Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Contents: The Black Chauncey Bailey Project's Book

Bay Area Writers, Artists, Activists: The Black Chauncey Bailey Project












WHO KILLED CHAUNCEY BAILEY?

BY

El Muhajir (Marvin X, MA)
Black Bird Press
Release date: Summer 2012

Contents


Introduction

Preface

1. Who Killed Chauncey Bailey, Part I and II

2. Exchange between Oakland Tribune Editor Martin Reynolds and Marvin X

3. Initial Reaction: The Devil and the Deep Blue Sea

4. The Cross and the Lynching Tree

5. Chauncey and Malcolm X
6. OPD Gang
7. Chauncey, A Shakespearean Tragedy
8. Thomas Steele's Book: Killing the Messenger
9. Why the White Chauncey Bailey Project and the Black Chauncey Bailey Project
10. No Crocodile Tears for Longmire
11. Trial Begins
12. A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Chauncey Bailey Trial
13. Trial Is a Sham
14. Trial Ends, OPD Drama Begins
15. Chauncey Bailey, Rupert Murdoch, Media, Police and Politicians
16. The Monkey Mind Media and the World of Make Believe
17. Chairman Fred Hampton, Jr. and JR, Minister of Mis-information
18. Summary and Conclusion
19. Notes
20. Bibliography

Monday, March 19, 2012

French President Sarkozy on Africa

Pres. Sarkozy on Africa // "..it lives...in nostalgia for a lost childhood paradise"
Address by Mr. Nicolas Sarkozy, President of the French Republic, at the University of Dakar, Senegal, on July 26, 2007.
Source: http://www.africaresource.com/index.php?...Itemid=346

My dear friends, the black child of Camara Laye on his knees in the silence of the African night will know and understand that he can raise his head and look with confidence to the future. And this black child of Camara Laye will feel in himself the two parts of himself reconciled. And he will at last feel himself to be a human being like all members of humanity.

Ladies and gentlemen

Allow me first of all, to thank the Senegalese Government and people for their warm welcome. Allow me to thank the University of Dakar that allows me for the first time to address myself to the elite of the youth of Africa in the capacity of President of the French Republic.

I have come to talk to you with the frankness and sincerity that one owes to friends that one appreciates and respects. I appreciate and respect Africa and the Africans.

Between Senegal and France history has woven ties of a friendship that no one can undo. This friendship is strong and sincere. It is for this reason that I wanted to address, from Dakar, the fraternal greeting of France to all of Africa.

This evening I want to address myself to all the Africans who are so different the one from the other, who don’t have the same language, who don’t have the same religion, who don’t have the same customs, who don’t have the same culture, who don’t have the same history and yet recognize the other as being African. Here one finds the first mystery of Africa.

Yes, I want to address myself to all the people of this wounded continent and in particular to the youth, to you who have fought each other so much and often hated much, who at times still fight and hate each other but still recognize each other as brothers, in suffering, in humiliation, in revolt, in hope, in the sentiment that you are living a common destiny, brother through this mysterious faith that binds you to the African soil, a faith that transmits itself from generation to generation and which even exile cannot erase.

I have not come, youth of Africa, to lament with you the misfortunes of Africa. Because, Africa has no need of my laments. I have not come, youth of Africa, to take pity on your fate, because your fate is first of all in your hands. What would you do, proud youth of Africa, with my pity?

I have not come to erase the past because the past cannot be erased.

I have not come to deny mistakes or crimes – mistakes were made and crimes committed.

There was the black slave trade, there was slavery, men, women and children bought and sold as so much merchandise. And this crime was not only a crime against the Africans, it was a crime against man, it was a crime against all of humanity. And the black man that eternally “hears rising from the ship’s hold the chained curses, the sobs of the dying, the noise of one of them thrown into the sea”. This black man that can’t help repeating endlessly “and this country cried that we are brutal creatures”. This black man, I want to say here in Dakar, has the face of all humanity.

This suffering of the black man, and I don’t speak here in the sense of gender, I speak of man in the sense of a human being and off course of women and of man in its general use. This suffering of the black man is the suffering of all men. This open wound in the soul of the black man is an open wound in the soul of all men.

But no one can ask of the generations of today to expiate this crime perpetrated by past generations. No one can ask of the sons to repent for the mistakes of their fathers.

Youth of Africa, I have not come to talk to you about repentance. I have come to tell you that I consider the slave trade and slavery as crimes against humanity. I have come to tell you that your pain and your suffering are ours and therefore are mine.

I have come to propose to you to look together, as Africans and as French, beyond this pain and this suffering.

I have come to propose to you, youth of Africa not to forget this pain and this suffering that cannot be forgotten, but to move beyond it.

I have come to propose to you, youth of Africa, not to dwell on the past, but for us to draw together lessons from it in order to face the future together.

I have come, youth of Africa, to face with you our common history.

Africa is partly responsible for its own misfortune. People have killed each other in Africa at least as much in Europe. But it is true that a long time ago the Europeans came to Africa as conquerors. They took the land of your ancestors. They banished their gods, their languages, their beliefs, the customs of your forefathers. They told your forefathers what they had to think, what they had to believe, what they had to do. They have cut your forefathers from their past, they have torn their souls from their roots. They stole Africa’s spell. (Could also be translated as They killed Africa’s enthusiasm).

They were wrong.

They did not see the depth and the wealth of the African soul. They believed that they were superior, that they were more advanced, that they were progress, that they were civilisation.
They were wrong.

They wanted to convert the African, they wanted to make them in their image. They believed that they had all the rights and that they were all powerful, more powerful than the gods of Africa, more powerful than the African soul, more powerful than the sacred ties that men have woven patiently during thousands of years with the sky and earth of Africa, more powerful than the mysteries that came from the depths of time.

They were wrong.

They ruined a way of life. They ruined a marvellous imaginary world, they ruined an ancestral wisdom.

They were wrong.

They created anguish and misery. They fed hatred. They made it more difficult to open up to others, to exchange and to share because in order to open up oneself, to exchange and to share one must be sure of ones own identity, values and convictions. Before the coloniser, the colonised lost all confidence in himself, did not know who he was anymore, let himself be overwhelmed by fear of the other, by fear of the future.

The coloniser came, he took, he helped himself, he exploited. He pillaged resources and wealth that did not belong to him. He stripped the colonised of his personality, of his liberty, of his land, of the fruit of his labour.

The coloniser took, but I want to say with respect, that he also gave. He built bridges, roads, hospitals, dispensaries and schools. He turned virgin soil fertile. He gave of his effort, his work, his know-how. I want to say it here, not all the colonialists were thieves or exploiters.

There were among them evil men but there were also men of goodwill. People who believed they were fulfilling a civilising mission, people who believed they were doing good. They were wrong, but some were sincere. They believed to be giving freedom, but they were creating alienation. They believed they were breaking the chains of obscurantism, of superstition and of servitude. They were actually forging much heavier chains, they imposed a heavier servitude because it was the spirit, the soul that was enslaved. They believed they were giving love without seeing that they were sowing revolt and hatred.

Colonisation is not responsible for all the current difficulties of Africa. It is not responsible for the bloody wars between Africans, for the genocides, for the dictators, the fanaticism, the corruption, the prevarication, the waste and the pollution.

But, colonisation was a huge mistake that was paid for by the bitterness and the suffering of those who believed they had given all and did not understand why they were so hated.

Colonisation was a huge mistake that destroyed the colonised’s self-esteem and in his heart gave birth to this self-hatred that always results in hatred of others.

Colonisation was a huge mistake, but from it was born the embryo of a common destiny. And this idea is of particular importance to me.

Colonisation was a mistake that changed and intertwined the destinies of both Europe and Africa. And this common destiny was sealed by the blood of Africans that came to die in European wars.

And France does not forget this African blood spilled for its liberty.

No one can pretend that nothing happened.

No one can pretend that this mistake was not committed.

No one can pretend that this history did not transpire.

For better or for worse colonisation has transformed African and European.

Youth of Africa, you are heir to the most ancient African traditions and you are heir to all that the West has placed in the heart and soul of Africa.

Youth of Africa, European civilisation was wrong to believe itself to be superior to that of your ancestors, but now, the European civilisation belongs to you too.

Youth of Africa, do not yield to the temptation of purity (exclusivity) because it is a disease, it is a disease of the intellect that is the most dangerous in the world.

Youth of Africa, do not cut yourself off from that which enriches you, do not amputate a part of yourself. Purity (in the sense of exclusivity) is confinement, it is intolerance, it is a fantasy that leads to fanaticism.

I want to say to you, youth of Africa that the tragedy of Africa is not in the so-called inferiority of its art, its thought, its culture. Because, in what concerns art, thought and culture it is the West that learnt from Africa.

Modern art owes almost all to Africa. The influence of Africa contributed to changing not only the idea of beauty itself, not only the sense of rhythm, of music, of dance, but as Senghor said even the way of walking or laughing of the world in the 20th Century.

I therefore want to say, to the youth of Africa, that the tragedy of Africa does not come from the idea that the African soul would be impervious to logic and to reason. Because, the African is as logic and as reasonable as the European.

It is by drawing from the African imaginary world that your ancestors have left you, it is by drawing from their stories, their proverbs, their mythologies, their rites, by drawing from all these forms that, since the dawn of time were transmitted to and enriched generation after generation, that you will find the imagination and the power to invent a future for you. A unique future that does not resemble any other, where you will at last feel free, free youth of Africa to be yourselves, free to decide for yourselves.

I have come to tell you that you don’t have to be ashamed of the values of African civilisation, that they do not drag you down but elevate you, that they are an antidote to the materialism and the individualism that enslave modern man, that they are the most precious of legacies against the dehumanisation and the “uniformisation” of the world of today.

I have come to tell you that modern man, who experiences the need to reconcile himself with nature, has much to learn from the African that has lived in a symbiotic relationship with nature for thousands of years.

I came to tell you that this divide between two parts of yourselves is your greatest force, or your greatest weakness, according to the extent to which you bring yourself to unite them in a synthesis, or not.

But I also came to tell you that there are in you, youth of Africa, two legacies, two wisdoms, two traditions that have struggled with each other for a long time: that of Africa and that of Europe.

I came to tell you that this African part and European part of yourselves form your torn identity.

I did not come, youth of Africa, to lecture you.

I did not come to preach, but I came to tell you that the part of Europe that is in you is the fruit of a great sin of pride of the West, but that this part of Europe in you is not unworthy.

Because it is the call of freedom, of emancipation and of justice and of equality between women and men.

Because it is the call to reason and to the universal conscience.

The tragedy of Africa is that the African has not fully entered into history. The African peasant, who for thousands of years have lived according to the seasons, whose life ideal was to be in harmony with nature, only knew the eternal renewal of time, rhythmed by the endless repetition of the same gestures and the same words.

In this imaginary world where everything starts over and over again there is no place for human adventure or for the idea of progress.

In this universe where nature commands all, man escapes from the anguish of history that torments modern man, but he rests immobile in the centre of a static order where everything seems to have been written beforehand.

This man (the traditional African) never launched himself towards the future. The idea never came to him to get out of this repetition and to invent his own destiny.

The problem of Africa, and allow a friend of Africa to say it, is to be found here. Africa’s challenge is to enter to a greater extent into history. To take from it the energy, the force, the desire, the willingness to listen and to espouse its own history.

Africa’s problem is to stop always repeating, always mulling over, to liberate itself from the myth of the eternal return. It is to realise that the golden age that Africa is forever recalling will not return because it has never existed.

Africa’s problem is that it lives the present too much in nostalgia for a lost childhood paradise.

Africa’s problem is that too often it judges the present in terms of a purity of origin that is totally imaginary and that no one can hope to achieve.

Africa’s problem is not to invent for itself a more or less mythical past to help it to support the present, but to invent the future with suitable means.

Africa’s problem is not to prepare itself for the return of misfortune, as if that is supposed to repeat itself indefinitely, but to want to give itself the means to combat misfortune, because Africa has the right to happiness like all the other continents of the world.

Africa’s problem is to remain true to itself without remaining immobile.

Africa’s challenge is to learn to view its accession to the universal not as a denial of what it is but as an accomplishment.

