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Warith Deen Mohammed

Warith Deen Mohammed (born Wallace D. Muhammad;[a] October 30, 1933 – September 9, 2008), also known as W. Deen Mohammed, Imam W. Deen Muhammad and Imam Warith Deen, was an African-American Muslim leader, theologian, philosopher, Muslim revivalist, and Islamic thinker.

Warith Deen Mohammed
Leader of the Nation of Islam
In office
February 26, 1975 – 1976
Preceded byElijah Muhammad
Leader of the American Society of Muslims
In office
1976 – August 31, 2003
Director of The Mosque Cares
In office
2003 – September 9, 2008
Succeeded byWallace D. Mohammed II
Personal details
Born
Wallace D. Mohammed

October 30, 1933 (1933-10-30)
Hamtramck, Michigan, U.S.
DiedSeptember 9, 2008(2008-09-09) (aged 74)
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Resting placeMount Glenwood Cemetery, Thornton, Illinois, U.S.
Spouses
  • Shirley Mohammed
  • Khadijah Siddeeq Binah Muhammad
Children8
Parents
Relatives
Alma materMuhammad University of Islam
OccupationImam, religious reformer, Muslim scholar, businessman

He was a son of Elijah Muhammad, the leader of the Nation of Islam from 1933 to 1975.[4][5] In 1975, upon Elijah Muhammad's death, he became the Nation of Islam's national leader (Supreme Minister).[6][7]

In 1976, he disbanded the original Nation of Islam (NOI) and transformed it into an ostensibly orthodox and mainstream Sunni Islamic movement.[8] He rejected the previous deification of Wallace Fard Muhammad, accepted whites as fellow-worshippers, forged closer ties with mainstream Muslim communities, and introduced the Five Pillars of Islam into his group's theology.[3][9] This organization was called the Bilalians (1975), World Community of Al-Islam in the West (1976–77), American Muslim Mission (1978–85),[10] and finally the American Society of Muslims.

Splinter groups which resisted these changes were formed after Elijah Muhammad's death, particularly under Louis Farrakhan, who would revive the name Nation of Islam (from Final Call) for his organization in 1978. Farrakhan's NOI and the previous Final Call claim that they are direct continuations of the pre-1975 NOI and the pre-1975 Final Call.[3][11]

Biography edit

Early life and education edit

Mohammed was born Wallace D. Muhammad on Yemans Street in Hamtramck, Michigan in 1933.[12][13] In 1992, he changed his legal name to Warithuddin Muhammad, Warith Deen Muhammad, which translates to 'Inheritor of the Religion of Muhammad'.[14] His parents were Clara and Elijah Muhammad, both highly active in the Nation of Islam (NOI), the organization that preached a form of Black nationalism and its own version of Islam.[15] From 1934 until he died in 1975, Elijah Muhammad led the Nation under the title, "the Messenger of Allah."[16]

Named to honor Wallace Fard Muhammad (Fard), the founder of the Nation of Islam, Mohammed grew up in Chicago as one of seven siblings.[17] His elementary education came from the Muhammad University of Islam (MUI) school system (later known as the Clara Muhammad Schools, or Muhammad Schools).[18] He briefly studied Arabic as a youth under Jamal Shakir Diab, a Palestinian who was later hired by his father to teach at the MUI in Chicago.[19][20][21]

Mohammed became a minister under his father in late 1958 and served in Philadelphia during the late 1950s and early 1960s.[22][23] While serving in Philadelphia, W.D. Mohammed commenced an extensive study of Ahmadiyya doctrines under Philadelphia-based Ahmadi missionary Muhammad Abdullah.[24][25]

On October 29, 1961, Mohammed was arrested for failure to report to Elgin State Hospital. The following day, on his 28th birthday, Mohammed was transferred to Federal Correctional Institution, Sandstone to begin a term for having refused induction into the United States military.[26] He could have performed community service, but his father pressed him to accept the jail time.[5] He spent most of that time studying the Quran, the main Islamic holy book, and the Bible.[27][28]

He became convinced that the Nation of Islam had to change. In 1963, he was released from prison and resumed studies under Muhammad Abdullah.[29] Close also to Malcolm X, who the NOI had expelled, he found that by this time his viewpoints deviated significantly from those of his father, whom he no longer believed to be a prophet.[30] Because of this conclusion, he was excommunicated five different times; by 1974, he returned permanently to the NOI.[31]

Religious leadership and ministry edit

Reforming the Nation of Islam edit

Upon his father's death on February 25, 1975, Mohammed was unanimously chosen as the leader of the Nation of Islam and introduced to the NOI membership at the annual Saviours' Day convention on February 26, 1975.[2][32][33] Among the first changes Mohammed instituted, he dropped the title Supreme Minister and took the titles Mujaddid, Chief Imam, or simply Imam, in 1976.[34][35][36] The same year, he unveiled a new flag for the NOI community.[37][38][39]

These were just two of the many reforms which Mohammed introduced.[3] Among others, he eliminated the NOI dress code, disbanded the military branch of the NOI, clarified the concept of the devil, and introduced an eclectic, esoteric interpretation he labeled, The Divine Mind/Body-Christ. [40] According to WD's former Special Aide Dr. Na'im Akbar, WD's Teachings are not restricted to WD's followers but "will provide for the social community a series of readings which will cultivate and grow them more effectively as social human beings... based on the most renowned religious teachings of a teacher in the West."[41] Similarly, via his various written works, Muhammad Speaks newspaper, and public speeches, he gradually introduced and explained Islam's Five Pillars.[5][33][42] He stated that Fard was not divine and that his father was not a prophet.[43] All of the over 400 temples were converted into traditional Islamic mosques. He also renamed the community several times before finally settling on the American Society of Muslims to reflect the new thinking.[44][45] Mohammed was frank about his intentions to evolve the movement. On November 19, 1978, he spoke on the "Evolution of the Nation of Islam" at the American Academy of Religion in New Orleans.[46]

Mohammed's changes reached deep into the philosophy of the movement which his father had led for so long. He rejected literal interpretations of divine scriptures, his father's theology, and Black-separatist views, and based on his intensive independent study, history, and theology, he accepted whites as fellow worshipers.[47][48] However, he also encouraged African Americans (Bilalians) to separate themselves from their pasts, in 1976 calling upon them to change their surnames which were often given to their ancestors by slave masters.[49][50] He forged closer ties with mainstream Muslim communities, including Latinos.[51] He also decentralized power. On September 10, 1978, in an address in Atlanta he resigned as Chief Imam and appointed a six-member council to lead the Community.[52][53]

Mohammed felt quite keenly about his role in reform. In an interview which was published in the Muhammad Speaks newspaper and conducted by his brother Jabir Herbert Muhammad, Mohammed described his role as the successor to their father as that of a Mujeddid,[54] one who would watch over the new Islam or community.[55][56] In 1979 he used the title Mujeddid (Mujaddid) on his byline in his weekly articles for the Bilalian News (the new title of Muhammad Speaks).[57][58]

Warith Deen Mohammed received widespread support from the international Muslim community, but the changes which he made within the Nation of Islam were not universally accepted.[59] Several dissident groups resisted, most notably those who followed Louis Farrakhan in breaking ranks with Mohammed.[60] These groups revived the name 'Nation of Islam' between 1977 and 1979.[43][61] At the outset of the 1991 Gulf War, Warith Deen Mohammed became the only American Imam to issue a public endorsement of the US military bombing of Iraq. Two consecutive Muslim Journal issues featured the endorsement on its front page.[62] The endorsement came on the eve of the Amiriyah shelter bombing.

