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{{Short description|Founder of the Nation of Islam (c. 1877 – disappeared c. 1934)}} | |||
{{About-distinguish|the founder of the Nation of Islam|Warith Deen Mohammed}} | {{About-distinguish|the founder of the Nation of Islam|Warith Deen Mohammed}} | ||
{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2023}} | |||
{{short description|Founder of the Nation of Islam}} | |||
{{Infobox officeholder | {{Infobox officeholder | ||
| birth_name = | | birth_name = | ||
| image = |
| image = {{Multiple images | ||
| perrow = 1 | |||
| total_width = 230px | |||
| image1 = Wallace Fard Muhammad.jpg | |||
| image2 = W.D. Fard mugshot Los Angeles 1926.png | |||
| image3 = W.D. Fard mugshot Detroit 1933 (cropped2).jpg | |||
| border = infobox | |||
}} | |||
| imagesize = 200px | | imagesize = 200px | ||
| caption = |
| caption = Fard's official portrait (top, 1932), his 1926 mugshot (top), and his 1933 mugshot (bottom) | ||
| order = Leader of the ] | | order = Leader of the ] | ||
| term_start = 1930 | | term_start = 1930 | ||
| term_end = 1934 | | term_end = 1934 | ||
| father = Uncertain; Names given as Zaradodd or Alphonse | |||
| mother = Name given as Babbjie | |||
| successor = ] | | successor = ] | ||
| birth_date = February 26 |
| birth_date = Uncertain; tradition claims February 26, {{circa|1877}}{{Ref label|aaa|a}}<ref>{{cite web|url=https://aaregistry.org/story/n-o-i-founder-wallace-d-fard-born/|title=N.O.I. Founder, Wallace D. Fard born|website=African American Registry}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Wallace-D-Fard|title=Wallace D. Fard – American religious leader|website=Encyclopedia Britannica|date=March 2024 }}</ref> | ||
| death_date = Disappeared in {{death year and age|1934|1877}} | |||
| occupation = Religious and political activist | | occupation = Religious and political activist | ||
| footnotes = {{note|aaa}}a. Birth dates attributed to Fard include 1877, 1891, and 1893; the Nation of Islam ] February 26, 1877. | | footnotes = {{note|aaa}}a. Birth dates attributed to Fard include 1877, 1891, and 1893; the Nation of Islam ] February 26, 1877. | ||
| module = {{infobox person|child=yes | |||
|disappeared_date = 1934 | |||
| spouse = Pearl Allen (m. May 9, 1914; div. December 27, 1914)<br/> Hazel Barton (m. circa 1919)<br/> Carmen Trevino (m. June 5, 1924) | |||
| children = With Pearl: (DNA suggest not biologically related)<br/> With Hazel: Wallace Dodd Fard (later Wallace Max Ford) | |||
| birth_place = Uncertain. Tradition claims Mecca | |||
| death_place = Date, cause, and place of death is unknown | |||
| other_names = Wali Fred Dad, Fred Dodd, Fred the Greek, Fred the Turk, Wallie Dodd Fard,Wallace Dodd Ford, William D. Fard, Master Fard Muhammad | |||
}} | |||
}} | }} | ||
{{Nation of Islam|Leaders}} | {{Nation of Islam|Leaders}} | ||
'''Wallace |
'''Wallace Fard Muhammad''', also known as '''W. F. Muhammad''', '''W. D. Fard''', '''Wallace D. Fard''', or '''Master Fard Muhammad''', among other names<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.vice.com/en/article/9bn7ae/remembering-master-fard-muhammad |title=Remembering Master Fard Muhammad |first=Michael Muhammad |last=Knight |date=February 26, 2013 |archive-date=April 17, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210417052442/https://www.vice.com/en/article/9bn7ae/remembering-master-fard-muhammad |work=] |publisher=] |publication-place=New York City, New York, United States |editor1-first=Nancy |editor1-last=Dubuc |editor1-link=Nancy Dubuc |editor2-first=Shane |editor2-last=Smith |editor2-link=Shane Smith (journalist) |access-date=January 31, 2022 }}</ref> (pronounced ''Far-odd'' {{IPAc-en|f|ə|ˈ|r|ɑː|d}}){{sfn|Evanzz|2011|loc=|p=445}} (reportedly born February 26, {{circa|1877}}<ref name=bowen />{{Efn|The years 1891 and 1893 have both been cited by sources relying upon FBI records primarily. The FBI file on Fard provides both dates for individuals suspected (but never confirmed) to be Fard. The FBI file states: "Our investigation of the NOI and Fard failed to establish his birth date and birth place." Fard reportedly claimed to have been born in 1877. Most sources in the Nation of Islam claim that he hailed from ] in Saudi Arabia.<ref name=bowen /><ref>{{cite thesis |title=Fard Muhammad in historical context: An Islamic thread in the American religious and cultural quilt |publisher=] |publication-place=Washington, D.C., United States |type=PhD |oclc=488985857 |first=Fatimah Abdul-Tawwab |last=Fanusie |year=2008 }}</ref>{{sfn|Morrow|2019|loc=|pp=1-35}}}} – disappeared {{circa|1934}}) was the founder of the ]. | ||
He arrived in ] in 1930 with an ambiguous background and several aliases and proselytized ] ] teachings to the city's black population. His group taught followers to abandon their old "slave names" in favor of new names that were bestowed on new members. Fard's movement similarly taught ] and Black exceptionalism, saying that the black man is the "Original" man, and teaching that the white race were devils created by eugenics. The group preached abstinence from drugs, alcohol, pork, and out-of-wedlock sex. | |||
== Influence == | |||
Fard Muhammad, acting as a door-to-door travelling salesman, spread his religious teachings throughout Detroit, and within three years grew the movement to a reported 8,000–9,000 members in Detroit, Chicago and other cities. Today, the Nation of Islam has an estimated membership of 20,000–50,000.<ref>{{cite newspaper |title=Nation of Islam at a crossroad as leader exits |first=Neil |last=MacFarquhar |date=26 February 2007 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/26/us/26farrakhan.html |newspaper=] |publication-place=], New York, United States |issn=0362-4331 |oclc=1645522 |publisher=] |editor1-first=A.G. |editor1-last=Sulzberger |editor2-first=Dean |editor2-last=Baquet |editor3-first=Joseph |editor3-last=Kahn }}</ref> | |||
After one of Fard's followers, clearly psychotic, ], Fard was briefly arrested. Fard was set free, but he was ordered by police to depart Detroit and not return. Instead he continued to return to the city, where he was spotted by police. In 1934, after repeated arrests and death threats, Fard left Detroit and ultimately disappeared. | |||
The annual ] event is held in honor of Master Fard's birth.<ref>{{Cite web|date=2019-01-03|title=About Saviours' Day|url=https://www.noi.org/about-savioursday/|access-date=2020-08-10|website=NOI.org Official Website|language=en-US}}</ref> In 2020, it attracted an estimated 14,000 participants.<ref>{{cite news |archive-date=24 November 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211124092448/https://www.freep.com/story/news/local/michigan/2020/02/23/farrakhan-detroit-speaks-thousands-nation-islam-convention/4848519002 |work=] |publication-place=], ], United States |editor1-first=Peter |editor1-last=Bhatia |editor2-first=Anjanette |editor2-last=Delgado |editor3-first=James G. |editor3-last=Hill |issn=1055-2758 |oclc=474189830 |editor1-link=Peter Bhatia |publisher=] |title=Louis Farrakhan says billionaires 'paying off' black preachers, politicians |first=Niraj |last=Warikoo |date=23 February 2020 |access-date=31 January 2022 |url=https://www.freep.com/story/news/local/michigan/2020/02/23/farrakhan-detroit-speaks-thousands-nation-islam-convention/4848519002 }}</ref> | |||
] succeeded Fard as leader of the Nation of Islam.<ref name="kavanaugh">{{cite news |first=Kelli B. |last=Kavanaugh |work=] |title=Mystery man |publication-place=Detroit, Michigan, United States |publisher=] |url=https://www.metrotimes.com/detroit/mystery-man/Content?oid=2175649 |date=March 5, 2003 |access-date=January 31, 2021 |archive-date=January 10, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220110153729/https://www.metrotimes.com/detroit/mystery-man/Content?oid=2175649 |issn=0746-4045 |oclc=10024235 |editor1-first=Ron |editor1-last=Williams |editor2-first=W. Kim |editor2-last=Heron}}</ref> Fard's teachings in turn influenced many, including ], ], boxing legend ], and indirectly, basketball star ]. | |||
Fard taught a form of black ] and self-pride to poor Southern blacks during the ] at a time when old ideas of scientific racism were prevalent. He advocated community members to establish and own their own businesses,<ref>{{cite news |title=Nation of Islam resonates in Detroit as it returns home for convention |first=Niraj |last=Warikoo |date=23 February 2020 |access-date=31 January 2022 |url=https://www.freep.com/story/news/local/michigan/2020/02/23/led-farrakhan-nation-islam-convention-returns-home-detroit/4807488002 |work=] |archive-date=22 April 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210422170705/https://www.freep.com/story/news/local/michigan/2020/02/23/led-farrakhan-nation-islam-convention-returns-home-detroit/4807488002 |publication-place=], ], United States |editor1-first=Peter |editor1-last=Bhatia |editor2-first=Anjanette |editor2-last=Delgado |editor3-first=James G. |editor3-last=Hill |issn=1055-2758 |oclc=474189830 |editor1-link=Peter Bhatia |publisher=] }}</ref> eat healthy, raise families, and refrain from drugs and alcohol.<ref>{{cite news |title=The Nation of Islam could be Chicago’s savior |first=Armstrong |last=Williams |date=5 October 2015 |url=https://www.thehill.com/opinion/op-ed/255970-the-nation-of-islam-could-be-chicagos-savior |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210418214253/https://www.thehill.com/opinion/op-ed/255970-the-nation-of-islam-could-be-chicagos-savior |archive-date=18 April 2021 |issn=1521-1568 |oclc=31153202 |work=] |publisher=] |publication-place=], United States |editor1-first=Bob |editor1-last=Cusack |editor2-first=Ian |editor2-last=Swanson |editor3-first=Rory |editor3-last=McCafferty }}</ref> He influenced his successor ], ] and many other Black Nationalist thinkers. Both during and after his life, some charged that Fard was a con man who used mystery and charisma to swindle poor blacks by selling them new Muslim names and stirring up racial animosity<ref>{{cite web |title=False prophet |first=Debra |last=Dickerson |date=6 January 2000 |access-date=31 January 2022 |url=https://www.salon.com/2000/01/06/muhammad |archive-date=12 September 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210912110011/https://www.salon.com/2000/01/06/muhammad |oclc=43916723 |editor1-first=David |editor1-last=Talbot |editor2-first=Erin |editor2-last=Keane |publisher=Salon.com, LLC. |work=] }}</ref> by copying seleced elements of other Muslim religious sects and ideologies that would fit his racial supremacist narrative.{{sfn|Morrow|2019|loc=|p=xii}} | |||
== |
==Fard before Detroit== | ||
{{Main|Origin of Wallace Fard Muhammad}} | |||
In 1938, sociologist Erdmann Doane Beynon published in the '']'' a firsthand account of several interviews he conducted with followers of Fard in Michigan.<ref>{{harvp|Beynon|1938|pp=893–907}}</ref> From those interviews, Beynon wrote that Fard lived and taught in Detroit from 1930 to 1934.<ref name="Beynon_896"/> He came to the homes of black families who had recently ] to Detroit from the rural South.<ref>{{harvp|Beynon|1938|pp=894–95}}</ref> He began by selling silks door to door, telling his listeners that the silks came from their ancestral homeland. At his suggestion, he came back to teach the residents, along with guests.<ref name="Beynon_895">{{harvp|Beynon|1938|p=895}}</ref> | |||
Fard's origins are uncertain, as Fard variously identified as white, black, Spanish, Arab, Afghani, and on one occasion, Jewish. Scholar John Andrew Morrow describes Fard as a "racial and ethnic chameleon", noting "Farad lived in one of the most vicious, racist societies in the world: America. The conditions in which black people and indigenous people lived here were horrific. ] was severe. Bigotry abounded. White supremacy permeated everything. ] were a daily occurrence; there were columns in the newspaper titled 'Today's Lynchings'... Fard witnessed unspeakable horrors committed by genuine devils... Why would Master Fard pass for white? Who wouldn't?"<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ADQhX4ldEQQ&list=PLv6GjM2JRZMr-SjpbYWLczpUcMkh12kvK | title=History of Islam in Black America: Who is Master Fard Muhammad/Islam& Slavery Dr John Andrew Morrow | website=] | date=March 22, 2024 }}</ref> | |||
Many scholars argue that Fard may have had been from the ]. On his World War I draft card, Fard identified as a citizen of Afghanistan, born in ]. Fard reportedly spent time at the ] Mosque (a movement prominent in Pakistan), used translations of the Quran from Pakistanis, and bestowed Pakistani names on followers.{{sfn|Evanzz|2011|loc=|pp=409-414}} Fard's teaching of the ] may have been tied to Pakistan's ].{{Sfn|Evanzz|2011|pp=112-113}}{{Sfn|Morrow|2019|p=59}} | |||
In the early stage of his ministry, Fard "used the ] as his textbook, since it was the only religious book with which the majority of his hearers were familiar. With growing prestige over a constantly increasing group, became bolder in his denunciation of ] and began to attack the teachings of the Bible in such a way as to shock his hearers and bring them to an emotional crisis."<ref name="Beynon_895"/> | |||
Some speculate Fard was a Turk or a Greek -- he had been known as "Fred the Greek" and "Fred the Turk" in 1908. Some claim Fard was a white man, perhaps from New Zealand -- Fard indicated that background in records from 1920. In 1924, when he married a woman of Spanish ancestry, Fard claimed he had been born in Madrid, Spain. Less popular theories of origin suggest he may have been Syrian, Moroccan, Bosnian, Albanian, African-American, or Jewish. Fard was traditionally held by the Nation of Islam to be an Arab from Mecca. | |||
Beynon's interviewees told him that reports of Fard's message spread throughout the black community. Attendance at the house meetings grew until the listeners were divided into groups and taught in shifts. Finally, the community contributed money and rented a hall to serve as a Temple where meetings were conducted.<ref name="Beynon_896">{{harvp|Beynon|1938|p=896}}</ref> The ] was soon introduced as the most authoritative of all texts for the study of the faith.<ref name="Beynon_900">{{harvp|Beynon|1938|p=900}}</ref> Fard prepared texts that served as authoritative manuals of the faith and were memorized verbatim by his followers.<ref name="Beynon_900"/> | |||
===Oregon=== | |||
Prior to his time in Detroit, Fard operated a food cart and later restaurant in Oregon and California. In 1908, papers in Eugene, Oregon announced that Turkish tamale vendor Fred Walldad had acquired a small house on wheels to use as a food cart.<ref>{{Cite news |date=March 23, 1908 |title=Fred Walldad, the Turkish tamale vender... |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-eugene-guard-wd-fard/69365972/ |accessdate=August 10, 2023 |newspaper=The Eugene Guard |pages=8 |via=newspapers.com}}</ref> That Halloween, papers reported on a "Halloween prank" in which local boys took the wheels off Fred the Turk's tamale wagon and dropped it, breaking Fred's dishes and eggs, as well as injuring Fred himself; the wheel was stolen.<ref>{{Cite news |date=November 3, 1908 |title=Hallowe'en Pranks |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/morning-register/79075407/ |accessdate=August 10, 2023 |newspaper=Morning Register |pages=5 |via=newspapers.com}}</ref> By the following February, he had sold his lunchwagon and moved to ], where he had leased a restaurant and lodging house.<ref>{{Cite news |date=February 3, 1909 |title=Fred, The Turk, Sells Out |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/morning-register-wd-fard/69365957/ |accessdate=August 10, 2023 |newspaper=Morning Register |pages=5 |via=newspapers.com}}</ref> | |||
By 1912, Fard was again selling tamales, this time in Salem, Oregon; newspapers reported on vendor Fred Dadd, a naturalized American originally from New Zealand, attending his first baseball game.<ref>{{Cite news |date=August 9, 1912 |title=FOREIGNER LEARNS AMERICAN GAME |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/statesman-journal/78928860/ |accessdate=August 10, 2023 |newspaper=Statesman Journal |pages=5 |via=newspapers.com}}</ref> In 1913, Fard penned an announcement in the newspaper complaining about police harassment.<ref>{{Cite news |date=April 29, 1913 |title=Fred Dodd Complains |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-capital-journal-wd-fard-pens-op-ed-a/18700911/ |accessdate=August 10, 2023 |newspaper=The Capital Journal |pages=4 |via=newspapers.com}}</ref> His complaint of police harassment would be investigated by the police committee.<ref>{{Cite news |date=June 17, 1913 |title=Says Police Bother Him |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-capital-journal-wd-files-police-hara/18701046/ |accessdate=August 10, 2023 |newspaper=The Capital Journal |pages=3 |via=newspapers.com}}</ref> After the committee reported and the report was adopted, the mayor instructed the chief of police to allow Dodd to sell his wares.<ref>{{Cite news |date=June 24, 1913 |title=The police committee reported on the petition... |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-capital-journal-wd-fard-allowed-to-s/51037530/ |accessdate=August 10, 2023 |newspaper=The Capital Journal |pages=3 |via=newspapers.com}}</ref> | |||
Beynon described disputes and tension that arose between the new community and the police over the group's refusal to send their children to public schools. One member of the group, later declared mentally insane, allegedly participated in "human sacrifice" in 1932 in an effort to follow lessons regarding the sacrifice of devils.<ref>{{harvp|Beynon|1938|pp=903–04}}</ref><ref group="Note">Beynon stated that Fard's position on human sacrifice "was never made clear."</ref> These incidents drew police attention, according to Beynon, and contributed to persecutions and schisms.<ref>{{harvp|Beynon|1938|p=904}}</ref> | |||
In 1914, Fard was arrested for allegedly inducing Laura E. Swanson to leave her spouse for him; he was released on $1,000 bond.<ref>{{Cite news |date=March 5, 1914 |title=DODD WILL HAVE HEARING FRIDAY ON STATUTORY CHARGE |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-capital-journal-wd-fard-seduced-swan/51037835/ |accessdate=August 10, 2023 |newspaper=The Capital Journal |pages=4 |via=newspapers.com}}</ref> A March 23 report cited Dodd's charge as "assaulting a married woman".<ref>{{Cite news |date=March 23, 1914 |title=Fred Dodd Is Indicted on Charge of Attacking Woman |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-capital-journal-wd-fard-indicted-for/51041406/ |accessdate=August 10, 2023 |newspaper=The Capital Journal |pages=1 |via=newspapers.com}}</ref> On April 20, 1914, Dodd married Pearl Allen, a white-passing member of the ], in ]. The following day, April 21, a jury acquitted Dodd.<ref>{{Cite news |date=April 22, 1914 |title=Tamale Man Acquitted |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/51042587/wd_fard_acquitted_of_swanson_rape/ |access-date=15 April 2024 |newspaper=Statesman Journal |page=5 |via=newspapers.com}}</ref> ''The Capital Journal'' explained the verdict by saying "It was brought out in the cross examination of the complaining witness that there was another person in the house at the time of the alleged assault and that she did not cry for help as a person in her circumstances would be aroused."<ref>{{Cite news |date=April 22, 1914 |title=FRED DODD HELD NOT GUILTY OF ASSAULT |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-capital-journal/76744976/ |accessdate=August 10, 2023 |newspaper=The Capital Journal |pages=6 |via=newspapers.com}}</ref> | |||
