Malcolm X The FBI Recordings...(Powerful) . . . [[Malcolm's Accused Killers to be Released]]

Incredible Post,

Great work in bringing this to the fam, Supreme Math.

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Heres an MP3 of the Audio:


http://www.zshare.net/audio/12296087214b5ba4/


And ive also upload the vid to Dailymotion:

[flash]http://www.dailymotion.com/swf/x5hmml&v3=1&related=1[/flash]


FBI / US Goverment are true snakes in the grass and
divide and conquer has long been that snakes favourite weapon.
 
I can't understand why folks here are saying that this audio says nothing.

It says a lot to me. Especially for the time. Any tape of Malcolm X (or other of his stature) back then is historic. It says a lot about what this government was doing in trying to keep powerful Black figures in check. And how folks like Malcolm was smart enough to deal with them. Have to keep shit like this in perspective.

BTW...

Gil Noble is a local (NY), if not national media treasure. This Brother has been keeping it real before the term even existed. Been watching Noble since the late 60s. "LIKE IT IS" has survived every attempt at derailment from WABC. I missed my Sundays religiously when I was living in Oregon for 14 years (will be heading back there again for the summer).

Noble and his program make a Brother miss New York really bad.
 
Happy Birthday, El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz
(Malcolm X)



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May 19, 1925, in Omaha, Nebraska, the man we would come to know as Malcolm X burst into the world.

As he evolved away from his past as Detroit Red, he transformed himself first, into a loyal protégé of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, then, into a world renowned human rights activist. He never hid behind his legend to avoid speaking of his time as a petty criminal, instead using his story to bolster the confidence of everyday men facing his same struggles. He let them know, in no uncertain terms, that they didn’t have to have a pristine past to make a difference in the present and the future.

The seismic shift that occurred in our culture, politics and philosophy as Black Americans in the ’50s and ’60s will forever be linked to brother Malcolm and his strength in the face of adversity, his unwillingness to bow to the hypocrisy that he had grown to see within the Nation of Islam, and his refusal to dilute his power for a country that feared his influence.

When looking back at the often tumultuous days of Malcolm’s life, one can not help but wonder what was on his mind. As he began to separate from the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, the man he credited with saving his life, as he broke ranks with the Nation of Islam, the brothers he had molded into the image of Black manhood that was deemed necessary for the separation of Black and White Americans to be successful, as his philosophy began to shift away from merging race and religion, to his belief that matters of human rights can not be confined by such a flimsy institution, as he begin to realize that he was living a lie and all White Americans were no more our enemies than all Black Americans were our friends, what was on his mind?



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Many of us forget that he was only 39-years-old when he was gunned down in the Audubon Ballroom just north of Harlem, New York on February 21, 1965. In his short life he went through three pivotal transformations that culminated with the founding of Organization of Afro-America Unity and Muslim Mosque, Inc. Though the two convergent movements never gained the traction and power of the NOI, it spoke to Malcolm’s influence that he was able to step out on purpose and take people with him that were ready to die for him.

Where are those leaders today?

As we celebrate the birth of Malcolm, I’m reminded of the day that I had the honor of meeting his eldest daughter, Ambassador Attallah Shabazz in Los Angeles. I was able to look into her eyes and see her father’s spirit, intelligence, resilience and passion — and to also tell her that he shaped my philosophy on religion, politics and race. I shared with her that he gave me strength to stand on principal when it seemed that no one was standing by my side. She smiled when I told her that when I was first introduced to his focus on human rights, rather than civil rights — because how can we expect civility until we are first considered human? — it changed my life.​


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SOURCE








 
2 Men Convicted Of Murdering Malcolm X In 1965 To Be Exonerated

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Norman 3X Butler, left, and Thomas 15X Johnson, right, maintained their innocence, but were convicted on the testimony of several eyewitnesses conflicting stories. There was no physical evidence against them. Credit...Photographs by Associated Press



By CBSNewYork Team
November 17, 2021

NEW YORK (CBSNewYork/AP)
– Manhattan DA Cyrus Vance, Jr. is expected to move Thursday for two men convicted for the murder of Malcolm X to be exonerated, and their convictions vacated.

More details are expected to be released at a news conference Thursday, which will include the Innocence Project and Shanies Law Office.

The New York Times reports the convictions of Muhammad A. Aziz and Khalil Islam will be vacated after 55 years.

The move comes after a nearly two year investigation by the DA’s office found prosecutors and law enforcement officials withheld key evidence which, had it been turned over, would have likely led to Aziz and Islam being acquitted, according to the Times.


Malcolm X was assassinated while giving a speech at Harlem’s Audubon Ballroom on Feb. 21, 1965.

Aziz, 83, was released from prison in 1985. Islam was released two years later, and died in 2009.

(© Copyright 2021 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)


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