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Malcolm X - Death and aftermath

A Wisdom Archive on Malcolm X - Death and aftermath

Malcolm X - Death and aftermath

A selection of articles related to Malcolm X - Death and aftermath

We recommend this article: Malcolm X - Death and aftermath - 1, and also this: Malcolm X - Death and aftermath - 2.
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Malcolm X - Death and aft...
Malcolm X, Malcolm X - A Changed Man, Malcolm X - Africa, Malcolm X - Biographies and speeches, Malcolm X - Birth and early years, Malcolm X - Death and aftermath, Malcolm X - Funeral, Malcolm X - Hajj, Malcolm X - Marriage, Malcolm X - Name, Malcolm X - Nation of Islam, Malcolm X - Notes, Malcolm X - Prison, 1930 US Census with Malcolm Little and siblings in Lansing, Michigan

ARTICLES RELATED TO Malcolm X - Death and aftermath

Malcolm X - Death and aftermath: Encyclopedia - Malcolm X

Malcolm X, (born Malcolm Little May 19, 1925 – February 21, 1965) also known as Detroit Red, El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz, and Omowale, was a longtime spokesman for the Nation of Islam. He was also founder of the Muslim Mosque, Inc. and the Organization of Afro-American Unity. During his life, Malcolm went from being a street-wise Boston hoodlum to one of the most prominent black nationalist leaders in the United States. As a militant leader, Malcolm X advocated black pride, economic self-reliance, and identi ...

Including:

Read more here: » Malcolm X: Encyclopedia - Malcolm X

Malcolm X - Death and aftermath: Encyclopedia II - Malcolm X - Death and aftermath
In 1964, Life magazine published a famous photograph of Malcolm X holding an M1 Carbine and pulling back the curtains to peer out of a window. This photograph is a popular image on T-shirts and often appears with the slogan "By any means necessary." The photo was taken in connection with Malcolm's declaration that he would defend himself from the daily death threats which he and his family were receiving. The undercover FBI informants warned officials that Malcolm X had been marked for assassination. One officer undercover with the Nation of Islam is said to have reported that he had be ...

See also:

Malcolm X, Malcolm X - Name, Malcolm X - Birth and early years, Malcolm X - Prison, Malcolm X - Nation of Islam, Malcolm X - Marriage, Malcolm X - Hajj, Malcolm X - A Changed Man, Malcolm X - Africa, Malcolm X - Death and aftermath, Malcolm X - Funeral, Malcolm X - Biographies and speeches, Malcolm X - Notes

Read more here: » Malcolm X: Encyclopedia II - Malcolm X - Death and aftermath

Malcolm X - Death and aftermath: Encyclopedia II - Malcolm X - Marriage

In 1958 Malcolm married Betty X (née Sanders) in Lansing, Michigan. They had six daughters together, all of whom carried the surname of Shabazz: Attillah, born in 1958; Qubilah born in 1960; Ilyasah born in 1962; Gumilah born in 1964 and twins, Malaak and Malikah, who were born after Malcolm's death in 1965. As Malcolm worked tirelessly for the Nation of Islam, he was increasingly exposed to rumours of Elijah Muhammad's extra-marital affairs with young secretaries. Adultery is severely shunned in the teachings of the Nation of Islam. ...

See also:

Malcolm X, Malcolm X - Name, Malcolm X - Birth and early years, Malcolm X - Prison, Malcolm X - Nation of Islam, Malcolm X - Marriage, Malcolm X - Hajj, Malcolm X - A Changed Man, Malcolm X - Africa, Malcolm X - Death and aftermath, Malcolm X - Funeral, Malcolm X - Biographies and speeches, Malcolm X - Notes

Read more here: » Malcolm X: Encyclopedia II - Malcolm X - Marriage

Malcolm X - Death and aftermath: Encyclopedia - Aftermath

Aftermath, is first attested in the 16th century in the meaning "second crop" ("after-mowing", dialectal math, from Anglo-Saxon mæð "mowing" (c.f. meadow), from Proto-Germanic *mæthan. The figurative use now current arises in the mid-17th century. The word is used generally to refer to effects, or consequences, typically those that follow catastrophic events, both man-made and natural. It is almost always used in a negative sense—that is, the deaths from exposure to radiation in Hiroshima are seen as a ...