Fard named his community the "Nation of Islam".<ref name="Beynon_897">{{harvp|Beynon|1938|p=897}}</ref> Following the rapid increase in membership, he instituted a formal organizational structure.<ref name="Beynon_902">{{harvp|Beynon|1938|p=902}}</ref> He established the University of Islam, where school-age children were taught, rather than in the public schools.<ref name="Beynon_902"/> He established the Moslem Girls' Training and General Civilization Class, where women were taught how to keep their houses, clean and cook. The men of the organization were drilled by captains and referred to as the ]. The entire movement was placed under a Minister of Islam.<ref name="Beynon_902"/> | |||
The marriage to Pearl was short-lived; Divorce proceedings began by August 30.<ref>{{Cite news |date=August 30, 1914 |title=Dodd Files Motion |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/statesman-journal-wd-fard-files-for-divo/51039944/ |accessdate=August 10, 2023 |newspaper=Statesman Journal |pages=5 |via=newspapers.com}}</ref><!--"white passing klamath to Morrow https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ADQhX4ldEQQ @44mins" need better--> On November 14, he was arrested for larceny after allegedly stealing from Pearl.<ref name="auto1">{{Cite news |date=November 14, 1914 |title=Arrested for Larceny |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/statesman-journal-wd-fard-arrested-for-s/51042942/ |accessdate=August 10, 2023 |newspaper=Statesman Journal |pages=5 |via=newspapers.com}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |date=December 27, 1914 |title=Dodd Gets Divorce |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/statesman-journal/11450616/ |accessdate=August 10, 2023 |newspaper=Statesman Journal |pages=5 |via=newspapers.com}}</ref> Pearl gave birth to a son the following year,{{sfn|Evanzz|2011|loc=|p=399}}<ref>{{harvnb|Gibson|2012|pp=24–25}}</ref> though a 2024 DNA test may suggest that this son was not biologically descended from Dodd.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Muhammad |first=Bilal |date=January 14, 2024 |title=Did W.D. Fard have a son with Pearl Allen? A century old mystery solved |url=https://bliis.org/research/did-w-d-fard-have-a-son-with-pearl-allen-a-century-old-mystery-solved/ |accessdate=January 15, 2024 |website=Berkeley Institute for Islamic Studies}}</ref> | |||
According to Beynon, Fard's followers grew to approximately eight thousand.<ref name="Beynon_897"/> "Within three years the prophet not only began the movement but organized it so well that he himself was able to recede into the background, appearing almost never to his followers during the final months of his residence in Detroit."<ref name="Beynon_902"/> | |||
===Los Angeles and San Quentin=== | |||
From interviews with approximately 200 families who followed Fard, Beynon concluded:<blockquote>"Although the prophet lived in Detroit from July 4, 1930 until June 30, 1934, virtually nothing is known about him, save that he 'came from the East' and that he 'called' the Negroes of North America to enter the Nation of Islam. His very name is uncertain. He was known usually as Mr. Wali Farrad or Mr. W. D. Fard, though he used also the following names: Professor Ford, Mr. Farrad Mohammed, Mr. F. Mohammed Ali. One of the few survivors who heard his first addresses states that he himself said: 'My name is W. D. Fard and I came from the Holy City of Mecca. More about myself I will not tell you yet, for the time has not yet come. I am your brother. You have not yet seen me in my royal robes.' Legends soon sprang up about this mysterious personality."</blockquote> | |||
] | |||
Fard moved to Los Angeles, using the name Wallie Dodd Ford, where he owned a restaurant.<ref name="bowen" /><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KZVF-R7D|title=FamilySearch.org|website=]}}</ref>{{better source needed|date=May 2022}} The Nation of Islam contests the claim that Wallace Fard Muhammad and Wallie Dodd Ford were the same person.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Muhammad |first=Dr. Wesley |date=September 12, 2018 |title=The U.S. Government's targeting of the Nation of Islam |url=https://www.noi.org/fard-muhammad-fbi-cointelpro/ |access-date=August 10, 2020 |website=Nation of Islam |language=en-US}}</ref> | |||
Fard used the name "W. F. Muhammad" on several lessons written in 1933 and 1934.<ref name="Muhammad_93"/> In 1933, he began signing his name "W. F. Muhammad", which stands for "Wallace Fard Muhammad".<ref name="harvp|Muhammad|1965|pp=16–17">{{harvp|Muhammad|1965|pp=16–17}}</ref> | |||
Ford was arrested by Los Angeles police on November 17, 1918, on a charge of assault with a deadly weapon.<ref name="auto">{{Cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/FBI-Wallace-Fard-Muhammad|title=FBI Documents on Wallace Fard Muhammad|last=U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)|language=en}}</ref> As of 1920, Ford was still living in Los Angeles as 26-year-old Wallie D. Ford, with his 25-year-old common law wife, Hazel E. Ford. <ref>1920 Federal U.S. Census, Los Angeles City, Enumeration District 206, Sheet 10B</ref> The pair had a son, Wallie Dodd Ford Jr. | |||
== Arrest == | |||
On November 20, 1932, James J. Smith, a black man, was killed by Robert Harris, who was his roommate and a member of the Nation of Islam, on a makeshift altar in what was described as a ].{{Citation needed|reason=Previous linked sources are invalid.|date=December 2021}} Harris attended meetings of the Detroit chapter of the Nation of Islam, then also called the Order of Islam, and Allah Temple of Islam, where he was given the name of Robert Karriem. He claimed he was influenced by the group. Consequently, Fard and another leader, Ugan Ali, were arrested and questioned. "The society cannot be blamed for anything he did," Ali was quoted in the '']'', Nov. 23, 1932.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Coverage Of "The Voodoo Murders" — Mythic Detroit|url=http://www.mythicdetroit.org/index.php?n=Main.VoodooMurdersCoverage|access-date=2020-08-10|website=www.mythicdetroit.org}}</ref> "Harris had no standing in the order and was not regarded as a leader. Many people avoided him because of the wild things he sometimes said." Harris was later declared mentally unbalanced, pleaded guilty and was imprisoned, while Fard and Ali were released.{{fact|date=January 2021}} | |||
A marriage certificate, dated June 5, 1924, was issued to Wallie Dodd Ford and Carmen Treviño, a Mexican-born woman of Spanish ancestry, in ]. <ref>California State Board of Health, County of Orange, Certificate of Marriage, Local Registered No. 1768, as located in "California, County Marriages, 1850–1952", index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/K8FM-5FP: accessed January 5, 2013), Wallie Dodd Ford and Carmen Frevino, 1924.</ref>{{better source needed|date=May 2022}} | |||
== Efforts to trace Fard's history 1914–1926== | |||
Efforts to trace the origins and life story of Fard have been extensive but have yielded only fragmentary results and not even his date of death is known; further complicating any efforts is the fact that only 5 pictures of Fard are known to exist, 4 being mugshots taken after various arrests and one being the official portrait by the Nation of Islam; most observers agreed they all belong to the same person which was confirmed via ].{{sfn|Morrow|2019|loc=|page=111-155}} Additionally, Fard is alleged to have used up to 58 different aliasis during his life.<ref name=kavanaugh>{{cite news |first=Kelli B. |last=Kavanaugh |work=] |title=Mystery man |publication-place=], ], United States |publisher=] |url=https://www.metrotimes.com/detroit/mystery-man/Content?oid=2175649 |date=5 March 2003 |access-date=31 January 2021 |archive-date=10 January 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220110153729/https://www.metrotimes.com/detroit/mystery-man/Content?oid=2175649 |issn=0746-4045 |oclc=10024235 |editor1-first=Ron |editor1-last=Williams |editor2-first=W. Kim |editor2-last=Heron }}</ref>{{sfn|Evanzz|2011|loc=|p=445}} | |||
] | |||
Karl Evanzz of '']'' submitted a ] request to the FBI in 1978 requesting its file on Fard.{{sfn|Evanzz|2011|loc=|p=409-414}} Evanzz based his account of Fard's life on the declassified portion of the FBI file that he received about a decade after his request. Evanzz detailed the experience of several other authors who also based their accounts of Fard's life on the FBI file.{{sfn|Evanzz|2011|loc=|p=XVI-XVII}} | |||
Ford was arrested again on January 20, 1926, for violation of the California Woolwine Possession Act,<ref name="auto" /> and on February 15, 1926, for violation of the State Poison Act. After this second arrest, a Spanish-language paper in Los Angeles described him as a "street politician".<ref>"Fueron Confiscados $5,000.00 Valor de Drogas Heroicas", Heraldo de Mexico, February 17, 1926, 8., cited by Bowen</ref> Ford was sentenced to six months to six years at ] on June 12, 1926.<ref>FBI File SAC (100-43165-16)</ref><ref>FBI report CG 100-3386, p. 2. , ''FBI Records: The Vault''; retrieved October 14, 2015.</ref> Ford was paroled from San Quentin on May 27, 1929.{{Sfn|Bowen|2017|p=250}} | |||
From the FBI's response to the Freedom of Information Act request, Evanzz claimed that Fard, using the name Fred Dodd, married Pearl Allen in ], on May 9, 1914, with their first child, a son, born the next year.{{sfn|Evanzz|2011|loc=|p=399}}<ref>{{harvp|Gibson|2012|pp=24–25}}</ref> | |||
===In Chicago=== | |||
Dodd left his family in 1916 and moved to Los Angeles, using the name Wallie Dodd Ford. A ] draft registration card for Wallie Dodd Fard<ref name=bowen /> from 1917 indicated he was living in Los Angeles, unmarried, as a restaurant owner, and reported that he was born in ], ] on February 26, 1893. He further reported that he was a resident alien and citizen of Afghanistan. He was described as of medium height and build with brown eyes and black hair. On the draft card, "Ford" is written in parentheses in a different hand. At the bottom of the card, he signed his name as "Wallie Dodd Ford".<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KZVF-R7D|title=FamilySearch.org}}</ref> | |||
In the 1930 census, Fard was listed as a resident of Chicago, with stated occupation of clothing salesman. Scholars speculate that Fard's Nation of Islam might have been influenced by the ] in Chicago: Both groups saw "Negroes" as ], bestowed new names to replace slave names, and promoted wearing of the ]. | |||
==Fard in Detroit (1930–34)== | |||
As of 1920, Ford was still living in Los Angeles as 26-year-old Wallie D. Ford, with his 25-year-old wife, Hazel E. Ford. In the ], his race was reported as white, his occupation as a proprietor of a restaurant, and his place of birth as New Zealand. He provided no known place of birth for his parents nor his date of immigration.<ref>1920 Federal U.S. Census, Los Angeles City, Enumeration District 206, Sheet 10B</ref> | |||
Fard first appeared in Detroit in 1930; his followers cite July 4, 1930, as the date of his arrival. A ], Fard spread his religious teachings throughout Detroit, and within three years grew the movement to a reported 25,000 members in Detroit, Chicago, and other cities. | |||
A marriage certificate dated June 5, 1924, was issued to Wallie Dodd Ford and Carmen Trevino (or Treviño) in ]. Ford reported that he was a cook, age 26, born in Oregon and living in Los Angeles. Trevino was a 22-year-old native of ] also living in Los Angeles. Both provided their race as "Spanish"; Ford claimed that his parents, "Zaradodd" and "Babbjie", were natives of ], ].<ref>California State Board of Health, County of Orange, Certificate of Marriage, Local Registered No. 1768, as located in "California, County Marriages, 1850–1952", index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/K8FM-5FP: accessed January 5, 2013), Wallie Dodd Ford and Carmen Frevino, 1924.</ref> | |||
===Clothing peddler=== | |||
A declassified ] (FBI) memorandum dated May 16, 1957 states: "From a review of instant file it does not appear that there has been a concerted effort to locate and fully identify W. D. Fard. In as much as Elijah Muhammad recognizes W.D. Fard as being Allah (God) and claims that Fard is the source of all of his teachings, it is suggested that an exhaustive effort be made to fully identify and locate W. D. Fard and/or members of his family."<ref>FBI File SAC (25-20607) at 476</ref> The FBI took note of the article written by Erdmann Doane Beynon, and it conducted a search for Fard using various aliases including the name "Ford".<ref>FBI File SAC (100-26356) at 451–473, SAC Chicago (100-33683)</ref> | |||
Fard began by selling ] door-to-door in Detroit's black section. Fard visited the homes of black families who had recently ] to Detroit from the rural South.<ref>{{harvnb|Beynon|1938|pp=894–95}}</ref> Fard told black residents that his silks were the same kind that their ancestors in Mecca used and claimed to be a traveler from that land. When offered food, Fard reportedly ate what was provided but would advise residents to avoid certain foods, promising health benefits would follow. At his suggestion, he came back to teach the residents, along with guests.<ref name="Beynon_895">{{harvnb|Beynon|1938|p=895}}</ref> | |||
===Bible study leader at house churches=== | |||
The search produced two Fords of interest, one of whom was ], a prominent movie actor. The other was Wallie D. Ford of California, arrested by Los Angeles police on November 17, 1918 on a charge of assault with a deadly weapon.<ref name="auto">{{Cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/FBI-Wallace-Fard-Muhammad|title=FBI Documents on Wallace Fard Muhammad|last=U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)|language=en}}</ref> | |||
In the early stage of his ministry, Fard used the ] as his textbook, since it was the only religious book with which the majority of his audience were familiar. Patrick D. Bowen writes that in the early Nation of Islam, "ministers regularly referenced passages from the Bible to prove their claims".{{Sfn|Bowen|2017|p=297}} Fard's successor Elijah Muhammad would later claim Fard "knew the Bible better than any of the Christian-bred Negroes". Lomax wrote that Fard was "well-versed" in the Bible, used it as a textbook and taught in the style of a Southern ] preacher.<ref>{{cite web |last=Andrew Morrow |first=John |date=20 June 2023 |title=W.D. Fard's Bible of Islamism Identified: A Century-Old Mystery is Solved |url=https://bliis.org/essay/w-d-fards-bible-of-islamism-identified-a-century-old-mystery-is-solved |access-date=14 April 2024 |website=Berkeley Institute for Islamic Studies}}</ref> | |||
Beynon writes that "With growing prestige over a constantly increasing group, became bolder in his denunciation of ] and began to attack the teachings of the Bible in such a way as to shock his audience and bring them to an emotional crisis."<ref name="Beynon_895"/> | |||
On October 17, 1957, the FBI located and interviewed Hazel Barton-Ford, Wallie Ford's common-law wife, with whom he had a son named Wallace Dodd Ford, born on September 1, 1920.<ref name="SAC LA 105-4805">FBI File SAC LA (105–4805) at 135</ref> Barton-Ford gave a description of Wallie Ford, and described him as a Caucasian New Zealander.<ref name="SAC LA 105-4805"/> The FBI's search for Fard was officially closed the following year on April 15, 1958.<ref>FBI File Director FBI (105-63642) at 248, SAC Chicago (100-33683)</ref> Immigration records did not match any of his aliases. His true identity remains unknown,<ref name=fbipart2>{{cite web| url=https://vault.fbi.gov/Wallace%20Fard%20Muhammed/Wallace%20Fard%20Muhammed%20Part%202%20of%207/view| publisher=Federal Bureau of Investigation| title=Wallace Fard Muhammed Part 2 of 7}}{{rp|40, 74, 120, 123}}</ref> but there is strong evidence that the Nation of Islam founder Wallace D. Fard was the same man as Wallace Dodd Ford, an inmate in San Quentin Prison. According to Patrick D. Bowen, a PhD candidate at the ]'s ], fingerprints and photographs taken from ] matched those of Fard taken during the 1930s in Detroit; furthermore, in San Quentin he almost certainly came in contact with African American Muslim preachers and converts also incarcerated there.<ref name=bowen>{{cite journal |title=‘The Colored Genius’: Lucius Lehman and the Californian Roots of Modern African-American Islam |first=Patrick D. |last=Bowen |date=21 March 2013 |journal=The Graduate Journal of Harvard Divinity School |access-date=31 January 2022 |publisher=] |url=https://projects.iq.harvard.edu/hdsjournal/book/%E2%80%98-colored-genius%E2%80%99 |publication-place=], ], United States }}</ref> | |||
Fard taught a form of black exceptionalism and self-pride to poor Southern blacks during the ] at a time when old ideas of ] were prevalent. He advocated that community members establish and own their own businesses,<ref>{{cite news |title=Nation of Islam resonates in Detroit as it returns home for convention |first=Niraj |last=Warikoo |date=February 23, 2020 |access-date=January 31, 2022 |url=https://www.freep.com/story/news/local/michigan/2020/02/23/led-farrakhan-nation-islam-convention-returns-home-detroit/4807488002 |work=] |archive-date=April 22, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210422170705/https://www.freep.com/story/news/local/michigan/2020/02/23/led-farrakhan-nation-islam-convention-returns-home-detroit/4807488002 |publication-place=Detroit, Michigan, United States |editor1-first=Peter |editor1-last=Bhatia |editor2-first=Anjanette |editor2-last=Delgado |editor3-first=James G. |editor3-last=Hill |issn=1055-2758 |oclc=474189830 |editor1-link=Peter Bhatia |publisher=] }}</ref> eat healthy, raise families, and refrain from drugs and alcohol.<ref>{{cite news |title=The Nation of Islam could be Chicago's savior |first=Armstrong |last=Williams |date=October 5, 2015 |url=https://www.thehill.com/opinion/op-ed/255970-the-nation-of-islam-could-be-chicagos-savior |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210418214253/https://www.thehill.com/opinion/op-ed/255970-the-nation-of-islam-could-be-chicagos-savior |archive-date=April 18, 2021 |issn=1521-1568 |oclc=31153202 |work=] |publisher=] |publication-place=Washington, D.C., United States |editor1-first=Bob |editor1-last=Cusack |editor2-first=Ian |editor2-last=Swanson |editor3-first=Rory |editor3-last=McCafferty }}</ref> In 1938, sociologist Erdmann Doane Beynon published in the '']'' a firsthand account of several interviews he conducted with followers of Fard in Michigan.<ref>{{harvnb|Beynon|1938|pp=893–907}}</ref> From those interviews, Beynon wrote that Fard lived and taught in Detroit from 1930 to 1934.<ref name="Beynon_896" /> | |||
Fard was arrested again on January 20, 1926, for violation of the California Woolwine Possession Act,<ref name="auto"/> and on February 15, 1926, for violation of the State Poison Act, for which he was sentenced to six months to six years at ] on June 12, 1926.<ref>FBI File SAC (100-43165-16)</ref> According to San Quentin records, Wallie D. Ford was born in ] on February 25, 1891, the white son of Zared and Beatrice Ford, who were both born in Hawaii.<ref>FBI report CG 100-3386, p. 2. , ''FBI Records: The Vault''; retrieved October 14, 2015.</ref> | |||
