Hubert Brown (H. Rap) /Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin (1943- )

April 28, 2018 
/ Contributed By: Daren Salter

H. Rap Brown

Courtesy US Library of Congress (LC-U9- 17744-28)

H. Rap Brown succeeded Stokely Carmichael as chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and was a prominent figure in the Black Panther Party. A leading proponent of Black Power and a polarizing media icon, Brown symbolized both the power and the dangers—for white Americans and for radical activists themselves—of the civil rights movement’s new militancy in the late 1960s.

Brown was born in 1943 and raised in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.  In 1960 he joined the Non-Violent Action Group (NAG) and moved to Washington, D.C. In 1964 he became NAG chairman. His activities with NAG soon drew him to SNCC, which was then engaged in voter-registration drives in the Deep South. Brown quickly distinguished himself as a charismatic leader and effective organizer. He was appointed director of voter registration for the state of Alabama in 1966 and replaced Carmichael as national chairman a year later.

As SNCC chairman, Brown’s rhetoric proved more militant and inflammatory than even Carmichael’s. At the same time, like Carmichael, he struggled to translate SNCC’s vision into concrete terms and programs. In large part this was due to a paralyzing barrage of criminal charges levied by federal and state officials, from inciting a riot in Maryland, to violating the National Firearms Act, to illegally crossing state lines, to skipping bail. During his firearms trial in 1970, Brown disappeared for seventeen months and was placed on the FBI’s “Ten Most Wanted” list. In late 1971 he reemerged after being arrested on armed robbery charges in Manhattan, New York.  Convicted on the last charge, Brown served five years in Attica State Prison.

While in prison, Brown embraced Islam and changed his name to Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin. Following his release he settled in Atlanta, Georgia where he started a mosque and operated a small grocery store and community center. Seemingly removed from the firestorms of his youth, Al-Amin’s life took another dramatic turn in 2000 when he was charged with murdering a black police officer and injuring his partner in a gun battle outside Al-Amin’s store. Despite some controversy surrounding the evidence, Al-Amin was convicted in 2002 and is currently serving a life sentence.

Author Profile

Daren Salter is a PhD candidate in American history at the University of Washington. He received a Master’s Degree in American History from San Francisco State University, where he was named the History Department’s Distinguished Graduate Student for 2004. A student of race, labor, and radicalism, Salter’s essay, “Legacy of Paradox: The Communist Party, Civil Rights, and the Politics of Race in the Pacific Northwest, 1928-1945,” was awarded the History Department’s York-Mason Prize for outstanding graduate essay on African Americans in the West in 2006. He is a past Fellow at the Harry Bridges Center for Labor Studies and was a project coordinator and Associate Editor for the Seattle Civil Rights and Labor History Project from 2005-2009. He currently teaches Humanities at the Northwest School in Seattle.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Salter, D. (2018, April 28). Hubert Brown (H. Rap) /Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin (1943- ). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/brown-hubert-h-rap-jamil-abdullah-al-amin-1943/

Source of the Author's Information:

James Haskins, Profiles in Black Power (New York:  Doubleday & Co. 1972), 217-238; H. Rap Brown and Ekwueme Michael Thelwell, Die Nigger Die! A Political Autobiography (Lawrence Hill Books, 1969); Ekwueme Michael Thelwell, “H. Rap Brown/Jamil Al-Amin: A Profoundly American Story,” The Nation, February 28, 2002; https://www.thenation.com/authors/ekwueme-michael-thelwell/.

Further Reading

|

Joe Winston Jackson (1933- )

Joseph Jackson was the first African American to serve as the mayor of Pasco, Washington.  Jackson was one of the...