Including:

Read more here: » Aftermath: Encyclopedia - Aftermath

Malcolm X - Death and aftermath: Encyclopedia - X

X is the twenty-fourth letter of the Latin alphabet. Its name in English is ex (/ɛks/). In phonetics, x is the IPA and X-SAMPA symbol for the voiceless velar fricative (IPA is used for pronunciation throughout this article). The consonant cluster /ks/ was in Ancient Greece written as Chi 'Χ' (Western Greek) or Xi 'Ξ' (Eastern Greek). In the end, Chi was standardized as Including:

Read more here: » X: Encyclopedia - X

Malcolm X - Death and aftermath: Encyclopedia - X-Men

The X-Men Art by Salvador Larroca. (See also List of X-Men) (See also Ultimate X-Men) The X-Men are a team of comic book superheroes in the Marvel Comics universe. Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, they debuted in X-Men #1 from September 1963, the same month as the premiere of The Avengers. The X-Men franchise, with its original stories of youthful alienation in which teens literally are the freaks they often figuratively feel like, has grown to become one of the most popular comic books producing dozens of spin-off series over the years and turning some of ...

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Read more here: » X-Men: Encyclopedia - X-Men

Malcolm X - Death and aftermath: Encyclopedia - Aftermath!

Aftermath! is a pen and paper Role-Playing Game which was published in 1981 by Fantasy Games Unlimited. It is set in a post-apocalypic world in which the characters typically have to fight for food, water, basic supplies and shelter. The rules are reasonably complex and include many flow charts and tables to enable the Games Master (equivalent to a Dungeon Master) to simulate the world. This leads to a very immersive gaming experience. However, it do ...

Including:

Read more here: » Aftermath!: Encyclopedia - Aftermath!

Malcolm X - Death and aftermath: Encyclopedia - X anime

X, an early work of the hit all-female manga-ka group CLAMP, details the apocalypse in a very literal adaptation of the Book of Revelation. The first chapter of the manga originally appeared in the May 1992 issue of Asuka. The manga has yet to be completed, but it has been adapted a movie (X/1999 or X: The Destiny War) and an anime TV series. The manga is published in Japan by Kadokawa Shoten under the Asuka Comics line. In North America, Viz Communications publishes it in English under the name "X/1999". In Singapore, it is called "X" and is published in English by Chuan ...

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Read more here: » X anime: Encyclopedia - X anime

Malcolm X - Death and aftermath: Encyclopedia - X-wing

The Incom T-65 X-wing, a fictional starfighter in the Star Wars universe, is the main all-purpose craft of the Rebel Alliance. In A New Hope, the X-wing is the craft that Luke Skywalker uses to destroy the Empire's first Death Star at the Battle of Yavin. Most of the information that follows below is not featured in the Star Wars films themselves, only in the Expanded Universe of books and games released later. One such series is the X-wing series which features Rogue Squadron and the liberation of Coruscan ...

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Read more here: » X-wing: Encyclopedia - X-wing

Malcolm X - Death and aftermath: Encyclopedia - X-Statix

Cover to X-Statix TPB Volume 1. Art by Mike Allred. Spike Saint Anna Fan Boy Henrietta Hunter X-Statix was the name of a fictional team of mutant superheroes in Marvel Comics, specifically designed to be ironic media superstars. The team, created by Peter Milligan and Mike Allred, first appeared in X-Force #116, and originally went by the name X-Force. X-Statix - About the series. In 2001, the X-Men family of titles were being revamped by th ...

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Read more here: » X-Statix: Encyclopedia - X-Statix

Malcolm X - Death and aftermath: Encyclopedia - Death

Death is the cessation of physical life in a living organism, or the state of the organism after that event. Death - Interpretations of death. In almost all societies, death has one or several symbols associated with it. Common symbols of death in Western cultures include the grim reaper and the color black; conversely, in certain Eastern cultures, the color white is considered symbolic of death. The grave is a metonym for death. Biologically, death can occur to wholes, to parts, or to both. For exam ...

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Read more here: » Death: Encyclopedia - Death

Malcolm X - Death and aftermath: Encyclopedia - X-ray

X-ray or Röntgen radiation is a form of electromagnetic radiation with a wavelength in the range of 10 nanometers to 100 picometers (corresponding to frequencies in the range 30 PHz to 3 EHz). X-rays are primarily used for diagnostic medical imaging and crystallography. X-rays are a form of ionizing radiation and as such can be dangerous. In most languages it is called Röntgen radiation (or an equivalent name) after its discoverer Wilhelm Röntgen. X-ray - Physics. X-rays with a wavel ...