The following year, the United States Congress and Pentagon honored WD Mohammed for his "loyal and unswerving religious leadership in support of our Nation during the difficult times during the Gulf War." Mohammed described the invitation "I am like floating in the air. I never dreamed that we would receive such an invitation."[63] When questioned about his Gulf War endorsement and call for Muslims to fight Muslims generated conflicts in his community, he replied, "Yes, it is a conflict. It is a conflict of emotions and a conflict of conscience for many. But for me it is no conflict of conscience when I know that I am on the right side. Once I know that I am on the right side, I have no conflict of conscience at all. I did not rush into any decision. I thought it out very carefully…So I thank America many times. I thank you again. I thank the military. I thank the Army. I thank all of you. I told my sons I would be proud if my sons were in the military."[64]

In 1995, Mohammed released a statement in which he expressed his concern about Farrakhan's motivations and the racial divisiveness of his ministry.[55][59] Yet over the next twenty years, the pair would embrace publicly.[65] Warith Deen Mohammed declared, "I will never denounce him as long as he says he wants to be a Muslim."[66] They also declared reconciliation at the annual NOI Saviours' Day convention on February 25, 2000, and NOI Million Family March on Oct. 16, 2000. Still, on August 10, 2007, Mohammed repeated his frustration with the separatist stance of the current Nation of Islam, stating that its leaders had, "for the last 10 years or more,...just been selling wolf tickets to [threatening, without substance] the white race and having fun while they collect money and have fancy lifestyles."[67] He predicted a quiet evolution in the NOI towards unity with the mainstream American Muslim community.

Building ties within the Muslim community edit

Mohammed was intent on strengthening bonds between his movement and the wider American Muslim faith community as well as with followers of Islam abroad. It was his goal to align American Muslims with Sunni Islam.[17] In 1976, he took a delegation to Guyana on an official state visit to meet with Prime Minister Forbes Burnham, and the then President of Guyana Arthur Chung, during which he forged ties with the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community in the region.[68][69]

In Geneva, Switzerland in 1985, he met with Dr. Muhammad Ahmad Al-Sharif, Secretary General of the World Islamic Call Society of Libya and Dr. Abdul Hakim Tabibi, an Afghan mujahid, to discuss areas of future cooperation with the World Islamic Call Society and the Muslim Community of America.[70] He hosted Grand Mufti Abdullah Mukhtar, the leader of an estimated 60 million Muslims at Masjid Bilal, during his first visit to the United States in 1994.[71]

In 1999, he was elected to serve on the Islamic Society of North America's shura board.[72] That same year, during Ramadan, he pledged to work with the Grand Mufti of Syria, Shaikh Ahmed Kuftaro an-Naqshbandi for the advancement of Al-Islam during a meeting with Kuftaro and Shaikh Nazim al-Haqqanian-Naqshbandi.[73][74] He was the special invited guest and keynote speaker at the "Inaugural Conference on the Growth and Development of Islam in America", held at Harvard University on March 3–4, 2000.[75]

Interfaith cooperation edit

Just as Mohammed sought to be racially inclusive, he also focused on cooperation between multiple faiths. On May 23, 1976, he conducted a massive interfaith Spiritual Life Jubilee with the Peoples Temple in Los Angeles, California[76] and headlined with Jim Jones on the subject, "A New Heaven and a New Earth".[77] In 1977, he participated in a Muslim-Christian dialogue in Fort Worth, Texas with Dr. Jack Evans, then President of Southwestern Christian College in Terrell, Texas.[78] In February 1978, he gave a historic address before more than 1,000 Jews and Muslims at the Washington Hebrew Congregation in Washington, D.C., then under the leadership of Rabbi Joshua O. Haberman.[79]

This was a focus that would persist throughout his career. In 1993, he spoke at the Interfaith Roundtable National Conference of Christians, Jews and Muslims in Detroit, Michigan.[70] "If we look at the broad definition for Muslim, we have to say that even though a Christian may be worshipping Jesus the Christ Prophet more than he is worshipping Allah, he or she may be Muslim in their spirit. They may still be Muslim, though the orientation has now dominated their Muslim urge. The person carrying a heavy cross may be a Muslim inwardly. So it is for a Jew, or Communist, or a Buddhist, or a Hindu."[80]

In March 1995, he gave the keynote address at the Muslim-Jewish Convocation in Glencoe, Illinois.[81] From October 1–6, 1996 he met with Pope John Paul II and Cardinal Francis Arinze at the Holy See in Rome.[82] On August 17, 1997, he was presented the Luminosa Award for Unity from the Focolare Movement.[83] On September 9, 1997, he addressed the Baltimore Jewish Council speaking on themes of worldwide justice and fairness.[84]

On May 18–20, 1998, he attended the Conference on Religion and Peace which was sponsored by the Center for Christian, Jewish Understanding of Sacred Heart University in Auschwitz, Poland.[81] In June 1998 he addressed the Muslim Friends of the Focolare conference in Rome, Italy,[85] in October of the following year, along with a 92-member delegation, he spoke before a gathering of 100,000 people in the Vatican.[86][87] Pope John Paul II and the Dalai Lama were both in attendance.[88]

On October 29, 2001, Mohammed, Minister Louis Farrakhan , Pastor Robert H. Schuller, and members of the Parliament of the World's Religions participated in an "Evening of Religious Solidarity" at the Islamic Foundation in Villa Park, Illinois.[89]

Political and social activities edit

Throughout his ministry, Mohammed remained politically active, both domestically and internationally. His early meetings with prominent political figures included meetings with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat in 1975, Sharjah ruler Sheik Sultan bin Muhammad Al-Qasimi in 1976, and United States President Jimmy Carter in 1977.[45][90][91] But Mohammed would attend many events around the world focused on the advancement of Islam, racial unity and world peace.

He was the only American who was invited and the only American to attend the 10th Annual Islamic Conference of Ministers in May, 1979, in Fes, Morocco.[92][93] In April, 1988, he participated as the representative of Muslim Americans in the "Political and Religious Leaders Campaign for Planetary Survivor" in Oxford Town Hall. Later that year he was among 100 leaders in religion, government, business, law and philanthropy who gathered in Williamsburg, Virginia during the Williamsburg Charter Foundations "First Liberty Summit".[94]

In 1995, he participated in the Forbes Forum on Management in Naples, Florida.[95] In 1996, he participated in the "National Discussion on Race & Reconciliation" sponsored by the National Press Club in Washington, D.C.[96] In late 1997, he attended the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) in Teheran, Iran,[97] and he participated in The Religious Community and Moral Challenge of Poverty Round Table Discussion convened by former U. S. Senator Paul Simon in 1998 in Carbondale, Illinois.[98]

In November 1999, he attended consecutive World Peace Conferences. The first conference, Jubilenium Interfaith Conference for World Peace, was an invitation-only event held in Tiberias, Israel. The second was the 7th World Assembly of the World Conference on Religion and Peace, held in Amman, Jordan.[99]

He was a prominent political speaker. Mohammed gave the first invocation in the United States Senate ever by a Muslim in 1992.[100] That same year, he became the first Muslim to deliver an address on the floor of the Georgia State Legislature.[100] In 1993, he gave an Islamic prayer during the first Inaugural Interfaith Prayer Service of President Bill Clinton, and again in 1997 at the second Interfaith Prayer Service.[101] In 1996 he was invited to Egypt by Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak to address the Supreme Council of Affairs in Cairo on the theme "Islam and the Future of Dialogue between Civilizations".[85]

He sat on a number of councils and committees, both domestically and abroad. In 1986, he was selected to serve on the World Supreme Council of Masajid (mosques) as one of only three representatives of the United States.[93] Also in 1995 he was selected as a President of the World Conference of Religions for Peace (WCRP) and addressed its governing board in Copenhagen, Denmark.[88][102] In January 1997, he was appointed to President Bill Clinton's Religious Advisory Council.[85] In 2000, he was named to the executive committee of the Religious Alliance Against Pornography (RAAP).[103]

He made his opinions on political matters known. On July 4, 1976, he started the New World Patriotism Day celebrations which were conducted on Independence Day in major cities across America.[39][45][104] In 1984, Mohammed went against the mainstream African American political establishment and opposed Reverend Jesse Jackson's run for the Democratic nomination for president.[105] In 1985, to protest the Chicago probate court handling of an American Muslim Mission case, he organized a "Walk for Justice" that drew 500,000 participants.[106]

