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Betty Shabazz

Betty Shabazz (born Betty Dean Sanders;[2] May 28, 1934/1936[a] – June 23, 1997), also known as Betty X, was an American educator and civil rights advocate. She was married to Malcolm X.

Betty Shabazz
Born
Betty Dean Sanders

May 28, 1934/1936[a]
DiedJune 23, 1997 (aged 61 or 63)
New York City, U.S.
Resting placeFerncliff Cemetery
Other namesBetty X
EducationTuskegee University
Brooklyn State College School of Nursing
Spouse
(m. 1958; died 1965)
Children6, including Attallah, Qubilah, and Ilyasah
RelativesMalcolm Shabazz (grandson)[1]

Shabazz grew up in Detroit, Michigan, where her foster parents largely sheltered her from racism. She attended the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, where she had her first encounters with racism. Unhappy with the situation in Alabama, she moved to New York City, where she became a nurse. It was there that she met Malcolm X and, in 1956, joined the Nation of Islam. The couple married in 1958.

Along with her husband, Shabazz left the Nation of Islam in 1964. She witnessed his assassination the following year. Left with the responsibility of raising six daughters as a widow, Shabazz pursued higher education, and went to work at Medgar Evers College in Brooklyn, New York.

Following the 1995 arrest of her daughter, Qubilah, for allegedly conspiring to murder Louis Farrakhan, Shabazz took in her ten-year-old grandson Malcolm. In 1997, he set fire to her apartment. Shabazz suffered severe burns and died three weeks later as a result of her injuries.

Early life edit

Betty Dean Sanders was born on May 28, 1934 or 1936,[a] to Ollie Mae Sanders and Shelman Sandlin. Sandlin was 21 years old and Ollie Mae Sanders was a teenager; the couple were unmarried. Throughout her life, Betty Sanders maintained that she had been born in Detroit but early records — such as her high-school and college transcripts — show Pinehurst, Georgia, as her place of birth. Authorities in Georgia and Michigan have been unable to locate her birth certificate.[3]

By most accounts, Ollie Mae Sanders abused her daughter, whom she was raising in Detroit. When Betty was about 11 years old, she was taken in by Lorenzo and Helen Malloy, a prominent businessman and his wife. Helen Malloy was a founding member of the Housewives League of Detroit, a group of African-American women who organized campaigns to support black-owned businesses and boycott stores that refused to hire black employees. She was also a member of the National Council of Negro Women and the NAACP. The Malloys were both active members of their local Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church.[4]

Despite their lessons on black self-reliance, the Malloys never spoke with Sanders about racism.[5] Looking back in 1995, Shabazz wrote: "Race relations were not discussed and it was hoped that by denying the existence of race problems, the problems would go away. Anyone who openly discussed race relations was quickly viewed as a 'troublemaker.'"[6] Still, two race riots during her childhood—in 1942 when the Sojourner Truth housing project was desegregated, and one the following year on Belle Isle—made up what Shabazz later called the "psychological background for my formative years".[7][8]

Young adult years edit

After she graduated from high school, Sanders left her foster parents' home in Detroit to study at the Tuskegee Institute (now Tuskegee University), a historically black college in Alabama that was Lorenzo Malloy's alma mater. She intended to earn a degree in education and become a teacher.[9] When she left Detroit to go to Alabama, her foster mother stood at the train station crying. Shabazz later recalled that Malloy was trying to mumble something, but the words would not come out. By the time she arrived in Alabama, she felt she knew what her foster mother was saying. "The minute I got off that train, I knew what she was trying to say. She was trying to tell me in ten words or less about racism."[10]

Nothing had prepared Sanders for Southern racism. So long as she stayed on campus, she could avoid interacting with white people, but weekend trips into Montgomery, the nearest city, would try her patience. Black students had to wait until every white person in a store had been helped before the staff would serve them — if they received any service at all. When she complained to the Malloys, they refused to discuss the issue; in a 1989 interview, Shabazz summarized their attitude as "if you're just quiet it will go away."[11]

Sanders' studies suffered as a result of her growing frustration. She decided to change her field of study from education to nursing. The dean of nursing, Lillian Holland Harvey, encouraged Sanders to consider studying in a Tuskegee-affiliated program at the Brooklyn State College School of Nursing in New York City. Against her foster parents' wishes, Sanders left Alabama for New York in 1953.[12]

In New York, Sanders encountered a different form of racism. At Montefiore Hospital, where she performed her clinical training, black nurses were given worse assignments than white nurses. White patients sometimes were abusive toward black nurses. While the racial climate in New York was better than the situation in Alabama, Sanders frequently wondered whether she had merely exchanged Jim Crow racism for a more genteel prejudice.[13]

Nation of Islam edit

During her second year of nursing school, Sanders was invited by an older nurse's aide to a Friday night dinner party at the Nation of Islam temple in Harlem. "The food was delicious", Shabazz recalled in 1992, "I'd never tasted food like that."[14] After dinner, the woman asked Sanders to come to the Muslims' lecture. Sanders agreed. After the speech, the nurse's aide invited Sanders to join the Nation of Islam; Sanders politely declined.[14] When the woman asked her why she chose not to join the Nation of Islam after visiting, Sanders replied that she did not know she had been brought there to join. "Besides, my mother would kill me, and additionally I don't even understand the philosophy."[10] The Malloys were Methodists, and when she was 13, Sanders had decided she would remain a Methodist for the rest of her life.[10]

The nurse's aide told Sanders about her minister, who was not at the temple that night: "Just wait until you hear my minister talk. He's very disciplined, he's good looking, and all the sisters want him."[14] Sanders enjoyed the food so much, she agreed to come back and meet the woman's minister. At the second dinner, the nurse's aide told her the minister was present and Sanders thought to herself, "Big deal."[15]

In 1992, she recalled how her demeanor changed when she caught a glimpse of Malcolm X:

Then, I looked over and saw this man on the extreme right aisle sort of galloping to the podium. He was tall, he was thin, and the way he was galloping it looked as though he was going someplace much more important than the podium. ... He got to the podium—and I sat up straight. I was impressed with him.[16]

Sanders met Malcolm X again at a dinner party. The two had a long conversation about Sanders's life: her childhood in Detroit, the racial hostility she had encountered in Alabama, and her studies in New York. He spoke to her about the condition of African Americans and the causes of racism. Sanders began to see things from a different perspective.[17] "I really had a lot of pent-up anxiety about my experience in the South," Shabazz recalled in a 1990 interview, "and Malcolm reassured me that it was understandable how I felt."[18]

Soon Sanders was attending all of Malcolm X's lectures at Temple Number Seven in Harlem. He always sought her out afterwards, and he would ask her a lot of questions.[19] Sanders was impressed with Malcolm X's leadership and work ethic. She felt he was selfless when it came to helping others, but he had no one to lean on when he needed help. She thought maybe she could be that person.[10] He also began to pressure her to join the Nation of Islam. In mid-1956, Sanders converted. Like many members of the Nation of Islam, she changed her surname to "X", which represented the family name of her African ancestors whom she could never have known.[19]

Marriage and family edit

Betty X and Malcolm X did not have a conventional courtship. One-on-one dates were contrary to the teachings of the Nation of Islam. Instead, the couple shared their "dates" with dozens of other members. Malcolm X frequently took groups to visit New York's museums and libraries, and he always invited Betty X.[16]

Although they had never discussed the subject, Betty X suspected that Malcolm X was interested in marriage. One day he called and asked her to marry him, and they were married on January 14, 1958, in Lansing, Michigan.[20][21] By coincidence, Betty X became a licensed practical nurse (LPN) on the same day.[22]

At first, their relationship followed the Nation of Islam's strictures concerning marriage; Malcolm X set the rules and Betty X obediently followed them.[23] In 1969, Shabazz wrote that "his indoctrination was so thorough, even to me, that it has become a pattern for our [family's] lives."[24] Over time, the family dynamic changed, as Malcolm X made small concessions to Betty X's demands for more independence.[25] In 1969, Shabazz recalled:

