HOME PRESIDENT THE US CONSTITUTION ARTICLE CORNER
MALCOLM X
“Speech delivered After the
Bombing”
Distinguished guests, brothers and sisters, ladies and
gentlemen, friends and enemies:
I want to point out first that I am very happy to be here this
evening and I'm thankful [to the Afro-American Broadcasting Company] for the
invitation to come here to
It isn't something that made me lose confidence in what I am
doing, because my wife understands and I have children from this size on down,
and even in their young age they understand. I think they would rather have a
father or brother or whatever the situation may be who will take a stand in the
face of any kind of reaction from narrow-minded people rather than to compromise
and later on have to grow up in shame and in disgrace.
So I just ask you to excuse my appearance. I don't normally
come out in front of people without a shirt and a tie. I guess that's somewhat a
holdover from the 'Black Muslim' movement, which I was in. That's one of the
good aspects of that movement. It teaches you to be very careful and conscious
of how you look, which is a positive contribution on their part. But that
positive contribution on their part is greatly offset by too many other
liabilities.
Tonight we want to discuss -- and by the way, also, when I
came here today I was a bit -- last night, the temperature was about twenty
above and when this explosion took place, I was caught in what I had on, some
pajamas. And in trying to get my family out of the house, none of us stopped for
any clothes at that point -- twenty-degree cold. I myself was -- I had gotten
them into the house of the neighbor next door. So I thought perhaps being in
that condition for so long I would get pneumonia or a cold or something like
that, so a doctor came today -- a nice doctor too -- and he shot something in my
arm that naturally put me to sleep. I've been back there asleep ever since the
program started in order to get back in shape. So if I have a tendency to
stutter or slow down, it's still the effects of that drug. I don't know what
kind it was, but it was good; it makes you sleep, and there's nothing like
sleeping through a whole lot of excitement.
Tonight one of the things that has to be stressed is that
which has not only the
There are four different types of people in the Western
Hemisphere, all of whom have Africa as a common heritage, common origin, and
that's the -- those of our people in
When I was in
The only difference on the continent was the American Negro.
Those who were over there weren't even thinking about these over here. This was
the basic difference. The Africans, when they escaped from their respective
countries that were still colonized, they didn't try and run away from the
problem. But as soon as they got where they were going, they then began to
organize into pressure groups to get governmental support at the international
level against the injustices they were experiencing back home.
And as I said, the American Negro, or the Afro-American, who
was in these various countries, some working for this government, some working
for that government, some just in business -- they were just socializing, they
had turned their back on the cause over here, they were partying, you know.
And when I went through one country in particular, I heard a
lot of their complaints and I didn't make any move on them.
But when I got to another country, I found the Afro-Americans
there were making the same complaints. So we sat down and talked and we
organized a branch in this particular country, a branch of the OAAU,
Organization of Afro-American Unity. That one was the only one in existence at
that time. Then during the summer, when I went back to
They began to do this quite well, and when I got to
But since the French government and the British government and
this government here, the
And I might point out right here that colonialism or
imperialism, as the slave system of the West is called, is not something that's
just confined to
So that the era in which you and I have been living during the
past ten years most specifically has witnessed the upsurge on the part of the
Black man in
He wants his freedom.
Now, mind you, the power structure is international, and as
such, its own domestic base is in
The newly awakened people all over the world pose a problem
for what's known as Western interests, which is imperialism, colonialism,
racism, and all these other negative isms or vulturistic isms. Just as the
external forces pose a grave threat, they can now see that the internal forces
pose an even greater threat. But the internal forces pose an even greater threat
only when they have properly analyzed the situation and know what the stakes
really are.
Just by advocating a coalition of Africans, Afro-Americans,
Arabs, and Asians who live within the structure, it automatically has upset
So when you count the number of dark-skinned people in the
Not a great deal of concern for all white people, but a great
deal of concern for most white people. See, if I said "all white
people" then they would call me a racist for giving a blanket condemnation
of things.
And this is true; this is how they do it. They take one little
word out of what you say, ignore all the rest, and then begin to magnify it all
over the world to make you look like what you actually aren't. And I'm very used
to that.
So we saw that the first thing to do was to unite our people,
not only unite us internally, but we have to be united with our brothers and
sisters abroad. It was for that purpose that I spent five months in the Middle
East and
While I was traveling, I had a chance to speak in
So I also had a chance to speak to President [Julius K.]
