Tuesday, February 21, 2012

The legacy of Malcolm X — one Christian's perspective

If you didn't already know, today is the anniversary of the assassination of Malcolm X, best known as the foremost spokesman for "black nationalism" during the 1950s and '60s and who built the Nation of Islam into a major cultural force in the African-American community of that day. Needless to say, in many households he is still revered.

The truth be told, I truly wonder just what he accomplished throughout his just under 40 years of life.

Born in Malcolm Little in Omaha, Neb. in 1925 to a pastor who was lynched by the Ku Klux Klan, he eventually found himself in prison, I'm not sure why. But while there he fell under the spell of Nation of Islam teachings and, upon his release, became a major force not only in NOI but also in the black community. That is, outside the South.

That last item is important, as Malcolm, who used the letter X to replace his "slave name," once admitted, "I don't know nothing about the South."

I'm sure he felt that, with his extremely angry rhetoric, he was speaking out for the powerless in the 'hood, but the NOI's references to whites as "devils" put a lot of people off. (They certainly would have put me off had I heard them back then.) And those kind of pronouncements kept Martin Luther King Jr. from meeting with him during the Southern civil-rights movement; while King was firmly committed to nonviolence, Malcolm never was and King felt  correctly, in my view  that Malcolm would cause unnecessary bloodshed.

Now, Malcolm, as a Muslim, would have maintained that strict Islamic moral code -- no alcohol or tobacco, and he certainly refrained from eating pork  and to this day NOI members are quite disciplined, but sometimes these things have nothing to do with truth. I can't even think of any legislation he had passed, what kind of positive effects he had as far as economic empowerment or anything else. Moreover, according to Dinesh D'Souza's book "The End of Racism," he even met with Klan leaders in 1961.

And here's another irony: He died in part because he repudiated racism.

In 1964 he took the obligatory pilgrimage to Mecca and was shocked to see  white Muslims. He would eventually leave the NOI in part because he said that it wasn't teaching true Islam (and in fact, orthodox Muslims consider the NOI a "cult"). For the rest of his life Malcolm who took the name al-Hajj Malik al-Shabazz  dedicated himself to Islam, taking much of the African-American community with him. (The NOI eventually collapsed, being revitalized only a couple of decades ago under the leadership of Louis Farrakhan but having only a fraction of the membership that it had at its peak.)

I think the lesson for us Christians is that we need to be aware and militant about social injustice  because God certainly tells us to be so. Otherwise, we risk having folks outside the faith remind us of our failures. And let me leave no doubt: In the final analysis, Malcolm does represent a failure of the church.

1 comment:

Mark said...

I would like to disclaimer to anyone scrolling through their lists of the Church's failures. You can't judge Jesus by those who misrepresent Him.... I still hear the "N Word", far too much 4 decades after the civil rights movement. again that word does NOT even have anything to do with a Black Man. It is an old english Word meaning ignorant. And whether the Cotton gin, the Potatoe Chip, The elaborate improvement beyond static rhythm Classical Music that Blues and Jazz music is,or a panorama of cultural improvements; All these came from men who are anything but ingnorant.Christians of all colors must baptize their minds in the written Word. If it is boring to you. Jesus is boring to you. And then your ears start itching for something that's another Jesus or Gospel. To many I have conversed with on news comment sights. Jesus is "the Big Hippie in the Sky" with no moral standards, lacking holiness, and solid truth.The Bible tells us to always examine ourselves to correct our failures, and make sure we aren't preaching by our lives " another Jesus. I was born on February 21 and now am 51. Pittsburgh was a major "End Stop" for the underground railroad; and the great blessing for me was the Blacks who living there enriched my life with their friendship. Many showed more respect for Jesus, their parents, and their neighbors than their white christian youth counterparts. We do need to live out loud for Jesus, and remember we all got off the ark. One family a garden of colors...Mark David Madden