We would have little family talks. They began at first with Malcolm telling me what he expected of a wife. But the first time I told him what I expected of him as a husband it came as a shock. After dinner one night he said, "Boy, Betty, something you said hit me like a ton of bricks. Here I've been going along having our little workshops with me doing all the talking and you doing all the listening." He concluded our marriage should be a mutual exchange.[26]

The couple had six daughters. Their names were Attallah, born in 1958 and named after Attila the Hun;[b] Qubilah, born in 1960 and named after Kublai Khan; Ilyasah, born in 1962 and named after Elijah Muhammad; Gamilah Lumumba, born in 1964 and named after Patrice Lumumba; and twins, Malikah and Malaak, born in 1965 after their father's assassination and named for him.[30]

Leaving the Nation of Islam edit

On March 8, 1964, Malcolm X announced that he was leaving the Nation of Islam.[31] He and Betty X, now known as Betty Shabazz, became Sunni Muslims.[32][33]

Assassination of Malcolm X edit

 
Betty Shabazz in February 1965, after identifying Malcolm X's body at the New York City Morgue

On February 21, 1965, in Manhattan's Audubon Ballroom, Malcolm X began to speak to a meeting of the Organization of Afro-American Unity when a disturbance broke out in the crowd of 400.[34] As Malcolm X and his bodyguards moved to quiet the disturbance, a man rushed forward and shot Malcolm in the chest with a sawed-off shotgun.[35] Two other men charged the stage and fired handguns, hitting Malcolm X 16 times.[36]

Shabazz was in the audience near the stage with her daughters. When she heard the gunfire, she grabbed the children and pushed them to the floor beneath the bench, where she shielded them with her body. When the shooting stopped, Shabazz ran toward her husband and tried to perform CPR. Police officers and Malcolm X's associates used a stretcher to carry him up the block to Columbia Presbyterian Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.[37]

Angry onlookers caught and beat one of the assassins, who was arrested on the scene.[38][39] Eyewitnesses identified two more suspects. All three men, who were members of the Nation of Islam, were convicted and sentenced to life in prison.[40]

After Malcolm's assassination edit

Immediately afterward edit

Shabazz had difficulty sleeping for weeks after Malcolm X's assassination. She suffered from nightmares in which she relived the death of her husband. She also worried about how she would support herself and her family. The publication of The Autobiography of Malcolm X helped, because Shabazz received half of the royalties.[41] (Alex Haley, who assisted Malcolm X in writing the book, got the other half. After the publication of his best-seller Roots, Haley signed over his portion of the royalties to Shabazz.[42][43])

Actor and activist Ruby Dee and Juanita Poitier (married to Sidney Poitier until 1965) established the Committee of Concerned Mothers to raise funds to buy a house and pay educational expenses for the Shabazz family. The Committee held a series of benefit concerts at which they raised $17,000.[44][45] They bought a large two-family home in Mount Vernon, New York, from Congressmember Bella Abzug.[46][47]

Looking back, Shabazz said she initially made an "unrealistic decision" to isolate herself because of the injustice of her husband's assassination. She realized, however, that giving up because of her husband's death would not help the world. "It is impossible to create an environment for children to grow in and develop in isolation. It is imperative that one mix in society on some level and at some time."[10]

Pilgrimage to Mecca edit

In late March 1965, Shabazz made the pilgrimage to Mecca (Hajj), as her husband had the year before.[48] Recalling the experience in 1992, Shabazz wrote:

I really don't know where I'd be today if I had not gone to Mecca to make Hajj shortly after Malcolm was assassinated. ... That is what helped put me back on track. ... Going to Mecca, making Hajj, was very good for me because it made me think of all the people in the world who loved me and were for me, who prayed that I would get my life back together. I stopped focusing on the people who were trying to tear me and my family apart.[49]

Shabazz returned from Mecca with a new name that a fellow pilgrim had bestowed upon her, Bahiyah (meaning "beautiful and radiant").[50]

Raising her family edit

Raising six children by herself exhausted Shabazz. Providing for them was difficult as well. Shabazz's share of the royalties from The Autobiography of Malcolm X was equivalent to an annual salary. In 1966, she sold the movie rights to the Autobiography to film-maker Marvin Worth. She began to authorize the publication of Malcolm X's speeches, which provided another source of income.[51]

When her daughters were enrolled in day care, Shabazz became an active member of the day care center's parents organization, where she became very fond of the organization and where she would later start a campaign to run the organization. In time, she became the parents' representative on the school board. Several years later, she became president of the Westchester Day Care Council.[52]

Shabazz began to accept speaking engagements at colleges and universities. She often spoke about the black nationalist philosophy of Malcolm X, but she also spoke about her role as a wife and mother.[53] Shabazz felt that some of the images of her husband projected by the media were misrepresentations. "They attempted to promote him as a violent person, a hater of whites," she explained. "He was a sensitive man, a very understanding person and yes, he disliked the behavior of some whites ... He had a reality-based agenda."[10]

As her daughters grew older, Shabazz sent them to private schools and summer camps. They joined Jack and Jill, a social club for the children of well-off African Americans.[54]

Advanced education edit

In late 1969, Shabazz enrolled at Jersey City State College (now New Jersey City University) to complete the degree in education she left behind when she became a nurse. She completed her undergraduate studies in one year, and decided to earn a master's degree in health administration. In 1972, Shabazz enrolled at the University of Massachusetts Amherst to pursue an Ed.D. in higher education administration and curriculum development. For the next three years, she drove from Mount Vernon to Amherst, Massachusetts, every Monday morning, and returned home Wednesday night. In July 1975, she defended her dissertation and earned her doctorate.[55]

Shabazz joined the New York Alumnae chapter of Delta Sigma Theta in April 1974.[56]

Medgar Evers College edit

In January 1976, Shabazz became associate professor of health sciences with a concentration in nursing at New York's Medgar Evers College. The student body at Medgar Evers was 90 percent black and predominantly working-class, with an average age of 26. Black women made up most of the faculty, and 75 percent of the students were female, two-thirds of them mothers. These were all qualities that made Medgar Evers College attractive to Shabazz.[57]

By 1980, Shabazz was overseeing the health sciences department, and the college president decided she could be more effective in a purely administrative position than she was in the classroom. She was promoted to Director of Institutional Advancement. In her new position, she became a booster and fund-raiser for the college. A year later, she was given tenure. In 1984, Shabazz was given a new title, Director of Institutional Advancement and Public Affairs; she held that position at the college until her death.[58]

Volunteer work edit

 
Shabazz at St. Sabina Catholic Church in Chicago

During the 1970s and 1980s, Shabazz continued her volunteer activities. In 1975, President Ford invited her to serve on the American Revolution Bicentennial Council. Shabazz served on an advisory committee on family planning for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. In 1984, she hosted the New York convention of the National Council of Negro Women. Shabazz became active in the NAACP and the National Urban League[59] and was a member of The Links.[60]: 102  When Nelson and Winnie Mandela visited Harlem during 1990, Shabazz was asked to introduce Winnie Mandela.[61]

Shabazz befriended Myrlie Evers-Williams, the widow of Medgar Evers, and Coretta Scott King, the widow of Martin Luther King Jr. They had the common experience of losing their activist husbands at a young age and raising their children as single mothers. The press came to refer to the three, who made numerous joint public appearances, as the "Movement widows". Evers-Williams and King were frequent guests at Medgar Evers College, and Shabazz occasionally visited the King Center in Atlanta.[62] Writing about Shabazz, Evers-Williams described her as a "free spirit, in the best sense of the word. When she laughed, she had this beauty; when she smiled, it lit up the whole room."[63]

