Media
mischief makers
Min. Farrakhan responds to
slanderous news reports on death of Malcolm X
by James Muhammad
Editor |
CHICAGO�Media mischief makers are attempting to
do to him what has been done to every outspoken Black leader who has had
the ear of the masses�destroy his good name and ultimately kill him,
the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan charged May 14 during a series of
media appearances. To make things worse, they are using old distortions
to do it, he charged.
Min. Farrakhan made the remarks to FOX television, a
local CBS news affiliate, the Chicago Defender, a Black daily
newspaper, and CNN in response to the media�s handling of a press
release from CBS�s 60 Minutes program about a May 14 show
featuring the Minister. The 60 Minutes press release headlined
that Min. Farrakhan "admits for the first time his words played a
role leading to the murder of Malcolm X."
Interviewed for more than four hours by 60 Minutes
reporter Mike Wallace and Attalah Shabazz, daughter of Malcolm X, Min.
Farrakhan discussed a variety of issues, particularly the reconciliation
effort between his family and the family of Malcolm X over the last five
years. The interview was taped at Min. Farrakhan�s residence in
Phoenix, Az., and the actual broadcast lasted approximately 12 minutes.
"My concern is the mischief of the media to say
that Louis Farrakhan admits complicity to the murder of Malcolm X when
it�s well known that Malcolm X and I were in a heated controversy over
the morals of the Hon. Elijah Muhammad," Min. Farrakhan said.
"This created an atmosphere, unfortunately, that led to the
assassination of Malcolm X.
"It�s known that I had nothing to do with the
assassination of Malcolm X and there�s no statute of limitation on
murder. But I�m being treated in the media in a mischief-making
attempt � to turn the people against me," he said.
The attacks started May 10 when the Associated Press
rejected a request from 60 Minutes to embargo the press release
until the next day when the Black weekly newspapers would carry the
story. The headline of the AP news story said, "Farrakhan admits
complicity in Malcolm X�s murder."
Facts well known
Min. Farrakhan has noted in several of his past
speeches dating back a decade that some of his words, the words of
others, and Malcolm X�s own words helped to create the atmosphere in
which Malcolm X could be murdered.
The outspoken leader fired back first on the
"Tony Snow" news show aired Sunday mornings on FOX television.
During the ten-minute segment of the national program, Min. Farrakhan
explained that he did the 60 Minutes interview at the request of
Attalah Shabazz to put on tape with Mr. Wallace the history of their
wounds, agreements and disagreements.
He said the reconciliation effort began in 1994 when
he and the Nation of Islam rallied to the support of Qubilah Shabazz�daughter
of Malcolm X and the late Dr. Betty Shabazz�who was accused by the
government of hiring a hit man to assassinate Min. Farrakhan. During the
fallout of that case, Min. Farrakhan and the Black community charged the
government with trying to set-up Qubilah by paying Michael Fitzpatrick (aka
Michael Summers), a Jewish informant, $34,000 plus expenses to record
conversations with the woman.
Min. Farrakhan, in a Jan. 17, 1995 press conference
at Mosque Maryam, called for a letter-writing campaign demanding that
the charges be dropped and her unconditional release. The charges
against Qubilah shortly thereafter were dropped.
Mr. Fitzpatrick also under investigation for coin
fraud, was financially bankrupt and suffered drug addiction, according
to court records and media reports at that time.
The reconciliation effort between Min. Farrakhan and
Betty Shabazz continued during the build-up toward the Million Man March
whose themes were atonement and reconciliation. Min. Farrakhan reminded
Mr. Snow that Dr. Shabazz spoke at the March and that some of her
daughters also attended.
Responding to a question about activities of the FBI
with Black leaders, Min. Farrakhan referred to the government�s Church
Committee Report which highlighted FBI efforts to destabilize Black
groups and discredit Black leaders. Particularly, he recalled the
efforts against Marcus Garvey, W.E.B. DuBois, Congressman Adam Clayton
Powell Jr. and Malcolm X.
In an interview with the Chicago Defender
newspaper, Min. Farrakhan expounded on the government�s role in the
destruction of Black leaders. "You must remember Paul Robeson and
the media saying he was a communist and he was stoned (in New York). �
The sad thing is that the effect of this has been the alienation of our
people from leaders who loved us and fought for us.
"I am hoping that the mischief of the media will
not be to the alienation of our people, Black people, from Louis
Farrakhan, who has been and is and will continue to be a fighter for the
total liberation of Black people from all forms of oppression," he
said.