Nyerere in
And also I had an opportunity to speak with President [Nnamdi]
Azikiwe in
Now I hope you'll forgive me for just speaking so informally
tonight, but I frankly think it's always better to be informal. As far as I am
concerned, I can speak to people better in an informal way than I can with all
of this stiff formality that ends up meaning nothing. Plus, when people are
informal, they're relaxed. When they're relaxed, their mind is more open, and
they can weigh things more objectively. Whenever you and I are discussing our
problems we need to be very objective, very cool, calm, collected. But that
doesn't mean we should always be. There's a time to be cool and a time to be
hot. See, you got messed up into thinking that there's only one time for
everything. There's a time to love and a time to hate. Even Solomon said that,
and he was in that Book too. You're just taking something out of the Book that
fits your cowardly nature. And when you don't want to fight, you say,
"Well, Jesus said don't fight." But I don't even believe Jesus said
that.
Also I am very pleased to see so many who have come out to
always see for yourself, where you can hear for yourself, and then think for
yourself. Then you'll be in a better position to make an intelligent judgment
for yourself. But if you form the habit of listening to what others say about
something or some one or reading what someone else has written about someone,
somebody can confuse you and misuse you. So as Afro-Americans or Black people
here in the
And a good example of why it's so important to look into
things for yourself: I was on a plane between
I said, '"Yes." She said, "Well--" she had
been looking at my briefcase, and she said, "Well, what does that X--"
she says, "What kind of last name could you have that begins with X?"
So I said, "That's it -- X." And she said, "Well, what does the
'M' stand for?" I said, "Malcolm." So she was quiet for about ten
minutes, and she turned to me and she says, "You're not Malcolm
X?"
You see, we had been riding along in a nice conversation like
three human beings, you know, no hostility, no animosity, just human. And she
couldn't take this, she said, "Well you're not who I was looking for,"
you know. And she ended up telling me that she was looking for horns and all
that, and for someone who was out to kill all white people, as if all white
people could be killed. This was her general attitude, and this attitude had
been given her -- this image had been given [to] her by the press.
So before I get involved in anything nowadays, I have to
straighten out my own position, which is clear. I am not a racist in any form
whatsoever. I don't believe in any form of racism. I don't believe in any form
of discrimination or segregation. I believe in Islam. I am a Muslim. And there's
nothing wrong with being a Muslim, nothing wrong with the religion of Islam. It
just teaches us to believe in Allah as the God. Those of you who are Christians
probably believe in the same God, because I think you believe in the God who
created the universe. That's the One we believe in, the one who created the
universe, the only difference being you call Him God and I -- we call Him Allah.
The Jews call him Jehovah. If you could understand Hebrew, you'd probably call
him Jehovah too. If you could understand Arabic, you'd probably call him Allah.
But since the white man, your "friend," took your
language away from you during slavery, the only language you know is his
language. You know, your friend's language. So you call for the same God he
calls for. When he's putting a rope around your neck, you call for God and he
calls for God. [Laughter and applause.] And you wonder why the one you call on
never answers you.
So that once you realize that I believe in the Supreme Being
who created the universe, and believe in him as being one -- I also have been
taught in Islam that one God only has one religion, and that religion is called
Islam, and all of the prophets who came forth taught that religion -- Abraham,
Moses, Jesus, Mohammed, all of them. And by believing in one God and one
religion and all of the prophets, it creates unity. There's no room for
argument, no need for us to be arguing with each other.
And also in that religion, of the real religion of Islam --
when I was in the Black Muslim movement, I wasn't -- they didn't have the real
religion of Islam in that movement. It was something else. And the real religion
of Islam doesn't teach anyone to judge another human being by the color of his
skin. The yardstick that is used by the Muslim to measure another man is not the
man's color but the man's deeds, the man's conscious behavior, the man's
intentions. And when you use that as a standard of measurement or judgment, you
never go wrong.
But when you just judge a man because of the color of his
skin, then you're committing a crime, because that's the worst kind of judgment.
If you judged him just because he was a Jew, that's not as bad as judging him
because he's Black. Because a Jew can hide his religion. He can say he's
something else -- and which a lot of them do that, they say they're something
else. But the Black man can't hide. When they start indicting us because of our
color that means we're indicted before we're born, which is the worst kind of
crime that can be committed. The Muslim religion has eliminated all tendencies
to judge a man according to the color of his skin, but rather the judgment is
based upon his deeds.
And when, prior to going into the Muslim world, I didn't have
any -- Elijah Muhammad had taught us that the white man could not enter into
Makkah in
So when I got over there and went to Makkah and saw these
people who were blond and blue-eyed and pale-skinned and all those things, I
said, "Well!" But I watched them closely. And I noticed that though
they were white, and they would call themselves white, there was a difference
between them and the white one over here. And that basic difference was this: in
Asia or the Arab world or in Africa, where the Muslims are, if you find one who
says he's white, all he's doing is using an adjective to describe something
that's incidental about him, one of his incidental characteristics; so there's
nothing else to it, he's just white.