Louis Farrakhan edit

For many years, Shabazz harbored resentment toward the Nation of Islam—and Louis Farrakhan in particular—for what she felt was their role in the assassination of her husband.[64] Farrakhan seemed to boast of the assassination in a 1993 speech:

Was Malcolm your traitor or ours? And if we dealt with him like a nation deals with a traitor, what the hell business is it of yours? A nation has to be able to deal with traitors and cutthroats and turncoats.[65][66]

In a 1994 interview, Gabe Pressman asked Shabazz whether Farrakhan "had anything to do" with Malcolm X's death. She replied: "Of course, yes. Nobody kept it a secret. It was a badge of honor. Everybody talked about it, yes."[67] Farrakhan denied the allegations, stating "I never had anything to do with Malcolm's death", although he said he had "created an atmosphere that allowed Malcolm to be assassinated."[67]

In January 1995, Qubilah Shabazz was charged with trying to hire a hit man to kill Farrakhan in retaliation for the murder of her father.[68] Farrakhan surprised the Shabazz family when he defended Qubilah, saying he did not think she was guilty and that he hoped she would not be convicted.[69] That May, Betty Shabazz and Farrakhan shook hands on the stage of the Apollo Theater during a public event intended to raise money for Qubilah's legal defense.[70] Some heralded the evening as a reconciliation between the two, but others thought Shabazz was doing whatever she had to in order to protect her daughter. Regardless, nearly $250,000 was raised that evening. In the aftermath, Shabazz maintained a cool relationship with Farrakhan, although she agreed to speak at his Million Man March that October.[71]

Qubilah accepted a plea agreement with respect to the charges, in which she maintained her innocence but accepted responsibility for her actions.[70] Under the terms of the agreement, she was required to undergo psychological counseling and treatment for drug and alcohol abuse for a two-year period in order to avoid a prison sentence.[72] For the duration of her treatment, Qubilah's ten-year-old son, Malcolm, was sent to live with Shabazz at her apartment in Yonkers, New York.[73]

Death edit

On June 1, 1997, her 12-year-old grandson Malcolm set a fire in Shabazz's apartment. Shabazz suffered burns over 80 percent of her body, and remained in intensive care for three weeks, at Jacobi Medical Center in the Bronx, New York.[73][74] She underwent five skin-replacement operations as doctors struggled to replace damaged skin and save her life. Shabazz died of her injuries on June 23, 1997.[75] Malcolm Shabazz was sentenced to 18 months in juvenile detention for manslaughter and arson.[76][77]

 
The gravesite of Malcolm X and Betty Shabazz in Ferncliff Cemetery

More than 2,000 mourners attended a memorial service for Shabazz, at New York's Riverside Church. Many prominent leaders were present, including Coretta Scott King and Myrlie Evers-Williams, poet Maya Angelou, actor-activists Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee, New York Governor George Pataki, and four New York City mayors—Abraham Beame, Ed Koch, David Dinkins, and Rudy Giuliani. U.S. Secretary of Labor Alexis Herman delivered a tribute from President Bill Clinton.[78] In a statement released after Shabazz's death, civil rights leader Jesse Jackson said, "She never stopped giving and she never became cynical. She leaves today the legacy of one who epitomized hope and healing."[79]

Shabazz's funeral service was held at the Islamic Cultural Center in New York City. Her public viewing was at the Unity Funeral Home in Harlem, the same place where Malcolm X's viewing had taken place 32 years earlier. Shabazz was buried next to her husband, El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz (Malcolm X), at Ferncliff Cemetery in Hartsdale, New York.[80]

Memorials edit

In late 1997, the Community Healthcare Network renamed one of its Brooklyn, New York, clinics the Dr. Betty Shabazz Health Center, in honor of Shabazz.[81][82][c] The Betty Shabazz International Charter School was founded in Chicago, Illinois, in 1998 and named in her honor.[84] In 2005, Columbia University announced the opening of the Malcolm X and Dr. Betty Shabazz Memorial and Educational Center. The memorial is located in the Audubon Ballroom, where Malcolm X was assassinated.[85] In March 2012, New York City co-named Broadway at the corner of West 165th Street, the corner in front of the Audubon Ballroom, Betty Shabazz Way.[86][87]

Portrayals in film and television edit

Shabazz was the subject of the 2013 television movie Betty & Coretta, in which she was played by Mary J. Blige.[88] Angela Bassett portrayed her in the 1992 film Malcolm X[89] and in a less prominent role in the 1995 film Panther.[90] Yolanda King, the daughter of Martin Luther King Jr. and Coretta Scott King, played Shabazz in the 1981 television movie Death of a Prophet,[91] and Shabazz was portrayed by Victoria Dillard in the 2001 film Ali.[92] Joaquina Kalukango portrays her in the 2020 film One Night in Miami..., alongside Kingsley Ben-Adir as Malcolm X.[93] Shabazz was portrayed by Grace Porter in the second season of the 2019 TV series Godfather of Harlem.[94]