On December 23, 1989, he spoke at the Annual Conference of the Islamic Committee for Palestine on the plight of the Palestinians.[107] In 1990, Mohammed supported and endorsed Neil Hartigan for Governor of Illinois.[108] He gave his support to the peacemaking and humanitarian efforts of Bishop Samuel Ruiz.[102]

On September 10, 1990, he participated in the international conference on the "Current Situation in the Gulf", where he made his opposition to Iraq's invasion of Kuwait a matter of public record.[109] He stated: "We consider President George Bush to be an honorable man. We commend his actions in ordering the surgical strikes on Iraqi military installations. These efforts to avoid excessive loss of human life are appreciated."[110]

On behalf of the Muslim American Community, he donated $85,000 to Nelson Mandela to aid his efforts to end apartheid in South Africa during a personal meeting in Oakland, California on June 30, 1990.[95] On September 11, 2001, he denounced the terrorist attacks as un-Islamic.[81]

Islamic beliefs and ideology edit

Fiqh edit

While he emphasized unity within the Muslim community, Warith Deen Mohammed also asked the American Muslim community to establish a new school of fiqh, a code of conduct for the observance of rituals, morals and social legislation in Islam.[111] He told Islamica magazine in 2008 that he felt that the madhhab—the schools of thought within fiqh—were geographically influenced and should be regionally developed, suggesting that "I think we are gradually getting a sense of madhabs in America, especially those like me. We are getting a sense of madhabs. And with the coming generation I think that we will be getting a much stronger sense of it. It is coming more and more."[112] However, his call for a new madhhab came under fire from mainstream Muslims globally who questioned his motivation for desiring such an unprecedented action.[113]

Imagery and color symbolism edit

Mohammed was sensitive to the potential impact of the use of images and symbols in religions. In a 1975 article, he explored this topic and in 1976, he published his first article about the subject in the Bilalian News (later the Muslim Journal). Titled "A Message of Concern", this article has run in every subsequent copy of the publication.[114][115] He also spoke about the subject. For instance, during a June 17, 1977 Friday service, he taught his followers about "The meaning of colors in Scripture and the Natural Powers of Black and White", describing ancient scriptural symbolism and its effect on modern-day scriptural and religious interpretation. He also elaborated on how colors in scripture have triggered racist influences in religious societies.[45] In 1977, he formed the Committee for the Removal of All Images that Attempt to Portray the Divine (C.R.A.I.D.).[116][117][118]

Personal life edit

Warith Deen Mohammed's first wife was Shirley Mohammed, with whom he had four children.[119] By 1994, according to The Los Angeles Times, Mohammed had been married four times and had fathered eight children.[17] Mohammed married Khadija Siddeeq in 2004.[120] Mohammed's eldest child Laila Mohammed stated that Warith Deen practiced polygamy.[121] However this polygamy assertion is disputed within the community.[122]

Beyond his public role in religion and politics, Mohammed was involved in real estate, import clothing and skin care.[17] During his excommunications from the Nation of Islam in his 30s, he served as a laborer.[43] Imam Mohammed was also a businessman and endeavored to promote business among those that accepted to follow his leadership example.

Death edit

Mohammed died in Chicago in early September 2008 of a likely heart attack.[123] His body was found in his home by his assistant Rafa Muhammad on Tuesday September 9. In addition to cardiovascular disease, Mohammed suffered from diabetes.

According to the Final Call newspaper, "The Janazah prayer service was delayed for close to an hour so the huge crowd that had assembled could be organized and situated."[124] The Chicago Tribune wrote that 8,000 Muslims attended his funeral.[125] His funeral was held at the Islamic Foundation Masjid in Villa Park, Illinois. Imam W.D. Mohammed was buried at Mount Glenwood Memory Gardens (South) Glenwood, Cook County, Illinois.

Honors edit

On his 44th Birthday October 30, 1977, Mohammed received the Key to the City of Detroit, Michigan from the then Mayor of Detroit Coleman Young, along with a Proclamation declaring October 30, 1977 Wallace D. Muhammad Day in Detroit.[126]

Then Arkansas Governor Bill Clinton proclaimed March 26, 1983 "Economic Dignity Day" in the state of Arkansas. In doing so he stated the following: Whereas, through the leadership and efforts of Warith Deen Muhammad, the American Muslim Mission is on the path of economic progress and achieving growth through unity...(I) urge all citizens to engage in activities which promote economic progress.[127]

On July 4, 1983, Muhammad shared the Reviewing Stand for the 1984 New World Patriotism Day Parade in Chicago with then State Senator, Emarald Jones, State Representative, Howard Brooks, parade Grand Marshal, Harold Washington the then Mayor of Chicago, and many other dignitaries. Mayor Harold Washington issued a proclamation declaring July 4, 1984 as New World Patriotism Day Coalition Parade Day in Chicago.[128]

In 1988, King Hassan II of Morocco, invited Mohammed to participate in the traditional devotions during Ramadan, stating: Through you Imam W. Deen Mohammed all the people in America are represented.[129]

In 1992, President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt honored Warith Deen Mohammed with "The Gold Medal of Recognition" for his religious work in the United States.[130] He received the Focolare Movement "Luminosa Award for Unity" in 1997.[131] On May 17, 1999, he received a Certificate of Appreciation from the United States Department of State.[132] In 2002, Ebony Magazine selected him as one of its "100 Most Influential Black Americans".[133]

On December 9, 1994, he received the Cup of Compassion from the Hartford Seminary in Hartford, Connecticut.[95]

On April 6, 2002, Mohammed was made a member of the Martin Luther King Jr. International Board of Preachers at Morehouse College in Atlanta, and his portrait was hung in the International Chapel there.[103]

On Saturday, September 3, 2005, the Council on American–Islamic Relations (CAIR) presented an award to W. Deen Mohammed in recognition of his outstanding leadership role in the American Muslim community at The Mosque Cares sponsored Annual Islamic Convention.[134]

In eulogizing Mohammed on CNN blogs, the executive director of CAIR-Chicago, Ahmed Rehab, called him "America's Imam."[135]

Publications edit

Books authored edit

  • The Teachings of W. D. Muhammad, Muhammad's Mosque #2, Chicago, 1976
  • The Lectures of Emam W. D. Muhammad, Muhammad's Mosque #2, Chicago, 1976
  • Book of Muslim Names, The Honorable Elijah Muhammad Mosque #2, Chicago, February 1976
  • The Man and the Woman in Islam, The Honorable Elijah Muhammad Mosque #2, Chicago, February 1976
  • As the Light Shineth from the East, W.D.M. Publications, Chicago, 1980
  • Prayer and Al-Islam, Muhammad Islamic Foundation, Chicago, 1982, Library of Congress Card Number: 82-61077
  • Religion on the Line, W.D.M. Publications, Chicago, 1983
  • Imam W. Deen Muhammad speaks from Harlem, N.Y. Book 1, W. D. M. Publications, 1984
  • Imam W. Deen Muhammad speaks from Harlem, N.Y.: Challenges That Face Man Today Book 2, 1985
  • Meeting The Challenge: Halal Foods for Our Everyday Needs, The Honorable Elijah Muhammad Masjid, Chicago, 1986
  • An African American Genesis, M.A.C.A. Publication Fund, Chicago, Illinois, 1986, Library of Congress Card Number: 86-63266
  • Focus on Al-Islam: Interviews with Imam W. Deen Mohammed, Zakat Publications, Chicago, Dec. 1988, Library of Congress Card Number: 89-090728
  • Al-Islam: Unity, and Leadership, The Sense Maker, Chicago, 1991, Library of Congress Card Number: 91-061449, ISBN 1-879698-00-5
  • Worst Oppression Is False Worship "The Key Is Tauheed-Oneness of Allah," W.D.M. Publications, Chicago, 1991
  • Growth for a Model Community in America, W.D.M. Publications, Chicago, 1995
  • Islam's Climate for Business Success, The Sense Maker, Chicago, 1995, Library of Congress Card Number: 95-071105, ISBN 1-879698-01-3
  • Mohammed Speaks, W.D.M. Publications, Chicago, 1999
  • Blessed Ramadan – The Fast of Ramadan
  • Plans for a Better Future: Peace, Inclusion and International Brotherhood
  • The Schemes Of Satan the Enemy of Man
  • The Champion We Have In Common: The Dynamic African American Soul Books 1, 2, 3, & 4, The Mosque Cares Publications, August 2005
  • A Time for Greater Communities Volumes 1–4
  • Securing our Share of Freedom
  • Prayer in al-Islam, A Learner's Guide w/Instructional CD, WDM Publications, Chicago, 2007
  • Return to Innocence: Transitioning of the Nation of Islam, The Sense Maker, Chicago, 2007
  • Life The Final Battlefield, W.D.M. Publications, Chicago, 2008

