28 year old Malcolm Shabazz, the grandson and only
male descendant of Malcolm X, who reportedly embraced
Shia Islam recently and was becoming known as a
political activist engaged with and serving to unite
many different causes and communities, was murdered in
Mexico on May 9, 2013.
"As the son of Qubilah Shabazz, Malcolm Shabazz was
apparently in the process of putting his life on a
positive and productive path, attending the John Jay
College of Criminal Justice and writing his memoirs.
But now the family has to deal with yet another
devastating setback," writes Herb Boyd in the Daily
Beast.
Shabazz had made recent headlines in March 2013 when
he was arrested after applying for a visa to travel to
Iran to be a participant of the International Fajr
Film Festival, in order to give a lecture addressing
the issues of Hollywood and violence; in particular he
was to address the use of film to promote modern
violence & terrorism, and provoking clashes between
religions & populations. He had already been featured
from January 15th through 18th, 2013 as a featured
interviewee for the Press TV documentary "The Façade
of the American Dream."
Soon after his arrest, he appeared live on Iran's
Press TV reporting from New York under a headline
reading, "They drew guns on my mother and me." He also
issued a public statement to former US Representative
and presidential candidate Cynthia McKinney that she
posted on her Facebook page:
"Given the storm of lies, and half-truths that come
with being associated with being the descendant of El
Hajj Malik el Shabazz, also known as Minister Malcolm
X, any and everything that I do; great or small, good
or not so good, real or imagined is subject to
controversy. However, in this missive I will take this
opportunity to properly & fully disclose what
transpired. In the beginning of 2012 I had been
informed that I was under investigation by the
F.B.I.'s Counter Terrorism Task Force Unit located in
Goshen, N.Y."
Shabazz goes on to describe various incidents of
police harassment that had transpired recently,
including the questioning of his neighbors. "They seek
to neutralize my networking abilities… The formula for
a public assassination is: the character assassination
before the physical assassination; so one has to be
made killable before the eyes of the public in order
for their eventual murder to then deemed justifiable,"
he wrote to McKinney last March. He also had this to
say:
"I was not arrested by federal agents. I was taken in
by a squad from the City of Middletown, N.Y.'s Police
Department. I was not being held in an "undisclosed
location" so to speak. I was actually being held in
the Orange County Jail in Goshen, N.Y. However, from
the time that I was booked at the precinct, to
standing before a Judge the next day who told me to
come back in 7 more, to being processed at the Orange
County Jail and up until 7 days later I was not
permitted to make any calls to notify anyone of my
status; as though I had just been kidnapped from of
the street."
Dave Zirin writes in the Nation: "Malcolm Shabazz had
everything going for him. He was 28 years old,
handsome as hell and a remarkably charismatic public
speaker. He was an activist, an organizer and a proud
father… He wanted to wield Malcolm's memory to fight
for a better world."
Malcolm Shabazz was the guest of a Mexican labor
organizer, Miguel Suarez, who had recently been
deported from the US, when he was reportedly thrown
off the roof of the Palace Bar in Mexico while
resisting robbery at 3am. Speculation abounds, about
whether this Suarez, who was allegedly affiliated with
narcotics trafficking, had lured him into a trap, or
if he was just a new friend with a very stupid idea of
fun.
Herb Boyd writes in the Daily Beast: "With the
confirmation of Malcolm Lateef Shabazz's death, it
marks the third generation in which the family has
lost a member violently. Malcolm X's father, Earl
Little, was killed by the Black Legion or the Ku Klux
Klan in 1931. As Malcolm X recalled in his
autobiography, "Negroes in Lansing have always
whispered that he was attacked, and then laid across
some tracks for a streetcar to run over him. His body
was cut almost in half." Three of his father's
brothers were also killed by white men in Georgia,
which prompted his father to leave the state. Malcolm
Sr. was shot by assassins on February 21, 1965, as he
prepared to address an audience at the Audubon
Ballroom in Washington Heights. Along with the tragic
deaths in the family's patrilineal line, Betty Shabazz
was killed in 1997 by a fire in which her grandson,
Malcolm Shabazz, was accused and convicted of
setting."
His grandmother, Betty Shabazz, widow of Malcolm X,
was killed in a fire he started 11 years ago. He was
12 years old. He had been shuttled in and out of
correctional institutions until his release from
Attica Prison in February 2007. Malcolm Shabazz at age
24 declared to media that he was on a mission: to
clear his name, stay out of jail and rise from the
ashes of his past. In an extensive interview with
NewsOne in 2004, Shabazz explained the terrible event
that led to his imprisonment as a youth.
"I didn't mean for my grandmother to get hurt. I
wasn't thinking anything like that would happen. [I
thought] she would go to the fire escape [but] she
walked through the fire to get to me. I didn't think
she would walk through a fire for me."
The death of Malcolm Shabazz at 28 makes him the
youngest in the family to have his life end so
violently. His grandfather was 39, still in the prime
of his life, and on the road to even greater success
after meaningful contacts with world leaders in Africa
and the Middle East.