Peeling Away Multiple Masks
By MICHIKO KAKUTANI
Published: April 7, 2011
He was a master of reinvention who had as many names as he did
identities: Malcolm Little, Homeboy, Jack Carlton, Detroit Red, Big
Red, Satan, Malachi Shabazz, Malik Shabazz, El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz
and, most famously, Malcolm X. A country bumpkin who became a zoot-
suited entertainer who became a petty criminal who became a self-
taught intellectual who became a white-hating black nationalist who
became a follower of orthodox Islam who became an international figure
championing "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness for all
people."
In his revealing and prodigiously researched new biography, "Malcolm
X: A Life of Reinvention," Manning Marable — a professor at Columbia
University and the director of its Center for Contemporary Black
History, who died just last week — vividly chronicles these many
incarnations of his subject, describing the "multiple masks" he donned
over the years, while charting the complex and contradiction-filled
evolution of his political and religious beliefs. The book draws from
diaries, letters, F.B.I. files, Web resources and interviews with
members of Malcolm X's inner circle.
This volume does not provide much psychological insight into why
Malcolm X became such a protean figure (or why he needed to distance
"his inner self from the outside world"), and it lacks the urgency and
fierce eloquence of Malcolm X's own "Autobiography." Still, Mr.
Marable artfully strips away the layers and layers of myth that have
been lacquered onto his subject's life — first by Malcolm himself in
that famous memoir, and later by both supporters and opponents after
his assassination in 1965 at the age of 39.
Mr. Marable argues that Malcolm X was a gifted performer, adept at
presenting himself to black audiences "as the embodiment of the two
central figures of African-American folk culture, simultaneously the
hustler/trickster and the preacher/minister." He also suggests that
Malcolm exaggerated his criminal youth in his "Autobiography" to
create "an allegory documenting the destructive consequences of racism
within the U.S. criminal justice and penal system," and to underscore
the transformative power that the Nation of Islam brought to his own
life while in prison.
As Mr. Marable sees it, the "Autobiography," which was written with
Alex Haley (later of "Roots" fame), was in some respects "more Haley's
than its author's." Because Malcolm X died in February 1965, Mr.
Marable writes, "he had no opportunity to revise major elements of
what would become known as his political testament." Haley, "a liberal
Republican," in Mr. Marable's words, made the finished book read like
a work in "the tradition of Benjamin Franklin's autobiography" rather
than "a manifesto for black insurrection" — which perhaps explains its
widespread popularity and prominent place in high school and college
curriculums.
One of the many achievements of this biography is that Mr. Marable
manages to situate Malcolm X within the context of 20th-century racial
politics in America without losing focus on his central character, as
Taylor Branch sometimes did in his monumental, three-volume chronicle
of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and the civil rights movement.
At the same time Mr. Marable provides a compelling account of Malcolm
X's split with the Nation of Islam as he moved away from that sect's
black nationalism and radical separatist politics, and as personal
tensions between him and the Nation leader Elijah Muhammad escalated
further after Muhammad impregnated a woman who had had a longtime
romantic relationship with Malcolm X.
Along the way Mr. Marable lays out a harrowing picture of Nation
members' determination to do away with the charismatic Malcolm X, who
after being exiled from the sect had struck out on his own, forming a
new group and alliances with orthodox Islamic groups abroad. When
surveillance records become fully available, Mr. Marable asserts, "it
would not be entirely surprising if an F.B.I. transcript surfaced
documenting a telephone call from Elijah Muhammad to a subordinate,
authorizing Malcolm's murder," but he does not come up with a smoking
gun on that count in these pages.
It is Mr. Marable's contention that while two of the three men
convicted of the murder had alibis, the man who actually fired "the
kill shot, the blow that executed Malcolm X" went free, only to serve
prison time later for other crimes. He says this man is one Willie
Bradley, who was later inducted into the Newark Athletic Hall of Fame
for his high school baseball achievements and briefly appeared in a
campaign video, promoting the re-election of Newark's mayor, Cory A.
Booker. (The Star-Ledger of Newark published an article about a man it
says is Mr. Bradley, but his family denies any connection to the
shooting.)