===Giver of new names=== | |||
On August 15, 1959, the FBI sent a story to the Chicago '']'' newspaper, stating that Fard was a "Turkish-born Nazi agent who worked for ] in ]".{{sfn|Evanzz|2011|loc=|p=204-205}} According to the FBI story, Fard was a "Muslim from Turkey who had come to the United States in the early 1900s. He had met Muhammad in prison … where the two men plotted a confidence game in which followers were charged a fee to become Muslims."{{sfn|Evanzz|2011|loc=|p=204-205}} After the story was published, Elijah Muhammad and ] subsequently charged black media outlets, which reprinted the accusation in large numbers, with running the story without requesting a response from the Nation of Islam.{{sfn|Evanzz|2011|loc=|p=204-205}} | |||
Fard taught his followers to reject ]s inherited from ]s. As part of their initiation into the group, Fard bestowed new ]s upon his converts. He taught that this practice restored their original and true identities, while also revealing the lies that cloaked the origins of the so-called Asiatic Blackman.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Taylor |first=Ula Yvette |title=Patriarchy: Women and the Nation of Islam |publisher=University of North Carolina Press |year=2017 |isbn=978-1-4696-3395-4 |pages=22–26}}</ref> Such names included Muhammad, Ali, Karriem,<ref>{{Cite book |last=Taylor |first=Ula Yvette |title=The Promise of Patriarchy: Women and the Nation of Islam |publisher=University of North Carolina Press |year=2017 |isbn=978-1-4696-3395-4 |location=North Carolina, United States |pages=18}}</ref> and Fardan.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Taylor |first=Ula Yvette |title=The Promise of Patriarchy: Women and the Nation of Islam |publisher=University of North Carolina Press |year=2017 |isbn=978-1-4696-3395-4 |location=North-Carolina, United States |pages=186}}</ref> Scholars note that new names had previously been given by ] of the ], who assigned surnames El and Bey; the term "slave name" was used by the MSTA.{{Sfn|Bowen|2017|pp=241, 256}} | |||
After Fard's disappearance, Elijah Muhammad continued the practice of giving new Muslim names to converts to the Nation of Islam and added the letter X, symbolizing the unknown, instead of a name.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Taylor |first=Ula Yvette |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5149/9781469633947_taylor |title=The Promise of Patriarchy: Women and the Nation of Islam |date=2017 |publisher=University of North Carolina Press |isbn=978-1-4696-3395-4 |location=North-Carolina, United States |pages=30 |jstor=10.5149/9781469633947_taylor }}</ref> | |||
A February 19, 1963, FBI memorandum states: "In connection with efforts to disrupt and curb growth of the NOI, extensive research has been conducted into various files maintained by this office. Among the files reviewed was that of Wallace Dodd Ford."<ref>FBI File Director, FBI (25-330971) at 258, SAC Chicago (100-35635)</ref> Five months later, in July 1963, the FBI told the '']'' that Fard was actually Wallace Dodd Ford.{{sfn|Evanzz|2011|loc=|p=264}} The paper published the story in an article titled "Black Muslim Founder Exposed As White."<ref>"Black Muslim Founder Exposed As White", ''Los Angeles Evening Herald-Examiner'', July 28, 1963</ref>{{Dubious |reason=The FBI was aware of his many aliases he used. They received three plausible identities but were unable to verify any of them. He had many identities but they couldn't trace his actual origins and gave up the investigation.|date=July 2019}} An FBI memorandum dated August 1963 states that the FBI had not been able to verify his birthdate or birthplace, and "he was last heard from in 1934."<ref name="FBI File SAC 25-330971-26"/> | |||
===Leader of the Allah Temple of Islam=== | |||
The Nation of Islam refutes the claim that Fard and Ford are one and the same in an article posted on the NOI website by Dr. Wesley Muhammad.<ref>{{Cite web|date=2018-09-12|title=Master W. Fard Muhammad and FBI COINTELPRO|url=https://www.noi.org/fard-muhammad-fbi-cointelpro/|access-date=2020-08-10|website=NOI.org Official Website|language=en-US}}</ref> | |||
Beynon's interviewees told him that reports of Fard's message spread throughout the black community. Attendance at the house meetings grew until the listeners were divided into groups and taught in shifts. Finally, the community contributed money and rented a hall to serve as a temple where meetings were conducted.<ref name="Beynon_896">{{harvnb|Beynon|1938|p=896}}</ref> The ] was soon introduced as the most authoritative of all texts for the study of the faith.<ref name="Beynon_900">{{harvnb|Beynon|1938|p=900}}</ref> Fard prepared texts that served as authoritative manuals of the faith and were memorized verbatim by his followers.<ref name="Beynon_900" /> | |||
According to Beynon, Fard's followers grew to approximately eight thousand,<ref name="Beynon_897" /> and "ithin three years the prophet not only began the movement but organized it so well that he himself was able to recede into the background, appearing almost never to his followers during the final months of his residence in Detroit."<ref name="Beynon_902">{{harvnb|Beynon|1938|p=902}}</ref> | |||
Karl Evanzz, in his book ''The Messenger'', postulates that Fard was the son of a Pakistani Muslim, then known as East Indians. He bases this theory on several indications:{{sfn|Evanzz|2011|loc=|p=409-414}} | |||
During this time, Clara Poole, later renamed Clara Muhammad, was introduced to W.D. Fard and his teachings through her ]s.<ref name=":1">{{Cite book |last=Taylor |first=Ula Yvette |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5149/9781469633947_taylor |title=The Promise of Patriarchy: Women and the Nation of Islam |date=2017 |publisher=University of North Carolina Press |isbn=978-1-4696-3395-4 |location=North-Carolina |pages=7–17 |jstor=10.5149/9781469633947_taylor }}</ref> His teachings gave Poole hope and presented her life with new possibilities and new memories.{{clarify|date=May 2024}}<ref name=":1" /> After one of Fard's services, during which he asked if someone knew Elijah Poole, Clara, introduced him and his teachings to her husband, Elijah Poole, who later became Elijah Muhammad.<ref name=":1" /> His guidance and teachings eventually changed and reformed Elijah Poole into a responsible and ideal husband, who would later become the face and leader of the Nation Of Islam.<ref name=":1" /> | |||
# Fard spent time at the ] Mosque, a movement prominent in Pakistan and used translations of the Quran from Pakistanis. | |||
# The name Fard is a common surname in Pakistan as are other names he bestowed upon his followers such as Shabazz, Ghulam, and Kallatt | |||
# Interviews with long-time Nation figures who met him or saw original photos of him such as ], Rodnell Collins (nephew of Malcolm X) and Wilfred Little indicate that Fard has Pakistani features | |||
# Early teachings from Fard indicated a distrust and disdain for Hinduism | |||
From interviews with approximately two hundred families who followed Fard, Beynon concluded:<blockquote>Although the prophet lived in Detroit from July 4, 1930 until June 30, 1934, virtually nothing is known about him, save that he 'came from the East' and that he 'called' the ]es of North America to enter the Nation of Islam. His very name is uncertain. He was known usually as Mr. Wali Farrad or Mr. W. D. Fard, though he used also the following names: Professor Ford, Mr. Farrad Mohammed, Mr. F. Mohammed Ali. One of the few survivors who heard his first addresses states that he himself said: 'My name is W. D. Fard and I came from the Holy City of Mecca. More about myself I will not tell you yet, for the time has not yet come. I am your brother. You have not yet seen me in my royal robes.' Legends soon sprang up about this mysterious personality.</blockquote> | |||
The 2019 book ''Finding W.D. Fard: Unveiling the Identity of the Founder of the Nation of Islam'' by Dr. John Andrew Morrow investigates theories of Fard's origin. "The people who actually met him, and the scholars who have studied him, have suggested that he was variously an African American, an Arab from Syria, Lebanon, Algeria, Morocco or Saudi Arabia... a Turk, an Afghan, an Indo-Pakistani... a Greek..." Morrow writes. "In an attempt to determine the origins of W.D. Fard, most scholars have relied on his teachings as passed down, and perhaps modified, by Elijah Muhammad. Some have suggested that he was a member of the Moorish Science Temple of America or the Ahmadiyyah Movement. Others have suggested that he was a Druze or a Shiite."{{sfn|Morrow|2019|loc=|page=1-35}} | |||
In 1933, he began signing his name "W. F. Muhammad", which stood for Wallace Fard Muhammad, and used it on several lessons written in 1933 and 1934.<ref name="Muhammad_93" /><ref name="harvnb|Muhammad|1965|pp=16–17">{{harvnb|Muhammad|1965|pp=16–17}}</ref> | |||
''Chameleon: The True Story of W.D. Fard'' by A. K. Arian studies the origin of the Nation of Islam founder.<ref>{{Cite book |title=Chameleon: The True Story of W.D. Fard |publisher=Xis Books |isbn=978-0977911257 |edition=1 |date=4 April 2017 |first=A.K. |last=Arian }}</ref> One theory postulated is that Fard was of Afghan heritage. | |||
=== "Voodoo Murder" drives Fard from Detroit (1932) === | |||
===Moorish Science Temple of America=== | |||
{{Main|Murder of James J. Smith}} | |||
In addition to his assertion that Fard was Ford, Evanzz also said that Fard was once a member of the ],{{sfn|Evanzz|2011|loc=|p=69}}{{sfn|Evanzz|2011|loc=|p=673}} citing as a primary source the 1945 publication by ] and ] titled ''They Seek A City''.<ref>{{harvp|Bontemps|Conroy|1945}}</ref> Authors have also cited ] for this proposition as well.<ref>{{harvp|Essien-Udom|1995|p=35}}</ref> In his 1962 book ''Black Nationalism: The Search for an Identity'', Essien-Udom wrote: | |||
] | |||
On November 20, 1932, Robert Harris (who had received the name Robert Karriem from Fard) escorted James J. Smith into a room with a makeshift altar. In the audience were twelve adult witnesses and Harris's wife and children. Smith, who believed he was being inducted into the Allah Temple of Islam, was asked if he would sacrifice his life for Islam, and Smith nodded his assent. Harris then stabbed Smith in the chest, and proceeded to bludgeon him to death with an ].{{Sfn|Evanzz|2011|pp=84-85}}<ref>{{harvnb|Beynon|1938|pp=903–904}}</ref>{{Efn|Beynon stated that Fard's position on human sacrifice "was never made clear."}} | |||
After neighbors called the police, Harris was arrested. Under questioning, he confessed to the murder: "I had to kill somebody, I could not forsake my gods". Police initiated a ] for Fard and another leader, Ugan Ali, who were arrested and questioned. Harris was deemed insane and committed to a ]. "The society cannot be blamed for anything he did," Ali was quoted as saying in the '']''.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Coverage Of "The Voodoo Murders" — Mythic Detroit|url=http://www.mythicdetroit.org/index.php?n=Main.VoodooMurdersCoverage|access-date=August 10, 2020|website=www.mythicdetroit.org}}</ref> Fard and Ugan Ali, who acknowledged leadership of the Allah Temple of Islam but vehemently denied any teaching of ], were examined by ] David Clark, who recommended they be ] for further ]. A judge agreed, and both Fard and Ugan Ali were placed in ]s and confined in ]s.{{Sfn|Evanzz|2011|pp=84-92}} | |||
<blockquote>"] was shot and stabbed in his offices at the Unity Club in Chicago on the night of March 15, 1929 … He was eventually released on bond, but a few weeks later, he died under mysterious circumstances. Some people claim that he died from injuries inflicted by the police while he was in jail. Others, however, suggest that he was killed by Greene's partisans. For some time, one W. D. Fard assumed leadership of the Moorish movement. According to Bontemps and Conroy, Fard claimed that he was the reincarnation of Noble Drew Ali. By 1930 a permanent split developed in the movement. One faction, the Moors, remains faithful to Noble Drew Ali, and the other, which is now led by Elijah Muhammad, remains faithful to Prophet Fard (Master Wallace Fard Muhammad). However, Minister Malcolm X and other leaders of the Nation of Islam have emphatically denied any past connection whatsoever of Elijah Muhammad, Master Wallace Fard Muhammad, or their movement with Nobel Drew Ali's Moorish American Science Temple."<ref>{{harvp|Essien-Udom|1995|pp=35–36}}</ref></blockquote> | |||
With Fard and Ugan Ali still in custody five days after the murder, Elijah Muhammad, at the time known as Elijah Karriem, led over two hundred members into the court building and staged a protest on the main floor. The police spent a full day expelling the protesters.{{Sfn|Evanzz|2011|pp=84-92}} | |||
On the question of a connection between the Nation of Islam and the Moorish Science Temple of America, Beynon wrote: | |||
] | |||
<blockquote>"Awakened already to a consciousness of race discrimination, these migrants from the South came into contact with militant movements among northern Negroes. Practically none of them had been in the North prior to the collapse of the ] movement. A few of them had come under the influence of the Moorish-American cult which succeeded it. The effect of both these movements upon the future members of the Nation of Islam was largely indirect. Garvey taught the Negroes that their homeland was Ethiopia. The Noble Drew Ali, the prophet of the Moorish-Americans, proclaimed that these people were 'descendants of Morrocans '."<ref>{{harvp|Beynon|1938|p=898}}</ref></blockquote> | |||
On November 25, Harris was ] on charges of ]; he pleaded guilty, but his bizarre courtroom behavior convinced witnesses of his ]. On December 6, three psychiatrists testified that Harris was ], and he was committed to the Ionia State Hospital for the Criminal Insane; he died there on June 19, 1935. Faced with criminal charges, Ugan Ali was released after promising to help disband the Allah Temple of Islam, while Fard agreed to forever leave Detroit as a condition of release.{{Sfn|Evanzz|2011|pp=84-92}}<ref>{{Cite news |date=December 7, 1932 |title=Voodoo's Reign Here Is Broken |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/detroit-free-press-farad-leaves-city/33916350/ |accessdate=August 10, 2023 |newspaper=Detroit Free Press |pages=7 |via=newspapers.com}}</ref> | |||
Beynon also wrote: "The prophet’s message was characterized by his ability to utilize to the fullest measure the environment of his followers. Their physical and economic difficulties alike were used to illustrate the new teaching. Similarly, biblical prophecies and the teachings of Marcus Garvey and Noble Drew Ali were cited as foretelling the coming of the new prophet".<ref name="Beynon_900" /> | |||
On December 7, 1932, police put Fard on a train bound for Chicago. The Allah Temple of Islam was officially disbanded, though soon replaced by a new organization called the Nation of Islam. Former leader Ugan Ali was replaced by Elijah Muhammad.{{Sfn|Evanzz|2011|pp=84-92}} | |||
==Relationship with Elijah Muhammad== | |||
With regard to ], Beynon's article stated: "From among the larger group of Muslims there has sprung recently an even more militant branch than the Nation of Islam itself. This new movement, known as the Temple People, identifies the prophet, Mr. W. D. Fard, with the God, Allah. To Mr. Fard alone do they offer prayer and sacrifice. Since Mr. Fard has been deified, the Temple People raise to the rank of prophet the former Minister of Islam, Elijah Mohammed, now a resident of Chicago. He is always referred to reverently as the 'Prophet Elijah in Chicago.{{'"}}<ref>{{harvp|Beynon|1938|pp=906–07}}</ref> | |||
===Fard in exile and the Nation of Islam (1932–34)=== | |||
Elijah Muhammad, who led the Nation of Islam from 1934 to 1975, heard Fard teach for the first time in 1931.<ref name="Muhammad_64">Muhammad, Elijah (1964), Historic 1964 Buzz Anderson Interview, The Final Call</ref> Elijah Muhammad stated that he and Fard became inseparable between 1931 and 1934, where he felt "jailed almost" due to the amount of time that they spent together with Fard teaching him day and night.<ref name="Muhammad_64"/> | |||
In January 1933, Fard snuck back into Detroit and held secret meetings with followers. Fard left Detroit for a few weeks but returned to Detroit and resumed preaching on street corners. Recognized by police, he was arrested on May 25, booked, and ]ed. He was again released and ordered to depart the city.<ref>{{Cite news |date=May 26, 1933 |title=Banished Leader of Cult Arrested |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/detroit-free-press-farad-left-city-becau/33916139/ |accessdate=August 10, 2023 |newspaper=Detroit Free Press |pages=10 |via=newspapers.com}}</ref> | |||
] | |||
Fard renamed his community the "Nation of Islam".<ref name="Beynon_897">{{harvnb|Beynon|1938|p=897}}</ref> Following the rapid increase in membership, he instituted a formal organizational structure. He established the ], where women were taught how to keep their houses, clean, and cook. The men of the organization were drilled by captains and referred to as the ]. The entire movement was placed under a Minister of Islam.<ref name="Beynon_902" /> | |||
On September 26, Fard was arrested in Chicago by ] while addressing an audience in a rented hall. The following morning, the Chicago judge Dunn dismissed charges of ] and released Fard.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://archive.org/details/FBI-Wallace-Fard-Muhammad/100-CG-33683/page/n33 | title=FBI Documents on Wallace Fard Muhammad }}</ref> Fard made a third surreptitious visit to Detroit, this time preaching that the ] would soon be destroyed by poison bombs.<ref>{{harvnb|Evanzz|2011|p=96}}: "Upon his release, Fard made another self-described farewell visit to Detroit. He had returned, he told believers, to bring good news about the ] between blacks and whites. 'The White man will be destroyed this year' he said. Everyone was afraid to ask how he could be so certain, but he explained anyway. The ] '']'' sighted in Canada recently, he said, was really the Mother Plane, a vehicle that resembled the description of ] in the Holy Bible. The Mother Plane was designed and built in Japan by 'our Asiatic brothers', Fard said, and when he gave the signal, the ] would release smaller ships inside its bay that would drop poison bombs on America."</ref> | |||
A handwritten lesson written by Fard states:<blockquote>"Twelve Leaders of Islam from all over the Planet have conferred in the Root of Civilization concerning the Lost-Found Nation of Islam – must return to their original Land. One of the Conference Members by the name of Mr. Osman Sharrieff said to the Eleven Members of the Conference: 'The Lost-Found Nation of Islam will not return to their original Land unless they, first, have a thorough Knowledge of their own.' So they sent a Messenger to them of their own. Now, the Messenger and his Laborers worked day and night for the last three and one-half years, and their accomplishments are approximately twenty-five thousand..."<ref name="Muhammad_93"/></blockquote> | |||
