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The presence of Islam in America is as long-standing as the arrival
of the first captive Muslims from Africa, making Islam one of
America's formative religions. But the long-suppressed indigenous
Islam didn't resurface in organized form until the 1930s, when it
infused the politico-spiritual drive by the Noble Drew 'Ali and the
Honorable Elijah Muhammad to address the appalling social
conditions of the ghettoized black masses of the North. Elijah
Muhammad's Nation of Islam would prove to be the most extensive,
influential and durable of African-American self-generated
organizations. Combining black cooperative entrepreneurship with
indigenous Islam-tinged culture and spirituality, the NOI pursued a
collectivist nationalist agenda which sought to advance the black
masses' cause--within America or without it. At its collectivist
height, the NOI achieved a $95 million empire of interlocking black
Muslim small businesses and farms--providing a model for "bootstrap
self-development" by the marginalized and dispossessed, worldwide.
Bourgeois elements developed within, or engaged by, the NOI sought
to weld a united African-American nation out of a range of classes.
Outstanding second generation leaders--Warith Muhammad, Louis
Farrakhan and Malcolm X--would further imbed Islam in Black
America, and extend its relations into the international community.
Their media offered an informed and critical outlook on both
domestic and international affairs that often paralleled
progressive analysts. What seems clear, after two monumental
marches in 1995 and 2005 to the nation's capital, is that the NOI
and African-American Muslims will have substantial input into the
future direction of the African-American struggle. But it remains
ambiguous whether the developing African-American nation will
pursue its still-unfulfilled promise through secession, autonomy or
long-term integration. To date, indigenous American Islam has been
made a bogey by various white elites in order to regiment their own
and other ethnic groups. "Dr. Walker has drawn a portrait of this
movement that deserves the attention of scholars. I strongly
recommend it to teachers and students studying or writing about
Islam and the African American experience." -- Dr. Sulayman S.
Nyang, Howard University "It is not very often books of substance
on African Americans, Islam and the Nation of Islam are written to
set the record straight, or to reveal the truth about an historical
legacy in the making. However, Islam and the search for African
American, and the Nation of Islam, by Dr. Dennis Walker is an
exception to the rule... ...Dr. Walker's book sets the record
straight for an Islamic, African American and an Arab historical
connection, the influences and impacting maze of geographical
history, as well as the search for African American nationhood in
the 21st century. This well documented book offers several defining
points of views coupled with the elements of societies' Black
History, The Nation of Islam, race, class, and culture. Dr.
Walker's book also strengthens and confirms the longstanding
relevance of media knowledge and networks within the African
American communities and its impact on domestic and international
relations. Islam and the search for African American Nationhood is
an extensive scholarly treasure trove of African, Arab and Islamic
history. This timely study on Islam and the African American
movement and its leaders is worthy reading, yet goes beyond the
expansion of the African American experience and its search for
Nationhood." -- Leila Diab in Muslim Journal
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