What would Malcolm X have thought about Zawahiri's statements about Obama ???

divine

Superstar
BGOL Investor
I don't know that to be the truth.. and even if it was, I don't feel one way or the other about it. He is a god.. and so am I. I don't worship a mystery god... The Blackman is god, the maker, the owner, cream of the planet earth, father of civilization.

:smh::smh::lol::lol::lol: How do you feel about the fact he had Malcolm X killed. By the way, he's a man not a god.
 

Dr. Truth

QUACK!
BGOL Investor
I don't know that to be the truth.. and even if it was, I don't feel one way or the other about it. He is a god.. and so am I. I don't worship a mystery god... The Blackman is god, the maker, the owner, cream of the planet earth, father of civilization.

:smh::smh::smh::smh: A devout Muslim with 10k posts on a porn forum. The hypocrisy is beyond hilarious. You'd be stoned to death in the middle east.
 

owl

...
BGOL Investor
homer-eating-popcorn-c7873_sml.jpg
 

KRAYZIE

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
I called this some white BS interpretation.

Fact. The Honorable Elijah Muhammad did not teach anyone to hate whites. He taught us to do for ourselves and to respect and appreciate our black selves. He taught that white supremacy is evil and it is a general practice of whites thru out the world.

Fact. The Honorable Elijah Muhammad taught Malcolm X that there are living breathing- walking and talking white folks that have accepted Islam. And that they are faithful muslims. He taught that these white muslims will join the faithful black muslims in the hereafter.

Furthermore, Elijah Muhammad taught that his Islam and mission was specially crafted for the lost and miseducated black folks of the new world. Hate was never within or behind Elijah's message.

Before Malcolm went to the east, Elijah had already sent his own flesh and blood son there to study arabic and traditional Islam. Elijah also designated that this traditionally trained son to be his successor.

Elijah own son, Warith Deen taught that Elijah instructed him to take the NOI into traditional Islam.

Fact Malcolm X had traveled to the east and had rubbed shoulders with arab and white muslims before he later made his pilgrimage. Malcolm X was sent on his Pilgrimage by Elijah Muhammad. Elijah Muhammad also is the one that named Malcolm X - El Hajj Malik Shabazz.

You do realize that the name Shabazz is not the surname of any muslim or arab in the eastern world. Shabazz is the name of an ancient black tribe as taught by Elijah Muhammad. Malcolm X took that name - Shabazz to her grave. The same is true for Betty Shabazz. Dr. Betty Shabazz even reconciled with Farrakhan, currently the spiritual leader of Elijah Muhammad's Nation of Islam.

The Nation of Islam was founded on the teaching of Master Fard Muhammad. Master Fard Muhammad was the son of Black man and White woman.

master_fard.gif


Elijah Muhammad had no hate for whites. He didn't teach hate for whites. He taught that whites can and are faithful muslims. Obviously, Malcolm X wasn't the best student of his teacher and redeemer. Or maybe Malcolm X had a personal beef with white folks.

Maybe, I shouldn't say this because the Malcolm X worshipper are going to bust a vein.
:lol::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol:
MY BROTHER YOU NEED TO GO READ A BOOK, CAUSE YOU DONT KNOW WHAT THE FUCK YOU ARE TALKING ABOUT
 

rNubb

Rising Star
Registered
:lol::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol:
MY BROTHER YOU NEED TO GO READ A BOOK, CAUSE YOU DONT KNOW WHAT THE FUCK YOU ARE TALKING ABOUT

I like to read. I like to learn. Tell me what I should read. Tell me where I need correction.

Or did you just post an empty response because you high or drunk?
 

owl

...
BGOL Investor
Been a lot of interesting posts floating around here lately...

This one included...

Although I read the syllabus of Obama's classes, I didn't take any of his courses...still and yet, I would like to know what President-elect Barry thinks of Malcolm...
 

rNubb

Rising Star
Registered
Been a lot of interesting posts floating around here lately...

This one included...

Although I read the syllabus of Obama's classes, I didn't take any of his courses...still and yet, I would like to know what President-elect Barry thinks of Malcolm...

As they say, Great question. And it will be years before he can openly answer the question, if he seeks to maintain his current reputation.

This is a no win situation - at present.
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator

Malcolm X's Birthday
May 19, 1925



malcolmx1.jpg



The third Sunday in May marks the celebration of Malcolm X Day. Born
Malcolm Little on May 19, 1925, Malcolm X became one of the most
outspoken and popular leaders of the black nationalist movement in
the 1960s.

Malcolm X was imprisoned in 1946 for burglary and embraced the Nation
of Islam while in prison. Upon his release in 1952, he went to the Muslim
headquarters in Chicago and met Elijah Muhammad. He then became a
prominent speaker and was assigned to Mosque Number Seven in New
York City. However, his comments following the assassination of President
John F. Kennedy resulted in his suspension and Malcolm X decided to
establish his own organization, the Organization of Afro-American Unity.

Malcolm X was a fervent supporter of black separatism and spoke eloquently
and bitterly against white people. A trip to Mecca in 1964 caused him to
modify these views and he announced that he now embraced world unity.
On February 21, 1965, he was assassinated at the Audobon Ballroom in
Harlem by members of a rival organization.