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Rickford, pg. 2. Some sources indicate May 28, 1936. According to Perry, 1934 is the year shown on Shabazz's driver's license application and nursing license, but 1936 is shown on her marriage license and voting registration application (pg. 440). According to Rickford, Shabazz's birth certificate has not been located (pp. 2–3).
  2. ^ Attallah Shabazz has said she was not named after Attila, rather her name is Arabic for "the gift of God".[27][28][29]
  3. ^ In 2017, the Dr. Betty Shabazz Health Center was rebuilt, combined with another facility, and renamed Community Healthcare Network–East New York.[82][83]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Harrison, Isheka N. (July 2010). "Malcolm X's Grandson Working on Memoirs in Miami". South Florida Times. Retrieved June 9, 2016.
  2. ^ Rickford, pg. 56.
  3. ^ Rickford, pp. 2–3.
  4. ^ Rickford, pp. 5–11.
  5. ^ Rickford, pg. 12.
  6. ^ Shabazz, "From the Detroit Riot to the Malcolm Summit", pg. 62.
  7. ^ Shabazz, "From the Detroit Riot to the Malcolm Summit", pg. 64.
  8. ^ Rickford, pp. 17–18.
  9. ^ Rickford, pp. 21–22.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Lanker, pg. 100.
  11. ^ Rickford, pp. 24–26.
  12. ^ Rickford, pp. 26–28, 31.
  13. ^ Rickford, pg. 35.
  14. ^ a b c Shabazz, "Loving and Losing Malcolm", pg. 52.
  15. ^ Shabazz, "Loving and Losing Malcolm", pp. 52–54.
  16. ^ a b Shabazz, "Loving and Losing Malcolm", pg. 54.
  17. ^ Rickford, pp. 42–43.
  18. ^ Mills, David (February 25, 1990). . The Washington Post. Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved February 28, 2013. (subscription required)
  19. ^ a b Rickford, pp. 43, 50–51.
  20. ^ Shabazz, "Malcolm X as a Husband and Father", pp. 132–134.
  21. ^ Rickford, pp. 73–74.
  22. ^ Rickford, pg. 102.
  23. ^ Rickford, pp. 99–102.
  24. ^ Shabazz, "The Legacy of My Husband, Malcolm X", pg. 176.
  25. ^ Rickford, p. 106.
  26. ^ Shabazz, "Malcolm X as a Husband and Father", pg. 134.
  27. ^ Hopkins, Ellen (November 30, 1989). "Yolanda King and Attallah Shabazz: Their Fathers' Daughters". Rolling Stone. Retrieved June 19, 2016.
  28. ^ Miller, Russell (November 23, 1992). "X Patriot". New York. Retrieved June 19, 2016.
  29. ^ Barboza, Steven (1994). American Jihad: Islam After Malcolm X. New York: Image Books. pp. 205–206. ISBN 978-0-385-47694-2. People have to understand the autobiography was written at a time when indeed African Americans were likening themselves to warriors to underscore our revolutionary fervor. And Attallah was close to Attila the Hun, the warrior. But I'm named Attallah, which in Arabic means 'Gift of God.' I've never been Attila.
  30. ^ Rickford, pp. 109–110, 122–123, 197, 286.
  31. ^ Handler, M. S. (March 9, 1964). "Malcolm X Splits with Muhammad". The New York Times. Retrieved June 19, 2018. (subscription required)
  32. ^ Rickford, pg. 185.
  33. ^ Perry, pg. 261.
  34. ^ Kihss, Peter (February 22, 1965). "Malcolm X Shot to Death at Rally Here". The New York Times. Retrieved June 19, 2018. (subscription required)
  35. ^ Perry, pg. 366.
  36. ^ Evanzz, pg. 295.
  37. ^ Rickford, pp. 226–232.
  38. ^ Perry, pp. 366–367.
  39. ^ Talese, Gay (February 22, 1965). "Police Save Suspect From the Crowd". The New York Times. Retrieved June 19, 2018. (subscription required)
  40. ^ Rickford, pg. 289.
  41. ^ Rickford, pp. 255, 285.
  42. ^ Haley, p. 249.
  43. ^ Rickford, p. 390.
  44. ^ Rickford, pp. 261–264, 284.
  45. ^ "Stage Stars Due in Benefit for Family of Malcolm X". The New York Times. April 12, 1965. Retrieved June 20, 2018. (subscription required)
  46. ^ Levine and Thom, p. 43.
  47. ^ Nichelle Rascoe (January 18, 2018). "A Timeline of Black History in Westchester". Westchester Magazine. Retrieved December 27, 2021.
  48. ^ Rickford, pp. 278–284.
  49. ^ Shabazz, "Loving and Losing Malcolm", p. 110.
  50. ^ Rickford, p. 284.
  51. ^ Rickford, pp. 301, 314, 316, 346.
  52. ^ Rickford, pp. 304–305, 353.
  53. ^ Rickford, pp. 321–332.
  54. ^ Rickford, pp. 346–349.
  55. ^ Rickford, pp. 358–365.
  56. ^ Rickford, pp. 361–363.
  57. ^ Rickford, pp. 366–369, 373.
  58. ^ Rickford, pp. 373–374, 380.
  59. ^ Rickford, pp. 384, 394, 397–398.
  60. ^ Graham, Lawrence Otis (2014). Our kind of people. [Place of publication not identified]: HarperCollins e-Books. ISBN 978-0-06-187081-1. OCLC 877899803.
  61. ^ Rickford, pp. 447–452.
  62. ^ Rickford, pp. 400–405, 473–474.
  63. ^ Brown, p. 20.
  64. ^ Rickford, pp. 436–439, 492–495.
  65. ^ Rickford, p. 492.
  66. ^ Wartofsky, Alona (February 17, 1995). "'Brother Minister: The Martyrdom of Malcolm X'". The Washington Post. Retrieved February 28, 2013.
  67. ^ a b "Widow of Malcolm X Suspects Farrakhan Had Role in Killing". The New York Times. March 13, 1994. Retrieved June 20, 2018.
  68. ^ "Malcolm X's Daughter Indicted in Alleged Plot to Kill Louis Farrakhan". Jet. Johnson Publishing Company. January 30, 1995. pp. 6–10. Retrieved February 28, 2013.
  69. ^ "Betty Shabazz Praises Farrakhan for Believing Her Daughter Is Innocent in Alleged Murder Plot". Jet. Johnson Publishing Company. February 6, 1995. p. 18. Retrieved February 28, 2013.
  70. ^ a b "Dr. Betty Shabazz, Minister Farrakhan Mend 30-Year Rift During Fund-Raiser". Jet. Johnson Publishing Company. May 22, 1995. pp. 12–13. Retrieved February 28, 2013.
  71. ^ Rickford, p. 519.
  72. ^ "Settlement Reached in Murder-for-Hire Case Against Malcolm X's Daughter, Qubilah Shabazz". Jet. Johnson Publishing Company. May 15, 1995. p. 17. Retrieved February 28, 2013.
  73. ^ a b Bruni, Frank (June 4, 1997). "Mother Tries to Calm Son At Hearing on Shabazz Fire". The New York Times. Retrieved June 20, 2018.
  74. ^ McFadden, Robert D. (June 24, 1997). "Disputes and Legalisms Are Put Aside as Friends and Family Grieve". The New York Times. Retrieved June 20, 2018.
  75. ^ McFadden, Robert D. (June 24, 1997). "Betty Shabazz, A Rights Voice, Dies of Burns". The New York Times. Retrieved June 20, 2018.
  76. ^ "Betty Shabazz's Grandson Pleads Guilty to Setting Fatal Fire". Jet. Johnson Publishing Company. July 28, 1997. p. 5. Retrieved February 28, 2013.
  77. ^ Gross, Jane (August 9, 1997). "Grandson of Betty Shabazz Is Sentenced to a Juvenile Center". The New York Times. Retrieved June 20, 2018.
  78. ^ Bruni, Frank (June 30, 1997). "Stirred by Her Life, Thousands Attend Service for Shabazz". The New York Times. Retrieved June 20, 2018.
  79. ^ "Quotes in the News". The Buffalo News. June 25, 1997. Retrieved June 20, 2018.
  80. ^ "Thousands Mourn Death of Dr. Betty Shabazz in New York City". Jet. Johnson Publishing Company. July 14, 1997. pp. 14–17. Retrieved February 28, 2013.
  81. ^ Weisman, Peter (July 2000). (PDF). Lighting Design + Application. Illuminating Engineering Society of North America. p. 37. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 4, 2012. Retrieved December 15, 2017.
  82. ^ a b "Renovation of CHN's East New York Site" (PDF). 2016 Annual Report: Redefining Community Health Care for the 21st Century. Community Healthcare Network. p. 20. Retrieved June 20, 2018.
  83. ^ "East New York (formerly the Dr. Betty Shabazz Center)". Community Healthcare Network. Retrieved June 20, 2018.[permanent dead link]
  84. ^ Lowenstein, Jeff Kelly (Summer 2008). "O Pioneer!". Northwestern. Northwestern University. Retrieved December 15, 2017.
  85. ^ "Malcolm X and Dr. Betty Shabazz Memorial and Educational Center Launches". Columbia University. May 17, 2005. Retrieved December 15, 2017.
  86. ^ Potratz, John (March 3, 2012). "Street co-named after wife of Malcolm X". WABC-TV. Retrieved June 20, 2018.
  87. ^ . My Fox NY. March 3, 2012. Archived from the original on March 6, 2012. Retrieved December 15, 2017.
  88. ^ Hinckley, David (February 1, 2013). "Mary J. Blige is Betty Shabazz, Malcolm X's wife, in 'Betty and Coretta' TV movie". New York Daily News. Retrieved July 17, 2016.
  89. ^ Canby, Vincent (November 18, 1992). "'Malcolm X,' as Complex as Its Subject". The New York Times. Retrieved June 19, 2018.
  90. ^ Mills, Nancy (February 2, 2013). "Angela Bassett: Actress gets to play different civil-rights widow". The Columbus Dispatch. Retrieved July 17, 2016.
  91. ^ Martin, Douglas (May 17, 2007). "Yolanda King, 51, Actor and Dr. King's Daughter, Dies". The New York Times. Retrieved June 20, 2018.
  92. ^ McCann, Bob (2010). "Victoria Dillard". Encyclopedia of African American Actresses in Film and Television. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Company. p. 101. ISBN 978-0-7864-3790-0. Retrieved July 17, 2016.
  93. ^ Sledge, Philip (December 25, 2020). "One Night In Miami: Where You've Seen The Cast Of Regina King's New Drama". CinemaBlend. Retrieved January 18, 2021.
  94. ^ Petski, Denise (January 7, 2021). "'Walker' Casts Rebekah Graf; Grace Porter Joins 'Godfather Of Harlem'". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved April 27, 2021.