Africa’s challenge is to learn to feel itself to be heir to all that which is universal in all human civilisations.

It is to appropriate for itself human rights, democracy, liberty, equality and justice as the common legacy of all civilisations and of all people.

It is to appropriate for itself modern science and technology as the product of all human intelligence.

Africa’s challenge is that of all civilisations, of all cultures, of all peoples that want to protect their identity without isolating themselves because they know that isolation is deadly.

Civilizations are great to the extent that they participate in the great mix of the human spirit.

The weakness of Africa, which has known so many brilliant civilizations on its soil, was for a long time not being able to participate fully in this great engagement. Africa has paid dearly for its disengagement from the world and that has rendered it so vulnerable. But from its misfortunes Africa has drawn new strength by re-engaging with itself. This re-engagement, regardless of the painful conditions of its origin, is the real force and the real chance for Africa at the moment when the first global civilisation is emerging.

The Muslim civilisation, Christianity and colonisation, beyond the crimes and mistakes that were committed in their name and that are not excusable, have opened the African heart and mentality to the universal and to history.

Youth of Africa, don’t let your future be stolen by those who only know how to combat intolerance with intolerance and racism with racism.

Youth of Africa, don’t let your future be stolen by those who want to deprive you of a history that also belong to you because it was the painful history of your parents, of your grandparents and those who went before.

Youth of Africa, don’t listen to those who want to remove Africa from its history in the name of tradition because an Africa where nothing changes anymore will again be condemned to servitude.

Youth of Africa, don’t listen to those who want to prevent you from taking your part in the human adventure, because without you, youth of Africa, who are the youth of the world, the human adventure will not be as wonderful.

Youth of Africa, don’t listen to those who want to deprive you of your roots and of your identity, want to erase all that is African, all the mystique, the religiousness, the sensitivity, the African mentality. Because in order to exchange it is necessary to have something to give, to talk to others, it is necessary to have something to say to them.

Youth of Africa, rather listen to the great voice of President Senghor who tried his whole life to reconcile the legacies and cultures at the cross-roads of which chance and the tragedies of history had placed Africa.

He, the child of Joal, who had been cradled by the rhapsodies of Griots said: “We are cultural half-breeds, and if we feel “in Black”, we express ourselves in French, because French is a language of universal vocation that addresses our message as much too the French as to others”.

He also said: “The French has given us the gift of their abstract words - so scarce in our maternal languages. Our words are naturally haloed with vigour and blood; French words radiate with a thousand fires, like diamonds, rockets that light up our nights”.

Thus spoke Leopold Senghor, who honoured all that which humanity understands of intelligence. This great poet and African wanted that Africa should start talking to all of humanity and wrote on its behalf poems in French for all people.

These poems were songs that spoke to all men of fabulous beings that guard fountains, sing in the rivers and hide in the trees.

Poems that made them hear the voices of the dead of the village and their ancestors.

Poems that lead through forests of symbols to return to the sources of the ancestral memory that every people hold at the core of its conscience like an adult holds at the core of his conscience the memory of childhood happiness.

Because every people have known this time of the eternal present, where they search not to dominate the universe but to live in harmony with it. The time of feeling, of instinct, of intuition. The time of mystery and initiation. Mystical times were the sacred and signs where everywhere. The time of magicians, sorcerers and shamans. The time when the spoken word was important because it was revered and repeated from generation to generation, and transmitted, from century to century, legends as ancient as the gods.

Africa has reminded all the peoples of the earth that they shared the same infancy. Africa has reawakened the simple joys thereof, the ephemeral happiness and this need, in which I believe so much, to believe rather than to understand, to feel rather than to reason, this need to be in harmony rather than to conquer.

Those who consider African culture to be backward, those who consider Africans to be big children, all those have forgotten that ancient Greece, which has taught us so much about the use of reason, also had its sorcerers, its diviners, its mysterious cults and secret societies, its mythology that came from the depths of time and from which we still draw today an inestimable treasure of human wisdom.

Africa, which also has its great dramatic poems and tragic legends, when listening to Sophocles, has heard a more familiar voice than it would have thought possible, and the West has recognized in African art forms of beauty that had been its a long time ago and that it felt the need to resuscitate.

Listen then, youth of Africa, how much Rimbaud is African when he places the colours on the vowels as your ancestors put colours on their masks. “Black mask, red mask, black and white masks”.

Open your eyes, youth of Africa, and don’t look anymore, as your elders do too often, at global civilisation as a threat to your identity but as something that belongs also to you.

When you would recognise within the universal wisdom also part of the wisdom that you received from your forefathers, and when you would have the will to make it grow, then will start what I wish to call the African Renaissance.

When you would proclaim that the African is not doomed to a tragic destiny and that everywhere in Africa there would be no other goal but happiness, then the African Renaissance will start.

When you, youth of Africa, would declare that there will be no other objective for an African policy but African unity, and the unity of the human species, then the African Renaissance will start.

When you would fully face the reality of Africa and come to grips with it, then the African Renaissance will start. Because the problem of Africa is that it has become a myth that everyone reconstructs for the requirements of their cause.

And this myth prevents one from facing the reality of Africa.

Africa’s reality is demographic growth that is too high for an economic growth that is too low.

Africa’s reality is that there is still too much famine, too much misery.

Africa’s reality is scarcity that provokes violence.

Africa’s reality is that development is too slow, agriculture produces too little, the shortage of roads, schools and hospitals.

Africa’s reality is a great waste of energy, of courage, of talent and of intelligence.

Africa’s reality is that of a great continent that has everything to succeed, but that does not succeed because it cannot free itself from its myths.

You and you only, youth of Africa, can achieve the Renaissance that Africa needs because only you have the force to do so.

I came to propose this Renaissance to you. I came to propose it to you so that we can achieve it together, because the African Renaissance depends to a large extent on the Renaissance of Europe and the Renaissance of the world.

I know the desire to leave that so many amongst you experience, confronted with the difficulties of Africa.

I know the temptation of exile that pushes so many young Africans to go to look elsewhere for what they don’t find here to maintain their families.

I know that it requires will and courage to attempt this adventure, to leave one’s fatherland, to leave the land where one was born and grew up, to leave behind the familiar places where one was happy, the love of a mother, a father or a brother and this solidarity, this warmth, and this communal spirit that are so strong in Africa.

I know that it requires strength of soul to confront this disorientation, this separation, this solitude.

I know what the majority of them must confront in terms of trials, difficulties and risks.

I know that some times they would go as far as to risk their lives to reach what they believe to be their dream.

I know that nothing would hold them back.

Because nothing would ever hold back the youth when they believe they are carried by their dreams.

I do not believe that the African youth are pushed to leave only by the need to flee misery.

I believe that the African youth leave, because, like all youth, they want to conquer the world.

Like all youth they have a taste for adventure and the open sea.

They want to go and see how the others live, think, work and study elsewhere.

Africa will not achieve its Renaissance by cutting the wings of its youth. But Africa has need of its youth.

The African Renaissance will start by teaching the African youth to live with the world, not to refuse it.

The African youth must feel that the world belongs to them as it does to all the youth of the world.

The African youth must feel that all will be possible, as all seemed possible to the men of the Renaissance.

Now, I know well that the African youth must not be the only youth in the world confined to home. They cannot be the only youth of the world that only have a choice between living clandestinely and withdrawing into themselves.

They must be able to acquire, outside of Africa, the competence and knowledge that they would not find in their country.

But they also owe it to Africa to place at its service the talents that they will have developed. It is necessary to return to build Africa, it is necessary to bring to the continent the knowledge, the competencies and the dynamism of these managers. It is necessary to put an end to the pillaging of the African elite of which Africa has need in order to develop.

The African youth do not want to be at the mercy of unscrupulous human traffickers who play with their lives.

What the youth of Africa want is that their dignity should be preserved. To be able to study, to work, to live decently. In the final analysis it is what all of Africa wants. Africa does not want charity or help or privileges.

What Africa wants and what it should be given are solidarity, understanding and respect.

Africa does not want that one should take charge of its future, think in its place or decide in its place.

What Africa wants is the same as what France wants: cooperation, association, a partnership between nations equal in rights and in duties.

African youth, do you want democracy, freedom, justice, law? It is up to you to decide this. France will not decide in your place. But if you choose democracy, freedom, justice and law, then France will join forces with you to build it.

Youth of Africa, globalisation such as it is, does not please you. Africa has paid too high a price dearly for the mirage of collectivism and “progressisme” to yield to that of laisser-faire.

Youth of Africa, you believe that free-trade is beneficial but that it is not a religion. You believe that competition is a means but not and end in itself. You don’t believe in laisser-faire. You know that if Africa is too naïve it would be condemned to become the prey of predators from all over the world and you don’t want that. You want a different globalisation, with more humanity, more justice and more rules.

I came to tell you that France also wants this. France wants to fight along with Europe, along with Africa and along with all those in the world who want to change globalisation. If Africa, France and Europe together want this, we shall succeed. But we cannot express this will (desire) for you.

African youth, you want development, growth, a higher standard of living?

But, do you really want it? Do you want that injustice, corruption and violence should end, property be respected and money be invested instead of embezzled.

Do you want that the state should again fulfil its responsibilities, that it should be freed from the bureaucracies that smother it, that it should be liberated from parasitism and clientism, that its authority be restored, that it rules the feudal powers and corporate lobbies.

Do you want that the rule of law should govern everywhere? That it allows everyone to know reasonably what to expect from others?

If you want this then France will be at your side to demand it, but no one is going to want it in your place.

Do you want that there should be no more famine in Africa, never again a single child who dies of hunger? Then find a way to be self-sufficient in food production. Develop food. Africa has firstly the need to produce food to feed itself. If that is what you want, youth of Africa, you hold between your hands the future of Africa and France will work with you to build this future.

Do you want to fight against pollution? Do you want that development be sustainable, that the current generations should no longer live to the detriment of future generations, that every country should pay the real cost of what it consumes and that clean technologies are developed? It is for you to decide this. But if you decide, France will be at your side.

Do you want peace on the African continent, collective security, the peaceful settlements of conflicts, an end to the infernal cycle of vengeance and of hate? It is for you, my African friends, to decide this. And if you decide (yes), France will be at your side like an unwavering friend, but France cannot want it in the place of Africa.

Do you want African unity? France also wants it because African unity will return Africa to the Africans.

What France wants with Africa is to confront the realities head-on, to conduct policies of reality and not policies of myths anymore.

What France wants to do with Africa is co-development, that is to say shared development.

France wants to have joint projects with Africa, joint centres of competitivity, joint universities and joint laboratories.

What France wants to do with Africa is to design a joint strategy within the globalisation process.

What France wants to do with Africa is a jointly negotiated policy on immigration, decided together so that African youth can be received in France and in all of Europe with dignity and respect.

What France wants to do with Africa is an alliance between French and African youth so that the world of tomorrow will be a better one.

What France wants to do with Africa is to prepare the advent of Eurafrique, this great common destiny that awaits Europe and Africa.

To those in Africa who regard with suspicion the great project of the Mediterranean Union that France has proposed to all countries bordering the Mediterranean, I want to say that in France’s spirit it is not at all about side-lining Africa, which extends south of the Sahara. On the contrary it is about making this Union the pivotal point of Eurafrique, the first stage of the greatest dream of peace and prosperity that Europeans and Africans are capable of conceiving together.

My dear friends, the black child of Camara Laye on his knees in the silence of the African night will know and understand that he can raise his head and look with confidence to the future. And this black child of Camara Laye will feel in himself the two parts of himself reconciled. And he will at last feel himself to be a human being like all members of humanity.

I thank you.

Sunday, March 18, 2012

How the Infidels Plan to Use Islam Against the People

The Powers of Manipulation: Islam as a Geopolitical Tool to Control the Middle East

5 July 2011 1,524 views No Comment

by Mahdi Darius Nazemroaya.

As Washington and its cohorts march towards the Eurasian Heartland, they have tried to manipulate Islam as a geo-political tool. They have created political and social chaos in the process. Along the way they have tried to redefine Islam and to subordinate it to the interests of global capital by ushering in a new generation of so-called Islamists, chiefly amongst the Arabs.

