Sunday, April 12, 2020
Malcolm Hendrix Essays (541 words) - Discrimination, Hatred, Racism
  Malcolm Hendrix    The Racist Malcolm was a racist, violent Black Man. He has been an anti-white  all through his previous life as he had confessed, and has remained the same  even after his pilgrimage to Mecca. His thoughts and emotions deny the White  man, and he still sees them as hypocrites who try to benefit from the Blacks,  using Negroes as tools to enrich their lives. The influence he had received  during his past years from Elijah Muhammad, and his learning of the history of  the White man had so much affect on him. Although he had professed to witness to  have understood the real teachings of Islam, his ideas and opinions of the    Whites did not change. His preaching still focused on the Black man's plight, as  he had done when he served as the Minister of the Nation of Islam. Malcolm says,  " I didn't miss a single opportunity to tell the truth about the crimes,  the evils and the indignities that are suffered by the black man in America (pg    351)." He simply generalizes all Whites to be evil and tells how the White  men had oppressed them. He doesn't seem to realize that Whites nowadays are  different from who they were before in the past. He was telling the truth, of  the cruel history of the Whites, but the truth didn't apply to all Whites as he  thought. If he had witnessed the spirit of true brotherhood during his  pilgrimage in Mecca, shouldn't he be more open-minded, have more sympathy and a  magnanimous heart towards the White people? His speeches caused the blacks to  hate the Whites and commit violent crimes against them. "New York City's  press was highly upset about a recent killing in Harlem of a White woman, for  which many were blaming me at least indirectly (pg 365)." This shows that    Malcolm was a great orator, who could unite the blacks, bur it would have been  better off if he had thought more to love one another, to become one as  brothers, as written in the Quran. His 'Blood Brothers' only consisted of    Negroes. If we all are, as he says, the descendents of God's creation, why can't    Whites as well be a part of his 'Blood Brother'? Malcolm actually says that  there is only a minority of 'brotherly" white people. "Yes, I have  been convinced that some American whites do want to help cure the rampant racism  which is now the path to destroy this country! (Pg. 365)" He has no  sympathy for other Whites than the White Muslims, and doesn't even try to  compromise with them. As much as he defended the rights of the Blacks, and  preached of the Whites' historical crimes, he denied the Whites and couldn't get  out of his racial prejudice. How could he actually say that there was only a  minority of "brotherly" white people, when he, himself, didn't even  bother to socialize or integrate with the Whites in America, to get to know each  of them better? Muslims of white complexions were the only people whom Malcolm  considered as brothers. He did not accept other Whites as his brothers; he was  still a racist to them. Malcolm denies the White people, and before accepting  them as human beings, he first perceives their 'white' skin color and starts to  hold a racial prejudice against them. He lies the responsibility of the Black  man's sufferings on the White man unconditionally, that it is their entire  fault.    
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