Opened as
Temple No. 7 of the
Nation of Islam (NOI) at the Harlem YMCA in 1946 (all Nation of Islam sites were initially called Temples; the NOI switched to the term
mosque as a move to add to the Nation's legitimacy by adding elements from mainstream
Islam), it was moved to Lenox Casino at 102
West 116th Street on the southwest corner of
Lenox Avenue and it "was just a
storefront in 1954 when Malcolm was named minister by
Elijah Muhammad." When Malcolm X split from Elijah Muhammad in 1964, he started a Sunni Muslim mosque named The
Muslim Mosque Inc. The successor to that mosque is The Mosque of Islamic Brotherhood Inc. at 130
West 113th Street, in Harlem. In January 1964, Elijah Muhammad stripped Malcolm of his offices. Muhammad promoted
James 3X as the new minister of Mosque No. 7. Temple No. 7 was destroyed in a bombing in 1965, after
Malcolm X's assassination, which forced the Nation of Islam to move the mosque to 106
West 127th Street. The building was redesigned by Sabbath Brown, and in 1976 the mosque was renamed Malcolm Shabazz Mosque, (by Wallace D. Muhammad, the new leader of the Nation of Islam), or Masjid Malcolm Shabazz, to honor the memory and contributions of Malcolm X. In 1972, the mosque was the location of a
controversial shooting of a NYPD officer. At 19 years of age in 1984,
Conrad Tillard converted to Islam, joined the Nation of Islam, and became known as Conrad X, and later as Conrad Muhammad. At 25 years of age he was appointed the Minister of Mosque No. 7, and
The Boston Globe described him as the heir-apparent of NOI head
Louis Farrakhan. Tillard left the Nation of Islam in 1997. In 1989, Farrakhan appointed
Muhammad Abdul Aziz, who had been convicted of the 1965 murder of Malcolm X but proclaimed his innocence, as chief of security for the mosque. The
New York Times saw the appointment as a move to clear Aziz's name, and push for a re-opening of the investigation of the assassination. Aziz's conviction was overturned in 2021. == Imamship under Talib Abdur-Rashid ==