The Project to Redefine Islam: Turkey as the New Model and “Calvinist Islam”

Turkey in its present form is now being presented as the democratic model for the rebelling Arab masses to follow. It is true that Ankara has progressed since the days it used to ban Kurdish from being spoken in public, but Turkey is not a functional democracy and is very much a kleptocracy with fascist tendencies.

The military still plays a huge role in the affairs of the state and government. The term “deep state,” which denotes a state run secretly from the top-down by unaccountable bodies and individuals, in fact originates from Turkey. Civil rights are still not respected in Turkey and candidates for public office have to be approved by the state apparatus and the groups controlling them, which try to filter out anyone that would go against the status quo in Turkey.

Turkey is not being presented as a model for the Arabs due to its democratic qualifications. It is being presented as the political model for the Arabs, because of a project of political and socio-economic “bida” (innovation) involving the manipulation of Islam.

Although very popular, the Turkish Justice and Development Party or JDP (Adalet ve Kalkinma Partisi or AKP) was allowed to come into power in 2002, without opposition by the Turkish military and the Turkish courts. Before this there was little tolerance for political Islam in Turkey. The JDP/AKP was founded in 2001 and the timing of their founding and their electoral win in 2002 was also tied to the objective of redrawing Southwest Asia and North Africa.

This project to manipulate and redefine Islam seeks to subordinate Islam to dominant World Order capitalist interests through a new wave of “political Islamism”, such as the JDP/AKP. A new strand of Islam is thereby being fashioned through what has come to be called “Calvinist Islam” or a “Muslim version of the Protestant work ethic.” It is this model that is been nurtured in Turkey and now being presented to Egypt and the Arabs by Washington and Brussels.

This “Calvinist Islam” also has no problem with the “reba” or interest system, which is prohibited under Islam. It is this system that is used to enslave individuals and societies with the chains of debt to global capitalism. It is in this context that the European Bank of Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) is calling for so-called “democratic reforms” in the Arab World.

The ruling families of Sauda Arabia and the Arab petro-sheikhdoms are also partners in the enslavement of the Arab world through debt. In this regard Qatar and the Arab sheikhdoms of the Persian Gulf are in the process of creating a Middle East Development Bank that is intended to give loans to Arab countries to support their “transition towards democracy”. The democracy promotion mission of the Middle East Development Bank is ironic because the countries forming it are all staunch dictatorships.

It is also this subordination of Islam to global capitalism that is causing internal friction in Iran.

Opening the Door for a New Generation of Islamists

The hope in Washington is that this “Calvinist Islam” will take root with a new generation of Islamists under the banner of new democratic states. These governments will effectively enslave their countries by placing them further into debt and selling national assets. They will help subvert the region extending from North Africa to Southwest and Central Asia as the area is being balkanized and restructured in the image of Israel under ethnocratic systems.

Tel Aviv will also wield wide influence amongst these new states. Hand-in-hand with this project, different forms of ethno-linguistic nationalism and religious intolerance are also being promoted to divide the region. Turkey also plays an important, because it is one of the cradle for this new generation of Islamists. Saudi Arabia too plays a role in supporting the militant wing of these Islamists.

Washington’s Restructuring of the Geo-Strategic Chessboard

Targeting Iran and Syria is part of the larger strategy of controlling Eurasia. Chinese interests have been attacked everywhere on the global map. Sudan has been balkanized and both North Sudan and South Sudan are headed towards conflict. Libya has been attacked and is in the process of being balkanized. Syria is being pressured to surrender and fall into line. The U.S. and Britain are now integrating their national security councils, which parallels Anglo-American bodies from the Second World War.

Targeting Pakistan is also connected to neutralizing Iran and attacking Chinese interests and any future unity in Eurasia. In this regard, the U.S. and NATO have militarized the waters around Yemen. At the same time in Eastern Europe, the U.S. is building its fortifications in Poland, Bulgaria, and Romania to neutralize Russia and the former Soviet republics. Belarus and Ukraine are being put under increasing pressure too. All these steps are part of a military strategy to encircle Eurasia and to either control its energy supplies or the flow of energy towards China. Even Cuba and Venezuela are under increasing threat. The military noose is globally being tightened by Washington.

It appears that new Islamist parties are being formed and groomed by the Al-Sauds with the help of Turkey to take power in Arab capitals. Such governments will work to subordinate their respective states. The Pentagon, NATO, and Israel may even select some of these new governments to justify new wars.

It has to be mentioned that Norman Podhoretz, a original member of the Project for a New American Century (PNAC), in 2008 suggest an apocalyptic future scenario in which Israel launches a nuclear war against Iran, Syria, and Egypt amongst its other neighbouring countries. This would include Lebanon and Jordan. Podhoretz described an expansionist Israel and even suggested that the Israelis would militarily occupy the oil fields of the Persian Gulf.

What came across as odd in 2008 was the suggestion by Podhoretz, which was influenced by the strategic analysis of the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), that Tel Aviv would launch a nuclear attack on its staunch Egyptian allies ruling Cairo under President Mubarak. Despite the fact that the old regime still remains, Mubarak is no longer in power in Cairo. The Egyptian military still gives orders, but Islamists may come to power. This is occuring despite the fact that Islam continues to be demonized by the U.S. and most of its NATO allies.

Unknown Future: What Next?

The U.S., the E.U., and Israel are trying to use the upheavals in the Turko-Arabo-Iranic World to further their own objectives including the war on Libya and the support of an Islamic insurrection in Syria. Along with the Al-Sauds, they are attempting to spread “fitna” or division amongst the peoples of Southwest Asia and North Africa. The Israeli-Khaliji strategic alliance, formed by Tel Aviv and the ruling Arab families in the Persian Gulf, is crucial in this regard.

In Egypt the social upheaval is far from over and the people are become more radical. This is resulting in concessions by the military junta in Cairo. The protest movement is now starting to address the role of Israel and its relationship to the military junta. In Tunisia too, the popular stream is headed towards radicalization.

Washington and its cohorts are playing with fire. They may think that this period of chaos presents an excellent opportunity for confrontation with Iran and Syria. The upheaval that has taken root in the Turko-Arabo-Iranic World will have unpredictable results. The resilience of the peoples in Bahrain and Yemen under the threats of increased state-sponsored violence indicates the articulation of more cohesive anti-US and Anti-Zionist protest movement.

Madness is not the Reason by Robert Fisk

Madness is Not the Reason for the Afghan Massacre

Monkey Mind Media embedded with Military to perpetuate

world of make believe in Afghanistan

by Robert Fisk


I'm getting a bit tired of the "deranged" soldier story. It was predictable, of course. The 38-year-old staff sergeant who massacred 16 Afghan civilians, including nine children, near Kandahar this week had no sooner returned to base than the defense experts and the think-tank boys and girls announced that he was "deranged". Not an evil, wicked, mindless terrorist – which he would be, of course, if he had been an Afghan, especially a Taliban – but merely a guy who went crazy.

This was the same nonsense used to describe the murderous US soldiers who ran amok in the Iraqi town of Haditha. It was the same word used about Israeli soldier Baruch Goldstein who massacred 25 Palestinians in Hebron – something I pointed out in this paper only hours before the staff sergeant became suddenly "deranged" in Kandahar province.

"Apparently deranged", "probably deranged", journalists announced, a soldier who "might have suffered some kind of breakdown" (The Guardian), a "rogue US soldier" (Financial Times) whose "rampage" (The New York Times) was "doubtless [sic] perpetrated in an act of madness" (Le Figaro). Really? Are we supposed to believe this stuff? Surely, if he was entirely deranged, our staff sergeant would have killed 16 of his fellow Americans. He would have slaughtered his mates and then set fire to their bodies. But, no, he didn't kill Americans. He chose to kill Afghans. There was a choice involved. So why did he kill Afghans? We learned yesterday that the soldier had recently seen one of his mates with his legs blown off. But so what?

The Afghan narrative has been curiously lobotomised – censored, even – by those who have been trying to explain this appalling massacre in Kandahar. They remembered the Koran burnings – when American troops in Bagram chucked Korans on a bonfire – and the deaths of six Nato soldiers, two of them Americans, which followed. But blow me down if they didn't forget – and this applies to every single report on the latest killings – a remarkable and highly significant statement from the US army's top commander in Afghanistan, General John Allen, exactly 22 days ago. Indeed, it was so unusual a statement that I clipped the report of Allen's words from my morning paper and placed it inside my briefcase for future reference.

Allen told his men that "now is not the time for revenge for the deaths of two US soldiers killed in Thursday's riots". They should, he said, "resist whatever urge they might have to strike back" after an Afghan soldier killed the two Americans. "There will be moments like this when you're searching for the meaning of this loss," Allen continued. "There will be moments like this, when your emotions are governed by anger and a desire to strike back. Now is not the time for revenge, now is the time to look deep inside your souls, remember your mission, remember your discipline, remember who you are."

Now this was an extraordinary plea to come from the US commander in Afghanistan. The top general had to tell his supposedly well-disciplined, elite, professional army not to "take vengeance" on the Afghans they are supposed to be helping/protecting/nurturing/training, etc. He had to tell his soldiers not to commit murder. I know that generals would say this kind of thing in Vietnam. But Afghanistan? Has it come to this? I rather fear it has. Because – however much I dislike generals – I've met quite a number of them and, by and large, they have a pretty good idea of what's going on in the ranks. And I suspect that Allen had already been warned by his junior officers that his soldiers had been enraged by the killings that followed the Koran burnings – and might decide to go on a revenge spree. Hence he tried desperately – in a statement that was as shocking as it was revealing – to pre-empt exactly the massacre which took place last Sunday.

Yet it was totally wiped from the memory box by the "experts" when they had to tell us about these killings. No suggestion that General Allen had said these words was allowed into their stories, not a single reference – because, of course, this would have taken our staff sergeant out of the "deranged" bracket and given him a possible motive for his killings. As usual, the journos had got into bed with the military to create a madman rather than a murderous soldier. Poor chap. Off his head. Didn't know what he was doing. No wonder he was whisked out of Afghanistan at such speed.

We've all had our little massacres. There was My Lai, and our very own little My Lai, at a Malayan village called Batang Kali where the Scots Guards – involved in a conflict against ruthless communist insurgents – murdered 24 unarmed rubber workers in 1948. Of course, one can say that the French in Algeria were worse than the Americans in Afghanistan – one French artillery unit is said to have "disappeared" 2,000 Algerians in six months – but that is like saying that we are better than Saddam Hussein. True, but what a baseline for morality. And that's what it's about. Discipline. Morality. Courage. The courage not to kill in revenge. But when you are losing a war that you are pretending to win – I am, of course, talking about Afghanistan – I guess that's too much to hope. General Allen seems to have been wasting his time.

Saudi Wahhabism and Zionism

Have no doubt, Saudi Wahhabism is equally in league with Israel and the USA on keeping the lid on events in the Middle East, including keeping Iraq destabilized and attacking Iran because it may need nuclear weapons to level the playing field with its enemies, Israel, US and Saudi Arabia, et al.

Why is there no Arab Spring in Saudi Arabia? If Saudi Arabia turned off the oil spigot, Palestine would be an independent nation tomorrow morning!

Why was not Saudi Arabia attacked after 9/11 since most of the plane hijackers were from Saudi Arabia?
--Marvin X

Saudi Wahhabism and Conspiracies

Brief History of the Saudi Wahhabism and Conspiracies


Haytham A. K. Radwan for Intifada-Palestine.com

While Islam as a faith is the main religion in 48 countries, and Muslims around the globe are rapidly growing, Saudi Islam is the main sectarian movement in Saudi Arabia, and its influence is also rapidly growing. Acting as the protector of Islam through its own form of Islam, while it remains an American client state through its location, petrodollar’s cheque book, and American diplomatic and military protection, it could be argued that among the major influential players, Saudi Arabia’s policies, its own form of Islam, and its relations with the US, undoubtedly constitute one of the most serious threats to the security of the world today.

