Not very, but does it matter?
B

 
http://corner.nationalreview.com:80/post/?q=NWFhMmI0MTI1NTUxZTMzN2UxY2I4Mjky
MDczMTYxNDc=

How Islamic is the Nation of Islam?   [John Derbyshire]


A reader points me to this ancient (1984) column by Daniel Pipes
<http://www.danielpipes.org/article/167> on the subject.  (NOTE: SEE BELOW)

My "coat of paint" sounds about right.  Perhaps polls like this latest one
from Pew Research would be more informative if the N.o.I. people were just
left out.

05/23
<http://corner.nationalreview.com/post/?q=NWFhMmI0MTI1NTUxZTMzN2UxY2I4MjkyMD
czMTYxNDc=> 11:57 AM


Louis Farrakhan Is Not a Muslim


by Daniel Pipes
Washington Post
July 2, 1984



*        <http://it.danielpipes.org/article/2341> Italian version of this
item 

Since he became involved with the presidential campaign of Jesse Jackson in
November 1983, Louis Farrakhan has been universally portrayed as a Muslim,
and his views have been ascribed to the Islamic religion. For example, in a
description of Farrakhan's enrolling to vote for the first time, an article
in The Washington Post noted that his action "is a major break with Muslim
preachings that blacks not participate in a political process controlled by
what they call white oppressors."

But this is wrong. Louis Farrakhan is not a Muslim; Islam says nothing about
blacks voting in U.S. elections. Instead, Farrakhan subscribes to an
American black religion founded in Detroit 50 years ago. His faith is not
recognized as Islamic by real Muslims, and his teachings bear almost no
resemblance to those of Islam. Farrakhan is as much a Muslim as the Shriner
is an Arab.

Farrakhan leads a group formally known as the "Nation of Islam," commonly
called the Black Muslims. The origins of this religion go back to 1931, when
Wallace D. Fard, an itinerant silk merchant, probably from Lebanon, taught
the rudiments of Islam to Elijah Poole, a 34-year-old black laborer. Poole
later changed his name to Elijah Muhammad and after the disappearance of
Fard in 1934, he became the leader of a group whose teachings were loosely
based on Fard's instructions. Many thousands of American blacks joined this
folk religion over the subsequent decades.

Although called the Nation of Islam, Elijah Muhammad's religion had almost
nothing in common with Islam. Rather, it was an original amalgam of animist
and Christian themes elaborated by an extravagant imagination.

Islam stresses the absolute transcendence and unity of God. Elijah Muhammad
said the Black Nation as a whole is God, and one person, the most powerful
Black Scientist of the age, is the Supreme Being. Islam stipulated that the
seventh-century prophet Muhammad was the last prophet sent to mankind;
Elijah Muhammad claimed prophethood for himself. Islam condemns racism;
Elijah Muhammad deemed blacks morally and spiritually superior to whites,
and believed that if blacks convert to his religion, they will eventually
destroy whites, who are devils. Therefore, while Islam calls on all people
to accept the Qur'anic message, Elijah Muhammad permitted only blacks to
join his religion. Islam imposes a great body of regulations on its
followers; Elijah Muhammad cast these out entirely or altered them beyond
recognition.

Elijah Muhammad's main political activities had nothing to do with Islam;
not his withdrawal from the U.S. electoral process, not his call for a
separate state for blacks, not his emphasis on black economic
self-sufficiency, and not his creation of a black paramilitary force, the
Fruit of Islam.

Had Elijah Muhammad called his religion something else - say, Poolism - no
one could confuse it with Islam. It would then have developed in its own
fashion into a distinct faith. But he called it the Nation of Islam, and
this simple fact of nomenclature profoundly affected its subsequent
evolution. For as Elijah Muhammad's followers came into contact with Islam
in Africa and the Middle East during the 1960s, and as Middle Eastern
Muslims took an interest in them, they began to realize how much Elijah
Muhammad's doctrines differed from Islam. The name of the American religion
brought pressure to bring its practices into conformity with Islam.

Two encounters with the Middle East had particular importance. When Malcolm
X, one of Elijah Muhammad's top lieutenants, traveled to the Middle East, he
became aware of the disparity between his faith and its supposed progenitor.
On his return to the United States, he demanded that Elijah Muhammad adopt
Islamic practices. These efforts failed, and Malcolm X left the fold to
become a Muslim, taking some of Elijah Muhammad's followers with him.

Second and even more critical, Elijah Muhammad sent some of his sons to be
educated in Cairo, where they studied Arabic and Islam. Although the sons
knew Islam, they kept their views quiet until Elijah Muhammad's death in
February 1975. Then one of them, Wallace Muhammad, succeeded his father.
Within a few months he abandoned the old tenets and adopted those of Islam:
one transcendent God, no prophet after Muhammad, no racism, the religion
open to all, and adherence to Islamic regulations. The sect led by Wallace
Muhammad is now called the American Muslim Mission.

As part of this transformation, Wallace recast his father as a "social
reformer" (not a prophet) who deliberately misinterpreted the Qur'an to make
it fit the needs of American blacks. Wallace also toned down his father's
politics, especially the demand for a separate state, and disbanded the
paramilitary force. He went so far as to take up celebrating the Fourth of
July.

Most of Elijah Muhammad's followers accepted Wallace Muhammad's authority
and became Muslims with him. Most but not all; Louis Farrakhan took over the
leadership of the minority which continued in the old beliefs.

Farrakhan uses the old name, Nation of Islam, and maintains the doctrines as
they had been under Elijah Muhammad. It was the Fruit of Islam that guarded
Jesse Jackson in the 1984 presidential campaign before the Secret Service
took over. In April, Farrakhan warned the Democratic Party that if Jackson's
demands were not taken seriously at the national convention, he would "lead
an army of black men and women to Washington, D.C. and we will . . .
negotiate for a separate state or territory of our own." Farrakhan's
statements about Hitler, Israel, and Judaism continue in the anti-Semitic
tradition begun by Elijah Muhammad.

Wallace Muhammad is a Muslim. Louis Farrakhan is not. Farrakhan's
reprehensible statements must not be ascribed to the fair-minded traditions
of Islam. 

 



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