Attalah�s request
The motivation for the interview with Mr. Wallace and
Ms. Shabazz was that she wanted "to say things that were on her
heart. She and her family have suffered much pain," Min. Farrakhan
told John Davis, a Black reporter for a local CBS news affiliate.
Through the years of dialogue, Min. Farrakhan said,
he mentioned to Ms. Shabazz the fact that the Pope of Rome has asked
Native Americans and other indigenous peoples to forgive the sins of the
church. Ms. Shabazz pointed out to the Minister that he is in a similar
position because he now sits in the seat of the Hon. Elijah Muhammad
over the Nation of Islam.
"I know that members of the Nation were involved
in the assassination of Malcolm X and other anti-social acts that were
against the teachings of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad. So I have asked
for mercy of God and forgiveness of God for those acts by Muslims that
were done out of their zeal and ignorance and I have asked our people
for their forgiveness. And this is what is new in our dialogue,"
Min. Farrakhan told Mr. Davis.
And despite the recent media controversy over the 60
Minutes broadcast, Ms. Shabazz called him May 11 to wish him a happy
birthday, the 67-year-old leader said.
After a mid-morning Mother�s Day message to more
than 500 women at Cook County Jail, Min. Farrakhan had his final
interview of the day with Gene Randall on CNN.
Responding to a question about a 1965 article he
wrote in Muhammad Speaks newspaper saying Malcolm X was
"worthy of death," Min. Farrakhan again pointed out that the
critical part of the quote continues to be omitted when it is referred
to and taken out of context.
"The other part of the sentence said that, it
would have been so �if it had not been for Muhammad�s confidence in
Allah for victory over the enemies.� So there was no threat against
Min. Malcolm in those words, however, those who have used those words
use half of the sentence" for the purpose of "discrediting me
and the new Nation of Islam that has come up around me," he said.
History of destabilization
The concern of Ms. Shabazz about the interview was
expressed during the actual 60 Minutes broadcast when she shared
her feelings of anticipation and anxiety as she prepared to go to the
interview. Ms. Shabazz said she prayed and included the names of her
parents in her prayer.
Nevertheless, the program focused primarily on
historical background of the assassination and other events that
demonstrated the threat to Min. Malcolm�s life. Completely lost in the
broadcast is the effort of reconciliation between Min. Farrakhan and the
late Dr. Shabazz, including a joint appearance at Harlem�s Apollo
Threater to raise funds to defend Qubilah in the case of the government
informant, which Mike Wallace attended. By the time the event was held,
the government had dropped the charges and the funds were to go to the
Shabazz family.
Neither was there a mention of Dr. Shabazz�s speech
at the Million Man March and the attendance of some of her daughters.
While graphic footage of Malcolm X�s murder was
prominent in the 60 Minutes broadcast, there was no mention that
on the day of the murder, New York Police were ordered to pull back the
usual contingent of officers that would monitor such events. Also,
records show that an undercover police agent on Malcolm�s security
team gave mouth-to-mouth resuscitation to the fallen leader.
Furthermore, the late attorney William Kunstler, who
represented the Shabazz family over the years, told The Final Call
in an interview that he had taken an affidavit from Talmadge Hayer, one
of the three convicted assassins, in which Mr. Hayer described in detail
who killed Malcolm X and named the murderers.
On March 30, 1998, Muhammad Abd Al-Aziz, then captain
of Muhammad Mosque No. 7 in Harlem, stood on the steps of the mosque and
proclaimed his innocence in the Malcolm X murder. With members of the
Nation of Islam around him and a barrage of reporters and film crews
documenting his words, Mr. Al-Aziz (aka Norman 3X Butler), who served 20
years for the murder, said he had voluntarily submitted to an
independent professional polygraph exam.
"I had nothing whatsoever to do with the
assassination of Malcolm X. I have been falsely accused, unfairly
convicted, and unjustly imprisoned�over 20 years�for a crime I did
not commit," he said.
Photos: 1-Min. Louis Farrakhan,
left, Attalah Shabazz, oldest daughter of Malcolm X, and Mike Wallace of
CBS' "60 Minutes," are seen at the home of the Honorable
Elijah Muhammad in Phoenix, Arizona on April 1, 2000; 23-Qubilah
Shabazz, daughter of late Malcolm X and Betty Shabazz; 2-Min. Farrakhan
and Dr. Betty Shabazz appear together in historic 1995 event held at the
Apollo Theater in Harlem, New York.
(Donald Muhammad and Saeed Shabazz contributed to
this article.) |