Message to the Blackman in America! November 5, 1965

Page 1

H E welcome publication this month of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad's "Message to the Blackman in T America" marks a blazing new day in the history of lifegiving literature available for black people the world over. Muhammad, who for decades—whether in good health or ill health, whether in danger or security—never failed to deliver Allah's own message to the black man in America —directly to his ears or directly to his doorstep. He has collected some of the most potent of these deliverances and the sum total of their revelations is astounding. IT IS T H E message which has enabled hundreds of thousands of black men, women and children to climb out of the mud, to wrest themselves out of the grip of their enslavers by responding and recognizing the Last Messenger of Allah—and that truth has spread so today until the Honorable Elijah Muhammad is rightfully regarded as the most powerful black man on earth; truly the leader with the only divine solution to the problems of the black man in this corrupt and doomed civilization. Muhammad's book is one of historic importance, for it puts into the hands of the literate, or soon-to-be literate, a map for their guidance; a tool with which to build, medicine with which to heal and food for nourishment. And above all, it gives them truth, the greatest weapon of all; truth to withstand those who would mislead and bring about the destruction of our people.

indeed the bread and light of life. Each chapter is a candle that reveals hitherto hidden crevices in the caves of our existence — and lights the way to liberation and freedom. In its dedication, this humble but gifted man — whose love for his people goes deeper than any yet known—says simply: "to my people . . . the so-called American Negro. Freedom, Justice, Equality, Happiness, Peace of Mind, Contentment, Money, Good Jobs, Decent Homes—all these can be yours if you accept your God, Allah, now and return to his and your original religion, Islam."

MUHAMMAD'S "Message to the Blackman" is a book that strikes the oppressors of black America a mighty blow. Its sales and wide-spread circulation are a barometer which the most avid enemies of black people will be watching. That it is destined to become history's highest-selling book in black communities will astound some and satisfy others—for it is a book that must be in the home of every family among the 22 million of our people here in this land. It will be read by every official, judge, politician and Congressman in this country. It also must be read by you and IT IS T R U E that some who read few books of any sort read today. are accustomed to saying, "bread before books." But here is a book so unlike any yet published in America that it is IN THE W E E K S to come, there will be crescendos of

Dedicated to Freedom, Justice and Equality for the s o - c a l l e d Negro. The Earth Belongs to Allah

TOuhammad NOVEMBER 5, 1965

VOL. 5—No. 7

Read

eak$ ill

Mr. Muhammad comment written about Muhammad "Message to the Blackman" but, regardless of what is said, satisfy yourself; read it for yourself; study it for yourself and send your response directly to the man who wrote it—the Honorable Elijah Muhammad.

Muhammad's Record Album Out Nov. 10th

15c—OUTSIDE ILLINOIS 20c

Muhammad's

MESSAGE TG THE BLACKMAN AMERICA! W h o

(See Above)

W a n t s to Assassinate Nasser? (See Page 2 )


MUHAMMAD SPEAKS

2

NOVEMBER 5, 1965

(Special to Muhammad Speaks) ROME, Italy — The assassination or overthrow of President Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt is reliably reported here to be the next "great" objective of European and American undercover agents entrusted with the highpriority tasks of eliminating independent "black militants" who cannot be bought or duped into restoring Western control over key areas of Africa and Asia. Western agents are said to be still exultant o v e r would not only restore the halo to the CIA, it is said, their unexbut would entrench it indispected ability putably at a t i m e when io maneuver many civic and political the overthrow leaders are uneasy over its of Algeria's awesome secret power. Ahmed B e n INDONESIA'S Sukarno, bound- Bella and to Black Africans whose presing back despite disruption of w r e c k the ence d i s t u r b s the West his unity plans for Soufh Asia. long - planned include such militants as African-Asian Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana, unity conferwho has escaped no less than ence and to seven assassination atfollow it up Nkrumah tempts. On Nkrumah's head with the unis a price perhaps second dermining of Indonesia's unonly to that of Nasser himity by turning that naself. Sekou Toure of Guinea tion into a fratricidal battleand Modibo Keita of Mali ground with its anti-western follow closely. President Sukarno a virtual CLOSE FRIENDSHIP between Algeria's former President prisoner of pro - Western Other black leaders on the Ahmed Ben Bella (I.) and Egypt's dynamic Nasser is reflected army leaders. "wanted — dead or alive" in this last photo of the pair taken at non-aligned conference' list of Western agents in- held in Cairo. Ben Bella's overthrow considerably weakened However, Western officials DAR E S SALAAM — Tanclude, it is said, such new- the North African alliance of militant neutralists. zania's prime minister, Dr. believe the m o m e n t u m comers as Julius Nyerere of Julius Nyerere has ad- gained from the Algerian Tanzania, Kenneth Kaunda T H E ANTI-NASSER group vanced the following three- and Indonesian coups will of Zambia and Milton Oboto the movement appears to have a chance of success. now established in this city point plan as a peaceful solu- soon phase out unless they of Uganda. had remained underground tion to the Rhodesian crisis: ire followed up by the overMEANWHILE, o n e cap- until the successful wrecking 1. IT MUST B E recognized throw of the leading AfricanALTHOUGH T H E m o v e tured leader of the recent at- of Indonesian unity. Presithat the principle of ma- Asian revolutionaries. to oust Nasser has already tempt to assassinate Nasser, dent Sukarno, President Nasjority independence was far THE OVERTHROW of had its first setback in an ill- Magdy Abdul Azia Met- ser and Algeria's former m o r e important t h a n the Nasser and his contagious fated assassination plot by wally, of the so-called Mos- President Ben Bella were retiming. socialist regime would ob- an European - inspired so- lem Brotherhood, was given garded as the "three legs" 2. The advancement of the called Moslem Brotherhood, people of Rhodesia will be viously weaken not only Afri- new plans were revealed time on Egyptian television of an Asian-African nonto confess the substance of aligned Third Force, which ca, but the Middle East— greatly assisted by the unity here by a new league of his plot. was emerging to challenge of the nationalist forces of a move deeply desired since Egyptian "exiles." 1957 when the Egyptian leadthat country. Competition beMetwally said his group the traditional world leadertween the two nationalist er took over the Suez Canal. had expected to receive wea- ship of the West. The group members call Such a coup would remove parties in the time of danger, themselves the "Free Egypt" pons from Saudia Arabia, from Africa the only leader movement — almost openly transmitted through the Su- A French is a disgrace. Skyscraper 3. The possibilities of a who has built up a first-class financed by white West- dan. The plot was to hurl a PARIS — France's first peaceful transition to major- military establishment and erners. They consist of a bag of explosives at the Nas- skyscraper, a 50-story office ity rule will be much in- whose nation is closest to motley assortment of left- ser motorcade in Alexandria, building, will be built in creased in Rhodesia if the economic independence via o v e r dissidents ambitious but because of the vigilance Paris during the next two nationalist leaders — pro- establishment of its mighty army officers and political of Egyptian security guards, years. It will have 50 elevavided they are not locked up Aswan High Dam and num- opportunists from the K i n g Metwally and members of tors, a concert hall, movie in prisons or detention camp erous industrial projects. Farouk regime who expect his group were arrested a theater, and a 4,000-car ga—should show a willingness rage. Observers here credit most to get Western backing once day earlier. to use constitutional methods of the recent pro-Western of struggle if these are avail- "victories" to America's able to them. I do not see Central Intelligence Agency, that this is any great prob- backed by unlimited billions lem. of dollars which do not have to be accounted for or even Youths Back Nyerere reported to Congress or the ZANZIBAR—The Zanzibar American people. The CIA, Afro - Shirazi Youth League however, works in close colhas pledged full support for laboration with French and Tanzanian President Dr. British intelligence agencies. Julius Nyerere's threat to They have concentrated on withdraw his country from the weaknesses and conthe Commonwealth if Brit- flicts in the emerging naain grants independence to tions and exploiting those Rhodesia's white minority conflicts to the highest. regime. America's CIA in particular — smarting under its igMUHAMMAD SPEAKS noble "Bay of Pigs" fiasco, which saw Cuba's F i d e l Published Weekly Castro not only out-maneuVol. 5—NoT^ Nov. 5, 1985 ver U.S. intelligence agents, but led their cohorts into a Published by bloody trap which only uniMuhammad's Mosque No. 2 fied the revolutionaries — is 6 3 4 E. 7 9 t h S t . . C h i c a g o , I I I . , 6 0 6 1 7 said to have regained stature great African militant leader by Herbert MuABerdeen 4-8622-23 for its Algerian and Indo- AT HIS home in Cairo, Egypt's President Nashammad (right) son of the Honorable Elijah ser warmly clasps hands of world heavyweight nesian operations. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Muhammad. Between Nasser and the champ champion Muhammad Ali and his brother 6 mas. (26 Issues) $ 5.20 is one of the Egyptian's President's sons. T H E OUSTER of Nasser Rahaman (I.) who were introduced to the 1 Year (52 Issues) $10.00

Nyerere

Advises

Rhodesia

V


MUHAMMAD SPEAKS

NOVEMBER 5, 1965

A

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Oh What a Lesson

Wo>M for the

Children

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HIDEOUS Hitler-like destruction in the Viet Nam war exemplified by this photo of dead Viet Cong who were dragged into village near Da Nang so that young children could

see the dead and "learn a lesson." However —the lesson they learn may not be the one American and South Vietnamese forces expect.

Howard at the OAU:

African Summit Cements Black Unity; New Liberation Moves May Upset Europe By Charles P. Howard (UN and Foreign Correspondent) ACCRA, Ghana—This highly significant meeting of the Organization of African Unity ended here after cementing the most important re-alignment of African forces to be made in a decade. With its key forces consist- rope — but upon the strong ing of the host, President independents, such as NkruKwame Nkrumah; Egypt's mah and Nasser. redoubtable Gamal Abdel W h a t disappointed the Nasser, Guinwhite press most was the ea's S e k o u Toure and all fact that on the burning quesof Africa's tion of Rhodesia, most of the more militant deliberations here were done black leaders, behind closed doors. so tight was BUT I T became clear that the unity of the c o n f e r - the OAU is moving into a e n c e t h a t position to take a militant many of its and unprecedented step, not major delib- only in such matters as Rhoerations and desia but upon other issues Howard conclusions affecting the economic and were withheld from the white political welfare of Africa. Meanwhile, the leaders Western press. here have demanded that the D E S P I T E AN all-out at- jailed black leaders of Rhotempt by that same p r e s s desia, Joshua Nkomo and service to discredit and actu- the Rev. Ndabaningi Si thole, ally distort the conference, and other political prisoners it is obvious to all here that be released by Britain. this third summit conferA sweeping resolution calls ence of African nations got upon all governments and indown to practical, concrete ternational bodies to reconterms in its struggle to liber- sider all political, economic, ate the remaining colonized territories of Africa and the diplomatic and financial relations with the governments world. of the United Kingdom of The white press concen- Great Britain and Northern trated on the fact that those Ireland in the event of Britblack nations formerly (and ain granting and tolerating still) under the jurisdiction the independence of Rhodeof France attempted to "boy- sia under a white minority cott" the meeting. However, government. the wheels of Africa no It further urges the use of longer turn on those still following the dictates of E u - all possible means—includ-

ing force — to o p p o s e the unilateral declaration of independence.

LAGOS, Nigeria—A call to consolidate armed forces from all free African states under the banner of the Organization of African Unity and take massive military action against Rhodesia's white supremacy regime was issued here by the Eastern Nigerian Premier, Dr. Michael Okpara. RHODESIA'S PLAN for a there are many ways of killunilateral declaration of inde- ing a cat," Chikerema conpendence would greatly per- tinued. "Axes, spears, arpetuate the white supremacy rows and stones can kill and set up and destroy the hopes we will use anything that can of the 16-to-l black majority kill. of having representative gov"AT FIRST, we will attack ernment. white farms in isolated Dr. Okpara called for the areas and with, the arms we united m i l i t a r y action capture there, we shall atagainst Smith's r e g i m e tack white homes in the while speaking at Lagos Air- towns. Our people have been port on his arrival from Enu- told it must be an eye for gu where he attended a an eye, tooth for a tooth and meeting of Nigerian Region- life for life. al Premiers with the Feder"Anyone who is not for us al Premier. is against us. Even white Meanwhile, a black Rho- people who sympathize with desian leader, acting Presi- our cause may die if they dent J a m e s Chikerema, do not fight on our side, for threatened Rhodesian set- how else are we to know tlers with a mau mau type where they stand? reign of terror if independ"This will be a campaign ence is declared. of terror," Chikereme de"THE MOMENT the dec- clared. "We will show no laration is made," Chike- mercy and I am sure Smith's rema said, "we have given men will show none. It may instructions to the African be a long fight, weeks, people to rise up. We are de- months or years. But we will termined to take power. It fight on until we have power could be another Sharpville; in our own land." there could be many deaths. CHIKEREMA said his orBut the African people of Zimbabwe are determined ganization would be very never to live under white sorry if Smith did not declare independence, for such minority rule. "We may not be equipped a move would be suicide to with modern weapons, but the white supremacy regime.

T H E RESOLUTION a l s o empowers the African group at the United Nations to make certain that the request sent to the Security Council receives due consid.§.;§ 1 $ J mm? Ww -51eration. The conference gave this P R E S I D E N T SUKARNO SAYS T H E Indonesian crisis resolution its unanimous supwill cause no change in Indonesia's relations with Red port. China, the newspaper Yomiuri reported. Yomiuri said Sukarno made the statement in an interview with its foreign editor in Jakarta. Peking has made three complaints to Jakarta on treatment of Chinese by Indonesia's army in its anti-Communist campaign.

Zanzibar Farms

ZANZIBAR — The Government of Zanzibar has announced the nationalization of six more plantations belonging to private owners, the "Zanzibar G a z e t t e " said at the week-end.

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RESTRICTIONS AGAINST DRAFTING CHILDLESS men married before Aug. 26 were lifted by the Selective Service System to allow local boards to fill larger monthly calls. An Associated Press sampling of state draft boards indicated most anticipated calling married men by January with at least a dozen states planning to start in December.

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IN A MOVE POSSIBLY AIMED at those loyal to ousted Premier Tshombe, Congolese Premier Kimba threatened to expel all foreign mercenaries unless they submit to integration in the Congolese Army. Presumably, the order would not affect Lt. Col. Mike Hoare's white group and certain French-speaking groups which are holding down the rebels in the eastern Congo.

ABOUT 250 private plantations have been t a k e n over by the State in the past two-and-half months. The Zanzibar Government, in its efforts to raise the * * # living standards of the workLOS A N G E L E S POLICE C H I E F , WILLIAM P A R K E R ing p e o p l e , has recently given about 1,000 landless returned home after heart surgery at Mayo Clinic in peasants plots and c a s h Rochester, Minn. "I'm going to be here a while longer as grants. chief of police," he said. Some civil rights groups sought his ouster after the Watts riots in August. The distribution of land, * * * as recently pointed out by AFGHANISTAN'S FIRST E L E C T E D PARLIAMENT the first Vice-President of the United Republic of Tan- named Mohammed Yousuf as Premier. Yousuf, 51, has zania, Mr. Abeid Karume served as Premier since 1963, both before and after prowill continue until all the clamation of the 1964 Constitution. A five-member Cabinet peasants get'their own plots. to serve under him was also appointed.


MUHAMMAD S P E A K S

NOVEMBER 5, 1965

Europe Eyes Civil Rights, Says Wilkins NEW YORK — Roy Wilkins^ NAACP e x e c u t i v e director, b a c k last week from a month's tour of E u rope, found there is a continuing interest among E u ropeans in the U.S. civil rights movement. Mr. and Mrs. Wilkins left the country last Sept. 15 on vacation celebrated in conjunction with their 36th wedding anniversary. "Everywhere we enountered interest in civil rights," Wilkins said. "The work and THE SONS OF GOD SAW THE DAUGHTERS OF MEN THAT THEY name of the NAACP were WERE FAIR i AHD THEY TOOK also well known to many THEM WIVES. : Europeans and to practically GEMEWS 6 2.4 all resident and touring Americans we met." The Wilkins visited LonBY NO M E A N S don, Stockholm, Copenhagen, A m s t e r d a m , LuxSHOULD T H E BLACK WOMAN embourg and Paris. In LuxFOLLOW I embourg, they were guests of honor at a diplomatic dinner tendered by Ambassador Patricia R. Harris, new American envoy to t h a t country. In Stockholm, they were NEW D E L H I — Uganda's Africa. entertained by the Gunnar Prime Minister, Dr. Milton Dr. Obote, who was adMyrdals. Obote, has said that Africans dressing Indian Council for would do 'everything passible (African Affairs in New DelSet Coffee Quotas to drive out Portugal from hi, said that the possibility of LONDON — The Internaan armed conflict in order to tional Coffee Council, in a Africa to ensure that there rid Africa of the remnants of was freedom in Rhodesia meeting here, has agreed to set annual quotas for the and no racial inequality and colonialism c o u l d not be racial injustice in S o u t h completely ruled out. year, ending Sept. 30,1966.

(V\Q?ieD

A W A R N I N G T O THE NEGRO AND HIS W O M A N / See QuraH- W i s u r a

Ofaofe: Blacks to Drive Portugal from Africa

N

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W

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The

Honorable

World's Fair in Japan

A number of colonial powers, he said, had left Africa and "we will not give it to the West or the East.'' On the Congo (Leopoldville), Dr. Obote said "the Congo problem is a political problem, it can only be solved in a political way."

N

OSAKA, J a p a n — The world's fair bug has bitten Japan's second largest industrial city, and its mayor, Kaoru C h u m a, has j announced that the city {will hold its international exposition in 1970. Fairgroundsi will be built on an 815-acre area outside the city at an esti^ mated cost of $3.3 million.

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E L I J A H M U H A M M A D THE

MESSENGER

N o w Speaks SUNDAYS —

OF

On TV 4s30

CHANNEL

W

O

ALLAH

P.M.