Including:

Read more here: » X-ray: Encyclopedia - X-ray

Malcolm X - Death and aftermath: Encyclopedia - X-Factor

X-Factor was a Marvel comic book series, published from 1985 until 1998. X-Factor was one of many spin-offs of the popular X-Men franchise. Like the X-Men, X-Factor was a team of mutant superheroes, born with various superhuman powers who used their abilities to protect a world that hates and fears them. The first X-Factor consisted of the same members as the original X-Men. In 1991, Marvel unveiled the second X-Factor, initially written by Peter David, a U.S. government-sponsored team that incorporated many seconda ...

Including:

Read more here: » X-Factor: Encyclopedia - X-Factor

Malcolm X - Death and aftermath: Encyclopedia II - Malcolm X - Assassination

In 1964, Life magazine published a famous photograph of Malcolm X holding an M1 Carbine and pulling back the curtains to peer out of a window. This photograph is a popular image on T-shirts and often appears with the slogan "By any means necessary." The photo was taken in connection with Malcolm's declaration that he would defend himself from the daily death threats which he and his family were receiving. The undercover FBI informants warned officials that Malcolm X had been marked for assassination. One officer undercover with the Nation of Islam is said to have reported that he had been ord ...

See also:

Malcolm X, Malcolm X - Name, Malcolm X - Birth and early years, Malcolm X - Prison, Malcolm X - Nation of Islam, Malcolm X - Marriage, Malcolm X - Tensions, Malcolm X - Hajj, Malcolm X - A Changed Man, Malcolm X - Africa, Malcolm X - Assassination, Malcolm X - Funeral, Malcolm X - Biographies and speeches, Malcolm X - Media files, Malcolm X - Notes

Read more here: » Malcolm X: Encyclopedia II - Malcolm X - Assassination

Malcolm X - Death and aftermath: Encyclopedia II - Malcolm X - Marriage

In 1958 Malcolm married Betty X (née Sanders) in Lansing, Michigan. They had six daughters together, all of whom carried the surname of Shabazz: Attallah (also spelled Attillah), born in 1958; Qubilah, born in 1960; Ilyasah, born in 1962; Gamilah (also spelled Gumilah), born in 1964; and twins, Malaak and Malikah, born after Malcolm's death in 1965. As Malcolm worked tirelessly for the Nation of Islam, he was increasingly exposed to rumours of Elijah Muhammad's extramarital affairs with young secretaries. Adultery is severely shunned ...

See also:

Malcolm X, Malcolm X - Name, Malcolm X - Birth and early years, Malcolm X - Prison, Malcolm X - Nation of Islam, Malcolm X - Marriage, Malcolm X - Tensions, Malcolm X - Hajj, Malcolm X - A Changed Man, Malcolm X - Africa, Malcolm X - Assassination, Malcolm X - Funeral, Malcolm X - Biographies and speeches, Malcolm X - Media files, Malcolm X - Notes

Read more here: » Malcolm X: Encyclopedia II - Malcolm X - Marriage

Malcolm X - Death and aftermath: Encyclopedia II - Malcolm X - Tensions

By the summer of 1963, tension in the Nation of Islam reached boiling point. Malcolm believed that Elijah Muhammad was jealous of his popularity (as were several senior ministers). Malcolm watched the March on Washington critically, unable to understand why black people were excited over a demonstration "run by whites in front of a statue of a president who has been dead for a hundred years and who didn't like us when he was alive." Later in the year, following the John F. Kennedy assassination, Malcolm delivered a speech as he regula ...

See also:

Malcolm X, Malcolm X - Name, Malcolm X - Birth and early years, Malcolm X - Prison, Malcolm X - Nation of Islam, Malcolm X - Marriage, Malcolm X - Tensions, Malcolm X - Hajj, Malcolm X - A Changed Man, Malcolm X - Africa, Malcolm X - Assassination, Malcolm X - Funeral, Malcolm X - Biographies and speeches, Malcolm X - Media files, Malcolm X - Notes

Read more here: » Malcolm X: Encyclopedia II - Malcolm X - Tensions

Malcolm X - Death and aftermath: Encyclopedia II - Malcolm X - Africa

Among the little known and least mentioned facts about the life of Malcolm X are his excursions in Africa. In all, Malcolm X visited Africa on three separate occasions, once in 1959 and twice in 1964. During his visits, he met officials, as well as spoke on television and radio in such diverse places as: Cairo, Egypt; Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; Dar Es Salaam, Tanganyika (now Tanzania); Lagos and Ibadan, Nigeria; Accra, Winneba, and Legon, Ghana; Conakry, Guinea; Algier ...

