Malcolm X’s Grandson Breaks Silence!
To commemorate Malcolm X’s birthday, an icon who many consider to be the greatest Black leader who has ever lived, NewsOne presents this exclusive investigative story, photo gallery and video that, for the first time, speaks to Malcolm X’s first male heir, MALCOLM SHABAZZ.
TO WATCH THE BEHIND-THE-SCENES VIDEO OF THE MALCOLM SHABAZZ PHOTO SHOOT CLICK HERE
Also Read
Malcolm X and Barack Obama: Far From Opposites
INTRODUCTION
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. Now MALCOLM SHABAZZ, 24, is on a mission: to clear his name, stay out of jail and rise from the ashes of his past.
During the course of a long-standing exclusive correspondence with Aliya S. King for NewsOne and GIANT magazine, Malcolm spoke candidly and introspectively about a checkered childhood, an unstable family life, and the burden of being the sole male heir to an icon whose life and legacy have transformed millions of lives.
The following are woven excerpts from hours of conversation with Shabazz:
People often describe me as troubled. I’m not going to say that I’m not. But I’m not crazy. I have troubles. A lot of us do. But you need to understand where I’m coming from and why I am the way I am. Considering what I’ve been through, it’s a miracle that I’ve been able to hold it together. I’m just trying to find my way. [I’ve read newspaper stories about me that] say, “Experts testify [that boy] is psychotic.” The way they describe me is wrong — bi-polar, depression, pyro, whatever. I know I’m not at all. Some of the things I’ve been through, the average person would have cracked.
All my life, I’ve had [moments where] I’ve lived in the lap of luxury in the Trump Towers and not wanted for a single thing. And the very next day I’m [living in] a slum in a gang-infested Philly neighborhood, eating fried dough three times a day. One minute, I’m in a situation with structure and discipline. The next minute I’m running the streets with no supervision at all. One of my aunts has a friend who is very devoted to his children. I was hanging out with them one day and all he talked about was [their] schedule and sports and taking his kids here and there. I wish I had that. I wish I had someone whose purpose in life was to take care of me. That’s how white people do it. They plan for [their] kids. We don’t. That’s cause we don’t plan our kids. I wasn’t planned.
Malcolm Lateef Shabazz was born in Paris, France in 1984. His mother is Qubilah Shabazz, the second of Malcolm X’s six daughters. She was only four years old when her father was killed right in front of her at the Audubon Ballroom in Harlem. According to her son, Qubilah grew up loving nature and being by herself. When she was still a young girl, she chose to become a Quaker. She later attended Princeton University, but left before graduating. As she told the Minneapolis Star Tribune in a 1995 interview: “I was under a lot of social pressure, largely due to who I was. I did not fit the view of who I was supposed to be. I didn’t arrive on campus with combat boots and a beret, and I didn’t speak Swahili.” After leaving Princeton, Qubilah traveled to Paris, where she began studying at the Sorbonne. It was here that she met Malcolm’s father, an Algerian. To this day, her son says he has never met his biological father.
I am [my grandfather’s] first male heir, his first grandson. [I’ve read and been told that] he always wanted a son. No boys in the Shabazz family until me. I used to think [Malcolm X] was my father. My mother told me that. I would ask and she would show me pictures of her father and tell me it was my father. I can’t talk to her about him. Nothing in-depth. She acts like she doesn’t know about him. She was there. She was four years old and sitting right there [when he was killed]. I don’t think she’s ever recovered from that.
CHILDHOOD
Qubilah left Paris when Malcolm was still very young and moved back to the U.S. He remembers them moving around a lot, living in such places as Los Angeles and Brooklyn. His mother reportedly took odd jobs at places like Denny’s to earn enough to get by.
How do you [fill out an application at] Denny’s and put down Princeton and the Sorbonne as your education? I felt like she was better than that. And I didn’t like seeing [her work those kinds of jobs.] When I was 3 or 4, we lived in California. I used to run away from home. My mother drank and she would be asleep and I would be unsupervised. [According to various news reports, Qubilah Shabazz has had issues with alcohol and mental illness in the past.] I was very adventurous [so] I would walk up [and down] the street. It would end with the police bringing me home. One day I walked to my day care center [which was] miles away. One day I got on the bus and just hung out away from home and no one said a word. Whole day goes by before anyone stopped me. [My mom] loves me. I’m sure of that. Everyone is not meant to be a parent. She didn’t hug me. She’s just not that kind of person. It used to make me upset and angry [when I was younger].
