last point is that until we start as people to realize that we don't really have much choice in the matter if we totally transform the system, you know, I guess we're trying to do it through, you know, changing the curricula and everything. that, but you know it's a little problematic if you really get down to business and stuff or we have to develop educational systems ourselves, now one of the good ones. things that historically we've always had organizations that we've always had, you know, different institutions that were signed so that you know that educating our children is vital to our power and liberation.
I challenge that we need many of them and we need them. North, Southeast and West live in Harlem, we need them in poverty, but in DC we need them everywhere a and B, we also need them to teach our children and teach our students thatThey have responsibilities to our people and that is their responsibility. Let's be warriors because one last point is that if we don't understand that if we don't use education to train us to fight for our people, then basically the education system, if we don't do it, doesn't teach us to struggle. against the people Khalid Mohammed refused to answer his question, so we'll move on to more, like I said about the LSAT.
He, you know, said he wouldn't be here on the stand, but he wouldn't speak tonight. Robert my The question is about today, apart from the painful process of healing and reuniting or perhaps uniting as a family. I would like to meet someone in a position developing Minister Khalid Conrad Webber's AK or the bill, what information do we have today about what it is? What is being done to our people outside the family, specifically what patterns and activities of Government Intelligence interference are taking place today as they did 30 years ago? What new information do you have about how we act against that?
Right in this picture here is the government. every one except getting into bed with the government, various state law enforcement or intelligence agencies, you are an agent, this man Fitzpatrick, see, that's why we don't need to spend much time on the nation and its hatred of Malcolm because the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan, even though he was the target of the assassination attempt, said let's put our hands around them. Shabazz family, let's support the bill, let's raise money if we have to, let's do whatever it takes to support this family, but it's not the nation. who has waged this war against the chiffons family, you return to the state of Michigan because they killed Malcolm's father and allowed it to be covered up, then that same white man state put his mother in a mental institution, then that same white man killed to Malcolm and then those same white men today also Malcolm's grandson who was named Malcolm after his daughter and named him the same snake now he took it from his mother and then sent a disgusting character that she thought was her friend who, From what we understand, he proposed to her.
They brought her to Minnesota and then this devil handed her over to his boss. Look, this is the Caucasian Eve with deep roots and I guarantee you that even though we fight and kill each other, when you go to the group, you find it, but that's what she does. today for a long time I respect in addition to other things what other things are what other things this case has new information or new clues in the nation I refer to the surveillance intelligence part of the government and that is yes, I like it, I also like to address That The problem is that some of you are mine, actually the enemy is doing a lot of things right now and they are becoming a lot more electronic and a lot more mechanical these days.
In the past, they had to go into people's houses in order to plant microphones to connect, you know, for surveillance, like today they can do it through television, they have several satellites up there, now they can listen to conversations like What's happening right now with us, they're also getting Okay, you know he's always been like that, but lately they've revived some of that whole genetics of Hitler's organization with these with the so-called violence initiative with which some of you are certainly familiar, you know what you have now. Congress is now going to fund the violence initiative for those of you who are not familiar with that, these Europeans have come up with an extraordinary idea and this idea is that they feel that if they can put markers on young African males at the age of about four or five years old and I gave them different drugs that are basically designed to reproduce what I hear and consistent things that would prevent young African males from growing up violent and eventually, and this is part of the diploma and would eventually be affected, so so much, maybe even kill a president of the United States or something.
What's ridiculous is that in 1992 the initiative was denied funding because you know people who break up if they start talking about it if they realize it. Nickolas, so they postponed it, but in

