https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/19/books/review/the-dead-are-arising-les-payne-tamara-payne.html

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A New Life of Malcolm X Brimming With Detail, Insight and Feeling
*****************************************************************

Malcolm X, speaking at a Harlem rally around 1962. “It is hard not to want 
Malcolm back, because his charisma is undeniable,” Michael P. Jeffries writes 
in his review of “The Dead Are Arising.” “His heroism grew from his courage, 
but also from his delight in his Blackness and his cause.”

Credit... O'Neal L. Abel

By Michael P. Jeffries

* Oct. 19, 2020

*THE DEAD ARE ARISING*
*The Life of Malcolm X*
By Les Payne and Tamara Payne

Les Payne’s “The Dead Are Arising” arrives in late 2020, bequeathed to an 
America choked by racism and lawlessness. The book’s subject, Malcolm X, knows 
this place well, though he died in 1965. Readers may pick up this biography 
hoping for a celebration of Black pride and resilience in the midst of madness. 
Payne, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist who devoted nearly 30 years to the 
book before his death in 2018, meets these needs intermittently, but that is 
not his primary goal. Malcolm’s presence is beautifully rendered, but “The Dead 
Are Arising,” which was ultimately completed by Payne’s daughter and principal 
researcher, Tamara Payne, is not a tribute or enshrinement of achievements. 
Instead, it reconstructs the conditions and key moments of Malcolm’s life, 
thanks to hundreds of original interviews with his family, friends, colleagues 
and adversaries. Nobody has written a more poetic account.

This book reveals more of Malcolm’s childhood than we have ever seen. The 
Paynes’ research elucidates a family history of American racial terror that 
preceded his birth in 1925. Malcolm’s middle-class parents moved several times, 
often into neighborhoods they knew were hostile, confronting the Ku Klux Klan, 
local officials and bigoted employers. His father, Earl Little, died when 
Malcolm (born Malcolm Little) was 6, the victim of a streetcar accident that 
Malcolm later suspected was a cover-up for the work of a racist mob.

His mother, Louise, kept the family together as long as she could, but 
eventually succumbed to poverty and mental illness. Malcolm, then 13, and his 
seven siblings were scattered into foster care and other arrangements. Still, 
the influence of his parents, who were steeped in the teachings of Marcus 
Garvey, cannot be overstated. They could not nurture Malcolm through childhood, 
but they steeled him with the truth: He owed white people nothing. Not 
deference, or trust, or gratitude for whatever comfort he might find in life. 
Malcolm’s character and beliefs changed over the years. Defiance of white 
supremacy was his essence.

Les Payne wrote “The Dead Are Arising” in part to correct the record in Malcolm 
X’s autobiography, as is evident in his treatment of Malcolm’s troubled 
adolescence. Malcolm’s time as a hustler is subject to debate. The historian 
Manning Marable’s award-winning biography, published in 2011, argues that 
Malcolm’s autobiography embellishes his early crimes to dramatize his later 
redemption. “The Dead Are Arising” does not directly engage Marable, but it 
refutes his interpretation and fills in gaps in Malcolm’s own account. Though 
he was rarely violent, Malcolm was embedded in a social network of thieves, 
drug dealers, racketeers and prostitutes as he split his late teenage years 
between Boston and New York City. His tragic and frequently despicable behavior 
marked him for early imprisonment, if not death.

Incarceration at 20 was the pivot of Malcolm’s life. He accepted the teachings 
of the Nation of Islam while behind bars, thanks to evangelizing correspondence 
from his brothers Philbert and Reginald. Upon his release, Malcolm dedicated 
himself to his new religion and its captivating and duplicitous leader, Elijah 
Muhammad. He quickly became the group’s most effective and recognizable 
spokesman, with fierce criticism of white America and a gospel of Black 
self-respect. Malcolm’s political celebrity and unapologetic approach 
ultimately turned the leadership of the Nation of Islam against him, and 
Muhammad gave the assassination order that led to Malcolm’s killing.