After California, Malcolm moved to Philadelphia where he lived with his great-grandmother, Madeline Sandlin, the stepmother of his grandmother Betty Shabazz.
She’s a very strong woman. Native American—very strong and stern and strict. She [lived] in North Philly. [Her neighborhood] was so rough. It was so bad, I couldn’t go outside [and] play. It was like being behind bars. I started school at [a private school outside of Philadelphia]. I went to kindergarten and first grade. These kids were rich. [The bus] wouldn’t go to my house. [It] would go to the corner. [The kids] would say, “You live here?” This [white] girl called me a nigger [one time on the school bus]. I didn’t even know what it meant. I [just] knew it was something bad. I wanted to be white. They seemed happy, like they had everything they needed. White was equal to happy and rich. And black [was] just the opposite.
My aunt Attallah was visiting [in Philly] one day. I was looking at a magazine and [there was a picture] of a white boy in a suit. [I took the magazine to my aunt] and I said “I wish I was white like this white boy right here.” She said, “Why would you say that?”
My great-grandmother couldn’t take care of me forever. I ended up in [upstate] New York living with my teacher for second grade [at the school I was enrolled in]. I liked her–I was calling her “Mom.” She had a 16-year-old daughter. I had a pet hamster [and] a bike. I [was] on the Little League team, I [went to] church every Sunday. I had a crush on a white girl named Heidi. I had stability, something I never had before and I liked it a lot. I was the only black kid in the entire school but [I had] a lot of kids to play with. [My aunt] came to pick me up for the summer and I think she didn’t like [the situation]. I was happy and taken care of, but I don’t think she liked it. She [took me] for the summer [and] as it got closer to September I [kept] asking [if I was going back to Kingston]. She kept saying yeah, but I never went back.
Also Read
Malcolm X and Barack Obama: Far From Opposites
Malcolm X to Barack Obama: 44 Year Of Change
ADOLESCENCE
As Malcolm tells it, he led a nomadic childhood, living at different times with his mother, his grandmother and his aunts.
I was always happiest around my aunt Ilyasah. She always smelled good. I loved staying at her house because she’d always have a tidy home. I loved being with her. She was always funny. One day we were on [an] elevator and I was about to throw up. She cupped her hands up to my mouth like she was going to catch it. When we got off the elevator, I threw up everywhere, all over the floor, all over her hands, but she kept her hands there. That gesture showed how much she felt about me. [It] made an impression on me. I said back then [that] if I ever had a daughter, I would name her after Ilyasah.
[As for] my grandmother, I never saw her relax. She was speaking at colleges [and] going overseas. On vacation, she would take me to a hotel to swim and she would sit there with books and paper. I never saw anyone work that hard. That’s why I couldn’t live there full time. All [of] my aunts [also] worked a lot [so] I had to shuttle around. That was taught with school. My grades ended up being really poor even though the work was not hard. I wasn’t challenged and the teachers couldn’t make the connection because I was all over the place.
I started driving when I was 9. I would watch my aunt [Check with writer to determine which aunt] and memorize [each step]. One day, early in the morning I took [her] keys. I had difficulty starting [the car] at first, [but] I drove to school [and] parked [and] went to school like it was nothing. My aunt found out and came to school. They didn’t even believe her, but it was true. My mother put me in a mental institution after that. She was really angry. I didn’t belong there. I wasn’t crazy. I had done something wrong and needed discipline. But not [being sent] to a hospital.
[At the hospital] they start asking me all these questions. [Stuff like] Do you hear voices? I was into Marvel comic books at the time. There were two characters I liked, Mister Sinister [from the X-Men] and the Human Torch. [So] I was like, “Yeah, here’s my friend that told me to do it.” I just picked them out randomly and drew pictures of them. But I had no idea it would follow me that way it did. I was just making it all up. One time, my aunt came to visit me. She said “You know you don’t hear voices. You need to stop.” And I did. In my experiences, [the doctors] want to find something wrong with you. That’s how they get paid. When I [was in] jail, they said I was depressed and anti-social. I was in jail. I’m in solitary confinement. They gotta say something [is wrong with you].
TO WATCH THE BEHIND-THE-SCENES VIDEO OF THE MALCOLM SHABAZZ PHOTO SHOOT CLICK HERE
As Malcolm remembers it, after he was discharged from the hospital, he and his mother moved to Minneapolis, where Qubilah had reconnected with an old schoolmate named Michael Fitzpatrick.