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W A S H I N G T O N

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NOVEMBER 5, 1965

MUHAMMAD SPEAKS

5

Nothing Can Stem the Tide:

a black,

brown

(Pun-African Research Associates) WASHINGTON—Scientists heading up projects to discover and mass-produce the most •attractive" products of contraception for saturation distribution among the nonwhite peoples of the world must feel like the man trying to empty the ocean with a child's sand pail—for a recent United Nations report makes it crystal clear that even the most sophisticated birth-control methods can't stem the headlong "rising tide of color.' The October, 1965, Population Bulletin, published by ty of the non-whites over the the Population Reference world's whites is a longBureau. Inc.. breaking down standing one, noted first in the tell-tale demographic 150!^?:hen "just over twostatistics released recently trfft*toe-"(''f the world's 1.6 in a United Nations report, billion »gM>ople at the time) points out that the two-thirds lived hi Asia, Africa and majority discovered to be Latin America; less than held in 1900 by the non- one-third lived in Europe white peoples of the world and Northern America. By will be increased to four- 1965, these proportions had OCEANIA fifths by the year 2000. shifted to three-fourths and "Even if a crash program one-fourth, respectively." will show a majority of four-fifths by 2000, P r o j e c t i o n s indicat- MAP SHOWING the "Major population of fertility control were to be according to a breakdown of a United instituted tomorrow." the ing "four - fifths of the areas" of the world. The non-white areas of Bureau says, "the popula- world's people will then Asia, Africa and Latin America, where threeNations report. tion of the world would in- (2000) be living in Asia, Afri- fourths of the world's population now resides, crease very rapidly for the ca and Latin America" also point to the conclusion that generation or so by a denext decade." "Through enforced 'birth control pills,' cline in birth rates due to The statement means that "Northern America and Eu- spontaneous action by indiemasculating propaganda, deadly poverty and rope—including the U.S.S.R. nothing short of "famine, viduals," the study said, neglect, massive deprivation and starvation in —will have shrunk to iess nuclear war. disintegration adding: "Today, birth rates Asia and Africa, direct massacres as in the or some new and 'miracu- than one fifth of the total." and death rates (in the delous' form of fertility conCongo and South Africa—the crusade of disTHE 1965 figures disclose veloped countries) are in aptrol" can change the accuguised genoicide is one by the Christian West proximate balance, with a racy of the projections in the five "developed" countries consequent slow rate of popto crush and crucify the gigantic black and UN's Provisional Report on (defined in the report as ulation growth." "the industrialized, urban brown populations of Asia and Africa—before World Population Prospects nations of Europe. Northern as Assessed in 1963. these giants grow strong and grab hold of their THE REPORT noted that The Bulletin notes that "in America, U.S.S.R., Oceania "the rate of population own. the past, UN projections and Japan") ranked among growth is determined by the — R . T . Hamzar the 10 largest nations. have tended to be low." difference between the birth But by 2000, two of rate and the death rate" and "developed" coun- that the "gains or losses countries, it ranges from 0.5 Measles M a y Cause CALLING attention to the these tries West Germany and through migration," vital in per cent to 1.7 per cent. estimate that the world's "At a 3.5 per cent rate of 3 0 , 0 0 0 Birth Defects population figure will reach the United Kingdom (Brit- past figures, is "today . . . growth," explains the study, ain)-will be displaced by Possibly 30,000 defective 7.4 billion in the year 2000-of minor importance" in the a gain of 4.1 billion "in only Nigeria and Mexico in the developing countries of Asia. "a population doubles in 20 children will be born in the years. This means more 35 years." topping today's eighth and ninth slots. Africa and Latin America. than a 30-fold increase in a United States as a result of "The slow rate of populapresent world population of "The annual rate of popu- century. A 0.5 per cent an- t h e measles epidemic of 3.3 billion by nearly a billion tion growth in the Western lation increase in the devel- nual increase requires 139 1964-65 was a prediction that —the Bulletin said that more developed nations." the Buloping countries ranges from years to double the popula- came from the 34th annual than "85 per cent of the in- letin r e p o r t s , "is due (o crease will be in the high- a 'demographic transition' 1.0 per cent (per 1.000 of the tion." meeting in Chicago of the birth rate 'developing' coun- which began early in the population) to 3.5 per cent— DISCUSSING the "high," American Academy of Peditries of Asia. Africa and 19th Century with a slow de- and even more," Population "medium" and "low" pro- atrics. Bulletin observes. cline in death rates. Latin America." vContinued on Page 161 The forecast was made by "In most of the developed "This was followed in a This population superioriDr. John L . Sever, head of Educator Sees Sharp the section on infectious diseases for the National Institutes of Health. Measles Rise In Education early in pregnancy, could A phenomenal growth in produce birth defects, he higher education during the said. second half of this century was predicted by Kenneth G. Nelson, director of the highChief Says: Swazis er education studies branch Ready for Freedom of the United States office of MBABANE — Paramount education. Chief Sobhuza I I of SwaziHE SPOKE at the second land has echoed a demand National Summers Session! for independence made by conference sponsored by the the leader of the ruling ImNational Association of Col- bokodvo Party, Prince Maklege and University Summer hosini in Mbabane. j Sessions at the Sheraton-ChiSpeaking at the official opj cago hotel. He said nine mil- ening of the Swaziland savion students will be seeking ings bank at the weekend, i bachelor's degrees in Amer- the chief stressed that the j ica's c o l l e g e s and uni- future of independence Swaversity's in 1974. ziland depended on co-operS i m i l a r substantial in- ation between all races. He asked the British Comcreases are expected in the if necessary to keep Rhodesia's white minority number of persons seeking missioner, Sir F r a n c i s HOST TO RECENT summit meeting of the ruling clique from declaring independence masters and doctor degrees Lloyd, who was present, to Org?nization of African Unity, Ghana's Presifrom the British Commonwealth of Nations, and in the number of teach- tell the British government dent Kwane Nkrumah (right, in white tunic), o? which Ghana is a member. Listening (left) ers available to instruct col- that the Swazis are now told gathering of militant black African leadlege stpdepts, Nelson, s^iitJv,, ready fijr independence. is President Sekou Toure of Guinea. ers that Great Britain should employ troops


NOVEMBER 5, 1965

MUHAMMAD S P E A K S

6

The New Slavery: An

African's

CAIRO — Neither Europe nor America gave up willingly its control over the v a s t riches of Africa — and if its peoples were granted some semblance of self - government, the old colonialism w e n t to work in new ! clothes. T H E NAME G I V E N for the new imperialism by Africans has been "neo-colonialism" and the most accurate definition of it has been made by a black African leader who received his early training in America, President Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana. What is neo-colonialism? Mr. Nkrumah describes it this way: The essence of neo-colonialism is that the State which is subject to it is, in theory, independent and has all the outward trappings of international sovereignty. \pi R E A L I T Y its economic system and thus its political policy are directed from outside. The methods and form of this direction can take various shapes. For example, in an extreme case t h e troops of the imperial power may garrison the territory of the neo-colonial State and control the government of it. More often, however, neocolonialist control is exercised through economic or monetary means. T H E NEO-C O L O N I A L State may be obliged to take the manufactured products of the imperial power to the exclusion of competing products from elsewhere. Control over government policy in the neo-colonial State may be secured by payments towards the cost of running the State, by the provision of civil servants in positions where they can dictate policy, and by monetary control over foreign exchange through the imposition of a banking system controlled by the imperial power. W H E R E NEO-COLONIALISM exists, the power exercising control is often the State which formerly ruled the territory in question, but this is not necessarily so. For example, in the case of South Viet Nam, the former imperial power was France, but neo-colonial control of the State has now gone to the United States. IT IS POSSIBLE that neocolonial control may be exercised by a consortium of financial interests which are not specifically identifiable with any particular State. The control of the Congo

Definition

by great international financial concerns is a case in point. The result of neo-colonialism is that foreign capital is used for the exploitation rather than for the development of the less developed parts of the world. INVESTMENT under neocolonialism increases rather than decreases the gap between the rich and the poor countries of the world: A State in the grip of neocolonialism is not master of its own destiny. It is this factor which makes neo-colonialism such a serious threat to world peace. NEO - COLONIALISM is also the worst form of imperialism. For those w h o practice it, it means power without responsibility a n d for those who suffer from it, it means exploitation without redress.

Angola Black Patriots Kill Portuguese ACCRA, Ghana — A band of soldiers from the Angolan People's Liberation A r m y attacked and killed 62 Portuguese colonial troops, including a lieutenant, in the Sanga-Wanda area. Announcement of the victory, as the Angolan government-in-exile continued its fight to free Angola from oppressive Portuguese rule, was made here by the Accra representative of t h e People's Liberation Movement. The communique said the Portuguese t r o o p s were moving toward Bucu - Zau, where the Portuguese colonial government has great economic interests. The freedom fighters from the APLA suffered no losses in the encounter.

Europe Fetes Black Chiefs LISBON — Fifty-three Uncle Tom-type Rhodesian tribal chiefs arrived here from London for a week's visit at the invitation of the Portuguese Government to see commercial and industrial centers in Portugal. The weak-headed chiefs, who support white minority rule spent nine days in Britain visiting farms and factories as part of a plan to make them feel grateful to racist spokesman Ian Smith.

of

Neo-Colonialism

COLONIALISM

AND NEO-COLOMALISM

From Ghanaian Times

Ugandan Rips Negro Nonviolence: 'We Fought for Freedom-Why Don't You?' "When you prove to Charlie that you'll give him blow by blow what he serves out—that's when you're hit, you get annoyed and when you're annoyed, you're dangerous —when you do this, Charlie will be so glad not to get hit that he'll leave us alone. Twenty-two million black people can make a hell of a lot of noise and damage in the world." , Such are the sentiments of find all this 'love crap' they John N a g e n d a, brilliant preach." Mr. Nagenda said that Ugandan journalist who is visiting the United States to when things are tilted and write an article on Afro-Ne- extreme against black peogro relationships for "Life" ple, they must be extreme; magazine. He was address- then when things are level, ing a Chicago meeting of we can be liberal and nonACT, a nation-wide, third- violent. But, he continued, this notion about being staline civil rights group. tically effeminate and de" I N E V E R C E A S E to be fenseless is ridiculous. amazed at these people in H E ASSERTED that it is America who constantly time to get up and' move, to preach l o v e and nonvio- form bonds between Amerilence," he said, "in the face can blacks and the people of of Charlie's hatred and vio- Africa. Pointing out two Afrilence. And I tell these can students in the audience, preachers: Look around you he called for an all-out ef—there's no love. Husbands fort to make them feel at and wives don't love; even home and give them aid and children don't love in Ameri- encouragement to progress ca. I wonder where they rapidly in their studies, "so

they can go home and help raise the fist of black power. "Africans and b l a c k Americans remain painfully misinformed about each other," he said. "Africans are encouraged by the white news media to believe that black Americans are lazy, no good drunkards. And Charlie and the Uncle To® blacks connected with. th% State Department here help spread this propaganda. T H E N TO give this brain washing c r e d e n c e , uninformed blacks here make the mistake of asking visiting Africans about primitiveness in Africa and look down their noses at their black brothers. "Afro-Americans must develop a rapport with African guests. We must stop having mediators and start speaking for ourselves." ( C o n t i n u e d on Page

16)

THE H O N O R A B L E E L I J A H

M U H A M M A D SPEAKS A Message of Truth . . . Mightier Than The Sword! (TIMES LISTED ARE LOCAL)

LISTEN to

Mr. MUHAMMAD Every Week On the Radio Station In Your Area

WHILE IN London, they visited farms, agricultural Listed shows, tobacco and o t h e r factories. The chiefs and headmen Here. . . also visited Greece.

AREA

STATION

DIAL, K C

ATLANTA—GRIFFIN, GA WERD A T L A N T I C C I T Y — V I N E L A N D , N. J WDVL B A L T I M O R E , MD WSID BIRMINGHAM, ALA XERF BUFFALO N.Y WUFO C H I C A G O — E V A N S T O N , ILL .WEBH-FM COLUMBUS. G A WCLS DALLAS, TEXAS XERF DETROIT, M I C H WGPR-FM G A R Y , IND WJOB H A M M O N D , IND WJOB H A R V E Y , ILL WJOB H O U S T O N , TEXAS XERF J A C K S O N , MISS XERF KANSAS CITY, M O XERF LITTLE R O C K , A R K XERF LOS ANGELES, C A L I F KAPP-FM M I A M I — F T . LAUDERDALE, FLA .WFAB MIAMI—FT. LAUDERDALE, FLA WMIE M O N R O E , LA XERF NASHVILLE, TENN XERF N E W O R L E A N S , LA XERF N E W Y O R K , N. Y . — - N E W A R K , N . J WBNX O K L A H O M A CITY, OKLA XERF PHOENIX, ARIZ.* KWBX P I T T S B U R G H , PA WAMO-FM R I C H M O N D — P E T E R S B U R G , VA .WANT SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS XERF SAN F R A N C I S C O — O A K L A N D , C A L I F . . . . KMPX-FM SEATTLE—TACOMA. WASH K*iO ST. L O U I S . M O XERF TUSCALOOSA. ALA XERF TYLER, TEXAS .XERF W A S H I N G T O N , D. C WOOK

860 1270 1010 1570 1080 93 9 1580 1570 107.5 1230 1230 ' 1230 1570 1570 1570 1570 93.5 990 1140 1570 1570 1570 1380 1570 1440 106 990 1570 106.9 1360 1570 1570 1570 1340

DAY SUN. SUN SUN. SUN. SUN. SUN SUN SUN SUN SUN SUN SUN SUN SUN SUN SUN SUN SUN SUN SUN SUN SUN SUN SUN. SUN. SUN SUN. SUN. SUN. SUN SUN SUN SUN. SUN

TIME 5:00 3:00 12:30 7:30

P.M P.M. P.M. P.M.

7:00 P.M. 6:30 A . M . 8 : 3 0 P.M 7:30 P.M. 2:00 N O O N 5:30 P.M. 5:30 P . M . 5:30 P.M. 7:30 P.M 7:30 P.M 7:30 P.M 7 : 3 0 P.M 8 : 0 0 P.M 1:00 P.M 6:30A.M. 7:30 P.M. 7:30 P.M. 7:30 P.M. 6 : 3 0 P.M 7:30 P.M. 10:30 A . M . 8:00 P.M. 5:00 P.M. 7:30 P.M. I I :00 P.M. 6:30 A . M . 7 : 3 0 P.M. 8 : 3 0 P.M. 7:30 P.M. 4 : 4 5 P.M.


NOVEMBER S, 1965

7

MUHAMMAD S P E A K S

T h e ^astralicr^ of N e g r o A by a White

Society

The struggle to secure quality education for black children in America lias thrown together all forward-looking forces in and out of the black ghettos; laboring classes, middle classes, profes sionals and civic leaders. A n historic conference around the question of "Education for the Negro Child" held recently in Chicago and sponsored almost exclusively by black educators brought forth some of the basic issues of this struggle. Because of its significance and its bearing on the progresse of black people throughout the world, Muhammad Speaks will present some of its deliberations in a two part series, the first of which follows. "America is attempting to methodically castrate Negro men. This society is trying to make us into eunuchs by disallowing us from playing the male role. If a culture fails to provide men with legitimate means to provide for and protect their families, it's inflicting a punishment worse than death, and this is the scheme they're attempting to perpetrate against the Negro male in America." So said Edwin Berry, executive director of the Chi- disallowed to work because cago Urban League, during of current discrimination in an address before a Nation- jobs or past discrimination al Teachers' Conference in education, have to forage held in Chicago on "Crises for food by begging or stealin Education for the Negro ing. The meanest thing of all is that black people are Child." "Any people can be sup- forced into this in a land of pressed and virtually en- abundance without peer in slaved without laying down the history of the world.'' Berry said that shortly one edict if their education can be controlled," Berry after the Chicago riots of said. "And this is what's August 12 and 13, many Nehappening in Chicago and gro and white leaders got across the nation. Our peo- together and listened to sevple are left to go out and eral talks. forage for food, shelter and "After it was over," he clothing without the skills to said, " I got and up said, gain legitimate access to 'Gentlemen, I think I underthese necessities of life. stand what you're saying. Those from the Negro com"WE KNOW there are munity are instructed to go only three ways to get what back and tell the ghetto you need in this world," he dwellers to lay down and continued. "You can work, play dead, to learn to be beg or steal. Those who are happy under the oppression

of discrimination and the inhumanity of segregation.' "MR. CHARLIE instructed us, as if we were plantation overseers, to go back and tell the rest to control and desist—only in politer terms. How long can this work?" Berry said that in his studies of social change throughout history, he found that it is always led by the middle class. He pointed out that the Negro middle class is represented more by Negro teachers than by all the doctors, lawyers and dentists put together. There are more Negro teachers than all other Negro professionals, "unless we count the preachers and social workers," he said. "And teachers can lose the civil - rights revolution without the power structure striking a blow. Vote or nc vote, violence or no violence if we lose the teachers, we have lost the revolution." "MORE

PROGRAM PARTICIPANTS at the recent National Teachers' Conference in Chicago were Edwin C. Berry (left), executive director of the Chicago Urban League, who Spoke on the theme of the session, "Crises in Education for the Negro Child," and Oscar Brown, Jr., famous singer-composer.

school population in Chicago is Negro and one-fourth the teachers are Negro," he continued. "Ben Willis,, the Chicago Superintendent of Schools, said he doesn't THAN half the know exactly how many Negro teachers are in the system. He says it's illegal to make a count on the basis of race — but he always seems to know who is white where better jobs are concerned. "There are only 15 Negro elementary school principals and only five high school principals are Negro. The number of Negroes above the level of principal are so few they can hardly be found at all."

It's Different Story at Muslim School

Berry said black people have to depend upon teachers to do "one hell of a job" in the classrooms and also to help parents to understand what's happening. "IT'S FROM the roles of teachers that we get the leaders in future societies," he asserted. "We cannot win without leaders. We cannot win without education. We cannot win without establishing in our sons the goals set forth to build an American society where every man is capable of becoming what his potential will allow. Let us struggle toward this goal."

GhanaTellsYoung Newsmen to Fight Neo-Coloniolism

BLACK CHILDREN af the University of Islam get the best in quality education, as Muslim Sister Mattie instructs a small class on the alphabets. The University of Islam takes spe-

ACCRA—African journalists were urged to oppose and expose neo-colonialism here during the graduation ceremonies of journalism students of the Ghana Institute of Journalism. Minister of Information, Mr. I . K. Chinebuah called on the young journalists to regard themselves as the press agents of the African revolution who must help the people understand and accial care with near pre-school children to cept the social objectives of provide personal assistance in the class Ghana's leaders. room. "SO THAT OUR people, mobilized, will come to em-

brace socialism and African unity as the guiding light of every aspect of their life and as the best means to their emancipation," he declared. Journalism degrees will be awarded at the Institute after a reorganization of the curriculum, Chinebuah announced. The school will finally be d e v e l o p e d into Ghana's main journalism training institution. The information m i n i s t e r predicted that the Ghana Institute of Journalism will rank, when completed, with the best anywhere.


NOVEMBER 5, 1965

MUHAMMAD S P E A K S

8

Events,

Trends

in the

News

from

Deny Anti-Negro

the

West

Coast

Attitude:

Mexican-Americans Assert Struggle o f Negroes H a v e Benefitted A l l N o n - W h i t e s

REAFFIRMING FRIENDSHIP of Mexican - Americans and Negroes, despite a Ford Foundation report which alleges bias on both sides, Frank X. Paz, presiding chairman of the Los Angeles "War on Poverty" (left), and Eduardo Quevedo, president of the Mexican-American Political Association of California, point out that for several years the MexicanAmericans have been the recipients of many benefits because of the struggle of the Negro community and therefore "certainly could not be against Negroes."

LA.

Teacher

LOS ANGELES—Mexican - American leaders here blasted a "Los Angeles Times" report which alleged that "anti-Negro feeling is running so strong among MexicanAmericans that some residents and community leaders express fear of renewed rioting." They pointed out that far from being anti-Negro, Mex- ing for the Negro commuican Ameri- nity among us," he said. cans had benefited greaJy THE "TIMES" r e p o r t from the val- states that the stepped - up iant struggle public and private aid being Yankees w a g e d by channeled into the N e g r o the N e g r o community as a result of the against r a - Watts riots has stirred sharp Divide cial discrimi- resentment among a much larger minority group in Los —PANCHO nation. VILLA Mr. Eduar- Artgeles — the M e x i c a n do Quevedo, Americans. President of Mr. Quevedo said this is the Mexican- untrue. He pointed out that American Political Associa- for several years the Mexition (MAPA) of California, can - Americans have been is one of the leaders who the r e c i p i e n t s of many vehemently r e f u t e d the benefits because of the "Times" statement. struggle of the Negro com" I am very sure that I munity; therefore they cerspeak for more than 90 per tainly could not be against cent of our people in saying Negroes. that there is no such ill-feel-

Rips City Officials;

'Riot Could Easily Have Been

Says:

Avoided'

LOS A N G E L E S — A black teacher, forced to resign from the public school system because she spoke out against police brutality, told a MUHAMMAD SPEAKS reporter how she tried unsuccessfully over several years to contact city officials in order to protest the sub-human living conditions of Negroes. Mrs. Ruth Robinson, her- t a p e d u e to insufficient self a victim of police bru- funds. tality, has been trying to Mrs. Robinson cites as the bring suit against the city major cause of the W a t t s for the past two years but riots, the treatment she and became bogged down in red other interested, responsible

community leaders received when they attempted to get some action from proper authorities. She was ignored, neglected and harassed on her job when she presented complaints of dope peddling to teenagers. The police refused to take action on evidence she presented. The following was related by Mrs. Robinson:

Black Leaders Find Unity in Opposition to Mayor Yorty

I AM A private citizen. I am a parent. I am a former teacher in the Los Angeles City Schools, having taught 13 years. Former teacher for the simple reason that I dared speak out against police brutality in the Negro community. Mayor Y o r t y was first contacted by me and other groups August 30, 1963. I have yet to receive a response. Chief Parker w a s also contacted by me by letter. I have yet to receive an answer from Chief Parker. After I did not make any h e a d w a y with our local elected leaders, I attempted to contact Governor Brown because he is the head of the state and if all else fails, I feel that he is the one to be contacted on serious matters. I did get a letter from the governor but there was nothing done to show that he meant to put some meat into the Federal constitution and into the constitution of California.

