Message to the Blackman#1459
$ 8.00
Message To the Black Man
Written in 1965 by Elijah Muhammad,
the then Leader of the Nation of Islam
Message To the Black man was the first book I had read
that spoke of an all-Black theology and promoted unity now.
In brief, Elijah Muhammad (formerly Elijah Poole) says he
met a man whom convinced him that he was God in person.
That this man taught him for 3 years and from that teaching
he builds the Nation of Islam, creates a Malcolm X, Louis
Farrakhan, Muhammad Ali and guides Alex Hailey to study
his "Roots". He establishes the first Black International
Weekly Newspaper (In Color) "Muhammad Speaks", establishes
a private K-12 Elementary School system via Mosques in every
major city, nearly corners the market importing fish which
he sells to Black people to replace pork, and buys thousands
of acres of farmland from which he grows food that the Nation
sold through its own grocery stores.
Muhammad was born Elijah Poole in Sandersville, Georgia, as one of 13 children of Willie Poole (1868–1942) and Mariah Hall (1873–1958) both were tenant farmers (share croppers). At the age of 16 he left home and traveled about America. In 1917 he married Clara Evans, later to be known as Mother Clara Muhammad. In 1923 he finally settled in Detroit, Michigan where he worked at an automobile factory. The young Elijah Poole apparently witnessed three lynchings before the age of twenty, no doubt contributing to his grim evaluation of whites. In the early 1930s, Muhammad became acquainted with a W.D. Fard also known as Wallace Fard Muhammad, whose followers consider to be Allah "in Person" (Theology of Time Series). This consideration, however, is entirely against the teachings of mainstream Islam, though followers of Elijah Muhammad are quick to support this controversial position using both Bible and Qur'an. W.Fard Muhammad, then working as a peddler, had already established his Temple of Islam in Detroit, he had approximately twenty-five thousand followers.[citation needed] The beliefs taught by Fard, though similar to orthodox Islam in many essentials, also differed from it in several ways. Scholars who reject the idea that Fard Muhammad is "Allah in Person" have identified a wide range of possible influences on Fard's theology including Sufi Islam, the teachings of the contemporary Noble Drew Ali of the Moorish Science Temple, Egyptology, Numerology, Eastern mysticism, Black Nationalism, the earlier ideas of economic independence as espoused by Marcus Garvey, and more. Upon Fard Muhammad's disappearance in 1934, following his arrest and departure from Detroit, Elijah Poole, renamed Elijah Muhammad, by Fard Muhammad, became the successor to the Nation of Islam and Supreme Minister. In 1942, Muhammad was arrested in Chicago on charges of sedition and violation of the Selective Service Act. He was cleared of the sedition charges, but was convicted of the others, specifically for instructing his followers to avoid the draft. Elijah Muhammad was sent to Federal prison for four years.