Theology The NOI has a highly distinct and detailed
theology. Although professing a
monotheistic belief in a single God, its discourse refers to multiple gods, meaning that it can be interpreted as
polytheistic. In the NOI's view, each
Allah (God) is not an incorporeal spiritual entity but a flesh-and-blood person, one that takes the form of a black man. In Nation teaching, the Allahs are not immortal, instead typically living for around 200 to 300 years, after which a new God will take over from their predecessor. The Nation regards its founder, Fard Muhammad, as the latest of these Allahs, or "God in person". The Nation teaches that although this founder disappeared in 1934, he would live for another 409 years. Reflecting a belief in the inner divinity of humanity that is common among North America's black-oriented new religions, the Nation also promotes the idea that "God is man and man is God, that God has a presence inside human individuals." Accordingly, the NOI teaches that the black race is divine, a "nation of Gods". The NOI maintains that by following its teachings, adherents can recognize their inner godliness. In doing so, it stipulates, black people will also recognize that they have
psychic powers; Elijah Muhammad, for instance, claimed
telepathic abilities. According to the scholars of religion Ana Belén Soage and Jason Eric Fishman, the Nation of Islam's theology is "completely divorced" from that of mainstream Islam. In the latter,
God is a single, monotheistic entity, one that is eternal and non-anthropomorphic; Islam also stresses that there is a fundamental ontological divide between humanity and God, which is at odds with NOI teaching. Similarly conflicting with mainstream Islam is the NOI's belief that there is no afterlife; Elijah Muhammad wrote that "when you are dead, you are DEAD". Notions of
Heaven, the Nation claims, are a lie used by white Christians to keep black people docile. Instead, Elijah Muhammad taught that there is no spiritual realm beyond the material universe.
Cosmogony and the Tribe of Shabazz The Nation teaches that in the beginning, there was nothing but darkness. Then, 76 trillion years ago, the first Allah willed himself into being, taking 6 million years to form into his desired appearance: that of a black man. The first Allah then created the Sun and the planets, as well as fellow black gods, who lived predominantly on the Earth but also on
Mars. Of these, the first Allah and 23 others formed a council of ruling
imams: 12 greater and 12 lesser. The NOI refers to these early individuals as "god-scientists". They are part of what it calls the "Original" or "Asiatic" race, a people who were divided into 13 tribes. The Nation labels these people "black", describing them as having dark skin as well as smooth, straight hair. In portraying humanity as the creation of the first Allah, rather than a product of
evolution, the Nation endorses a unique form of
creationism. According to Nation teaching, one of the god-scientists was a renegade and, 66 trillion years ago, tried to destroy the Earth with explosives. The resulting explosion forced a chunk of the Earth's mass into orbit, where it became the moon. One of the 13 tribes was trapped on the moon, where they died due to a lack of water. Of the 12 tribes that remained on Earth, the most resilient was the
Tribe of Shabazz, who settled in Egypt's
Nile Valley and the area around Mecca in the Arabian peninsula. The Nation calls this region "East Asia", reflecting its belief that Asia and Africa were once a single continent. It was because they moved into the "jungles of East Asia" (i.e., Africa), Elijah Muhammad claimed, that members of this Original Asiatic Race developed
Afro-textured hair. The Nation teaches that the members of this Original Race were
Muslims by nature, but that many created heretical deviations, such as
Hinduism. For the Nation, everyone not of West European genetic origin is a descendant of the Original Asiatic Race. In contrast to understandings of race held by most Americans, for the Nation, "black" does not simply mean those of Sub-Saharan African genetic descent, but all
people of color, including Asians, North Africans, and Native Americans. Even some Eastern Europeans, such as
Albanians, are considered descendants of the Original Asiatic Race. Elijah Muhammad, for instance, referred to "black, brown, yellow [and] red" people as collectively constituting "black mankind", which he then juxtaposed against the "white race".