SAN FRANCISCO — Black unity against Los Angeles' police brutality has j e l l e d here against the continuance in power of Mayor Sam Yorty whom Negro leaders say has earned the title of being a Western version of Birmingham's notorious anti-Negro Bull Connor. A hot welcome from black pickets w i l l greet Mayor Yorty w h e n he a r r i v e s h e re f or speaking engagements and wherever he a p p e a r s as a candidate for governor, reports W i l f r e d T. Yorty U s s e r y , nat i o n a l vice-president of CORE. San Francisco's first Negro supervisor, Atty. Terry A. Francois, says that if

Yorty is indeed a serious candidate for governor and if his visit to the Bay Area is "part of the buildup . . . we want him to know that he is likely to face solid Negro opposition throughout t h e state of California." Many N e g r o leaders here express the opinion that Yorty is attempting to play the Mexican-American community against the Negro in the hope that this will enable him to slip through for another political term.

Ghana's

Gold

Output

ACCRA — A total of 59,470,526 fine ounces of gold was produced by Ghana in July this year, Mr. H. Benyah, chief inspector of mines has announced. The cumulative figure for the C a l e n d a r year, was 460,413.016 fine ounces, he added.

"IT HAS B E E N my feelings—and I have been an officer in our organization for several years—that we have no gripes with the Negro community," he continued. "We are fighting the establishment and the p o w e r structure only to the extent that we can let them know the needs and concerns of the Mexican-American - people." The "Times" article states that Ralph C. Guzman, leader of a $500,000 Ford Found a t i o n research project which is investigating t h e

problems of Mexican-Americans in the United States, reported that a "terrible bitterness" was building up because of a widespread belief t h a t Mexican - Americans were being dismissed from many jobs to make way for Negroes. " T H I S BITTERNESS," Guzman is reported to have said, "was revealed in surveys that showed many Mexican-Americans feel it has now become fashionable to hire colored people and reject Mexican-American applicants." Mr. Quevedo said that, with due respect to Dr. Guzman and the Ford Foundation, he is of the opinion that the survey was in very poor taste, to say the least. He said it's hard to believe Dr. Guzman made such a statement. WHEN DR. GUZMAN was contacted, he repudiated the statement, joining with leaders of the Mexican - American Organization in a conference assembled at the Alexander Hotel. The conference unanimously denied that there was anti - Negro feelings among the MexicanAmerican population of Los Angeles. "Many of the Times' writers use the pages to divide the Mexican - American and Negro community and to slander Negro officials and the Negro community," an (Continued

on Page

17)

NAACP Seeks to End Watts Area Whitewash

LOS A N G E L E S — T h e struggle to block the obvious whitewashing of savage police brutality, which inflicted more than 35 deaths on Negro residents of Watts during the recent so-called riot, continued here when the District C o u r t of Appeals turned down an NAACP appeal that more legal counsel be provided for nearly 4,000 persons arrested during the August revolt. The NAACP has appealed to the Supreme Court for writs of prohibition and mandamus on behalf of four Negroes arrested d u r i n g the summer rioting, but they were referred to the Appellate Court, which made no comments on its decision in the case. NAACP spokesmen s a i d the case would not be apMY MAIN c o n c e r n is pealed to the State Supreme crime in our community — Court. especially crime among our The Watts area rioting involved low - income Negroes, ( C o n t i n u e d on Page 9)

who are unable to pay high legal fees for counsel, the NAACP says. The rights organization wants the t r i a l court to furnish lists of private lawyers to all defendants and to pay the legal fees.

Burundi's

Danger

BUJUMBURA — The post of premier of Burundi seems to be a dangerous one. Since 1961, two p r e m i e r s have been s l a i n in attempted coups — Prince Louis Rwagasore, son of the Mwami, King Mwambutsa, in October, 1961; and Pierre Ngendandumwe, last May. In last week's abortive coup, Premier Leopold Biha was reported to have been seriously wounded in the head and chest. Burundi received its independence from Belgium in July, 1962.


NOVEMBER 5, 1965

News

Fk>*r/

MUHAMMAD SPEAKS

The Pool Shark and The Ring King

Ccur*p

M e m o to Floyd Patterson: Prepare for C h a s t i s e m e n t ! NEW YORK — Muhammad AH, heavyweight boxingchampion of the world, demonstrated consummate skill of hands and feet, as he punched, jabbed, feinted and "rolled" to the right and left in five rounds of exhibition boxing with his sparring partners at the Unity Bazaar in the 369th Armory. Interrupting his methodi- jah Muhammad. cal training routine for his MEMO TO Patterson: Muupcoming title fight with ex- hammad Ali says he will champion Floyd Patterson, give you about a five-round Muhammad Ali flew here whipping b e f o r e knocking from Miami Beach, F l a . , to you out—because you talked box three exhibition rounds about the Muslims. He said with Leroy Ellis and two a speedy knock-out is too good for you. "What he with Cody Jones. That same e v e n i n g , needs first is a body whipthe heavyweight champion ping" to be followed by the jetted to Chicago to attend a knockout. MEMO TO Senator Robert Unity Bazaar and d i n n e r honbring the Honorable Eli- Kennedy: Muhammad A 1 i

sends you his greetings. He's sorry he did not see you waving at him in front of the Americana Hotel last week. He invites you to Las Vegas to see him chastise Patterson. There still is no definite word on the proposed fight between Muhammad Ali's brother, Rahaman Ali, and Ray Patterson, brother of Floyd, on the same championship card at Las Vegas the night of November 22. T H E R E IS a possibility of Muhammad Ali appearing in Saudi Arabia, but he'll have more on that in the near future.

"HOW DID YOU say this game goes?" inquires Jackie Gleason before challenging Muhammad Ali fo a game. Gleason, an all-around entertainer, prides himself on his pool game. It was easy for him to play the role of "Minnesota Fats," a pool shark, in one of his movies.

LA. Teacher Rips Watts Riot ( C o n t i n u e d f r o m page

POINTING OUT A shot to Jackie Gleason, an old pool and billiard pro, Muhammad Ali, heavyweight boxing champion of the world, spends a few leisure moments with the cham-

JACKIE GLEASON, the perennially-dieting television star, gives an appreciative O.K. to the world heavyweight champion's lowcalorie, high-protein salad and steak dinner.

8)

, Negro students. I have documented evidence to prove that some of the crime that the Negro community is being accused of, is being promoted by large syndicates. In this society, three out of five Negroes are on welfare—are demoralized. Naturally, Negro children have pion of the TV variety shows. Gleason, a guest homes that are broken and at the champ's Miami Beach training camp, families that have not had concentrates while kibitzers in the background the opportunities for proper education a n d t h e y have watch. problems when it comes to t a k i n g advantage of our present educational system. I do not feel that Negroes are asking for anything special as a group but only that we need more help and more understanding from the police system, from our elected leaders and others. I BECAME A member of the Citizens Protest Committee and we tried in every way to do something about police malpractice. I feel that the recent riot in Los Angeles could have been prevented if the e l e c t e d leaders had not betrayed the public and had acted on our recommendations a n d those of other groups. But they didn't. In our recent riot, Chief Parker said, "we're on top and they're on the bottom." How could you divide the people into bottom and top Gleason took time off from rehearsal of his and not have discord? The TV show to visit Muhammad Ali's Miami Beach Negro people do not wish to be divided. training camp. We are asking for better

education of policemen — That citizens not be attacked in their homes, in t h e i r churches or mosques, or in any way by policemen. I have been attacked by police officers in a very crude and inhuman way. And my 15 - year - old daughter has been attacked by police officers. These are the kind of things w h i c h precipitate riots. WE HAVE AN important job in our community and that is to see that each and every Negro child receives a proper education. This ine l u d e s criminology, sociology as well as the three R's. It is not going to do the community any good to educate a boy in reading, writing and arithmetic and have him walk out of school only to be approached by a dope peddler, destroying everything we have done in the schools. I was outraged over the way the vicious police and state troopers attacked the Muslim Mosque and the unarmed Muslim followers of Mr. Muhammad. I d o n ' t t h i n k anything Nazi Germany did was any worse than this. The police hate the Muslims because they have the courage to stand up to the police. Our country was founded on the belief in religious freedom. The constitution of the United States, if it has any value at all, certainly must extend to the Negro people.


MUHAMMAD ' V E A K S

10

NOVEMBER 5, 1965

Rights Workers Killed; No Convictions By Elijah Muhammad Messenger of Allah The Devil's Opposition to Man (Black Man) and the Devil's Insinuations. Chapter 7, 3rd Verse: Follow what has been revealed to you from your Lord and follow not beside Him any guardians. Little do you mind. 7:4 And how many a town have We destroyed? For Our punishment came to it by night or while they slept at midday. 7:5 Yet their cry when Our punishment came to them was nothing but that they said: surely we are wrong doers. 7:6 Then certainly We shall question those to whom Messengers were sent and We shall question the Messengers. 7:7 Then surely We shall relate to them with knowledge and We are never absent. 7:8 And the judgment on that day will be just. So as for those whose good deeds are heavy, they will be successful. Chapter 7, 26th Verse: O children of Adam we have sent down to you clothing to cover your shame, and clothing for beauty, and clothing that guards against evil. That is the best. This is the Message of Allah that they may be mindful. This is referring to the white race, after they stripped off their clothes and were naked in the caves and hillsides of E u r o p e to remind them today that they were given c l o t h e s to cover their body and shame, and then He clothed them with beauty, the clothing that guards against evil. That is the Law and guidance of God that He gave to them through Moses and the Supreme Wisdom of how to protect themselves against mockery of civilizations — it was Supreme for their time. Now with knowledge of decency and intelligence they have turned to the practice of going nude, partly nude, and acting indecent in order to tempt the world of Black Man to break the Law of decency and intelligence that their fathers were taught not to break. This is to lead Black men and Black women astray from the respect of God (Allah) and decent society of man, so they will find a place of divine chatisement and doom along with them (the white race). In the following verse (27) Allah still warns them, and the Black people here are mentioned. Chapter 7, 27th Verse: O children of Adam let not the devil seduce you as he expelled your parents from the garden, pulling off from them their clothing that he might show them their shame. He surely sees you. He as well as his host from which you see them not. Surely He made the Devil's to be the friends of those who believe not. Those who believe not is referring to the American socalled Negro (Black Man). The devil becomes their friends and guardians and they adopt indecency and the devil's way of civilization, and thus become the enemy of God and their Nation of righteousness (Black Nation). And therefore, t h e i r doom is that of the devil's (white man).

Alderman

ALDERMAN ROBERT MILLER (2nd from r.J. who led in the establishment of a fund to aid oppressed black people of Tuscaloosa, Ala., traveled to the racially explosive city of some 64,000 to inspect first hand the dire conditions of Negroes, especially those who lost jobs as a result of voting and civil rights activity. Aid. Miller is Chicago Alderman of (he Year for 1965. Joining in festivities follow-

ATLANTA, Ga.—Two civil-rights organizations, ripping civil-rights cases revealed a the "double standard" of Southern injustice, reported that crazy-quilt pattern of justice at least 26 Negroes and white civil-rights workers have from coast to coast. been slain by white supremacists in the South during the IN SOME states where arlast five years of the so-called "Negro revolt." rests have piled up — MissisThe Southern Regional sippi, Alabama, Georgia, Council and the Southern of- urged Federal intervention Missouri, Tennessee, South fice of the American Civil into Southern court proce- Carolina and Florida — FedLiberties Union pointed out dures to rectify this situa- eral or state appeals courts that the killers of rights tion. have voided convictions runworkers Mrs. Viola Liuzzo Meanwhile, a survey of ning into the thousands. and the Rev. Jonathan Daniels — both slain in or near Hayneville, Ala.—were never convicted. According to the report of the organizations, the "double standard" of Southern "justice" did not begin with these two killings. Rather, Southern injustice is as old as the South itself, they indicated. "IN MANY areas of the South, dual justice is a standing abuse to all Negroes — the maid, the undertaker, the field hand, the s c h o o l teacher, the minister," the report declared. The study made it clear that this "double standard" confronts the Negro from birth to death. "More than "any other standard," the report asserted, the double standard of Southern injustice is "responsible for what the white South views as increasing 'radicalism' and 'anarchy' in the civil-rights movement." P O I N T I N G OUT that "Negroes r e g a r d e d by whites as 'good niggers' fare better in courts," the rights £">'96r-f=^e?2:E4-cc:^ groups added that "the way -me w a s , to gain this status is syste'A guy's entitled to a jury of his peers, ain't he?' matic debasement of self." The t w o organizations

Africans Study Blending of Tribal Tongues

Into One Common

ACCRA—A dream that Africa's multitude of t r i b a l tongues will one day blend into a common African language that can be written and read by all Africans came nearer reality during the recent fifth West African

of the Year

ing the 6th Ward Regular Democratic Organization's "Night of Stars" at McCormick Place Arie Crown Theater, are (I. to r.) Judge Maurice Pompey, Mr. Charles F. Armstrong, Mrs. and Mr. Frank Coleman, who was cited as "Precinct Captain of the Year," Mrs. Lauretta Naylor, Aid. Miller and Jane Armstrong.

Languages Congress, which was attended by more than 200 linguists and specialists in African languages f r o m all over the world. GHANA'S Minister of E d ucation Kwaku B o a t e n g called for a reduction of African oral literature to writings in a worthy form for study in Africa and their translation into foreign languages. The Congress had a fundamental role to play in this since w i t h o u t deep studies of African languages, there could be no worthy w r i t i n g of the literatures contained in them, Boateng said. Ghana is deeply concerned with the development of literacy and of education because on a percentage basis, Ghana's population is the most literate in Africa, Boateng explained. Ghana has built national unity by use of the English language and gained independence as an English-speaking nation, but literacy in a completely foreign language cannot be real mass literacy, the Minister of Education declared. Ghana, for this reason, has set up a Bureau of Languages, to prepare literacy

Language

materials and readers in selected Ghanaian languages, Boateng said. He u r g e d great care in the preparation of books which will be used by thousands of teachers and tens of thousands of students. " C L E A R L Y there is a great need for cooperation between the linguists and t h o s e directly concerned with the development of literacy and of education," Boateng said. He added that linguists can help in showing the most efficient ways to write languages that had not yet been written, or well written, and plan teaching programs as well as instruct teachers. African governments, in planning for literacy and for education, were faced with the necessity of making delicate and difficult choices. Ghana believes in socialism, Boateng said, and is determined to afford her citizens their basic rights. CONGRESS delegates, he said, have a duty to unlock and popularize the v a s t treasures of the African personality and African culture throughout the continent and the world.


11

MUHAMMAD SPEAKS

NOVEMBER 5, 1965 •

: •

H o w To EatTo Live

The Right Food and the Proper T i m e t o E a t I t is B e c o m i n g a " M u s t " "What Allah, in the Person of Master F^rd Muhammad, has revealed to me"

By The Honorable Elijah Muhammad To live without sickness and without fear of a short span of life is how a must for the people who expect to see the Hereafter. The way that God, in the Person of Master-Fard Muhammad (to Whom praises are due forever), is teaching us (the Lost-found members of the aboriginal nation) is the best way; regardless to what it is. Whether is (concerns food, mental stability, or what have you, He teaches us in the best way. I offer you His teachings, and it is up to you to accept beans and collard greens are or reject. But, I repeat, His for animals and for making is the best way as He says oils and are used for other in His Holy Qu$-an, " I Allah valuable purposes. They are am the Best Knower" (Chap- not for your stomachs. Do ter 2, verse ]*). Since He not eat any cornbread, it is represents Hinjiself as the for your horses and cattle; Best Knower, t£en it is noth- and the hog loves it. The hog ing but intelligence on our is made for medical purposes part to follow and obey that for the white man and not Best Knower Who gives the for food relishing. best advice and Whose guidLet the white man eat all ance is best for our future the hog he wants. It was regardless of what we desire. made for him, not for us. It He is the Best Knower of was made for a cure—all for what guidance we should many of their diseases and have. is used for salves. There are many disbelievers, infidels, and atheists toI F YOU WANT to enjoy day as the Bible teaches: good health, eat only once a the fool has said in his heart, day and nothing b e t w e e n that there is no God. These meals if you are not sick. ignorant sayings and attacks There is an allowance made made against- truth go for for the sick ones who, somenothing today but condemna- times, are not able to eat tion with truth. (We do not enough at one meal to take have the type of God that them over to the next meal, they were taught of; some or their bodies are weak and s p o o k God and man. But, must be built up for the one there are s u p r e m e men meal a day. In this case, a m o n g man and this Su- they sometimes eat t w o preme One is referred to as meals a day, but never three. God, having infinite wisdom If you can eat one meal and k n o w l e d g e over all every other day, you will enthings.) joy both health and a longer life. Even the men and womT H E R E WILL B E no sick- en who do strenuous mental ness or disease among us work can go along with one when we learn and obey the meal a day if they eat the law of nature. The law of proper food and never want nature is the divine law the more than that. Creator set for us in the beWATCH THIS A R T I C L E ginning of the creation of the FOR HEALTH AND universe. This r a c e (white) LONG L I F E . of people has ignored and disobeyed this law and has met with disaster. They seek, and have tried throughout their civilization to change the very natural religion of First Negro Producer the Black Man. HOLLYWOOD—Ike Jones, But, time has proved that a producer of small motion he was a failure and now has picture productions in the clashed with his unnatural past, has been signed to coand false teachings and prac- produce "Adam," the story tices with truth and reality of a jazz musician for E m of the law of nature and its bassy Pictures. This makes workings amcmg the created Jones the first Negro procreatures of God. This law ducer to make a major is now to defend us against American motion picture. the f a l s e guidance and re- Sammy Davis, Jr. will star in the film reported to be a belling of this race (white). Do not eat swine flesh. Do version of the jazz trumpenot eat field peas, black- ter Miles Davis' story. eyed peas, white-eyed peas, Others tentatively schedlima beans, soy beans. There uled for roles are L o u i s are many other vegetables Armstrong, S u g a r Ray that you can eat without Robinson, Cicely T y s o n , touching the wrong ones. Do Bobby Darin, Tony Bennett not buy and eat c o l l a r d and F r a n k Sinatra, Jr. greens. Gerry Mulligan is writing The aforementioned peas, the musical score.

&£/?ALD2X

"Operation

job-training and education tion Bootstrap" requires its Bootstrap" aproject. Patterned after the enrollees to take a course in

LOS A N G E L E S — Robert Lee Hall, 38, a militant civil rights worker who got more than burning feet on the picket line, put them back under a desk to try a new technique in solving t h e problems of south Los Angeles. Hall borrowed $1,000— with no collateral — from a Negro businessman to open

Opportunities Industrialization Center, Philadelphia, which pulled unemployables up by their bootstraps into paying jobs, Hall's "Opera-

Negro history. It also will attempt to enlist industrialists, merchants and other businessmen to sponsor classes and to provide instruction.

FREEDOM, JUSTICE and EQUALITY W E MUST H A V E OR E L S E Would you like remaining a permanent slave or being a permanent member of a soup line? Are you with us to get Freedom, Justice and Equality lor the So-Called Negroes? P L E A S E SEND US YOUR Name Address City

Zone

State

to Muhammad's Mosque No. 2 5:535 S. Greenwood Avenue Chicago 15, Illinois or 4847 S. Woodlawn Avenue

GERALD 2X a

GO WEST, YOUNG WAN ! "


MUHAMMAD SPEAKS

NOVEMBER 5, 1965

"Be on the Alert; Somewhere at This Very Minute They May be Integrating"

Black Leaders Rip So-Called KKK Probe; Call It 'Phony' WASHINGTON, D. C. — Negroes are unenthusiastic to the point of indifference over the House Un - American Activities Committee's investigation of the Ku Klux Klan, said spokesmen for two leading civil rights organizations. James B. Williams, editor of "The Afro - American," said: " I honestly wonder whether the committee really wants to investigate the Klan or indulge in window-dressing?" C L A R E N C E MITCHELL, Washington director of the N.A.A.C.P. and the R e v . Walter Fauntroy, Washington director of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, said they were unconvinced that the committee is sincere in purported efforts to expose the Klan. Most civil rights officials

Zambia Finds Coal at Home, Not in Rhodesia LUSAKA — Zambia plans to begin mining coal for domestic use in the Gwembe Valley in southern Zambia, a Government announcement

fecial!

giant copper industry. Surveys h a v e already been started by the two big Zambian copper mining groups, the Roan Selection Trust and the Anglo-American Corporevealed here recently. Pres- ration. ently, Zambia depends entirely for coal supplies on COAL DEPOSITS h a v e white-ruled Rhodesia. been discovered to be in Zambia is noted for its great quantities and of better

quality in the Gwembe Valley area than previously believed, said Grey Zulu, Zambia's Minister of Mines and Cooperatives. This was the first indication of relief for Zambians, who have been anxious to reduce economic dependence on Rhodesia, South Africa and the so-called Portuguese territories in the hinterlands.

say t h a t the committee chairman, Rep. Edwin Willis (D.-La.) has been too nice to the Klan. They point out that no Negro victim of Klan violence has yet been called to testify. Mr. Mitchell and the Rev. Fauntroy cited several reasons for the attitude of their organizations t o w a r d the K K K inquiry. Leading the list, they said, was the record of the committee in past investigations. "THE COMMITTEE has the geneiialgngButaticauof-being abusive ^ the area ..of Constitutiorfai "rights," said Mr. Mitchell. The Rev. Fauntroy suggested that the committee "ought to be done a w a y with. It serves no useful purpose; it has been an instrument of intimidation and has tended to reflect negatively on the civil rights movement." Inquiries disclose that persons who have figured in at least two civil rights murder cases have not been subpoenaed. The mother of the attorney for Collie LeRoy Wilkins Jr., 22-year-old Alabama Klansman acquitted in the slaying of Mr. Viola Liuzzo, said he had not been served notice to appear before the committee.

