Malcolm X: A Life of Reinvention

                                by Geoff Wisner, csmonitor.com
April 26th 2011                                                                 
                                                                                
                                        

On February 21, 1965, El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz, formerly known as Malcolm X, 
rose to address a meeting of the Organization of Afro-American Unity, which he 
had founded less than a year before. The weekly meetings were held in the 
Audubon Ballroom in Harlem. As two men staged a disturbance in the audience, a 
third man strode toward the stage, pulled a sawed-off shotgun from under his 
coat, and fired into Malcolm’s chest. Two more assassins shot handguns at him, 
but the job was done.

                                                        

Three weeks later, Doubleday canceled its contact with Alex Haley for the 
publication of “The Autobiography of Malcolm X,” on which Haley and Malcolm X 
had been collaborating since 1963. Manning Marable, the author of Malcolm X: A 
Life of Reinvention, an excellent new biography, called it the “most disastrous 
decision in corporate publishing history.” The book was published later that 
year by Grove Press, and by 1977 more than six million copies had been sold. 

The life story Marable presents is essentially the same as the one that Malcolm 
and Haley told. It is the dramatic tale of a man who was born in Nebraska and 
became a hustler, a criminal, a convict, a highly effective organizer for the 
Nation of Islam, a convert to orthodox Islam, a spokesman for pan-Africanism, 
and finally a martyr to the organization he helped to build. It is a tale of 
transformation, self-sacrifice, and betrayal, punctuated by memorable, almost 
Shakespearean turns of phrase: “By any means necessary.” “Such a man is worthy 
of death.” “Our own black shining prince.” 

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What, then, does this biography offer that is unavailable from the 
“Autobiography?” 

Quite a lot, as it turns out. It draws on interviews with friends, colleagues, 
and family members to offer a variety of viewpoints on the man and his work. It 
details the social and political context in which Malcolm lived, shedding light 
on the extraordinary power of the Ku Klux Klan during Malcolm’s childhood, 
describing the quasi-Islamic organizations that preceded the Nation of Islam, 
and explaining the beliefs and inner workings of the Nation and of the two 
organizations that Malcolm founded toward the end of his short life: the 
Islamic group Muslim Mosque, Inc., and the pan-African Organization for 
Afro-American Unity. (Malcolm’s political views and plans for the future were 
to have appeared in three chapters at the end of the Autobiography, which Haley 
cut before publication.) 

Marable emphasizes the importance of Marcus Garvey’s back-to-Africa movement in 
the development of Malcolm’s thought. His father, killed in a suspicious 
streetcar accident when Malcolm was six years old, had been a staunch 
Garveyite, and Garvey’s followers proved to be fertile ground for conversion to 
the Nation of Islam. Garvey was an essential source for Malcolm’s doctrine of 
black pride and self-sufficiency, and for his later belief in the solidarity of 
people of color worldwide. 

The biography includes considerable detail on Malcolm’s 19-week visit to Africa 
in 1964, during which he met with several heads of state and prepared to bring 
the case of America’s blacks to the United Nations as a matter of human rights. 
Marable recounts Haley’s efforts to convince Malcolm to put his story on paper 
and to make it personal rather than polemic. He describes the years of 
surveillance by FBI and police, noting that one NYPD wiretapper was so 
impressed by Malcolm’s views on jobs and education that he tried to get his 
superiors to change their policy toward him.

Finally, Marable tells the story of Malcolm’s assassination and its aftermath 
in a way that Malcolm himself obviously could not. The threat of imminent death 
hangs over nearly half of the narrative, beginning with an order given to a 
Fruit of Islam officer to plant a bomb in Malcolm’s 1963 Oldsmobile. That plot 
may have been part of an elaborate ruse to determine whether Malcolm planned to 
leave the Nation of Islam, but the threats and plots that followed were utterly 
serious. 

What is the significance of Malcolm X? As Marable suggests in the epilogue to 
his biography, Malcolm was as important a figure in the struggle against racism 
as the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. Unlike King, Malcolm could speak to poor 
and working-class blacks in a language that resonated with them. As a Muslim, 
he forged links with international Islam, and as a black man he forged links 
with Africa. 

Malcolm X was a galvanizing speaker and tenacious debater, though his education 
came mostly from the books he read in prison. Disciplined, hard-working, and 
self-sacrificing, he struck one observer as a combination of priest and 
soldier. And perhaps most impressive, he continued to grow and change until the 
end. As Marable writes, “Malcolm’s strength was his ability to reinvent 
himself.” 

Geoff Wisner is the author of “A Basket of Leaves: 99 Books that Capture the 
Spirit of Africa.”

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Original Page: 
http://www.csmonitor.com/Books/Book-Reviews/2011/0426/Malcolm-X-A-Life-of-Reinvention

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