Publisher's Synopsis
Elijah Muhammad and the Fight for Black Independence tells the story of a man who dared to reimagine Black America's destiny. Born Elijah Poole in rural Georgia in 1897, he migrated to Detroit in 1923 and, by 1934, had succeeded Wallace D. Fard as head of the Nation of Islam. Under his leadership, Muhammad transformed a small Detroit congregation into a nationwide movement advocating Black self-reliance, economic empowerment, and separation from a society built on white supremacy.
Muhammad's message was simple but radical: Black people were Allah's chosen, fully capable of building their own schools, businesses, and farms without depending on white America. He taught that white society was a deliberate creation of a Black scientist named Yakub-an idea that gave followers a sense of pride and agency amid systemic oppression. His 1965 classic, Message to the Blackman in America, laid out a blueprint for economic independence and moral discipline that still resonates today. He mentored figures like Malcolm X and Muhammad Ali, instilling in them the courage to challenge the status quo and claim their own power. Yet his separatist ideology and controversial doctrines sparked fierce criticism both from within the civil rights movement and from U.S. authorities, who once jailed him for sedition during World War II. Bold, uncompromising, and visionary, Elijah Muhammad gave Black Americans a new lens through which to see themselves, not as victims waiting for change but as architects of their own freedom. This book captures his fiery spirit and enduring impact on the fight for true independence.