
Elijah Muhammad
Herbert Berg(Author)
Oneworld Academic (Publisher)
Published on 3. October 2013
Book
Hardback
160 pages
978-1-85168-803-6 (ISBN)
Description
Almost four decades after his death Elijah Muhammad (1897-1975) remains by far the most influential African American Muslim. Leader of the Nation of Islam movement for over thirty years and a mentor to Malcolm X, Muhammad was responsible for introducing hundreds of thousands of African Americans to Islam. In this fascinating biography Herbert Berg assesses the impact of Muhammad's unique and intriguing perspective on Islam, and seeks to understand why he formulated it. Careful to consider Muhammad's career within the context of the significant racial tensions of his time, this volume investigates a figure whose formulation of Islam, however divisive, forced Muslims and scholars alike to evaluate their often normative definitions of this religious tradition.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Oneworld Publications
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 223 mm
Width: 139 mm
Thickness: 20 mm
Weight
340 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-85168-803-6 (9781851688036)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Herbert Berg
Elijah Muhammad
E-Book
10/2013
1st Edition
Oneworld Publications
€27.69
Available for download
Person
Herbert Berg trained at the University of Toronto's Centre for the Study of Religion. He is currently a professor in the Department of Philosophy and Religion at the University of North Carolina Wilmington and is the Director of the International Studies program.
Content
Preface
Acknowledgments
Main Persons and Technical Terms
Chronology
INTRODUCTION
1 ISLAM AND AFRICAN AMERICANS
African American Muslim slaves and African American religion
Ahmadis and the Moorish Science Temple
Wali Fard Muhammad
Wallace D. Ford
Detroit's Allah
2 ELIJAH POOLE
Racism in the South
Racism in the North
The Nation of Islam
3 THE APOSTLE OF ALLAH
A decade of persecution, preaching and prison
Two decades of success
A decade of decline
4 BLACK ISLAM
The rise and fall of the white race
The five principles of Islam
Allah and Allahs
Black angels and white devils
Black prophets
Glorious, poisonous, and future books
The Last Day and the Fall of America
The five pillars of Islam
Shahada
Salat
Sawm
Zakat
Hajj
Dietary regulations
5 WHAT MUSLIMS BELIEVE AND WHAT MUSLIMS WANT
Do for self: economic self-sufficiency
A land of our own: separation, not integration
Protect your women!
Be yourself! Black pride
6 THE TEXTUAL SOURCES OF ISLAM
The Sira
The Sunna
The Qur'an
7 OTHER MUSLIMS
Hypocrites
American Muslim opposition
"Copper-colored" brothers
White Muslims
Islamic trajectories
Warith Deen Mohammed
Louis Farrakhan
CONCLUSION: THE LEGACIES
Further Reading
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
Main Persons and Technical Terms
Chronology
INTRODUCTION
1 ISLAM AND AFRICAN AMERICANS
African American Muslim slaves and African American religion
Ahmadis and the Moorish Science Temple
Wali Fard Muhammad
Wallace D. Ford
Detroit's Allah
2 ELIJAH POOLE
Racism in the South
Racism in the North
The Nation of Islam
3 THE APOSTLE OF ALLAH
A decade of persecution, preaching and prison
Two decades of success
A decade of decline
4 BLACK ISLAM
The rise and fall of the white race
The five principles of Islam
Allah and Allahs
Black angels and white devils
Black prophets
Glorious, poisonous, and future books
The Last Day and the Fall of America
The five pillars of Islam
Shahada
Salat
Sawm
Zakat
Hajj
Dietary regulations
5 WHAT MUSLIMS BELIEVE AND WHAT MUSLIMS WANT
Do for self: economic self-sufficiency
A land of our own: separation, not integration
Protect your women!
Be yourself! Black pride
6 THE TEXTUAL SOURCES OF ISLAM
The Sira
The Sunna
The Qur'an
7 OTHER MUSLIMS
Hypocrites
American Muslim opposition
"Copper-colored" brothers
White Muslims
Islamic trajectories
Warith Deen Mohammed
Louis Farrakhan
CONCLUSION: THE LEGACIES
Further Reading
Bibliography
Index