Pamphlets edit

  • A Look At W. Deen Mohammed: Muslim American Spokesman for Human Salvation, A Ministry of W. Deen Mohammed Publication, Chicago, 1993

Video and audio presentations edit

  • Imam W. Deen Mohammed: "Systems of Knowledge", Muslim News Magazine, recorded as a television special by MNM during the 1994 Islamic Convention in Washington, D.C. This classroom lecture was delivered in front of more than 200 Imams and scholars at the Renaissance Hotel. "Systems of Knowledge" is a classroom presentation on the essence of Quranic Arabic and its meaning to all mankind. This presentation marked the only time that Mohammed allowed cameras into one of his private Imam classes. RT: 60 minutes. 1994.[citation needed]

[136]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ In 1989, Mohammed changed the spelling of his surname Muhammad to Mohammed to reflect the spelling on his birth certificate.[1][2][3]

References edit

  1. ^ Muslim Journal, Vol. 15, No. 19, December 22, 1989
  2. ^ a b Wall Street Journal, Vol. CIV, NO. 6, Friday, July 9, 1999
  3. ^ a b c d Esposito, John (September 10, 2008). "W.D. Mohammed: A Witness for True Islam: On Faith". The Washington Post.
  4. ^ "The Emergence of Islam in the African-American Community" February 20, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ a b c "Warith Deen Mohammed", This Far By Faith, Public Broadcasting Service.
  6. ^ Lincoln, C. Eric. (1994) The Black Muslims in America, Third Edition, William B. (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Eerdmans Publishing Company) page 263
  7. ^ Fraser-Rahim, Muhammad. America’s Other Muslims: Imam WD Mohammed, Islamic Reform, and the Making of American Islam. Lexington Books, 2020.
  8. ^ See Al-Islam, The Islamic Movement Journal, vol. 4, no. 4, p. 19-20, July–August 1975; vol 4. no. 6, p. 10-12, Nov-Dec, 1975; Unrecanted Statements, 1990; The Truth Regarding Warith Deen Mohammed, 1993
  9. ^ , TIME, 14 Mar 1977
  10. ^ See Bilalian News/A.M.Journal, 1976–1985
  11. ^ Lincoln, C. Eric. (1994) The Black Muslims in America, Third Edition, William B. (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Eerdmans Publishing Company) page 274
  12. ^ "W.D. Mohammed Obituary | W.D. Mohammed Funeral | Legacy.com". Legacy.com.
  13. ^ Essien-Udom, E. U. (1962) Black Nationalism: A Search for an Identity in America, New York City: Dell Publishing Company, p. 93
  14. ^ See Muslim Journal, Jan. 3, 1992, pp. 4, 14, 15, 23, 27, 28
  15. ^ Rashad, Adib, (1991) The History of Islam and Black Nationalism in the Americas, Writers Inc., ISBN 0-9627854-1-5.
  16. ^ Evanzz, Karl. (2001) The Messenger: The Rise and Fall of Elijah Muhammad, (New York: Random House).
  17. ^ a b c d Martin, Douglas (September 9, 2008). "W. Deen Mohammed, 74, Top U.S. Imam, Dies". New York Times. Retrieved January 11, 2014.
  18. ^ Lincoln, C. Eric. (1994) The Black Muslims in America, Third Edition, William B. (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Eerdmans Publishing Company) page 264
  19. ^ "Lincoln, C. Eric 1994 page 263"
  20. ^ "Evanzz, Karl, 1993, "The Messenger", p. 82"
  21. ^ E. U. Essien-Udom (1962) Black Nationalism: A Search for an Identity in America, p. 238, (New York: Dell Publishing Company).
  22. ^ E. U. Essien-Udom (1962) Black Nationalism: A Search for an Identity in America, p. 88, (New York: Dell Publishing Company).
  23. ^ W. DEEN MOHAMMED: A leap of faith http://www.courant.com/topic/chi-021020-mohammedprofile,0,4258812.story?page=4 Chicago Tribune.
  24. ^ Bilalian News, Aug. 12, 1977, p. 28
  25. ^ "The Lahore Ahmadiyya Movement Blog » Blog Archive » USA — a land granted to the Saint-of-Allah, i.e. Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad".
  26. ^ The Teachings of W.D. Muhammad: "First Official Interview"
  27. ^ Magida, Arthur J. (1996) Prophet of Rage: A Life of Louis Farrakhan and His Nation, First Edition, (Basic Books/Harper Collins Publishers Inc.) page 74 & 75
  28. ^ The Teachings of W.D. Muhammad, First Official Interview
  29. ^ W. DEEN MOHAMMED: A leap of faith, page 5, Chicago Tribune
  30. ^ Malcolm X, February 1965: The Final Speeches, Pathfinder Press 1992, pp. 173, 305, 331, 344; Chicago American, Muhammad Losing Support, Son Asserts, Sept. 15, 1964, p. 1, 4.
  31. ^ Muhammad Speaks, 1974
  32. ^ "Warith Deen Mohammed", This Far By Faith, Public Broadcasting Service
  33. ^ a b Evolution of a Community, WDM Publications 1995
  34. ^ The Teachings of W.D. Muhammad "I was Born For The Mission"
  35. ^ Gardell, Mattias. In the Name of Elijah Muhammad: Louis Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam. Duke University Press, 1996, page 110
  36. ^ Lincoln, C. Eric. (1994) The Black Muslims in America, Third Edition, William B. (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Eerdmans Publishing Company) page 265 & 274
  37. ^ Bilalian News, March 12, 1976, p. 21, "New flag for the Nation of Islam"
  38. ^ Evolution of a Community, WDM Publications 1995 page 15
  39. ^ a b Gardell, Mattias. In the Name of Elijah Muhammad: Louis Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam. Duke University Press, 1996 page 112
  40. ^ The Teachings of W.D. Muhammad; Lectures of Emam Muhammad
  41. ^ Bilalian News, September 3, 1976, p. 30.
  42. ^ Gardell, Mattias. In the Name of Elijah Muhammad: Louis Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam. Duke University Press, 1996, page 108
  43. ^ a b c "Warith Deen Mohammed: Imam who preached a moderate form of Islam to black Americans". The Independent. September 15, 2008. Retrieved January 11, 2014.
  44. ^ Lincoln, C. Eric. (1994) The Black Muslims in America, Third Edition, (Grand Rapids, Michigan: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company), p. 265.
  45. ^ a b c d Evolution of a Community, WDM Publications, 1995
  46. ^ As The Light Shineth From The East, WDM Publications, Chicago, 1980.
  47. ^ "Black Muslims Alter View of White 'Devil'" By Paul Delaney, September 2, 1975, New York Times News Service
  48. ^ , TIME, 20 Jun 1975
  49. ^ Gardell, Mattias. In the Name of Elijah Muhammad: Louis Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam. Duke University Press, 1996 page 111
  50. ^ Book of Muslim Names, The Honorable W. D. Muhammad, 1976, Chicago, Illinois
  51. ^ Essien-Udom, E. U. (1962) Black Nationalism: A Search for an Identity in America, New York City: Dell Publishing Company, p. 93,
  52. ^ Imam W. Deen Muhammad speaks from Harlem, N.Y. Book 1, W. D. M. Publications, 1984
  53. ^ Evolution of a Community, WDM Publications 1995 page 20
  54. ^ Gardell, Mattias. In the Name of Elijah Muhammad: Louis Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam. Duke University Press, 1996 page 102
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  57. ^ , TIME, October 1, 2001
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External links edit