Playboy magazine published Alex Haley's interview with Malcolm X in May
1963. This interview led to Haley co-authoring The Autobiography of Malcolm
X which was published in 1965.

Malcolm X Day is celebrated in most major American cities, including
Washington, D. C. where festivities draw about 75,000 people to Anacostia
Park.



http://www3.kumc.edu/diversity/ethnic_relig/malcolm.html
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Happy Birthday, El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz
(Malcolm X)



malcolm-x.jpg



May 19, 1925, in Omaha, Nebraska, the man we would come to know as Malcolm X burst into the world.

As he evolved away from his past as Detroit Red, he transformed himself first, into a loyal protégé of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, then, into a world renowned human rights activist. He never hid behind his legend to avoid speaking of his time as a petty criminal, instead using his story to bolster the confidence of everyday men facing his same struggles. He let them know, in no uncertain terms, that they didn’t have to have a pristine past to make a difference in the present and the future.

The seismic shift that occurred in our culture, politics and philosophy as Black Americans in the ’50s and ’60s will forever be linked to brother Malcolm and his strength in the face of adversity, his unwillingness to bow to the hypocrisy that he had grown to see within the Nation of Islam, and his refusal to dilute his power for a country that feared his influence.

When looking back at the often tumultuous days of Malcolm’s life, one can not help but wonder what was on his mind. As he began to separate from the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, the man he credited with saving his life, as he broke ranks with the Nation of Islam, the brothers he had molded into the image of Black manhood that was deemed necessary for the separation of Black and White Americans to be successful, as his philosophy began to shift away from merging race and religion, to his belief that matters of human rights can not be confined by such a flimsy institution, as he begin to realize that he was living a lie and all White Americans were no more our enemies than all Black Americans were our friends, what was on his mind?



<iframe width="420" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/V1lxQv9MRac" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>



Many of us forget that he was only 39-years-old when he was gunned down in the Audubon Ballroom just north of Harlem, New York on February 21, 1965. In his short life he went through three pivotal transformations that culminated with the founding of Organization of Afro-America Unity and Muslim Mosque, Inc. Though the two convergent movements never gained the traction and power of the NOI, it spoke to Malcolm’s influence that he was able to step out on purpose and take people with him that were ready to die for him.

Where are those leaders today?

As we celebrate the birth of Malcolm, I’m reminded of the day that I had the honor of meeting his eldest daughter, Ambassador Attallah Shabazz in Los Angeles. I was able to look into her eyes and see her father’s spirit, intelligence, resilience and passion — and to also tell her that he shaped my philosophy on religion, politics and race. I shared with her that he gave me strength to stand on principal when it seemed that no one was standing by my side. She smiled when I told her that when I was first introduced to his focus on human rights, rather than civil rights — because how can we expect civility until we are first considered human? — it changed my life.​


<iframe width="420" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/CRNciryImqg" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>


SOURCE








 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Happy Birthday, El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz
(Malcolm X)



malcolm-x.jpg



May 19, 1925, in Omaha, Nebraska, the man we would come to know as Malcolm X burst into the world.

As he evolved away from his past as Detroit Red, he transformed himself first, into a loyal protégé of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, then, into a world renowned human rights activist. He never hid behind his legend to avoid speaking of his time as a petty criminal, instead using his story to bolster the confidence of everyday men facing his same struggles. He let them know, in no uncertain terms, that they didn’t have to have a pristine past to make a difference in the present and the future.

The seismic shift that occurred in our culture, politics and philosophy as Black Americans in the ’50s and ’60s will forever be linked to brother Malcolm and his strength in the face of adversity, his unwillingness to bow to the hypocrisy that he had grown to see within the Nation of Islam, and his refusal to dilute his power for a country that feared his influence.

When looking back at the often tumultuous days of Malcolm’s life, one can not help but wonder what was on his mind. As he began to separate from the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, the man he credited with saving his life, as he broke ranks with the Nation of Islam, the brothers he had molded into the image of Black manhood that was deemed necessary for the separation of Black and White Americans to be successful, as his philosophy began to shift away from merging race and religion, to his belief that matters of human rights can not be confined by such a flimsy institution, as he begin to realize that he was living a lie and all White Americans were no more our enemies than all Black Americans were our friends, what was on his mind?



<iframe width="420" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/V1lxQv9MRac" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>



Many of us forget that he was only 39-years-old when he was gunned down in the Audubon Ballroom just north of Harlem, New York on February 21, 1965. In his short life he went through three pivotal transformations that culminated with the founding of Organization of Afro-America Unity and Muslim Mosque, Inc. Though the two convergent movements never gained the traction and power of the NOI, it spoke to Malcolm’s influence that he was able to step out on purpose and take people with him that were ready to die for him.

Where are those leaders today?

As we celebrate the birth of Malcolm, I’m reminded of the day that I had the honor of meeting his eldest daughter, Ambassador Attallah Shabazz in Los Angeles. I was able to look into her eyes and see her father’s spirit, intelligence, resilience and passion — and to also tell her that he shaped my philosophy on religion, politics and race. I shared with her that he gave me strength to stand on principal when it seemed that no one was standing by my side. She smiled when I told her that when I was first introduced to his focus on human rights, rather than civil rights — because how can we expect civility until we are first considered human? — it changed my life.​


<iframe width="420" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/CRNciryImqg" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>


SOURCE








 
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