Malcolm X: Legacy of a revolutionary
Socialist Worker
February 18, 2005 | Pages 6 and 7
https://www.socialistworker.org/2005-1/531/531_06_MalcolmX.shtml
LEE SUSTAR looks at Malcolm X and the relevance of his ideas 40 years after his assassination.
WHEN THE historic leaders of African American
struggle are briefly acknowledged during Black History Month in February,
schoolchildren get to hear a few quotations: Frederick Douglass' indictment of
slavery, Rosa Parks' refusal to sit at the back of a segregated bus, Martin
Luther King's dream of a non-racist
Malcolm X, however, is usually left mute.
Seen, perhaps--in a photo in a textbook, a name on a street sign or community
college, even as an image on a
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It's not hard to understand why. "Every time you see a white man, think about the devil you're seeing!" Malcolm said when he was the leading spokesperson for the Nation of Islam, a Black nationalist religious group headed by Elijah Muhammad with an estimated 100,000 members at its peak. "Think of how it was on your slave foreparents' bloody, sweaty backs that he built this empire that's today the richest of all nations--where his evil and greed cause him to be hated around the world!"
Just in case a student stumbles upon such quotes, a typical summary of Malcolm's life reassures us that he "broke with [the Nation of Islam], rejecting racial separatism" and "continued to speak out until his assassination on February 21, 1965, urging Blacks to take pride in their race and to take action to claim their civil and human rights."
This mild rendering of Malcolm's political
development comes from a Web-based "diversity" calendar posted by the Los
Alamos National Laboratory--birthplace of the atomic
bombs dropped on
The Los Alamos officials, of course, omitted
Malcolm's devastating summary of
Malcolm's politics did evolve after his break with the Nation of Islam--not into a safely mainstream civil rights leader, but into a revolutionary and an internationalist who forcefully confronted questions of imperialism and racism that remain before us today.
BORN MALCOLM Little in 1925 in
His father was a Baptist minister and
follower of the Black nationalist leader Marcus
Garvey, who advocated independent Black economic development and emigration to
A racist gang was also believed to be responsible for killing Malcolm's father by pushing him in front of a streetcar. Malcolm's mother became mentally ill under the strain of trying to raise eight children alone. Her children were sent to live in foster homes.
Malcolm did well in school, but was told by a
teacher that his idea of being a lawyer was "no realistic goal for a nigger."
He dropped out, moving to
That life ended with Malcolm's arrest and conviction on burglary charges in 1946. While in prison, his brother Reginald converted him to the Nation of Islam, also known as the Black Muslims. Like many Nation of Islam members, he used "X" to stand in for a name that was stolen during slavery.
Malcolm used the prison's library to complete his education. Once released in 1952, he quickly became the Nation's most effective organizer and best-known spokesperson.
The Nation's base was in Northern and Midwestern cities that had seen a massive expansion of the Black population during the economic boom of the Second World War. Crowded into ghettos, excluded from the best-paying jobs and forced to send their children to schools that were effectively as segregated as those in the South, African Americans in the North had many grievances, but few political outlets.
The McCarthyite anticommunist witch-hunts had marginalized the left and purged the labor movement of radicals. The emerging civil rights movement focused on dismantling legal segregation in the South, but had little to offer African American workers in the North.
The Nation partly filled this void by preaching Black self-reliance, bitterly denouncing racism in the North and advocating self-defense from racist violence.
Malcolm in particular harshly criticized civil rights leaders for their doctrine of nonviolent protest, and for ignoring the problems of Blacks in the North. "They front-paged what I felt about Northern white and Black Freedom Riders going South to 'demonstrate,'" he said. "I called it ridiculous; their own North ghettos, right at home, had enough rats and roaches to kill to keep all of the Freedom Riders busy...The North's liberals have been so long pointing accusing fingers at the South and getting away with it that they have fits when they are exposed as the world's worst hypocrites."
Malcolm derided the 1963 March on
Yet the Nation also failed to provide a real political alternative. It advocated a strict moral code regarding alcohol, drugs and sexuality and was admired for its anti-racist stance. But it abstained from the civil rights movement and politics generally--restrictions that Malcolm chafed against. "It could be heard increasingly in the Negro communities: 'Those Muslims talk tough, but they never do anything unless somebody bothers Muslims,'" he said later.
The tensions broke into the open after the
assassination of President John F. Kennedy in November 1963, described by
Malcolm as an example of the "chickens coming home to roost"--a reference to
the violence used by the
At first, Malcolm continued to accept the overall framework of the Nation of Islam. But a trip to Africa and the Middle East accelerated Malcolm's transformation--religiously, into an orthodox Sunni Muslim; and politically, into a revolutionary who re-conceptualized what had been called the "Negro freedom struggle" as a Black liberation movement bound up with anti-colonial and anti-imperialist struggles worldwide.