But when you get the white man over here in
This was what I saw was missing in the Muslim world. If they
said they were white, it was incidental. White, black, brown, red, yellow,
doesn't make any difference what color you are. So this was the religion that I
had accepted and had gone there to get a better knowledge of it.
But despite the fact that I saw that Islam was a religion of
brotherhood, I also had to face reality. And when I got back into this American
society, I'm not in a society that practices brotherhood. I'm in a society that
might preach it on Sunday, but they don't practice it on no day -- on any day.
And so, since I could see that
To wit, right now what's going on in and around Saigon and
That's a shame. Because we get tricked into being nonviolent,
and when somebody stands up and talks like I just did, they say, "Why, he's
advocating violence!" Isn't that what they say? Every time you pick up your
newspaper, you see where one of these things has written into it that I'm
advocating violence. I have never advocated any violence. I've only said that
Black people who are the victims of organized violence perpetrated upon us by
the Klan, the Citizens' Council, and many other forms, we should defend
ourselves. And when I say that we should defend ourselves against the violence
of others, they use their press skillfully to make the world think that I'm
calling on violence, period. I wouldn't call on anybody to be violent without a
cause. But I think the Black man in this country, above and beyond people all
over the world, will be more justified when he stands up and starts to protect
himself, no matter how many necks he has to break and heads he has to crack.
I saw in the paper where they -- on the television where they
took this Black woman down in
And Negro men standing around doing nothing about it saying,
"Well, let's overcome them with our capacity to love." What kind of
phrase is that? "Overcome them with our capacity to love." And then it
disgraces the rest of us, because all over the world the picture is splashed
showing a Black woman a with some white brutes, with their knees on her holding
her down, and full-grown Black men standing around watching it. Why, you are
lucky they let you stay on earth, much less stay in the country.
When I saw it I dispatched a wire to Rockwell; Rockwell was
one of the agitators down there, Rockwell, this [George] Lincoln Rockwell
[leader of the American Nazi Party].
And the wire said in essence that this is to warn him that I
am no longer held in check from fighting white supremacists by Elijah Muhammad's
separatist 'Black Muslim' movement. And that if Rockwell's presence in Alabama
causes harm to come to Dr. King or any other Black person in Alabama who's doing
nothing other than trying to enjoy their rights, then Rockwell and his Ku Klux
Klan friends would be met with maximum retaliation from those of us who are not
handcuffed by this nonviolent philosophy. And I haven't heard from Rockwell
since.
Brothers and sisters, if you and I would just realize that
once we learn to talk the language that they understand, they will then get the
point. You can't ever reach a man if you don't speak his language. If a man
speaks the language of brute force, you can't come to him with peace. Why, good
night! He'll break you in two, as he has been doing all along. If a man speaks
French, you can't speak to him in German. If he speaks Swahili, you can't
communicate with him in Chinese. You have to find out what does this man speak.
And once you know his language, learn how to speak his language, and he'll get
the point. There'll be some dialogue, some communication, and some understanding
will be developed.
You've been in this country long enough to know the language
the Klan speaks. They only know one language. And what you and I have to start
doing in 1965 -- I mean that's what you have to do, because most of us already
been doing it -- is start learning a new language. Learn the language that they
understand. And then when they come up on our doorstep to talk, we can talk. And
they will get the point. There'll be a dialogue, there'll be some communication,
and I'm quite certain there will then be some understanding. Why? Because the
Klan is a cowardly outfit. They have perfected the art of making Negroes be
afraid. As long as the Negro's afraid, the Klan is safe. But the Klan itself is
cowardly. One of them will never come after one of you. They all come together.
Sure, and they're scared of you.
And you sit there when they're putting the rope around your
neck saying, "Forgive them, Lord, they know not what they do." As long
as they've been doing it, they're experts at it, they know what they're doing!
No, since they federal government has shown that it isn't
going to do anything about it but talk, it is a duty, it's your and my duty as
men, as human beings, it is our duty to our people, to organize ourselves and
let the government know that if they don't stop that Klan, we'll stop it
ourselves. And then you'll see the government start doing something about it.
But don't ever think that they're going to do it just on some kind of morality
basis, no. So I don't believe in violence -- that's why I want to stop it. And
you can't stop it with love, not love of those things down there, no. So, we
only mean vigorous action in self-defense, and that vigorous action we feel
we're justified in initiating by any means necessary.