Image

One possible criticism is that Payne does not provide an exhaustive account of 
Malcolm’s political philosophy. The book contains little analysis of Malcolm’s 
most celebrated speeches, debates or interviews. Instead, Payne most fully 
presents Malcolm’s ideas in contrast to those of both Muhammad and Martin 
Luther King Jr.

This discussion unfolds in one of the book’s strongest sections, a retelling of 
a bizarre arranged meeting between Malcolm and the leadership of the Ku Klux 
Klan in Atlanta in 1961. Muhammad sent Malcolm and his colleague Jeremiah X to 
attend the meeting on behalf of the Nation of Islam, and Malcolm never forgave 
him. Payne puts readers in the room, and Malcolm’s disgust at being forced to 
negotiate with terrorists is palpable. But Payne also shows how enthralling it 
was to watch Malcolm improvise and argue. In this scene and others, we are 
exposed to Malcolm’s teachings within the rhythm of Payne’s masterly 
storytelling.

The portion of the book that may receive the most attention is Payne’s account 
of Malcolm’s assassination at the Audubon Ballroom in Harlem. The details of 
the killing have never been totally clear, but Payne’s narrative is exacting. 
He spotlights key figures and examines the possible involvement of the F.B.I. 
and New York City police. But I found myself less intrigued by the loose ends 
of Malcolm’s assassination than devastated by the indignity and simplicity of 
the killing. Malcolm knew he was in danger and did little to protect himself. 
He had broken from the Nation of Islam, dedicated himself to Sunni Islam and 
begun experimenting with new tools for a global, human-rights-based movement 
for Black liberation. He was forceful, fine and weary, but not finished. And 
then three men rushed the stage, bullets ripped through Malcolm’s flesh and he 
bled to death on the floor. We lost him, again.

It is hard not to want Malcolm back, because his charisma is undeniable. His 
heroism grew from his courage, but also from his delight in his Blackness and 
his cause. Whenever I see footage of Malcolm ( 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C7IJ7npTYrU ) , he seems on the verge of 
smiling, no matter how fiery his words or powerful his enemies. He can’t help 
laughing at white America’s hypocrisy, and mocking the calls to bargain with a 
government that wanted him silenced. There was an amused confidence that 
attracted his followers, along with his rhetorical genius and love for Black 
people.

But Malcolm’s power was more than embodied charm, and he need not rise from the 
dead. His diagnosis of calamity is enough to guide us. America has never been a 
nation of laws for Black people, he said. A country that is conditionally 
lawful is not lawful at all. It is weak, and will eventually be exposed, no 
matter how much wealth and military power it amasses. And in such a country, he 
wondered, what good is it for Black people to ask for trim legal solutions to 
police violence, electoral theft, segregation and poverty?

An epilogue to “The Dead Are Arising” comments briefly on Malcolm’s legacy, but 
it doesn’t take a Pulitzer Prize winner to see Malcolm’s inheritance in the 
Black Lives Matter movement. Black Lives Matter isn’t asking for anything. Like 
Malcolm, it demands everything that Black people deserve, by any means 
necessary. It does not advocate violence, but will not abide the sick moral 
logic that condemns destruction of property as “too extreme” a response to the 
police shooting us in the back. And thanks to the leadership of Black women and 
Black L.G.B.T.Q. people, the imagination of the current movement is even more 
expansive than its predecessors in the mid-20th century. This is the promise 
they keep, and the idea that pushed Payne to write until death took the pen: We 
will exceed even Malcolm’s wildest dreams.

Michael P. Jeffries is the dean of academic affairs and a professor of American 
studies at Wellesley College. He is the author of three books on race and 
American culture.

*THE DEAD ARE ARISING
The Life of Malcolm X
* By Les Payne and Tamara Payne
Illustrated. 612 pp. Liveright. $35.


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