  • Chicago Tribune Bio
  • WDM Ministry
  • WDM Publications
  • Life and ministry of Imam W. Deen Mohammed remembered
  • Brother Malcolm Speaks
  • Wood, Daniel B (February 14, 2002). "America's Black Muslims close a rift". The Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved December 10, 2007.
  • Appearances on C-SPAN

warith, deen, mohammed, wallace, muhammad, redirects, here, confused, with, wallace, fard, muhammad, born, wallace, muhammad, october, 1933, september, 2008, also, known, deen, mohammed, imam, deen, muhammad, imam, warith, deen, african, american, muslim, lead. Wallace D Muhammad redirects here Not to be confused with Wallace Fard Muhammad Warith Deen Mohammed born Wallace D Muhammad a October 30 1933 September 9 2008 also known as W Deen Mohammed Imam W Deen Muhammad and Imam Warith Deen was an African American Muslim leader theologian philosopher Muslim revivalist and Islamic thinker Warith Deen MohammedLeader of the Nation of IslamIn office February 26 1975 1976Preceded byElijah MuhammadLeader of the American Society of MuslimsIn office 1976 August 31 2003Director of The Mosque CaresIn office 2003 September 9 2008Succeeded byWallace D Mohammed IIPersonal detailsBornWallace D MohammedOctober 30 1933 1933 10 30 Hamtramck Michigan U S DiedSeptember 9 2008 2008 09 09 aged 74 Chicago Illinois U S Resting placeMount Glenwood Cemetery Thornton Illinois U S SpousesShirley Mohammed Khadijah Siddeeq Binah MuhammadChildren8ParentsElijah Muhammad Clara MuhammadRelativesJabir Herbert Muhammad brother Akbar Muhammad brother Alma materMuhammad University of IslamOccupationImam religious reformer Muslim scholar businessmanHe was a son of Elijah Muhammad the leader of the Nation of Islam from 1933 to 1975 4 5 In 1975 upon Elijah Muhammad s death he became the Nation of Islam s national leader Supreme Minister 6 7 In 1976 he disbanded the original Nation of Islam NOI and transformed it into an ostensibly orthodox and mainstream Sunni Islamic movement 8 He rejected the previous deification of Wallace Fard Muhammad accepted whites as fellow worshippers forged closer ties with mainstream Muslim communities and introduced the Five Pillars of Islam into his group s theology 3 9 This organization was called the Bilalians 1975 World Community of Al Islam in the West 1976 77 American Muslim Mission 1978 85 10 and finally the American Society of Muslims Splinter groups which resisted these changes were formed after Elijah Muhammad s death particularly under Louis Farrakhan who would revive the name Nation of Islam from Final Call for his organization in 1978 Farrakhan s NOI and the previous Final Call claim that they are direct continuations of the pre 1975 NOI and the pre 1975 Final Call 3 11 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life and education 2 Religious leadership and ministry 2 1 Reforming the Nation of Islam 2 2 Building ties within the Muslim community 2 3 Interfaith cooperation 3 Political and social activities 4 Islamic beliefs and ideology 4 1 Fiqh 4 2 Imagery and color symbolism 5 Personal life 6 Death 7 Honors 8 Publications 8 1 Books authored 8 2 Pamphlets 8 3 Video and audio presentations 9 Footnotes 10 References 11 External linksBiography editEarly life and education edit Mohammed was born Wallace D Muhammad on Yemans Street in Hamtramck Michigan in 1933 12 13 In 1992 he changed his legal name to Warithuddin Muhammad Warith Deen Muhammad which translates to Inheritor of the Religion of Muhammad 14 His parents were Clara and Elijah Muhammad both highly active in the Nation of Islam NOI the organization that preached a form of Black nationalism and its own version of Islam 15 From 1934 until he died in 1975 Elijah Muhammad led the Nation under the title the Messenger of Allah 16 Named to honor Wallace Fard Muhammad Fard the founder of the Nation of Islam Mohammed grew up in Chicago as one of seven siblings 17 His elementary education came from the Muhammad University of Islam MUI school system later known as the Clara Muhammad Schools or Muhammad Schools 18 He briefly studied Arabic as a youth under Jamal Shakir Diab a Palestinian who was later hired by his father to teach at the MUI in Chicago 19 20 21 Mohammed became a minister under his father in late 1958 and served in Philadelphia during the late 1950s and early 1960s 22 23 While serving in Philadelphia W D Mohammed commenced an extensive study of Ahmadiyya doctrines under Philadelphia based Ahmadi missionary Muhammad Abdullah 24 25 On October 29 1961 Mohammed was arrested for failure to report to Elgin State Hospital The following day on his 28th birthday Mohammed was transferred to Federal Correctional Institution Sandstone to begin a term for having refused induction into the United States military 26 He could have performed community service but his father pressed him to accept the jail time 5 He spent most of that time studying the Quran the main Islamic holy book and the Bible 27 28 He became convinced that the Nation of Islam had to change In 1963 he was released from prison and resumed studies under Muhammad Abdullah 29 Close also to Malcolm X who the NOI had expelled he found that by this time his viewpoints deviated significantly from those of his father whom he no longer believed to be a prophet 30 Because of this conclusion he was excommunicated five different times by 1974 he returned permanently to the NOI 31 Religious leadership and ministry editReforming the Nation of Islam edit Upon his father s death on February 25 1975 Mohammed was unanimously chosen as the leader of the Nation of Islam and introduced to the NOI membership at the annual Saviours Day convention on February 26 1975 2 32 33 Among the first changes Mohammed instituted he dropped the title Supreme Minister and took the titles Mujaddid Chief Imam or simply Imam in 1976 34 35 36 The same year he unveiled a new flag for the NOI community 37 38 39 These were just two of the many reforms which Mohammed introduced 3 Among others he eliminated the NOI dress code disbanded the military branch of the NOI clarified the concept of the devil and introduced an eclectic esoteric interpretation he labeled The Divine Mind Body Christ 40 According to WD s former Special Aide Dr Na im Akbar WD s Teachings are not restricted to WD s followers but will provide for the social community a series of readings which will cultivate and grow them more effectively as social human beings based on the most renowned religious teachings of a teacher in the West 41 Similarly via his various written works Muhammad Speaks newspaper and public speeches he gradually introduced and explained Islam s Five Pillars 5 33 42 He stated that Fard was not divine and that his father was not a prophet 43 All of the over 400 temples were converted into traditional Islamic mosques He also renamed the community several times before finally settling on the American Society of Muslims to reflect the new thinking 44 45 Mohammed was frank about his intentions to evolve the movement On November 19 1978 he spoke on the Evolution of the Nation of Islam at the American Academy of Religion in New Orleans 46 Mohammed s changes reached deep into the philosophy of the movement which his father had led for so long He rejected literal interpretations of divine scriptures his father s theology and Black separatist views and based on his intensive independent study history and theology he accepted whites as fellow worshipers 47 48 However he also encouraged African Americans Bilalians to separate themselves from their pasts in 1976 calling upon them to change their surnames which were often given to their ancestors by slave masters 49 50 He forged closer ties with mainstream Muslim communities including Latinos 51 He also decentralized power On September 10 1978 in an address in Atlanta he resigned as Chief Imam and appointed a six member council to lead the Community 52 53 Mohammed felt quite keenly about his role in reform In an interview which was published in the Muhammad Speaks newspaper and conducted by his brother Jabir Herbert Muhammad Mohammed described his role as the successor to their father as that of a Mujeddid 54 one who would watch over the new Islam or community 55 56 In 1979 he used the title Mujeddid Mujaddid on his byline in his weekly articles for the Bilalian News the new title of Muhammad Speaks 57 58 Warith Deen Mohammed received widespread support from the international Muslim community but the changes which he made within the Nation of Islam were not universally accepted 59 Several dissident groups resisted most notably those who followed Louis Farrakhan in breaking ranks with Mohammed 60 These groups revived the name Nation of