MUHAMMAD ALI SUBSCRIPTION CONTEST * - *

INF*]

W I N A R O U N D TRIP 10 WORLD HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP FIGHT In L a s V e g a s . . . Nov. 2 2 A $200 RINGSIDE

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ALL EXPENSES PAID IN LAS VEGAS'S MOST FABULOUS HOTEL AS THE PERSONAL GUEST OF MUHAMMAD ALI FOR THE DAY BEFORE AND AFTER THE FIGHT,

To the salesman o! the highest number of subscriptions to Muhammad Speaks newspaper, the only paper which brings to the world the Honorable Elijah Muhammad's Message to the Blackman...

CONTEST ENDS NOV. 15, 1965 «

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Get Your Friends To Help You Win By Taking A Subscription-For Information Or Assistance, Contact Local Mosque in Your Area (See Directory Page 27)


NOVEMBER 5, 1965

13

MUHAMMAD S P E A K S

P e o p l e , Events, Thing

RESIDENT (above) of Pompano Beach, Fla., sits on the hood of his almostsubmerged auto and waits for help as 20-inch rainfall in area floods nearby homes. Weather disaster is another fulfillment of the frequent prophecy of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad that America is doomed. RIGHT: Reports from Viet Nam play down casualties of American soldiers, but this U.S. lieutenant was wounded in the Mekong Delta area.

IT'S ALL a "lark" for Collie Leroy Wilkins (above) Ku Klux Klansman, who was acquitted at his second trial in Hayneville, Ala., in the slaying of white woman civilrights worker, Mrs. Viola Liuzzo. He dashes to courthouse in vain effort to avoid cameramen and (inset) wears sporty 10-gallon hat for another appearance at his trial before all-white jury. All-white jury could not decide on verdict in his first trial.

Inf VSF W

d

INTREPID cameraman on U.S. Navy destroyer is role played by "Oscar"winning black actor, Sidney Poitier (right) in movie, "The Beford Incident." Poitier stars with Richard Widmark.

THIS IS not a man llefi] who hitched a rich on space capsule but a ivto from planet earth-who wi chief witness at a trial < ( liquor law violators. Ban.' ages were meant to ceal his identity from th violators.


•sr

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Y o r k

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v i v i d

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o f

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t h e v i t a l

n e e d

M u h a m m a d o f a

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lACi J e t

M a g a z i n e

Muhammad, a master psychologist, offers identification, definition a n d belonging t o all t h o s e w h o seek it.

TO TH

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ie

Christian

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Muslim a p p e a l s

for c l e a n

;lf-respect, a n d independently community

Negroes.

living,

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RE-EDUCATE THE NEGRO SO HE CAN QUALIFY FOR HIS OWN FUTURE!

Your purchase of the book, MESSAGE TO THE BLACKMAN, by Elijah Muhammad is a contribution toward the establishment of an educational center in Chicago, III., for the benefit of your and my future. MUHAMMAD'S MOSQUE NO. 2, BOOK DEPT. BUY IT AT YOUR BOOKSTORE, OR SEND s5°° M.O. OR CHECK TO: M U H A M M A D ' S M O S Q U E N O . 2 , B O O K DEPT. 5 3 3 5 S. G R E E N W O O D A V E .

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16

MUHAMMAD S P E A K S

The

Animals

NOVEMBER 5, 1965

The Population Statistics for the Year 2 0 0 0 A.D.

Africa

( C o n t i n u e d f r o m page

5)

of 1.4 per cent annually produced 1.8 billion by 1965. The overall projected growth rate of 2.5 per cent to the year 2000 would result in about 4.4 billion people in Asia alone," Population Bulletin discloses. It is noted that 56 per cent of the world's people are in Asia today and that in 20(KL about 60 per cent will live on that continent.

jections, the report says these are "based on different assumptions regarding the timing of fertility de clines in Asia, Africa and Latin America. "Birth rates there have maintained their previous high level in the 40-50 range with a few relatively minor exceptions — Chile, Taiwan, Ceylon, Singapore and Hong "AFRICA RANKS after Kong. During the past 50 years, death rates have de- Asia and Europe as the third clined by 50 per cent or more most populous continent . . . and now stand at 25 to 30 in By 2000, Africa's expected Asia, Africa and even lower population total of 860 million will make it second largin Latin America." It is pointed out that "con- est in the world." In southern Africa, where tinued trends" indicate a larger increase in population the continent's w h i t e supremacist power structure is THE GREATEST LAND animals on earth, Kenif plans put forward by Kenya, Uganda and on every continent between headquartered, the present 1965 and 2000 "than between yan elephants are among the unique species Tanzania are realized. 20 million people (over1930 and 1965." of animals who may be saved from extinction whelmingly black)—with 90 "Africa is expected to increase by 177 per cent, com- percent of the total in South pared to 90 per cent in,the Africa — t h e "continued previous three decades. Asia trends show a tripling by would jump from a 64-per 2000" or 60 million. The Population Bulletin cent to a 139-per cent inmakes the point: "It has crease." (Special to Muhammad Speaks) been said and said again . . . phants in Kenya's Tsavo Na IN AN ASIDE, the report 'we know enough to feed all NAIROBI, Kenya — The sportful lust for animal tro- tional Park. It is estimated phies and the wanton destruction of unique species of ani- that at least 5,000 of the says that "among the devel- people.' On paper, this is mal life which has characterized European domination of great pachyderms will have oped areas, the U.S.S.R. is true. In terms of the magniAfrica, Asia and the islands of the Pacific, may come to a to be shot or allowed to die expected to have the highest tude and urgency . . . the gain from a previous 31 per present efforts to increase grinding halt if the plans of Tranzania, Kenya and Uganda of starvation. cent to an anticipated 72 per food production are pathetiare put into effect. The 8,000 s q u a r e-mile cent." cally inadequate to put this AFRICA IS a land with in- helping to finance the proj- Tsavo National Park — larg knowledge to work." Asia, "in terms of massive numerable exotic animals ect, and already has ap- est on the continent — was which can be found nowhere proved grants totaling $726,- covered abundantly w i t h numerical gains," tops all AS HAS B E E N stated by else on the planet and the 300 to aid the wildlife con- dense bush and provided areas in the "developing" cooler heads, forget the fernew African nations — al- servation institutions of the sanctuary for the animals, category. "One half of the world's tility control gimmicks and though b e s e t by economic three nations. including the elephant, buftwo billion people lived in "get the lead out" on a food and political problems afThe projects are many, in- falo, black rhinoceros, oryx Asia in 1930; a growth rate production. fecting their people — are cluding a study of the inti- (type of straight-horned antaking up the task of pre- mate habits of the topi — a telope), z e b r a , Hartebeest, serving these for posterity. variety of antelope—in Tan- (antelope with ringed, diverA sweeping study of ways zania and tranquilizing ele- gent horns), waterbuck and and m e a n s of preserving phants in Uganda so their giraffe. "How can the black people some of the abundant wild- ears may be painted white Destruction of the Tsavo ( C o n t i n u e d f r o m page 6 ) of Africa, who have fought, life in surroundings condu- or small radio transmitters has been blamed on the elebled and died for freedom in cive to its overall welfare is hung around their necks so phant, said to have "pushed Mr. Nagenda said he does a vicious struggle against to be launched by three East their wanderings c a n be over whole forests of trees" not approve of the goal of the imperialist white man, African countries — Kenya, traced. in order to strip off the bark Uganda and Tanzania. THE BIGGEST problem and get at tasty bits of bush "integration," which is so have respect for a man who popular in the civil rights says don't fight, don't die, THE FORD Foundation is is reported to be the ele- beneath. turn the other cheek?" struggle. He said Africans are be" I F , A F T E R hundreds of ginning to associate Dr. King years of struggle, American with the missionaries who blacks are to be swallowed used religion as a tool of opinto the mainstream of pression against black peoAmerican life, all this strug- ples. gle will have gone to waste," he said. "Instead, American "BUT WHETHER we are blacks must identify with led by movements of hate or something—what?'' love, the one main thing is He said Africans used to that we stick together," he think that the Rev. Martin said in closing. "For only in Luther King was the true the framework of oneness leader of American Negroes, and unity can we overcome but they are changing now the universal oppressor and and beginning to see him as achieve true independence, a true "Uncle Tom." stability and manhood."

Tanzania,

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Uganda,

Kenya

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Ugandan Hits

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NOVEMBER 5, 1965

MUHAMMAD SPEAKS

17

The Dove and His Package Prefer War in

Mississippi:

Poll S h o w s

Negroes See

Little V a l u e in V i e t More and more Negroes throughout America are becoming disillusioned, if not completely outraged, over U.S. involvement in the war in Viet Nam. One apparent reason is that, although the press invariably reports that American casualties are "light" or "negligible" in Viet Nam battles, increasing numbers of Negroes are hearing from relatives, neighbors and friends that more and more black soldiers have been reported missing, wounded or killed in the seemingly endless war Another reason is t h a t South Viet Nam, even those burning questions about Viet the government still control, Nam remain unanswered. might want has never been Negroes along with white in- given a passing thought." But what does the Negro tellectuals are asking, "Why are we over there?" "If we man and woman on the win, what will we have streets of America t h i n k won?" and "Is it worth the about U.S. involvement in Viet Nam? lives of our sons?" Pan-African Research AsA STATEMENT by Sen- sociates conducted a poll of ator John F . Kennedy, taken some 4,100 Negroes in the from the Congressional Rec- South and another 4,000 in ord of April 6, 1954, sheds the North. In order to give light on the question, "Can the poll an even broader we win?" He said: scope than most such sur"The time has come for veys, the q u e s t i o n was the American people to be phrased this way: told the blunt truth about InDo you think most Nedochina. g r o e s favor U.S. involve"To pour money, materi- ment in the war in Viet Nam, al and men into the jungles or do you think most Neof Indochina without at least groes would rather the U.S. a remote prospect of victory spent more time and money would be dangerously futile furthering democracy in the and self-destructive. I am United States? The answers: frankly of the belief that no In the South: amount of American miliAgainst U.S. tary assistance in Indochina Involvement 82% can conquer an enemy which Favor U.S. is everywhere and at the Involvement 8% same time nowhere, 'an eneNo opinion 10% my of the people' which has In the North: the sympathy and covert Against U.S. support of the people." Involvement 89% A statement by Senator Favor U.S. Wayne Morse, taken from Involvement 4% the Congressional Record of No Opinion 7% August 5, 1964, discusses the MUHAMMAD SPEAKS' issue, "why are we over r e s e a r c h photographer, there?" He said: "It makes no difference George Beatty, asked the who says that our object is peace, even if he be the OAU Summit Meet Held President of the U n i t e d ACCRA, Ghana—The oneStates. Our actions s p e a k day summit conference of louder than words; and our the Organization for African actions in Asia today are the Unity (OAU) has convened actions of warmaking. in the Ghanaian capital. The "There is no freedom in s u m m i t was originally South Viet Nam. I think even scheduled for Nov. 5, but the American people know was moved up when Algeria that to say we are defend- protested that the summit ing freedom in South Viet would conflict with the openNam is a travesty Upon the ing of the much - postponed word. We are defending a Afro - Asian conference in clique of military generals Algiers on Nov. 5. and their merchant friends who live well in Saigon, and who need a constantly inC H I C A G O M creasing American military 616 EAST 71st STREET force to protect their priviPHONE: 483-1668 leged position. "WHAT T H E P E O P L E of

INSURANCE AUTO - FIRE - LIFE

W a r same question of Negroes on the streets of Chicago and received these characteristic replies:

IRENE BRANDBERRY, waitress: I don't know a single Negro who is in favor of U.S. involvement in V i e t Nam, but I k n o w plenty w h o a r e against it. There's no doubt in my mind t h a t most Negroes Brandberry a c r o s s the n a t i o n are against what the U.S. is doing over there — especially the bombings. One of the main reasons why is that no one seems to know why we are over there in the first place. I c e r t a i n l y don'L There must be some shady reason, or it seems they would level with us and explain the whole thing. I'm sure no one believes those notions about saving V i e t Nam for democracy and such. CHARLES THREAT, postal clerk: They should try to solve problems at home ^1^^ before going over there to try to solve problems. They should take m o r e time and effort here to cement relations between Threat Negroes a n d w h i t e s , t h r o u g h public relations, provision of jobs and bettering the educational systems. We're supposed to be Americans just like whites, yet for centuries we've been the underdog. Most Negroes I know have no idea why the U.S. is in Viet Nam, but they know what is needed right here. Very few want the U.S. in

M l

F R A N K L. WILLIAMS

S. P k w y .

( C o n t i n u e d on Page

NEW

Mexican-Americans ( C o n t i n u e d f r o m page

" I WROTE to the "Times" demanding clarification of the report," said Mr. Quevedo, "but have received neither a denial nor a confirmation. I say again that such a report does not represent the f e e l i n g of the

PROMPT, C O U R T E O U S

SERVICE

grass-roots of the community." Atty. Manuel Ruiz, of Ruiz and Ruiz, a private international law firm, said the Ford Foundation Committee had requested authentic information from his o f f i c e concerning redevelopment programs among MexicanAmericans. "Inasmuch as we've represented more than 100 Mexican - American families in such suits, and often dealt with the issue of race relations between Negroes and M e x i c a n-Americans, we were in position to deny that any bias, prejudice or conflict exist on the part of Mexican-Americans.''

r^e long-awaited first record album of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad will be ready for deliveries on or about November 10, it was reported here this week. The album, consisting of five separate messages, is the first in a series to be produced by the Messenger, and is included with the special combination book and record offer, or may be purchased separately.

IN CHICAGO

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editorial in the Herald Dispatch said. "They use the pretense of being interested in the Civil Rights movement. The anti-Negro 'cartoons' which appear regularly in the "Times" are designed to create racial hatred and anti - Negro feelings."

L O N G ISLAND, N.Y.

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NOVEMBER 5, 1965

MUHAMMAD SPEAKS

18

Oh What a Lesson 111 i

By Harriett Muhammad DEAR HARRIETT: • For several months I have been a faithful reader of MUHAMMAD SPEAKS because this newspaper gives so much information one would never find in any other United States newspaper, and also, because I am very much interested in the American I movement of Islam, which ' has done so much good for its members. Reading the paper, however, many questions come to my mind which have, so far, remained unanswered because I have not had a chance to discuss them with a so-called "Black Muslim" — not knowing anyone. My Muslim friends are all from the Arab world, Africa and Pakistan, and they have the same questions as I : 1. How can Islam be only the religion for one group of people? 2. If it is for black people only, what about the millions of white Arabs who are all Muslims? Remember, t h e Arab world is the house of Islam. 3. Doesn't Islam t e a c h brotherhood among all people who believe in Allah, without specifying their skin color? 4. American Islam teaches that "intermarriage or race mixing should be prohibited." What about marriage between two Muslims of different skin color? I would greatly appreciate your answering these questions for me. —GERDA MENSAHSABAH, New York, N.Y. DEAR GERDA: I enjoyed reading your letter and I , in the best way I can, will attempt to answer your questions. 1. The Honorable Elijah Muhammad doesn't t e a c h that Islam can be only the religion for one group of people. He teaches that Islam is the religion for those who have a righteous nature. 2. When Mr. Muhammad refers to black people, he is not just referring to skin tones. It is the nature of a

n o w •

..

person that is important. He teaches us that all black people (including brown, red, yellow and cream peoples, those with blonde hair and light eyes) are born with righteous natures, whereas the white man has b e e n grafted out of the black man, thus making his nature weak and prone to evilness. It is not the whiteness of the skin that is evil. This is only an identifying mark. An evil nature is found in the European white man and his descendants. We consider all "white" Arabs as members of the black nation, the original nation of the earth. 3. Islam does teach brotherhood among all peoples who truly believe in Allah. Since this is beyond the capabilities of a race of devils, only those who are not devils qualify. The main point here is whether or not you believe that Mr. Muhammad has been given a new message to the world, warning of the presence and workings of a race of devils. The choice is up to you to accept it or reject it. Time will surely tell which choice was correct. 4. Marriage between two righteous Muslims of different skin color is fine. I don't profess to be a minister, but I hope my answers have helped you in your understanding of Islam, as taught by the Honorable Elijah Muhammad. Something on your mind? Write and tell me about it. Harriett Muhammad Westwood Plaza Box 390 Los Angeles, Calif. 90024

IN THE same city where the dead bodies of their fathers, older brothers and relatives are piled up to teach the populace a "lesson" (See photo on page 2) orphaned Vietnamese children innocently await the day when they

may see their relatives. Plight of the Vietnamese children during the devastating bombardments from U.S. forces is one of the most pathetic on the globe.

U.S. Births Down in Eight-Year Period

ending August 31, down from WASHINGTON—The Pub- August, 1964. lic Health Service has reThe birth rate for the 12 4,062,000 the previous year. ported a decline in the birth months ending in August was The total of the first eight rate and the number of ba- even lower, at 20 per 1,000 months of 1965 were 2,497,population, compared with bies born in the United 21.3 in the preceding year. 000 down from 2,687,000 in the same period of 1964. States in the 12-month period An estimated 3,864,000 baending August, 1965. bies were born in the year BIRTH CONTROL p i l l s The National Center for were blamed for only a Health Statistics said present ! EDI Offers Languages minor role in the decline, a indications were that the deNational Center for Health cline in both the birth rate I WASHINGTON—The Eco- Statistics spokesman said. I nomic Development Instiand the number of babies j tute, the 10-year-old World Government e x p e r t s , he might continue until 1968 and Bank department which acts added, generally decline to 1969, but the decrease would as a staff college for senior try to attribute the cause to any one factor. be less than now. officials f r o m developing countries, has launched its Algeria THE DROP IN births and 1965 - 66 language s t u d y Russ Counsels the birth rate began in 1957. courses in English and Span- ALGERIA — The Soviet The Public Health Service ish. In its general English Newspaper, P r a v d a, has estimated that 335,000 babies course, 23 participants from warned Algerian leaders were born in August com- 18 countries are registered, that they are playing into pared with 350,000 a year while the project evaluation the hands of the "Imperialearlier. The August b i r t h course in Spanish numbers ist" by breaking up the left Chicago Counts Heads rate was 20.3 per 1,000 popu- 25 participants from 14 coun- wing "Organization De L a Resistance Populaire." There are 258,835 Negroes, lation, compared with 21.6 in tries. 249,478 whites, and 14,907 other non-whites, m a i n l y Oriental and American Indian, in Chicago's public school system, a r a c i a l count has disclosed. The racial composition of elementary schools in which Negroes make up the majority SAVE MONEY! SAVE TIME! MAIL C O U P O N TODAY changed slightly, showing a •It] less than 1 per cent increase, while whites decreased by about the same amount. Muhammad Speaks Newspaper Check how you wish to 634 EAST 79th ST. receive Muhammad

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NOVEMBER 5, 1965

MUHAMMAD S P E A K S

The Chef Takes A Bride

FELLOW GRADUATES of the University of Islam, Brother Marvis L.X and Sister Audrey L.X, joined hands in matrimony in a beautiful October wedding. Sister Audrey is the daughter of Minister Albert L.X of Saginaw, Mich., and Brother Marvis X is the famous chef for Shabazz Restaurant in Chicago. In the inset the happy pair continue their loving ways at their new home.