Story of Yakub The NOI teaches a story about a figure known as
Yakub. The story received its fullest exposition in Elijah Muhammad's 1965 book
Message to the Blackman. In this narrative, Yakub was a black scientist; a child prodigy, by the age of 18 he had learned everything that Mecca's universities had to teach him. He attracted a following but caused trouble, leading the Meccan authorities to exile him and his 59,999 followers to Pelan, the Mediterranean island of
Patmos. On Pelan, the NOI claims, Yakub engaged in a selective breeding program to create the white race. This entailed breeding new children, with those who were too dark killed at birth and their bodies fed to wild animals or incinerated. Over several centuries, Yakub's experiments created a blonde, light-skinned people, the white race. The Nation maintains that most white people are unaware of their true origins, but that such knowledge is held by senior white
Freemasons. The NOI teaches that, as a group of people distinct from the Original Asiatic Race, the white race is degenerate, sub-human, bereft of divinity, and intrinsically prone to lying, violence, and brutality. Elijah Muhammad repeatedly referred to whites as "the devil". Various academic commentators have characterized these views as
racist. According to the Nation, Yakub's new white race sowed discord among black people, and thus were exiled to live in the caves of "West Asia", meaning Europe. In this narrative, it was in Europe that the white race engaged in
bestiality; their attempts to restore their blackness resulted in the creation of apes and monkeys. To help the whites develop, the ruling Allah sent prophets to them, the first of whom was
Musa (
Moses), who taught the whites to cook and wear clothes. According to the Nation,
Jesus was also a prophet sent to civilize the white race. The group rejects the Christian belief that Jesus was a unique manifestation of God, that he was the
Messiah, was
the product of a virgin birth, or was
crucified and
resurrected.
White rule and antisemitic conspiracism The NOI teaches that the ruling Allah permitted the white race to rule the Earth for 6000 years, a period which ended in 1914. It maintains that the ruling Allahs allowed this so that black people would discover humanity's inner potential for evil and learn how to defeat it, thus enabling them to realize their inner divine capacity. During the era of white rule, the Nation states, the whites enslaved the Tribe of Shabazz, shipping many of them to the Americas. The NOI claims that most enslaved blacks forgot their true names, their Arabic language, and their Muslim identity, instead embracing Christianity, which the Nation labels "white man's religion". The Nation claims that in their enslaved state, black people began engaging in sinful behavior such as fornication and drinking alcohol, something encouraged by the whites. The group interprets many of the problems facing African Americans in this framework; Farrakhan for instance claimed that the white establishment encouraged a black gang culture to provide an excuse for the police killing of black youths, that they flooded black-majority areas with drugs, and that they created
AIDS to exterminate black people. In making this argument, the NOI equates the United States with the city of
Babylon, which the Bible presents as a symbol of oppression. Elijah Muhammad suggested that
Orthodox Jews, by following the
laws set down by Moses, had raised themselves to a higher spiritual level than most white people. Subsequently, Farrakhan and his NOI
have repeatedly been accused of antisemitism. Farrakhan promoted
antisemitic tropes about a
Jewish cabal controlling the US government,
banking systems, universities, and entertainment sector. Elsewhere, Farrakhan called
Judaism a "dirty religion", and described
Adolf Hitler as a "very great man". Other senior figures have also made
antisemitic statements. NOI representative
Khalid Abdul Muhammad referred to the "Jew-nited Nations" in "Jew York City", while NOI health minister Abdul Alim Muhammad accused Jewish doctors of injecting blacks with AIDS. The group has also
espoused the claim that Jews were disproportionately responsible for the Atlantic slave trade, and has embraced an
anti-Zionist position regarding
Israel.
Eschatology and the Mother Plane The NOI is
millenarian. Central to its view of the apocalypse is a large spaceship, known as the Mother Plane, the Mother Ship, or the Wheel, which Elijah Muhammad described as "a small human planet". The Nation teaches that this vessel is
the Merkabah that appears in the
Book of Ezekiel (1:4–28). It maintains that Fard Muhammad/Allah and many of his scientists live aboard the Mother Plane; Farrakhan has claimed that Elijah Muhammad never died but is resident aboard this ship. The Nation teaches that there are also smaller vessels, "baby planes", docked inside the Mother Plane, which travel to Earth. NOI members have repeatedly claimed that this apocalypse is imminent; in the early 1960s, Elijah Muhammad was predicting that it would occur in 1965 or 1966, Farrakhan later stated that the
Gulf War of 1990 would spark it, while
Tynetta Muhammad thought it would occur in 2001. According to Nation teaching, the apocalypse will come when the Mother Plane appears above the Earth and transports the righteous to live aboard it. It will then use the baby planes to bury bombs beneath the Earth's surface, which, on detonation, will wipe out the old, white-dominated order. The NOI has taught that the white ruling elite are aware of this forthcoming apocalypse and that the
US exploration of space and the
Strategic Defense Initiative are futile attempts to protect themselves from the Mother Plane. According to this account, after the bombs explode, the Earth's atmosphere will burn for 390 years and spend another 610 years cooling down. Once the Earth is again habitable, the ruling Allah will return the righteous to the planet, in a new black paradise. In his book
The Supreme Wisdom, Elijah Muhammad claimed that after the apocalypse, "Peace, joy and happiness will have no end," with residents of this perfect society eating the finest food and wearing silk clothes interwoven with gold.