Fard established the ], where school-aged children were taught, as an alternative to Detroit public schools.<ref name="Beynon_902" />{{Sfn|Evanzz|2011|pp=94-102}} By January 1934, local ]s had noticed the pattern of dropouts and alerted authorities. On March 27, the '']'' proclaimed that the "] cult" had been revived, and the city initiated legal action against the school.<ref>{{Cite news |date=March 27, 1934 |title=Voodooist Cult Revived in City |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/detroit-free-press/81995138/ |accessdate=August 10, 2023 |newspaper=Detroit Free Press |pages=1 |via=newspapers.com}}</ref> The school was raided by police, and Elijah Muhammad was arrested. | |||
In this lesson, Fard places the number of converts obtained in Detroit at 25,000, and he describes a "Messenger" sent to the "Lost-Found Nation of Islam" who is "of their own".<ref name="Muhammad_93"/> Nation of Islam theology states that this "Messenger" is Elijah Muhammad.<ref>Muhammad, Jabril (1993) This is The One The Most Honored Elijah Muhammad We Need Not Look For Another, Vol. 1</ref> | |||
Press reported that at trial, fifteen-year-old Sally Ali, who had attended the University of Islam, testified that she had been taught "in the Islamic New Deal that if she cut off the heads of four devils—devils being unrighteous people—she would win a free trip to Mecca and a button of some sort." She further testified that she had been taught that ]s would be destroyed in the year 1934 by poison gas and fighting.<ref name="GirlLore">{{Cite news |date=April 26, 1934 |title=Girl Recounts Lore of Islam |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/detroit-free-press-noi-dfp-april-26/32215486/ |accessdate=August 10, 2023 |newspaper=Detroit Free Press |pages=1 |via=newspapers.com}}</ref> Elijah Muhammad was found guilty for his role in establishing an unlicensed school, but he was released on probation. Amid rumors that police wanted both Fard and his chief aide dead, Elijah Muhammad fled for Chicago, and Fard was never again seen by most residents of Detroit.{{Sfn|Evanzz|2011|pp=94-102}} | |||
Fard wrote, in his instructions to the leaders of his community, that they should "copy the Answers of Lesson of Minister Elijah Muhammad."<ref name="Muhammad_93"/> He went on to state: "Why is Stress made to the Muslims to Copy, the Minister, Elijah Muhammad's Answers? The past History shows that the ALMIGHTY ALLAH sends Prophets and Apostles for the people's Guide and Example, and through them HIS Mystery was Revealed. And those who follow the Apostle would see the Light."<ref name="Muhammad_93"/> | |||
==Fard's fate and death== | |||
Fard wrote several lessons which are read and committed to memory by members of the Nation of Islam.<ref name="Muhammad_93">{{harvp|Muhammad|1993}}</ref><ref group="Note">Beynon refers to some of the lessons by Fard as an "oral tradition" that was recorded at the University of Islam as the "Secret Ritual of the Nation of Islam." See {{harvp|Beynon|1938|p=898}}. Authors have subsequently attributed a text of this title to Fard. See Evanzz, supra at 81. However, Fard's lessons were individually written lessons later compiled in a single publication. See {{harvp|Muhammad|1993}}. Language attributed to Fard by author Karl Evanzz does not appear in any of the individually written lessons.</ref> Some of the lessons are in the form of questions asked by Fard to Elijah Muhammad.<ref name="Muhammad_93"/> One such lesson concludes with the text: "This Lesson No. 2 was given by our Prophet, W.D. Fard, which contains 40 questions answered by Elijah Muhammad, one of the lost found in the wilderness of North America February 20th, 1934."<ref name="Muhammad_93"/> | |||
{{expand-section|date=December 2024}} | |||
] | |||
It is not known what became of Fard or the circumstances of his death. Though he was a naturalized citizen, he may have been forced to accept voluntary deportment; In 1932, the '']'' reported that he had been awaiting an immigration hearing. <ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-escanaba-daily-press/34389501/ | title=Article clipped from the Escanaba Daily Press | work=The Escanaba Daily Press | date=November 24, 1932 | page=1 }}</ref> | |||
After he had departed Detroit, Fard visited Hazel Barton, the mother of his child, in Los Angeles; she recalled him only eating one meal per day as part of his new lifestyle. Hazel recalled he was driving a new car with California plates, with white sheets covering the seats. He left the sheets with her, saying he was going "back to New Zealand".<ref>FBI interview with Barton</ref> | |||
Fard's last known contact with the Nation of Islam was a letter sent from Mexico which was received in March 1934.<ref name="youtube.com" /> Morrow speculates that Fard might have tried to return to the US under another name. | |||
For decades after Fard's disappearance, Elijah Muhammad maintained that Fard was alive and well. Fard suffered from diabetes and had to carry sugar packets; Morrow notes the possibility that Fard might have died not long after his disappearance. | |||
==Ideology== | ==Ideology== | ||
Beynon described the substance of Fard's teaching as follows:<blockquote> |
Beynon described the substance of Fard's teaching as follows:<blockquote>The black men in North America are not Negroes, but members of the lost ], stolen by traders from the Holy City of Mecca 379 years ago. The prophet came to America to find and to bring back to life his long lost brethren, from whom the Caucasians had taken away their language, their nation and their religion. Here in America they were living other than themselves. They must learn that they are the original people, noblest of the nations of the earth. The Caucasians are the colored people, since they have lost their original color. The original people must regain their religion, which is Islam, their language, which is Arabic, and their culture, which is astronomy and higher mathematics, especially calculus. They must live according to the law of Allah, avoiding all meat of 'poison animals', hogs, ducks, geese, possums and catfish. They must give up completely the use of stimulants, especially liquor. They must clean themselves up – both their bodies and their houses. If in this way they obeyed Allah, he would take them back to the Paradise from which they had been stolen – the Holy City of Mecca.<ref>{{harvnb|Beynon|1938|pp=900–901}}</ref></blockquote> | ||
Fard's lessons themselves state that the "traders" referenced by Beynon came to Africa, not Mecca.<ref>{{harvnb|Muhammad|1993|p=12}}</ref> | |||
Modern Nation of Islam theology is based upon the belief that Fard's teaching of Elijah Muhammad was fulfillment of scripture regarding God's teaching of an Apostle, where Fard is described as "God in Person", the "]", and the "]".<ref>{{harvnb|Muhammad|1965|p=164}}</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Muhammad|1993|p=3}}</ref> Fard wrote the following for his followers:<blockquote>he LESSONS that OUR SAVIOUR (ALLAH) gave us to Study and Learn is the Fulfillment of the Prophecies of All the Former Prophets concerning the Beginning of the Devils, and the Ending of the Civilization, and of our Enslavement by the Devils, and Present Time of our Delivery from the Devils by OUR SAVIOUR (ALLAH). PRAISE HIS HOLY NAME! There is No God but ALLAH. How that ALLAH would separate us from the Devils and, then destroy them; and Change us into a New and Perfect People; and Fill the Earth with FREEDOM, JUSTICE and EQUALITY as it was filled with wickedness; and Making we, the Poor Lost-Founds, the Perfect RULERS.<ref name="Muhammad_93" /></blockquote> | |||
In Elijah Muhammad's 1965 book '']'', which is a compilation of articles written for newspapers throughout the early part of his ministry, Muhammad summarized what Fard taught him as follows:<blockquote>He began teaching us the knowledge of ourselves, of God and the devil, of the measurement of the earth, of other planets, and of the civilization of some of the planets other than earth. ... He measured and weighed the earth and its water; the history of the moon; the history of the two nations, black and white, that dominate the earth. He gave the exact birth of the white race; the name of their God who made them and how; and the end of their time, the judgment, how it will begin and end. ... He taught us the truth of how we were made 'slaves' and how we are kept in slavery by the 'slave-masters' children. He declared the doom of America, for her evils to us was past due. And that she is number one to be destroyed. Her judgment could not take place until we hear the truth. ... He declared that we were without the knowledge of self or anyone else. How we had been made blind, deaf and dumb by this white race of people and how we must return to our people, our God and His religion of peace (Islam), the religion of the prophets. We must give up the slave names of our slave-masters and accept the name of Allah (God) or one of His divine attributes. He also taught us to give up all evil doings and practices and do righteousness or be destroyed from the face of the earth. He taught us that the slave-masters had taught us to eat the wrong food and that this is the cause of our sickness and short span of life. He declared that he would heal us and set us in heaven at once, if we would submit to Him. Otherwise he would chastise us with a severe chastisement until we did submit. And that He was able to force the whole world into submission to his will. He said that he loved us (the so-called Negroes), his lost and found, so well that he would eat rattlesnakes to free us if necessary, for he has power over all things.<ref name="harvnb|Muhammad|1965|pp=16–17" /> </blockquote> | |||
Part of Fard's teaching also involved admiration for ].<ref>{{cite book |title=The African American Encounter with Japan and China: Black Internationalism in Asia, 1895–1945 |first=Marc S. |last=Gallicchio |publisher=] |publication-place=], North Carolina |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QzAaDgAAQBAJ |via=] |isbn=9780807860687 |year=2000 |oclc=43334134 |chapter=4. The Rise of the Black Internationale |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QzAaDgAAQBAJpg }}</ref> | |||
Both during and after his life, some charged that Fard was a ] who used mystery and ] to ] poor blacks, selling them new Muslim names and stirring up ]<ref>{{cite web |title=False prophet |first=Debra |last=Dickerson |date=January 6, 2000 |access-date=January 31, 2022 |url=https://www.salon.com/2000/01/06/muhammad |archive-date=September 12, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210912110011/https://www.salon.com/2000/01/06/muhammad |oclc=43916723 |editor1-first=David |editor1-last=Talbot |editor2-first=Erin |editor2-last=Keane |publisher=Salon.com, LLC. |work=] }}</ref> by copying selected elements of other Muslim religious sects and ideologies that fit his ] narrative.{{sfn|Morrow|2019|loc=|p=xii}} | |||
===Influences=== | |||
] | |||
Fard was influenced by the Jehovah's Witness movement, Freemansonry (especially the Shriners), ], Moorish Science, and of course Islam. | |||
The teaching of the Jehovah's Witnesses has been called "the most obvious non-Islamic source for teachings".<ref>Bowen:Given that the Jehovah’s Witnesses had been the group that originally popularized the belief in 1914 being the end of the reign of a large group of evil people—a doctrine that clearly corresponds to Fard’s use of the 1914 date—and that Fard had explicitly encouraged his followers to read and listen to the Witnesses’ leader Rutherford, it seems that the Witnesses are the most obvious non-Islamic source for his teachings"</ref> Fard was known to teach from what a Detroit newspaper described as "The Bible of Islam"; in 2023, the book was identified as ''Deliverance!'' by ], of the ] or ].<ref>{{cite web | url=https://bliis.org/essay/w-d-fards-bible-of-islamism-identified-a-century-old-mystery-is-solved/ | title=W. D. Fard's Bible of Islamism Identified: A Century-Old Mystery is Solved }}</ref> Fard recommended radio broadcasts by Rutherford, ], and other millennial preachers.<ref>Beynon</ref> Jehovah's Witness founder ], like Fard, interpreted the year 1914 as the beginning of an apocalypse.<ref>"35. Tell us the exact date of the expiration of the devil's civilization. ANS. Expired in Nineteen and Fourteen."</ref> Both groups instructed members to refuse compulsory military service. Both groups taught that souls were not immortal, that there was no afterlife, and that heaven and hell were states of life on Earth rather than ].<ref>{{Cite journal|url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/1384578|title=Watchtower Influences on Black Muslim Eschatology: An Exploratory Story|author=Maesen, William A.|year=1970|journal=Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion|volume=9|issue=4|pages=321–325|doi=10.2307/1384578|jstor=1384578 }}</ref> | |||
Fard encouraged students to read ]’s ''Conquest of Civilization'', ]’s '']'' and books on Freemansonry. Fard recommended the writings of Henry Ford, including '']'', an anti-Jewish forgery promoted by Henry Ford. Police found literature by anti-Jewish preacher ].{{sfn|Morrow|2019|p=42}} | |||
Fard is believed to have been influenced by the ], which also assigned new names to members to replace their "slave name".{{Sfn|Bowen|2017|pp=241, 256}} Both groups taught African-Americans to identify as 'Asiatics', both groups wore the ]. Both groups met at "temples", not mosques. Freemasonry has similarly been thought to be a souce of inspiration; Elijah Pool (later Elijah Muhammad) had been a Freemason before meeting Fard. Garveyism has similarly be cited an inspiration, with modern scholars noting Garvey's teachings were popular in San Quentin. | |||
The Islamic scholar John Andrew Morrow summarizes Fard's teachings as rooted in "a wide variety of ideas from both East and West" including "], ], ], and ] Extremism, as well as ], ], ], ], and ]."{{sfn|Morrow|2019|loc=|pp=36–37}} Like Islam, Fard's teaching forbade drugs, alcohol, and pork; Fard also preached against 'slave foods' like ducks, geese, possums and catfish. | |||
==Legacy== | |||
Fard influenced his successor ], ], and many other ] thinkers. The annual ] event is held in honor of Fard's birth.<ref>{{Cite web |date=January 3, 2019 |title=About Saviours' Day |url=https://www.noi.org/about-savioursday/ |access-date=August 10, 2020 |website=Nation of Islam |language=en-US}}</ref> In 2020, it attracted an estimated 14,000 participants.<ref>{{cite news |archive-date=November 24, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211124092448/https://www.freep.com/story/news/local/michigan/2020/02/23/farrakhan-detroit-speaks-thousands-nation-islam-convention/4848519002 |work=] |publication-place=Detroit, Michigan, United States |editor1-first=Peter |editor1-last=Bhatia |editor2-first=Anjanette |editor2-last=Delgado |editor3-first=James G. |editor3-last=Hill |issn=1055-2758 |oclc=474189830 |editor1-link=Peter Bhatia |publisher=] |title=Louis Farrakhan says billionaires 'paying off' black preachers, politicians |first=Niraj |last=Warikoo |date=February 23, 2020 |access-date=January 31, 2022 |url=https://www.freep.com/story/news/local/michigan/2020/02/23/farrakhan-detroit-speaks-thousands-nation-islam-convention/4848519002 }}</ref> | |||
===Continued deification under Elijah Muhammad=== | |||
] | |||
With regard to ], Beynon's article stated: "From among the larger group of Muslims there has sprung recently an even more militant branch than the Nation of Islam itself. This new movement, known as the Temple People. To Mr. Fard alone do they offer prayer and sacrifice. Since Mr. Fard has been deified, the Temple People raise the former Minister of Islam, now a resident of Chicago."<ref>{{harvnb|Beynon|1938|pp=906–907}}</ref> This reference is in conflict with the first hand accounts of Malcolm X, such as his appearance in 1963 on the news program City Desk. Malcolm X states that Elijah Mohammed was neither Allah nor a Prophet, but rather that he was a Messenger. Elijah Muhammad, who led the Nation of Islam from 1934 to 1975, heard Fard teach for the first time in 1931.<ref name="Muhammad_64">Muhammad, Elijah (1964), Historic 1964 Buzz Anderson Interview, The Final Call</ref> Elijah Muhammad stated that he and Fard became inseparable between 1931 and 1934, where he felt "jailed almost" due to the amount of time that they spent together with Fard teaching him day and night.<ref name="Muhammad_64" /> | |||
A handwritten lesson written by Fard states:<blockquote>Twelve Leaders of Islam from all over the Planet have conferred in the Root of Civilization concerning the Lost-Found Nation of Islam – must return to their original Land. One of the Conference Members by the name of Mr. Osman Sharrieff said to the Eleven Members of the Conference: 'The Lost-Found Nation of Islam will not return to their original Land unless they, first, have a thorough Knowledge of their own.' So they sent a Messenger to them of their own. Now, the Messenger and his Laborers worked day and night for the last three and one-half years, and their accomplishments are approximately twenty-five thousand...<ref name="Muhammad_93" /></blockquote> | |||
In this lesson, Fard places the number of converts obtained in Detroit at 25,000, and he describes a "Messenger" sent to the "Lost-Found Nation of Islam" who is "of their own".<ref name="Muhammad_93" /> Nation of Islam theology states that this "Messenger" is Elijah Muhammad.<ref>Muhammad, Jabril (1993) This is The One The Most Honored Elijah Muhammad We Need Not Look For Another, Vol. 1</ref> Fard wrote, in his instructions to the leaders of his community, that they should "copy the Answers of Lesson of Minister Elijah Muhammad."<ref name="Muhammad_93" /> He went on to state: "Why is Stress made to the Muslims to Copy, the Minister, Elijah Muhammad's Answers? The past History shows that the ALMIGHTY ALLAH sends Prophets and Apostles for the people's Guide and Example, and through them HIS Mystery was Revealed. And those who follow the Apostle would see the Light."<ref name="Muhammad_93" /> | |||
Fard wrote several lessons which are read and committed to memory by members of the Nation of Islam.<ref name="Muhammad_93">{{harvnb|Muhammad|1993}}</ref>{{Efn|Beynon refers to some of the lessons by Fard as an "oral tradition" that was recorded at the University of Islam as the "Secret Ritual of the Nation of Islam." See Beynon (1938), p. 898. Authors have subsequently attributed a text of this title to Fard. See Evanzz, supra at 81. However, Fard's lessons were individually written lessons later compiled in a single publication. See Muhammad (1993). Language attributed to Fard by author Karl Evanzz does not appear in any of the individually written lessons.}} Some of the lessons are in the form of questions asked by Fard to Elijah Muhammad.<ref name="Muhammad_93" /> One such lesson concludes with the text: "This Lesson No. 2 was given by our Prophet, W.D. Fard, which contains 40 questions answered by Elijah Muhammad, one of the lost found in the wilderness of North America February 20th, 1934."<ref name="Muhammad_93" /> | |||
While some scholars argue that Fard's divinity was a creation of Elijah Muhammad, Morrow points out that Fard did identify himself as God to Detroit police and that the psychiatrists who examined Fard after his arrest reported that Fard had delusions of Godhood. Morrow argues that under Elijah Muhammad, the doctrine of whites as devils was emphasized, while Fard had taught that "devils" were unbelievers of all races.<ref name="youtube.com">{{Cite web |last=Bilal's Boulder |date=13 August 2019 |title=Finding W.D. Fard - John Andrew Morrow |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OrTT64jFpr4 |accessdate=August 10, 2023 |via=www.youtube.com}}</ref> | |||