Indeed, since the eighteenth century, and in conjunction with the Wahhabi religious establishment, Saudi Arabia became the centre for a new brand of religious imperialism based on sectarian movements. For nearly a century, the kingdom’s religious fervour kept the oil-rich country in the Western political camp. Today, the existence of radical Islamic groups is in part a legacy of the Saudi form of Islam, not Islam itself, and the Saudi-US alliance, and of political decisions made to address a different set of security concerns which helped no one accept the US projects.

While Islam itself as a faith is not a threat to international security, it is Saudi Islam that is a threat. Indeed, it is fair to say that the problems within the Muslim world today rise not from Islam itself, but from the Saudi form of Islam, Muslim religious leaders who are relying on Saudi support, and their own interpretations of the Quran. It is also fair to say that questions pertaining to why Americans see Islam as a threat to world stability is because of the American failures to distinguish between Islam as a faith and Saudi Islam. In the US, Islam has been perceived as a threat to its civilization. However, while Americans knew that Islam itself is not a threat to their civilization, the majority of American politicians, journalists, and ideologists have ignored the truth that the threat is coming from Saudi Islam. This is seen as a tactic to avoid any damage to the relations with the House of Saud in order to keep economic and political interests alive.

As a result, the Saudi-US relationship and the Saudi Wahhabi expansionist policy not only transform Muslim world politics, but also world politics. Saudaisation movements may expand into broader struggle throughout the Arab and Muslim nations and beyond. In some parts of the Muslim world, steps toward Saudaisation have already begun while the US is turning a blind eye to the Saudi rulers. At the same time, the US is also busy trying to convince the world that their policies towards Saudi Arabia is about promoting democracy and protecting human rights.

Apart from the obvious results of such a conflict, such as loss of power in some Muslim countries, it would impact on the behaviour of other Western and non-Western states which could use the conflict for more ideological and tactical reasons. So, because religion has no borders, it could become global religious and sectarian conflicts.

It is possible we are already seeing the war in Afghanistan, in Pakistan, in Iraq, in Lebanon, in Gaza, in Yemen and of course, the non-stoppable Wahhabi-American pressure on Syria.

Why? This is because Wahhabism itself is nothing more than an extension of Western imperialism. This short paper shed light on the roots and origin of the Saudi Wahhabism.

The Roots of Wahhabism:

Although the origin of the Saudis’ current expansionist and extremist policy dates back to the religious and military alliance with the Wahhabi establishment, it was actually the British who initially provided the Saudis with the ideas of Wahhabism and made them its leaders for their own purposes to destroy the Muslim Ottoman Empire.[1] Indeed, the intricate details of this intriguing British conspiracy are to be found in the memoirs of its master spy, titled “Confessions of a British Spy” (For details see Sindi 2004). [2] In his memories, the British spy “Hempher” who was one of many spies sent by London to the Arabian Peninsula in order to destabilize the Ottoman Empire has stated:

“In the Hijri year, the Minister of Colonies sent me to Egypt, Iraq, Hejaz and Istanbul to act as a spy and to obtain information necessary and sufficient for the breaking up of Muslims. The Ministry appointed nine more people, full of agility and courage, for the same mission and at the same time. In addition to the money, information and maps we would need, we were given a list containing names of statesmen, scholars, and chiefs of tribes. I can never forget! When I said farewell to the secretary, he said, the future of our State is dependent on your success. Therefore you should exert your utmost energy”. (Nabhani, see also confession of a British spy). [3]

As a result, a small Bedouin army was established with the help of British undercover spies. In time, this army grew into a major menace that eventually terrorized the entire Arabian Peninsula up to Damascus, and caused one of the worst Fitnah (violent civil strife) in the history of Islam.[4] In the process, this army was able to viciously conquer most of the Arabian Peninsula to create the first Saudi-Wahhabi State.[5]

After the death of Muhammad ibn Saud, his son, Abd al-Aziz, became Ad Diriyah’s new emir who captured Riyadh in 1773. By 1781, the al-Saud family’s territory extended outward from Ad Diriyah, located in the Arabian Peninsula’s central region of Najd, about one hundred miles in every direction. In 1788, Saud, son of Abd al-Aziz, was declared heir apparent. He led his Wahhabi warriors on more raids.[6] To fight what they considered Muslim “polytheists” and “heretics”, the Saudis-Wahhabis shocked the entire Muslim world when in 1802, invaded Iraq’s Shiite majority, sacked Karbala, where Hussein, the grandson of the prophet Muhammad and the leading Shiite martyr is buried, and also demolished the massive golden dome and intricate glazed tiles above Hussein Bin Ali’s tomb, a holy shrine to Shiite Muslims. In the same year, the Saudi-Wahhabi warriors committed another atrocity in Taif, just outside Mecca. Again in 1810 they ruthlessly killed many innocent people across the Arabian Peninsula. They raided and pillaged many pilgrimage caravans and sever major cities in Hejaz including the two holiest cities of Makah and Medina.

In Makah they turned away pilgrims, and in Medina they attacked and desecrated Prophet Mohammad’s Mosque, opened his grave, and sold and distributed its valuable relics and expensive jewels.[7] The Saudi-Wahhabi crimes angered the ottomans.

In 1818, an Egyptian army destroyed the Saudis-Wahhabis army and razed their capital to the ground. The Wahhabi Imam Abdullah al-Saud and two of his followers were sent to Istanbul in chains where they were publicly beheaded. The rest of the Saudi-Wahhabi clan was held in captivity in Cairo. The destruction of the Saudi-Wahhabi warrior’s alliance did not last long. It was soon revived with the help of British colonialist.[8]

Accordingly, when Britain colonized Bahrain in 1820 and to expand its colonization in the area, the Wahhabi House of Saud sought British protection through Wahhabi Imams.[9] As a result, the British sent Colonel Lewis Pelly in 1865 to Riyadh to establish an official British treaty with the Wahhabi House.[10] Between 1871 and 1876, power changed hand seven times and the Wahhabis led more raids. This marked the end of the second Saudi state. This period however, kept the Wahhabi movement alive, ready to influence Muslims again in the twentieth century—and in the twenty-first.[11]

The twentieth century’s Saudi Arabia comprises the third period of Wahhabis political power. It has changed Saudi Arabia dramatically and the Saudi-Wahhabi’s kingdom has changed the century significantly. The first interval began in 1902, when Abdul Aziz Ibn Saud captured Riyadh and proceeded to re-establish a Wahhabi Kingdom. In 1904, Abd al-Aziz captured Anaiza, an oasis near Hail. In 1913, he captured Al Hasa Province, but had no idea that he had just acquired a quarter of the world’s oil.[12]

Not surprisingly, after his return from Al Hasa, the British helped ibn Saud with the establishments of the Ikhwan (Muslim Brotherhood), an army of fierce religious warriors. The Ikhwan looked for the opportunity to fight non-Wahhabi Muslims—and non-Muslims as well—and they took Abd al Aziz as their leader. The Ikhwan movement began to emerge among the Bedouin. They abandoned their traditional way of life in the desert and moved to an agricultural settlement. By moving to agricultural settlement, the Ikhwan intended to take up a new way of life to enforce a rigid Islamic orthodoxy.[13]

To achieve his goals, on December 26, 1915, Abd al Aziz signed treaty with Sir Percy Cox, Britain’s political agent in the Arab Gulf. The British praised Abd al-Aziz as the greatest Arab man,[14] and recognised his [Abd al- Aziz] sovereignty over Najd and Al-Hasa (central and eastern Arabia), while Abd al-Aziz promised the British that he would not have any dealing with any other country without the British approval and supplies.[15] In addition, the British praised Abd al-Aziz despite his unattractive traits such as public beheading, amputations and floggings. The advisor of Abd al-Aziz for more over 30 years, Harry St John Philby, had described him as ‘the greatest Arab since the Prophet Muhammad’. Philby was sent to Arabia by the British government to assist Abd al-Aziz, perhaps to play kingmaker, in 1917.[16]

Indeed, when in 1915, there were more than 200 hujar in and around Najd and nearly 100,000 Ikhwan waiting to fight, the British supplied Abd al-Aziz with weapons and money. The word hijra (hujar) was related to the term for the Prophet’s emigration from Mecca to Medina in 622. This period ended in 1934, with the declaration of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia under the leadership of Abd al-Aziz Ibn Saud.

Since then, Abd al-Aziz declared the relationship between oil and religion. Indeed, after establishing his British-made Wahhabi State, the Wahhabi king and imam Abd al-Aziz became an autocratic dictator who named the whole country after his own family, calling it the Kingdom of “Saudi” Arabia.[17] Since then the House of Saud has allocated a significant amount of oil revenues to building Islamic schools and mosques throughout the Muslim world,[18] which eventually has inspired radical Islam.[19] At that time however, Abd al-Aziz had various goals: he wanted to take Hail from the Al Rashid’ clan, to extend his control into the northern deserts (Syria), and to take over the Hejaz and the Persian Gulf coast. While Cox openly encouraged Abd al-Aziz to attack al-Rasheed’s clans to divert them from helping the Ottomans he prevented him from taking over much of the Gulf coast, where they [the British] had established protectorates.[20] They also opposed Abd al Aziz’s efforts to extend his influence beyond the Jordanian, Syrian, and Iraqi deserts because of their own imperial interests. But Abd al-Aziz continued his mission, and after he began the siege of Hail, the city surrendered to the Saudi’s warriors. In 1922, the Ikhwan warriors attacked Amman, the capital of Trans-Jordan. This caused problem with the British because, unlike Mecca and Medina, Hail had no religious significance. However, Abd al-Aziz apologised to the British. The British asked him to draw borders between his kingdom and Jordan, Iraq, and Kuwait.[21]

Today, although a few Wahhabi religious leaders have tried to “distant” themselves from the House of Saud’s brutality and anti-Islamic policies in a vain attempt to save Wahhabism’s image from further deterioration, most of the top Wahhabi religious leaders are still firmly behind the House of Saud. In fact, most Wahhabi leaders have openly supported the House of Saud’s unpopular domestic and foreign policies. Indeed, in the Arab nations, the rise of extremism in the form of the Wahhabi movement during the twentieth century could not have taken place without the huge investments made by the Al-Saud family in conjunction with the American in the name of democracy, freedom and human rights to destroy Arab nationalism, socialism, secularism, and of course Islam. This has intensified since the discovery of oil in the 1930s, reached its peak during World War II, and the Cold War, and took more extreme directions since the establishment of the Iranian Islamic Republic in 1979, and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in the same year.

References:


[1] – Abdullah-M, S 2004, ‘Britain and the Rise of Wahhabism and the House of Saud’, Kana’an Bulletin, vol. IV, no. 361, pp. 1-9.

[2] -Sindi, A-M 2004, ‘Britain and the Rise of Wahhabism and the House of Saud’, Kana’n bulletin, vol. IV, no. 361.

[3] -Nabhani, Y Khulasat-ul Kalam, Dar-ul-kitab-is-sufi (the House of Sufi book), Cairo, Egypt, see also Confession of a British Spy and British Enmity Against Islam, available at: , .

[4] Weston, M 2008, Prophets and Princes: Saudi Arabia from Muhammad to the Present, Wiley &Sons, Hoboken, New Jersey.

[5] -Sindi, A-M 2004, ‘Britain and the Rise of Wahhabism and the House of Saud’, Kana’n bulletin, vol. IV, no. 361.

[6] Weston, M 2008a, Prophets and Princes: Saudi Arabia from Muhammad to the Present, Wiley &Sons, Hoboken, New Jersey.

[7] Ibid; Sindi, A-M 2004, ‘Britain and the Rise of Wahhabism and the House of Saud’, Kana’n bulletin, vol. IV, no. 361.

[8] Ibid.

[9] Weston, M 2008, Prophets and Princes: Saudi Arabia from Muhammad to the Present, Wiley &Sons, Hoboken, New Jersey; Troeller, G 1976, the Birth of Saudi Arabia: Britain and the Rise of the House of Saud, Frank Cass, London.

[10] Lacey, R 1981, the Kingdom: Arabia and the House of Saud, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, New York.

[11] Weston, M 2008, Prophets and Princes: Saudi Arabia from Muhammad to the Present, Wiley &Sons, Hoboken, New Jersey.

[12] Ibid.

[13] Ibid.

[14] Aburish, SK 1994, A Brutal Friendship: the West and the Arab Elite, first edn, St. Martin’s Press, New York.