Just days before his death, Malcolm told a group
of
MALCOLM BECAME an anti-imperialist during the heroic period
of
In 1964, Malcolm met with several heads of state who had been leaders in anti-imperialist and nationalist movements--Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt, Jomo Kenyatta of Kenya, Julius Nyere of Tanzania, Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana and Sekou Touré of Guinea Conakry.
In one of his last speeches, he described how
imperialism had changed its methods, with the old colonial powers in Asia
replaced by the
Malcolm was killed well before the newly independent
countries he saw as models--like
Nevertheless, Malcolm's experience abroad led him to question his previous political framework. "So I had to do a lot of thinking and reappraising of my definition of Black nationalism," he said in an interview with Young Socialist magazine. Malcolm stopped using this term to describe himself. He also spoke out in favor of "women's freedom," a break from the Nation of Islam's conservative views.
Some have claimed that Malcolm had effectively become a socialist by the time he was cut down. While he did appear at forums organized by the Socialist Workers Party and linked capitalism to racism--"show me a capitalist, and I'll show you a racist," he liked to say--the fact is that Malcolm's new politics hadn't crystallized yet. He still rejected the idea of political unity between Black and white workers, arguing that "there can be no workers' solidarity until there is first some racial solidarity" among Blacks.
Malcolm's continued emphasis on racial solidarity led to an ambiguity in his attitude towards Black politicians. Although he viewed nearly all of the small number of Black elected officials of his day as co-opted, he believed that Blacks should step up efforts to elect independent political leaders. This was to be a task of the group he founded, the Organization of Afro-American Unity. Malcolm also frequently pointed out that Black votes held the balance of power in presidential contests between the Republicans and Democrats--implying that Black voters should play political kingmaker.
At the same time, however, he hammered the Democratic Party at every opportunity, showing how the Northern Democrats were beholden to the racist "Dixecrats" who remained in office because of segregation. "Put the Democrats first, and they'll put you last," he said.
Upon returning from his travels abroad,
Malcolm established closer contacts with the Southern struggle, appearing in
Malcolm was murdered before his new approach could bear fruit. Ultimately, three members of the Nation of Islam went to prison for the killing, although questions about the possible role of undercover police have lingered for years. Current Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan--who had declared Malcolm "worthy of death" in a newspaper article weeks before his murder--apologized for the Nation's role many years later.
The Democratic Party's liberal establishment was relieved by the assassination. "Malcolm X had the ingredients for leadership, but his ruthless and fanatical belief in violence not only set him apart from the responsible leaders of the civil rights movement and the overwhelming majority of Blacks, it also marked him for notoriety and a violent end," stated a New York Times editorial. "Yesterday, someone came out of the darkness that he spawned and killed him."
WHILE IT'S impossible to briefly summarize Malcolm X's
legacy, three elements stand out: an uncompromising opposition to racism and
imperialism, a determination to expose the façade of
Malcolm thus blazed a trail for the rise of Black revolutionary organizations such as the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense and the League of Revolutionary Black Workers--and the revival of the far left generally in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
Since Malcolm's day, an African American
political establishment within the Democratic Party has altered the surface of
the
For example, as Barbara Miner pointed out in
a recent article in The Progressive, unemployment rates for Black men in
2002 was 50 percent or higher in Philadelphia, Chicago and Detroit, and nearly
as high in New York. Add to this picture deteriorating schools, residential
segregation, racist police violence, rising social inequality and the
occupation of
So are his calls to action. "[In] my opinion, the young generation of whites, Blacks, browns, whatever else there is, you're living in a time of revolution, a time when there's got to be change," Malcolm told a group of British students in 1964. "People in power have misused it, and now there has to be a change, and a better world has to be built, and the only way it's going to be built is with extreme methods. I, for one, will join in with anyone--I don't care what color you are--as long as you want to change this miserable condition that exists on this earth."
Listen to Malcolm X
RECORDINGS OF several of Malcolm X's speeches are available on the Web at www.brothermalcolm.net. Listen to Malcolm's powerful speaking style--and the audiences' enthusiastic response.
Malcolm's words can also be found in The Autobiography of Malcolm X, Malcolm X Speaks, By Any Means Necessary and February 1965: The Final Speeches. Other important material can be found in George Breitman's The Last Year of Malcolm X: The Evolution of a Revolutionary.
Finally, Spike Lee's 1992 film Malcolm X has just been released on DVD, featuring Denzel Washington's moving portrayal of Malcolm's life.
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