Louis Abdul Farrakhan (1933- )

January 18, 2007 
/ Contributed By: George Tamblyn

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Louis Farrakhan||

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Louis Abdul Farrakhan was born on May 11, 1933 in Bronx, New York as Louis Eugene Walcott.  Walcott, who grew up in Roxbury, Massachusetts, excelled as a musician, singer and track star.  He attended a Boston-area school for gifted children and was given national exposure at age 14 when, as one of the first African Americans to appear on the Ted Mack Amateur Hour, he won the competition for that episode.  After high school Walcott attended Winston-Salem Teachers College for two years and then worked as a calypso guitarist-singer. Walcott joined the Nation of Islam (NOI) in 1955 and changed his name to Louis X and later Louis Farrakhan.  Initially he was a follower of Malcolm X, but became a competitor in the period before Malcolm’s assassination in 1965.

When longtime Nation of Islam leader Elijah Muhammad died in 1975, his son, Wallace D. Muhammad, took control of the organization and repudiated many of his father’s teachings and began the process of integrating the NOI into the orthodox Muslim community, Louis Farrakhan and other NOI followers were displeased with the organization’s new direction.  In 1978, Farrakhan and the dissidents reestablished the Nation of Islam.

Farrakhan, who emphasizes black self reliance, has preached the wickedness of whites and has been condemned as anti-Semitic by a number of organizations.  In 1995, he was one of the principal organizers of the “Million Man March” in Washington, D.C., where African American men celebrated unity and family values. In January 1996 Farrakhan made a 20-nation “world friendship tour” that included stops in Iran, Libya, and Iraq. Farrakhan was critical of the U.S. government, provoking condemnation by U.S. officials. Farrakhan conducted another world tour the following year and met with Palestinian leader Yasir Arafat.

Author Profile

George Tamblyn is a Ph.D. candidate in African American history at the University of Washington where he works with Professor Quintard Taylor. His current project, Race and Courts Martial during the Korean War examines the military justice system as applied to white and black soldiers serving in Korea. The paper is part of a larger study of race and the military in the 20th Century. Tamblyn, a retired attorney with more than 30 years of practice, received an MSc. Degree in 2000 from the University of Edinburgh in World War II Studies. While there he wrote as his thesis Winston Churchill and the Bombing of Germany. Tamblyn teaches American, World, African American and Military history in various community colleges and universities including Seattle Pacific University and Washington State University.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Tamblyn, G. (2007, January 18). Louis Abdul Farrakhan (1933- ). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/farrakhan-louis-abdul-1933/

Source of the Author's Information:

Kwame A. Appiah and Henry Louis Gates, eds., Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African & African American Experience, (New York: Basic Civitas Books, 1999), 732, 33; Sundiata Keita Cha-Jua and Clarence Lang, “Providence, Patriarchy, Pathology: Louis Farrakhan’s Rise & Decline,” New Politics, vol. 6, no. 2 (new series), whole no. 22, Winter 1997. http://www.wpunj.edu/~newpol/issue22/chajua22.htm.

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