Baby-Sitting Comes of Age, But on 'Professional' Basis Did you know baby-sitting is B I G BUSINESS? But don't fool yourself, it's not easy. There are an estimated 10 million girls between the ages of 11 and 15 earning money by baby-sitting. In other words, competition is keen. But the teen, qualified to baby-sit, must have much to offer; youth and energy are their greatest assets. Y o u n g children respond, more quickly to teens, for, joyable experience for "temas the saying goes, "you're porary parents," the Kimmore their size." Teens can berly-Clark Corporation has still remember fairy t a l e s created a booklet expressly and ghost stories, blow bub- for teens who want to beble gum and talk the lancome better "sitters" — for guage of young children. a good baby-sitter prepares On the other side of the for her job carefully. coin, though, they have to know more than games and THIS "SITTING" guidemagic tricks to baby - sit. book — Sitting Beauty—puts What to do when a child baby-business on a "profescries is as important as sional" basis. The Client knowing how to make a child Fact sheets, the Diary and laugh. How to establish rou- the information included in tines that promote safety the booklet will make "sitare as vital as how to act ters" more confident, t h e in an emergency. m o s t competent, soughtTo know what you have to after ones in the neighborknow to make baby-sitting a hood. rewarding as well as an en-

Negro School

Blasted

K E N L Y , N.C., — A Negro school in rural J o h n s t o n County was shaken by an explosion. The blast, b e f o r e school opened, ripped open a wall in the rear of the building and demolished one. S U P P O R T M U H A M M A D ' S

3

By Tynnetta Deanar To the vast majority of the American public, t h e Muslim woman appears as a strange and alien force in great contrast to the accepted American way of life. For it has been assumed, and too rashly, that to be apart of their society was the great objective of t h e Black People in the Western Hemisphere. This was thought of by the w h i t e s as the greatest achievement for which the Black politicians and educated classes of our kind were demonstrating through their fiery appeal for integration. The white man, by setting up and legally endorsing the establishment of v a r i o u s high-priced and extravagant glamor spots in his cities which denied entrance to Black folks (American, Afro or Asian) has inflated his ego to have thought that we outsiders were envious of his seemingly superior position in society. To those whites who know the eventuality of the rapid increase of so-called Negro women adopting the Muslim Way of Life, there is much to fear. For these apprehensive white observers realize that the woman represents a family and is inextricably interwoven into the entire field of activities conducted within the family circle and the e n t i r e society; it is feared that her influence will easily convert her people into accepting this new way of life in Islam. This is too much for the white man to take. For he envisions the rapid decline of his economy and a decrease in the prestige and influence he has experienced in every avenue of the Black man and woman's life.

1 2 3 0 kc

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himself. Furthermore, he realizes that this power being generated throughout our entire population is not the sole result of a man named Elijah but by the force and power of a living God who taught Honorable Elijah Muhammad this poignant truth that is building up that which has been torn down and tearing down that which has been built up. WHEN T H E white man and woman suddenly see the emergence of their ex-slaves and especially the woman who has been allowed more privileges and freedom to matriculate i n t o their society than the man, as Muslims, they are struck with awe and cannot help but to admire in humility and submit to the Power of the God

that is bringing this change about. Upon coming into contact with the Muslim woman, follower of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, they are unable to recognize t h e i r once ex-slave. They are actually confounded to learn that we are not from India, Pakistan, Egypt or the West Indies as they assumed but right from their old slave land of America. TO CONCLUDE this brief study of the effects of the Muslim Woman in American Society, I say that for the white people, it is fear mixed with admiration and anguish mixed with a dying hope that perhaps in t h e flickering light that remains of their day to be in command, they may take a few black converts with them to their defeat.

Nursing School Frauds and U.S.-Made Paris Perfumes The frauds perpetrated against the gullible American buying public continue to reap huge profits before the Federal Trade Commission clamp down. More and more "false and misleading" labels flood the market and more and more innocent victims are taken in. It has recently been found that some perfumes from Paris originate in Hoboken, New Jersey and courses promising instruction in practical nursing amount to merely correspondence courses with nothing "practical" about them.

A T O I L E T PREPARATIONS and perfume company, the Lauangel Corp., was forbidden to misrepresent the country of origin of perfume or other toilet preparations it distributes to other distributors, jobbers and retailers. In connection with perfume or other toilet preparations not wholly made in a foreign country, the order specifically prohibits Lauangel from (1) representing that the products are made in a foreign country and (2) using any foreign word or term in any brand or product name or any H E BECOMES no longer depiction, device or phrase indicative of foreign origin the idol to adorn and wor- unless clear disclosure is made that the products are manship but the source of evil ufactured in the United States. to flee from and to be aware THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE of Practical Nursing of. The white man realizes that the reconversion of the was forbidden to misrepresent its correspondence course Black people to Islam means of instruction in practical nursing. that his deception and false teachings of our origin and destiny and his own have been made manifest. He is afraid that now his true nature is being revealed and he himself, is learning the utmost parts of the meaning of his own existence, much of which he was ignorant of

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MUHAMMAD SPEAKS

20

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DAR E S S A L E E M : —The plight of black natives of Africa to find a home even within their own continent continues to g r o w worse as increasing thousands of black refugees uprooted and driven from their country by colonial w a r s , fratricidal conflicts, internecine wars and ruthless maneuvers of white colonists retain control cry out here for relief although the facts are known only by few black leaders either inside or o u t s i d e Africa. "IN AMERICA we have to thank The Honorable Elijah Muhammad for first presenting our condition to the black public in his newspaper Muhammad Speaks," said Dr. Otangbu E . Morasia of the Brundui Society for the Aid of African Homeless, "the sooner the black world becomes conscious of the fact that their brother and work and hope. In some sisters are being doomed to places their welcome wears extinction — the better for thin. Those are the lost peoall of us." ple of Africa — its refugees. Across Africa from the The scope of their probSudan to the tip of Nazi- lems is enormous and little white South Africa there known. There are some 500, stretches a steady stream of 000 to 750,000 of them, acblack men, women and chil- cording to varying estimates. dren driven out of homes by Having h a d little in the the s t i l l unsettled conflict countries from which they eminatings from the libera- fled for reasons of war, trition struggle of the continent. balism or persecution, they They huddle in makeshift have even less today. huts of mud and thatch or castoff materials just inside HUNGER IS A constant Tanzania's border with Mo- companion. Work is almost zambique. forgotten luxury. InternaThey live in more settled tional aid has been mobilcommunities of n e a t l y ized but the need is greater aligned rondawels ( g r a s s than the means by far. Each huts) in remote Oruchinga day brings new recruits to this army of despair. Some Valley, Uganda. vow to return to their homeT H E Y CROWD two small lands and fight the oppresislands in Lake Malawi just sor. Others have lost hope over the Portugese border. and sadly prepare to exist in Or they wander faceless in an alien land. It is not surstrange cities looking for prising that communism has ST 3 - 1 1 1 3

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this have received asylum in is hardly a black African Swaziland, Basotuland, and student or leader who does Bechunaland. Several thou- not regard the coming strugSOME REFUGEES—Such sand from P o r t u g u e s e as those from the Sudan, the Guinea have spilled over In- gle to free the central and Congo, Mozambique, Angola to Senegal since March, 1964. Southern part of black AfLeaders here predict that rica from White Supremacy and Portuguese Guina—fled to escape savage fighting. inasmuch as the main strug- as the "decisive war" for Others are politicals who gle for the liberation of Af- freedom. could not abide the regimes rica has yet to be joined, in their homelands or es- the present flow of refugees T H E CURRENT conflicts caped just ahead of the po- is regarded as a harbinger between A f r i c a n nations, of things to come. lice. many obviously encouraged Despite the rapid multipli- by Europe and America, is Nor is the flow confined to any one part of Africa. cation of so-called indepen- regarded as the main holdA small but steadily increas- dant black nations following up to an assault by the more ing number of South Afri- Europe's organized retreat militant African nations on c a n s opposed to apartheid from open colonialism, there the bastion of South Africa. been able to exploit misery here and there.

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MUHAMMAD S P E A K S

NOVEMBER 5, 1965

Muhammad

And

Tuskegee:

After 3 8 Y e a r s - t h e Return toTuskegee

Campus

to point out the fallacies in By Minister Benjamin E . X Mitchell (Minister of Muhammad's Mosque No. 24; Richmond, Va.) the American Educational T U S K E G E E INSTITUTE, Ala.—Arriving on Tuskegee System and did not in any Institute's campus after graduating 38 years ago, created way concern itself with any an intense moment of ecstasy. My mind immediately aspect of genetics as sugdrifted back to the many past experiences I had on this gested by o n e Caucasian student. campus. Finally when we w e r e I also recognized the many changes and growth of about to leave the campus, the school. While reflecting on past experiences at this we met one of the professors great Institution, I began to think of the purpose of being who had attended the lecture here, which was to assist in the program of the Honorable the previous evening. He exElijah Muhammand. pressed his enjoyment of the Mr. Muhammad was in- people to be delivered in the facts Dr. Shabazz gave on vited to speak at Tuskegee last days, according to Gen. t h e Honorable Elijah MuInstitute, Tuesday n i g h t , 15:13, 14. Mai. 4:5, 6 a 1 s o hammad's program and misOct. 5, 1965. However, he speaks of the coming of Eli- sion. was substituted by Dr. Lon- jah and the works tie would nie Shabazz, Ph.D., w h o do. All of these scriptures THIS PROFESSOR stated formerly taught at Tuskegee. are being fulfilled today by that he had something to Dr. Shabazz is presently the Honorable Elijah Mu- tell us that he had never Minister of Muhammad's hammad and his work. told any other Muslim — Mosque No. 4 (Washington, With regards to the "Mus- that when he visited JerusaD.C.), and also director of lim Program" — on the back lem along with 50 whites, he the University of Islam in of each edition of MUHAM- was embraced by a Muslim Washington, D.C. MAD SPEAKS, as given to there who referred to him Miss Gwendolyn Patton, the Honorable Elijah Mu- as "Brother." He noticed president of t h e Student hammad from the mouth of that this was not done to any Council and other student of- Allah, in the Person of Mas- of the whites. On the basis ficers gave Dr. Shabazz and ter Fard Muhammad — Dr. of the truth he had heard his party a warm and hearty Shabazz explained " W h a t presented, many questions welcome. The security offi- the Muslims Believe" and were cleared up in his mind. cers of Tuskegee City and "What the Muslims Want." Tuskegee Institute rendered their best service in making DR. SHABAZZ pointed out our stay a safe and secure in Section Nine of " W h a t one. the Muslims Want" that it deals with equal education THE L E C T U R E was given and gave a parable of a cat in Logan Hall by Dr. Sha- and dog, wherein all d o g bazz concerning the noble classes were taught, i.e. dog mission of t h e Honorable psychology, dog sociology, E l i j a h Muhammad a n d dog history, etc. Undoubtbacked up by Biblical scrip- edly, in a "dogological" settures. Deut. 18:18 predicts ting such as this, the cat that a man who would do suffers. Thus, the cat is the works of Moses would be taught to think in terms of raised up in the last days. a dog, and therefore, the acBased on all available his- tion of the cat is diametritory, the so-called Negroes cally opposed to its o w n are the o n l y people who nature. h a v e been enslaved 400 Dr. Shabazz added t h a t years, and so they are the his illustration served only

Armed Rebellion Seen as South Africans' Only 'Out'

Booker T. Washington monument, honoring THE NAME OF the famous Alabama school is the founder of Tuskegee. Inscription (not emblazoned on wall on the campus — a visible) reads: "He lifted the veil of ignorACCRA, G h a n a — The hausted and the only ave- sight to catch the eye of many students who ance from his people and pointed the way to South African struggle has nue open to the suppressed studied there in the past and are now in progress through education and industry." reached a stage where there South Africans is to take up classes. Another famous landmark is the is no other way except to arms and engage in the hightake up arms and fight the est form of sacrifice — to die Diamonds in Tanzania infamous policies of facist for freedom. UPHOLSTERING DAR E S SALAAM—A new Verwoerd, said Mr. J . D. He appealed for all ma- diamond deposit has been AND REUPHOLSTERING Matlou, the West African Representative of the Afri- terial assistance from the in- discovered in Tanzania at can National Congress in dependent African States to Singida, near the f a m o u s D r a p e r i e s . . . S l i p - C o v e r s South Africa, at a press con- facilitate the early liquida- Williamson diamond mine, P l a s t i c C o v e r s . . . R u g s Furniture Finishing an announcement here said. ference here. tion of apartheid. OLD FURNITURE MADE He pointed out that all TO L O O K LIKE N E W peaceful methods, short of IS THE TIME TO START HELPING SELF! revolution have been ex- !

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MUHAMMAD S P E A K S

Poll Shows Negroes See Little Worth in Viet War

Report Rips School Desegregation Programs in All 11 Southern States WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) has released a report on school desegregation programs throughout the South, calling for the immediate resignation of David S. Seeley, acting director of the Equal Education Opportunities Program, the civil rights compliance arm of the Office of Education, and an immediate investigation of the E E O P by Health, Education and Welfare Secretary John W. Gardner. The report claims that the Register were, "at b e s t instructions and regulations sketchy and at worst so published in the Federal vague as to render them ab-

The Tell-Tale Fiaures V

Negro-white public school enrollment figures, showing progress — if any — of desegregation in five Southern states, compiled by the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC): Negroes enEnrollment rolled with White Negro Whites Percent ALABAMA 1964-65 549,543 293,476 94 0.032 1965-66 575,000 300,000 1,500 0.5 GEORGIA 752,620 354,850 1,337 0.377 1964-65 1965-66 800,000 375,000 6,000 1.5 LOUISIANA 1964-65 489,000 321,000 3,581 1.12 1965-66 506,000 331,000 1,850 0.6 MISSISSIPPI 1964-65 308,409 295,962 58 0.020 1965-66 350,000A 325,000 1,500 0.5 SOUTH CAROLINA 1964-65 371,921 260,667 260 0.10 1965-66 383,902 272,000 3,500 1.3 (A) —estimate.

Chinese Engineers Help Plan Tanzania Railway DAR E S SALAAM — A team of 12 Chinese engineers have arrived here to begin a survey of the proposed Tanzania-Zambia railway. THE TEAM'S arrival follows an approach to People's Republic of China by President J u l i u s Nyerere during a visit to Peking last February for assistance in the project originally declared uneconomical by the World Bank.

The Chinese are to survey a section of the proposed link which will run between Kidatu, west of Dar-es-Salaam, to Tanzania - Zambia border.

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BRITAIN HAS also offered to finance half of the survey but no appreciable effort has been shown so far. Tanzanian officials stated that Britain had been asked to pay the full cost of the survey.

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solutely meaningless and ineffective," while the f i n a l guidelines issued on April 29 "contained Innumerable loopholes and muddy language." SNCC maintains that as a result of this and the incompetent and Insufficient staff, only 466 of 1839 plans already submitted had been approved six weeks before schools were to open; that the rest of the plans were then approved so hurriedly that many, which violated the spirit and letter of the already loose regulations, were accepted. SUCH P L A N S included those which: Desegregated two grades— when four was the minimum under extenuating circumstances—and followed court decisions which did not meet minimal standards. Permitted white students to be bused out of areas where more than 40 per cent of the students were Negro. Allowed ' ' f r e e d o m of choice" plans which, SNCC, claims, "are, in fact, a farce." THE SNCC P A P E R closes with a 16-page summary of harassment incidents reported to Its staff relating to school desegregation and a statistical breakdown of actual desegregation figures for 1964-65 and 1965-66. These figures indicate that only 8 per cent of all Negro students In the 11 Southern states are attending schools with white children. Copies of the report can be obtained by writing: SNCC, 107 Rhode Island Ave., N. W., Washington, D.C.

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Viet Nam. I've discussed this issue many times, and find that Negroes want help here at home, instead of having so much money going to help someone else.

killed over there. For what? If we won in Viet Nam, what would he have gained — or me, or any black person? We'd have the same rotten school system, t h e same lousy jobs, the same brokendown houses, the same stinking system. We should start tearing up our draft cards, too. No, I don't know any Negroes who are in favor of the war in Viet Nam. Even the brainwashed N e g r o e s have this much sense.

MARGIE GHOLAR, waitress: I don't know any Negroes who believe the U.S. is r i g h t in V i e t Nam. My husband is l e a v i n g J E S S E J E F F E R S O N , lafor Southeast Asia tomor- borer: I haven't discussed this very row, so you much, but I know I don't believe most w a n t the Negroes don't fighting to go k n o w what Gholar on. Even the it's ail about whites a r e o v e r there. tearing up their draft cards. Of course, if It seems, of all people, they I was called, would be willing to go; they I would go. own everything anyway. My But I'd rathhusband has a friend who er have nothwas recently ambushed and Jefferson ing to do with it. I t h i n k To Free Mozambique most Negroes would like to OLSO, Norway — Dr. Ed- straighten t h i n g s out at uardo Mondlane, President home and leave those people of the Mozambique Libera- overseas alone. tion Movement, said in Oslo, Norway, that Mozambique BARBARA G R E E N , social would be completely inde- worker: It's hard to say how others feel. I pendent within three or four know a few years. who f a v p r He said clandestine cells fighting i n had been organized throughV i e t Nam, out Mozanbique and increasbut I certaining numbers of young Afrily don't think cans were being trained for Negroes guerilla warfare. should fight "There are now about 2,000 over there. If of them fighting in MozamI were a man, bique," he told a press conI wouldn't go ference. over t h e r e . Dr. Mondlane, who was in Green First I'd try Oslo at the invitation of the Norwegian committee of the to get out of it by going to World Assembly of Youth, school. If this didn't work, has met and had talks with I'd do whatever comes next representatives of the For- — conscientious objector or whatever. But I wouldn't go. eign Ministry.

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V o r f e x

MUHAMMAD S P E A K S

of Violence

?