Now, the press, behind something like that, they call us
racist and people who are "violent in reverse." This is how they
psycho you. They make you think that if you try to stop the Klan from lynching
you, you're practicing "violence in reverse." Pick up on this, I hear
a lot of you all parrot what the [white] man says. You say, "I don't want
to be a Ku Klux Klan in reverse." Well, you - heh! -- if a criminal comes
around your house with his gun, brother, just because he's got a gun and he's
robbing your house, brother, and he's a robber, it doesn't make you a robber
because you grab your gun and run him out. No, see, the man is using some tricky
logic on you. And he has absolutely got a Ku Klux Klan outfit that goes through
the country frightening black people. Now, I say it is time for black people to
put together the type of action, the unity, that is necessary to pull the sheet
off of them so they won't be frightening black people any longer. That's all.
And when we say this, the press calls us "racist in reverse."
"Don't struggle -- only within the ground rules that the
people you're struggling against have laid down." Why, this is insane. But
it shows you how they can do it. With skillful manipulating of the press,
they're able to make the victim look like the criminal, and the criminal look
like the victim.
Right now in
One of the shrewd ways that they use the press to project us
in the eye or image of a criminal: they take statistics. And with the press they
feed these statistics to the public, primarily the white public. Because there
are some well-meaning persons in the white public as well as bad-meaning persons
in the white public. And whatever the government is going to do, it always wants
the public on its side, whether it's the local government, state government,
federal government. So they use the press to create images. And at the local
level, they'll create an image by feeding statistics to the press -- through the
press showing the high crime rate in the Negro community. As soon as this high
crime rate is emphasized through the press, then people begin to look upon the
Negro community as a community of criminals.
And then any Negro in the community can be stopped in the
street. "Put your hands up," and they pat you down. You might be a
doctor, a lawyer, a preacher, or some other kind of Uncle Tom. But despite your
professional standing, you'll find that you're the same victim as the man who's
in the alley. Just because you're Black and you live in a Black community, which
has been projected as a community of criminals. This is done. And once the
public accepts this image also, it paves the way for a police-state type of
activity in the Negro community. They can use any kind of brutal methods to
suppress Blacks because "they're criminals anyway." And what has given
this image? The press again, by letting the power structure or the racist
element in the power structure use them in that way.
A very good example was the riots that took place here during
the summer: I was in
It was not the case that they were just knocking out store
windows ignorantly. In
So finally, when the thing is sparked, the white man is not
there; he's gone. The merchant is not there, the landlord is not there; the one
he considers to be the enemy isn't there. So, they knock at his property. This
is what makes them knock down the store windows and set fire to things, and
things of that sort.
It's not that they're thieves. But they try and project the
image to the public that this is being done by thieves, and thieves alone. And
they ignore the fact that no, it is not thievery alone. It's a corrupt, vicious,
hypocritical system that has castrated the Black man; and the only way the Black
man can get back at it is to strike it in the only way he knows how.
They use the press. That doesn't mean that all reporters are
bad. Some of them are good… I suppose. But you can take their collective
approach to any problem and see that they can always agree when it gets to you
and me. They knew that [the Afro-American Broadcasting Company was giving] this
affair -- which is designed to honor outstanding Black Americans, is it not?
You'd find nothing in the newspapers to give the slightest hint that this affair
was going to take place. Not one hint.
Why? You see, you have many sources of news. If you don't
think that they're in cahoots, watch! They're all interested, or none of them
are interested. It's not a staggering thing. They're not going to say anything
in advance [about an event] that's being given by any Black people who believe
in functioning beyond the scope of the ground rules that are laid down by the
"liberal" element of the power structure.
When you begin to start thinking for yourself, you frighten
them, and they try and block your getting to the public, for fear that if the
public listens to you, then the public won't listen to them anymore. And they've
got certain Negroes whom they have to keep blowing up in the papers to make them
look like leaders. So that the people will keep on following them, no matter how
many knocks they get on their heads following him. This is how the man does it,
and if you don't wake up and find out how he does it, I tell you, they'll be
building gas chambers and gas ovens pretty soon -- I don't mean those kind
you've got at home in your kitchen.
Another example at the international level of how skillfully
they use this trickery was in the
And it had started way back in June. They would drop bombs on
African villages that would blow that village apart and everything in it -- man,
woman, child, and baby. No outcry, no sympathy, no support, no concern, because
the press didn't project it in such a way that it would be designed to get your
sympathy. They know how to put something so that you'll sympathize with it, and
they know how to put it so you'll be against it. I'm telling you, they are
masters at it. And if you don't develop the analytical ability to read between
the lines in what they're saying, I'm telling you again -- they'll be building
gas ovens, and before you wake up you'll be in one of them, just like the Jews
ended up in gas ovens over there in
This was mass murder in the
And these pilots are hired, their salaries are paid by the
They call it a humanitarian project and that they're doing it
in the name of freedom. And all of this, these glorious terms, are used to pave
the way in your mind for what they're going to do.