1995

they decided to finance it now. I don't think any of us need to be rocket scientists to realize that if something like this works a little bit and stuff, I mean, this is like the ultimate example, the ultimate example of killable war, there's no nothing worse than this. The last point is that, at the very least, I think that should give us an idea of ​​where the enemy is right now in relation to us.
I have to finish this before. Brother Herman Ferguson has a question. Give me a second. Please, before reading, yes. I would like to apologize for this, but I think it is an important question. We have a brother here who was a special guest. The guest is just the talk guy, but I think there's an important question I want to ask and I think he would answer it. You know that Brother Khalid had an attack on his life recently and I would like to know in the context of what. What we are trying to do here has any meaning or relevance to this entire forum and what we are trying to talk about, Brother Lee, could you please address that question in the name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Merciful?
All praise is due to Allah, the Lord of all the worlds, testifies that there is only one God who came in person here, to the hells of North America, in the person of the master Fahrrad Muhammad, to whom praise is due for Always, we have thanked you for raising up your messenger and your Messiah, the Honorable Elijah Muhammad and we thank you both for the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan. I agree with my brothers and sisters with the greeting words of peace assalamualaikum upon being invited, of course, in my absence from the city and speaking with someone who I spoke with those who had extended the invitation.
I told you that I would not speak here tonight because I did not feel it was appropriate and that is still my feeling. Be patient. You will understand why it has already been a year since my suspension as national spokesperson Minister Malcolm was the first great national spokesperson for the Nation of Islam, the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan was the second and he chose me to be the third in that line. It has been a year since my suspension as assistant national spokesperson, our representative and of the Ministry and during that year, which is now more than a year that has become an indefinite suspension, I have attempted to communicate with my spiritual father, the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan, and I haven't really been able to arrange a successful meeting with him, I certainly won't. stay quiet for a minute let me answer the questions no matter how difficult it is and I meant no disrespect to what I was answering your disrespect no matter how difficult it is to even stand here don't goad me don't pressure me You pressure me to say something which maybe I shouldn't say or wouldn't have said, since Malekith was probably goaded and pushed too hard 30 years ago.
This happened almost thirty years to the day that in many ways I didn't set it that way. that way and I didn't plan it that way it started in November 30 years ago it started again in November 30 years later at Keene College many other parallels that don't need to be discussed now but one in particular Malcolm, it's true, made attempts to reach the Honorable Elijah Muhammad we do not know if his calls were intercepted we do not know if his mail was intercepted we do not know which government agents worked between Malcolm and his spiritual father For the most part I have not spoken on this topic because I am still waiting for my meeting with the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan and until I have that meeting with him there are things that I would like to hear from him and there are things that, as a son would say, I would like to say to him and I don't think I should tell you before I say them to him and some of you may not agree with that.
I think I understand Brother Malcolm more today than I had before not being in the Nation of Islam 30 years ago I was in my teens at the time in Houston, Texas, and had not yet moved to the University where I would meet to the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan as a young student leader there in New Orleans, so there are many things on my heart, but I think if you would allow me to be a little wise today it would be better and I am sure that if you were weighing you would agree withI don't I know how long it will take, it has been more than a year, but during that year I have not said a word or a phrase against my spiritual father, the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan, and it does not matter what he has done. in my heart again I think it should be said between father and son behind closed doors and some resolution made behind closed doors before returning to the larger community and family at large.
They asked me many questions. Keene College was not a speech I was at. To condemn my Keene College teacher was not a speech in which I delved into his domestic life. King College was a speech like all my speeches where they gave me the white man and I will continue to do so, I make no apologies for that and so on. I keep talking about Timber about that center of Jews, the so-called Jews, outside that auditorium calling for his death. He was in a war spirit and war posture and I felt like I did the right thing.
I felt like I should have done even more. They have gone beyond the grandstand and should have been taken outside like we did in Los Angeles when we took them out of the Convention Center and ran them through the streets. I wonder what would have been done then to get the President out, Bill Will. It's Slick Willy the vice president of the United States Senate to vote unanimously against me for the first time the House of Representatives and the full Congress and all the mayors and governors and the City Council and the state assemblies and the black organizations and the preachers blacks Ben Chavis Reverend behind The reverend criticizes some of the other blacks who demonstrated against me Jesse Lewis Jackson, who called the whites, they didn't have to call him, he called them.
Ben Chavis boasted in this city on television that he was the first to call Minister Farrakhan to tell him. Something had to be done to avoid all that and my last word, what is in my heart. I'll have to endure as the old people say. I'm going to break your time and wait until my change arrives. I do not believe that no matter how long it takes I will continue the fight for the liberation of our people, no matter how long it takes. I don't think they will find common ground in speaking out against Louis Farrakhan, no matter what happened 30 years ago between the Honorable Elijah.
Muhammad and the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan today Malcolm with the Honorable Elijah Muhammad thirty years ago and Minister Farrakhan would call him today, hopefully, in prayer, Farrakhan and Khalid can put a positive period behind the umbrellas of history the hours late, We will have to cut the questions. We want to thank what we call Muhammad, who was not asking me at this time. Sorry, just you know, just what's right for the speaker, the bath sister, Joan Gibbs, was an alchemist commemoration committee. I will do many like Maggie. Evans called a center for the law and the justice system Jolin Garrison, thanks guys.
I'm going to be brief because I know how to be brief and I want to thank you all on behalf of the committee for coming tonight and we invite you. to join us in Maine because, as this marks the 30th anniversary of Malcolm's murder, it also marks the 70th anniversary of his birth, and in that spirit of May, we would have a week-long series of events which I also want to point to because the question has been repeatedly raised about how events like this are divisive when the Malcolm important to follow Malcolm's teachings. building and he has to rebuild another black liberation movement and that's why we mainly brush their teeth, we don't, we work on the legacy of service, they don't do it because he's an icon or he's a guy, kind of like dignity that his brother taught.
The second thing we're going to do as we look at the assassination people tonight is talk about the role of the U.S. government, and we think it's important for people to understand the U.S. government and defend our relationship with that government and our people have been at war with that government since we got here and we need them to continue that war until we win it and they raise some people if we understand the nature of the beast that we bought from them and you know, we said it before . Tonight I think we must remember that the head of the FBI among all agencies of the United States government, second only to the CIA, is one of our greatest enemies and we must maintain his power over this.
Finally I want to say it because I think it is also important that these events are not just to get you out, listen if you want to urge you to do something and what I always try to urge people to do is to really support your fight for political prisoners. I spoke this morning with one of the longest. honking for prisons in the United States but for the sudden sending he asked me to encourage him to do that too the right to have and the other political prisoners Sundiata was recently given another 20 years denied by evil and needs oursupport because we know the brother is there partly because they don't have that sister Assad and we need to help them get out suddenly.
Thank you, get home safely and please pick up the literature about Amir and the back and collect some information, sign the petitions for a beer that unites us man thank you

If you have any copyright issue, please Contact