23

Ingenuity of the Japanese

Emergence of the Deacons for Defense, the first black "protective" organization since the early days of the Ku Klux Klan, is forcing a quiet reappraisal of the "nonviolent" position of many civil rights groups and has led to innumerable public and private debates among Negro individuals and organizations. In the Midwest, long the center of militant grass- go school teacher, has made two trips to Africa with his roots b l a c k organizations, wife, Mary, and has been in the white press gave special the forefront of the civil prominence to a proposal by rights battle in Chicago for the Deacons to organize some 15 years. He asserted that one of chapters in Chicago, even though the Rev. Martin these days black people will wake up and wonder what Luther King, the epitome of demon possessed them that the "non-violent" sect, has they behaved so well and for also decided to make Chica- so long. go his headquarters for a "But let me point out that new anti-segregation drive. I believe in peace and want A recent debate on this it dearly, but yet I have to pressing issue concerning go along with the saying, THE STEADY PROGRESS of the Japanese in American scientists won the award for transthe N e g r o 'Peace if possible, but jus- scientific fields is reflected in Nobel prize forming the "exchange play" between eletice at any cost,' " he added. rights battle awarded to Prof. Sinichiro Tomonaga for mentary particles into, hard mathematical today, "NonThe Rev. C. T. Vivian, a physics on Oct. 21. Prof. Tomonaga and two facts. violence vs. representative of the SouthSelf - Protec- ern Christian Leadership a job to do and we have diftion," w a s Conference, said the probheld on Chi- lems Negroes face now are ferent ways of doing it. The ^ti^k I cago's West the same problems they've only ones we criticize are I Side between faced throughout the history those who do nothing. ML jM I four of the of America. A. A I top N e g r o "WE SPEND money and ^^^^ leaders of the "OUT - AND - OUT vio- time protecting civil rights Bevel country. An lence on our part can't pos- workers in the South. We let advocate o f sibly succeed," he said. self-protection spoke first. "The forces of violence them do the demonstrating, would overwhelm us before but when terror and violence "I'M NOT arguing in fa- we got started. threaten, we are there to vor of violence but in favor "Violence loses issues," protect them. No one can of that age-old church prin- he continued. "Issues be- deny the need for an organiciple that the most precious come violence. We need to thing in the world is human be nobler, we need more dig- zation such as ours." life," said N a h a z Rogert nity than to fight in the The Rev. James Bevel, vice chairman of ACT, a streets." another representative of third-line national civil The Rev. Vivian said that the Southern Christian Leadrights group. after centuries of oppression ership Conference, said he's "As sure as I have faith in in Montgomery, we saw Ne- against all kinds of violence, an all-powerful being," he groes in revolt. "When every other possi- whether by whites or black. continued, "I'm certain he bility was exhausted, black would not deny me, because "Lying is a necessary part I'm black, the right to pro- people found a means to step of violence," he said. "That tect myself and my posses- forth and make demands upon the culture in such a is what I have against most sions." way that would not destroy white officials — they lie. "What kind of thing is this them but which eventually Then they act on lies and runon-violence?" he asked. destroyed at least a part of mors. Look at the Bay of " T threaten you that I will the system." Pigs fiasco. Here we had an do nothing, is what non-vioH E SAID THAT Negroes invasion based on lies. lence is saying. I wouldn't criticize anything that has recognize that in such a "SOMEONE SAID the Cusome use. But laying down process, one cannot change bans didn't want socialism your life without protecting every Sheriff Clark, but one and would rush to aid incan change the system it is preposterous. which p r o d u c e s Sheriff vaders. The U.S. wanted to believe this so badly, they " T H E R E A R E no people Clarks. backed a foolish invasion IT'S NOT a puzzle game nor a surrealist painting, but a new Earnest Thomas, v i c e in the world who would plan. See what dealing in highway in Japan that winds upward five miles "every which chairman of the Deacons for allow a man to stand in their lies will do?" he said. way." Light-colored objects on blade ribbon of highway (botan organization chests and ask him nicely, Defense, Bevel said violence and tom right section of picture) are vehicular traffic. formed to protect black peo'please get off.' " the fear of violence has led Rogers said it wasn't non- ple and their possessions, almost every country to get said his organization found violence that brought about a huge army. the "pitifully few" changes nothing wrong with non-vio"Then nations like the U.S. lence as a tactic, but not as in America, but the forces of take their guns and jump on ACCRA—Women vocation- now that the women training a way of life. organization and unity comlittle nations, like Viet Nam. al training centers in the centres had gained grounds, "We have no complaints bined with the force of world against any group," Thomas Johnson hasn't found out rural areas are to be made something should be done to opinion. said. "All black people have how to deal with problems at self - supporting following a keep them running and to "In Chicago, and it's like home, but he puts armed scheme initiated by the Min- g a i n economic independthis in the North across the forces in Santo Domingo and istry of Social Welfare. ence. nation, the schools are more Alabama May Be Cut ! Viet Nam to keep these peosegregated in 1965 than they WASHINGTON—The strug- jple from having their freeT H E SCHEME will make A L R E A D Y , women in the were in 1964—and they were gle between the federal gov-; dom. available t h e productive rural areas had been taught even less segregated in ernment and the state of J abilities of women to the na- how to make crafts for sale, 1963," he said. "Are we pro- Alabama over a non-discrim-1 " SO I T SHOULD be clear tional reconstruction. house-wifery, home economgressing?" ination pledge is regarded as j that we take a stand against Social Welfare Minister ics, nutrition and child care a second version of civil j all violence, international, Mrs. Susan Al-Hassan, told in these centres, the MinisROGERS, A former Chica- war. national and local". the "Ghanaian Times" that, ter said.

New Japanese

Ghana's Women

Highway

Centers


22

MUHAMMAD

PEAKS

NOVEMBER 5. 1965

24

MUHAMMAD SPEAKS

NOVEMBER 5, 1965

.What E

C

msim

ipiiiti

IHas

Finds New Outlook on Life thru Islam

Done

By Sister Hottie C . 3X which we don't have to wait your honey and drink sweet until we die to enjoy heav- milk while you are living. Washington, D.C. w o m e n , especially, All Holy Praises are due en, but a religion in which Our should fly to Islam, because we seek heaven right here Allah, to whom I submit. I on earth. Islam makes our M u s l i m thank Allah for giving us a Islam, as laught by Mes- men stand up and be real divine guide, and I b e a r witness that the Honorable senger Muhammad, makes men. I N D E E D , I AM forever Elijah Muhammad is t h e it possible for us to enjoy the finer things of life on earth, saying all praises are due true Messenger of God. I thank Allah for letting my money, good homes, luxury, Allah. Yes, we believe in one mind be open enough to ac- friendships in all walks of God, a living God, W h o s e proper name is Allah; and I cept my own. All praises are life. Take it from your sister, forever thank Allah for givdue to Allah. I first heard of Islam dur- follow the Honorable Elijah ing us, the lost-found black ing the time Sultan Muham- Muhammad and set yourself nation here in America, His mad was the minister. What in heaven at once! You can last and greatest Messenger, impressed me most then was wear your starry crown and the Honorable Elijah Muwhen Brother Sultan said: your long white robe, eat hammad. "Do something for self and your people." During the time I was working for the government and doing all right for myBy William X Edwards self, but that was not really If a man is interested in living the "good life," he doing something for myself or my people. I decided right will stop and evaluate himself occasionally. He will then and there to join unto weigh the good and bad, then plan for the future. Before hearing about the j my own kind and follow the leadership of the Honorable Nation of Islam, I had fin-; Catholic Church. I was a practicing Catholic, doElijah Muhammad. T h a t ished my education — high g00 school and college. Prior to j e v i l a l l w e e k b u t a b l e t o was some 15 years ago. SINCE THEN Allah has my entry into the armed s l i m t o confessional in time blessed me to have a small forces, I knew nothing of Is- ! P super market and carry out, lam. Minus the teachings of \ to qualify and receive comwith nine employees on my the Honorable Elijah Mu- munion along with a false 3RD PRIZE WINNER of Muhammad Speaks' recent sales conpay roll. I now feel that I hammad, I would only be pat on the back from fellow test, Brother Frank 3X of Muhammad's Mosque of Islam No. 27 am doing something that the indoctrinated by a masters hypocrites. in Los Angeles, demonsfrafes his sales technique on a Los degree. Messenger wants us to do. Messenger Muhammad's Angeles street to a customer who appreciated the message One of my frustrations teachings have strengthened of the Messenger of Allah. I thank Allah for sending when I graduated, I me with a stronger love for us a leader and teacher, the was, Honorable Elijah Muham- became a servile beggar for Allah, more respect for my- learn the true knowledge of \ to investigate the teachings of Honorable E l i j a h Mnmad, who is teaching us a a job. I was a Christian. In self, plus the desire to help the Nation of Islam. I invite educated Negroes hammad. peaceful religion. Islam, in fact, I was reared in the my brothers and sisters

How

to Win the 'Good Life'

a

H o w A l l a h Is W o r k i n g w i t h E l i j a h M u h a m m a d , H i s Last Messenger THE FOODS WE eat have By Dr. Leo P. X McCallum and was known by no one of or lack of nutritional value. medicine relative to diet Malcolm was elevated to any worth until he met Mu- After many years of study that can't be evaluated in i either a deleterious or benehis position by t h e Honor- hammad. Then he became j and research, the white man money. ; ficial effect on the health of By the way, how much I our mouths and teeth. Cerable Elijah Muhammad, and an international figure be- himself will readily admit Malcolm was cause of Muhammad. Yet, j that the science of nutrition have you benefited directly | tain foods are termed deter^gpR^ effective and everyone was very careful is one least understood by by the teachings of t h i s gent foods. By this, we mean great man through his week- they are helpful in cleaning p o w e r f u 1 not to mention a single word him. ^ only as long that even sounded like Mu-1 Y E T , MR. MUHAMMAD ly c o 1 u m.n contributed to the teeth and keeping them as he took hammad or Muslim in the j has made it easy for anyone help this program a l o n g ? free of debris. Others are the word giv- entire program. Well, howj to enjoy not just general Why not send a contribution sticky and soft or very sweet en to him by ridiculous and obvious can health, but — as a very im- to the 3-year Economic Pro- and may be cariogenic. by Mr. Muham- the white man get before we portant part of this general gram or the proposed Na- which we mean, decay prohealth — dental health as tional Educational Center m a d a n d catch on? Jm spoke well (if your m o u t h and for our people? Mr. Mu-ducing. Yet, without any of it bewhat you call "education." tit c a u s e that T H E S E THINGS ought to teeth aren't healthy, neither hammad has given us a word was in serve as signs to us that, no are you). If you have been program which, if effective- Mr. Muhammad has unerressence com- matter what, the white man wise enough to keep up with ly carried out. can virtually ingly picked for us and recDr. Leo i n g f r o m just doesn't want to give this newspaper—for just 15 eliminate the two primary ommends for us those things God. Yet the most ridicul- Muhammad the credit due or 20 cents a week during causes of the loss of teeth— which we really n e e d for ous farce imaginable w a s him. Today, no matter how the time Mr. Muhammad periodontal disease (pyor- healthy mouths. How do you put before the public in the wise one of us may sound or was teaching on foods—you rhea) and dental caries (de- suppose he managed that? Good question, isn't it? form of a television program how well we tell it—remem- purchased yourself a lesson cay). called "The Legacy of Mal- ber it came from Muham- in nutrition and preventive colm X " shortly after Mal- mad. So brother, sister, why colm's death. T H E PRO- don't you c o m e to MuSHABAZZ / A t P O R T - E X P O R T GRAM C O N S U M E D A hammad? Specializing in: MR. MUHAMMAD F U L L H O U R BUT NOT As a practicing dentist, it AFRICAN WOODCRAFT, PARISIAN ONCE IN THE COURSE OF is frequently my job to coun- PERFUMES, NOVELTIES and ARTIFACTS SPEAKS THE E N T I R E HOUR DID sel people on methods of 34 W . 1 16th St., N.Y.C. • ANY OF THE GUESTS (and preventing dental disease TEL.: 831-8842 there were three or four of with its consequent loss and Every SUNDAY Also Business Consultation them, plus the moderator) destruction of t e e t h and MENTION T H E MUSLIMS health. I spent a number of At 6:30 P.M. o n OR THE HONORABLE E L I - years studying enzyme sysTHE DENTAL Radio Station JAH MUHAMMAD. tems and the biochemical REHABILITATION Here was a program about breakdown of various foodW BNX a man who knew nothing stuffs and their nutritional LABORATORY

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N O V E M B E R 5, 1965

Why Africans

MUHAMMAD SPEAKS

Back

25

China:

A Nation of 700 Million must be brought into UN U N I T E D N A T I O N S , N . Y . — M a n y o f the leaders o f i n - "the peaceful settlement o f dependent A f r i c a n states have contended f o r years that disputes." I t w a s asserted the conspiracy led b y the U n i t e d States and other W e s t e r n that China respected the Gep o w e r s t o k e e p t h e P e o p l e ' s R e p u b l i c o f C h i n a ( m a i n - n e v a A g r e e m e n t s o f 1954 l a n d ) , a n a t i o n o f m o r e t h a n 700,000,000 p e o p l e o u t o f t h e w i t h r e g a r d t o I n d o - C h i n a U n i t e d Nations, is both unrealistic and unwise. " a n d t h o s e o f 1962 o n L a o s . " The statement said t h e Recently the six African nations — Algeria, B u r u n d i , the future o f t h e organiza- " o n l y realistic attitude" t o take o n the matter was the Congo (Brazzaville), Ghana, tion. "abandonment o f t h e 'quarGuinea a n d M a l a — joined " S I N C E J O I N I N G t h e antine' policy which certain four other countries i n a United Nations, these gov- powers have pursued f o r s t a t e m e n t s e t t i n g f o r t h t h e v e r n m e n t s h a v e u n c e a s i n g l y m o r e t h a n 15 y e a r s w i t h reasons w h y they agree that protested, t h r o u g h their rep- regard t o t h e People's R e m a i n l a n d China should be resentatives, against the un- bublic of China. " I t is a fact that the solurepresented at the U N . justifiable ostracism o f a Representatives o f t h e government w h i c h indisput- tion o f any i m p o r t a n t interblack A f r i c a n nations w h o ably represents a v e r y great national p r o b l e m w i t h o u t t h e participresented t h e i r r e s o l u t i o n i n - and v e r y ancient people, p a t i on of cluded A n d r e N y a n k i y e o f w h i c h is heir t o a r e m a r k China is i n Burundi, Frederick A r k - a b 1 e civilization a n d i s conceivahurst o f Ghana, Jonas M o u - marching courageously o n H A R D - P R E S S E D U N S e c r e t a r y - G e n e r a l U T h a n t w h o has o f t e n ble." anza o f t h e Congo (Brazza- the road o f progress," t h e The p o i n t expressed his o w n o p i n i o n t h a t C h i n a should be a U N m e m b e r , ville) a n d Sori Coulibaly o f statement continued. w a s m a d e accepts credentials f r o m p e r m a n e n t r e p r e s e n t a t i v e o f G u i n e a Mali. " I t i s indeed incontestable t h a t " I t i s A m b a s s a d o r A c h k a r M a r o f ( r i g h t ) , w h o s e n a t i o n has l o n g E x c e r p t s f r o m that state- that t h e a r b i t r a r y exclusion i m p o s s i b l e t o led t h e struggle f o r t h e admission o f t h e largest n a t i o n i n ment follows: of C h i n a e x c l u d e the w o r l d . f r o m a n or' I n c o n f oo rr mmiittyy wwiitthh t h e China from g anization, position they great decis- Shek's T a i w a n r e g i m e rep- concludes b y w a r n i n g t h a t N y a n k i y e w h i c h has set have freions w h i l e , a t resenting Chinese people, continued p r o c r a s t i n a t i o n i n i t s e l f t h e the same time, requiring i t calling i t " a n absurdity" restoring t o China "its lawquently e x lofty goal o f to subscribe t o t h e obliga- a n d " a f i c t i o n " and its offic- ful r i g h t s " i n t h e U N c a n pressed in u n i v e r s a l i t y , tions i m p o s e d b y agree- ials " u n l a w f u l authorities." cause t h e w o r l d body " t o p a s t years, is a n e x - ments which i t h a d no part t h e governlose a u t h o r i t y i n the eyes t r e m e l y in concluding." ments of A l " T H E E X I S T E N C E of the of t h e interational c o m m u g r a v e d e n i a j T h e r e s o l u t i o n o f t h e 10 P e o p l e ' s R e p u b l i c o f C h i n a n i t y a n d f a i l i n i t s p r i n c i p a l bania, Algerr of j u s t i c e . " ia, B u r u n d i , n a t i o n s blasted C h i a n g K a i is a r e a l i t y , " i t said, a n d o b j e c t i v e s . " Pointing C a m b o d 1 a, Mouanza o u t that [Congo (BrazC h i n a ' s popz a v i 1 1 e), African Farmers Eye Diversified Crops Coulibaly Cuba, Ghana, ulation m a k e s u p "one quarG u i n e a , M a l i t e r o f m a n k i n d , " t h e g o v - A C C R A — O n e - c r o p e c o n - c r o p e c o n o m y s i n c e t h e c o -f a c t o r i e s a n d h a r d w o r k a n d that and R o m a n i a believe that ernments o b s e r v e coa price i s subject t o fluc- sacrifice. the question o f t h e restora- China " i s a founding m e m - omies—the heritage o f hun- tuations. A PLAN TO c o n s t r u c t t i o n o f t h e l a w f u l rights o f ber a n d a p e r m a n e n t m e m - dreds of years of c o l o n i a l i s m I n addition t o urging crop m o r e feeder roads t o enable t h e P e o p l e ' s R e p u b l i c o f b e r o f t h e S e c u r i t y C o u n c i l " w h i c h a f f l i c t s m a n y o f t h ed i v e r s i f i c a t i o n , t h e A g r i c u l - f a r m e r s t o t r a n s p o r t f a r m C h i n a i n t h e U n i t e d N a t i o n s b u t " h a s , s i n c e 1949, b e e n n e w n a t i o n s — h a v e b e e n t u r e M i n i s t e r c a l l e d o n t h ep r o d u c e t o t h e b u y i n g c e n is o f t h e f i r s t i m p o r t a n c e t o r e f u s e d t h e r i g h t t o o c c u p y r i p p e d i n t h i s n a t i o n o f b l a c k f a r m e r s t o p r o d u c e r a w m a - t e r s i s b e i n g s t u d i e d b y h i m , the seat w h i c h legally h a s f a r m e r s , w h o have been terials for G h a n a ' s m a n y said M r . Jantuah. a l w a y s belonged to i t . " urged t o diversify f a r m T H E S I G N A T O R Y nations products i n order t o stabilize to t h e s t a t e m e n t , n o t i n g t h a t G h a n a ' s e c o n o m y . the c o n f e r e n c e o f non- D U R I N G T H E D A Y S o f aligned countries i n Cairo European rule, Agriculture last year urged the U N General Assembly " t o restore Minister F . A . Jantual told the rights o f t h e People's the Supreme Council o f t h e P R E T O R I A , S. Africa — that black Africa w o u l d one W A S H I N G T O N — S e c r e t a r y R e p u b l i c o f C h i n a a n d t o U n i t e d G h a n a F a r m e r s ' Co- The N a z i - w h i t e 1 e a d e r o f d a y co-exist peacefully w i t h of I n t e r i o r S t e w a r t L . U d a l l recognize t h e representa- o p e r a t i v e s C o u n c i l here, S o u t h A f r i c a , H e n d r i k V e r - his f a s c i s t r e g i m e , h e a l said t h e United States a n d tives o f i t s government as most A f r i c a n a n d A s i a n n a - woerd, h a s inaugurated t h e luded that t h e t i m e w o u l d Saudia A r a b i a had agreed i n the only legitimate represen- tions w e r e regarded s i m p l y first nuclear research rector come w h e n other countries s u b s t a n c e o n t h e c o n s t r u c - t a t i v e s o f C h i n a i n t h e U n i t - a s s o u r c e s o f r a w m a t e r i a l s . to b e b u i l t o n t h e c o n t i n e n t in Africa would be prepared t i o n o f a 14 m i l l i o n d o l l a r e d N a t i o n s , " s a i d f l a t l y : Cocoa, h e said, had for m a n y near here a t Pelindaba. • to accept t h e benefits o f water desalting a n d electri" I t seems evident that the years been t h e m a i n s t a y o f THE 1,800,000 ( a b o u t South A f r i c a n nuclear cal power plant. r e f u s a l t o r e s t o r e t o t h e t h e n a t i o n ' s e c o n o m y b u t i t 4,300,000 C e d i s ) p l a n t , b u i l t T h e p l a n t i s t o b e b u i l t b y P e o p l e ' s R e p u b l i c o f C h i n a is d a n g e r o u s t o r e l y o n o n e o n t h e o p e n V a l d t a n d k n o w n k n o w l e d g e a n d a s s i s t a n c e . the Saudi A r a b i a n governits lawful as " S a f a r i O n e , " i s a l r e a d y C O N S P I C U O U S among m e n t a t Jidda. U d a l l said rights I n the being used for the manufacthe U n i t e d States w i l l conU n i t e d N a - Negro Business Fund t u r e o f r a d i o a c t i v e i s o t o p e s . s e v e r a l n u c l e a r s p e c i a l i s t s f r o m western countries w h o t r i b u t e the design f o r t h e detions i s based A M E R I C U S , G a . — A n " i n Vervoerd is reported t o attended the ceremony were salting portion o f t h e plant, on considera- v o l v e m e n t f u n d , " launched w h i c h w i l l produce five m i l tions w h i c h recently b y D r . Clarence have boastfully declared a t Sir W i l l i a m Penney, Presilion gallons o f w a t e r a d a y a r e entirely Jordan, head o f K o i n o n i a the ceremony that w o r k car- dent o f t h e B r i t i s h A t o m i c a n d 36 m e g a w a t t s o f elecpolitical a n d f a r m , h a s brought i n over ried out a t the center w a s a t E n e r g y Council and M r . A n dre Auvenet, Chief Secretric power. a r e c o n t r a r y $1,200 i n a p r o g r a m t o h e l p t h e d i s p o s a l o f ' a l l A f r i c a . ' to t h e s p i r i t l o c a l N e g r o e s g e t s t a r t e d i n I n h i s u s u a l s h o r t s i g h t e d - t a r y o f t h e F r e n c h A t o m i c Udall made the announcew h i c h guided t h e i r o w n businesses. T h e ness t o his f i r m conviction E n e r g y H i g h C o m m i s s i o n . m e n t a t t h e closing session t h e creation fund initially purchased five of t h e F i r s t I n t e r n a t i o n a l of o u r organ- second-hand bicycles, under Symposium o nWater DesalArkhurst a " B i k e s - and - T r i k e s - forization." ination. U d a l l said construcT y k e s " slogan, f o r distribution o f the plant will adv a n c e t h e t e c h n o l o g y o f d e - T H E S T A T E M E N T o f t h et i o n a m o n g N e g r o c h i l d r e n . s a l t i n g a n d w i l l b e n e f i t b o t h 10 n a t i o n s d e c l a r e d t h a t T h e g o a l i s t o d i s t r i b u t e a t TV RENTALS AND SALES countries. C h i n a " h a s a l w a y s " f a v o r e d l e a s t 1,000.