Then they take Tshombe. You've heard of Tshombe. He's the
worst African that was ever born. The lowest type that was ever born. He's a
murderer himself. He's the murderer of Lumumba, the former prime minister of --
the first and only rightful prime minister of the
You know, it's something to think about. How do you think you
would feel right now if some Congolese brothers walked up to you -- and they
look just like you, don't think you don't look Congolese. You look as much
Congolese as a Congolese does. They got all kinds of Congolese over there. How
would you feel if one of them walked up to you and asked you about what your
government is doing in the
And they justify the usage of Tshombe as the present head of
state by saying that he's the only African who can unite -- or bring unity to
the
This is all a cold-blooded act on the part of your Western
powers, namely the Western powers here in the
The step-by-step process that was used by the press: First
they fanned the flame in such a manner to create hysteria in the mind of the
public. And then they shift gears and fan the flame in a manner designed to get
the sympathy of the public. And once they go from hysteria to sympathy, their
next step is to get the public to support them in whatever act they're getting
ready to go down with. You're dealing with a cold calculating international
machine, that's so criminal in its objectives and motives that it has the seeds
of its own destruction, right within. They use the press to emphasize that white
hostages are being held by [inaudible] -- imagine that -- or white priests,
white missionaries, white nuns -- they don't say nuns: white nuns. You know what
the paper said right here in Detroit: white missionaries, not just a missionary;
a white nun -- as if there's a difference between a white nun and a black nun;
or a white priest and a black priest; or if the light that's in a white skin is
more valuable than a light within a black skin. This is what they're implying!
And the press -- look at the press when this thing was going on -- and you will
see what I'm talking about. They're vicious in their whiteness.
But still, I wouldn't judge them just 'cause they're white, or
they'd call me a racist. [I'm] judging by their deeds, by their conscious
behavior -- and you know how they've been consciously behaving in the
One more thing concerning Tshombe, if you notice -- and I must
-- while we were over there on the African continent, in order to give you a
better understanding of what is going on right here. The next thing that is good
to know about Tshombe: no Congolese troops have ever won any victories,
whatsoever, for the present Congolese government. Congolese soldiers won't even
fight unless they're forced to.
But the fighters in the
The other people, their heart wasn't in it. And because of the
fighting spirit of these people, it will be impossible for Tshombe to remain as
head of state over the
And they're going to have to end up doing the same thing in
the
So on the African continent they are training Africans --
these soldiers -- so they can invade one of these countries, and take it over,
and give it [back] to the rightful people.
One of the last things I must say concerning the
Wherein, if a real genuine African government were to come in
power over the
And the
So, now what effect does this have on us? Why should the Black
man in America concern himself -- since he's been away from the African
continent for three or four hundred years -- why should we concern ourselves?
What impact does what happens to them have upon us? Number one, first you have
to realize that up until 1959
You show me one of these people over here who have been
thoroughly brainwashed, who has a negative attitude toward
You know yourself -- and we have been a people who hated our
African characteristics. We hated our hair, we hated the shape of our nose -- we
wanted one of those long, dog-like noses, you know. Yeah. We hated the color of
our skin, hated the blood of
And we hated ourselves. Our color became to us a chain. We
felt that it was holding us back. Our color became to us like a prison, which we
felt was keeping us confined, not letting us go this way or that way. We felt
that all of these restrictions were based solely upon our color. And the
psychological reaction to that would have to be that as long as we felt
imprisoned or chained or trapped by Black skin, Black features, and Black blood,
that skin and those features and that blood that was holding us back
automatically had to become hateful to us. And it became hateful to us. It made
us feel inferior; it made us feel inadequate; it made us feel helpless.
And when we fell victims to this feeling of inadequacy or
inferiority or helplessness, we turned to somebody else to show us the way. We
didn't have confidence in another Black man to show us the way, or Black people
to show us the way. In those days we didn't. We didn't think a Black man could
do anything but play some horn -- you know, some sounds and make you happy with
some songs and in that way. But in serious things, where our food, clothing, and
shelter was concerned and our education was concerned, we turned to the man. We
never thought in terms of bringing these things into existence for ourselves, we
never thought in terms of doing things for our selves. Because we felt helpless.
What made us feel helpless was our hatred for ourselves. And our hatred for
ourselves stemmed from our hatred of things African.