===FBI's public claims about Fard=== | |||
A declassified ] (FBI) memorandum dated May 16, 1957, states: "From a review of instant file it does not appear that there has been a concerted effort to locate and fully identify W. D. Fard. In as much as Elijah Muhammad recognizes W.D. Fard as being Allah (God) and claims that Fard is the source of all of his teachings, it is suggested that an exhaustive effort be made to fully identify and locate W. D. Fard and/or members of his family."<ref>FBI File SAC (25-20607) at 476</ref> The FBI took note of the article written by Erdmann Doane Beynon, and it conducted a search for Fard using various aliases including the name "Ford".<ref>FBI File SAC (100-26356) at 451–473, SAC Chicago (100-33683)</ref> On October 17, 1957, the FBI located and interviewed Hazel Barton-Ford, Wallie Ford's common-law wife, with whom he had a son named Wallace Dodd Ford, born on September 1, 1920.<ref name="SAC LA 105-4805">FBI File SAC LA (105–4805) at 135</ref> This son, later also known as Wallace Max Ford, died in 1942. He was serving for the ], during ], at the time of his death.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://vault.fbi.gov/Wallace%20Fard%20Muhammed/Wallace%20Fard%20Muhammed%20Part%205%20of%207|title=FBI document | |||
|website=fbi.gov|access-date=10 August 2023}}</ref> Barton-Ford gave a description of Wallie Ford, and described him as a Caucasian New Zealander.<ref name="SAC LA 105-4805" /> The FBI's search for Fard was officially closed the following year on April 15, 1958.<ref>FBI File Director FBI (105-63642) at 248, SAC Chicago (100-33683)</ref> Immigration records did not match any of his aliases. His true identity remains unknown,<ref name="fbipart2">{{cite web |url=https://vault.fbi.gov/Wallace%20Fard%20Muhammed/Wallace%20Fard%20Muhammed%20Part%202%20of%207/view |publisher=Federal Bureau of Investigation |title=Wallace Fard Muhammed Part 2 of 7|work=FBI }}{{rp|40, 74, 120, 123}}</ref> but there is strong evidence that the Nation of Islam founder Wallace D. Fard was the same man as Wallace Dodd Ford, an inmate in San Quentin Prison. According to Patrick D. Bowen, a PhD candidate at the ]'s ], fingerprints and photographs taken from ] matched those of Fard taken during the 1930s in Detroit; furthermore, in San Quentin he almost certainly came in contact with African American Muslim preachers and converts also incarcerated there.<ref name="bowen">{{cite journal |title='The Colored Genius': Lucius Lehman and the Californian Roots of Modern African-American Islam |first=Patrick D. |last=Bowen |date=March 21, 2013 |journal=The Graduate Journal of Harvard Divinity School |access-date=January 31, 2022 |publisher=] |url=https://projects.iq.harvard.edu/hdsjournal/book/%E2%80%98-colored-genius%E2%80%99 |publication-place=], Massachusetts, United States }}</ref> | |||
On August 15, 1959, the FBI sent a story to the Chicago '']'' newspaper, stating that Fard was a "Turkish-born Nazi agent who worked for ] in ]". According to the FBI story, Fard was a "Muslim from Turkey who had come to the United States in the early 1900s. He had met Muhammad in prison … where the two men plotted a confidence game in which followers were charged a fee to become Muslims."{{sfn|Evanzz|2011|loc=|pp=204–205}} | |||
After the story was published, Elijah Muhammad and ] subsequently charged black media outlets, which reprinted the accusation in large numbers, with running the story without requesting a response from the Nation of Islam.{{sfn|Evanzz|2011|loc=|pp=204–205}} | |||
According to the FBI, Fard was linked to the ], a ] of ] which promoted the idea that the ] was the champion of all ] peoples, and to senior members of the ], such as ] and Ashima Takis.{{sfn|Evanzz|2011|loc=|pp=105-108}} The FBI charged that Takahashi had been an influential presence in the Nation of Islam. He spoke as a guest at the NOI temples in Detroit and Chicago.<ref>{{cite journal |title=When Japan Was "Champion of the Darker Races": Satokata Takahashi and the Flowering of Black Messianic Nationalism |first=Ernest |last=Allen Jr. |journal=] |pages=23–46 |volume=24 |issue=1 |date=December 21, 1994 |issn=0006-4246 |publication-place=San Francisco, California, United States |publisher=]/] |doi=10.1080/00064246.1994.11413118 |editor1-first=Louis |editor-last=Chude-Sokei |url=https://www.scribd.com/document/190326286/When-Japan-Was-Champion-of-the-Darker-Races-Satokata-Takahashi-and-the-Flowering-of-Black-Messianic-Nationalism-by-Ernest-Allen-Jr |via=] |format=PDF }}</ref>{{better source needed|date=May 2022}} A February 19, 1963, FBI memorandum states: "In connection with efforts to disrupt and curb growth of the NOI, extensive research has been conducted into various files maintained by this office. Among the files reviewed was that of Wallace Dodd Ford."<ref>FBI File Director, FBI (25-330971) at 258, SAC Chicago (100-35635)</ref> Five months later, in July 1963, the FBI told the '']'' that Fard was actually Wallace Dodd Ford.{{sfn|Evanzz|2011|loc=|p=264}} The paper published the story in an article titled "Black Muslim Founder Exposed As White."<ref>"Black Muslim Founder Exposed As White", ''Los Angeles Evening Herald-Examiner'', July 28, 1963</ref>{{Dubious |reason=The FBI was aware of his many aliases he used. They received three plausible identities but were unable to verify any of them. He had many identities but they couldn't trace his actual origins and gave up the investigation.|date=July 2019}} An FBI memorandum dated August 1963 states that the FBI had not been able to verify his birthdate or birthplace, and "he was last heard from in 1934."<ref name="FBI File SAC 25-330971-26">FBI File SAC (25-330971-26)</ref> | |||
===Demotion by Warith Deen Mohammed=== | |||
Upon Elijah Muhammad's death in February 1975, his son Wallace (later Warith) was named successor and instituted sweeping reforms. Where his father has regarded Fard as a physical manifestation of Allah, Wallace denounced Fard as a human who "had his own designs on the black community".<ref name=":0">{{Cite news |date=25 April 1977 |title=U.S. Muslims Closer to Uniting With Islam |url=https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/556533019/ |access-date=15 April 2024 |work=Hawaii Tribune-Herald |pages=5 |via=newspapers.com}}</ref> The group discontinued the annual Savior's Day celebration in honor of Fard.{{Citation needed|date=April 2024}} | |||
Wallace brought the group closer to mainstream Sunni Islam, restyling their 'temples' as mosques while 'ministers' became known as imams. Wallace rejected black nationalism in favor of Islamic anti-racism and disbanded the militaristic "Fruit of Islam" group.<ref name=":0" /> | |||
In a 2000s interview alongside Louis Farrakhan, Warith Deen Muhammad described breaking with his father Elijah Muhammad over the issue of Fard's divinity: | |||
<blockquote> | |||
I differed with my father, and I didn't want to differ with him. In fact I never differed with him directly, he was told that someone heard me saying something different. So he called me to question me about it. | |||
And I told him that I could more readily believe ''he'' was God, than I could believe that his teacher was God. Because his teacher was a white man and he said white people were devils. | |||
My mother, when I was leaving the home one day, after my father had insisted that I accept God the way he presented God, or I was gonna be cut off from all communication, he told me he knew it would hurt me to know that I wouldn't be able to see my mother. He said - "you won't be able to talk to your mother or see her". So... I didn't change, and as I was leaving my mother was hurt, and it hurt me to see her hurting like that. | |||
She said, she walked me to the door, which she didn't do, that wasn't normal for her. And she stood on the porch at the door and she said - 'Wallace, why don't you go back there and accept it? Just say you believe.' | |||
I said - 'Mama, tell me what Mr. Fard told you all. Did he tell you he was God?' | |||
And she looked like her face went blank, and looked like she didn't know what to say, and in a few seconds she said - 'No, he did not. In fact he told us to not even call him Prophet, said that was too big a title for him.' | |||
Then I said to my mother - 'How can you ask your son now, to accept a man as God, who said Prophet was too big a title for him?'.<ref name="ReferenceA">{{Cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4tdRe1z5J4A|title=Louis Farrakhan & Warith Deen Muhammad Discuss WD Fard|date=May 29, 2022 |accessdate=August 10, 2023|via=www.youtube.com}}</ref> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
===False claim that Muhammad Abdullah was Fard=== | |||
After the death of Elijah Muhammad in 1975, his son and new Nation of Islam leader ] suggested that his newly appointed Oakland California Imam Muhammad Abdullah was Fard, though Abdullah himself later retracted this claim.{{Sfn|Morrow|2019|pp=54-55}}<ref name="AyshaKhan">{{cite thesis|author=Aysha Khan |title='A Seed of Truth': Ahmadiyya Muslim Propagation Networks and the Development of Islam in America |url=https://dash.harvard.edu/handle/1/37372947 |location=Harvard University |degree=MA |year=2022}}</ref> Scholar Fatimah Fanusie has argued that Abdullah was, in fact, Fard.<ref name="AyshaKhan" /> Abdullah was reportedly introduced as Fard to boxing legend ].<ref name="youtube.com" />{{better source needed|date=July 2023}} | |||
===Restoration under Louis Farrakhan=== | |||
] | |||
In 1978, Farrakhan and a small number of supporters decided to rebuild what they considered the original Nation of Islam upon the foundations established by Wallace Fard Muhammad and Elijah Muhammad. | |||
In 1979, Farrakhan's group founded a weekly newspaper entitled '']'', which was intended to be similar to the original ''Muhammad Speaks'' newspaper that Malcolm X claimed to have started,<ref>{{cite book|last=Malcolm X|title=The Autobiography of Malcolm X|publisher=Random House Publishing Group|year=1964|isbn=978-0-345-37671-8}}</ref>{{Page needed|date=November 2024}} Farrakhan had a weekly column in ''The Final Call''. In 1981, Farrakhan and his supporters held their first Saviours' Day convention in Chicago, Illinois, and took back the name of the Nation of Islam. The event was similar to the earlier Nation's celebrations, last held in Chicago on February 26, 1975. At the convention's keynote address, Farrakhan announced his attempt to restore the Nation of Islam under Elijah Muhammad's teachings.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.finalcall.com/national/savioursday2k/farrakhan.htm|title=Farrakhan continues Hon. Elijah Muhammad's mission|publisher=Finalcall.com|access-date=November 16, 2014}}</ref> | |||
In a 2000s interview featuring both Louis Farrakhan and Warith Deen Muhammad, Farrakhan argued that "Master Fard Muhammad taught us to accept our own and to be ourselves. We know that he, a man born February 26, 1877, is not the originator of the Heavens and Earth... Fard Muhammad developed a methodology, strange as it seems, unorthodox as it seems, even poisonous as it may seem, yet it was a prescription that started bringing balance to the system, and that we would evolve from a Nationalist Black-thinking people into the universal message of Islam."<ref name="ReferenceA" />{{Additional citation needed|date=July 2023}} | |||
Fard's lessons actually state that the "traders" referenced by Beynon, came to Africa, not Mecca.<ref>{{harvp|Muhammad|1993|p=12}}</ref> | |||
In 2007, the Nation of Islam had an estimated membership of 20,000–50,000.<ref>{{cite news |title=Nation of Islam at a crossroad as leader exits |first=Neil |last=MacFarquhar |author-link=Neil MacFarquhar |date=February 26, 2007 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/26/us/26farrakhan.html |url-access=subscription |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130522093351/http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/26/us/26farrakhan.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all |archive-date=2013-05-22 |newspaper=] |publication-place=New York City, New York, United States |issn=0362-4331 |oclc=1645522 |editor1-first=A.G. |editor1-last=Sulzberger |editor2-first=Dean |editor2-last=Baquet |editor3-first=Joseph |editor3-last=Kahn }}{{cbignore}}</ref>{{better source needed|date=July 2023}} | |||
Modern Nation of Islam theology is based upon the belief that Fard's teaching of Elijah Muhammad was fulfillment of scripture regarding God's teaching of an Apostle, where Fard is described as "God in Person", the "]", and the "]".<ref>{{harvp|Muhammad|1965|p=164}}</ref><ref>{{harvp|Muhammad|1993|p=3}}</ref> Fard wrote the following for his followers:<blockquote>"he LESSONS that OUR SAVIOUR (ALLAH) gave us to Study and Learn is the Fulfillment of the Prophecies of All the Former Prophets concerning the Beginning of the Devils, and the Ending of the Civilization, and of our Enslavement by the Devils, and Present Time of our Delivery from the Devils by OUR SAVIOUR (ALLAH). PRAISE HIS HOLY NAME! There is No God but ALLAH. How that ALLAH would separate us from the Devils and, then destroy them; and Change us into a New and Perfect People; and Fill the Earth with FREEDOM, JUSTICE and EQUALITY as it was filled with wickedness; and Making we, the Poor Lost-Founds, the Perfect RULERS."<ref name="Muhammad_93"/></blockquote> | |||
===In popular culture=== | |||
In his 1965 book ''Message to the Blackman in America'', which is a compilation of articles written by Elijah Muhammad for newspapers throughout the early part of his Ministry, he summarized what Fard taught him as follows:<blockquote>"He began teaching us the knowledge of ourselves, of God and the devil, of the measurement of the earth, of other planets, and of the civilization of some of the planets other than earth. ... He measured and weighed the earth and its water; the history of the moon; the history of the two nations, black and white, that dominate the earth. He gave the exact birth of the white race; the name of their God who made them and how; and the end of their time, the judgment, how it will begin and end. ... He taught us the truth of how we were made 'slaves' and how we are kept in slavery by the 'slave-masters{{''}} children. He declared the doom of America, for her evils to us was past due. And that she is number one to be destroyed. Her judgment could not take place until we hear the truth. ... | |||
Fard ] ], by ], in which Fard's Detroit Temple No. 1 is the setting for several scenes.{{Citation needed|date=April 2024}} | |||
Fard and his teachings are also referenced in many ] songs. Artists who have made references within their music include ] and ] in the song "We Made It",<ref>{{Cite web |last=Markman |first=Rob |date=24 March 2014 |title=Jay Z Teaches Drake A Lesson On Jay Electronica's 'We Made It': What We Learned |url=https://www.mtv.com/news/zuwqjw/jay-z-drake-jay-electronica-we-made-it |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230319075314/https://www.mtv.com/news/zuwqjw/jay-z-drake-jay-electronica-we-made-it |url-status=dead |archive-date=March 19, 2023 |access-date=15 April 2024 |website=MTV}}</ref><ref name="JayZ">{{Cite web |title=Jay Z & Jay Electronica - We Made It | date=March 23, 2014 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iaLIzQJLBz0&ab_channel=CLEO%26CUQUINenEspa%C3%B1ol |access-date=15 April 2024 |via=www.youtube.com}}</ref> ] in the song "Wake Up",<ref>{{Cite web |title=Brand Nubian - Wake Up (Reprise in the Sunrise) | date=August 28, 2018 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IJeDHYsNkHI&t |access-date=15 April 2024 |via=www.youtube.com}}</ref> and ] in the song "Riiiot!"<ref>{{Cite web |title=Chino XL ft. Rass Kass - Riiiot! | date=April 5, 2022 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yGRoNdfwOxM&ab |access-date=15 April 2024 |via=www.youtube.com}}</ref> | |||
He declared that we were without the knowledge of self or anyone else. How we had been made blind, deaf and dumb by this white race of people and how we must return to our people, our God and His religion of peace (Islam), the religion of the prophets. We must give up the slave names of our slave-masters and accept the name of Allah (God) or one of His divine attributes. He also taught us to give up all evil doings and practices and do righteousness or be destroyed from the face of the earth. He taught us that the slave-masters had taught us to eat the wrong food and that this is the cause of our sickness and short span of life. He declared that he would heal us and set us in heaven at once, if we would submit to Him. Otherwise he would chastise us with a severe chastisement until we did submit. And that He was able to force the whole world into submission to his will. He said that he loved us (the so-called Negroes), his lost and found, so well that he would eat rattlesnakes to free us if necessary, for he has power over all things."<ref name="harvp|Muhammad|1965|pp=16–17"/> Wallace Fard Muhammad loved the black people of the United States of America.</blockquote> Part of Fard's teaching also involved admiration for Japan.<ref>{{cite book |title=The African American Encounter with Japan and China: Black Internationalism in Asia, 1895-1945 |first=Marc S. |last=Gallicchio |publisher=] |publication-place=], ], United States |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QzAaDgAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover |via=] |isbn=9780807860687 |year=2000 |oclc=43334134 |chapter=4. The Rise of the Black Internationale |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QzAaDgAAQBAJpg=PT98 }}</ref> He was linked to the ] and Japanese agitators such as ], and Ashima Takis.{{sfn|Evanzz|2011|loc=|p=105-108}} The FBI charged that Takahashi had been an influential presence in the Nation of Islam. He spoke as a guest at the NOI temples in Detroit and Chicago.<ref>{{cite journal |title=When Japan Was "Champion of the Darker Races": Satokata Takahashi and the Flowering of Black Messianic Nationalism |first=Ernest |last=Allen Jr. |journal=] |pages=23-46 |volume=24 |issue=1 |date=21 December 1994 |issn=0006-4246 |publication-place=], ], United States |publisher=]/] |doi=10.1080/00064246.1994.11413118 |editor1-first=Louis |editor-last=Chude-Sokei |url=https://www.scribd.com/document/190326286/When-Japan-Was-Champion-of-the-Darker-Races-Satokata-Takahashi-and-the-Flowering-of-Black-Messianic-Nationalism-by-Ernest-Allen-Jr |via=] |format=PDF }}</ref> | |||
==Timeline== | |||
==In popular culture== | |||
* '''Purported birth dates:''' | |||
{{in popular culture|section|date=June 2020}} | |||
** February 26, 1877 - Birth per Nation of Islam | |||
Fard ] ], by ], in which Fard's Detroit Temple No. 1 is the location setting for several scenes in the book. | |||
** Feb 14, 1882 - Birth per Naturalization application | |||
** circa 1898 - US Census of 1930 | |||
** circa 1891 - Birth per Marriage Certificate | |||
** Feb 26, 1893 - Birth per WWI draft card | |||
* March 23, 1908 - Running tamale lunchcart in Eugene Oregon | |||
* May 26, 1909 - Citizenship papers filed | |||
