<http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/FromNyToIsraelSultanRevealsTheStoriesBehindT
heNews/~3/SSO8OBVhbbI/sufi-abdul-hamid-black-hitler-of-harlem.html?utm_sourc
e=feedburner&utm_medium=email> Sufi Abdul Hamid, the Black Hitler of Harlem

Posted: 13 Apr 2011 08:30 PM PDT

The Black Hitler was a Chicago community organizer who moved to New York.
Somewhere along the way he picked up a gold lined cape, a purple turban and
a stepladder which he used to give speeches outside of the Jewish stores
owned by Harlem's dwindling Jewish community.  

 
<http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-cly2xKVUR6U/TaH2C9aOTfI/AAAAAAAAEnM/_-5p8ZLxsy4/s
1600/muslimblackhitler.jpg> The cape and the turban were sometimes combined
with Nazi style military shirt and pants, and jackboots, along with a fez,
completing the uniform of a man who is remember today as a pioneering labor
leader-- but was known back then as the Black Hitler. A dagger thrust
through his belt completed the ensemble. 

In his stepladder speeches, he declared himself the only man who could stop
the Jews, accusing them of spreading filth and disease, and called on his
followers to tear out the tongue of any Jew they met. He boasted that he was
the "only one fit to carry on the war against the Jews" and vowed an "an
open bloody war against the Jews who are much worse than all other whites."
It was speeches like that which earned him the title, 'Black Hitler' and
intimidated local businesses into hiring workers from his own private labor
union.  

The Black Hitler styled himself as Sufi Abdul Hamid, when he opened his
mosque, he frontloaded his name all the way up to His Holiness Bishop Amiru
Al-Mu-Minin Sufi A. Hamid. His press man claimed that he had been born in
Egypt beneath the shadow of a pyramid. The truth is that he was born Eugene
Brown in Lowell, Massachusetts and in Chicago had called himself Bishop
Conshankin, a Buddhist cleric. Like the Nation of Islam, which was finding
its feet at around the same time, his theology was a hodgepodge of
traditional Islam and whatever else he picked up along the way.

It is unknown what connection Sufi Abdul Hamid had to the burgeoning Nation
of Islam, but in the year before he moved to Harlem-- Nation of Islam
founder Fard Muhammad disappeared, and his successor Elijah Muhammad moved
to Chicago after conflicts with the state government and rival NOI leaders.
Hamid was probably never part of the Nation of Islam, but he had almost
certainly seen it in action, and his New York operation was guided by
similar methods. 


The year was 1932. In Germany, the actual Hitler was running for president.
In New York City, Mayor Jimmy Walker was still reigning as the corrupt but
entertaining figurehead of the Tammany Hall Democratic party apparatus, but
not for long. In a few months the Seabury Commission's investigation into
the city's horrifyingly corrupt justice system would send the Tin Pan Alley
singing mayor fleeing off to Europe along with his showgirl wife.   

The Great Depression had hit New York's prosperous commercial and industrial
sector like a sledgehammer. The city that never slept had not gone quiet,
but it had slowed down. New York's black population had exploded in its boom
days drawn by the lure of jobs, but now that the bust had come the streets
of Harlem were full of unemployed men. The time was ripe for a messiah or a
violent explosion. And Sufi Abdul Hamid offered them both.

Hamid was not the only one working the streets of Harlem. The Communists in
the form of the Young Communist League and the Young Liberators had been
there first looking for cannon fodder for the revolution. The Japanese were
dreaming of a black army that would serve as their fifth column in the
conquest of the United States. Both were to be disappointed. The Black
Communist, once commonplace among Harlem intellectuals, would become an
endangered species beginning with the Hitler-Stalin pact and ending with the
liberal takeover of civil rights. But for now some of those same
intellectuals would visit Japan and even endorse its brutal invasion of
China.

Marcus Garvey's UNIA also took Japan's side. And Imperial Japan's
simultaneous cultivation of Muslims in order to subvert the British Empire,
also lead to ties in the US between Japanese officials and the Nation of
Islam's Elijah Muhammad. The Moorish Science Temple, a more explicit fusion
of Islam, Asiatic exoticism and Black Nationalism, would eventually be
investigated by the FBI for ties to Japan. And the Temple was a probable
influence on Hamid's own Universal Holy Temple of Tranquility. The People's
Voice, a left wing black newspaper, would even claim that Hamid's temple had
been partly funded by Japan.