[15] Weston, M 2008, Prophets and Princes: Saudi Arabia from Muhammad to the Present, Wiley &Sons, Hoboken, New Jersey.

[16] Aburish, SK 1994, A Brutal Friendship: the West and the Arab Elite, first edn, St. Martin’s Press, New York.

[17] Sindi, A-M 2004, ‘Britain and the Rise of Wahhabism and the House of Saud’, Kana’n bulletin, vol. IV, no. 361.

[18] Long, D 1979, The Wilson Quarterly (1976), vol. 3, no. 1, pp. 83-91.

[19] Redissi, H 2008, ‘The Refutation of Wahhabism in Arabic Sources, 1745-1932′, in Kingdom without Borders: Saudi Arabia’s Political, Religious and Media Frontiers, ed. A-R M, Hurst, London, pp. 157-177.

[20] Aburish, SK 1994, A Brutal Friendship: the West and the Arab Elite, first edn, St. Martin’s Press, New York.

[21] Weston, M 2008, Prophets and Princes: Saudi Arabia from Muhammad to the Present, Wiley &Sons, Hoboken, New Jersey.

*********

Haytham A. K. Radwan is a Syrian-Australian citizen living in Adelaide, Australia. He is currently completing Bachelor of Laws at the University of South Australia. He has completed a Masters in International Studies / Relations in 2011, and Bachelor degree in International Studies in 2006 at the University of South Australia. His Masters research examined Saudi Arabia’s Politics, Its Islam, and Its Relations with the U.S. As A Threat to World Stability: Myth or Reality. Haytham also studied Psychology and Education Studies in the early 1990s at Damascus University, Syria. He is been admitted into the Golden Key International Honour Society in 2006, awarded the University Merit Award in 2006, and the Chancellor’s Commendation in 2005 from the University of South Australia. He can be reached at: haustralia@hotmail.com

*********

Day of Action for Imam Jamil Al-Amin (Rap Brown)


A DAY OF ACTION” (Public Rally) for Imam Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin
Monday, March 19, 2012, at the Georgia State Capitol


For Immediate Release:
March 16, 2012
Contact information: Heather Gray
404 234 4630 - heather@wrfg.org

ATLANTA....March 16, 2012, marks the 12th anniversary of a tragedy that
affected three families and an entire community. It was on March 16, 2000,
at around 10 PM at night, that two Fulton County Sheriff Deputies got into
a gunfight with an assailant that left one deputy dead and the other
seriously injured. Jamil Al-Amin (the former H. Rap Brown), the accused
assailant (who has consistently maintained his innocence), was arrested
days later in White Hall (AL), and charged with first degree murder and
assault.

After a deeply flawed trial that resulted in Al-Amin receiving a life
sentence, the leader of the West End Muslim community was confined to
Georgia’s maximum security prison in Reidsville. In 2007 Al-Amin was
arbitrarily deemed a “security risk” - despite having no serious
infractions within the institution – and was moved from state custody into
federal custody, and assigned to the federal admax facility (aka,
“supermax prison”) in Florence, Colorado - 1,400 miles away from his
family and attorneys.

This abrupt move, which was made without even informing his family, led to
a number of pressing questions, beginning with the federal government's
complicity in his case. It raised the question of whether Al-Amin was
being punished because he is a prominent Muslim, and also begged the
question of whether his civil rights past - principally through the
Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) in the 1960's - and his
ongoing demands and activism for civil and human rights in the U.S. may
have also factored into the equation?

It should also be noted that just prior to his abrupt move to Florence,
Colorado, in 2007, Muslims in Georgia's prisons had asked that he serve as
the Imam for Muslim prisoners throughout the State. This was without
Al-Amin's prompting, and was a clear acknowledgement of the broad based
respect for him and his leadership.

Al-Amin’s case was, and is, a local case. There were no federal charges,
conviction, or sentences. In spite of this, the State of Georgia chose to
move him out of Georgia's prison population into a high-cost federal
institution at Georgia taxpayer’s expense! The conditions in the prison
are extraordinarily punitive, including 24-hour isolation in an
underground facility with no human contact. (Notwithstanding the moral
considerations, the material cost of such punishment is un-called for.)

On Monday, March 19, 2012, at 3 PM, there will be a demonstration in front
of the Georgia State Capitol - designated as a "Day of Action in Support
of Imam Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin" - to demand that “Imam Jamil” (as he is
commonly known) be returned to Georgia state custody, where he rightfully
belongs, until such time that he can receive a new trial, a fair trial,
with all of the relevant and available evidence allowed to come into the
proceedings.

The speakers for Monday’s press conference will be (in alphabetical order):

Michael Bond (City Councilman - Atlanta)
Ramsey Clark (a former US Attorney General – New York)
Connie Curry (a veteran activist, and SNCC alumni - Atlanta)
Pastor Kenneth Glasgow (Christian clergyman)
Heather Gray (WRFG Radio - Atlanta)
Vincent Hardin (distinguished visiting scholar, Morehouse College)
Dianne Mathiowetz (International Action Center - Atlanta)
Min. Akbar Muhammad ( International Representative, Nation of Islam)
Imam Furqan Muhammad (a highly regarded Muslim chaplain - Atlanta)
Abdul Muhayman (Rep. for The Community Masjid - West End)
Nan Orrock (State Senator, District 36, Atlanta)
Imam Farid W. Rassool (Masjid As-Sabiqun, Chester, PA)
Mauri' Saalakhan (The Peace Thru Justice Foundation – Washington, DC)
Imam Zaid Shakir (a nationally known, California-based Islamic scholar)
Aaron Ward (District Director for Congressman John Lewis, D-GA)

The State Capitol is located at 206 Washington Street in Atlanta, Georgia.
Additional information on this case is available at www.freeimamjamil.com
<http://www.freeimamjamil.com/> .

For interviews on Imam Jamil's case please call Heather Gray at (404)
234-4630 or email her at heather@wrfg.org heather@wrfg.org> .

###

Review of the White Chauncey Bailey Project's Book

The above photo reveals the supreme irony of the Chauncey Bailey murder.Chauncey is on the far right under the protection of the Your Black Muslim Bakery brothers, his alleged killers. The white man on the far left appears to be Thomas Steele, lead writer of the White Chauncey Bailey Project and author of the book Killing the Messenger. Even the caption is a half truth since Bailey was working on the Bakery but also on corruption in the Oakland Police Department and City Hall under then Mayor (now Governor) Jerry Brown.

We present this review of the White Chauncey Bailey Project's book on Black Muslims and the Assassination of Chauncey Bailey. At a book signing, Marvin X shouted from the audience that the book is a sham. Oakland Tribune editor Martin Reynolds shouted back (Martin was having an on stage conversation with Thomas Steele), "Ok, Marvin, we know you are doing a book on Chauncey so we'll just wait for your book." Indeed, my book is Who Killed Chauncey Bailey? and A Short History of Black Muslims in the Bay. As per who killed Malcolm X, James Baldwin said, "The hand that pulled the trigger didn't buy the bullet." Oakland Post Publisher Paul Cobb had this to say about the assassination of his editor, "Chauncey was our soul, blood and bones. And we take authority on the matter of facts concerning his assassination. We are taking authority on his legacy to our community and the world.We do not accept the OPD's, the DA's, or CBP's explanation of his cold blooded murder."



Killing the Messenger: A Story of Radical Faith, Racism’s Backlash, and the Assassination of a Journalist | By Thomas Peele | The Crown Publishing Group | 441 pages, $26.00

by Jess Mowry

Columbia Journalism Review


It’s said that the devil is in the details, and experienced writers would agree that the tiniest details can make or break a story. This may tempt authors to emphasize or embellish aspects of a story that reinforce a theme; to present the facts in a way that fits the frame.

One may receive impressions of this in the first 40 pages of Killing The Messenger, Thomas Peele’s new book about ideology, murder, and journalism, set primarily in Oakland, CA. For instance, one may wonder why the author, who in the first paragraph of the introduction describes Oakland as “little more than a place I passed through to get anywhere,” should choose to inform readers that Oakland’s Lake Merritt “had been created from a drained swamp in the 1860s,” or at low tide the area where the lake drains into the San Francisco Bay (actually the Oakland Estuary) “reeked of rotting mussels ripped open by hungry gulls.”

He might have said that Lake Merritt is the largest saltwater lake located within an urban area and is quite picturesque. And what could be more natural than seagulls feeding on mussels? But, of course, he was trying for gritty atmosphere; just as one could add grit to San Francisco’s image by mentioning that much of the riprap around its Aquatic Park is composed of old tombstones leftover when the city moved most of its graveyards to Colma in the early 20th century.

Likewise, the author repeatedly describes the neighborhood around the (former) Your Black Muslim Bakery on San Pablo Avenue, home base for the semi-legit organization that this book is about, as being the “North Oakland ghetto.” This reviewer, having frequented this bakery for fish sandwiches, and who still passes through the neighborhood at least once a week, can attest that while it’s not one of Oakland’s upscale communities, it’s far from a ghetto. Nor did this reviewer ever find the bakery’s staff anything less than pleasant, neat, clean, or observe the “compound” being guarded by “thugs in bow ties” or “the frenzied pit bull and mastiffs,” though that would have certainly been wise at night, and many area businesses take similar precautions.

None of which is to say that this reviewer admired the Black Muslims or agreed with their doctrine—though the sandwiches were killer—but rather to note that the deployment of superfluous details, especially when one already has an ironclad case, may undermine one’s credibility.

Earning readers’ trust is especially important when an author is writing about black people, who are so accustomed to being misrepresented and negatively portrayed that many automatically distrust or outrightly dismiss anything written about them, especially by a non-black author. It is therefore unfortunate that the first three chapters of Killing The Messenger appear as if Peele was trying too hard to set his stage.

While Part One of this book, opening with the August 2, 2007 gangstuh-style murder of Chauncey Bailey, an Oakland Post editor who was working on a story about Your Black Muslim Bakery, abounds with descriptions of thugs, thuggery, and Dashiell Hammett-meets-Boyz n the Hood atmosphere, one quickly forgives Peele when he settles down to solid journalistic writing, especially since Peele was a principal in the Chauncey Bailey Project, an ad hoc group of journalists dedicated to reporting the circumstances of Bailey’s death.

Though the hook is the murder of Bailey, an undistinguished journalist whose article, Peele notes, would probably not have been very good, Bailey is actually a minor character. The real story is about the Black Muslims, and particularly the Oakland-based Bey family. For decades, Peele reports, the Beys used their health-food bakery as a front for criminal activity, operating largely untouched by police. (The bakery’s founder, Yusuf Ali Bey, actually ran for mayor of Oakland in 1994.) It was only when the erratic, overmatched Yusuf Bey IV assumed control in 2005 that everything began to crumble.

With exceptions noted and forgiven, Killing The Messenger is a very well-written and thoroughly researched book; this becomes apparent as one gets deeper into it. Like James A. Michener, Peele begins at the roots of his subject, in this case a man named Wallace Dodd Ford, a.k.a. Walli Dodd Fard (and many other aliases), who filled out a draft card on June 5, 1917, stating his birthplace as Shinka, Afghanistan, his birth date as February 26, 1893, and his race as “Caus” (presumably an abbreviation of Caucasian). This is ironic, since he was the co-founder of what would become the Black Muslim faith, after teaming up with a spiritual charlatan who styled himself Noble Drew Ali from Morocco, though he was reputedly born Timothy Drew from North Carolina. (Peele makes clear that the Black Muslim “faith” is Islamic in name only, just as the Ku Klux Klan bills itself as a Christian organization.)

The book, backed up by 74 pages of acknowledgments, notes, and bibliography, traces the history not only of the group itself, which was based upon “Tricknology” (a term coined by its founders to describe the misinformation and outright lies foisted upon black people by whites to keep them confused and disunited), but also the individual histories of the principal men involved. Unlike the Black Panther Party, which had its roots in Oakland and was for the most part purely political, the Black Muslims cloaked their militancy in pseudo-religion, encouraging violence not only in their brainwashed believers but also providing a justification to those who simply wanted to act out their hatred by killing. Peele brings vital historical context to the contemporary aspects of his tale: the establishment of the Bey family in Oakland, the rise and fall of Your Black Muslim Bakery, and the eventual murder of Chauncey Bailey—a foolish, arrogant, and typically thuggish act, which, rather than removing a perceived threat to the organization, actually brought it down.