* August 9, 1912 - Salem, Oregon papers announced new citizen attends first baseball game | |||
* April 29, 1913 - Fard complains in papers of police harassment in Salem | |||
* September 1913 - Far files a criminal complaint alleged he was a victim of embezzling | |||
* '''1914:''' | |||
** March 5 - Arrested for rape of Laura E. Swanson | |||
** April 20 - Marries Pearl Allen | |||
** April 21 - Found not guilty of rape at trial | |||
** August 30 - Divorce proceedings begin | |||
** November 14 - Arrest for larceny for stealing from wife | |||
** December 27 - Divorce finalized | |||
* November 22, 1915 - Vacation announced in papers | |||
* December 19, 1915 - Lunch wagon sold by court in connection with Montana debt | |||
* November 17, 1918 - Arrested for assault with a deadly weapon by Los Angeles police | |||
* June 5, 1924 - Marriage to Carmen Trevino | |||
*'''1926:''' | |||
** January 20 - Arrested on alcohol prohibition | |||
** February 15 - Arrested on drug charges | |||
** June 12 - sentenced to San Quentin | |||
* May 27, 1929 - Paroled | |||
* 1930 - Resident of Chicago | |||
* July 4, 1930 - Fard arrival in Detroit, per Nation of Islam | |||
* November 20, 1932 - "Voodoo murder" | |||
* December 7, 1932 - Fard ordered out of Detroit | |||
* May 25 1933 - Snuck back into Detroit and was arrested | |||
* September 26, 1933 - Arrested for speaking in Chicago | |||
* March 1934 - Final letter from Fard in California | |||
Fard and his teachings are also referenced in many ] songs. Artists who have made references within their music include ] ("I'm going to chase the Yacub back in the cave"<ref name="JayZ">Jay Z & Jay Electronica, "We Made It"</ref>), ] ("Lost tribe of Shabazz stylin' on the record", "The son of W.D., who hung around in the D, Who ran around in the three, The trap gods raised me, Face all on the Sphinx, Story all in the wall of the pyramids, Niggas know the Black God saved me"<ref name="JayZ"/>), ] ("This asiatic black man is a dog spelled backwards, The maker, the owner, the cream of the planet earth, Father of civilization, God of the universe, Manifestin thought with my infinite styles, Making sure this travels twenty-three million miles, The other six I set the crucifix, Because the heart of the problem is this...."<ref>Brand Nubian, "Wake Up"</ref>), and ] in the song "Riiiot" ("Now I got niggas claiming they saw God unfortunately, he wasn't in the person of Master Fard Muhammad").<ref>Chino XL ft/ Ras Kass – "Riiiot"</ref> | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | |||
==Notes== | == Notes == | ||
{{Notelist}} | |||
{{reflist|group=Note}} | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
===Citations=== | |||
{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} | ||
===Bibliography=== | ===Bibliography=== | ||
{{refbegin|}} | {{refbegin|}} | ||
*{{cite book |first=John Andrew |last=Morrow |title=Finding W.D. Fard: Unveiling the Identity of the Founder of the Nation of Islam |isbn=9781527524897 |via=] |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LTWEDwAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover |publisher=] |publication-place=], ], United Kingdom |year=2019 }} | |||
*{{cite book|last=Arian|first=A.K.|year=2017|isbn=978-0977911257|title=Chameleon: The True Story of W.D. Fard|publisher=Xis Books}} | *{{cite book|last=Arian|first=A.K.|year=2017|isbn=978-0977911257|title=Chameleon: The True Story of W.D. Fard|publisher=Xis Books}} | ||
*{{cite journal |last=Beynon |first=Erdmann Doane |date= |
*{{cite journal |last=Beynon |first=Erdmann Doane |date=May 1, 1938 |title=The Voodoo Cult among Negro migrants in Detroit |journal=] |volume=43 |issue=6 |pages=894–907 |jstor=2768686 |doi=10.1086/217872 |s2cid=144039917 |url=https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1086/217872 }} | ||
*{{cite book|last1=Bontemps|first1=Arna|last2=Conroy|first2=Jack|year=1945|title=They Seek a City|chapter=Beloved and scattered millions|publisher=Doubleday, Doran and Company|asin=B0007E2JSU|oclc=1444797}} | *{{cite book|last1=Bontemps|first1=Arna|last2=Conroy|first2=Jack|year=1945|title=They Seek a City|chapter=Beloved and scattered millions|publisher=Doubleday, Doran and Company|asin=B0007E2JSU|oclc=1444797}} | ||
*{{cite book |last1=Bowen |first1=Patrick D. |url=https://brill.com/view/book/9789004354371/B9789004354371_008.xml |title=A History of Conversion to Islam in the United States, Volume 2: The African American Islamic Renaissance, 1920–1975 |chapter=W.D. Fard |location=Boston |publisher=Brill |date=2017 |pages=240–276 |doi=10.1163/9789004354371_008 |isbn=9789004354371 |accessdate=March 16, 2022 }} | |||
*{{cite book|last=Essien-Udom|first=E.U.|year=1995|title=Black Nationalism: the Search for an Identity|publisher=] |publication-place=], ], United States |isbn=9780226218533}} | |||
*{{cite book |
*{{cite book|last=Essien-Udom|first=E.U.|year=1995|title=Black Nationalism: the Search for an Identity|publisher=] |publication-place=Chicago, Illinois, United States |isbn=9780226218533}} | ||
*{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7s0ubWTcGzEC |via=] |title=The Messenger: The Rise and Fall of Elijah Muhammad |first=Karl |last=Evanzz |orig-year=1999 |year=2011 |publisher=] |edition=3 |isbn=9780307805201 |publication-place=New York City, New York, United States }} | |||
*{{cite book|last=Gibson|first=Dawn-Marie|year=2012|title=A History of the Nation of Islam: Race, Islam, and the Quest for Freedom|publisher=Praeger|isbn=978-0-313-39807-0|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/history_gib_2012_00_1145}} | *{{cite book|last=Gibson|first=Dawn-Marie|year=2012|title=A History of the Nation of Islam: Race, Islam, and the Quest for Freedom|publisher=Praeger|isbn=978-0-313-39807-0|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/history_gib_2012_00_1145}} | ||
*{{cite book|last=Hakim|first=Nasir|year=1996|title=The True History of Master Fard Muhammad|publisher=Secretaries MEMPS Ministries|isbn=1-884855-78-4}} | *{{cite book|last=Hakim|first=Nasir|year=1996|title=The True History of Master Fard Muhammad|publisher=Secretaries MEMPS Ministries|isbn=1-884855-78-4}} | ||
*{{cite book |first=John Andrew |last=Morrow |title=Finding W.D. Fard: Unveiling the Identity of the Founder of the Nation of Islam |isbn=9781527524897 |via=] |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LTWEDwAAQBAJ |publisher=] |publication-place=], England, United Kingdom |year=2019 }} | |||
*{{cite book|last=Muhammad|first=Elijah|year=1965|title=Message to the Blackman in America|url=https://archive.org/details/messagetoblackma00muha|url-access=registration|publisher=Muhammad's Temple No 2|isbn=978-1-929594-01-6}} | *{{cite book|last=Muhammad|first=Elijah|year=1965|title=Message to the Blackman in America|url=https://archive.org/details/messagetoblackma00muha|url-access=registration|publisher=Muhammad's Temple No 2|isbn=978-1-929594-01-6}} | ||
*{{cite book|last=Muhammad|first=Fard|year=1993|title=The Supreme Wisdom Lessons by Master Fard Muhammad: to His Servant, The Honorable Elijah Muhammad for The Lost-Found Nation of Islam in North America|url=http://www.ciphertheory.net/supremewisdom.pdf|isbn=978-1442165403}} | *{{cite book|last=Muhammad|first=Fard|year=1993|title=The Supreme Wisdom Lessons by Master Fard Muhammad: to His Servant, The Honorable Elijah Muhammad for The Lost-Found Nation of Islam in North America|publisher=CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform |url=http://www.ciphertheory.net/supremewisdom.pdf|isbn=978-1442165403}} | ||
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Latest revision as of 09:42, 8 January 2025
Founder of the Nation of Islam (c. 1877 – disappeared c. 1934) This article is about the founder of the Nation of Islam. Not to be confused with Warith Deen Mohammed.
Wallace Fard Muhammad | |
---|---|
Fard's official portrait (top, 1932), his 1926 mugshot (top), and his 1933 mugshot (bottom) | |
Leader of the Nation of Islam | |
In office 1930–1934 | |
Succeeded by | Elijah Muhammad |
Personal details | |
Born | Uncertain; tradition claims February 26, c. 1877 |
Parents |
|
Occupation | Religious and political activist |
Born | Uncertain. Tradition claims Mecca |
Disappeared | 1934 |
Died | Date, cause, and place of death is unknown |
Other names | Wali Fred Dad, Fred Dodd, Fred the Greek, Fred the Turk, Wallie Dodd Fard,Wallace Dodd Ford, William D. Fard, Master Fard Muhammad |
Spouse(s) | Pearl Allen (m. May 9, 1914; div. December 27, 1914) Hazel Barton (m. circa 1919) Carmen Trevino (m. June 5, 1924) |
Children | With Pearl: (DNA suggest not biologically related) With Hazel: Wallace Dodd Fard (later Wallace Max Ford) |
a. Birth dates attributed to Fard include 1877, 1891, and 1893; the Nation of Islam celebrates February 26, 1877. | |
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Wallace Fard Muhammad, also known as W. F. Muhammad, W. D. Fard, Wallace D. Fard, or Master Fard Muhammad, among other names (pronounced Far-odd /fəˈrɑːd/) (reportedly born February 26, c. 1877 – disappeared c. 1934) was the founder of the Nation of Islam.
He arrived in Detroit in 1930 with an ambiguous background and several aliases and proselytized syncretic Islamic teachings to the city's black population. His group taught followers to abandon their old "slave names" in favor of new names that were bestowed on new members. Fard's movement similarly taught Black pride and Black exceptionalism, saying that the black man is the "Original" man, and teaching that the white race were devils created by eugenics. The group preached abstinence from drugs, alcohol, pork, and out-of-wedlock sex.
After one of Fard's followers, clearly psychotic, performed a human sacrifice, Fard was briefly arrested. Fard was set free, but he was ordered by police to depart Detroit and not return. Instead he continued to return to the city, where he was spotted by police. In 1934, after repeated arrests and death threats, Fard left Detroit and ultimately disappeared.
Elijah Muhammad succeeded Fard as leader of the Nation of Islam. Fard's teachings in turn influenced many, including Malcolm X, Clarence 13X, boxing legend Muhammad Ali, and indirectly, basketball star Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
Fard before Detroit
Main article: Origin of Wallace Fard MuhammadFard's origins are uncertain, as Fard variously identified as white, black, Spanish, Arab, Afghani, and on one occasion, Jewish. Scholar John Andrew Morrow describes Fard as a "racial and ethnic chameleon", noting "Farad lived in one of the most vicious, racist societies in the world: America. The conditions in which black people and indigenous people lived here were horrific. Segregation was severe. Bigotry abounded. White supremacy permeated everything. Lynchings were a daily occurrence; there were columns in the newspaper titled 'Today's Lynchings'... Fard witnessed unspeakable horrors committed by genuine devils... Why would Master Fard pass for white? Who wouldn't?"
Many scholars argue that Fard may have had been from the Indian subcontinent. On his World War I draft card, Fard identified as a citizen of Afghanistan, born in Shinkay. Fard reportedly spent time at the Ahmadiyya Mosque (a movement prominent in Pakistan), used translations of the Quran from Pakistanis, and bestowed Pakistani names on followers. Fard's teaching of the Tribe of Shabazz may have been tied to Pakistan's Shrine of Lal Shahbaz Qalandar.
Some speculate Fard was a Turk or a Greek -- he had been known as "Fred the Greek" and "Fred the Turk" in 1908. Some claim Fard was a white man, perhaps from New Zealand -- Fard indicated that background in records from 1920. In 1924, when he married a woman of Spanish ancestry, Fard claimed he had been born in Madrid, Spain. Less popular theories of origin suggest he may have been Syrian, Moroccan, Bosnian, Albanian, African-American, or Jewish. Fard was traditionally held by the Nation of Islam to be an Arab from Mecca.
Oregon
Prior to his time in Detroit, Fard operated a food cart and later restaurant in Oregon and California. In 1908, papers in Eugene, Oregon announced that Turkish tamale vendor Fred Walldad had acquired a small house on wheels to use as a food cart. That Halloween, papers reported on a "Halloween prank" in which local boys took the wheels off Fred the Turk's tamale wagon and dropped it, breaking Fred's dishes and eggs, as well as injuring Fred himself; the wheel was stolen. By the following February, he had sold his lunchwagon and moved to Cottage Grove, where he had leased a restaurant and lodging house.
By 1912, Fard was again selling tamales, this time in Salem, Oregon; newspapers reported on vendor Fred Dadd, a naturalized American originally from New Zealand, attending his first baseball game. In 1913, Fard penned an announcement in the newspaper complaining about police harassment. His complaint of police harassment would be investigated by the police committee. After the committee reported and the report was adopted, the mayor instructed the chief of police to allow Dodd to sell his wares.
In 1914, Fard was arrested for allegedly inducing Laura E. Swanson to leave her spouse for him; he was released on $1,000 bond. A March 23 report cited Dodd's charge as "assaulting a married woman". On April 20, 1914, Dodd married Pearl Allen, a white-passing member of the Klamath people, in Multnomah County, Oregon. The following day, April 21, a jury acquitted Dodd. The Capital Journal explained the verdict by saying "It was brought out in the cross examination of the complaining witness that there was another person in the house at the time of the alleged assault and that she did not cry for help as a person in her circumstances would be aroused."
The marriage to Pearl was short-lived; Divorce proceedings began by August 30. On November 14, he was arrested for larceny after allegedly stealing from Pearl. Pearl gave birth to a son the following year, though a 2024 DNA test may suggest that this son was not biologically descended from Dodd.
Los Angeles and San Quentin
Fard moved to Los Angeles, using the name Wallie Dodd Ford, where he owned a restaurant. The Nation of Islam contests the claim that Wallace Fard Muhammad and Wallie Dodd Ford were the same person.
Ford was arrested by Los Angeles police on November 17, 1918, on a charge of assault with a deadly weapon. As of 1920, Ford was still living in Los Angeles as 26-year-old Wallie D. Ford, with his 25-year-old common law wife, Hazel E. Ford. The pair had a son, Wallie Dodd Ford Jr.
A marriage certificate, dated June 5, 1924, was issued to Wallie Dodd Ford and Carmen Treviño, a Mexican-born woman of Spanish ancestry, in Santa Ana, California.
Ford was arrested again on January 20, 1926, for violation of the California Woolwine Possession Act, and on February 15, 1926, for violation of the State Poison Act. After this second arrest, a Spanish-language paper in Los Angeles described him as a "street politician". Ford was sentenced to six months to six years at San Quentin State Prison on June 12, 1926. Ford was paroled from San Quentin on May 27, 1929.
In Chicago
In the 1930 census, Fard was listed as a resident of Chicago, with stated occupation of clothing salesman. Scholars speculate that Fard's Nation of Islam might have been influenced by the Moorish Science Temple in Chicago: Both groups saw "Negroes" as Afro-Asiastic, bestowed new names to replace slave names, and promoted wearing of the fez.
Fard in Detroit (1930–34)
Fard first appeared in Detroit in 1930; his followers cite July 4, 1930, as the date of his arrival. A door-to-door salesman, Fard spread his religious teachings throughout Detroit, and within three years grew the movement to a reported 25,000 members in Detroit, Chicago, and other cities.
Clothing peddler
Fard began by selling Oriental silks door-to-door in Detroit's black section. Fard visited the homes of black families who had recently migrated to Detroit from the rural South. Fard told black residents that his silks were the same kind that their ancestors in Mecca used and claimed to be a traveler from that land. When offered food, Fard reportedly ate what was provided but would advise residents to avoid certain foods, promising health benefits would follow. At his suggestion, he came back to teach the residents, along with guests.
Bible study leader at house churches
In the early stage of his ministry, Fard used the Bible as his textbook, since it was the only religious book with which the majority of his audience were familiar. Patrick D. Bowen writes that in the early Nation of Islam, "ministers regularly referenced passages from the Bible to prove their claims". Fard's successor Elijah Muhammad would later claim Fard "knew the Bible better than any of the Christian-bred Negroes". Lomax wrote that Fard was "well-versed" in the Bible, used it as a textbook and taught in the style of a Southern Baptist preacher.
Beynon writes that "With growing prestige over a constantly increasing group, became bolder in his denunciation of white people and began to attack the teachings of the Bible in such a way as to shock his audience and bring them to an emotional crisis."
Fard taught a form of black exceptionalism and self-pride to poor Southern blacks during the Great Northward Migration at a time when old ideas of scientific racism were prevalent. He advocated that community members establish and own their own businesses, eat healthy, raise families, and refrain from drugs and alcohol. In 1938, sociologist Erdmann Doane Beynon published in the American Journal of Sociology a firsthand account of several interviews he conducted with followers of Fard in Michigan. From those interviews, Beynon wrote that Fard lived and taught in Detroit from 1930 to 1934.
Giver of new names
Fard taught his followers to reject surnames inherited from white slaveowners. As part of their initiation into the group, Fard bestowed new Muslim names upon his converts. He taught that this practice restored their original and true identities, while also revealing the lies that cloaked the origins of the so-called Asiatic Blackman. Such names included Muhammad, Ali, Karriem, and Fardan. Scholars note that new names had previously been given by Noble Drew Ali of the Moorish Science Temple of America, who assigned surnames El and Bey; the term "slave name" was used by the MSTA.
After Fard's disappearance, Elijah Muhammad continued the practice of giving new Muslim names to converts to the Nation of Islam and added the letter X, symbolizing the unknown, instead of a name.
Leader of the Allah Temple of Islam
Beynon's interviewees told him that reports of Fard's message spread throughout the black community. Attendance at the house meetings grew until the listeners were divided into groups and taught in shifts. Finally, the community contributed money and rented a hall to serve as a temple where meetings were conducted. The Quran was soon introduced as the most authoritative of all texts for the study of the faith. Fard prepared texts that served as authoritative manuals of the faith and were memorized verbatim by his followers.
According to Beynon, Fard's followers grew to approximately eight thousand, and "ithin three years the prophet not only began the movement but organized it so well that he himself was able to recede into the background, appearing almost never to his followers during the final months of his residence in Detroit."