Along about 1955 they had the Bandung Conference in
After 1959 the spirit of African nationalism was fanned to a
high flame, and we then began to witness the complete collapse of colonialism.
In that -- when you're playing basketball and they get you
trapped, you don't throw the ball away, you throw it to one of your teammates
who's in the clear. And this is what the European powers did. They were trapped
on the African continent, they couldn't stay there; they were looked upon as
colonial, imperialist. So they had to pass the ball to someone whose image was
different, and they passed the ball to Uncle Sam. And he picked it up and has
been running it for a touchdown ever since. He was in the clear, he was not
looked upon as one who had colonized the African continent. But at that time,
the Africans couldn't see that though the
When the ball was passed to the
They're going to send all the way to
So, realizing that it was necessary to come up with these new
approaches, Kennedy did it. He won -- he created an image of him self that was
skillfully designed to make the people on the African continent think that he
was Jesus, the great white father, come to make things right. I'm telling you,
some of these Negroes cried harder when he died than they cried for Jesus when
he was crucified.
From 1954 to 1964 was the era in which we witnessed the
emerging of
For one reason -- for one thing, one of the primary
ingredients in the complete civil rights struggle was the 'Black Muslim'
movement. The 'Black Muslim' movement, though it took no part in things
political, civic -- it didn't take too much part in anything other than stopping
people from doing this drinking, smoking, and so on. Moral reform it had, but
beyond that it did nothing. But it talked such a strong talk until it put the
other Negro organizations on the spot. Before the 'Black Muslim' movement came
along, the NAACP was looked upon as radical; they were getting ready to
investigate it. And then along came the 'Muslim' movement and frightened the
white man so much he began to say, "Thank God for old Uncle Roy and Uncle
Whitney and Uncle A. Philip and Uncle... -- you've got a whole lot of uncles in
there. I can't remember their names, they're all older than I, so I call them
"uncle." Plus, if you use the word "Uncle Tom" nowadays, I
heard they'll sue you for libel, you know. So I don't call any of them Uncle Tom
anymore. I call them Uncle Roy.
One of the things that made the 'Black Muslim' movement grow
was its emphasis upon things African. This was the secret to the growth of the
'Black Muslim' movement. African blood, African origin, African culture, African
ties. And you'd be surprised, we discovered that deep within the subconscious of
the Black man in this country, he's still more African than he is American. He
thinks that he's more American than African, because the man is jiving him, the
man is brainwashing him every day. He's telling him, "You're an American,
you're an American." Man, how could you think you're an American and you
haven't ever had any kind of American treat over here? You have never, never!
Ten men can be sitting at a table eating, you know, dining,
and I can come and sit down where they're dining. They're dining; I've got a
plate in front of me, but nothing is on it. Because all of us are sitting at the
same table, are all of us diners? I'm not a diner until you let me dine. Then I
become a diner. Just being at the table with others who are dining doesn't make
me a diner, and this is what you've got to get in your head here in this
country.
Just because you're in this country doesn't make you an
American. No, you've got to go farther than that before you can become an
American. You've got to enjoy the fruits of Americanism. You haven't enjoyed
those fruits. You've enjoyed the thorns. You've enjoyed the thistles. But you
have not enjoyed the fruits, no sir. You have fought harder for the fruits than
the white man has. You have worked harder for the fruits than the white man has,
but you've enjoyed less. When the man put the uniform on you and sent you
abroad, you fought harder than they did. Yeah, I know you -- when you're
fighting for them, you can fight.
The 'Black Muslim' movement did make that contribution. They
made the whole civil rights movement become more militant, and more acceptable
to the white power structure. He would rather have them than us. In fact, I
think we forced many of the civil rights leaders to be even more militant than
they intended. I know some of them who get out there and "boom, boom,
boom" and don't mean it. Because they're right on back in their corner as
soon as the action comes.
John F. Kennedy also saw that it was necessary for a new
approach among the American Negroes. And during his entire term in office, he
specialized in how to psycho the American Negro. Now, a lot of you all don't
like my saying that, but I wouldn't ever take a stand on that if I didn't know
what I was talking about. And I don't -- by living in this kind of society,
pretty much around them -- and you know what I mean when I say "them"
-- I learned to study them. You can think that they mean you some good ofttimes,
but if you look at it a little closer you'll see that they don't mean you any
good. That doesn't mean there aren't some of them who mean good. But it does
mean that most of them don't mean good.
Kennedy's new approach was pretending to go along with us in
our struggle for civil rights and different other forms of rights. But I
remember the expose that Look magazine did on Meredith's situation in
So in my conclusion I would like to point out that the
approach that was used by the administration right on up until today -- see,
even the present generation -- was designed skillfully to make it appear that
they were trying to solve the problem when they actually weren't. They would
deal with the conditions, but never the cause. They only gave us tokenism.