Works cited edit

Further reading edit

External links edit

betty, shabazz, born, betty, dean, sanders, 1934, 1936, june, 1997, also, known, betty, american, educator, civil, rights, advocate, married, malcolm, bornbetty, dean, sandersmay, 1934, 1936, pinehurst, georgia, diedjune, 1997, aged, york, city, resting, place. Betty Shabazz born Betty Dean Sanders 2 May 28 1934 1936 a June 23 1997 also known as Betty X was an American educator and civil rights advocate She was married to Malcolm X Betty ShabazzBornBetty Dean SandersMay 28 1934 1936 a Pinehurst Georgia U S DiedJune 23 1997 aged 61 or 63 New York City U S Resting placeFerncliff CemeteryOther namesBetty XEducationTuskegee UniversityBrooklyn State College School of NursingSpouseMalcolm X m 1958 died 1965 wbr Children6 including Attallah Qubilah and IlyasahRelativesMalcolm Shabazz grandson 1 Shabazz grew up in Detroit Michigan where her foster parents largely sheltered her from racism She attended the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama where she had her first encounters with racism Unhappy with the situation in Alabama she moved to New York City where she became a nurse It was there that she met Malcolm X and in 1956 joined the Nation of Islam The couple married in 1958 Along with her husband Shabazz left the Nation of Islam in 1964 She witnessed his assassination the following year Left with the responsibility of raising six daughters as a widow Shabazz pursued higher education and went to work at Medgar Evers College in Brooklyn New York Following the 1995 arrest of her daughter Qubilah for allegedly conspiring to murder Louis Farrakhan Shabazz took in her ten year old grandson Malcolm In 1997 he set fire to her apartment Shabazz suffered severe burns and died three weeks later as a result of her injuries Contents 1 Early life 2 Young adult years 2 1 Nation of Islam 3 Marriage and family 3 1 Leaving the Nation of Islam 3 2 Assassination of Malcolm X 4 After Malcolm s assassination 4 1 Immediately afterward 4 2 Pilgrimage to Mecca 4 3 Raising her family 4 4 Advanced education 4 5 Medgar Evers College 4 6 Volunteer work 5 Louis Farrakhan 6 Death 6 1 Memorials 7 Portrayals in film and television 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Footnotes 8 3 Works cited 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life editBetty Dean Sanders was born on May 28 1934 or 1936 a to Ollie Mae Sanders and Shelman Sandlin Sandlin was 21 years old and Ollie Mae Sanders was a teenager the couple were unmarried Throughout her life Betty Sanders maintained that she had been born in Detroit but early records such as her high school and college transcripts show Pinehurst Georgia as her place of birth Authorities in Georgia and Michigan have been unable to locate her birth certificate 3 By most accounts Ollie Mae Sanders abused her daughter whom she was raising in Detroit When Betty was about 11 years old she was taken in by Lorenzo and Helen Malloy a prominent businessman and his wife Helen Malloy was a founding member of the Housewives League of Detroit a group of African American women who organized campaigns to support black owned businesses and boycott stores that refused to hire black employees She was also a member of the National Council of Negro Women and the NAACP The Malloys were both active members of their local Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church 4 Despite their lessons on black self reliance the Malloys never spoke with Sanders about racism 5 Looking back in 1995 Shabazz wrote Race relations were not discussed and it was hoped that by denying the existence of race problems the problems would go away Anyone who openly discussed race relations was quickly viewed as a troublemaker 6 Still two race riots during her childhood in 1942 when the Sojourner Truth housing project was desegregated and one the following year on Belle Isle made up what Shabazz later called the psychological background for my formative years 7 8 Young adult years editAfter she graduated from high school Sanders left her foster parents home in Detroit to study at the Tuskegee Institute now Tuskegee University a historically black college in Alabama that was Lorenzo Malloy s alma mater She intended to earn a degree in education and become a teacher 9 When she left Detroit to go to Alabama her foster mother stood at the train station crying Shabazz later recalled that Malloy was trying to mumble something but the words would not come out By the time she arrived in Alabama she felt she knew what her foster mother was saying The minute I got off that train I knew what she was trying to say She was trying to tell me in ten words or less about racism 10 Nothing had prepared Sanders for Southern racism So long as she stayed on campus she could avoid interacting with white people but weekend trips into Montgomery the nearest city would try her patience Black students had to wait until every white person in a store had been helped before the staff would serve them if they received any service at all When she complained to the Malloys they refused to discuss the issue in a 1989 interview Shabazz summarized their attitude as if you re just quiet it will go away 11 Sanders studies suffered as a result of her growing frustration She decided to change her field of study from education to nursing The dean of nursing Lillian Holland Harvey encouraged Sanders to consider studying in a Tuskegee affiliated program at the Brooklyn State College School of Nursing in New York City Against her foster parents wishes Sanders left Alabama for New York in 1953 12 In New York Sanders encountered a different form of racism At Montefiore Hospital where she performed her clinical training black nurses were given worse assignments than white nurses White patients sometimes were abusive toward black nurses While the racial climate in New York was better than the situation in Alabama Sanders frequently wondered whether she had merely exchanged Jim Crow racism for a more genteel prejudice 13 Nation of Islam edit During her second year of nursing school Sanders was invited by an older nurse s aide to a Friday night dinner party at the Nation of Islam temple in Harlem The food was delicious Shabazz recalled in 1992 I d never tasted food like that 14 After dinner the woman asked Sanders to come to the Muslims lecture Sanders agreed After the speech the nurse s aide invited Sanders to join the Nation of Islam Sanders politely declined 14 When the woman asked her why she chose not to join the Nation of Islam after visiting Sanders replied that she did not know she had been brought there to join Besides my mother would kill me and additionally I don t even understand the philosophy 10 The Malloys were Methodists and when she was 13 Sanders had decided she would remain a Methodist for the rest of her life 10 The nurse s aide told Sanders about her minister who was not at the temple that night Just wait until you hear my minister talk He s very disciplined he s good looking and all the sisters want him 14 Sanders enjoyed the food so much she agreed to come back and meet the woman s minister At the second dinner the nurse s aide told her the minister was present and Sanders thought to herself Big deal 15 In 1992 she recalled how her demeanor changed when she caught a glimpse of Malcolm X Then I looked over and saw this man on the extreme right aisle sort of galloping to the podium He was tall he was thin and the way he was galloping it looked as though he was going someplace much more important than the podium He got to the podium and I sat up straight I was impressed with him 16 Sanders met Malcolm X again at a dinner party The two had a long conversation about Sanders s life her childhood in Detroit the racial hostility she had encountered in Alabama and her studies in New York He spoke to her about the condition of African Americans and the causes of racism Sanders began to see things from a different perspective 17 I really had a lot of pent up anxiety about my experience in the South Shabazz recalled in a 1990 interview and Malcolm reassured me that it was understandable how I felt 18 Soon Sanders was attending all of Malcolm X s lectures at Temple Number Seven in Harlem He always sought her out afterwards and he would ask her a lot of questions 19 Sanders was impressed with Malcolm X s leadership and work ethic She felt he was selfless when it came to helping others but he had no