As he does for virtually all the dramatis personae in this book, Peele offers detailed studies of their origins and backgrounds, often not without sympathy in regard to conditions, environment, and events in their lives which may have contributed to what they became. For example, we learn the life history of Devaughndre Monique Broussard, who would become Bey’s hit-man for Chauncey Bailey’s murder. It is an all-too-typical story of a young black man raised in a soul-crushing environment of poverty, drugs, and violence in Richmond, CA, and who wasn’t strong enough to somehow rise above it.

As Peele acknowledges, though most of these men had seedy backgrounds, it was pretty difficult for any black man, especially during the first half of the 20th century, to be squeaky clean in regard to white laws, morals, and values. Peele’s extensive research on the oppression of black people in the US through most of the 20th century, explains part of the book’s subtitle: Racism’s Backlash—the backlash being the rise of an organization claiming to be a religious faith that professes hate toward white people. Peele is not hesitant to give white devils their due, whether murderous police, racist politicians and journalists, or discriminatory policies. He describes several attacks by police upon Black Muslims in various cities that ended in outright murder of black men, the officers involved invariably cleared of any wrongdoing. No wonder that, then as now, certain young black men would be attracted to an ideology that encouraged them to fight back.

Throughout the book’s 350 pages, Peele presents detailed accounts of how various individuals became involved with and/or ensnared by the Black Muslim movement; some idealistically, many—especially young black men intellectually stunted by the public-education system and emotionally scarred by the judicial system—because it offered opportunities no one else was offering. Broussard, for example, a once-promising student who lost his way, is Peele’s Exhibit A: an impressionable youth who was lured by the financial and emotional shelter the Beys provided.

Did anything positive come out of this? While Peele seems a bit cloudy on this point, he also appears to imply that the answer is yes. Though he may have somewhat embellished the grit and grimness of Oakland, he also acknowledges the thousands of young black men taken in off the streets, or when fresh out of prison, who would have likely been behind bars—or behind bars again—had they not been offered productive jobs and educated in matters of self-worth, physical and mental discipline, and personal integrity, and who may well have gone on to live better lives by using these teachings as a basis to self-educate and think for themselves. In other words, Peele seems to realize there are shades of gray in everything—no absolute evil, no untarnished good, and few saints or devils without their own motives.

Killing The Messenger may well be the best, most thoroughly researched, and—with exceptions noted—most objective book thus far written on this subject, and is no doubt destined to become required reading in many colleges and universities. Hopefully, it will also be read in prisons, to educate young black men that Tricknology comes in all colors. If the devil is indeed in the details, Peele has given us many demons to exorcise.

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Bibliography: A Short History of Black Muslims in the Bay Area

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Bibliography: A Short History of Black Muslims in the Bay

Allah, Wakeel, In the Name of Allah, A-Team, Atlanta, 2007
Allen, Robert L., Black Awakening in Capitalist America, AWP, New Jersey, 1992
Al Mansour, Khalid Abdullah Tariq, Black America at the Crossroads
________, The Reflections of an African Arabian in American Captivity
________, Talal, The Challenge of Spreading Islam in America
Ali, Yusef, Holy Qur'an
Armstrong, Karen, A History of God
________, Muhammad
Aslan, Reza, No god but God, Random House, 2006
Baldwin, James, The Fire Next Time, Dial Press, NY, 1963
Bloom, Alexander, Wini Breines, eds, Takin' it to the Streets, Oxford, 1995
Bontemps, Arna, Black Thunder, Beacon, Boston, 1963
_______, Conroy, They Seek A City
Breitman, George, The Last Year of Malcolm X, Merit, NY, 1967
_______, Malcolm X Speaks, Grove, NY., 1965
Clarke, John Henrik, ed, Malcolm X, The Man and His Times, Collier, NY, 1969
Cleaver, Soul on Ice
______, Soul on Fire
______, Post Prison Writings, Ramparts, 1969
Diop, Cheikh Anta, Cultural Unity of Africa, TWP, Chicago
DuBois, W.E.B, The Souls of Black Folk, Penguin, NY, 1996
_____, The World and Africa
_____, Black Reconstruction
Foner, Philip S., ed., The Black Panthers Speak, Da Capo Press, 1995
Frazier, E. Franklin, Black Bourgeoisie, Collier, NY, 1975
_____, Race and Culture Contacts in the Modern World, Beacon, Boston, 1957
Franklin, John Hope, From Slavery to Freedom, Alfred A. Knopf, NY, 1980
Genovese, Eugene D, From Rebellion to Revolution, Louisiana State U. Press, 1979
Gitlin, Todd, The Sixties, Years of Hope, Days of Rage, Bantam, NY, 1987
Hilliard, David, Huey, Spirit of the Panther, Thunder Mouth Press, NY, 2006
Houston, Drusilla Dunjee, Wonderful Ethiopians of the Ancient Cushite Empire, BCP, Baltimore,
1985
Howard, Elbert "Big Man", Panther on the Prowl, BCP, Baltimore, 2002
Jackson, George, Soledad Brother
Jackson, John G., Man, God and Civilization
______, Introduction to African Civilization,
Jamal, Mumia Abu, Live from Death Row, Avon, 1996
James, George G.M., Stolen Legacy, AWP, New Jersey, 1992
Kenyatta, Jomo, Facing Mt. Kenya, Vintage, NY, 1965
Lincoln, C. Eric, The Black Muslims in America, Beacon, Boston, 1961
Martin, Tony, Literary Garveyism, The Majority Press, Mass, 1983
Muhammad, Elijah, Message to the Black Man
________, Theology of Time
________, Fall of America, Muhammad's Temple No.2, Chicago, 1973
________, How to Eat to Live
Oliver, John A, Eldridge Cleaver Reborn
Polk, William R., The Arab World Today, Harvard, 1991
Sertima, Ivan Van, They Came Before Columbus, Random House, 1976
Soyinka, Wole, The Open Sore of A Continent, Oxford U. Press, 1995
Ture, Kwame, Hamilton, Charles, Black Power, Vintage, 1992
Udom, E.U. Essien, Black Nationalism, Dell, NY, 1962
Vincent, Theodore G., Black Power and the Garvey Movement, BCP, Baltimore, 2006
Walker, David, David Walker's Appeal, 1829,
Washington, Booker T, Up From Slavery, Bantam, NY, 1967
Williams, Chancellor, The Destruction of Black Civilization, TWP, Chicago, 1987
Williams, Eric, Capitalism and Slavery, University of North Carolina Press, 1994
Williams, Sherley Anne Williams, Dessa Rose, Berkley, New York, 1987
Young, Henry J, Major Black Religious Leaders, Abingdon, 1977
X, Malcolm, Autobiography of Malcolm X, Ballantine, NY, 1965
X, Marvin, Eldridge Cleaver, My friend the Devil, BBP, Berkeley, 2009
_______, Beyond Religion, toward Spirituality, BBP, Berkeley, 2007
_______, How to Recover from the Addiction to White Supremacy, BBP, Berkeley, 2008
_______, Wish I Could Tell You The Truth, BPP, Berkeley, 2005
_______, Somethin' Proper, BBP, Berkeley, 1998
_______, How I Met Isa, MA thesis, San Francisco State University, 1975, unpublished,
_______, Fly to Allah, Al Kitab Sudan, Fresno, 1969
_______, I Am Oscar Grant, BBP, Berkeley, 2010

AUDIOGRAPHY

Nisa Islam (Bey), Cherokee, 2004.
Nadar Ali, Fresno, 2004.
Manuel Rashid, Fresno, 2004.
John Douimbia, Grand Ayatollah of the Bay, San Francisco, 2004.
Minister Rabb Muhammad, Oakland, 2004.
Antar Bey, CEO, Your Black Muslim Bakery, Oakland, 2004.
Norman Brown, Oakland, Oakland, 2004.
Kareem Muhammad (Brother Edward), Oakland, 20

VIDEOGRAPHY

Proceedings of the Melvin Black Human Rights Conference, Oakland, 1979, produced by Marvin X, featuring Angela Davis, Minister Farakhan, Eldridge Cleaver, Paul Cobb, Dezzie Woods-Jones, Jo Nina-Abran, Mansha Nitoto, Khalid Abdullah Tarik Al Mansur, Dr. Yusef Bey, Dr. Oba T-Shaka, and Marvin X.

Proceedings of the First Black Men's Conference, Oakland, 1980, John Douimbia, founder, Marvin X, chief planner, Dr. Nathan Hare, Dr. Wade Nobles, Dr. Yusef Bey, Dr. Oba T'Shaka,Norman Brown, Kermit Scott, Minister Ronald Muhammad, Louis Freeman, Michael Lange, Betty King, Dezzie Woods-Jones, et al.

Forum on Drugs, Art and Revolution, Sista's Place, Brooklyn, New York, 1997, featuring Amiri and Amina Baraka, Sonia Sanchez, Sam Anderson, Elombe Brath and Marvin X.

Eldridge Cleaver Memorial Service, produced by Marvin X, Oakland, 1998, participants included Kathleen and Joju Cleaver, Emory Douglas, Dr. Yusef Bey, Minister Keith Muhammad, Imam Al Amin, Dr. Nathan Hare, Tarika Lewis, Richard Aoki, Reginald Major, Majidah Rahman and Marvin X.

One Day in the Life, a docudrama of addiction and recovery, filmed by Ptah Allah-El, produced, written, directed and staring Marvin X, edited by Marvin X, San Francisco: Recovery Theatre, 1999.

Marvin X Interviews Bobby Seale, co-founder of the Black Panther Party, former actor in Marvin X's Black Theatre: Berkeley, La Pena Cultural Center, 1999.

"Abstract for An Elders Council," lecture/discussion, Tupac Amaru Shakur One Nation Conference, Oakland: McClymonds High School, 1999.

Marvin X at Dead Prez Concert, San Francisco, 2000.

Kings and Queens of Black Consciousness, produced by Marvin X at San Francisco State University, 2001, featuring Dr. Cornel West, Amiri Baraka, Amina Baraka, Dr. Julia Hare, Dr. Nathan Hare, Rev. Cecil Williams, Destiny, Phavia, Tarika Lewis, Askia Toure, Kalamu Ya Salaam, Rudi Wongozi, Ishmael Reed, Dr. Theophile Obenga, Marvin X, et al.

Live In Philly At Warm Daddies, a reading accompanied by Elliot Bey, Marshall Allen, Danny Thompson, Ancestor Goldsky, Rufus Harley, Alexander El, 2002.

Marvin X Live in Detroit, a documentary by Abu Ibn, 2002.

In the Crazy House Called America, concert with Marvin X and Destiny, San Francisco: Buriel Clay Theatre, 2003.

Marvin X in Concert (accompanied by harpist Destiny, violinist Tarika Lewis and percussionists Tacuma and Kele Nitoto, dancer Raynetta Rayzetta), Amiri and Amina Baraka, filmed by Kwame and Joe, Berkeley: Black Repertory Group Theatre, 2003.

Marvin X Speaks at the Third Eye Conference, Dallas, Texas, 2003.

Marvin X and the Last Poets, San Francisco: Recovery Theatre, 2004.

Proceedings of the San Francisco Black Radical Book Fair, produced by Marvin X, filmed by Mindseed Productions, San Francisco, Recovery Theatre, 2004, participants include: Sonia Sanchez, Davey D, Amiri Baraka, Sam Hamod, Fillmore Slim, Askia Toure, Akhbar Muhammad, Sam Anderson, Al Young, Devorah Major, Opal Palmer Adisa, Tarika Lewis, Amina Baraka, Julia and Nathan Hare, Charlie Walker, Jamie Walker, Reginald Lockett, Everett Hoagland, Sam Greenlee, Ayodelle Nzinga, Suzzette Celeste, Tarika Lewis, Raynetta Rayzetta, Deborah Day, James Robinson, Ptah Allah-El, Kalamu Ya Salaam, Marvin X, et al. (Note: let me please acknowledge some of the historic personages in the audience: Gansta Alonzao Batin (mentor of the Bay Area BAM, made his transition shortly after the conference), Willie Williams of Broadside Press, Detroit, Gansta Brown, Gansta Mikey Moore (now Rev.), Arthur Sheridan, founder of Black Dialogue magazine, also co-founders Aubrey and Gerald LaBrie, Reginald Major, author of Panther Is A Black Cat. Thank you all for making this event historic, ed. MX)

Get Yo Mind Right, Marvin X Barbershop Talk, #4, a documentary film by Pam Pam and Marvin X, Oakland: 2005.

