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The Nation of Islam (NOI), also known as the Black Muslim Movement (although the term is
discouraged by the NOI), is a spiritual and political black
supremacist movement founded by Wallace Fard Muhammad
(1877-1934?). It was based on the doctrine that out
of all the nations of the earth, black people are the only nation without any knowledge of their past history, no control of
their present lives, and no guidance for their future. One of Wallace's first disciples was Elijah Poole, who later changed his
name to Elijah Muhammad (1897-1975). Elijah Muhammad began preaching that W F. Muhammad was literally
God in person.
Elijah was born in Georgia but later moved to
Chicago where he came into contact with Fard Muhammad and accepted his teachings. He
eventually travelled all across America setting up mosques or temples (as they are commonly called) and named them based upon his sequence of arrival. In New York, to this day, the mosque there is still referred to as Temple No. 7 because that
was the seventh place visited by Elijah Muhammad during his travels. The main temple is dedicated to Mary, the mother of Jesus.
Throughout this time Elijah Muhammad's teachings were spread by his followers, everywhere from the streets to the prisons. They eventually reached a prisoner named
Malcolm Little. Upon his acceptance of the teachings, as he left prison he joined the Nation of Islam and became commonly known
as Malcolm X. This 'X' represents what is called in mathematics an unknown variable. The followers accept this
'X', or in other cases an 'I', as a sign that they are rejecting all that this world has done to them including the family name
given to their ancestors by slave owners (some observers, particularly white conservatives, have charged that members of the
Nation of Islam earned the right to use the "X" only after they had seriously maimed or killed a white person and could provide
proof that they had done so). They eventually replace this 'X' with an Arabic name more descriptive of their personality and
character. (see slave name)
Also around this time an up-and-coming calypso singer, actor and violinist called Louis Eugene Walcott came into contact with the teachings of Elijah Muhammad. He also accepted
the teachings and eventually came to be known as Louis Farrakhan.
Elijah Muhammad's son, Warith Deen Mohammad, took over
NOI as successor after his father's death. Although he had been suspended from NOI for "dissident views" and ideological rifts
with his father over religious doctrine, he was unanimously approved during Savior's Day celebrations on February 26, 1975, although not without controversy; Louis Farrkhan believed he should have been named Elijah
Muhammad's successor.
When W.D. Muhammad was installed as Supreme Minister of Nation of Islam in 1975, he
immediately began to reformulate his father's beliefs and practices to bring NOI closer to Sunni Islam. W. D. Muhammad publicly shunned his father's theology and black separatist views and forged ties
with other Muslim communities in the US..
Farrakhan disagreed publicly with W.D. Muhammad in 1977 over NOI's move toward Sunni
Islam, and took a minority of NOI members with him into a splinter group. W. D. Mohammad renamed his organization a number of
times, settling on the Muslim American Society, and
most of his followers assimilated into mainstream Islam.
In 1981, Farrakhan announced restoration of the "old" Nation of Islam, and went forward
with Elijah Muhammad's NOI teachings. He continues to be the more media savvy of the two successors, and was responsible for the
dramatic Million Man March in 1995. Louis Farrakhan is currently the leader of The Nation of Islam and lives in Chicago, Illinois at the former home of Elijah Muhammad.
Michael Jackson was incorrectly rumored to have joined the Nation
of Islam in 2003, according to some newspapers, despite the fact that he professed to be a Jehovah's Witness. The reason was because he had hired several African-American bodyguards who were
members of the NOI.
A separate article, Nation of Islam
anti-semitism, describes this group's history of anti-Semitic
preaching.
Most Muslims all over the world reject and disapprove of this group because of its
divergence, sometimes extreme, from the teachings of the mainstream and original Islam.
Many Muslims use the derogatory term Farrakhanism to refer to to the Nation of Islam (this may be compared to
the derogatory term Muhammadanism used to refer to Islam itself).
The Nation of Islam and Islam coincide on many points, including the following:
- Both teach that there is but one God.
- Both teach that there will literally be a resurrection of the dead, and that resurrected souls (or bodies) will be sent to paradise or hell.
- Both teach that Muslims must fast during daylight hours during the entire month of Ramadan.
But they differ in several respects:
- God's incarnation
- NOI: Teaches that God became physically incarnate in the form of a black preacher in 1930s Chicago.
- Islam: Teaches that it is heretical to believe that God would manifest Himself as a human.
- Black supremacy
- NOI: Teaches that Caucasians were created by an ancient evil
scientist called Yakub. Only black people are considered human by the Nation of Islam. Non-blacks are literally held to be non-human demons.
- Islam: Teaches that all races are created equal in the eyes of God. Yakub (Jacob) is considered a Prophet of Allah
in Islam.
- Prophets
- NOI: Rejects the Muslim belief that Muhammad was the last prophet.
Instead it teaches that Elijah Muhammad was a prophet of Allah, and that Louis Farrakhan is yet another messenger, sent to deliver a last call to
humanity.
- Islam: Holds that Muhammad was the very last of all prophets, and that
no more prophets would ever arise.
The Final Call is the official newspaper of the NOI in the United States.
External link
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