one to lean on when he needed help She thought maybe she could be that person 10 He also began to pressure her to join the Nation of Islam In mid 1956 Sanders converted Like many members of the Nation of Islam she changed her surname to X which represented the family name of her African ancestors whom she could never have known 19 Marriage and family editBetty X and Malcolm X did not have a conventional courtship One on one dates were contrary to the teachings of the Nation of Islam Instead the couple shared their dates with dozens of other members Malcolm X frequently took groups to visit New York s museums and libraries and he always invited Betty X 16 Although they had never discussed the subject Betty X suspected that Malcolm X was interested in marriage One day he called and asked her to marry him and they were married on January 14 1958 in Lansing Michigan 20 21 By coincidence Betty X became a licensed practical nurse LPN on the same day 22 At first their relationship followed the Nation of Islam s strictures concerning marriage Malcolm X set the rules and Betty X obediently followed them 23 In 1969 Shabazz wrote that his indoctrination was so thorough even to me that it has become a pattern for our family s lives 24 Over time the family dynamic changed as Malcolm X made small concessions to Betty X s demands for more independence 25 In 1969 Shabazz recalled We would have little family talks They began at first with Malcolm telling me what he expected of a wife But the first time I told him what I expected of him as a husband it came as a shock After dinner one night he said Boy Betty something you said hit me like a ton of bricks Here I ve been going along having our little workshops with me doing all the talking and you doing all the listening He concluded our marriage should be a mutual exchange 26 The couple had six daughters Their names were Attallah born in 1958 and named after Attila the Hun b Qubilah born in 1960 and named after Kublai Khan Ilyasah born in 1962 and named after Elijah Muhammad Gamilah Lumumba born in 1964 and named after Patrice Lumumba and twins Malikah and Malaak born in 1965 after their father s assassination and named for him 30 Leaving the Nation of Islam edit Further information Malcolm X Leaving the Nation of Islam On March 8 1964 Malcolm X announced that he was leaving the Nation of Islam 31 He and Betty X now known as Betty Shabazz became Sunni Muslims 32 33 Assassination of Malcolm X edit nbsp Betty Shabazz in February 1965 after identifying Malcolm X s body at the New York City Morgue On February 21 1965 in Manhattan s Audubon Ballroom Malcolm X began to speak to a meeting of the Organization of Afro American Unity when a disturbance broke out in the crowd of 400 34 As Malcolm X and his bodyguards moved to quiet the disturbance a man rushed forward and shot Malcolm in the chest with a sawed off shotgun 35 Two other men charged the stage and fired handguns hitting Malcolm X 16 times 36 Shabazz was in the audience near the stage with her daughters When she heard the gunfire she grabbed the children and pushed them to the floor beneath the bench where she shielded them with her body When the shooting stopped Shabazz ran toward her husband and tried to perform CPR Police officers and Malcolm X s associates used a stretcher to carry him up the block to Columbia Presbyterian Hospital where he was pronounced dead 37 Angry onlookers caught and beat one of the assassins who was arrested on the scene 38 39 Eyewitnesses identified two more suspects All three men who were members of the Nation of Islam were convicted and sentenced to life in prison 40 After Malcolm s assassination editImmediately afterward edit Shabazz had difficulty sleeping for weeks after Malcolm X s assassination She suffered from nightmares in which she relived the death of her husband She also worried about how she would support herself and her family The publication of The Autobiography of Malcolm X helped because Shabazz received half of the royalties 41 Alex Haley who assisted Malcolm X in writing the book got the other half After the publication of his best seller Roots Haley signed over his portion of the royalties to Shabazz 42 43 Actor and activist Ruby Dee and Juanita Poitier married to Sidney Poitier until 1965 established the Committee of Concerned Mothers to raise funds to buy a house and pay educational expenses for the Shabazz family The Committee held a series of benefit concerts at which they raised 17 000 44 45 They bought a large two family home in Mount Vernon New York from Congressmember Bella Abzug 46 47 Looking back Shabazz said she initially made an unrealistic decision to isolate herself because of the injustice of her husband s assassination She realized however that giving up because of her husband s death would not help the world It is impossible to create an environment for children to grow in and develop in isolation It is imperative that one mix in society on some level and at some time 10 Pilgrimage to Mecca edit In late March 1965 Shabazz made the pilgrimage to Mecca Hajj as her husband had the year before 48 Recalling the experience in 1992 Shabazz wrote I really don t know where I d be today if I had not gone to Mecca to make Hajj shortly after Malcolm was assassinated That is what helped put me back on track Going to Mecca making Hajj was very good for me because it made me think of all the people in the world who loved me and were for me who prayed that I would get my life back together I stopped focusing on the people who were trying to tear me and my family apart 49 Shabazz returned from Mecca with a new name that a fellow pilgrim had bestowed upon her Bahiyah meaning beautiful and radiant 50 Raising her family edit Raising six children by herself exhausted Shabazz Providing for them was difficult as well Shabazz s share of the royalties from The Autobiography of Malcolm X was equivalent to an annual salary In 1966 she sold the movie rights to the Autobiography to film maker Marvin Worth She began to authorize the publication of Malcolm X s speeches which provided another source of income 51 When her daughters were enrolled in day care Shabazz became an active member of the day care center s parents organization where she became very fond of the organization and where she would later start a campaign to run the organization In time she became the parents representative on the school board Several years later she became president of the Westchester Day Care Council 52 Shabazz began to accept speaking engagements at colleges and universities She often spoke about the black nationalist philosophy of Malcolm X but she also spoke about her role as a wife and mother 53 Shabazz felt that some of the images of her husband projected by the media were misrepresentations They attempted to promote him as a violent person a hater of whites she explained He was a sensitive man a very understanding person and yes he disliked the behavior of some whites He had a reality based agenda 10 As her daughters grew older Shabazz sent them to private schools and summer camps They joined Jack and Jill a social club for the children of well off African Americans 54 Advanced education edit In late 1969 Shabazz enrolled at Jersey City State College now New Jersey City University to complete the degree in education she left behind when she became a nurse She completed her undergraduate studies in one year and decided to earn a master s degree in health administration In 1972 Shabazz enrolled at the University of Massachusetts Amherst to pursue an Ed D in higher education administration and curriculum development For the next three years she drove from Mount Vernon to Amherst Massachusetts every Monday morning and returned home Wednesday night In July 1975 she defended her dissertation and earned her doctorate 55 Shabazz joined the New York Alumnae chapter of Delta Sigma Theta in April 1974 56 Medgar Evers College edit In January 1976 Shabazz became associate professor of health sciences with a concentration in nursing at New York s Medgar Evers College The student body at Medgar Evers was 90 percent black and predominantly working class with an average age of 26 Black women made up most of the faculty and 75 percent of the students were female two thirds of them mothers These were all qualities that made Medgar Evers College attractive to Shabazz 57 By 1980 Shabazz was overseeing the health sciences department and