She said she was going for a fresh start and I was excited too. First we [stayed] in a hotel. They would meet there and talk. I heard them talking about Farrakhan. It stayed in my mind, but I didn’t really know what they were talking about. I found out later that there were cameras everywhere because there were federal agents watching my mom.
According to published news reports, Fitzpatrick was an FBI informant who helped the agency gather information about an assassination plot against Louis Farrakhan. Qubilah was arrested and charged with plotting to hire a hit man to kill the Nation of Islam leader, who she reportedly believed to have played a part in her father’s death. After his mother was arrested, Malcolm was sent to live in a group home and remembers being transferred to foster parents who he claims wanted to adopt him until they learned who his mother was. Qubilah was later cleared of the charges against her, but Malcolm says he didn’t see her again for almost two years, at which point she had resettled in San Antonio, Texas.
I went to a boarding school in Connecticut for a while. I lasted there about a month. They went in my property and found a laptop computer that belonged to one of the students on another campus. And they had this kid with a slash in his coat and he said I stabbed him. None of that happened, but my grandmother came and got me out of there. I know she was upset, but we never talked about it. That’s how I ended up back in Philadelphia. [When] I was 11, [I] had a fight with a 16-year-old kid. I’m going in so hard, my body goes numb and I couldn’t even pick up my arms anymore. I won that fight and [afterwards] I would come out [of my house] and people were different. [They said] “Don’t mess with him, he’s crazy.” [But] I wasn’t crazy. I was just scared. I had to adapt to survive.
[My grandmother] didn’t know the extent of what I was going through. I told her, but I don’t think she believed it. Malcolm was eventually reunited with his mother in San Antonio, where she reportedly worked for a radio station owned by Percy Sutton, who was Malcolm X’s attorney before he was killed. She also had a new boyfriend, who Malcolm liked right away.
He would give me hundred dollar bills [for no reason]. And he let me drive his car. We lived in a [nice apartment] with a balcony and a Jacuzzi. My mom was working at the radio station [and I was going to a] private school. We lived in a Mexican neighborhood and everyone made a big deal that I was from New York. [When you're from New York] all the girls like you [and] all the dudes hate on you. I got kicked out because my mom started drinking again. [And] her boyfriend ended up going to jail for an attempted murder [charge]. [Suddenly,] there was no food in the house. She’s not taking me to school [so] I’m falling behind. She wouldn’t get up to take me to school and I started falling behind. [One morning,] I woke her up to tell her to take me to school. She got belligerent. She tried to bite me. And I pushed her. She said I hit her, but I didn’t. She put me in a mental hospital for two weeks.
After that incident, Malcolm says he was sent back to New York, even though he wanted to stay with his mother.
All my life, I had been shuttled back and forth, living with this [person] or that [person], never knowing where I was going to lay my head or wake up. I was so sick of it. I wanted to be back with my mom. [The day I came back to New York] it was cold and rainy. My grandmother came to pick me up [at the airport]. I had the big skater pants [on] and the earring. My grandmother said, “Can we please get you to stop wearing those pants?” [After that] I started acting out. I was doing a lot of things–I was stealing money from my aunts to save up to buy a ticket [back to Texas].
THE DEATH OF BETTY SHABAZZ
In the middle of the night on July 1, 1997, authorities responded to a fire at Betty Shabazz’s residence in Yonkers, New York. According to reports, Malcolm X’s widow sustained burns over 80% of her body. Her grandson was held under suspicion of starting the blaze. On June 23, after several operations in the hospital, Betty Shabazz died. She was 63 years old. On July 10, Malcolm, then 12, pleaded guilty to the juvenile equivalent of manslaughter and arson. He was sentenced to 18 months in a juvenile facility for troubled adolescents. He remained in state custody for almost four years. In April 2001, he was sent home with an electronic monitoring device, but soon ended up back in detention due to curfew violations. In January 2002, he was arrested in Middletown, New York on robbery and burglary charges. That September, he was sentenced to 3½ years in prison. He received parole in May 2006.