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NOVEMBER 5, 1965

MUHAMMAD SPEAKS

26

Ads Go All Out Telling Negro Youths "Things Are Better" WASHINGTON—Whether Negroes are better off or not, they'll soon be seeing advertising signs declaring that things were never better, if the program advocated by the American advertising industry and supported by Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey is successful. SUGGESTED advertisements and commercials were sent to all newspapers, radio and TV stations with the theme: "Things are Changing." "Things are changing," Humphrey said. "They are changing forever. Everybody is a first-class citizen now. There is no more of that get-in-the-back-of-thebus insult and foolishness." HUMPHREY urged every American to "sell the idea (of equal opportunity)" in a spirit of patriotic devotion. Advertising messages, prepared by the Advertising Council, said: "Things are changing. There's one way to find out if equal opportunity applies to you. Apply yourself. "Things are changing. Have you looked at the Help Wanted lately? Prejudice is going out of business." S E V E R A L ROCK 'n' roll music groups have recorded "Things Are Changing," written by Phil Spector.

Examiners

Into

WASHINGTON — Federal voting examiners are slated to serve in five additional Mississippi counties, bringing to nine the counties of that state where the examiners have been assigned. The additional counties are Benton, Boliver, Clay Coahoma and Humphreys. Despite the provision of the 1965 Voting Rights Act, which outlaws literacy tests, Miss. Atty. Gen. Joseph T. Patterson has brought a se-

Mississippi

ries of legal actions designed to prevent registrars from registering persons who do not meet state literacy requirements. "IN VIEW of Atty. Gen. Patterson's action," Katzenbach remarked, "and in view of the fact that many Negro applicants are, therefore, being turned away, we believe it is essential that federal examiners be assigned to these counties."

Classified Ads

Ghana's Glass Factory ACCRA—Work on the new C8,400,000 State Glass Factory at Aboso has been comFOR S A L E MISCELLANEOUS— pleted. NEGRO CHRISTMAS CARDS A fire was lit in one of the Beautiful Negro Designs. Rich Looking. Prices $1.20; Name Imprinted $1.65, $2.95. factory's furnaces by t h e Lumpkin's. 610 W. I l l St., N.Y. 10025. production manager of the R E A L E S T A T E FOR S A L E factory, Mr. Heinz K. Privy 6 APT. — 5 ROOM. NEAR SCHOOLS AND to mark the completion of transportation. 4500 North. Small down work on the factory. payment. 561-2395. Chicago. BUY A N D S E L L W I T H S H A B A Z Z REALTY 73 W e s t 1 1 6 t h Street New York, N.Y. 876-5882

S U P P O R T MUHAMMAD'S MOSQUE OF ISLAM YEAR ECONOMIC SAVINGS PLAN

3

All MAKES AND MODELS' 787 ST. NICHOLAS AVE. NEW YORK 31, N.Y. CALL AU 1-5968

DUBISON & MAULTSBY G r o c e r y S t o r e f o r Sale 1983 7th AVENUE (cor. 119th Street) NEW YORK, NEW YORK $2,000 CALL UN 5-6717 (TUES., THURS. OR SAT.)

N O W

..

KOLD-AIR REFRIGERATION SERVICE COMMERCIAL • DOMESTIC Repairs

M a d e O n The

. . n

Spot-

o

w

NOW

IS THE TIME TO START HELPING SELF! by Supporting Muhammad's Mosques of Islam 3 - Y E A R E C O N O M I C P L A N W H I C H W I L L HELP O U R PEOPLE IN G E N E R A L

"YES I a m g o i n g t o SUPPORT THIS P L A N . . . I a m going t o enclose $ with this coupon, and every coupon hereafter that is printed in this Newspaper, and mail to: 3-YEAR ECONOMIC PLAN, 5335 S. Greenwood Ave., Chicago, HI. 60A15 I understand a receipt will be sent bock to me NAME ADDRESS CITY STATE ZIP CODE

MARKING THE culmination of a mutual aspiration, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Grice, both winners of John Hay Whitney Foundation Fellowships, recently established the GriceReynold* School of Drama and Dance in New York City. Mrs. Grice — Pearle Reynolds before her marriage last March—was formerly a principal dancer with the Katherine Dunham and Donald McKayle companies and has appeared in several Broadway plays. The

1964-65 Whitney Fellowship winner will direct the dance department of the new academy. Grice, a 1965-66 Whitney Fellowship winner, appeared on stage in James Baldwin's "Blues for Mr. Charlie" and on television in the Emmy-nominated "Mr. Novak" program. He will conduct classes in drama (acting) while he continues his work at the famous Actor's Studio.

Capital Bridge Named to Honor Famed Abolitionist, Frederick Douglass THE L I F E O F Douglass, eration of C i v i c Associathe most eloquent spokesman tions. Benjamin Quarles, a of his day against slavery, a Morgan State History prosuccessful newspaper pub- fessor and a u t h o r i t y on lisher, a respected lecturer D o u g l a s s was principal and writer whose speeches speaker at the dedication and letters f i l l e d two vol- ceremony. umes by 1854, was eulogized in ceremonies at the bridge SHABAZZ spanning the Anacostia river. NOVELTY SHOP The affair was part of Imported African-Asian "Civic Responsibility Week," of A r t sponsored by the D. C. Fed- J e w e l r y Objects • Leather • Gift Items SIS. EUNICE, PROP. 4 7 0 CONVENT AVE. SHABAZZ GENERAL TRUCKING INr. 151st 5T.L & DELIVERY SERVICE NEW YORK CITY AU 1 -0428 4 0 9 W E S T 1 2 7 t h STREET N E W YORK, N E W YORK NOW: MO 2-0656 10 A.M. TO 8 P.M. (MON.-FRI.) 10 A.M. TO 10 P.M. (SAT.) NIGHT AND DAY SERVICE

WASHINGTON—The South Capitol Street bridge here has been named the Frederick Douglass b r i d g e in honor of the Negro abolitionist. The dedication ceremonies were held four months before the birthday of great freedom fighter, who not only orated against s l a v e evils but fought with his fists against the inhuman institution.

M A I L Y O U R CLASSIFIED A D T O D A Y O N L Y 50<lpenre W H E N Y O U W A N T T O RENT, SELL, T R A D E , M O V E , HIRE, W O R K , O W N , T E A C H , LEARN, E A R N , SEARCH, FIND, A N N O U N C E M S CLASSIFIED WILL DO THE JOB CLASSIFICATION DESIRED

(For E x a m p l e : FEMALE HELP W A N T E D HOUSE FOR SALE, FURNISHED R O O M . )

MUHAMMAD SPEAKS NEWSPAPER NOW PUBLISHED WEEKLY DEADLINE 12 O'CLOCK N O O N EVERY WEDNESDAY PRINT your ad on lines provided below (including all information to be published) FIGURE NOT M O R E T H A N 5 W O R D S FOR E A C H LINE

NAME

TELEPHONE

ADDRESS

NO.

CITY. CLASSIFIED RATES 50c per line (3 line minimum $1.50) Please Send Check or Money Order to

M U H A M M A D 634

S P E A K S

N E W S P A P E R

Kindly Address Replies To — ATT'N! Classified Ad Dept. E. 79th St. Chicago 19,


N O V E M B E R 5, 1965

MUHAMMAD

SPEAKS

27 ~

MUHAMMAD'S MESSAGE

Associated

Negro

Press Writer

Says:

A United Black Press Could Change the Nation By GORDON HANCOCK citizenship is much louder (For ANPI) and more insistent. The voice of the Negro In the gradual advancement of the Negro since Emannewspapers g i v e s some cipation, the Negro newspaper has been something special or super-special! The press is powerful. When Claude unanimity in his cry for deBarnett founded the Associated Negro Press, he numbered liverance in this and other himself among the Negro immortals. Some of us remem- countries. No more apalling ber too well just what Negroes were before the coming fact confronts the N e g r o of the Negro Press—and what the Negro has become with race tfian its leaderlesshess the coming of the Negro press, we also know too well. at this stage of its fight for full deliverance. In such a Too often, the Negro press is taken for granted. Negro center as Harlem, we Before the coming of a have an Adam Clayton PowNegro press, here and there Du Bois, with the Niagra ell as a political leader of Movement as his springabout the country, enterprisgreat effectiveness, but Neing and adventurous Ne- board, was ever heard from, groes need more than politithe triumvirate of Fortune, groes published Negro newscal leadership. papers with, at times, dra- Trotter and Mitchell were on The coming of Dr. Martin the firing line. They were in matic results. Thomas T. Luther King inspired h o p e Fortune, John Mitchell and very truth trailblazers and it that a great Negro leader Monroe Trotter published in is almost a certainty that Du had at last arrived, but New York, Richmond and Bois got his early lessons in t h e r e are signs that our Boston respectively. Negro the freedom fight from one hopes have been frustrated. newspapers of great power or all of this great Negro Dr. King's plea of non-vioand effectiveness. And what newspaper triumvirate. lence on the one hand, and is more, these Negro editors T H E NEGRO newspapers, his suggestion and approval were great and courageous under the direction of the indirectly of violence on the fighters for the right of Ne- Associated N e g r o Press, other hand, has weakened groes. create formidable influence his leadership. W h e n NeOf the three, it must be toward the advance of the groes cease to revere and admitted that John Mitchell, Negro's cause In the Second begin to jeer, the possibiliwith his Richmond Planet Emancipation. Because of ties of a leader are strictly was, by far, the mightiest an efficient Negro press — limited. Negro fighter of his day. He made up of Negro newspaf o u g h t in the dangerous pers great and small, here THEN TOO, T H E rise of a South and not from the pro- and there about the country plethora of would-be leaders tected North. Long before —the Negro's voice for full curtails the possibility of Ne-

gro leadership. The leader lessness of Negroes in this crisis becomes a real danger. It could be a tragedy! In a t i m e like this, the hope lies in the Negro newspaper. The teacher, the minister, the business and professional people are strictly limited when it comes to reaching the unreached Negroes of the ghetto. Only the N e g r o newspaper reaches the ghetto. And while these carry a heavy load of crime and criminality, they need to get over to the impoverished masses the lessons of law and order, decency and faith, hope and brotherhood . . . the essentials of full citizenship. The horrors and dangers of hate and bitterness must be stressed. The Negroes are the greatest sufferers from these. Negroes need not only to clean up t h e i r premises but their persons as well. Nobody wants to integrate an uncouth and unkempt and poorly mannered person. Some things among Negroes should also be condemned.

of race behavior is not going to h e l p matters. Only the Negro newspaper can reach the lowliest Negroes with words of life! The cause is crying for a "Read Negro Newspapers" movement.

Sweet Briar Case Set AMHERST, Va. — T h e county circuit court has set Dec. 1 for hearing arguments on a motion to dismiss a petition by Sweet Briar college to admit Negro students. The women's college's attempt to integrate was blocked last June when a lower court ruled it could not enroll Negroes under the terms of the "white girls only" will of its founder, Mrs. Indiana Fletcher Williams.

Bechuanaland

Freedom

GABERONE, Bechuanaland—-Premier Seretse Khama told his people they would get full independence from Britain in September. The country is self-governing under Khama's leadership, but its external affairs A TOO-BLIND indulgence are handled by Britain.

VISIT MUHAMMAD'SMOSQUES OF ISLAM Hear the Life Giving Teachings of MOSQUE NO. 22 MOSQUE NO. 20 The Honorable Elijah Muhammad, —

1027 N. LANG AVE. WED. 8 P.M.

PITTSBURG, PA SUN. 2 P.M.

4S0 MICKLE ST. 966-2830 CAMDEN, N.J. WED. & FRI. 8 P.M. SUN 2 P.M.

MOSQUE NO. 33

a

1221 WASHINGTON ST. GARY. IND. 883-7025 WED. & FRi.. 8 P.M.- SUN., 2 P.M.

MOSQUE NO. 1

11529 LINWOOD AVE. DETROIT 6, MICH. WED. s, FRI. 8 P.M. SUN. 2 P.M.

MOSQUE NO. 5

3507 READING RD., 2nd fl. CINCINNATI, C . WED. & FRI. 8 P.M SUN. 2 P.M.

MOSQUE NO. 12

2204 N. BROAD ST., PHILA PA. PO 3-3534 WED. & FRI. 8 P.M. — SUN. 2 P M

MOSQUE NO. 18

12416 SUPERIOR AVE. PO 1-8373 CLEVELAND 6, OHIO WED. 6. FRI. 8 P.M SUN. 2 P.M.

MOSQUE NO. 11

35 INTERVALE ST. ROXBURY, MASS. WED & FR.. 8 P.M. SUN. 2 P.M.

FOR

ADDRESSES

MESSENGER O F ALLAH MOSQUE NO. 2

5335 S. GREENWOOD AVE. CHICAGO 53, ILL WED. & FRI. U P M SUN. 2 P.M.

MOSQUE NO. 6

514 WILSON ST. WED a FRI. 8 P.M.

BALTIMORE, MD. SUN 2 P.M.

MOSQUE NO. 21

89 KEARNEY AVE. JERSEY CITY, N.J. 435-6845 WED. & FRv 8 PM. SUN. 7 P.M

MOSQUE NO. 23

192 BROADWAY WED. & FRI. 8 P.M.

BUFFALO 8, N.Y. SUN. 2 P.M.

MOSQUE NO. 14

40 ALBANY AVE. HARTFORD, CONN. WED. & FRi. 8 P.M SUN. 2 P.M.

MOSQUE NO. 37

359 W. BARTGES ST. AKRON, OHIO BL 3-4711 THURS. 8. SUN. 8 P.M.

OF OTHER

MOSQUE NO. 28

MOSQUE NO. 3

2463 N. 3rd ST.

MILWAUKEE, WIS. FR 2-5733 WED. & FRi. II P M. SUN. 2 P.M.

MOSQUE NO. 7 (HARLEM) N.Y.

102 W. 116th ST. Rl 9-7569 WED a FRI. 8 P.M. SUN 2 P.M.

MOSQUE NO. 7-B (LONG ISLAND)

105-03 NORTHERN BLVD. HA 9-8915 CORONA, LONG ISLAND, N.Y. SUN., 2 F.M. —WED & FR\ 8 P.M

MOSQUE NO. 7-C (Brooklyn) N.Y.

120 Madison St. (Cor. Bedford Avo.) ST 3-8635 SUN., 2 P M WED. & FRI., 8 P.M

MOSQUE NO. 7-D (BRONX) N.Y. 878 PROSPECT AVE. (NEAR 161st ST.) PHONE 323-9490 WED. & FRI. 8 P.M. — SUN. 2 P.M

M O S Q U E S iN YOUR AREA, SEE

YOUR

1434 N. GRAND AVE. ST. LOUIS 6, MO. JE 3-2497 WED. & FR.. 8 P.M SUN. 2 P.M.

MOSQUE NO. 4

1519 FOURTH ST., N.W. WASHINGTON 1, D.C. WED & FRI. .8 P.M. SUN, 2 P.M.

MOSQUE NO. 25

257 S. ORANGE ST. NEWARK, N.J. 622-9021 WED. a FRI. 8 P M SUN. 2 P.M.

MCSQUE NO. 27

5606 S. Broadway St., Los Angeles 37, Cat. WED & FRI. 8 P.M. SUN'2 P.M.

MOSQUE NO. 35

236 N. MONROE ST. WILMINGTON. DEL. WED li P.M SUN. 2. P.M.

MOSQUE NO. 26

1872 POST ST.

SAN FRANCISCO Fl 6-9966 WED & FRI. 8 P.M. — SUN. 2 P.M.

TELEPHONE

DIRECTORY


MUHAMMAD

26

NOVEMBER

SPEAKS

5, 1965

Ads Go All Out Telling Negro Youths "Things Are Better" WASHINGTON—Whether Negroes are better off or not, they'll soon be seeing advertising signs declaring that things were never better, if the program advocated by the American advertising industry and supported by Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey is successful. SUGGESTED advertisements and commercials were sent to ail newspapers, radio and TV stations with the theme: "Things are Changing." "Things are changing," Humphrey said. "They are changing forever. Everybody is a first-class citizen now. There is no more of that get-in-the-back-of-thebus insult and foolishness." HUMPHREY urged every American to "sell the idea (of equal opportunity)" in a spirit of patriotic devotion. Advertising messages, prepared by the Advertising Council, said: "Things are changing. There's one way to find out if equal opportunity applies to you. Apply yourself. "Things are changing. Have you looked at the Help Wanted lately? Prejudice is going out of business." S E V E R A L ROCK 'n' roll music groups have recorded "Things Are Changing," written by Phil Spector.

Examiners

Into

Mississippi

WASHINGTON — Federal voting examiners are slated to serve in five additional Mississippi counties, bringing to nine the counties of that state where the examiners have been assigned. The additional counties are Benton, Boliver, Clay Coahoma and Humphreys. Despite the provision of the 1965 Voting Rights Act, which outlaws literacy tests, Miss. Atty. Gen. Joseph T. Patterson has brought a se-

Ties of legal actions designed to prevent registrars from registering persons who do not meet state literacy requirements.

Classified Ads

Ghana's Glass Factory ACCRA—Work on the new C8,400,000 State Glass Factory at Aboso has been completed. A fire was lit in one of the factory's furnaces by t h e production manager of the factory, Mr. Heinz K. Privy to mark the completion of work on the factory.

FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS— NEGRO CHRISTMAS CARDS Beautiful Negro Designs. Rich Looking. Prices $1.20; Name Imprinted $1.65, $2.95. Lumpkin's, 610 W. I l l St., N.Y. 10025. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE6 APT. — 5 ROOM. NEAR SCHOOLS AND transportation. 4500 North. Small down payment. 561-2395. Chicago.

"IN VIEW of Atty. Gen. Patterson's action," Katzenbach remarked, "and in view of the fact that many Negro applicants are, therefore, being turned away, we believe it is essential that federal examiners be assigned to these counties."

S U P P O R T

BUY AND S E L L W I T H SHABAZZ REALTY

M U H A M M A D ' S MOSQUE

7 3 W e s t 1 1 6 t h Street N e w Y o r k , N.Y. 876-5882 KOLD-AIR REFRIGERATION SERVICE

COMMERCIAL • DOMESTIC Repairs Made On The Spot— ALL MAKES AND MODELS' 787 ST. NICHOLAS AVE. NEW YORK 31, N.Y. CALL AU 1-5968

N O W

n

o

w

3

OF

Capital Bridge Named to Honor Famed Abolitionist, Frederick Douglass WASHINGTON—The South Capitol Street bridge here has been named the Frederick Douglass b r i d g e in honor of the Negro abolitionist. The dedication ceremonies were held four months before the birthday of great freedom fighter, who not only orated against s l a v e evils but fought with his fists against the inhuman institution.

THE L I F E O F Douglass, the most eloquent spokesman of his day against slavery, a successful newspaper publisher, a respected lecturer and writer whose speeches and letters f i l l e d two volumes by 1854, was eulogized in ceremonies at the bridge spanning the Anacostia river. The affair was part of "Civic Responsibility Week," sponsored by the D. C. Fed-

& DELIVERY

.

NOW

IS THE TIME TO START HELPING S E L F ! b y Supporting Muhammad's Mosques of Islam 3 - Y E A R E C O N O M I C P L A N WHICH WILL HELP OUR PEOPLE IN GENERAL "YES I am going to SUPPORT THIS PLAN . . . I am going to enclose $ with this coupon, and every coupon hereafter that is printed in this Newspaper, and mail to: 3-rEAR ECONOMIC PLAN, 5335 S. Greenwood Ave., Chkago, III. 60615 I understand a receipt will be sent back to me NAME ADDRESS CITY STATE ZIP CODE

SHABAZZ NOVELTY SHOP Imported African-Asian Objects of A r t J e w e l r y • Leather • Gift Items SIS. EUNICE, PROP. 4 7 0 CONVENT AVE.