But Sufi Abdul Hamid did not need Japanese money. He had something better.
For all his theatrics, Hamid had been a community organizer and under the
slick mustache, the gold lined cape and his gleaming dagger-- beat the heart
of a union organizer.

What Hamid came up with was a combination labor union, employment agency,
protection racket, Islamic cult and protest movement. With black
unemployment in Harlem running as high as 50 percent, he offered to find
jobs for black men who paid him a dollar. And to make sure they got hired,
his men picketed businesses demanding that they get put on the payroll.
Businesses which didn't have a proper proportion of black employees were
accused of racism and exploitation. Businesses which did were harassed
anyway until they fired their black employees and hired Hamid's men instead.

Hamid's 125th street stepladder harangues intimidated Jewish store owners
and customers, and many black customers as well. Whenever he succeeded, he
picked up more recruits who might not have believed in his religious
message, but liked the idea of getting a job. Businesses that paid up didn't
have to worry that the cape wearing hatemonger would show up in front of
their store screaming violent threats. And so Hamid's following grew. As did
his bank account.

 
<http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-JE06xj6oXFw/TaH2NBJAZRI/AAAAAAAAEnQ/YHCGRaqlgsU/s
1600/muslimblackhitler3.jpg> By 1938, Hamid had his own private plane and a
white secretary. His union had gone through many names, from the Negro
Industrial and Clerical Alliance to the Afro-American Federation of Labor.
Adam Clayton Powell briefly joined forces with Sufi Abdul Hamid in labor
protests and store boycotts, but Hamid was too power hungry to work with
anyone for long. His rhetoric moved beyond anti-white and anti-Jewish racism
to targeting light skinned blacks. Violent clashes with rival black unions
led to Hamid's arrest for stabbing Hammie Snipes, a former follower of
Marcus Garvey turned Communist labor union organizer. And the courts barred
Hamid from his picketing and forced him to focus his energies on his mosque.
But in between, Hamid would play a role in Harlem's first race riot.

The Harlem riot of 1935 had many of the characteristics of the type. False
information about police brutality circulated by radicals looking to stir up
a mob. Looting misrepresented as a civil rights protest. And a swelling
undercurrent of bigotry portrayed as outrage. As Congresswoman Maxine Waters
would call the LA riots, "a revolution" and a "a spontaneous reaction to a
lot of injustice"-- Nannie H. Burroughs compared the Harlem riot to the
Boston Tea Party and claimed that it was the duty of the oppressed to
revolt. 

The tactic was an old one, to unleash violence and then claim to be the only
ones who could bottle it up again. Hamid had begun by intimidating
storeowners with the threat of racial violence, but the race riot of 1935
would begin the intimidation of the entire neighborhood and eventually the
entire city. Once unleashed and legitimized, the violence could no longer be
bottled up again. A race riot before 1935 was an unusual phenomenon in
Harlem. After 1935, it became far less commonplace. Next year when Joe Louis
lost his first fight against Max Schmeling, Harlem rioters attacked white
men in the street and dropped bricks from buildings on passing cars. 

The 1935 riot would destroy as many black businesses as white ones. But that
was the goal of the Communists who had played a major role in organizing the
riot, who did not want to see black men reach the middle class, and of Sufi
Abdul Hamid, who wanted to increase the scope of his protection racket. The
courts had taken a dim view of his labor organizing tactics, but a race riot
meant that stores could be hit up in a whole new way. 

The riots and arsons went on for three days. Two hundred stores were
destroyed and many more were looted, fires were set to cries of "Let it
burn". Entire businesses were wiped out. Some never recovered. The damage to
Harlem's business district was estimated at one million dollars. Bodies went
to hospitals and morgues.

After the riot, Hamid began transitioning to a more moderate image. In an
interview with the liberal Nation magazine, he disavowed bigotry and claimed
to be a champion of the underprivileged. Liberal newspapers were all too
eager to accept the nation that the riot was caused by oppression and
economic conditions. The New York Times championed an aid package for
Harlem. While some Jewish newspapers called the attacks a 'Pogrom', the
socialist left wing Forward insisted on whitewashing the attacks as a
protest against the authorities. 