Marvin X Live in the Fillmore at Rass'elas Jazz Club, A Nisa Islam production, filmed by Ken Johnson, San Francisco, 2005.

Marvin X in the Malcolm X Room, MaClymonds High School, accompanied by Tacuma (dijembe and percussion, dancer/choreographer Raynetta Rayzetta, actor Salat Townsend, filmed by Eddie Abrams, Oakland, 2005.



Introduction, Overview


This project employs the participant/observer model. Brother Donald Hopkins noted that I am close to the subject, psychologically and physically, although I maintain a psychic distance from all things in order to allow the artist's touch to happen.

Sometimes being too close to the subject destroys all objectivity. This occurred when I viewed Spike Lee's film Malcolm X. I left the theatre in tears at a point because I saw too much of my life before my eyes. Additionally, I was disgusted that Malcolm claimed not to know Elijah had a plethora of women, since he and Elijah were so close. And, more so, Elijah taught all of us to trust no one, including him.

This project began and ended in 2004 because my advisers warned me I would be killed if I published it. For several years, until now, I put the manuscript aside although I have no fear of death: Inna salati wa nusuki wa mahyaya wa mamati li-Lahi Rabbi-l-alamin... (Surely my prayer, and sacrifice and my life and death are for Allah, Lord of the worlds).

I did not resume the project until 2012, inspired by the release of Thomas Steele's book Killing the Messenger, his socalled expose of Black Muslims and their role in the assassination of Oakland Post Editor Chauncey Bailey. Part One of this project deals with my view of who killed Chauncey Bailey. For sure, as James Baldwin said of Malcolm's killers, "The hand that pulled the trigger didn't buy the bullet."

I would like readers to understand that for all my psychi distance, I am yet a captive of the Islamic spirit and cannot deny this. I'm also a captive of the African spirit and lastly the human spirit, though I do consider myself divine. For the purpose of this project, I will try to dwell on th human plane.

As I overview this work, it is crystal clear to me that we are a superhuman people. It is so wonderful to explore the beginnings of our evolution in the Nile Valley. What is amazing is that when we conclude the African man and woman are indeed Adam and Eve, we must then recognize Africans as the progenitors of humanity. What an awesome responsibility to be burdened with, and yet I have no doubt once we regain our mental equilibrium, we shall handle the matter handsomely.

Yet, this puts us on a plane superior to most of humanity, despite our inferior condition today. After difficulty comes ease, the Qur'an teaches us, so we know everything is going to be all right once we master the Sisyphus syndrome of rolling the rock up the hill only to have it slip from our grasp and then we must go to the bottom of the mountain to begin anew. If this has been only a test of strength, surely we have mastered the test. The problem is that some people continue praying when Allah has already answered. Why are you on your knees when you have acquired the trappings of freedom, i.e., knowledge of self and others?

Our history is so awesome it staggers the mind, making one tremble with tears in the night, and yet so much ignorance prevails in spite of knowledge blowing in the wind. Perhaps this is why the Bible says the people were destroyed for lack of knowledge. Who can pity you if you die of thirst when the well water is beneath your feet? In the spirit of
ancestor David Walker, somebody help me! Somebody needs a healing up in here!

It is well known today that Africans or the Aboriginal Man developed from the four thousand miles of the Nile Valley that begins in the Congo and ends on the delta. Four thousand miles of history and culture, acquired over thousands, yea, millions if not trillions of years, once we escape the White Supremacy paradigm of time. Elijah was
trying to tell us something in his Theology of Time. Does
not the Qur'an say by the time surely man is lost, except
those who bow down and exhort one another to truth! And Solomon told us there is a time for everything, a time for
you and a time for me, a time to reap and a time to sow,
a time for war and a time for peace, a time to love and a time to hate. There used to be the cry Nation Time! What
happened? Did those caught in the slave system go back to
sleep? Let us not digress.

From the Nile Valley we evolved religion, from many gods to One God, from ancestor worship and the trinity to the purity of Akhenaton's Sun Hymn. But the African mind can
walk and chew gum, we are thus quite able to derive a holistic relationship with the variety of theological concerns.
As my Islamic mentor taught me, ancestor Ali Sherif Bey,
all religions yet express primitive notions, shall we call it
polytheism, ancestor worship? Tell me, do not certain Muslims worship saints? Do not certain Muslims practice
magic?

In his Dawn of Conscience, James H. Breasted told us, "Monotheism is but imperialism in religion." And so when we evolved to empire building, it was a natural thing for monotheism to rule. Nile Valley religion expanded to rule the world. And with the decline of the West, the pure monotheism appears about to surface again.

Can you not see there is before us a global Islamic people's revival, call it revolution, witness the Middle East, from Tunisia to Syria. I am so serious about Syria, not only
because my son (RIP) spent time in Syria with a Fulbright fellowship to the University of Damascus. He repeatedly
told me about the police state called Syria, that interrogated him daily, and then the CIA questioned him,
a black man in Syria who spoke Arabic fluently, who graduated in Arabic and Middle Eastern literature at
UC Berkeley, and did graduate studies at Harvard.
My son cried out to me about conditions in Syria, how
the Africans were treated like persons caught in the Arab slave system, passports seized, forced to live live rats unable to go home. The Syrians questions my son on
a daily basis, he told me. "Dad, they question me every
day, why are you reading material about the Baath party,
why are you hanging around those filthy Palestinians?"

And the CIA was equally interested in my son, a North
American African who spoke Arabic. The CIA tried to
recruit him at every turn. After all, no white man could
enter Syria. Remember when the USA pilot was shot down? Who was able to rescue the pilot? Only Jesse
Jackson and Minister Farrakhan! The white man was
cut out the game! Somebody help me!

And yes, ultimately the Islamic and Arab revolution shall engulf Saudia Arabia, Jordan, Bahrain and the entire Persian Gulf Western sycophants. The Western powers may try to utilize a moderate or conservative Islam, yet they shall fail to swindle the people of their birthright to freedom, justice and self determination. Even the nuclear blackmail shall not suffice!

What does a man determined to be free care about the nuclear threat from Israel or America? To hell with America and Israel, and to hell with their sycophants
Saudi Arabia, Jordan and the Gulf states. The people shall be free by any means necessary! Let us not digress!

Diop and others have dispelled the notion of Whites creating civilization, including Arabs and Jews, actually, both Arabs and Jews have been found to be non-white. And furthermore, the first white man was a black man! Call me Grimaldi and Negrito!

As per Islam, Diop tells us "the fundamental ideas of Islam were in Arabia a thousand years before Muhammad. Dr. Ben taught us the African origin of Judaism, Christianity and Islam. Other scholars have confirmed this: J.A., Rogers, W.E.B. DuBois, Chancellor Williams, DeGraft Johnson, J. G. Jackson and the wonderful Druisilla Dunjee Houston with her Wonderful Ethiopians of the Ancient Cushite Empire.

And from Homer down to the present, there is a plethora of White scholars who transcended their white supremacy to tell the truth about our history as a people of genius. What is astounding is that even under the worse conditions of the slave system in the Americans, our genius flowed like water. Imagine victims of the vicious American slave system producing a body of literature, i.e., the socalled slave narratives. These narratives are the foundation stone
of American literature.

No genre of American literature is superior to the socalled slave narratives! What on earth can the master class say above the oppressed slave class about the love of life, the joy of life, the humanity of life, the philosophy of life, the politics of life, the economy of life? Let us not digress!

For sure, there is no Islam without the African Arabian Bilal, or even in pre-Islamic Arabia, there is no Arabic literature without the African Arabian poet Antar.

And this brings tears to my eyes! Bilal was held in such high regard by Prophet Muhammad that he saw Bilal's footsteps ahead of his in paradise! Bilal is considered the third part of Islam after Allah and Muhammad. And who originated the Ahdan or call to prayer said five times daily throughout the Muslim world, a world of over a billion people? Bilal!

Even under torture, it was Bilal who refused to renounce the one God Allah, who cried again and again, Al Ahad, Al Ahad, Al Ahad! (The One, the One, the One).

After Muhammad's victory in Arabia, Islam took off like a jet plane. As per Africa, Egypt was conquered, North Africa soon after. And then the Moors (led by Africans or blackamoors). J. DeGraft Johnson makes plain it was an African conquest, African Glory. It was the African general Tarik who conquered Spain, for whom Gibraltar is named (Gebel (rock) Tarik.

The Moors ruled from 711 until 1492. Spain has languished in darkness since the fall of Grenada. And yet the glory of Moorish Spain that permitted the Europeans to escape the Dark Ages was nothing unique for the Africans. So what the Moors and Arabs translated the Greek classic into European languages. So what they made Plato, Aristole and Socrates available to the West, after all, what were these characters to Nile Valley Civilization, from who their teachings were Stolen legacy, see George M. James.

After all, the Dark Ages did not inhabit Africa, for in Africa simultaneously light was shining brightly in West Africa. Nile Vally civilization reappeared in Beled Es Sudan or land of the Blacks. We need only cite the kingdoms and empires of Ghana, Mali and Songhay. Diop has shown us the cultural similarities between the Nile Valley and Beled Es Sudan, linguistically, socially, religiously, ritually, mythologicaly, politically, etc. Timbuktu became the center of intellectual power in West Africa.

Scholars came to study from around the world, most certainly the African and Islamic world. Books were as precious as gold. Almost everyone had a library, and one of Timbuktu's greatest scholars, Ahmad Baba, said his library was the smallest, compared with his family members.

Ghana, Mali and Songhay gave full expression to the African genius prior to the Maafa or great disaster of the American slave system. Now any intelligent person will ask the question, "If we were so intelligent, so great, how did we fall?" Chancellor Williams told us in Destruction of African Civilization that our doom was sealed 6,000 years ago when we welcomed strangers into our land, despite this being an African custom. Europeans shoot strangers, Africans welcome strangers. But Dr. Walter Rodney (West Africa and the Atlanta Slave Trade, a monograph) explains we fell from much the same that is occurring in Africa today: corruption, corruption, corruption.

All social, cultural institutions fell victim to greed and wanton materialism. The political, judicial, religious, military and other segments of society fell victim to the slave system. We must be brave enough to consider the African side of the slave system, not simply blame the white man, for there can be no buyers without sellers.

From a society that valued knowledge, we degenerated to one that valued trinkets above human beings. Is it not the same today in the modern slave system called America, wherein one can be killed for a pair of tennis shoes, or because one possesses a nice car someone else doesn't have, or a nice woman who departed to another because she was continually abused, physically, verbally and emotionally. In the manner of slave system psychology, we truly believe we own the woman or man, that he or she is chattel property (personal).

What is interesting is that prior to entering the slave system, we were quite familiar with the Americas, having traveled there for centuries, it being a distance of 1,600 miles from Africa to the Americas. See They Came Before Columbus by ancestor Ivan Van Sertima, also Kofi Harun Wangara's writings.

And then shit hit the fan! The slave system. What horror, bestiality, savagery, eternal servitude.
Who are these people? They really make you wonder, hurry Allah with the fire and water! Can these be human beings, an African wrote when observing them aboard ship. He had never seen white people before and could not believe the savage treatment they meted out.

From a culture that allowed the full expression of our genius, we found ourselves in a situation when ignorance was the order of the day, where hands were cut off to keep us in darkness, as if we had never known literacy and literature, science and philosophy. And even in the triple darkness of the slave system, there were many of us who spoke and wrote multiple languages, Arabic, Hausa, Yoruba, Spanish, French, Portuguese, often times we were more intelligent than those who controlled the slave system, many of whom could not read or write their names, yet believed themselves superior to Africans. We should have the common sense to know the slave system master had no need of ignorant slaves, but rather those with skills in agriculture, architecture, construction, plantation management, iron making, bricklaying, etc.