See also:

Malcolm X, Malcolm X - Name, Malcolm X - Birth and early years, Malcolm X - Prison, Malcolm X - Nation of Islam, Malcolm X - Marriage, Malcolm X - Tensions, Malcolm X - Hajj, Malcolm X - A Changed Man, Malcolm X - Africa, Malcolm X - Assassination, Malcolm X - Funeral, Malcolm X - Biographies and speeches, Malcolm X - Media files, Malcolm X - Notes

Read more here: » Malcolm X: Encyclopedia II - Malcolm X - Africa

Malcolm X - Death and aftermath: Encyclopedia II - Malcolm X - Hajj

On April 13, 1964, Malcolm departed JFK Airport, New York for Cairo, Egypt by way of Frankfurt, Germany. It was the second time Malcolm had been to Africa. Malcolm left Cairo arriving in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia at about three in the morning. He was automatically suspect due to his inability to speak the Arabic language and his United States passport. He was separated from the group he came with and was isolated. He spent about 20 hours wearing the ihram, a two-piece towel outfit wrapping the wearer from the waist down with one towel and fro ...

See also:

Malcolm X, Malcolm X - Name, Malcolm X - Birth and early years, Malcolm X - Prison, Malcolm X - Nation of Islam, Malcolm X - Marriage, Malcolm X - Tensions, Malcolm X - Hajj, Malcolm X - A Changed Man, Malcolm X - Africa, Malcolm X - Assassination, Malcolm X - Funeral, Malcolm X - Biographies and speeches, Malcolm X - Media files, Malcolm X - Notes

Read more here: » Malcolm X: Encyclopedia II - Malcolm X - Hajj

Malcolm X - Death and aftermath: Encyclopedia II - Malcolm X - Name

He explained the name he chose by saying, "To take one's 'X' is to take on a certain mystery, a certain possibility of power in the eyes of one's peers and one's enemies ... The 'X'; announced what you had been and what you had become: Ex-smoker, Ex-drinker, Ex-Christian, Ex-slave." The 'X' also stood for the unknown original surname of the slaves from whom Malcolm X descended, in preference to continuing to use a name which would have been given by the slave owner. This rationale made many members of the Nation o ...

See also:

Malcolm X, Malcolm X - Name, Malcolm X - Birth and early years, Malcolm X - Prison, Malcolm X - Nation of Islam, Malcolm X - Marriage, Malcolm X - Tensions, Malcolm X - Hajj, Malcolm X - A Changed Man, Malcolm X - Africa, Malcolm X - Assassination, Malcolm X - Funeral, Malcolm X - Biographies and speeches, Malcolm X - Media files, Malcolm X - Notes

Read more here: » Malcolm X: Encyclopedia II - Malcolm X - Name

Malcolm X - Death and aftermath: Encyclopedia II - Malcolm X - Prison

Malcolm became a small time hustler and was known on the street as "Detroit Red", due to his lighter skin tone and hair color. He was arrested in Boston on January 12, 1946 at the age of 20 and sentenced to eight to ten years' imprisonment on charges of breaking and entering, carrying firearms, and larceny. He later earned the nickname Satan in the Charlestown State Prison for his constant cursing, especially of God and the Bible. While in jail in 1948, he received letters from his brother Reginald, asking him to join the Nation of Islam (NO ...

See also:

Malcolm X, Malcolm X - Name, Malcolm X - Birth and early years, Malcolm X - Prison, Malcolm X - Nation of Islam, Malcolm X - Marriage, Malcolm X - Tensions, Malcolm X - Hajj, Malcolm X - A Changed Man, Malcolm X - Africa, Malcolm X - Assassination, Malcolm X - Funeral, Malcolm X - Biographies and speeches, Malcolm X - Media files, Malcolm X - Notes

Read more here: » Malcolm X: Encyclopedia II - Malcolm X - Prison

More material related to Malcolm X can be found here:
Main Page
for
Malcolm X
YouTube Videos
related to
Malcolm X
Index of Articles
related to
Malcolm X
Index of Articles
related to
Malcolm X - Death and aft...



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