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[Editor’s note: The following article is an excerpt taken from a
keynote address by Minister Farrakhan delivered July 8, 2004 at the United
Methodist Church in Chicago, Illinois during the National Black United
Front’s convention celebrating its 25th anniversary.
In The Name of Allah, The Beneficent, The Merciful.
We are 50 years from Brown v. Board of Education. While Blacks in the Civil
Rights Movement cheer that we’ve come 50 years, there is sadness because, in
50 years, nothing has really changed. We’re 40 years from the Voting Rights
Act and civil rights that allowed us to go here and go there, yet we are
getting further and further behind socially, economically and otherwise.
They allowed us the right to vote and we voted into office a few Black men
here and a few Black women there. We have nearly 10,000 elected officials,
but we’re in a worse condition and position today. There’s something wrong
with that picture. In football and in warfare, it is the art of deception
that wins the war and wins the game, and we are a greatly deceived people.
Like a dog running after its own tail, we never quite catch up.
It’s time now for us to assess where we are, because if we don’t make a
serious change in our way of thinking and a serious commitment for real
liberation, the death of our people will grow exponentially by the chemical
and biological warfare that murders us daily. As Black doctors find it
difficult to continue to practice medicine because of the high rate of
liability insurance, we have less and less doctors. One doctor for every
2,000 Black people, when in Cuba it’s one doctor for every 185 people.
When your doctors quit and your community hospitals close, you become the
guinea lambs—experimented on in county hospitals, prisons and jails;
experimented on with new weapons, new chemical weapons, new weapons of birth
control, new weapons that destroy the fertility of the Black male and female
while they develop fertility drugs for their own people.
We are under assault. What is so sad is that, in this presidential election
season, Black people who have been sold and sold out to the Democratic Party
feel that in John Kerry they really have an alternative to George W. Bush.
You are so pitiful that you are still, at this late date, looking for the
lesser of two evils to bring about good in your life.
Many will go to the polls because they want to get rid of George W. John
Kerry may look better in your eyes—especially when you can’t see. The same
day that I made my address, “Guidance to America and the World in a Time of
Trouble,” at the National Press Club on May 3, John Kerry was speaking to
the Anti-Defamation League of B’nai B’rith, the ADL. Mr. Kerry was promising
Jewish people everything that would make them want to vote for him. A few
weeks later, George W. Bush was making a speech before AIPAC, out-promising
John Kerry. Now, Israel is going to get the benefit of whomever you vote
for, or don’t vote for, but where are your benefits?
These candidates tell us, “Vote for me and I’ll make eight million jobs,”
and you buy that, as though, if he does make eight million jobs, you’re
going to be the recipient.
The Honorable Elijah Muhammad was a very truthful Warner. He had our
cartoonist, Eugene Majied, make a cartoon in the Muhammad Speaks newspaper
at that time, with the factories closing, a locked gate and Black people
standing outside of the gate looking for a job. The Honorable Elijah
Muhammad said, “You must rise up and do something for yourself before you’re
forced to do it.”
And now, the factories are closing and White folks are crying out against
the outsourcing of jobs to other countries. The labor market has fought for
higher wages, but higher wages have literally made it unprofitable for
corporate America to compete with those products that are manufactured in
Asia. So, outsourcing means that America brings her jobs to Asia where they
may work for $1 a day, and then bring those products back into America. They
sell them to the American people who corporate America has abandoned in
order to increase their bottom line at the expense of the American people
and Black people, who are always the last hired and the first fired.
Where is our future? As we open this convention celebrating the 25th
anniversary of the National Black United Front, I ask you, “Do you have a
future in a country that doesn’t have a future?”
I know America looks very strong and impenetrable. Not so. The economy of
this country is held up with nothing of substance. The dollar bill is not
backed by anything sound. It used to be called the Silver Certificate and it
used to say, “Pay to the bearer on demand the equivalent in silver.” But it
is no longer backed by silver or gold. It’s backed by the GDP (Gross
Domestic Product) of this country. As the doorway of Asia begins to close on
America, her economy is going to decline and many scholars of economics
project that one day it will crash.
The Honorable Elijah Muhammad said to us, “One day, you will see the rich
lighting their cigars with $1,000 bills because the currency will have no
more value.” When the currency goes down, the government goes down behind
the currency.
You may think that all of the construction on highways is to build the
city’s infrastructure, and it is. But as I travel in cities across America,
and as you do too, you may notice the great Highway Construction Program.
You may notice, especially around the major cities, they are digging up
asphalt roads and putting up concrete and steel.
If you follow the construction, you will see an armory nearby, filled with
tanks and anti-personnel carriers. You may think that what we see happening
in Gaza and on the West Bank in Palestine and Israel is something just
happening over there. My poor, poor, poor foolish brothers and sisters.
When we were coming up, we never carried guns. The best we could get was a
switchblade. We would threaten people like we were going to do something,
but we didn’t want to cut anybody. We just wanted to hold them off from
whipping us, so we would pull out the blade. Today, the switchblade is gone
and my young brothers and sisters are carrying weapons.
You think that weapons are to protect you, give you a sense of power because
you can smoke your brother in a drive-by. But the gun can be so inaccurate;
you shoot over here and the bullet lands over there. Then, one of your young
brothers and sisters sitting on the porch with Mommy and Daddy is dead
because of your foolishness.
You don’t think there’s a price to pay for your madness? The Bible says,
“Since you love to shed blood, I will give you your own blood to drink and
you will be drunk with your own blood as with sweet wine.”
In Los Angeles, another beating took place after the one that we just saw on
television and the Black community is up in arms. Police Chief Bratton said,
“These gangs are tribal thugs. The face of crime in L.A. is a Black face and
they are terrorists.” That’s a prescription for slaughter.
When I talked to my minister in L.A., Minister Tony Muhammad, I told him,
“Brother, call the family together, but don’t let the enemy in and repeat
Chief Bratton’s words. Ask our family is there truth in what he has said?”
Let’s forget his color or the motive, let’s deal with truth. We used to be
tribes that had some intelligence. A tribe called Baptist, a tribe called
Methodist, a tribe called Episcopalian, a tribe called Church of God in
Christ, a tribe called Jehovah’s Witness. We were tribes then and we
wouldn’t go to each other’s churches or services, but we never shed each
other’s blood. We have degenerated now.
Name the various so-called gangs in the city, they are people of the same
color and ethnicity, but we have become tribes. We don’t necessarily have
tribal marks, but some do: a tattoo, a sign, a handshake or a color. We have
forgotten that we are a nation within a nation.
In the sixties, the cry was, “What time is it?” and we would answer, “It’s
Nation Time!” When you say “Nation Time,” nation evolves out of tribes and
families. That is what is killing Africa. Africa was given national
sovereignty without ever evolving from tribes into nations. Ghana is
composed of tribes, not yet fully a nation. Nigeria is composed of tribes,
not yet fully a nation.
Uganda, Sudan, all of Africa is composed of tribes not yet fully
nations.
Allah (God) says in the Qur’an, “I created you from a single essence into
tribes and families that you may know one another.” But as Allah (God)
evolves us from sperm mixed with ovum, then a clot, then an embryo, then a
fetus, then a baby, then a young child, then a teenager and then an adult—we
live in a world that is constantly evolving. If we stay as tribes, we can
never become a nation. Tribes must evolve into nations.
We must see the commonality of our ethnicity or our racial identity and
become a genuine nation. We have to grow beyond denomination and
organizational names which make us tribes, so we refuse to grow: “My tribe,
not yours. My church, not yours. My organization, not yours.” We are a
people that must evolve from tribes into a nation. We are a nation within a
nation.
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