(Mr. 151st ST.L NEW YORK CITY

SERVICE

4 0 9 W E S T 1 2 7 t h STREET

AU 1-0428

NEW YORK, NEW YORK

NOW: 10 A.M. TO 8 P.M. (MON.-FRI.) 10 A.M. TO 10 P.M. (SAT.)

M O 2-0656 NIGHT AND DAY SERVICE

M A I L

DUBISON & MAULTSBY

G r o c e r y S t o r e f o r Sale 1983 7th AVENUE (car. 119th Street) NEW YORK, NEW YORK $2,000 CALL UN 5-6717 (TUES., THURS. OR SAT.)

eration of C i v i c Associations. Benjamin Quarles, a Morgan State History professor and a u t h o r i t y on D o u g l a s s was principal speaker at the dedication ceremony.

SHABAZZ GENERAL TRUCKING

ISLAM

YEAR ECONOMIC S A V I N G S PLAN

1964-65 Whitney Fellowship winner will direct the dance department of the new academy. G r i c e , a 1965-66 Whitney Fellowship winner, a p p e a r e d on stage in J a m e s Baldwin's "Blues for Mr. C h a r l i e " and on television in the Emmy-nominated " M r . Novak" program. He will conduct classes in drama (acting) while he continues his work at the famous Actor's Studio.

M A R K I N G T H E culmination of a mutual aspiration, Mr. and Mrs. W a y n e G r i c e , both winners of John H a y Whitney Foundation Fellowships, recently established the G r i c e Reynoldi* School of Drama and Dance in N e w York C i t y . Mrs. G r i c e — Pearle Reynolds before her marriage last M a r c h — w a s formerly a principal dancer with the Katherine Dunham and Donald McKayle companies and has appeared in several Broadway plays. The

Y O U R

CLASSIFIED

ONLY

A D

T O D A Y

SOTi

W H E N Y O U W A N T TO RENT, SELL, TRADE, M O V E , HIRE, W O R K , O W N , TEACH, LEARN, E A R N , S E A R C H , FIND, A N N O U N C E

M S

CLASSIFIED

CLASSIFICATION DESIRED

WILL

DO

THE

JOB

(For E x a m p l e : F E M A L E HELP W A N T E D HOUSE FOR SALE, FURNISHED R O O M . )

M U H A M M A D SPEAKS NEWSPAPER N O W PUBLISHED WEEKLY DEADLINE 12 O'CLOCK N O O N EVERY WEDNESDAY PRINT your ad on lines provided below (including all information to be published) FIGURE NOT MORE T H A N 5 W O R D S FOR E A C H LINE

NAME ADDRESS

TELEPHONE NO. CITY. CLASSIFIED RATES 50c per line (3 line minimum $1.50) Please Send Check or Money Order to

MUHAMMAD SPEAKS NEWSPAPER Kindly Address Replies To - ATT N! Classified A d Dept. 6 3 4 E. 79th St. Chicago 19, III.


\

N O V E M B E R 5, 1965

MUHAMMAD

27

SPEAKS

MUHAMMAD'S MESSAGE

KJHEN OMAR HEARD THAT HIS SISTER FATIMA WAS A CONVERT TO ISLAM HIS ANGER TURNED ON HER... HE WENT P/RECTLY TO HER HOUSE... (Y$izi>" A

Associated

Negro

Press Writer

Says:

A United Black Press Could Change the Nation By GORDON HANCOCK citizenship is much louder (For ANPI) and more insistent. The voice of the Negro In the gradual advancement of the Negro since Emancipation, the Negro newspaper has been something spe- newspapers g i v e s some cial or super-special! The press is powerful. When Claude unanimity in his cry for deBarnett founded the Associated Negro Press, he numbered liverance in this and other himself among the Negro immortals. Some of us remem- countries. No more apalling ber too well just what Negroes were before the coming fact confronts the N e g r o of the Negro Press—and what the Negro has become with race than its leaderlessness the coming of the Negro press, we also know too well. at this stage of its fight for full deliverance. In such a Too often, the Negro press is taken for granted. Negro center as Harlem, we Before the coming of a have an Adam Clayton PowNegro press, here and there Du Bois, with the Niagra ell as a political leader of about the country, enterpris- Movement as his spring- great effectiveness, but Neing and adventurous Ne- board, was ever heard from, groes need more than politigroes published Negro news- the triumvirate of Fortune, cal leadership. papers with, at times, dra- Trotter and Mitchell were on The coming of Dr. Martin matic results. Thomas T. the firing line. They were in Luther King inspired h o p e Fortune, John Mitchell and very truth trailblazers and it that a great Negro leader Monroe Trotter published in is almost a certainty that Du had at last arrived, but New York, Richmond and Bois got his early lessons in t h e r e are signs that our Boston respectively. Negro the freedom fight from one hopes have been frustrated. newspapers of great power or all of this great Negro Dr. King's plea of non-vioand effectiveness. And what newspaper triumvirate. lence on the one hand, and is more, these Negro editors THE NEGRO newspapers, his suggestion and approval were great and courageous under the direction of the indirectly of violence on the fighters for the right of Ne- Associated N e g r o Press, other hand, has weakened groes. create formidable influence his leadership. W h e n NeOf the three, it must be toward the advance of the groes cease to revere and admitted that John Mitchell, Negro's cause in the Second begin to jeer, the possibiliwith his Richmond Planet Emancipation. Because of ties of a leader are strictly was, by far, the mightiest an efficient Negro press — limited. Negro fighter of his day. He made up of Negro newspaf o u g h t in the dangerous pers great and small, here THEN TOO, T H E rise of a South and not from the pro- and there about the country plethora of would-be leaders tected North. Long before —the Negro's voice for full curtails the possibility of Ne-

1027

N. LANG AVE. WED. 8 P.M.

1221

WASHINGTON ST. GARY. IND. 883-7025 WED. & FRi., 8 P.M.- SUN., 2 P.M.

Sweet Briar Case Set AMHERST, Va. — T h e county circuit court has set Dec. 1 for hearing arguments on a motion to dismiss a petition by Sweet Briar college to admit Negro students. The women's college's attempt to integrate was blocked last June when a lower court ruled it could not enroll Negroes under the terms of the "white girls only" will of its founder, Mrs. Indiana Fletcher Williams.

Bechuanaland

Freedom

GABERONE, Bechuanaland—Premier Seretse Khama told his people they would get full independence from Britain in September. The country is self-governing under Khama's leadership, but its external affairs A TOO-BLIND indulgence are handled by Britain.

PITTSBURG, PA SUN. 2 P.M.

MOSQUE NO. 33

MOSQUE NO. 2

3507 READING RD„ 2nd fl. CINCINNATI, C . WED. & FRI. 8 P.M SUN. 2 P.M.

MOSQUE NO. 12

2204 N. BROAD ST., PHILA PA. PO 3-3534 WED. 8. FRI. 8 P.M. — SUN. 2 P M

MOSQUE NO. 18

SUPERIOR AVE, PO 1-8373 CLEVELAND 6, OHIO WED. 8. FRI. 8 P.M SUN. 2 P.M.

MOSQUE NO. 11

35 INTERVALE ST. ROXBURY, MASS. WED 8. FRi. 8 P.M. SUN. 2 P.M.

ADDRESSES

OF

MOSQUE NO. 3

5335 S. GREENWOOD AVE. CHICAGO S3, ILL WED. 8. FRI. IS P M. SUN. 2 P.M.

2463 N. 3rd ST.

MOSQUE NO. 6

WED.

514

MOSQUE NO. 5

FOR

450

MICKLE ST. 966-2830 CAMDEN, N.J. WED. & FRI. 8 P.M. SUN. 2 P.M.

1434

N. GRAND AVE. ST. LOUIS 6, MO. JE 3-2497 WED. & FR.. 8 P.M SUN. 2 P.M.

MOSQUE NO. 28

MESSENGER O F ALLAH

11529 LIN WOOD AVE. DETROIT 6, MICH. ' WED. 0. FRI 8 P.M. SUN. 2 P.M

12416

of race behavior is not going to h e l p matters. Only the Negro newspaper can reach the lowliest Negroes with words of life! The cause is crying for a "Read Negro Newspapers" movement.

VISIT MUHAMMAD'SMOSQUES OF ISLAM Hear the Life Giving Teachings of MOSQUE NO. 22 MOSQUE NO. 20 The Honorable Elijah Muhammad, — MOSQUE NO. 1

3.

gro leadership. The leaderlessness of Negroes in this crisis becomes a real danger. It could be a tragedy! In a t i m e like this, the hope lies in the Negro newspaper. The teacher, the minister, the business and professional people are strictly limited when it comes to reaching the unreached Negroes of the ghetto. Only the N e g r o newspaper reaches the ghetto. And while these carry a heavy load of crime and criminality, they need to get over to the impoverished masses the lessons of law and order, decency and faith, hope and brotherhood . . . the essentials of full citizenship. The horrors and dangers of hate and bitterness must be stressed. The Negroes are the greatest sufferers from these. Negroes need not only to clean up t h e i r premises but their persons as well. Nobody wants to integrate an uncouth and unkempt and poorly mannered person. Some things among Negroes should also be condemned.

WILSON ST. WED a. FRI. 8 P.M.

BALTIMORE, MD. SUN 2 P M.

89 KEARNEY AVE. JERSEY CITY, N.J. 435-6845 WED. & PR'. 8 P M. SUN. 7 P.M 192

MOSQUE NO. 23

BROADWAY WED. & FRI 8 P.M.

BUFFALO 8, N.Y. SUN. 2 P.M

MOSQUE NO. 14

40 ALBANY AVE. HARTFORD, CONN. WED. &-FRi. 8 P.M SUN. 2 P.M. 359

MOSQUE NO. 37

W. BARTGES ST. AKRON, OHIO BL 3-4711 THURS. & SUN. 8 P.M.

OTHER

MOSOUES

iN

W. 1 16th ST. Rl 9-7569 WED a FRI. 8 P.M. SUN 2 P.M.

FOURTH ST., N. W. WASHINGTON 1, D.C. WED & FRi. .8 P.M SUN. 2 P.M.

257

S. ORANGE ST. NEWARK, N.J. 622-9021 WED. 8. FRI. 8 P M SUN. 2 P.M.

MOSQUE NO. 25

MOSQUE NO. 7-B (LONG ISLAND)

105-03 NORTHERN BLVD. HA 9-8915 CORONA, LONG ISLAND, N.Y. SUN.. 2 F.M. —WED & FR'. 8 P.M

MOSQUE NO. 7-C (Brooklyn) N.Y.

120 Madison St. (Cor. Bedford Ave.) ST 3-8635 SUN., 2 P M .-WED. & FRI., 8 P.M

MOSQUE NO. 7-D (BRONX) N.Y. 878

YOUR

PROSPECT AVE. (NEAR 161st ST.) PHONE 323-9490 WED. & FRI. 8 P.M. — SUN. 2 P.M.

AREA,

SEE

MOSQUE NO. 4

1519

MOSQUE N C . 7 (HARLEM) N.Y.

102

MOSQUE NO. 21

MILWAUKEE, WIS. FR 2-5733 & FRi. II P M SUN. 2 P.M.

MOSQUE NO. 27

5606 S. Broadway St., Los Angeles 37, Cal. WED & FRI. 8 P.M. SUN'2 P.M. 236

1872

YOUR'TELEPHONE

MOSQUE NO. 35

N. MONROE ST. WILMINGTON. DEL. WED II P.M SUN. 2. P.M.

MOSQUE NO. 26

POST ST. WED

SAN FRANCISCO Fl 6-9966 & FRI. 8 P.M. — SUN. 2 P.M.

DIRECTORY

V


M U H A M M A D SPEAKS

28

The Messenger

N O V E M B E R 5, 1965

of Allah Presents

The Muslim Program I

What the Muslims Want

|

This is t h e question asked most frequently b y both t h ewhit / \ n d t h eblacks. T h e a n s w e r s t o t h i s quest:/ I shall state as s i m p l y as possible. ,1. W e w a n t f r e e d o m . W e w a n t a f u l l a n d complete freedom. 2. W e w a n t j u s t i c e E q u a l j u s t i c e u n d e r the l a w . W e w a n t j u s ' e applied equally t o all, regardless of creed o r class o r color. 3. W e w a n t e q u a l i t y o f o p p o r t u n i t y . W e w a n t equal membership i n society with t h e best i n civilized society. 4. W e w a n t o u r p e o p l e i n A m e r i c a w h o s e parents o r grandparents were descendants f r o m slaves, t o b e a l l o w e d t o establish a separate state o r t e r r i t o r y o f their o w n — e i t h e r o n this continent o r elsewhere. W e believe that our f o r m e r slave masters a r e obligated t o provide such land a n d that the area m u s t be fertile a n d m i n e r a l l y rich. W e believe that o u r former slave masters a r e obligated t o m a i n tain and supply our needs i n this separate terr i t o r y f o r t h e n e x t 20 t o 25 y e a r s — u n t i l w e a r e able to produce a n d supply o u r o w n needs. Since w e cannot get along with t h e m i n peace a n d equality, after giving t h e m 400 years of o u r sweat and blood and receiving i n return some of the worst treatment h u m a n beings have ever experienced, w e believe o u r contributions to this land a n d the suffering forced upon us b y white A m e r i c a , justifies o u r demand for complete separation i n a state o r territory of our own. 5. W e w a n t f r e e d o m f o r a l l B e l i e v e r s o f I s l a m n o w held i n federal prisons. W e w a n t freedom for a l lblack m e n and w o m e n n o w under death sentence i n innumerable prisons i n the N o r t h as well as the South. We want every black m a n a n dw o m a n to have t h e freedom t o accept o r reject being separated f r o m the slave master's children and establish a land of their o w n . We k n o w that the above plan for the solution o f the black a n d w h i t e conflict i s the best and only answer to the problem between t w o people. 6. W e w a n t a n i m m e d i a t e e n d t o t h e p o lice b r u t a l i t y a n dm o b attacks against the socalled N e g r o throughout the U n i t e d States. We believe that t h e Federal government should intercede to see that black m e n a n d w o m e n tried i n white courts receive justice i n accordance with the laws of the land—or allow us t o build a n e w nation f o rourselves, dedicated to justice, freedom a n d liberty. 7. A s l o n g a s w e a r e n o t a l l o w e d t o e s tablish a state o r t e r r i t o r y o f o u r o w n , w e dem a n d not only equal justice under the laws of the U n i t e d States, b u t equal e m p l o y m e n t opportunities—NOW! W e d o n o t b e l i e v e t h a t a f t e r 400 y e a r s o f free o r nearly free labor, sweat a n d blood, which h a s helped A m e r i c a become rich a n d powerful, that so m a n y thousands o f black people should h a v e t o subsist o n relief, c h a r i t y or l i v e i n poor houses. 8. W e w a n t t h e g o v e r n m e n t o f t h e U n i t e d States t o e x e m p t o u r people f r o m A L L taxation as long as w e a r e deprived o f equal justice under the l a w s of the land. 9. W e w a n t e q u a l e d u c a t i o n — b u t s e p a r a t e s c h o o l s u p t o 16 f o r b o y s a n d 18 f o r g i r l s o n "the c o n d i t i o n t h a t t h e g i r l s b e s e n t t o w o m e n ' s colleges a n d universities. W e w a n t a l l black children educated, taught and trained b y their own teachers. Under such schooling system w e believe we w i l l m a k e a better n a t i o n o f people. T h e U n i t e d States government should provide,

free, a l l necessary text books a n d equipment, schools a n d college buildings. T h e M u s l i m teachers shall be left free t o teach a n d train their people i n t h e w a y o f righteousness, decency a n d self respect. 10. W e b e l i e v e t h a t i n t e r m a r r i a g e o r r a c e m i x i n g should be prohibited. W e w a n t t h e r e ligion o f I s l a m taught without hinderance o r suppression. These a r esome o fthe things that we, the M u s l i m s , w a n t f o r o u r people i n N o r t h A m e r i ca.

What the Muslims Believe 1. W E B E L I E V E i n t h e O n e G o d W h o s e proper N a m e is Allah. 2. W E B E L I E V E i n t h e H o l y Q u r a n a n d in theScriptures o fa l l theProphets o f G o d . 3. W E B E L I E V E i n t h e t r u t h o f t h e B i b l e , but w e believe that i t h a s been t a m p e r e d w i t h and must be reinterpreted so that m a n k i n d will not be snared b y the falsehoods that have been added to i t . 4. W E B E L I E V E i n A l l a h ' s P r o p h e t s a n d the Scriptures they brought t othe people. 5. W E B E L I E V E i n t h e r e s u r r e c t i o n o f the dead—not i n physical resurrection—but i n m e n t a l resurrection. W e believe that t h e socalled Negroes a r e m o s t i n need o f m e n t a l resurrection; therefore, they will be resurrected first. F u r t h e r m o r e , w e believe w e a r e t h e people o f God's choice, as i t h a s been w r i t t e n , that G o d w o u l d choose t h e rejected a n d t h e despised. W e c a n find n o other persons fitting this description i n these last days m o r e than t h e so-called Negroes i n A m e r i c a . W e believe i n the resurrection of the righteous. 6. W E B E L I E V E i n t h e j u d g e m e n t ; w e believe this first j u d g e m e n t will take place as God revealed, i n A m e r i c a . . . 7. W E B E L I E V E t h i s i s t h e t i m e i n h i s tory f o r t h e separation o f t h e so-called N e groes a n d t h e so-called w h i t e A m e r i c a n s . W e believe the black m a n should be freed i n n a m e as w e l l as i n fact. B y this w e m e a n that h e should be freed f r o m the names imposed upon him b y his former slave masters. Names which identified h i m as being t h e slave master's slave. W e believe that i fw e a r e free i n deed, w e should go i no u r o w n people's n a m e s —the black peoples o f the earth. 8. W E B E L I E V E i n j u s t i c e f o r a l l , w h e t h er i n G o d o r n o t ; w e believe as others, that we a r e due equal justice as h u m a n beings. W e believe i n equality—as a nation—of equals. We do not believe that w e a r e equal with o u r slave masters i n t h estatus o f "freed slaves." We recognize a n d respect A m e r i c a n citizens as independent peoples a n d w e respect their laws which govern this nation. 9. W E B E L I E V E t h a t t h e o f f e r o f i n t e g r a tion is hypocritical a n d is m a d e b y those w h o are t r y i n g t o deceive the black peoples into believing that their 400-year-old open enemies of f r e e d o m , j u s t i c e a n d e q u a l i t y a r e , a l l o f a sudden, their " f r i e n d s . " F u r t h e r m o r e , w e believe that such deception is intended t o prevent black people f r o m realizing that the t i m e in history h a s a r r i v e d f o r the separation f r o m the whites of this nation. If the w h i t e people a r e truthful about their professed friendship t o w a r d t h e so-called N e -

Honorable Elijah Muhammad

gro, t h e y c a n p r o v e i t b y d i v i d i n g u p A m e r i c a w i t h their slaves. We do not believe that A m e r i c a will ever be a b l e t o f u r n i s h e n o u g h j o b s f o r h e r o w n millions o funemployed, i n addition t o jobs for t h e 20,000,000 b l a c k p e o p l e a s w e l l . 10. WE B E L I E V E t h a t w e w h o d e c l a r e d ourselves t o be righteous M u s l i m s , should not participate i n wars which take the lives of h u mans. W e do n o t believe this nation should force us t o take part i n such wars, f o r w e have nothing t o gain f r o m i t unless A m e r i c a agrees t o give us t h e necessary territory wherein w e m a y have something to fight for. 11. W E B E L I E V E o u r w o m e n s h o u l d b e respected and protected as the w o m e n o f other nationalities are respected a n d protected. 12. WE B E L I E V E that Allah (God) appeared in the Person of Master W. Fard Muhammad, July, 1930; the long-awaited "Messiah" of the Christians and the "Mahdi" of the Muslims. We believe further and lastly that Allah is God and besides HIM there is no God and He will bring about a universal government of peace wherein we all can live in peace together.


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