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. People say [to me] “Oh you are the one who burned down your grandmother’s house?” [But]…it didn’t really happen like that. I’ve always told the same story. [I was] coerced to say something else, because [I was told] it would be better for me. [I was told] I would go to jail forever…
TO WATCH THE EXCLUSIVE BEHIND-THE-SCENES VIDEO OF THE MALCOLM SHABAZZ PHOTO SHOOT CLICK HERE
Also Read
Malcolm X and Barack Obama: Far From Opposites








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SHABAZZ1876
11-14-2009 8:49 am
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Clayton_Powell
8-25-2009 10:01 am
« Previous 1 ... 5 6 7@HARDCORE MALCOLMITES I hate to burst everyone’s bubble but here are the facts… Malcolm is in Syria, studying Shiia Islam. He now admires radical Muslims that have used violence to exact revenge on America. (Malcolm X. was Sunni but his grandson needs something more radical.) I am taking my daughter and I am relocating for our saftey. Our people are in denial and won’t see what is really going on in his mind. The only person I can relate him to is John Allen Muhammad. The CIA, FBI, and The Justice Department are just waiting for him to make his move and then his family will really see what they’ve been surpressing. (Yes, he ADMIRES IRANIANS) He’s going to do something violent in this country. He needs to be in a hospital not in another country learning about JIHAD… I hate to say it but I’m preparing my child for A life without him. He’s got one foot in the grave and THAT’S EXACTLY WHAT HE WANTS. Please don’t hate me for telling you the truth. Ignore his words and monitor his actions. He’s a ticking time bomb. So, nope his story isn’t over, it has just begun….If he can’t be famous for something good, he’ll be infamous for something terrible.
May God protect us all.
@Sinister Torch…. If I hear, “You were older, you should have known better one more time, I’ll scream like an insane woman…First, DON’T REPEAT TO ME WHAT SHOULD HAVE BEEN TOLD TO MY DAUGHTERS FATHER WHEN HE WAS 12. So now U pass the buck to me…I should have known better? I didn’t know the extent of his illness, as I have stated before. Now, where the hell were you when he set Yasah’s house on fire, burning her mother? You should have told his behind, Malcolm, ur not an infant, YOU SHOULD HAVE KNOWN BETTER…His mother SHOULD HAVE KNOWN BETTER THAN TRYING TO HIRE A BOYFRIEND TO KILL FARRAKHAN…Come on, you tell me to stop, but yet you insist Malcolm’s story isn’t over. Sure it’s not over. He has an innumerable amount of wealthy Black socialites in his corner that want to pimp him and collect from his “redemption”. The same folks that say, Malcolm X. this, Malcolm X. that, but those are the same PUNKS (soft-bodies with no balls) that didn’t offer Malcolm X. any protection…They say they walked with Malcolm X. now that’s he’s dead and buried..HYPOCRITES!!!
And if it will make you feel better, Malcolm prefers young girls with low-self esteem and even lower IQ’s so I’m not his type anyway…Leave me and my daughter alone. Thank you very much.
Sincerely,
Saudi X. Muhammad
And I’ve been raising my child by myself, I DON’T NEED YOU TO TELL ME WHAT TO DO ABOUT HER WELL-BEING.. YOU’RE CONCERNED ABOUT A GROWN MAN, THAT ISN’T CONCERNED ABOUT HIS OWN CHILD.. YOU NEED TO SIT BACK AND THINK BEFORE YOU SPEAK….
he is nothing like his grandfather! he learnt nothing about him! i mean does he even understand who his grandfather was??? i doubt it. as far as growing up thru a troubled childhood,my question is did he think it would be easy? His grandfather was larger than life! he was an Icon,i still shiver @ The depth of his intelligence & action/purpose @ a time when it was a sacrilage to be black in America, & u expect me to sympathise with him for exactly what???? u’ve got to be kidding me
good luck to you cuz life affords one very few opportunities use your time to reflect on who you are and be a better person
I could give this guy 110% support if i knew HE was ENLIGHTEN with a part of his grandfather that we especially blackmen need in this day and time…He has no excuses.. IT’S IN HIS BLOODLINE.AND BE THE GRANDSON MALCOLM WANTED… MUCH RESPECT TO THE MARLEY KLAN PEACE AND BLESSINGS STILL…
HUH!!
I APPRECIATE EVERYONE WHOM WORKED ON THIS STORY. I THANK YOU. IT’S TIME FOR HEALING!!! ALL PRAISES BE TO GOD.