The docile African was made so by terror, beatings, whippings, emotional and verbal abuse, much in the same manner as men beat their wives into submission today. The Slave Narratives abound in tales of white terror and black submission, see Frederick Douglass or recall how Kunta Kinte was beaten until he acknowledged his "real" name was Toby. We call this the first step in the psycholinguistic crisis of the North American African. Who am I and what is my name? It has taken over four hundred years for us to settle this question for ourselves, and even today we are still not quite sure who we are or what is our name! African, Negro, Colored, Bilalian, Nubian, Arabian, Nigguh, bitch, ho, motherfucker, American, Afro American, North American African. Alas, if the white man knows nothing else, he knows he's white. He may not know whether he's straight or gay, but he knows he's white, and at any given moment the lowest white man can take advantage of white privilege.

For the black man to claim his racial identity is a constant war, yes, a war of liberation, since slavery and after, down to the present moment. Blackness is not a color but a condition and that condition is freedom, independence and self determination. Blackness is thus a state of mind, a sense of being in harmony with the universe, with the living, the dead and the yet unborn.

Resistance to the American slave system was widespread and constant, almost daily, yes, as Richard Wright told us in Native Son, his very presence was a crime against the state, every glance of the eye a threat.

Men and women who came from a tradition of great literature, art, science and philosophy cannot submit to a slave system, only for a time, then the human soul revolts at the travesty of its condition. Africans planned and plotted and took a variety of actions, see Herbert Aptheker's Negro Slave Revolts. There was the burning and looting of plantations, the Maroon tradition of running into the bush. In Palmares, Brazil, the Africans liberated space for a century, after a series of Hausa Muslim revolts in the 17th century. In North America and the Caribbean, Africans escaped to live among the Native Americans, after all, not all the Africans had arrived here on slave ships but came before Columbus and were indistinguishable from the indigenous people.

In the early 19th century, there were revolts by Nat Turner, Denmark Vesey and Gabriel Prosser, the liberation essays of David Walker and others inspired by God, Allah, and Jesus to liberate themselves. Their writings were suppressed by the slave system. A bounty was put on David Walker's head and he died mysteriously in Boston a year after David Walker's Appeal was published in 1829. Yes, no wonder the slave system called for cutting off the hands of those who could read and write. Even today, the African who is able to think, read and write is a dangerous person. He must be watched, his writings suppressed if he
expresses radical consciousness. Not only do the white publishers run from him, but the Negro publishers as well.

Often the African sang in code, call it the Blues, the music Muslims brought to the Mississippi delta from Mali and elsewhere. What did the great Malian musician (RI), Ali Farka say, "Blues! I don't play Blues, but the music my people have been playing for thousands of years." Blues, Spirituals, the Sorrow Songs, told our story of life in the American slave system, songs and tales of lost love, rejection, hope and liberation.

The Gullah Africans of South Carolina and the Georgia islands not only brought rice to the Americas but an infusion of Islam as well.

--continued--






























A Short History of Black Muslims in The Bay Area (Circa 1954-2012)
by El Muhajir (Marvin X, M.A.)

Contents

Chronology of Original Man
Introduction
1. African Origin of Religions and the Cultural Unity of Africa
2. Mythology of Allah: Egyptian Religion and its steps toward Islam
3. Muhammad Ibn Abdullah: The fundamental ideas of Islam were in Arabia a thousand
years before Muhammad (Cheikh Anta Diop)
4. Blackamoors in Spain (711-1492)

5. Belad Es Sudan (Islam in West Africa): Ghana, Mali, Songhay, Usman Dan Fodio and the

Fulani Jihads, Ahmadu Bamba in Senegal and the Holy City of Touba (More sacred than Mecca to Africans)

6. Moorish Muslims in the Americas before Columbus

7. Muslim victims of the American "Slave System"
See the "Slave narratives" , Maroon communities, slave revolts, Seminoles and especially Hausa revolts in Brazil, Gullah Negroes

8. Muslims Up South:

Newark, Detroit, Chicago: Edward Wilmot Blyden, Duse Muhammad Ali, Noble Drew Ali, Marcus Garvey, Farad Muhammad, Elijah Muhammad, Malcolm X
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9. Black Muslims in the Bay Area of SF/Oakland: Toward National Consciousness or the Mental Revolution

10. Mosque #26

a. Min. Robert X. Ashford (Aaron Ali), the linguist
b. Bernard Cushmeer
c. John Wesley
d. Henry Majed
e. John Muhammad
f.Billy X, aka Rabb Muhammad
g. Minister Keith Muhammad
h. Minister Christopher Muhammad
i. Imam Shauib
j. Imam Alamin
k. Capt. Nisa Islam
l. Lt. Joan, aka Tarika Lewis
m. Capt. Mae Helen, Fatimah
n. Lt. Fahizah
11. The Little Manger or the "Hypocrites"
a. Aaron Ali's house
b. Brother Green's barber shop

12. Muslims and the Black Arts Movement (1966)

a. Marvin X
b. Duncan X
c. Hillery X
d. Ethna X
e. Farouk, aka Carl Bossiere
f. Alonzo Harris Batin
g. Ali Sharif Bey
h. Ed Bullins
i. Danny Glover

13. Muslims and the Prison Movement:

Eldridge Cleaver, A Case Study, Folsom, San Quentin, Soledad; Bunchy Carter, associate of Eldridge Cleaver, George Jackson, Messiah of the Prison Movment, Brother Booker, Kumasi, Geronimo Ji Jaga

14. Muslims and the Black Student Movement: Brother Edward's Jihad, Mar'yam Wadai and the Black Studies Curriculum

15. Islam and the Black Panther Party:
"Marvin X was my teacher", Huey P. Newton
a. Source of the Ten Point Program
b. Terminology: Pig, Babylon
c. Malcolm influence

16. Muslims, Zebra Killers and the Kidnapping of Patty Hearst
a. Ali Sharif Bey as runner for SLA
b. Marvin X's M.A. thesis on the SLA
c. Fatima Shabazz and the SLA


17. The Melvin Black Forum on Human Rights, 1979
a. Minister Farakhan
b. Angela Davis
c. Khalid Abdullah Tariq Al Mansour
d. khalid Muhammad
e. Marvin X
f. Eldridge Cleaver

18. The Black Men's Conference: The Honorable John Douimbia, Founder
a. Dr. Wade Nobles
b. Dr. Oba T'Shaka
c. Dr. Yusef Bey
d. Dr. Nathan Hare
e. Dezzie Woods/Jones
f. Louis Freeman
g. Marvin X


19. From Black Nationalism to Global Islam:
Khalid Muhammad Abdullah Tariq Al Mansour: A Case Study, The African American Association

20. His Holiness Guru Bawa in the Bay: Man/god/God/man

21. Conclusion: Beyond Religion, toward Spirituality
22. Notes
23. Bibliography: A Short History of Black Muslims in the Bay

Allah, Wakeel, In the Name of Allah, A-Team, Atlanta, 2007
Allen, Robert L., Black Awakening in Capitalist America, AWP, New Jersey, 1992
Al Mansour, Khalid Abdullah Tariq, Black America at the Crossroads
________, The Reflections of an African Arabian in American Captivity
________, Talal, The Challenge of Spreading Islam in America
Ali, Yusef, Holy Qur'an
Armstrong, Karen, A History of God
________, Muhammad
Aslan, Reza, No god but God, Random House, 2006
Baldwin, James, The Fire Next Time, Dial Press, NY, 1963
Bloom, Alexander, Wini Breines, eds, Takin' it to the Streets, Oxford, 1995
Bontemps, Arna, Black Thunder, Beacon, Boston, 1963
_______, Conroy, They Seek A City
Breitman, George, The Last Year of Malcolm X, Merit, NY, 1967
_______, Malcolm X Speaks, Grove, NY., 1965
Clarke, John Henrik, ed, Malcolm X, The Man and His Times, Collier, NY, 1969
Cleaver, Soul on Ice
______, Soul on Fire
______, Post Prison Writings, Ramparts, 1969
Diop, Cheikh Anta, Cultural Unity of Africa, TWP, Chicago
DuBois, W.E.B, The Souls of Black Folk, Penguin, NY, 1996
_____, The World and Africa
_____, Black Reconstruction
Foner, Philip S., ed., The Black Panthers Speak, Da Capo Press, 1995
Frazier, E. Franklin, Black Bourgeoisie, Collier, NY, 1975
_____, Race and Culture Contacts in the Modern World, Beacon, Boston, 1957
Franklin, John Hope, From Slavery to Freedom, Alfred A. Knopf, NY, 1980
Genovese, Eugene D, From Rebellion to Revolution, Louisiana State U. Press, 1979
Gitlin, Todd, The Sixties, Years of Hope, Days of Rage, Bantam, NY, 1987
Hilliard, David, Huey, Spirit of the Panther, Thunder Mouth Press, NY, 2006
Houston, Drusilla Dunjee, Wonderful Ethiopians of the Ancient Cushite Empire, BCP, Baltimore,
1985
Howard, Elbert "Big Man", Panther on the Prowl, BCP, Baltimore, 2002
Jackson, George, Soledad Brother
Jackson, John G., Man, God and Civilization
______, Introduction to African Civilization,
Jamal, Mumia Abu, Live from Death Row, Avon, 1996
James, George G.M., Stolen Legacy, AWP, New Jersey, 1992
Kenyatta, Jomo, Facing Mt. Kenya, Vintage, NY, 1965
Lincoln, C. Eric, The Black Muslims in America, Beacon, Boston, 1961
Martin, Tony, Literary Garveyism, The Majority Press, Mass, 1983
Muhammad, Elijah, Message to the Black Man
________, Theology of Time
________, Fall of America, Muhammad's Temple No.2, Chicago, 1973
________, How to Eat to Live
Oliver, John A, Eldridge Cleaver Reborn
Polk, William R., The Arab World Today, Harvard, 1991
Sertima, Ivan Van, They Came Before Columbus, Random House, 1976
Soyinka, Wole, The Open Sore of A Continent, Oxford U. Press, 1995
Ture, Kwame, Hamilton, Charles, Black Power, Vintage, 1992
Udom, E.U. Essien, Black Nationalism, Dell, NY, 1962
Vincent, Theodore G., Black Power and the Garvey Movement, BCP, Baltimore, 2006
Walker, David, David Walker's Appeal, 1829,
Washington, Booker T, Up From Slavery, Bantam, NY, 1967
Williams, Chancellor, The Destruction of Black Civilization, TWP, Chicago, 1987
Williams, Eric, Capitalism and Slavery, University of North Carolina Press, 1994
Williams, Sherley Anne Williams, Dessa Rose, Berkley, New York, 1987
Young, Henry J, Major Black Religious Leaders, Abingdon, 1977
X, Malcolm, Autobiography of Malcolm X, Ballantine, NY, 1965
X, Marvin, Eldridge Cleaver, My friend the Devil, BBP, Berkeley, 2009
_______, Beyond Religion, toward Spirituality, BBP, Berkeley, 2007
_______, How to Recover from the Addiction to White Supremacy, BBP, Berkeley, 2008
_______, Wish I Could Tell You The Truth, BPP, Berkeley, 2005
_______, Somethin' Proper, BBP, Berkeley, 1998
_______, How I Met Isa, MA thesis, San Francisco State University, 1975, unpublished,
_______, Fly to Allah, Al Kitab Sudan, Fresno, 1969
_______, I Am Oscar Grant, BBP, Berkeley, 2010

24. AUDIOGRAPHY

Nisa Islam (Bey), Cherokee, 2004.
Nadar Ali, Fresno, 2004.
Manuel Rashid, Fresno, 2004.
John Douimbia, Grand Ayatollah of the Bay, San Francisco, 2004.
Minister Rabb Muhammad, Oakland, 2004.
Antar Bey, CEO, Your Black Muslim Bakery, Oakland, 2004.
Norman Brown, Oakland, Oakland, 2004.
Kareem Muhammad (Brother Edward), Oakland, 20