the college president decided she could be more effective in a purely administrative position than she was in the classroom She was promoted to Director of Institutional Advancement In her new position she became a booster and fund raiser for the college A year later she was given tenure In 1984 Shabazz was given a new title Director of Institutional Advancement and Public Affairs she held that position at the college until her death 58 Volunteer work edit nbsp Shabazz at St Sabina Catholic Church in Chicago During the 1970s and 1980s Shabazz continued her volunteer activities In 1975 President Ford invited her to serve on the American Revolution Bicentennial Council Shabazz served on an advisory committee on family planning for the U S Department of Health and Human Services In 1984 she hosted the New York convention of the National Council of Negro Women Shabazz became active in the NAACP and the National Urban League 59 and was a member of The Links 60 102 When Nelson and Winnie Mandela visited Harlem during 1990 Shabazz was asked to introduce Winnie Mandela 61 Shabazz befriended Myrlie Evers Williams the widow of Medgar Evers and Coretta Scott King the widow of Martin Luther King Jr They had the common experience of losing their activist husbands at a young age and raising their children as single mothers The press came to refer to the three who made numerous joint public appearances as the Movement widows Evers Williams and King were frequent guests at Medgar Evers College and Shabazz occasionally visited the King Center in Atlanta 62 Writing about Shabazz Evers Williams described her as a free spirit in the best sense of the word When she laughed she had this beauty when she smiled it lit up the whole room 63 Louis Farrakhan editFor many years Shabazz harbored resentment toward the Nation of Islam and Louis Farrakhan in particular for what she felt was their role in the assassination of her husband 64 Farrakhan seemed to boast of the assassination in a 1993 speech Was Malcolm your traitor or ours And if we dealt with him like a nation deals with a traitor what the hell business is it of yours A nation has to be able to deal with traitors and cutthroats and turncoats 65 66 In a 1994 interview Gabe Pressman asked Shabazz whether Farrakhan had anything to do with Malcolm X s death She replied Of course yes Nobody kept it a secret It was a badge of honor Everybody talked about it yes 67 Farrakhan denied the allegations stating I never had anything to do with Malcolm s death although he said he had created an atmosphere that allowed Malcolm to be assassinated 67 In January 1995 Qubilah Shabazz was charged with trying to hire a hit man to kill Farrakhan in retaliation for the murder of her father 68 Farrakhan surprised the Shabazz family when he defended Qubilah saying he did not think she was guilty and that he hoped she would not be convicted 69 That May Betty Shabazz and Farrakhan shook hands on the stage of the Apollo Theater during a public event intended to raise money for Qubilah s legal defense 70 Some heralded the evening as a reconciliation between the two but others thought Shabazz was doing whatever she had to in order to protect her daughter Regardless nearly 250 000 was raised that evening In the aftermath Shabazz maintained a cool relationship with Farrakhan although she agreed to speak at his Million Man March that October 71 Qubilah accepted a plea agreement with respect to the charges in which she maintained her innocence but accepted responsibility for her actions 70 Under the terms of the agreement she was required to undergo psychological counseling and treatment for drug and alcohol abuse for a two year period in order to avoid a prison sentence 72 For the duration of her treatment Qubilah s ten year old son Malcolm was sent to live with Shabazz at her apartment in Yonkers New York 73 Death editOn June 1 1997 her 12 year old grandson Malcolm set a fire in Shabazz s apartment Shabazz suffered burns over 80 percent of her body and remained in intensive care for three weeks at Jacobi Medical Center in the Bronx New York 73 74 She underwent five skin replacement operations as doctors struggled to replace damaged skin and save her life Shabazz died of her injuries on June 23 1997 75 Malcolm Shabazz was sentenced to 18 months in juvenile detention for manslaughter and arson 76 77 nbsp The gravesite of Malcolm X and Betty Shabazz in Ferncliff Cemetery More than 2 000 mourners attended a memorial service for Shabazz at New York s Riverside Church Many prominent leaders were present including Coretta Scott King and Myrlie Evers Williams poet Maya Angelou actor activists Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee New York Governor George Pataki and four New York City mayors Abraham Beame Ed Koch David Dinkins and Rudy Giuliani U S Secretary of Labor Alexis Herman delivered a tribute from President Bill Clinton 78 In a statement released after Shabazz s death civil rights leader Jesse Jackson said She never stopped giving and she never became cynical She leaves today the legacy of one who epitomized hope and healing 79 Shabazz s funeral service was held at the Islamic Cultural Center in New York City Her public viewing was at the Unity Funeral Home in Harlem the same place where Malcolm X s viewing had taken place 32 years earlier Shabazz was buried next to her husband El Hajj Malik El Shabazz Malcolm X at Ferncliff Cemetery in Hartsdale New York 80 Memorials edit In late 1997 the Community Healthcare Network renamed one of its Brooklyn New York clinics the Dr Betty Shabazz Health Center in honor of Shabazz 81 82 c The Betty Shabazz International Charter School was founded in Chicago Illinois in 1998 and named in her honor 84 In 2005 Columbia University announced the opening of the Malcolm X and Dr Betty Shabazz Memorial and Educational Center The memorial is located in the Audubon Ballroom where Malcolm X was assassinated 85 In March 2012 New York City co named Broadway at the corner of West 165th Street the corner in front of the Audubon Ballroom Betty Shabazz Way 86 87 Portrayals in film and television editShabazz was the subject of the 2013 television movie Betty amp Coretta in which she was played by Mary J Blige 88 Angela Bassett portrayed her in the 1992 film Malcolm X 89 and in a less prominent role in the 1995 film Panther 90 Yolanda King the daughter of Martin Luther King Jr and Coretta Scott King played Shabazz in the 1981 television movie Death of a Prophet 91 and Shabazz was portrayed by Victoria Dillard in the 2001 film Ali 92 Joaquina Kalukango portrays her in the 2020 film One Night in Miami alongside Kingsley Ben Adir as Malcolm X 93 Shabazz was portrayed by Grace Porter in the second season of the 2019 TV series Godfather of Harlem 94 References editNotes edit a b c Rickford pg 2 Some sources indicate May 28 1936 According to Perry 1934 is the year shown on Shabazz s driver s license application and nursing license but 1936 is shown on her marriage license and voting registration application pg 440 According to Rickford Shabazz s birth certificate has not been located pp 2 3 Attallah Shabazz has said she was not named after Attila rather her name is Arabic for the gift of God 27 28 29 In 2017 the Dr Betty Shabazz Health Center was rebuilt combined with another facility and renamed Community Healthcare Network East New York 82 83 Footnotes edit Harrison Isheka N July 2010 Malcolm X s Grandson Working on Memoirs in Miami South Florida Times Retrieved June 9 2016 Rickford pg 56 Rickford pp 2 3 Rickford pp 5 11 Rickford pg 12 Shabazz From the Detroit Riot to the Malcolm Summit pg 62 Shabazz From the Detroit Riot to the Malcolm Summit pg 64 Rickford pp 17 18 Rickford pp 21 22 a b c d e f Lanker pg 100 Rickford pp 24 26 Rickford pp 26 28 31 Rickford pg 35 a b c Shabazz Loving and Losing Malcolm pg 52 Shabazz Loving and Losing Malcolm pp 52 54 a b Shabazz Loving and Losing Malcolm pg 54 Rickford pp 42 43 Mills David February 25 1990 The Resurrection of Malcolm X The Washington Post Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved February 28 2013 subscription required a b Rickford pp 43 50 51 Shabazz Malcolm X as a Husband and Father pp 132 134 Rickford pp 73 74 Rickford pg 102 Rickford pp 99 102 Shabazz The Legacy of My Husband Malcolm X pg 176 Rickford p 106 Shabazz Malcolm X as a Husband and Father pg 134 Hopkins Ellen November 30 1989 Yolanda King and Attallah Shabazz Their