during his speech at the Audubon Ballroom in Manhattan, Malcolm X was
interrupted by a scuffle in the audience of more than 400.
He and his bodyguards hurried to calm the crowd, but Malcolm suddenly
tripped. Gunshots broke out, but in his prone position Malcolm was only
wounded along his side. After receiving several stitches, he was deemed
fit and returned to his work campaigning for African American rights.
Born Malcolm Little in Omaha, Nebraska, in 1925, X would have a rough
life. His father was born in Reynolds, GA, and Malcolm spoke of three of
his uncles dying at the hands of white men, one being lynched. KKK threats
prompted Malcolm's family, which became active in the Universal Negro
Improvement Association, to move to Milwaukee. Following the death of his
father and his mother becoming committed, Malcolm would drop out of school
and go through a series of foster homes before moving to Boston and
settling in New York. He turned to a life of crime upon determining there
was not a place in society as a career-minded black man. After several
years of robbery, pimping, and drug-dealing, Malcolm was arrested for
larceny and sentenced to eight to ten years in Charlestown State Prison.
In prison, Malcolm would become affiliated with the Nation of Islam and
began a written correspondence with leader Elijah Muhammad. After
converting to Islam, he served his term and was paroled in 1952. Upon his
release, Malcolm changed his surname to "X" to shed "the white slavemaster
name of 'Little' which some blue-eyed devil named Little had imposed upon
my paternal forebears," he wrote. X became a leader among the Nation of
Islam, a powerful speaker at 6'3", and promoted separatism from the white
race. He dismissed the nonviolence of the civil rights movement and
referred to its pacifist leaders as "stooges" and "chumps".
After a misguided comment about the assassination of JFK, Malcolm left the
country and toured the world. He made a pilgrimage to Mecca (turning to
Sunni Islam after his Hajj), toured Africa, and visited France and
England. During this time, Malcolm began to change his philosophy. He
continued to support black nationalism, though his definitions of "black"
began to expand, including northern Africans and even approving of "white
students helping black people". In a controversial move, he broke with the
Nation of Islam and began his own organizations, the religious Muslim
Mosque, Inc., and the secular Pan-Africanist Organization of Afro-American
Unity.
It was at this time that the attempted assassination took place. After his
recovery, Malcolm spoke out against the attack as the work of misguided
hatred, outlined in his autobiography published soon afterward. He
released documents of stolen funds and improper conduct that brought the
Nation of Islam under legal proceedings. Meanwhile, Malcolm's influence
increased, and he took a place beside Martin Luther King, Jr., calling for
African American rights. Upon the assassination of MLK three years later,
Malcolm X led the accusations of conspiracy by the FBI. Rev. Jesse Jackson
separated from X, who became increasingly anti-capitalist. The division of
the leadership would signal a faltering in the latter days of the civil
rights movement.
Although he had given up his belief in violence, Malcolm renewed his
ideals in separatism. He saw the United States government as irrevocably
corrupt and the only solution to be leaving. Using his organizations,
Malcolm led a call to move to Canada. Canadian officials disagreed on how
to handle the unwanted situation, and immigration bureaucracy tied up the
movement until it began to die. Frustrated, Malcolm and a handful of
followers would move to Cuba, where he would be welcomed by old friend
Fidel Castro. He would continue to preach, but his persuasive voice would
not survive the international transition. X's later days would be spent
largely working on his body of writings, which would be recognized but
rarely considered influential.