The judicial crackdown on Hamid's labor extortion project refocused his
attention on his mosque, the Universal Holy Temple of Tranquility, where he
dubbed himself a Bishop. His nickname migrated from the Black Hitler to the
Black Mufti. He married Queenie St. Clair, who ran Harlem's numbers racket.
Their marriage however ended badly when Queenie shot him, but failed to kill
him. Hamid married again and bought a private plane, an obscene luxury at a
time when many of those he claimed to help didn't have enough to eat. But
Hamid frugally kept it low on gas. The plane ran out of fuel over Long
Island and crashed. Hamid died, survived by his white secretary who suffered
only a broken elbow. 

His new wife, a candle shop owner and fortune teller named Dorothy Hamid,
who styled herself Madame Fu Futtam, and improbably claimed to be Asian,
attempted to keep Hamid's mosque going with visits that he reportedly made
to her nightly from beyond the grave. Her prediction that Hamid would return
from the grave in sixty days did not come true. Not long after the mosque
had become a dance hall featuring a one legged dancer. Today the site at 103
Morningside Avenue is the home of St. Luke's Baptist Church.

But though Sufi Abdul Hamid is mostly forgotten today, his legacy lives on. 


60 years later back on 125th street where the Black Hitler had delivered his
stepladder harangues, the smashed windows and burning stores would find
another ominous echo. In the winter of 1995-- Al Sharpton and his National
Action Network wennt to Harlem to lead a protest against another Jewish
store, Freddie's Fashion Mart. Sharpton denounced Freddie's owner as a
"White Interloper" in Harlem, protesters mimed tossing matches into the
store, and
<http://www.jewishpost.com/archives/news/massacre-at-freddys-in-harlem-fire-
fueled-by-anti-semitism-kills-8.html> one of them threatened to "Burn the
Jew Store Down". Finally one of the protesters pulled out a gun, ordered the
black customers to leave and set the store on fire. Seven of the store's
mostly Hispanic employees died in the blaze.

Sharpton's prominence was a testament to how mainstream Sufi Abdul Hamid's
tactics had become. When Obama visited Sharpton last week to celebrate the
20th anniversary of his National Action Network, he was commemorating not
just the 20th anniversary of the Crown Heights Pogrom, but an organization
which had ominous similarities to Hamid's own.

 
<http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-5y3Z-UazovY/TaH238br9sI/AAAAAAAAEnU/1hOkmiOie3o/s
1600/SHARPTON_OBAMA4.jpg> 

The Freddie's protests had been led by Morris Powell, who had been accused
of Nazi type tactics. Powell ran the National Action Network's Buy Black
Committee, which echoed Hamid's Don't Buy campaign.
<http://husaria.wordpress.com/category/national-action-network/> Powell's
tactic of standing outside and screaming hatefilled slurs at passerby would
have been entirely familiar to Hamid. "Keep going right on past Freddy's,
he's one of the greedy Jew bastards killing our people. Don't give the Jew a
dime."

Powell's
<http://www.nydailynews.com/archives/news/1995/12/15/1995-12-15_pie_man_used
_venom_as_filling.html> record goes back to 1984 when he broke the head of a
Korean woman during one of his pickets. There is no doubt that Sharpton knew
exactly whom he was bringing on board.

Sharpton too has more than a little in common with the Black Hitler. Like
Hamid, Sharpton started out with a flamboyant personality, playing on
bigotry while terrorizing storeowners and entire communities, building the
perception of being the man who could unleash or tamp down racial violence,
and then toned down the tactics which had power in exchange for political
influence. Hamid never lived long enough to gain that kind of influence..
but Sharpton has become a major power broker in the city, the state and even
nationwide, with Bloomberg funneling money to his National Action Network
and Obama using him as his messenger to the black community.

The lesson of the Black Hitler is that such tactics pay off. Today Hamid is
remembered as a pioneering union organizer. And Sharpton has been to the
White House more often than any black leader. Sharpton's gold medallion and
Hamid's turban and cape were showpieces. Their bigoted rhetoric and mob
pickets a way of playing on violent populism. Self-interested protests whose
goal is to boost the profile of a leader and the bank accounts of his
organization have become the bread and butter of more mainstream leaders
like Jesse Jackson. Their occasional outbursts of bigotry are forgiven for
the power, protection and influence that they can bring to the table. 

Even after the fire, Powell returned to Freddie's screaming, "Freddie Ain't
Dead Yet". The Black Hitler ain't dead yet either. Not until his tactics are
disavowed for good.

 



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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