Islam between 1977 and 1979 43 61 At the outset of the 1991 Gulf War Warith Deen Mohammed became the only American Imam to issue a public endorsement of the US military bombing of Iraq Two consecutive Muslim Journal issues featured the endorsement on its front page 62 The endorsement came on the eve of the Amiriyah shelter bombing The following year the United States Congress and Pentagon honored WD Mohammed for his loyal and unswerving religious leadership in support of our Nation during the difficult times during the Gulf War Mohammed described the invitation I am like floating in the air I never dreamed that we would receive such an invitation 63 When questioned about his Gulf War endorsement and call for Muslims to fight Muslims generated conflicts in his community he replied Yes it is a conflict It is a conflict of emotions and a conflict of conscience for many But for me it is no conflict of conscience when I know that I am on the right side Once I know that I am on the right side I have no conflict of conscience at all I did not rush into any decision I thought it out very carefully So I thank America many times I thank you again I thank the military I thank the Army I thank all of you I told my sons I would be proud if my sons were in the military 64 In 1995 Mohammed released a statement in which he expressed his concern about Farrakhan s motivations and the racial divisiveness of his ministry 55 59 Yet over the next twenty years the pair would embrace publicly 65 Warith Deen Mohammed declared I will never denounce him as long as he says he wants to be a Muslim 66 They also declared reconciliation at the annual NOI Saviours Day convention on February 25 2000 and NOI Million Family March on Oct 16 2000 Still on August 10 2007 Mohammed repeated his frustration with the separatist stance of the current Nation of Islam stating that its leaders had for the last 10 years or more just been selling wolf tickets to threatening without substance the white race and having fun while they collect money and have fancy lifestyles 67 He predicted a quiet evolution in the NOI towards unity with the mainstream American Muslim community Building ties within the Muslim community edit Mohammed was intent on strengthening bonds between his movement and the wider American Muslim faith community as well as with followers of Islam abroad It was his goal to align American Muslims with Sunni Islam 17 In 1976 he took a delegation to Guyana on an official state visit to meet with Prime Minister Forbes Burnham and the then President of Guyana Arthur Chung during which he forged ties with the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community in the region 68 69 In Geneva Switzerland in 1985 he met with Dr Muhammad Ahmad Al Sharif Secretary General of the World Islamic Call Society of Libya and Dr Abdul Hakim Tabibi an Afghan mujahid to discuss areas of future cooperation with the World Islamic Call Society and the Muslim Community of America 70 He hosted Grand Mufti Abdullah Mukhtar the leader of an estimated 60 million Muslims at Masjid Bilal during his first visit to the United States in 1994 71 In 1999 he was elected to serve on the Islamic Society of North America s shura board 72 That same year during Ramadan he pledged to work with the Grand Mufti of Syria Shaikh Ahmed Kuftaro an Naqshbandi for the advancement of Al Islam during a meeting with Kuftaro and Shaikh Nazim al Haqqanian Naqshbandi 73 74 He was the special invited guest and keynote speaker at the Inaugural Conference on the Growth and Development of Islam in America held at Harvard University on March 3 4 2000 75 Interfaith cooperation edit Just as Mohammed sought to be racially inclusive he also focused on cooperation between multiple faiths On May 23 1976 he conducted a massive interfaith Spiritual Life Jubilee with the Peoples Temple in Los Angeles California 76 and headlined with Jim Jones on the subject A New Heaven and a New Earth 77 In 1977 he participated in a Muslim Christian dialogue in Fort Worth Texas with Dr Jack Evans then President of Southwestern Christian College in Terrell Texas 78 In February 1978 he gave a historic address before more than 1 000 Jews and Muslims at the Washington Hebrew Congregation in Washington D C then under the leadership of Rabbi Joshua O Haberman 79 This was a focus that would persist throughout his career In 1993 he spoke at the Interfaith Roundtable National Conference of Christians Jews and Muslims in Detroit Michigan 70 If we look at the broad definition for Muslim we have to say that even though a Christian may be worshipping Jesus the Christ Prophet more than he is worshipping Allah he or she may be Muslim in their spirit They may still be Muslim though the orientation has now dominated their Muslim urge The person carrying a heavy cross may be a Muslim inwardly So it is for a Jew or Communist or a Buddhist or a Hindu 80 In March 1995 he gave the keynote address at the Muslim Jewish Convocation in Glencoe Illinois 81 From October 1 6 1996 he met with Pope John Paul II and Cardinal Francis Arinze at the Holy See in Rome 82 On August 17 1997 he was presented the Luminosa Award for Unity from the Focolare Movement 83 On September 9 1997 he addressed the Baltimore Jewish Council speaking on themes of worldwide justice and fairness 84 On May 18 20 1998 he attended the Conference on Religion and Peace which was sponsored by the Center for Christian Jewish Understanding of Sacred Heart University in Auschwitz Poland 81 In June 1998 he addressed the Muslim Friends of the Focolare conference in Rome Italy 85 in October of the following year along with a 92 member delegation he spoke before a gathering of 100 000 people in the Vatican 86 87 Pope John Paul II and the Dalai Lama were both in attendance 88 On October 29 2001 Mohammed Minister Louis Farrakhan Pastor Robert H Schuller and members of the Parliament of the World s Religions participated in an Evening of Religious Solidarity at the Islamic Foundation in Villa Park Illinois 89 Political and social activities editThroughout his ministry Mohammed remained politically active both domestically and internationally His early meetings with prominent political figures included meetings with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat in 1975 Sharjah ruler Sheik Sultan bin Muhammad Al Qasimi in 1976 and United States President Jimmy Carter in 1977 45 90 91 But Mohammed would attend many events around the world focused on the advancement of Islam racial unity and world peace He was the only American who was invited and the only American to attend the 10th Annual Islamic Conference of Ministers in May 1979 in Fes Morocco 92 93 In April 1988 he participated as the representative of Muslim Americans in the Political and Religious Leaders Campaign for Planetary Survivor in Oxford Town Hall Later that year he was among 100 leaders in religion government business law and philanthropy who gathered in Williamsburg Virginia during the Williamsburg Charter Foundations First Liberty Summit 94 In 1995 he participated in the Forbes Forum on Management in Naples Florida 95 In 1996 he participated in the National Discussion on Race amp Reconciliation sponsored by the National Press Club in Washington D C 96 In late 1997 he attended the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation OIC in Teheran Iran 97 and he participated in The Religious Community and Moral Challenge of Poverty Round Table Discussion convened by former U S Senator Paul Simon in 1998 in Carbondale Illinois 98 In November 1999 he attended consecutive World Peace Conferences The first conference Jubilenium Interfaith Conference for World Peace was an invitation only event held in Tiberias Israel The second was the 7th World Assembly of the World Conference on Religion and Peace held in Amman Jordan 99 He was a prominent political speaker Mohammed gave the first invocation in the United States Senate ever by a Muslim in 1992 100 That same year he became the first Muslim to deliver an address on the floor of the Georgia State Legislature 100 In 1993 he gave an Islamic prayer during the first Inaugural Interfaith Prayer Service of President Bill Clinton and again in 1997 at the second Interfaith Prayer Service 101 In 1996 he was invited to Egypt by Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak to address the Supreme Council of Affairs in Cairo on the theme Islam and the Future of Dialogue between Civilizations 85 He sat on a number of councils and committees both domestically and abroad In 1986 he was selected to serve on the World Supreme Council of Masajid mosques as one of only three representatives of the United States 93 Also in 1995 