I am not a Muslim. I am simply a man in search of truth -- the
truth about myself, my people, my country, my world and God. In my search for truth, I have discovered
that there is much that I once believed to be true that is certainly not the
total truth and, indeed, may not be true at all.
I once believed that I am
only an African American.
However, in my search for truth, I discovered that such a label is not
entirely true. I discovered that, like
me, most persons of African descent who live in the United States
also have European and Indigenous American blood. By labeling such individuals as being only
African American, society may be denying essential elements of
their being.
As a so-called
African American, I once believed that American slavery defined my
past and impacted my present. But once I
escaped the confines of the label, I learned that my triple heritage -- my
African, European and Indigenous American heritage -- is far richer than I could
ever have imagined. With a triple
heritage, African slavery is not an overriding historical theme. With a triple heritage, the self-evident fact
is that for people like me the overriding historical theme concerns the creation
of a new people and the beginning of a new experiment with fascinating
possibilities for the future history of man.
Another consequence of
discovering the nature of a triple heritage is the realization that one of the
defining labels that is currently en vogue in American society simply does not
fit. On almost any day of the week, in
schools, churches, and the halls of power throughout the land, one can hear
pronouncements being made concerning the Judeo-Christian heritage
of America . However, as a person with a triple heritage,
there are other religious traditions which have obviously had some bearing on
the individual that I am today. In
addition to my Judeo-Christian heritage, there is also a lingering
influence of the tribal religions of the African and Indigenous American peoples
and, perhaps more significantly, there is the ongoing influence of
Islam.
Yes, Islam has, undoubtedly,
had an historical role in defining what it means to be an African American. But, for me, there is even
more.
For me, there are moments
and times in my life which are indelibly etched in my psyche. There was the time while living in Glasgow , Montana , in the early 1960s that I became
aware of the sport of boxing when a brash young boxer by the name of Cassius
Clay defeated the "invincible" bear known as Sonny Liston. Cassius Clay would soon become the legendary
Muhammad Ali -- a Muslim who became the dominant sports figure of my
generation.
There was the time in high
school in 1969 when I first began to explore my African heritage by reading a
story about a small time hoodlum who underwent two Islamic conversions -- first
as the Nation of Islam leader known as Malcolm X and later as the more orthodox
Muslim, El Hajj Malik Shabazz.
Then there was the crucial
period of my life when during my first two years of college, in 1972 and 1973, I
served as the "Minister of Information" of the Amherst Afro-American
Society under the leadership of Umar Zaid Muhammad.
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