During this time, Clara Poole, later renamed Clara Muhammad, was introduced to W.D. Fard and his teachings through her in-laws. His teachings gave Poole hope and presented her life with new possibilities and new memories. After one of Fard's services, during which he asked if someone knew Elijah Poole, Clara, introduced him and his teachings to her husband, Elijah Poole, who later became Elijah Muhammad. His guidance and teachings eventually changed and reformed Elijah Poole into a responsible and ideal husband, who would later become the face and leader of the Nation Of Islam.
From interviews with approximately two hundred families who followed Fard, Beynon concluded:
Although the prophet lived in Detroit from July 4, 1930 until June 30, 1934, virtually nothing is known about him, save that he 'came from the East' and that he 'called' the Negroes of North America to enter the Nation of Islam. His very name is uncertain. He was known usually as Mr. Wali Farrad or Mr. W. D. Fard, though he used also the following names: Professor Ford, Mr. Farrad Mohammed, Mr. F. Mohammed Ali. One of the few survivors who heard his first addresses states that he himself said: 'My name is W. D. Fard and I came from the Holy City of Mecca. More about myself I will not tell you yet, for the time has not yet come. I am your brother. You have not yet seen me in my royal robes.' Legends soon sprang up about this mysterious personality.
In 1933, he began signing his name "W. F. Muhammad", which stood for Wallace Fard Muhammad, and used it on several lessons written in 1933 and 1934.
"Voodoo Murder" drives Fard from Detroit (1932)
Main article: Murder of James J. SmithOn November 20, 1932, Robert Harris (who had received the name Robert Karriem from Fard) escorted James J. Smith into a room with a makeshift altar. In the audience were twelve adult witnesses and Harris's wife and children. Smith, who believed he was being inducted into the Allah Temple of Islam, was asked if he would sacrifice his life for Islam, and Smith nodded his assent. Harris then stabbed Smith in the chest, and proceeded to bludgeon him to death with an axle rod.
After neighbors called the police, Harris was arrested. Under questioning, he confessed to the murder: "I had to kill somebody, I could not forsake my gods". Police initiated a manhunt for Fard and another leader, Ugan Ali, who were arrested and questioned. Harris was deemed insane and committed to a mental hospital. "The society cannot be blamed for anything he did," Ali was quoted as saying in the Detroit News. Fard and Ugan Ali, who acknowledged leadership of the Allah Temple of Islam but vehemently denied any teaching of human sacrifice, were examined by psychiatrist David Clark, who recommended they be committed for further observation. A judge agreed, and both Fard and Ugan Ali were placed in straitjackets and confined in padded cells.
With Fard and Ugan Ali still in custody five days after the murder, Elijah Muhammad, at the time known as Elijah Karriem, led over two hundred members into the court building and staged a protest on the main floor. The police spent a full day expelling the protesters.
On November 25, Harris was arraigned on charges of first-degree murder; he pleaded guilty, but his bizarre courtroom behavior convinced witnesses of his insanity. On December 6, three psychiatrists testified that Harris was legally insane, and he was committed to the Ionia State Hospital for the Criminal Insane; he died there on June 19, 1935. Faced with criminal charges, Ugan Ali was released after promising to help disband the Allah Temple of Islam, while Fard agreed to forever leave Detroit as a condition of release.
On December 7, 1932, police put Fard on a train bound for Chicago. The Allah Temple of Islam was officially disbanded, though soon replaced by a new organization called the Nation of Islam. Former leader Ugan Ali was replaced by Elijah Muhammad.
Fard in exile and the Nation of Islam (1932–34)
In January 1933, Fard snuck back into Detroit and held secret meetings with followers. Fard left Detroit for a few weeks but returned to Detroit and resumed preaching on street corners. Recognized by police, he was arrested on May 25, booked, and photographed. He was again released and ordered to depart the city.
Fard renamed his community the "Nation of Islam". Following the rapid increase in membership, he instituted a formal organizational structure. He established the Muslim Girls' Training and General Civilization Class, where women were taught how to keep their houses, clean, and cook. The men of the organization were drilled by captains and referred to as the Fruit of Islam. The entire movement was placed under a Minister of Islam.
On September 26, Fard was arrested in Chicago by local police while addressing an audience in a rented hall. The following morning, the Chicago judge Dunn dismissed charges of disturbing the peace and released Fard. Fard made a third surreptitious visit to Detroit, this time preaching that the white man would soon be destroyed by poison bombs.
Fard established the University of Islam, where school-aged children were taught, as an alternative to Detroit public schools. By January 1934, local truant officers had noticed the pattern of dropouts and alerted authorities. On March 27, the Detroit Free Press proclaimed that the "voodoo cult" had been revived, and the city initiated legal action against the school. The school was raided by police, and Elijah Muhammad was arrested.
Press reported that at trial, fifteen-year-old Sally Ali, who had attended the University of Islam, testified that she had been taught "in the Islamic New Deal that if she cut off the heads of four devils—devils being unrighteous people—she would win a free trip to Mecca and a button of some sort." She further testified that she had been taught that Caucasians would be destroyed in the year 1934 by poison gas and fighting. Elijah Muhammad was found guilty for his role in establishing an unlicensed school, but he was released on probation. Amid rumors that police wanted both Fard and his chief aide dead, Elijah Muhammad fled for Chicago, and Fard was never again seen by most residents of Detroit.
Fard's fate and death
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It is not known what became of Fard or the circumstances of his death. Though he was a naturalized citizen, he may have been forced to accept voluntary deportment; In 1932, the Escanaba Daily Press reported that he had been awaiting an immigration hearing.
After he had departed Detroit, Fard visited Hazel Barton, the mother of his child, in Los Angeles; she recalled him only eating one meal per day as part of his new lifestyle. Hazel recalled he was driving a new car with California plates, with white sheets covering the seats. He left the sheets with her, saying he was going "back to New Zealand".
Fard's last known contact with the Nation of Islam was a letter sent from Mexico which was received in March 1934. Morrow speculates that Fard might have tried to return to the US under another name.
For decades after Fard's disappearance, Elijah Muhammad maintained that Fard was alive and well. Fard suffered from diabetes and had to carry sugar packets; Morrow notes the possibility that Fard might have died not long after his disappearance.
Ideology
Beynon described the substance of Fard's teaching as follows:
The black men in North America are not Negroes, but members of the lost tribe of Shabazz, stolen by traders from the Holy City of Mecca 379 years ago. The prophet came to America to find and to bring back to life his long lost brethren, from whom the Caucasians had taken away their language, their nation and their religion. Here in America they were living other than themselves. They must learn that they are the original people, noblest of the nations of the earth. The Caucasians are the colored people, since they have lost their original color. The original people must regain their religion, which is Islam, their language, which is Arabic, and their culture, which is astronomy and higher mathematics, especially calculus. They must live according to the law of Allah, avoiding all meat of 'poison animals', hogs, ducks, geese, possums and catfish. They must give up completely the use of stimulants, especially liquor. They must clean themselves up – both their bodies and their houses. If in this way they obeyed Allah, he would take them back to the Paradise from which they had been stolen – the Holy City of Mecca.
Fard's lessons themselves state that the "traders" referenced by Beynon came to Africa, not Mecca.
Modern Nation of Islam theology is based upon the belief that Fard's teaching of Elijah Muhammad was fulfillment of scripture regarding God's teaching of an Apostle, where Fard is described as "God in Person", the "Messiah", and the "Mahdi". Fard wrote the following for his followers:
he LESSONS that OUR SAVIOUR (ALLAH) gave us to Study and Learn is the Fulfillment of the Prophecies of All the Former Prophets concerning the Beginning of the Devils, and the Ending of the Civilization, and of our Enslavement by the Devils, and Present Time of our Delivery from the Devils by OUR SAVIOUR (ALLAH). PRAISE HIS HOLY NAME! There is No God but ALLAH. How that ALLAH would separate us from the Devils and, then destroy them; and Change us into a New and Perfect People; and Fill the Earth with FREEDOM, JUSTICE and EQUALITY as it was filled with wickedness; and Making we, the Poor Lost-Founds, the Perfect RULERS.
In Elijah Muhammad's 1965 book Message to the Blackman in America, which is a compilation of articles written for newspapers throughout the early part of his ministry, Muhammad summarized what Fard taught him as follows:
He began teaching us the knowledge of ourselves, of God and the devil, of the measurement of the earth, of other planets, and of the civilization of some of the planets other than earth. ... He measured and weighed the earth and its water; the history of the moon; the history of the two nations, black and white, that dominate the earth. He gave the exact birth of the white race; the name of their God who made them and how; and the end of their time, the judgment, how it will begin and end. ... He taught us the truth of how we were made 'slaves' and how we are kept in slavery by the 'slave-masters' children. He declared the doom of America, for her evils to us was past due. And that she is number one to be destroyed. Her judgment could not take place until we hear the truth. ... He declared that we were without the knowledge of self or anyone else. How we had been made blind, deaf and dumb by this white race of people and how we must return to our people, our God and His religion of peace (Islam), the religion of the prophets. We must give up the slave names of our slave-masters and accept the name of Allah (God) or one of His divine attributes. He also taught us to give up all evil doings and practices and do righteousness or be destroyed from the face of the earth. He taught us that the slave-masters had taught us to eat the wrong food and that this is the cause of our sickness and short span of life. He declared that he would heal us and set us in heaven at once, if we would submit to Him. Otherwise he would chastise us with a severe chastisement until we did submit. And that He was able to force the whole world into submission to his will. He said that he loved us (the so-called Negroes), his lost and found, so well that he would eat rattlesnakes to free us if necessary, for he has power over all things.
Part of Fard's teaching also involved admiration for Japan.
Both during and after his life, some charged that Fard was a conman who used mystery and charisma to swindle poor blacks, selling them new Muslim names and stirring up racial animosity by copying selected elements of other Muslim religious sects and ideologies that fit his racial supremacist narrative.
Influences
Fard was influenced by the Jehovah's Witness movement, Freemansonry (especially the Shriners), Marcus Garvey, Moorish Science, and of course Islam.
The teaching of the Jehovah's Witnesses has been called "the most obvious non-Islamic source for teachings". Fard was known to teach from what a Detroit newspaper described as "The Bible of Islam"; in 2023, the book was identified as Deliverance! by Joseph Franklin Rutherford, of the Watch Tower Society or Jehovah's Witnesses. Fard recommended radio broadcasts by Rutherford, Frank Norris, and other millennial preachers. Jehovah's Witness founder Charles Taze Russell, like Fard, interpreted the year 1914 as the beginning of an apocalypse. Both groups instructed members to refuse compulsory military service. Both groups taught that souls were not immortal, that there was no afterlife, and that heaven and hell were states of life on Earth rather than allegories.
Fard encouraged students to read James Henry Breasted’s Conquest of Civilization, Hendrick van Loon’s The Story of Mankind and books on Freemansonry. Fard recommended the writings of Henry Ford, including The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, an anti-Jewish forgery promoted by Henry Ford. Police found literature by anti-Jewish preacher Gerald Burton Winrod.
Fard is believed to have been influenced by the Moorish Science Temple of America, which also assigned new names to members to replace their "slave name". Both groups taught African-Americans to identify as 'Asiatics', both groups wore the fez. Both groups met at "temples", not mosques. Freemasonry has similarly been thought to be a souce of inspiration; Elijah Pool (later Elijah Muhammad) had been a Freemason before meeting Fard. Garveyism has similarly be cited an inspiration, with modern scholars noting Garvey's teachings were popular in San Quentin.
The Islamic scholar John Andrew Morrow summarizes Fard's teachings as rooted in "a wide variety of ideas from both East and West" including "Twelver Shi'ism, Sevener Shi'ism, Druzism, and Shi'ite Extremism, as well as Babism, Baha'ism, Yezidism, Ahmadism, and Sufism." Like Islam, Fard's teaching forbade drugs, alcohol, and pork; Fard also preached against 'slave foods' like ducks, geese, possums and catfish.
Legacy
Fard influenced his successor Elijah Muhammad, Malcolm X, and many other Black nationalist thinkers. The annual Saviours' Day event is held in honor of Fard's birth. In 2020, it attracted an estimated 14,000 participants.
Continued deification under Elijah Muhammad
With regard to Elijah Muhammad, Beynon's article stated: "From among the larger group of Muslims there has sprung recently an even more militant branch than the Nation of Islam itself. This new movement, known as the Temple People. To Mr. Fard alone do they offer prayer and sacrifice. Since Mr. Fard has been deified, the Temple People raise the former Minister of Islam, now a resident of Chicago." This reference is in conflict with the first hand accounts of Malcolm X, such as his appearance in 1963 on the news program City Desk. Malcolm X states that Elijah Mohammed was neither Allah nor a Prophet, but rather that he was a Messenger. Elijah Muhammad, who led the Nation of Islam from 1934 to 1975, heard Fard teach for the first time in 1931. Elijah Muhammad stated that he and Fard became inseparable between 1931 and 1934, where he felt "jailed almost" due to the amount of time that they spent together with Fard teaching him day and night.
A handwritten lesson written by Fard states:
Twelve Leaders of Islam from all over the Planet have conferred in the Root of Civilization concerning the Lost-Found Nation of Islam – must return to their original Land. One of the Conference Members by the name of Mr. Osman Sharrieff said to the Eleven Members of the Conference: 'The Lost-Found Nation of Islam will not return to their original Land unless they, first, have a thorough Knowledge of their own.' So they sent a Messenger to them of their own. Now, the Messenger and his Laborers worked day and night for the last three and one-half years, and their accomplishments are approximately twenty-five thousand...
In this lesson, Fard places the number of converts obtained in Detroit at 25,000, and he describes a "Messenger" sent to the "Lost-Found Nation of Islam" who is "of their own". Nation of Islam theology states that this "Messenger" is Elijah Muhammad. Fard wrote, in his instructions to the leaders of his community, that they should "copy the Answers of Lesson of Minister Elijah Muhammad." He went on to state: "Why is Stress made to the Muslims to Copy, the Minister, Elijah Muhammad's Answers? The past History shows that the ALMIGHTY ALLAH sends Prophets and Apostles for the people's Guide and Example, and through them HIS Mystery was Revealed. And those who follow the Apostle would see the Light."
Fard wrote several lessons which are read and committed to memory by members of the Nation of Islam. Some of the lessons are in the form of questions asked by Fard to Elijah Muhammad. One such lesson concludes with the text: "This Lesson No. 2 was given by our Prophet, W.D. Fard, which contains 40 questions answered by Elijah Muhammad, one of the lost found in the wilderness of North America February 20th, 1934."
While some scholars argue that Fard's divinity was a creation of Elijah Muhammad, Morrow points out that Fard did identify himself as God to Detroit police and that the psychiatrists who examined Fard after his arrest reported that Fard had delusions of Godhood. Morrow argues that under Elijah Muhammad, the doctrine of whites as devils was emphasized, while Fard had taught that "devils" were unbelievers of all races.
FBI's public claims about Fard
A declassified Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) memorandum dated May 16, 1957, states: "From a review of instant file it does not appear that there has been a concerted effort to locate and fully identify W. D. Fard. In as much as Elijah Muhammad recognizes W.D. Fard as being Allah (God) and claims that Fard is the source of all of his teachings, it is suggested that an exhaustive effort be made to fully identify and locate W. D. Fard and/or members of his family." The FBI took note of the article written by Erdmann Doane Beynon, and it conducted a search for Fard using various aliases including the name "Ford". On October 17, 1957, the FBI located and interviewed Hazel Barton-Ford, Wallie Ford's common-law wife, with whom he had a son named Wallace Dodd Ford, born on September 1, 1920. This son, later also known as Wallace Max Ford, died in 1942. He was serving for the United States Coast Guard, during World War II, at the time of his death. Barton-Ford gave a description of Wallie Ford, and described him as a Caucasian New Zealander. The FBI's search for Fard was officially closed the following year on April 15, 1958. Immigration records did not match any of his aliases. His true identity remains unknown, but there is strong evidence that the Nation of Islam founder Wallace D. Fard was the same man as Wallace Dodd Ford, an inmate in San Quentin Prison. According to Patrick D. Bowen, a PhD candidate at the University of Denver's Iliff School of Theology, fingerprints and photographs taken from San Quentin Prison matched those of Fard taken during the 1930s in Detroit; furthermore, in San Quentin he almost certainly came in contact with African American Muslim preachers and converts also incarcerated there.
On August 15, 1959, the FBI sent a story to the Chicago New Crusader newspaper, stating that Fard was a "Turkish-born Nazi agent who worked for Hitler in World War II". According to the FBI story, Fard was a "Muslim from Turkey who had come to the United States in the early 1900s. He had met Muhammad in prison … where the two men plotted a confidence game in which followers were charged a fee to become Muslims."
After the story was published, Elijah Muhammad and Malcolm X subsequently charged black media outlets, which reprinted the accusation in large numbers, with running the story without requesting a response from the Nation of Islam.
According to the FBI, Fard was linked to the Pacific Movement of the Eastern World, a pro-Japanese movement of African Americans which promoted the idea that the Empire of Japan was the champion of all non-white peoples, and to senior members of the Black Dragon Society, such as Satokata Takahashi and Ashima Takis. The FBI charged that Takahashi had been an influential presence in the Nation of Islam. He spoke as a guest at the NOI temples in Detroit and Chicago. A February 19, 1963, FBI memorandum states: "In connection with efforts to disrupt and curb growth of the NOI, extensive research has been conducted into various files maintained by this office. Among the files reviewed was that of Wallace Dodd Ford." Five months later, in July 1963, the FBI told the Los Angeles Evening Herald-Examiner that Fard was actually Wallace Dodd Ford. The paper published the story in an article titled "Black Muslim Founder Exposed As White." An FBI memorandum dated August 1963 states that the FBI had not been able to verify his birthdate or birthplace, and "he was last heard from in 1934."
Demotion by Warith Deen Mohammed
Upon Elijah Muhammad's death in February 1975, his son Wallace (later Warith) was named successor and instituted sweeping reforms. Where his father has regarded Fard as a physical manifestation of Allah, Wallace denounced Fard as a human who "had his own designs on the black community". The group discontinued the annual Savior's Day celebration in honor of Fard.
Wallace brought the group closer to mainstream Sunni Islam, restyling their 'temples' as mosques while 'ministers' became known as imams. Wallace rejected black nationalism in favor of Islamic anti-racism and disbanded the militaristic "Fruit of Islam" group.
In a 2000s interview alongside Louis Farrakhan, Warith Deen Muhammad described breaking with his father Elijah Muhammad over the issue of Fard's divinity:
I differed with my father, and I didn't want to differ with him. In fact I never differed with him directly, he was told that someone heard me saying something different. So he called me to question me about it.
And I told him that I could more readily believe he was God, than I could believe that his teacher was God. Because his teacher was a white man and he said white people were devils.
