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America's black
Muslims close a rift
Louis Farrakhan's "Nation of
Islam" edges closer to orthodox Islam
By Daniel B. Wood

W. Deen Mohammed (in light jacket) and Louis Farrakhan (glasses and bow tie) -
stood together in February 2000 in a move aimed at healing rivalry between their
groups.
LOS ANGELES - When Imam W. Deen
Mohammed ascends a wooden podium at the Los Angeles Convention Center here
tomorrow, the gaze of 20,000 Nation of Islam faithful will rest upon his
countenance for Friday prayer. The proceeding, an orthodox Islamic ritual known
as Jummah, will mark an important milestone for the famously radical group
headed by Louis Farrakhan.
Known for his inflammatory black
nationalist ideology, Mr. Farrakhan has been seeking a more moderate profile -
and reconciliation with the broad majority of African-American Muslims.
It's been evident, in the past two
years, in his toned-down rhetoric since a recovery from illness. Now, in a sign
of softening perhaps heightened by Sept. 11, Mr. Farrakhan has invited longtime
rival Imam Mohammed, who leads the largest group of African American Muslims, to
conduct the special prayer this week at the Nation of Islam's annual convention
here.
For decades, Farrakhan's much
smaller band of followers has largely ignored the Jummah, a pillar of practice
for most Muslims. Mohammed's appearance at the dais represents a further step in
a detente that could help end 26 years of division between the two groups - at a
time when the American Muslims face renewed public scrutiny.
"The fact that Farrakhan has
asked Rev. Mohammed to lead the ... Jummah ... at his organization's biggest
event will be one of the most important healing gestures in the history of Islam
in America," says Imam Faheem Shuaibe, of Masjid Waritheen in Oakland,
Calif. "This is the stitching of a wound that has lasted for decades. The
only thing after that will be to wait for natural healing."
Mr. Farrakhan is expected to
praise and embrace Mohammed, a sign of easing in divisions over ideology going
back to 1976. It may also reflect a chastening of heart for Mr. Farrakhan in the
wake of Sept. 11 attacks on America by terrorists claiming Islamic faith as a
motivation.
"What happened in the
terrorist attacks on America made us realize that as Muslims we need to bury our
petty differences because there is a bigger picture to consider now," says
Akbar Muhammad, international representative for the Nation of Islam. "It
has given us a new sense that we must strive to come together for the good of
society and future generations of American Muslims."
Beyond America's shores, the
gesture is also important as Muslim countries around the globe try to assess
America's relationship to Islam, within and without its borders.
"The story of African
American Muslims has become key to how America is viewed internationally, both
in the Middle East and elsewhere across the Muslim world," says Fathi Osman,
an Islamic scholar and for the Omar Ibn Al Khattab Foundation. Of all
non-immigrant Muslims in this country, more than 85 percent are black "They
are the ones who have planted the roots of Islam firmly in this country,
establishing mosques and centers of civic outreach, working in prisons and
communities.... And they are also perhaps the most misunderstood."
Indeed, the strident black
nationalist rhetoric of Farrakhan - and the media attention it garnered over the
years - reinforced one key misunderstanding: the view that the Nation of Islam
represents most black Muslims in America.
The group rose to prominence
during the civil rights era of the 1960s as a black separatist movement that
labeled other religions as oppressors and whites as "blue-eyed
devils." But leader Elijah Mohammed died in 1975. His immediate leadership
heir, son W. D. Mohammed, abandoned such notions as blasphemy to true Islam, and
embraced orthodox interpretations of the Koran, which encourages the universal
acceptance of races and genders.
The vast majority of
African-American Muslims (now about 2.5 million) followed him into a new
organization known as The Muslim Society of America. Only a small percentage -
perhaps 30,000 to 70,000 members by most accounts - remain in the Nation of
Islam under Farrakhan.
But because of Farrakhan's
persuasive charisma and ability to attract controversy and press, the image of
African American Muslims as militant separatists persists to this day.
"For many Americans, the
Nation of Islam still is the face of Islam in America, and so they associate
Muslims with the harmful and even demonic rhetoric espoused by Rev.
Farrakhan," says Anthony Pinn, professor of religion at Macalester College.
The confusion persists, say Pinn and others, because Farrakhan often reaches out
to society at large and to blacks of other faiths, as during his "Million
Man March" on Washington in 1997.
To many African-American Muslims,
who disagree with Farrakhan and feel unfairly tarred with his views in the
public eye, the leader's recent evolution is encouraging.
In recent years, experts say,
Farrakhan has lowered the tone of his separatist and black nationalist rhetoric.
He has embraced other races, appointed women in high positions, and played down
doctrinal differences that were points of division between his followers and
those of W.D. Mohammed..
"It is very clear to me that
Minister Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam are very serious in embracing the
love and peace message of Islam and putting harsh rhetoric behind," says W.
D. Mohammed in a Monitor interview. Recounting a meeting between himself,
Farrakhan, and Christian minister Robert Schuller in December, he says Farrakhan
openly repented of confusing the picture of Muslims before the US public, and
vowed to discontinue his message of black nationalism.
"The old rhetoric [of
Farrakhan] is changing," says Dr. Maher Hathout of the Muslim Public
Affairs Council. "We will see if his behavior changes as well."
The Christian Science Monitor,
February 14, 2002
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