Encyclopedia of Islam



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Nation of Islam

  

521  J




Elijah Muhammad’s greatest social empha-

ses included the need for the community to 

become socially and economically self-sufficient 

and independent of the cycle of post–Civil War 

urban and rural poverty, drugs, and violence, as 

well as dependence on government welfare that 

he felt was leaching the strength and motive force 

from the community. He implemented strong 

directives throughout the NOI (which had a great 

impact on nonmembers in the African-American 

community as well) to adopt a healthful lifestyle 

through a change in diet and nutrition, which he 

advocated in his two-volume How to Eat to Live.

This book taught the virtues of abandoning the 

nutritional habits of “soul food,” which had its 

origins among blacks in the American South and 

was associated with the culture of black rural 

poverty. Muhammad’s health agenda included 

prohibiting alcohol, smoking, and drugs (for 

their economic and health consequences, as well 

as the traditional Islamic one, that person cannot 

be spiritual aware, ritually prepared, or morally 

responsible if she or he is impaired by alcohol or 

drugs). Followers were expected to follow these 

standards in their conduct, as well as dress and 

comport themselves in public and private in a 

way that bolstered self-respect and respect for 

the community by nonmembers, white or black. 

Male community members still follow the dress 

code and style established by the founder in the 

1930s—the blue or gray business suit, white 

shirt with red bow-tie. Female members model 

themselves on the modified veil and long full 

dress worn by the founder’s wife, “Sister” Clara 

Muhammad (d. 1972). Elijah Muhammad further 

advocated that the community achieve economic 

self-sufficiency and independence from white 

business and government aid through his phi-

losophy of “buy Black”: be self- or community-

employed, create and foster NOI product lines 

(such as household, health-care, and hygiene 

products; homemade food products; and the 

community newspaper, Muhammad Speaks), and 

support local black business (which had been rig-

orously discouraged or eliminated by large-scale 

white competition in the 1930s), keeping black 

dollars inside the black community. The last and, 

perhaps, most important item in his social/reli-

gious agenda was the founding of a NOI school 

system as an alternative to the U.S. K–12 public 

system. Such school systems taught basic literacy 

and history of the world and of the Blackman 

according to NOI cosmology discussed above.

The community came to its greatest public 

and media notice during the civil rights era of 

the 1960s, when m

alcolm

 X served as chief lieu-



tenant for Elijah Muhammad and as public rela-

tions spokesperson for the NOI. His charismatic 

speaking style carried the message of the NOI to 

universities across America as well as in media 

interviews with famous journalists and television 

personalities of the day, such as Mike Wallace’s 

1959 documentary The Hate That Hate Produced. 

The NOI charted a more verbally militant and 

aggressive stance in relation to white America 

than the parallel Christian civil rights leader, Mar-

tin Luther King, Jr. (1929–68), and it came under 

much negative public, media, government/law 

enforcement attention. It is now well documented 

in recently declassified FBI documents that the 

then director of the FBI, J. Edgar Hoover, pursued 

a long-standing campaign of harassment and 

media disinformation against the NOI in order 

to discredit the organization and, if possible, to 

disband it. One of the issues the NOI has pursued 

throughout its history until the present day is a 

strong prison outreach and conversion ministry, 

tied to rehabilitation in the NOI community upon 

release. As seen in Malcolm X’s own 

aUtobiogra

-

phy


, this activity has had a significant impact on 

prison populations and improved their constitu-

tional religious rights to freedom of worship.

Both a sex scandal associated with Elijah 

Muhammad’s behavior within the community 

and Malcolm’s public remarks on the death of 

President John F. Kennedy in 1963 about “chick-

ens coming home to roost” caused Malcolm X 

to be censured. In 1964 he broke away from the 

K  522  




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