Black nationalism and separatism Black unity is at the core of the NOI's black nationalist ideology. The group seeks to empower black people by purging ideas they may have of white superiority and black inferiority. Instead, it maintains that the black race is superior and the white race inferior. The Nation is also
black separatist, rejecting the integration of black and white people. This racial separatism put the NOI at odds with the
civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s. The Nation was critical of African American activists who promoted racial integration, such as
Martin Luther King Jr. and the
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), calling them "
Uncle Tom Negroes". As
compensation for the unpaid labor of their enslaved ancestors, the NOI has called for the creation of a sovereign African American nation-state in the
southern part of the United States. Elijah Muhammad stipulated that the US should financially support this new country for 20 to 25 years. Farrakhan also suggested that the countries of Africa should set aside land on that continent for the African diaspora, characterizing this as a reparation for the complicity of West African states in the Atlantic slave trade. Rejecting
Pan-Africanism, the NOI focuses on African Americans rather than emphasising links between Africa and the African diaspora. Elijah Muhammad stated that " the Black man in Africa is our brother, our central responsibility is with the Black man here in the wilderness of North America". The NOI's origin myths present Mecca, not Africa, as the original home of African Americans, and its writings portray Africa itself as the least desirable of the Original Asiatic lands. The scholar of religion
Michael Muhammad Knight argued that Elijah Muhammad "upheld white supremacist tropes" about African cultures. Elijah, for instance, complained of Africans' "savage dress and hair styles", adding that it was the Nation's job to "civilize Africa".
Gender and sexuality issues The NOI's teachings on gender are conservative and patriarchal. Emphasis is placed on the family unit; the group is critical of the
matrifocal focus of many African American families, instead stressing the importance of a male family figurehead. Men are encouraged to be economic providers for their family; women to be caretakers of the household and children. Outsiders often perceive the Nation's women as victims of male oppression, and some ex-NOI women have complained of a repressive atmosphere in the group. The NOI's leadership is overwhelmingly male. Despite this, Clara Muhammad led the group while Elijah Muhammad was incarcerated between 1942 and 1946, and during the 1990s several women rose to senior positions; in 1998 the Nation appointed its first woman minister,
Ava Muhammad, as head of Mosque Number 15 in Georgia. Women have also been allowed leadership in the Muslim Girls Training group and in the NOI's schools and businesses. The NOI enforces heterosexual monogamy and encourages sexual abstinence prior to marriage. Despite the group's formal opposition to
polygyny, Elijah Muhammad had sexual relations with multiple women, whom Farrakhan has called his "wives"; the group states that this was permitted because Elijah was God's messenger. Nation members are encouraged to wed other members, although marriage to non-members is permitted. The NOI stipulates that followers should only marry other black people, although this includes Native, Latino, and African Americans. Marrying whites is taboo, with the group claiming that sex with white women emasculates black men. (left, photographed in 2014) was the NOI's first female minister.|alt=Two middle-aged black woman stand looking at the viewer, evidently posing for the photograph. The woman on the left is wearing a purple outfit with long sleeves and a matching headpiece. Men and women are discouraged from forming friendships with each other. Instead, members seeking to court each other are expected to inform the captain of their local Fruit of Islam or Muslim Girls Training branch about their intentions. Men found to have beaten their wives are temporarily suspended from Nation membership. Divorce is discouraged but not forbidden. NOI members are encouraged to have children, with Farrakhan also encouraging adoption. Children are expected to study hard, avoid street culture, and respect their elders. The Nation criticizes birth control methods as the white establishment's attempt to lower the black birthrate, although it does not ban their use. Farrakhan expressed support for
abortion in cases of rape, incest, or where the woman's life is endangered. Same-sex relationships are condemned as immoral. Elijah Muhammad complained that schools, jails, and prisons were "breeding dens of homosexuals," while Farrakhan banned gay men from his Million Man March, bringing accusations of
homophobia. == Practices ==