ajnapoleon
Veteran
Interesting
I knew but I didn’t know that other part was real


It’s tough because they hide a lot of important facts over timeIf you only know of historical (black) figures through quotes of course you’re gonna miss the whole story
It’s tough because they hide a lot of important facts over time
Malcolm X was always into Pan-Africanism. His parents were Garveyits with his father leading the Garvey chapter in Nebraska. Yes Dikk Gregory is correct about Malcolm X leading meeting with Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana, Julius Nyerere of Tanzania, and Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt but that trip didn’t make him a Pan-Africanist his upbringing did.
When he went international and founded OAAU in Harlem that was just more about business ties.
Pan-Africanism was the move back then (and earlier) up until the 80's/90's.
No surprise.
Same with Ali and a lot of the others that people hail as icons of (insert acronym) -- only to turnaround and talk about how horrible Pan Africanism is. | Malcolm X And His Visit To Nigeria In The 1960s With Pic by keentola(m): 12:35pm On Oct 08, 2019 |
| Malcolm X , originally born Malcolm Little, was a notorious African-American hooligan who later became a world known human right activist and Islamic leader. Malcolm X visited Nigeria on two occasions, one in 1959 and the other in 1964. His first visit to Nigeria in 1959 was to arrange a tour for Elijah Muhammad, the leader of ‘ Nation of Islam‘, a black Muslim organization in America. Malcolm X’s second visit to Nigeria was in 1964. During this visit, he rendered a beautiful and brilliant speech at the Trenchard Hall in University of Ibadan . Also, at a reception held at the Students’ Union hall for Malcolm X by the Muslim Students’ Society, the Yoruba name ‘ Omowale‘ which literally means ‘the child has come home’ was bestowed upon him. At a press conference Malcolm addressed when he arrived in New York, he said the reception given to him by students in Nigeria was one of the highest honours he had ever received in his life. |
Malcolm X, like other long-gone leaders, has become a symbol. Nobody, at least here, really cares or pays attention to what he was standing for and believed in.
https://www.thecoli.com/threads/african-nations-lobbying-u-n-for-inquiry-into-american-police-brutality-and-systematic-racism.786985/#post-38075434
This hit me when I seen this years agoMalcolm X said this:
“In fact, you'd get farther calling yourself African instead of Negro. Africans don't catch hell. You're the only one catching hell. They don't have to pass civil-rights bills for Africans. An African can go anywhere he wants right now. All you've got to do is tie your head up. That's right, go anywhere you want.” (Ballot or the Bullet, 1964)
But if I said it, Coli moderators would ban me and call it “race baiting”.
Funny how we were aware of this back in 1964.
They hiding him and what he did and stood for by designMalcolm X, like other long-gone leaders, has become a symbol. Nobody, at least here, really cares or pays attention to what he was standing for and believed in.
https://www.thecoli.com/threads/african-nations-lobbying-u-n-for-inquiry-into-american-police-brutality-and-systematic-racism.786985/#post-38075434