In reading this article and some of the posts I am torn between feeling a sense of ambivalence b/c he did set a fire that ultimately killed Betty Shabazz. Yet at the same time from what was stated in the article his mother had her own issues that affected him and the poor decisions he made as a 12 y.o. child. Mental illness is usually hereditary and if I remember correctly Malcom X spoke of his own mother being institutionalized in a state mental hospital. Yes it was sad that the young man set a fire that caused his grandmother’s death. At the same time as a child his own mother was apparently unstable mentally, emotionally, financially and in general. He spoke of her being unfeeling,emotionless, and an alcoholic.
There are a lot of families in our communities that are impacted by dysfunction. Countless untold stories of abuse, neglect, and total chaos could be echoed all over the country. And alot of the posts have been judgmental in nature. Who are any of us to judge? The Ultimate Judge is God not us.
Cause if anyone has an understanding of Malcolm X’s life they would know that he too went through a transformation. From doing drugs, running numbers, white women, and being a street hustler…. to the iconic figure he is now. And when he was defending Blacks’ human rights and verbalizing his disdain for white injustice the world over alot of others including some “negroes” were saying the most vile things about him based on his religion, his association with the Nation, and because of his militancy/black nationalist ideology. They felt that he was too radical and revolutionary so they distanced themselves from him.
Then as usual with some of us the jealousy and hating started and the rest is history. Point being that he died a most brutal and inhumane death for trying to bring light to the fact that black nationalism did not have to necessarily mean that you couldn’t also love your brother/sister that didn’t look anything like you. I think that point is a poignant one for today. Love for your own kind DOES NOT mean that you can’t/don’t love others too! Malcom X’s legacy is much more complex than what his grandson did or didn’t do. To me this story is troubling b/c it capitalizes off of a family’s tragedies but is masked as redemption? This is just as tragic as the fact that MLK DAY has turned into a “sale” day for some instead of a day of service/rememberance.
Dear Saudi X:
The story of Malcolm X is heartbreaking.
The story of Malcolm L. Shabazz is heartbreaking, but not over.
And now it’s little Ilyasah’s turn to take on the world.
Please, for her sake, stop posting all of these crazy ALLCAP rants on the Internet.
It isn’t doing anybody any favors.
It makes you look completely insane.
If he’s such a terrible person, why did you get pregnant by him? You’re like a decade older than him, and should have known better.
Regards
Digby H. Thomassen
cosigning with clayton.the story was touching and @ times heartbreaking but no different than the next brotha.this brotha is a joke.WHY CANT BLACK PEOPLE IN AMERICA EVER TAKE A SITUATION,LEARN FROM IT AND THAN ATTEMPT TO improve THE SITUATION that they continue finding themselves in…In other words why is this joker indirectly comparing himself to Malcolm?he doesnt even deserve to bare the name malcolm.SAD THAT YOU ARE MALCOLM X’S GRANDSON AND DONT EVEN HAVE A COLLEGE DEGREE IN 2009!!THAT IS A DISGRACE!
my heart goes out to the grandmother who would have loved to see a black president in the U.S.
Macolm X is too intelligent,handsome,and accomplished.In life,there are always bumpy roads and tribulations but if you believe in GOD…and have Faith…THE DEVIL IS A LIE!Basically, NO MORE EXCUSES BLACK PEOPLE,FAR TOO MANY OPPORTUNITIES TODAY REGARDLESS OF YOUR PAST and YOUR PRESENT SITUATION!!get yo arses up,dust yo selves off and keep it move’n!stop being lazy and stop playing the blame game GROW UP!bunch of lazy ars finger pointing statistics…
If you werent there you cannot say what did or did not happen. That’s the bottom line. You can’t judge anybody else. I wish people would realize that and stop trying. You can’t say how somebody feels because you are not them and you simply just don’t know how they feel. A person can act one way or say one thing and feel the EXACT opposite nobody knows the truth but God and who ever else was there. Opinions are NOT facts no matter how much we believe them.
I tried to read this story, and I just couldn’t force it down, its like that section of the newspaper you put aside and dont throw away, saving it for later when u know good and well that u are never gonna actually read it… yeah one of those R.I.P. Brother Malcom
@Sexy Lexi “Why don’t you stop being a s**t, I apolgize, A BIMBO….LEARN TO READ..GO BACK TO SCHOOL…THEN TELL OL’ BOY TO PAY HIS CHILD SUPPORT. YOU SEEM TO HAVE THE I.Q OF A GHETTO BARBIE. Call Mattel and tell them you have been DISSED-CONTINUED…
HOLLA AT ME…SAUDI X. MUHAMMAD (HIS FIRST BABY MOMMA)
POOR MAN HE IZ SO SEXY I FEEL SO BAD 4 HIM!
