Rift with Ernest 2X McGee Ernest 2X McGee was the first national secretary of the NOI and had been ousted in the late 1950s. McGee went on to form a Sunni Muslim sect and changed his name to
Hamaas Abdul Khaalis. Khaalis attracted
Lew Alcindor, whom Khaalis renamed
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Jabbar donated
a house for use as the Hanafi Madh-Hab Center. Khaalis sent letters that were critical of Muhammad and Fard to Muhammad, his ministers, and the media.
Rift with Malcolm X Malcolm X's public response to the assassination of President Kennedy On December1, 1963, when asked for a comment about the
assassination of President John F. Kennedy,
Malcolm X said that it was a case of "
chickens coming home to roost". He added that "chickens coming home to roost never did make me sad; they've always made me glad."
The New York Times wrote, "in further criticism of Mr. Kennedy, the Muslim leader cited the murders of
Patrice Lumumba, Congo leader, of
Medgar Evers, civil rights leader, and of the
Negro girls bombed earlier this year in a
Birmingham, Alabama, church. These, he said, were instances of other 'chickens coming home to roost'." MalcolmX retained his post and rank as minister, but was prohibited from public speaking for 90 days.
Rape of underage girls Rumors were circulating that Elijah was conducting extramarital affairs with young Nation secretarieswhich would constitute a serious violation of Nation teachings. After first discounting the rumors, MalcolmX came to believe them after he spoke with Muhammad's son
Wallace and with the girls making the accusations. Muhammad confirmed the rumors in 1963, attempting to justify his behavior by referring to precedents set by Biblical prophets. Over a series of national TV interviews between 1964 and 1965, MalcolmX provided testimony of his investigation, corroboration, and confirmation by Muhammad himself of multiple instances of child rape. During this investigation, Malcolm X learned that seven of the eight girls had become pregnant by Muhammad, and publicly shared the information. Malcolm X also spoke of an attempt made to assassinate him, by means of an explosive device discovered in his car, and of death threats he was receiving, which he believed were in response to his exposure of Muhammad. Years later in a series of lectures titled "Malcolm X and Elijah Muhammad 28 years later" Louis Farrakhan would give a defense of Elijah Muhammads relationships by referring to Biblical and Quranic precedents. Farrakhan further states that one of the women whom Elijah Muhammad eventually had a child with, Evelyn, was someone who Malcolm had fallen in love with before his relationship with Betty Shabazz, leading to a greater sense of hurt and betrayal when he found about the relationship
Final schism and murder of Malcolm X The extramarital affairs, the suspension, and
other factors caused a rift between the two men, with MalcolmX leaving the Nation of Islam in March 1964 to form his own religious organization,
Muslim Mosque Inc. After dealing with death threats and attempts on his life for a year, MalcolmX
was assassinated on February21, 1965. Many people suspected that the Nation of Islam was responsible for the killing of Malcolm X. Five days after Malcolm X was murdered, in a public speech at the Nation of Islam's annual
Saviours' Day on February 26, Elijah justified the assassination by quoting that "Malcolm got just what he preached", but at the same time denied any involvement with the murder by asserting in the same speech: "We didn't want to kill Malcolm and didn't try to kill him. We know such ignorant, foolish teaching would bring him to his own end."
Cooperation with white supremacists Some believed that Elijah's pro-separation views were compatible with those of some
white supremacist organizations in the 1960s. He met with leaders of the
Ku Klux Klan (KKK) in 1961 to work toward the purchase of farmland in the
Deep South. For more than ten years Elijah received major financial support from white supremacist Texas oil baron
H. L. Hunt due to Elijah's belief in racial separation from whites. The money helped Elijah to acquire opulent homes for himself and his family and establish overseas bank accounts. Yet, there are also those who believe that the black separatism movement to be a consequence of historic social, political and financial disenfranchisement of the blacks. Many also believed that the narrative of racial superiority as a black construct to upend the white power structure is inconsistent with history. Muhammad eventually established Temple Farms, now
Muhammad Farms, on a tract in
Terrell County, Georgia.
George Lincoln Rockwell, founder of the
American Nazi Party, once called Elijah "the
Hitler of the black man." At the 1962
Saviours' Day celebration in Chicago, Rockwell addressed
Nation of Islam members. Many in the audience booed and heckled him and his men, for which Elijah rebuked them in the April 1962 issue of
Muhammad Speaks. ==Personal life==