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Malcolm X Centennial Conference

Fri, March 21, 2025 - Sat, March 22, 2025 at Erickson KIVA

More information here.

Zoom registration

Dr. Charisse Burden-Stelly - Friday, 7:00 pm, KIVA

Malcolm X and the Radical Black Tradition of Peace and Human Rights

Associate Professor of African American Studies at Wayne State University

In this talk, I will analyze Malcolm X ( El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz) as part of the long tradition of Radical Black Peace Activism, which is a fundamental but often-forgotten feature of the modern Black Liberation Movement. This mode of peace activism was internationalist in scope and made the link between the cessation of global conflict, disarmament, non-proliferation, racial equality, the end of imperialism and colonialism, and the eradication of capitalist exploitation. Focusing on his speech at the Second Organization of Afro-American Unity Rally on July 5, 1964, among other speeches and writings, I will examine how Malcom X continued the tradition of freedom fighters like W.E.B. Du Bois, Paul Robeson, and Claudia Jones in asserting the realization of Black peoples’ human rights as an essential aspect of the national and international struggle for self-determination, global cooperation, and economic democracy.

 

Dr. Akinyele Umoja - Saturday, 7:00 pm, KIVA

From Malcolm X to Omowale Malik Shabazz: Towards a 21st Century New Afrikan Nationalism

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On March 12th, 1964 Malcolm X publicly made his break with the Nation of Islam (NOI). Malcolm began to chart a new political course within the eleven months of his life after his declaration of independence from the NOI. Malcolm’s new political agenda not only represented a break with the politics of the NOI but with elements of North American Black Nationalism. Malcolm X was a transitional ideological influence on Black freedom struggle in North America. Malcolm is considered the ideological father of a “new” nationalist movement, often called the Black Power movement, which was in ascendancy during the mid-1960’s.

I argue that the “new” nationalist model that Malcolm was attempting to develop could be distinguished from the “old” or fundamental Black Nationalism in certain characteristics. Influenced by anti-colonial national liberation movements in Afrika[1], Asia and the Americas, Malcolm began to develop ideological positions that challenged perceptions and practices institutionalized by Black nationalists in North America in previous eras. The “new” nationalist model articulated by Malcolm was different from particular features of fundamental Black Nationalism, including leadership and decision-making style, perspective on the role of women in the liberation movement, ideological orientation of social change, and view of continental Afrikans. This presentation will apply the New Afrikan revolutionary nationalist and internationalist perspective of Malcolm X and his associates and comrades to the political realities of our current moment.

[1] As a form of cultural self-determination, this author spells “Afrika” with a “k.” In written Afrikan languages “Afrika” is spelled with a “k.” Consistent with this since the early 1970’s many Afrikan-centered intellectuals and activists have rejected the spelling of “Afrika.” With a “c.”