malcolm x was sexy
@mscluvly …. This man isn’t sorry for what he did that’s why he didn’t mention feelings of remorse. He did what he did for two reasons. 1)He was angry she wouldn’t let him return to his mother and 2)He was instructed and advised to set the fire. Read this carefully: I didn’t think she would walk through a fire for me. This statement means: He didn’t know that she would go to the extreme for him that she did and he was happy when she did because to him it “proved she would do anything to protect HIM” AND NOT HERSELF..Do you see the power of the control he exibited over her emotions? He couldn’t control his emotions but he controlled hers. Please research what a psychopath/sociopath does and is about. He moved to Syria for two reasons. 1) To avoid paying child support, he knows that he would have legal trouble behind that and 2) He didn’t want to be in the country when his letter to me admitting murder was published. He knows that his own safety would be compromised if Black people knew that he MURDERED MALCOLM X.S WIFE with the secret assistance of two relatives.( a child can’t buy gasoline can they?) And one told me to my face and God is my witness, “I told him to burn the b***h!” See, money is the root to all evil. Betty was in charge of MALCOLM X.’S ESTATE, with her gone, greedy relatives could then take over, which is exactly what happened…..The truth is there but it may be too painful to see….But you will…..This man is going on 25 and still hasn’t accepted responsibility for any of his actions from the fire to having an illegitimate child. He knows that he can’t hide his deeds from the wise so he fled the country like a TRUE COWARD. Killed his Gramz had a kid, saw a few chickenheads from Middletown (JesieBelie/Salen) and then skipped on to Syria where he can pretend to be someone else.. READ WHAT A PSYCHO DOES.. Percy Sutton and David Dinkins admitted under oath that THE BOY IS INDEED PSYCHOTIC….So, send him away for his own protection…Get it now??? He’s a dealer of death. I know as a fact he’s suicidal and if he can’t face the music so he would rather commit suicide or murder someone else and get locked up for the rest of his life because he gave up on himself long ago. He’s not doing well, he’s ignoring his deeds and he calls that “Breathin’ Easy”…He will never accept responsibility he’ll continue to run, give a corny interview here and there about MALCOLM X. (HE HAS NEVER ACCOMPLISHED ANYTHING ON HIS OWN BECAUSE HE’S A USER)and people like Aliar S. King will continue to paint him as Malcolm X. because none of them have the balls or the guts to do what Malcolm X. himself did so they just pretend.. And if you want to get in his good graces, lie to him, deceive him, and he will LOVE YOU FOR IT.
DUDE needs to quit trying to live in the shadow of someone who went above and beyond the call of duty, and live his own life. I’m not going to say that his life hasn’t been hard, because i wasn’t there. But for real, why is he trying to capitalize off of his mother, grandmother and grandfather’s places in history. Grow the hell up and quit blaming others, and yourself and make some history. what a f’ing waste. And most of all quit comparing pics of him and Malcom X, THEY DON’T LOOK ALIKE (except for the forehead, roughly).
This is just a magazine, trying to sell. What a joke.
Alot of these pictures of Malcolm X captured him in great relevence as a Leader, a Speaker, a Man of wisdom,and a soilder. I can not say that for the guy in this interview.
i’m not really clear on what this article is trying to say. Is this man trying to clear his name by justifying his actions because of the thing that happened in his past? If that is so then I get it. Alot of people need not be so judgmental. I think however people are being more judgmental because of who he is much less on what he has done. He was a kid that lived in an unstable life that made alot of bad choices. As an Adult he should not be judged for the bad things he did as a child as anyone else shouldn’t. HOWEVER i do not feel he should get any extra pat on the back because of who his grandfather was. UNLESS he was taking steps to send as his his grandfather (MALCOME X) did. Help those that are in those same shoes. I can feel sorry for him and for give him because he was a lost kid. I am not blind to the fact that some of the events that happend in his life had some kind of linkege to his grandfathers death. But he is not his grandfather he is his own man. And unless he is trying to make a change in peoples lives as his grandfather did then I can not look at his as being any thing like his grandfather.
it really urked me seein this site tryna parallel this kid to Malcolm X. Them pictures were a joke. Yes, everyone should have the opportunity to redeem themselves, but not everyone deserves a public spotlight for it. This really shouldn’t have been posted, considering its not even any real remorse in it. Peace