Home > Black Power & Its Legacies > Malcolm

Malcolm

"Malcolm X/El Hajj Malik El Shabazz was a household name in my home, but it was not until combing through the archive that I got a better sense of how significant he was to Umi's development as a Black woman, as a Muslim, and as an activist."

Malcolm Speaks

 
1960s/1970s
Malcolm Speaks

I Buried Malcolm

Jersey City, NJ
1992
I Buried Malcolm

African-American Leadership
for the 21st Century

Congo Players Wanted

Columbus, OH
March 1970

The Spirit of Malcolm X

 
1992

Our Own Black Prince

 
 

Alhaji Abdul Malik Shabazz

Brooklyn, NY
December 1980

The Malcolm X Quiz

Brooklyn, NY
1998

Multimedia Malcolm

New York
1980s - 2000s

Betty Shabazz

New York
 
Betty Shabazz
Curator's Notes:

Malcolm X/El Hajj Malik El Shabazz was a household name in my home, but it was not until combing through the archive that I got a better sense of how significant he was to Umi's development as a Black woman, as a Muslim, and as an activist. In her own narration, her conversion story starts with Malcolm and even her search for a life partner was shaped by his example. And of course, as displayed here, there are numerous books, tapes, and videos about him in her library. In this, Umi is far from singular. From individuals like Umi, artists like The Last Poets, and all of hip hop to movement organizations (too many to name), and independent media organizations like Sapelo Square; the impact of El-Hajj Malik El Shabazz/Malcolm X on the world is profound.