Tokenism benefits only a few. It never benefits the masses, and the masses are
the ones who have the problem, not the few. That one who benefits from tokenism,
he doesn't want to be around us anyway -- that's why he picks up on the token.
You ever notice how some Negroes will brag, "I'm the only
one out there, I'm the only one on my job." Don't you hear them say that?
Yes, you ought to punch him in hi -- no he's your brother, you shouldn't punch
your brother. But you should really get him -- you can punch him with some
words.
Whenever you see a Negro bragging about "he's the only
one in his neighborhood," he's bragging. He's telling you in essence,
"I'm surrounded by white folks," you know. "I love them, and they
love me." Oh yes. And on his job "I'm the only one on my job."
I've been listening to that stuff all my life, and the generation that's coming
up, they're not going to be saying that. The generation that's coming up,
everybody is going to look like an Uncle Tom to them. And you and I have to
learn that in time, so that we don't pose that image when our people, when our
young generation come up and begin to look at us.
The masses of our people still have bad housing, bad
schooling, and inferior jobs, jobs that don't compensate with sufficient salary
for them to carry on their life in this world. So that the problem for the
masses has gone absolutely unsolved. The only ones for whom it has been solved
are people like Whitney Young, who's supposed to be placed in the cabinet, so
the rumors say. He'll be one of the first Black cabinet men. And that answers
where he's at. And others who have been given jobs -- Carl Rowan, who was put
over the USIA, who is very skillfully trying to make Africans think that the
problem of Black men in this country is all solved.
And this is the worst thing the white man can do to himself is
to take one of these kind of Negroes and ask him, "How do your people feel,
boy?" He's going to tell that man that we are satisfied. That's what they
do, brothers and sisters. They get behind the door and tell the white man we're
satisfied. "Just keep on -- keep me up here in front of them, boss, and
I'll keep 'em behind you." That's what they talk when they're behind closed
doors. 'Cause, see, the white man doesn't go along with anybody who's not for
him. He doesn't care whether you're for right or wrong, he wants to know, are
you for him. And if you're for him, he doesn't care what else you're for. As
long as you're for him, then he puts you up over the Negro community. You become
the spokesman.
In your struggle it's like standing on a revolving wheel:
you're running, but you're not going anywhere. You run faster and faster and the
wheel just goes faster and faster. You don't ever leave the spot that you're
standing in. So, it is very important for you and me to see that the only way
that our problem is going to be solved, it has to be with a solution that will
benefit the masses, not the upper class -- so-called "upper class."
Actually, there's no such thing as an upper-class Negro,
because he catches the same hell as the other class Negro. All of them catch the
same hell, which is one of the things that's good about this racist system -- it
makes us all one.
Quickly, if you'll notice in 1963, everyone was talking about
the "centennial of progress!" I think that's what they called it. A
hundred years since the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation, and everyone
is celebrating how much white and Black people have learned to love each other
in
In 1964 they started out the same way. That was the year of
promise. If you were to have told them while they were talking about this great
year of promise ahead, you know, civil rights and all of that, what was coming,
that before long three civil rights workers would be brutally murdered and the
government unable to do anything about it. A Negro educator in
If you tell them right now what is in store for 1965, they'll
think you're crazy for sure. But 1965 will be the longest and hottest and
bloodiest year of them all. It has to be, not because you want it to be, or I
want it to be, or we want it to be, but because the conditions that created
these explosions in 1963 are still here; the conditions that created explosions
in '64 are still here. You can't say that you're not going to have an explosion
and you leave the condition, the ingredients, still here. As long as those
ingredients, explosive ingredients, remain, then you're going to have the
potential for explosion on your hands.
Brothers and sisters, let me tell you, I spend my time out
there in the street with people, all kind of people, listening to what they have
to say. And they're dissatisfied, they're disillusioned, they're fed up, they're
getting to the point of frustration where they are beginning to feel: What do
they have to lose? And when you get to that point you're the type of person who
can create a very dangerously explosive atmosphere. This is what's happening in
our neighborhood, to our people. I read in a poll taken by Newsweek magazine
this week, saying that Negroes are satisfied. Oh yes, poll you know, in
Newsweek, supposed to be a top magazine with a top pollster, talking about how
satisfied Negroes are. Maybe I haven't met the Negroes he met. Because I know he
hasn't met the ones that I've met.
