Malcolm X_ A Life of Reinvention - Manning Marable [366]
391 “that are headquartered in Mecca.ʺ Hajj Malik el-Shabazz to Muhammad Taufik Oweida, November 30, 1964, MXC-S, box 3, folder 4; and MX FBI, Teletype, New York Office, December 1, 1964.
391 “to change this miserable condition.” Ibid., pp. 252-53; MX FBI, Memo, London Office, December 9, 1964; MX FBI, Memo, London Office, January 11, 1965; and “Cheers for Malcolm X at Oxford,” Daily Telegraph, December 4, 1964.
391 “no one should doubt the power.” “Militant Muslim,” Manchester Guardian Weekly, December 10, 1964.
391 met privately with Wallace Muhammad. FBI—MMI Summary Report, New York Office, February 21, 1965, p. 40; MX FBI, Teletype, New York Office, December 6, 1964; and a reception invitation from the Tanzanian representative to the United Nations, December 9, 1964, in OAAU Papers, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture.
392 man in his father’s eyes. DeCaro, On the Side of My People, p. 236.
392 “just as ruthless and cold-blooded.” Hajj Malik el-Shabazz (Malcolm X) to Walith Mohammed (Wallace Muhammad), December 21, 1964, MXC-S, box 3, folder 4.
393 “with what I have to do.” James 67X Warden interview, July 24, 2007.
393 “being ‘terminated with extreme prejudice.ʹʺ Ibid.
394 “seem to have all the power.” “Communication and Reality,” in Clarke, ed., Malcolm X: The Man and His Times, pp. 307-20.
395 “avenge the crime in the Congo.” William Gálves, Che in Africa: Che Guevara’s Congo Diary (Melbourne, Australia: Ocean, 1999), pp. 27-28.
395 reports, many more. The FBI estimated the December 13, 1964, audience at the Audubon Ballroom at two thousand. See MX FBI, Memo, New York Office, January 8, 1965.
395 “the segregationist, lyncher, and exploiter.ʺ “At the Audubon, December 13, 1964,” in Breitman, ed., Malcolm X Speaks, pp. 88-104; and MX FBI, Memo, New York Office, January 8, 1965.
396 “here—we eat them up.” “At the Audubon, December 13, 1964.”
396 support for the guerrilla war. The best single study of Ernesto Che Guevara’s guerrilla activities in Congo in 1965 is Gálvez, Che in Africa, especially pp. 29-32, 35-36, 43. An excellent biography of the subject is Anderson, Che Guevara.
397 “thief, dope addict, and a pimp.” MX FBI, Summary Report, New York Office, January 20, 1965, p. 56.
397 “May Allah burn them in hell.” See Muhammad Speaks, September 25, 1964, especially Captain Joseph and Jeremiah X, “Biography of a Hypocrite.”
398 “destruction for such a defector.” Edwina X, “Open Invitation: Come to Muhammad’s Mosque,” Muhammad Speaks, November 26, 1964.
398 “as Malcolm is worthy of death.” Louis X, “Boston Minister Tells of Malcolm—Muhammad’s Biggest Hypocrite,” Muhammad Speaks, December 4, 1964.
398 them to keep a low profile. Clegg, An Original Man, pp. 226, 330; and “Muslims Charged,” Amsterdam News, November 14, 1964.
398 by his former roommate Anas Luqman. James 67X Warden interview, August 1, 2007.
399 “a program, you get action.” “At the Audubon,” in Breitman, ed., Malcolm X Speaks, pp. 115-36; MX FBI, Memo, New York Office, December 21, 1964, and December 22, 1964; and “Malcolm Favors Mau Mau in U.S.,” New York Times, December 21, 1964.
400 triumph for all colored people. W. E. B. Du Bois’s address on his ninety-first birthday (February 21, 1959), from Beijing, advanced similar ideas about China serving as a model for the world’s oppressed non-Europeans. Malcolm continued to stay in communication with the Du Bois family; in fact he had just written to David Du Bois on December 15, 1964, urging him to start an OAAU branch in Egypt. See Marable, W. E. B. Du Bois, pp. 205-6; and Malcolm X to David Graham, December 15, 1964, MXC-S, box 3, folder 4.
400 “systems to solve their problems.” “At the Audubon,” in Breitman, ed., Malcolm X Speaks, pp. 115-36.
401 still considerable, had been narrowed. Reminiscences of James Farmer (1979), in the Columbia University Oral History Research Office Collection.
401 as he left the station. FBI—MMI Summary