Mr. Marable speculates that Mr. Bradley "and possibly other Newark
mosque members may have actively collaborated on the shooting with
local law enforcement and/or the F.B.I.," but fails to provide any
hard evidence concerning this allegation either. In addition he argues
that law enforcement agencies did not actively investigate threats on
Malcolm X's life, but instead "stood back, almost waiting for a crime
to happen."
In the course of this volume Mr. Marable corrects some popular
assumptions: for instance, Malcolm X was introduced to the Nation of
Islam not by a fellow prisoner — as depicted in Spike Lee's 1992 movie
"Malcolm X" — but by family members. Somewhat more enigmatic and
sharper-elbowed than the man in the movie, Mr. Marable's Malcolm is a
passionate, conflicted and guarded man, filled with contradictions —
charming and charismatic with audiences and the press but detached,
even chilly with his wife, Betty, whom he frequently treated with
misogynistic disdain. Some people quoted in this volume depict Malcolm
X as being fatalistic in the last days of his life, telling one former
associate that "the males in his family didn't die a natural death."
As a young man in prison Malcolm steeped himself not just in black
history, Mr. Marable writes, but in "Herodotus, Kant, Nietzsche, and
other historians and philosophers of Western civilization." His hungry
intellect and gift for oratory would make him a magnetic proselytizer
for the Nation of Islam, and later, after his split from the Nation,
for his own more pluralistic vision, which would align him more
closely with the civil rights movement and Dr. King, whom he had once
denounced as an Uncle Tom.
There is one ill-considered effort in these pages to rationalize
Malcolm X's violent rhetoric in his Nation of Islam days. "In
retrospect," Mr. Marable writes, "many of Malcolm's most outrageous
statements about the necessity of extremism in the achievement of
political freedom and liberty were not unlike the views expressed by
the 1964 Republican presidential candidate Barry Goldwater, who
declared that 'extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice, and
moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue.' "
This hardly seems an apt comparison given Malcolm X's description of a
1962 airplane crash, killing more than a hundred well-to-do white
residents of Atlanta, as "a very beautiful thing," proof that God
answers prayers. Or his description of the assassination of President
John F. Kennedy as an instance of "the chickens coming home to roost"
— to which he added that "being an old farm boy myself, chickens
coming home to roost never did make me sad; they've always made me
glad."
For the most part in this book, however, Mr. Marable takes a
methodical approach to deconstructing Malcolm X's complex legacy: his
articulation of the "frustrations of the black poor and working class"
and his message of "black pride, self-respect, and an awareness of
one's heritage." As for the incendiary actions Malcolm X sometimes
took as a member of the Nation of Islam, these are duly chronicled
here as well.
After a 1962 police raid on a Nation of Islam mosque in Los Angeles
(in which more than a half-dozen Muslims were shot), Mr. Marable
asserts, Malcolm X began to recruit members for an assassination team
to target officers from the Los Angeles Police Department. The year
before, Mr. Marable says, Malcolm and another Nation leader met with
representatives of the Ku Klux Klan, assuring those white racists,
according to F.B.I. surveillance, that "his people wanted complete
segregation from the white race."
Spiritual and political growth was the one constant in Malcolm X's
restless and peripatetic life. During a 1964 trip to Mecca he was
treated with kindness by white Muslims and was moved by the sight of
thousands of people of different nationalities and ethnic backgrounds
praying in unison to the same God. This would lead to his embrace of a
kind of internationalist humanism, separating himself not just from
Nation of Islam's leadership but from its angry, separatist theology
too. After Mecca, Malcolm began reaching out to the civil rights
establishment and came to recognize, in Mr. Marable's words, that
"blacks indeed could achieve representation and even power under
America's constitutional system."
Toward the end of his "Autobiography" Malcolm X wrote: "The American
Negro never can be blamed for his racial animosities — he is only
reacting to 400 years of the conscious racism of the American whites.
But as racism leads America up the suicide path, I do believe, from
the experiences that I have had with them, that the whites of the
younger generation, in the colleges and universities, will see the
handwriting on the wall and many of them will turn to the spiritual
path of truth — the only way left to America to ward off the disaster
that racism inevitably must lead to."
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/08/books/malcolm-x-a-life-of-reinvention-by-manning-marable-review.html?scp=3&sq=black%20intellectual&st=cse
A version of this review appeared in print on April 8, 2011, on page
C27 of the New York edition.
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