he was selected as a President of the World Conference of Religions for Peace WCRP and addressed its governing board in Copenhagen Denmark 88 102 In January 1997 he was appointed to President Bill Clinton s Religious Advisory Council 85 In 2000 he was named to the executive committee of the Religious Alliance Against Pornography RAAP 103 He made his opinions on political matters known On July 4 1976 he started the New World Patriotism Day celebrations which were conducted on Independence Day in major cities across America 39 45 104 In 1984 Mohammed went against the mainstream African American political establishment and opposed Reverend Jesse Jackson s run for the Democratic nomination for president 105 In 1985 to protest the Chicago probate court handling of an American Muslim Mission case he organized a Walk for Justice that drew 500 000 participants 106 On December 23 1989 he spoke at the Annual Conference of the Islamic Committee for Palestine on the plight of the Palestinians 107 In 1990 Mohammed supported and endorsed Neil Hartigan for Governor of Illinois 108 He gave his support to the peacemaking and humanitarian efforts of Bishop Samuel Ruiz 102 On September 10 1990 he participated in the international conference on the Current Situation in the Gulf where he made his opposition to Iraq s invasion of Kuwait a matter of public record 109 He stated We consider President George Bush to be an honorable man We commend his actions in ordering the surgical strikes on Iraqi military installations These efforts to avoid excessive loss of human life are appreciated 110 On behalf of the Muslim American Community he donated 85 000 to Nelson Mandela to aid his efforts to end apartheid in South Africa during a personal meeting in Oakland California on June 30 1990 95 On September 11 2001 he denounced the terrorist attacks as un Islamic 81 Islamic beliefs and ideology editFiqh edit While he emphasized unity within the Muslim community Warith Deen Mohammed also asked the American Muslim community to establish a new school of fiqh a code of conduct for the observance of rituals morals and social legislation in Islam 111 He told Islamica magazine in 2008 that he felt that the madhhab the schools of thought within fiqh were geographically influenced and should be regionally developed suggesting that I think we are gradually getting a sense of madhabs in America especially those like me We are getting a sense of madhabs And with the coming generation I think that we will be getting a much stronger sense of it It is coming more and more 112 However his call for a new madhhab came under fire from mainstream Muslims globally who questioned his motivation for desiring such an unprecedented action 113 Imagery and color symbolism edit Mohammed was sensitive to the potential impact of the use of images and symbols in religions In a 1975 article he explored this topic and in 1976 he published his first article about the subject in the Bilalian News later the Muslim Journal Titled A Message of Concern this article has run in every subsequent copy of the publication 114 115 He also spoke about the subject For instance during a June 17 1977 Friday service he taught his followers about The meaning of colors in Scripture and the Natural Powers of Black and White describing ancient scriptural symbolism and its effect on modern day scriptural and religious interpretation He also elaborated on how colors in scripture have triggered racist influences in religious societies 45 In 1977 he formed the Committee for the Removal of All Images that Attempt to Portray the Divine C R A I D 116 117 118 Personal life editWarith Deen Mohammed s first wife was Shirley Mohammed with whom he had four children 119 By 1994 according to The Los Angeles Times Mohammed had been married four times and had fathered eight children 17 Mohammed married Khadija Siddeeq in 2004 120 Mohammed s eldest child Laila Mohammed stated that Warith Deen practiced polygamy 121 However this polygamy assertion is disputed within the community 122 Beyond his public role in religion and politics Mohammed was involved in real estate import clothing and skin care 17 During his excommunications from the Nation of Islam in his 30s he served as a laborer 43 Imam Mohammed was also a businessman and endeavored to promote business among those that accepted to follow his leadership example Death editMohammed died in Chicago in early September 2008 of a likely heart attack 123 His body was found in his home by his assistant Rafa Muhammad on Tuesday September 9 In addition to cardiovascular disease Mohammed suffered from diabetes According to the Final Call newspaper The Janazah prayer service was delayed for close to an hour so the huge crowd that had assembled could be organized and situated 124 The Chicago Tribune wrote that 8 000 Muslims attended his funeral 125 His funeral was held at the Islamic Foundation Masjid in Villa Park Illinois Imam W D Mohammed was buried at Mount Glenwood Memory Gardens South Glenwood Cook County Illinois Honors editOn his 44th Birthday October 30 1977 Mohammed received the Key to the City of Detroit Michigan from the then Mayor of Detroit Coleman Young along with a Proclamation declaring October 30 1977 Wallace D Muhammad Day in Detroit 126 Then Arkansas Governor Bill Clinton proclaimed March 26 1983 Economic Dignity Day in the state of Arkansas In doing so he stated the following Whereas through the leadership and efforts of Warith Deen Muhammad the American Muslim Mission is on the path of economic progress and achieving growth through unity I urge all citizens to engage in activities which promote economic progress 127 On July 4 1983 Muhammad shared the Reviewing Stand for the 1984 New World Patriotism Day Parade in Chicago with then State Senator Emarald Jones State Representative Howard Brooks parade Grand Marshal Harold Washington the then Mayor of Chicago and many other dignitaries Mayor Harold Washington issued a proclamation declaring July 4 1984 as New World Patriotism Day Coalition Parade Day in Chicago 128 In 1988 King Hassan II of Morocco invited Mohammed to participate in the traditional devotions during Ramadan stating Through you Imam W Deen Mohammed all the people in America are represented 129 In 1992 President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt honored Warith Deen Mohammed with The Gold Medal of Recognition for his religious work in the United States 130 He received the Focolare Movement Luminosa Award for Unity in 1997 131 On May 17 1999 he received a Certificate of Appreciation from the United States Department of State 132 In 2002 Ebony Magazine selected him as one of its 100 Most Influential Black Americans 133 On December 9 1994 he received the Cup of Compassion from the Hartford Seminary in Hartford Connecticut 95 On April 6 2002 Mohammed was made a member of the Martin Luther King Jr International Board of Preachers at Morehouse College in Atlanta and his portrait was hung in the International Chapel there 103 On Saturday September 3 2005 the Council on American Islamic Relations CAIR presented an award to W Deen Mohammed in recognition of his outstanding leadership role in the American Muslim community at The Mosque Cares sponsored Annual Islamic Convention 134 In eulogizing Mohammed on CNN blogs the executive director of CAIR Chicago Ahmed Rehab called him America s Imam 135 Publications editBooks authored edit The Teachings of W D Muhammad Muhammad s Mosque 2 Chicago 1976 The Lectures of Emam W D Muhammad Muhammad s Mosque 2 Chicago 1976 Book of Muslim Names The Honorable Elijah Muhammad Mosque 2 Chicago February 1976 The Man and the Woman in Islam The Honorable Elijah Muhammad Mosque 2 Chicago February 1976 As the Light Shineth from the East W D M Publications Chicago 1980 Prayer and Al Islam Muhammad Islamic Foundation Chicago 1982 Library of Congress Card Number 82 61077 Religion on the Line W D M Publications Chicago 1983 Imam W Deen Muhammad speaks from Harlem N Y Book 1 W D M Publications 1984 Imam W Deen Muhammad speaks from Harlem N Y Challenges That Face Man Today Book 2 1985 Meeting The Challenge Halal Foods for Our Everyday Needs The Honorable Elijah Muhammad Masjid Chicago 1986 An African American Genesis M A C A Publication Fund Chicago Illinois 1986 Library of Congress Card Number 86 63266 Focus on Al Islam Interviews with Imam W Deen Mohammed Zakat Publications Chicago Dec 1988 Library of Congress Card Number 89 090728 Al Islam Unity and Leadership The Sense Maker Chicago 1991 Library of Congress Card Number 91 061449 ISBN 1 879698 00 5 Worst Oppression Is False Worship The Key Is Tauheed Oneness of Allah W D M Publications Chicago 1991 Growth