Fathers Daughters Rolling Stone Retrieved June 19 2016 Miller Russell November 23 1992 X Patriot New York Retrieved June 19 2016 Barboza Steven 1994 American Jihad Islam After Malcolm X New York Image Books pp 205 206 ISBN 978 0 385 47694 2 People have to understand the autobiography was written at a time when indeed African Americans were likening themselves to warriors to underscore our revolutionary fervor And Attallah was close to Attila the Hun the warrior But I m named Attallah which in Arabic means Gift of God I ve never been Attila Rickford pp 109 110 122 123 197 286 Handler M S March 9 1964 Malcolm X Splits with Muhammad The New York Times Retrieved June 19 2018 subscription required Rickford pg 185 Perry pg 261 Kihss Peter February 22 1965 Malcolm X Shot to Death at Rally Here The New York Times Retrieved June 19 2018 subscription required Perry pg 366 Evanzz pg 295 Rickford pp 226 232 Perry pp 366 367 Talese Gay February 22 1965 Police Save Suspect From the Crowd The New York Times Retrieved June 19 2018 subscription required Rickford pg 289 Rickford pp 255 285 Haley p 249 Rickford p 390 Rickford pp 261 264 284 Stage Stars Due in Benefit for Family of Malcolm X The New York Times April 12 1965 Retrieved June 20 2018 subscription required Levine and Thom p 43 Nichelle Rascoe January 18 2018 A Timeline of Black History in Westchester Westchester Magazine Retrieved December 27 2021 Rickford pp 278 284 Shabazz Loving and Losing Malcolm p 110 Rickford p 284 Rickford pp 301 314 316 346 Rickford pp 304 305 353 Rickford pp 321 332 Rickford pp 346 349 Rickford pp 358 365 Rickford pp 361 363 Rickford pp 366 369 373 Rickford pp 373 374 380 Rickford pp 384 394 397 398 Graham Lawrence Otis 2014 Our kind of people Place of publication not identified HarperCollins e Books ISBN 978 0 06 187081 1 OCLC 877899803 Rickford pp 447 452 Rickford pp 400 405 473 474 Brown p 20 Rickford pp 436 439 492 495 Rickford p 492 Wartofsky Alona February 17 1995 Brother Minister The Martyrdom of Malcolm X The Washington Post Retrieved February 28 2013 a b Widow of Malcolm X Suspects Farrakhan Had Role in Killing The New York Times March 13 1994 Retrieved June 20 2018 Malcolm X s Daughter Indicted in Alleged Plot to Kill Louis Farrakhan Jet Johnson Publishing Company January 30 1995 pp 6 10 Retrieved February 28 2013 Betty Shabazz Praises Farrakhan for Believing Her Daughter Is Innocent in Alleged Murder Plot Jet Johnson Publishing Company February 6 1995 p 18 Retrieved February 28 2013 a b Dr Betty Shabazz Minister Farrakhan Mend 30 Year Rift During Fund Raiser Jet Johnson Publishing Company May 22 1995 pp 12 13 Retrieved February 28 2013 Rickford p 519 Settlement Reached in Murder for Hire Case Against Malcolm X s Daughter Qubilah Shabazz Jet Johnson Publishing Company May 15 1995 p 17 Retrieved February 28 2013 a b Bruni Frank June 4 1997 Mother Tries to Calm Son At Hearing on Shabazz Fire The New York Times Retrieved June 20 2018 McFadden Robert D June 24 1997 Disputes and Legalisms Are Put Aside as Friends and Family Grieve The New York Times Retrieved June 20 2018 McFadden Robert D June 24 1997 Betty Shabazz A Rights Voice Dies of Burns The New York Times Retrieved June 20 2018 Betty Shabazz s Grandson Pleads Guilty to Setting Fatal Fire Jet Johnson Publishing Company July 28 1997 p 5 Retrieved February 28 2013 Gross Jane August 9 1997 Grandson of Betty Shabazz Is Sentenced to a Juvenile Center The New York Times Retrieved June 20 2018 Bruni Frank June 30 1997 Stirred by Her Life Thousands Attend Service for Shabazz The New York Times Retrieved June 20 2018 Quotes in the News The Buffalo News June 25 1997 Retrieved June 20 2018 Thousands Mourn Death of Dr Betty Shabazz in New York City Jet Johnson Publishing Company July 14 1997 pp 14 17 Retrieved February 28 2013 Weisman Peter July 2000 Sound Space PDF Lighting Design Application Illuminating Engineering Society of North America p 37 Archived from the original PDF on March 4 2012 Retrieved December 15 2017 a b Renovation of CHN s East New York Site PDF 2016 Annual Report Redefining Community Health Care for the 21st Century Community Healthcare Network p 20 Retrieved June 20 2018 East New York formerly the Dr Betty Shabazz Center Community Healthcare Network Retrieved June 20 2018 permanent dead link Lowenstein Jeff Kelly Summer 2008 O Pioneer Northwestern Northwestern University Retrieved December 15 2017 Malcolm X and Dr Betty Shabazz Memorial and Educational Center Launches Columbia University May 17 2005 Retrieved December 15 2017 Potratz John March 3 2012 Street co named after wife of Malcolm X WABC TV Retrieved June 20 2018 Street Renamed For Betty Shabazz My Fox NY March 3 2012 Archived from the original on March 6 2012 Retrieved December 15 2017 Hinckley David February 1 2013 Mary J Blige is Betty Shabazz Malcolm X s wife in Betty and Coretta TV movie New York Daily News Retrieved July 17 2016 Canby Vincent November 18 1992 Malcolm X as Complex as Its Subject The New York Times Retrieved June 19 2018 Mills Nancy February 2 2013 Angela Bassett Actress gets to play different civil rights widow The Columbus Dispatch Retrieved July 17 2016 Martin Douglas May 17 2007 Yolanda King 51 Actor and Dr King s Daughter Dies The New York Times Retrieved June 20 2018 McCann Bob 2010 Victoria Dillard Encyclopedia of African American Actresses in Film and Television Jefferson N C McFarland amp Company p 101 ISBN 978 0 7864 3790 0 Retrieved July 17 2016 Sledge Philip December 25 2020 One Night In Miami Where You ve Seen The Cast Of Regina King s New Drama CinemaBlend Retrieved January 18 2021 Petski Denise January 7 2021 Walker Casts Rebekah Graf Grace Porter Joins Godfather Of Harlem Deadline Hollywood Retrieved April 27 2021 Works cited edit Brown Jamie Foster 1998 Betty Shabazz A Sisterfriends Tribute in Words and Pictures New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 684 85294 2 Evanzz Karl 1992 The Judas Factor The Plot to Kill Malcolm X New York Thunder s Mouth Press ISBN 978 1 56025 049 4 Haley Alex 1992 Alex Haley Remembers In Gallen David ed Malcolm X As They Knew Him New York Carroll amp Graf pp 243 250 ISBN 978 0 88184 850 2 Originally published in Essence November 1983 Lanker Brian 1989 Summers Barbara ed I Dream a World Portraits of Black Women Who Changed America New York Stewart Tabori amp Chang ISBN 978 1 55670 063 7 Levine Suzanne Braun Thom Mary 2007 Bella Abzug New York Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 978 0 374 29952 1 Perry Bruce 1991 Malcolm The Life of a Man Who Changed Black America Barrytown N Y Station Hill ISBN 978 0 88268 103 0 Rickford Russell J 2003 Betty Shabazz A Remarkable Story of Survival and Faith Before and After Malcolm X Naperville Ill Sourcebooks ISBN 978 1 4022 0171 4 Shabazz Betty November 1995 From the Detroit Riot to the Malcolm Summit Ebony pp 62 64 Shabazz Betty June 1969 The Legacy of My Husband Malcolm X Ebony pp 172 182 Shabazz Betty as told to Susan L Taylor and Audrey Edwards February 1992 Loving and Losing Malcolm Essence pp 50 54 104 112 Shabazz Betty 1990 1969 Malcolm X as a Husband and Father In Clarke John Henrik ed Malcolm X The Man and His Times Trenton N J Africa World Press pp 132 143 ISBN 978 0 86543 201 7 Further reading editCobb William Jelani March April 2004 Betty Shabazz Uncovering the Woman Behind the Widow Veil The Crisis p 52 Edwards Audrey October 1997 The Fire This Time Essence pp 74 76 155 156 First Ladies of the Struggle Ebony Johnson Publishing Company February 1984 p 122 Malcolm X with Alex Haley 1965 The Autobiography of Malcolm X New York Grove Press OCLC 219493184 Nakao Annie February 22 2004 A Young Author Looks Back at the Tragedy and Triumph of Betty Shabazz s Life San Francisco Chronicle Shabazz Ilyasah with Kim McLarin 2002 Growing Up X A Memoir by the Daughter of Malcolm X New York One World ISBN 978 0 345 44495 0 Shabazz Ilyasah February 2 2013 How Betty Shabazz Persevered After Her Husband Malcolm X Was Killed The Daily Beast Shabazz Ilyasah February 27 2018 My Mother Dr Betty Shabazz Taught Me Every Child Deserves to Know They re Worthy NBC News External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Betty Shabazz nbsp Biography portal A 1990 interview by David Mills for The Washington Post Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Betty Shabazz amp oldid 1219068265, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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