My mother, when I was leaving the home one day, after my father had insisted that I accept God the way he presented God, or I was gonna be cut off from all communication, he told me he knew it would hurt me to know that I wouldn't be able to see my mother. He said - "you won't be able to talk to your mother or see her". So... I didn't change, and as I was leaving my mother was hurt, and it hurt me to see her hurting like that.
She said, she walked me to the door, which she didn't do, that wasn't normal for her. And she stood on the porch at the door and she said - 'Wallace, why don't you go back there and accept it? Just say you believe.'
I said - 'Mama, tell me what Mr. Fard told you all. Did he tell you he was God?'
And she looked like her face went blank, and looked like she didn't know what to say, and in a few seconds she said - 'No, he did not. In fact he told us to not even call him Prophet, said that was too big a title for him.'
Then I said to my mother - 'How can you ask your son now, to accept a man as God, who said Prophet was too big a title for him?'.
False claim that Muhammad Abdullah was Fard
After the death of Elijah Muhammad in 1975, his son and new Nation of Islam leader Wallace D. Muhammad suggested that his newly appointed Oakland California Imam Muhammad Abdullah was Fard, though Abdullah himself later retracted this claim. Scholar Fatimah Fanusie has argued that Abdullah was, in fact, Fard. Abdullah was reportedly introduced as Fard to boxing legend Muhammad Ali.
Restoration under Louis Farrakhan
In 1978, Farrakhan and a small number of supporters decided to rebuild what they considered the original Nation of Islam upon the foundations established by Wallace Fard Muhammad and Elijah Muhammad.
In 1979, Farrakhan's group founded a weekly newspaper entitled The Final Call, which was intended to be similar to the original Muhammad Speaks newspaper that Malcolm X claimed to have started, Farrakhan had a weekly column in The Final Call. In 1981, Farrakhan and his supporters held their first Saviours' Day convention in Chicago, Illinois, and took back the name of the Nation of Islam. The event was similar to the earlier Nation's celebrations, last held in Chicago on February 26, 1975. At the convention's keynote address, Farrakhan announced his attempt to restore the Nation of Islam under Elijah Muhammad's teachings.
In a 2000s interview featuring both Louis Farrakhan and Warith Deen Muhammad, Farrakhan argued that "Master Fard Muhammad taught us to accept our own and to be ourselves. We know that he, a man born February 26, 1877, is not the originator of the Heavens and Earth... Fard Muhammad developed a methodology, strange as it seems, unorthodox as it seems, even poisonous as it may seem, yet it was a prescription that started bringing balance to the system, and that we would evolve from a Nationalist Black-thinking people into the universal message of Islam."
In 2007, the Nation of Islam had an estimated membership of 20,000–50,000.
In popular culture
Fard appears in the novel Middlesex, by Jeffrey Eugenides, in which Fard's Detroit Temple No. 1 is the setting for several scenes.
Fard and his teachings are also referenced in many hip-hop songs. Artists who have made references within their music include Jay-Z and Jay Electronica in the song "We Made It", Brand Nubian in the song "Wake Up", and Ras Kass in the song "Riiiot!"
Timeline
- Purported birth dates:
- February 26, 1877 - Birth per Nation of Islam
- Feb 14, 1882 - Birth per Naturalization application
- circa 1898 - US Census of 1930
- circa 1891 - Birth per Marriage Certificate
- Feb 26, 1893 - Birth per WWI draft card
- March 23, 1908 - Running tamale lunchcart in Eugene Oregon
- May 26, 1909 - Citizenship papers filed
- August 9, 1912 - Salem, Oregon papers announced new citizen attends first baseball game
- April 29, 1913 - Fard complains in papers of police harassment in Salem
- September 1913 - Far files a criminal complaint alleged he was a victim of embezzling
- 1914:
- March 5 - Arrested for rape of Laura E. Swanson
- April 20 - Marries Pearl Allen
- April 21 - Found not guilty of rape at trial
- August 30 - Divorce proceedings begin
- November 14 - Arrest for larceny for stealing from wife
- December 27 - Divorce finalized
- November 22, 1915 - Vacation announced in papers
- December 19, 1915 - Lunch wagon sold by court in connection with Montana debt
- November 17, 1918 - Arrested for assault with a deadly weapon by Los Angeles police
- June 5, 1924 - Marriage to Carmen Trevino
- 1926:
- January 20 - Arrested on alcohol prohibition
- February 15 - Arrested on drug charges
- June 12 - sentenced to San Quentin
- May 27, 1929 - Paroled
- 1930 - Resident of Chicago
- July 4, 1930 - Fard arrival in Detroit, per Nation of Islam
- November 20, 1932 - "Voodoo murder"
- December 7, 1932 - Fard ordered out of Detroit
- May 25 1933 - Snuck back into Detroit and was arrested
- September 26, 1933 - Arrested for speaking in Chicago
- March 1934 - Final letter from Fard in California
See also
Notes
- The years 1891 and 1893 have both been cited by sources relying upon FBI records primarily. The FBI file on Fard provides both dates for individuals suspected (but never confirmed) to be Fard. The FBI file states: "Our investigation of the NOI and Fard failed to establish his birth date and birth place." Fard reportedly claimed to have been born in 1877. Most sources in the Nation of Islam claim that he hailed from Mecca in Saudi Arabia.
- Beynon stated that Fard's position on human sacrifice "was never made clear."
- Beynon refers to some of the lessons by Fard as an "oral tradition" that was recorded at the University of Islam as the "Secret Ritual of the Nation of Islam." See Beynon (1938), p. 898. Authors have subsequently attributed a text of this title to Fard. See Evanzz, supra at 81. However, Fard's lessons were individually written lessons later compiled in a single publication. See Muhammad (1993). Language attributed to Fard by author Karl Evanzz does not appear in any of the individually written lessons.
References
Citations
- "N.O.I. Founder, Wallace D. Fard born". African American Registry.
- "Wallace D. Fard – American religious leader". Encyclopedia Britannica. March 2024.
- Knight, Michael Muhammad (February 26, 2013). Dubuc, Nancy; Smith, Shane (eds.). "Remembering Master Fard Muhammad". Vice News. New York City, New York, United States: Vice Media. Archived from the original on April 17, 2021. Retrieved January 31, 2022.
- Evanzz 2011, p. 445, Appendices: A. Reported Aliases of the Messenger and of Wallace D. Ford.
- ^ Bowen, Patrick D. (March 21, 2013). "'The Colored Genius': Lucius Lehman and the Californian Roots of Modern African-American Islam". The Graduate Journal of Harvard Divinity School. Boston, Massachusetts, United States: Harvard University. Retrieved January 31, 2022.
- Fanusie, Fatimah Abdul-Tawwab (2008). Fard Muhammad in historical context: An Islamic thread in the American religious and cultural quilt (PhD). Washington, D.C., United States: Howard University. OCLC 488985857.
- Morrow 2019, pp. 1–35, Chapter 1. Issues of Origin.
- Kavanaugh, Kelli B. (March 5, 2003). Williams, Ron; Heron, W. Kim (eds.). "Mystery man". Detroit Metro Times. Detroit, Michigan, United States: Euclid Media Group, LLC. ISSN 0746-4045. OCLC 10024235. Archived from the original on January 10, 2022. Retrieved January 31, 2021.
- "History of Islam in Black America: Who is Master Fard Muhammad/Islam& Slavery Dr John Andrew Morrow". YouTube. March 22, 2024.
- Evanzz 2011, pp. 409–414, 18. Keys to the Kingdom.
- Evanzz 2011, pp. 112–113.
- Morrow 2019, p. 59.
- "Fred Walldad, the Turkish tamale vender..." The Eugene Guard. March 23, 1908. p. 8. Retrieved August 10, 2023 – via newspapers.com.
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- Evanzz 2011, p. 399, 18. Keys to the Kingdom.
- Gibson 2012, pp. 24–25
- Muhammad, Bilal (January 14, 2024). "Did W.D. Fard have a son with Pearl Allen? A century old mystery solved". Berkeley Institute for Islamic Studies. Retrieved January 15, 2024.
- "FamilySearch.org". FamilySearch.
- Muhammad, Dr. Wesley (September 12, 2018). "The U.S. Government's targeting of the Nation of Islam". Nation of Islam. Retrieved August 10, 2020.
- ^ U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). FBI Documents on Wallace Fard Muhammad.
- 1920 Federal U.S. Census, Los Angeles City, Enumeration District 206, Sheet 10B
- California State Board of Health, County of Orange, Certificate of Marriage, Local Registered No. 1768, as located in "California, County Marriages, 1850–1952", index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/K8FM-5FP: accessed January 5, 2013), Wallie Dodd Ford and Carmen Frevino, 1924.
- "Fueron Confiscados $5,000.00 Valor de Drogas Heroicas", Heraldo de Mexico, February 17, 1926, 8., cited by Bowen
- FBI File SAC (100-43165-16)
- FBI report CG 100-3386, p. 2. "FBI report CG 100-3386", FBI Records: The Vault; retrieved October 14, 2015.
- Bowen 2017, p. 250.
- Beynon 1938, pp. 894–95
- ^ Beynon 1938, p. 895
- Bowen 2017, p. 297.
- Andrew Morrow, John (June 20, 2023). "W.D. Fard's Bible of Islamism Identified: A Century-Old Mystery is Solved". Berkeley Institute for Islamic Studies. Retrieved April 14, 2024.
- Warikoo, Niraj (February 23, 2020). Bhatia, Peter; Delgado, Anjanette; Hill, James G. (eds.). "Nation of Islam resonates in Detroit as it returns home for convention". Detroit Free Press. Detroit, Michigan, United States: Gannett. ISSN 1055-2758. OCLC 474189830. Archived from the original on April 22, 2021. Retrieved January 31, 2022.
- Williams, Armstrong (October 5, 2015). Cusack, Bob; Swanson, Ian; McCafferty, Rory (eds.). "The Nation of Islam could be Chicago's savior". The Hill. Washington, D.C., United States: Nexstar Media Group. ISSN 1521-1568. OCLC 31153202. Archived from the original on April 18, 2021.
- Beynon 1938, pp. 893–907
- ^ Beynon 1938, p. 896
- Taylor, Ula Yvette (2017). Patriarchy: Women and the Nation of Islam. University of North Carolina Press. pp. 22–26. ISBN 978-1-4696-3395-4.
- Taylor, Ula Yvette (2017). The Promise of Patriarchy: Women and the Nation of Islam. North Carolina, United States: University of North Carolina Press. p. 18. ISBN 978-1-4696-3395-4.
- Taylor, Ula Yvette (2017). The Promise of Patriarchy: Women and the Nation of Islam. North-Carolina, United States: University of North Carolina Press. p. 186. ISBN 978-1-4696-3395-4.
- ^ Bowen 2017, pp. 241, 256.
- Taylor, Ula Yvette (2017). The Promise of Patriarchy: Women and the Nation of Islam. North-Carolina, United States: University of North Carolina Press. p. 30. ISBN 978-1-4696-3395-4. JSTOR 10.5149/9781469633947_taylor.
- ^ Beynon 1938, p. 900
- ^ Beynon 1938, p. 897
- ^ Beynon 1938, p. 902
- ^ Taylor, Ula Yvette (2017). The Promise of Patriarchy: Women and the Nation of Islam. North-Carolina: University of North Carolina Press. pp. 7–17. ISBN 978-1-4696-3395-4. JSTOR 10.5149/9781469633947_taylor.
- ^ Muhammad 1993
- ^ Muhammad 1965, pp. 16–17
- "HERE'S MY AUTHORITY". Detroit Free Press. November 24, 1932. p. 20. Retrieved August 10, 2023 – via newspapers.com.
- Evanzz 2011, pp. 84–85.
- Beynon 1938, pp. 903–904
- "Coverage Of "The Voodoo Murders" — Mythic Detroit". www.mythicdetroit.org. Retrieved August 10, 2020.
- ^ Evanzz 2011, pp. 84–92.
- "Voodoo's Reign Here Is Broken". Detroit Free Press. December 7, 1932. p. 7. Retrieved August 10, 2023 – via newspapers.com.
- "Banished Leader of Cult Arrested". Detroit Free Press. May 26, 1933. p. 10. Retrieved August 10, 2023 – via newspapers.com.
- "FBI Documents on Wallace Fard Muhammad".
- Evanzz 2011, p. 96: "Upon his release, Fard made another self-described farewell visit to Detroit. He had returned, he told believers, to bring good news about the impending war between blacks and whites. 'The White man will be destroyed this year' he said. Everyone was afraid to ask how he could be so certain, but he explained anyway. The unidentified flying object sic sighted in Canada recently, he said, was really the Mother Plane, a vehicle that resembled the description of Ezekiel's wheel in the Holy Bible. The Mother Plane was designed and built in Japan by 'our Asiatic brothers', Fard said, and when he gave the signal, the airship would release smaller ships inside its bay that would drop poison bombs on America."
- ^ Evanzz 2011, pp. 94–102.
- "Voodooist Cult Revived in City". Detroit Free Press. March 27, 1934. p. 1. Retrieved August 10, 2023 – via newspapers.com.
- "Girl Recounts Lore of Islam". Detroit Free Press. April 26, 1934. p. 1. Retrieved August 10, 2023 – via newspapers.com.
- "Article clipped from the Escanaba Daily Press". The Escanaba Daily Press. November 24, 1932. p. 1.
- FBI interview with Barton
- ^ Bilal's Boulder (August 13, 2019). "Finding W.D. Fard - John Andrew Morrow". Retrieved August 10, 2023 – via www.youtube.com.
- Beynon 1938, pp. 900–901
- Muhammad 1993, p. 12
- Muhammad 1965, p. 164
- Muhammad 1993, p. 3
- Gallicchio, Marc S. (2000). "4. The Rise of the Black Internationale". The African American Encounter with Japan and China: Black Internationalism in Asia, 1895–1945. Chapel Hill, North Carolina: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 9780807860687. OCLC 43334134 – via Google Books.
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- Morrow 2019, p. xii, Foreword by Dennis Walker.
- Bowen:Given that the Jehovah’s Witnesses had been the group that originally popularized the belief in 1914 being the end of the reign of a large group of evil people—a doctrine that clearly corresponds to Fard’s use of the 1914 date—and that Fard had explicitly encouraged his followers to read and listen to the Witnesses’ leader Rutherford, it seems that the Witnesses are the most obvious non-Islamic source for his teachings"
- "W. D. Fard's Bible of Islamism Identified: A Century-Old Mystery is Solved".
- Beynon
- "35. Tell us the exact date of the expiration of the devil's civilization. ANS. Expired in Nineteen and Fourteen."
- Maesen, William A. (1970). "Watchtower Influences on Black Muslim Eschatology: An Exploratory Story". Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. 9 (4): 321–325. doi:10.2307/1384578. JSTOR 1384578.
- Morrow 2019, p. 42.
- Morrow 2019, pp. 36–37, Chapter 2. W. D. Fard: Religious Roots.
- "About Saviours' Day". Nation of Islam. January 3, 2019. Retrieved August 10, 2020.
- Warikoo, Niraj (February 23, 2020). Bhatia, Peter; Delgado, Anjanette; Hill, James G. (eds.). "Louis Farrakhan says billionaires 'paying off' black preachers, politicians". Detroit Free Press. Detroit, Michigan, United States: Gannett. ISSN 1055-2758. OCLC 474189830. Archived from the original on November 24, 2021. Retrieved January 31, 2022.
- Beynon 1938, pp. 906–907
- ^ Muhammad, Elijah (1964), Historic 1964 Buzz Anderson Interview, The Final Call
- Muhammad, Jabril (1993) This is The One The Most Honored Elijah Muhammad We Need Not Look For Another, Vol. 1
- FBI File SAC (25-20607) at 476
- FBI File SAC (100-26356) at 451–473, SAC Chicago (100-33683)
- ^ FBI File SAC LA (105–4805) at 135
- "FBI document". fbi.gov. Retrieved August 10, 2023.
- FBI File Director FBI (105-63642) at 248, SAC Chicago (100-33683)
- "Wallace Fard Muhammed Part 2 of 7". FBI. Federal Bureau of Investigation.
- ^ Evanzz 2011, pp. 204–205, 10. Compromised.
- Evanzz 2011, pp. 105–108, 5. Bitter Fruit.
- Allen Jr., Ernest (December 21, 1994). Chude-Sokei, Louis (ed.). "When Japan Was "Champion of the Darker Races": Satokata Takahashi and the Flowering of Black Messianic Nationalism" (PDF). The Black Scholar. 24 (1). San Francisco, California, United States: Boston University/Routledge: 23–46. doi:10.1080/00064246.1994.11413118. ISSN 0006-4246 – via Scribd.
- FBI File Director, FBI (25-330971) at 258, SAC Chicago (100-35635)
- Evanzz 2011, p. 264, 12. Sons and Lovers.
- "Black Muslim Founder Exposed As White", Los Angeles Evening Herald-Examiner, July 28, 1963
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- Morrow 2019, pp. 54–55.
- ^ Aysha Khan (2022). 'A Seed of Truth': Ahmadiyya Muslim Propagation Networks and the Development of Islam in America (MA thesis). Harvard University.
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- Essien-Udom, E.U. (1995). Black Nationalism: the Search for an Identity. Chicago, Illinois, United States: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226218533.
- Evanzz, Karl (2011) . The Messenger: The Rise and Fall of Elijah Muhammad (3 ed.). New York City, New York, United States: Knopf Doubleday. ISBN 9780307805201 – via Google Books.
- Gibson, Dawn-Marie (2012). A History of the Nation of Islam: Race, Islam, and the Quest for Freedom. Praeger. ISBN 978-0-313-39807-0.
- Hakim, Nasir (1996). The True History of Master Fard Muhammad. Secretaries MEMPS Ministries. ISBN 1-884855-78-4.
- Morrow, John Andrew (2019). Finding W.D. Fard: Unveiling the Identity of the Founder of the Nation of Islam. Newcastle upon Tyne, England, United Kingdom: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. ISBN 9781527524897 – via Google Books.
- Muhammad, Elijah (1965). Message to the Blackman in America. Muhammad's Temple No 2. ISBN 978-1-929594-01-6.
- Muhammad, Fard (1993). The Supreme Wisdom Lessons by Master Fard Muhammad: to His Servant, The Honorable Elijah Muhammad for The Lost-Found Nation of Islam in North America (PDF). CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. ISBN 978-1442165403.
External links
- FBI file on Wallace Fard
- Historical Analysis of FBI's COINTELPRO AND W. Fard Muhammad
- Master Fard Muhammad
- 1870s births
- 19th-century births
- 19th-century apocalypticists
- 20th-century apocalypticists
- 1930s missing person cases
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- Members of the Moorish Science Temple of America
- Missing person cases in Michigan
- Nation of Islam religious leaders
- New religious movement deities
- People convicted of drug offenses
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