But this is dangerous. This is where the white man does
himself the most harm. He invents statistics to create an image, thinking that
that image is going to hold things in check. You know why they always say
Negroes are lazy? 'Cause they want Negroes to be lazy. They always say Negroes
can't unite because they don't want Negroes to unite. And once they put this
thing in the mind, they feel that the Negro gets that into him and he tries to
fulfill their image. If you say you can't unite him, and then you come to him to
unite him, he won't unite because it's been said that he's not supposed to
unite. It's a psycho that they work, and it's the same way with these
statistics.
When they think that an explosive era is coming up, then they
grab their press again and begin to shower the Negro public, to make it appear
that all Negroes are satisfied. Because if you know that you're dissatisfied all
by yourself and ten others aren't, you play it cool; but you know if all ten of
you are dissatisfied, you get with it. Well, this is what the man knows. The man
knows that if these Negroes find out how dissatisfied they really are -- and all
of them, even Uncle Tom is dissatisfied, he's just playing his part for now --
this is what makes them frightened. It frightens them in
And it is for this reason that it is so important for you and
me to start organizing among ourselves, intelligently, and try to find out: What
are we going to do if this happens, that happens, or the next thing happens?
Don't think that you're going to run to the man and say, "Look, boss, this
is me." Why, when the deal goes down, you'll look just like me in his
eyesight; I'll make it tough for you. Yes, when the deal goes down, he doesn't
look at you in any better light than he looks at me.
I was on a television program in
I point these things out, brothers and sisters, so that you
and I will know the importance in 1963 of being in complete unity with each
other, in harmony with each other, and not letting the man maneuver us into
fighting one another. The situation I have been maneuvered into right now
between me and the 'Black Muslim' movement, is something that I really deeply
regret, because I don't think anything is more destructive than two groups of
Black people fighting each other. But it's something that can't be avoided
because it goes deep down beneath the surface, and these things wiIl come up in
the very near future.
I might say this before I sit down. If you recall, when I left
the 'Black Muslim' movement, I stated clearly that it wasn't my intention to
even continue to be aware that they existed; but that I was going to spend my
time working in the non-Muslim community. But they were fearful that if they
didn't do something that perhaps many of those who were in the mosque would
leave it and follow a different direction. So they had to start doing a take-off
on me, plus, they had to try and silence me because of what they know that I
know.
I should think that they should know me well enough to know
that they certainly can't frighten me. But when it does come to the light --
excuse me for keep coughing like that, but I got some of that smoke last night
-- there are some things involving the 'Black Muslim' movement which, when they
come to light, you will be shocked. The thing that you have to understand where
those of us in the Black Muslim movement were concerned: all of us believed 100
percent in the divinity of Elijah Muhammad. We believed in him. We actually
believed that God had taught him -- right here in
I want to thank you for coming out this afternoon -- this
evening. I think it's wonderful that as many of you came out, considering the
blackout on the meeting that took place. Also, [Milton Henry] and the brothers
who are here in Detroit are very progressive young men, and I would advise all
of you to get with them in every way that you can to try and create some kind of
united effort toward common goals, common objectives. Don't let the power
structure maneuver you into a time wasting battle with others when you could be
involved in something that's constructive and getting a real job done. Probably,
one thing I should've pointed out to you, that once we formed our new
organization, once we became identified with the orthodox Muslim world, we also
formed a group known as the Organization of Afro-American Unity, which is
designed to fight all the negative political, economic, and social conditions
that exist in our neighborhood. It's a nonreligious organization to which anyone
can belong who's interested in direct action.
And one of our first programs is to take our problem out of
the civil rights context and place it at the international level, of human
rights, so that the entire world can have a voice in our struggle. If we keep it
at civil rights, then the only place we can turn for allies is within the
domestic confines of
Our internal aim is to become immediately involved in a mass
voter registration drive. But we don't believe in voter registration without
voter education. We believe that our people should be educated into the science
of politics, so that they will know what a vote is for, and what a vote is
supposed to produce, and also how to utilize this united voting power so that
you can control the politics of your own community, and the politicians that
represent that community. We're for that.
And in that line we will work with all others, even civil
rights groups, who are dedicated to increase the number of Black registered
voters in the South. The only area in which we differ with them is this: we
don't believe that young students should be sent into
I say again that I'm not a racist, I don't believe in any form
of segregation or anything like that. I'm for the brotherhood of everybody, but
I don't believe in forcing brotherhood upon people who don't want it. Long as we
practice brotherhood among ourselves, and then others who want to practice
brotherhood with us, we practice it with them also, we're for that. But I don't
think that we should run around trying to love somebody who doesn't love us.
Thank you.
MALCOLM
X
Speech
Delivered: February 14, 1965, at Ford Auditorium
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