for a Model Community in America W D M Publications Chicago 1995 Islam s Climate for Business Success The Sense Maker Chicago 1995 Library of Congress Card Number 95 071105 ISBN 1 879698 01 3 Mohammed Speaks W D M Publications Chicago 1999 Blessed Ramadan The Fast of Ramadan Plans for a Better Future Peace Inclusion and International Brotherhood The Schemes Of Satan the Enemy of Man The Champion We Have In Common The Dynamic African American Soul Books 1 2 3 amp 4 The Mosque Cares Publications August 2005 A Time for Greater Communities Volumes 1 4 Securing our Share of Freedom Prayer in al Islam A Learner s Guide w Instructional CD WDM Publications Chicago 2007 Return to Innocence Transitioning of the Nation of Islam The Sense Maker Chicago 2007 Life The Final Battlefield W D M Publications Chicago 2008Pamphlets edit A Look At W Deen Mohammed Muslim American Spokesman for Human Salvation A Ministry of W Deen Mohammed Publication Chicago 1993Video and audio presentations edit Imam W Deen Mohammed Systems of Knowledge Muslim News Magazine recorded as a television special by MNM during the 1994 Islamic Convention in Washington D C This classroom lecture was delivered in front of more than 200 Imams and scholars at the Renaissance Hotel Systems of Knowledge is a classroom presentation on the essence of Quranic Arabic and its meaning to all mankind This presentation marked the only time that Mohammed allowed cameras into one of his private Imam classes RT 60 minutes 1994 citation needed 136 Footnotes edit In 1989 Mohammed changed the spelling of his surname Muhammad to Mohammed to reflect the spelling on his birth certificate 1 2 3 References editConstructs such as ibid loc cit and idem are discouraged by Wikipedia s style guide for footnotes as they are easily broken Please improve this article by replacing them with named references quick guide or an abbreviated title February 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Muslim Journal Vol 15 No 19 December 22 1989 a b Wall Street Journal Vol CIV NO 6 Friday July 9 1999 a b c d Esposito John September 10 2008 W D Mohammed A Witness for True Islam On Faith The Washington Post The Emergence of Islam in the African American Community Archived February 20 2009 at the Wayback Machine a b c Warith Deen Mohammed This Far By Faith Public Broadcasting Service Lincoln C Eric 1994 The Black Muslims in America Third Edition William B Grand Rapids Michigan Eerdmans Publishing Company page 263 Fraser Rahim Muhammad America s Other Muslims Imam WD Mohammed Islamic Reform and the Making of American Islam Lexington Books 2020 See Al Islam The Islamic Movement Journal vol 4 no 4 p 19 20 July August 1975 vol 4 no 6 p 10 12 Nov Dec 1975 Unrecanted Statements 1990 The Truth Regarding Warith Deen Mohammed 1993 Conversion of the Muslims TIME 14 Mar 1977 See Bilalian News A M Journal 1976 1985 Lincoln C Eric 1994 The Black Muslims in America Third Edition William B Grand Rapids Michigan Eerdmans Publishing Company page 274 W D Mohammed Obituary W D Mohammed Funeral Legacy com Legacy com Essien Udom E U 1962 Black Nationalism A Search for an Identity in America New York City Dell Publishing Company p 93 See Muslim Journal Jan 3 1992 pp 4 14 15 23 27 28 Rashad Adib 1991 The History of Islam and Black Nationalism in the Americas Writers Inc ISBN 0 9627854 1 5 Evanzz Karl 2001 The Messenger The Rise and Fall of Elijah Muhammad New York Random House a b c d Martin Douglas September 9 2008 W Deen Mohammed 74 Top U S Imam Dies New York Times Retrieved January 11 2014 Lincoln C Eric 1994 The Black Muslims in America Third Edition William B Grand Rapids Michigan Eerdmans Publishing Company page 264 Lincoln C Eric 1994 page 263 Evanzz Karl 1993 The Messenger p 82 E U Essien Udom 1962 Black Nationalism A Search for an Identity in America p 238 New York Dell Publishing Company E U Essien Udom 1962 Black Nationalism A Search for an Identity in America p 88 New York Dell Publishing Company W DEEN MOHAMMED A leap of faith http www courant com topic chi 021020 mohammedprofile 0 4258812 story page 4 Chicago Tribune Bilalian News Aug 12 1977 p 28 The Lahore Ahmadiyya Movement Blog Blog Archive USA a land granted to the Saint of Allah i e Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad The Teachings of W D Muhammad First Official Interview Magida Arthur J 1996 Prophet of Rage A Life of Louis Farrakhan and His Nation First Edition Basic Books Harper Collins Publishers Inc page 74 amp 75 The Teachings of W D Muhammad First Official Interview W DEEN MOHAMMED A leap of faith page 5 Chicago Tribune Malcolm X February 1965 The Final Speeches Pathfinder Press 1992 pp 173 305 331 344 Chicago American Muhammad Losing Support Son Asserts Sept 15 1964 p 1 4 Muhammad Speaks 1974 Warith Deen Mohammed This Far By Faith Public Broadcasting Service a b Evolution of a Community WDM Publications 1995 The Teachings of W D Muhammad I was Born For The Mission Gardell Mattias In the Name of Elijah Muhammad Louis Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam Duke University Press 1996 page 110 Lincoln C Eric 1994 The Black Muslims in America Third Edition William B Grand Rapids Michigan Eerdmans Publishing Company page 265 amp 274 Bilalian News March 12 1976 p 21 New flag for the Nation of Islam Evolution of a Community WDM Publications 1995 page 15 a b Gardell Mattias In the Name of Elijah Muhammad Louis Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam Duke University Press 1996 page 112 The Teachings of W D Muhammad Lectures of Emam Muhammad Bilalian News September 3 1976 p 30 Gardell Mattias In the Name of Elijah Muhammad Louis Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam Duke University Press 1996 page 108 a b c Warith Deen Mohammed Imam who preached a moderate form of Islam to black Americans The Independent September 15 2008 Retrieved January 11 2014 Lincoln C Eric 1994 The Black Muslims in America Third Edition Grand Rapids Michigan William B Eerdmans Publishing Company p 265 a b c d Evolution of a Community WDM Publications 1995 As The Light Shineth From The East WDM Publications Chicago 1980 Black Muslims Alter View of White Devil By Paul Delaney September 2 1975 New York Times News Service White Muslims TIME 20 Jun 1975 Gardell Mattias In the Name of Elijah Muhammad Louis Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam Duke University Press 1996 page 111 Book of Muslim Names The Honorable W D Muhammad 1976 Chicago Illinois Essien Udom E U 1962 Black Nationalism A Search for an Identity in America New York City Dell Publishing Company p 93 Imam W Deen Muhammad speaks from Harlem N Y Book 1 W D M Publications 1984 Evolution of a Community WDM Publications 1995 page 20 Gardell Mattias In the Name of Elijah Muhammad Louis Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam Duke University Press 1996 page 102 a b In The Name of Elijah Muhammad Louis Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam Mattias Gardell Duke University Press Durham North Carolina 1996 The Lectures of Emam Muhammad Muhammad s Mosque 2 1975 Van Biema David As American As Although scapegoated Muslims Sikhs and Arabs are patriotic integrated and growing TIME October 1 2001 Bilalian News Feb 15 1980 p 17 What is Mujeddid a b Farrakhan berated by W Deen Mohammed Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan The Christian Century Vol 112 No 34 Bilalian News Feb 23 1979 p 17 W DEEN MOHAMMED A leap of faith page 3 Chicago Tribune See Muslim Journal February 1 amp 8 1991 p 1 Muslim Journal Feb 28 1992 p 21 Muslim Journal Feb 28 1992 p 21 See A M Journal Oct 21 1983 Muslim Journal Oct 21 1986 p 5 The Message International Nov 1990 p 12 Islamic Horizons March April 2000 p 10 The Washington Times Feb 7 1992 p A6 Warith Deen Mohammed Condemns the Nation of Islam Archived 2008 12 02 at the Wayback Machine Anti Defamation League Bilalian News May 28 1976 p 6 Sept 24 1976 p 8 Dec 10 1976 p 12 Focus on Al Islam Zakat Publications Chicago Dec 1988 Library of Congress Card Number 89 090728 page 24 a b Evolution of a Community WDM Publications Chicago 1995 Imam W Deen Mohammed Muslim Community Cultural Center of Baltimore Archived 2009 02 28 at the Wayback Machine Muslim Journal December 10 1999 page 1 1 Archived December 1 2008 at the Wayback Machine Imam W Deen Mohammed Masjid Al Mu minun Retrieved January 6 2014 Muslim Journal Vol 25 No 28 April 21 2000 Bilalian News June 4 1976 pp 1 3 39 40 Raven The Untold Story of the Rev Jim Jones and His People p 282 Bilalian News Muslim Journal Vol 2 No 29 May 27 1977 Imam W Deen Muhammad Speaks from Harlem N Y W D M Publications Chicago p 130 Muslim Journal Sept 10 1993 p 17 a b c AMV offers condolences on the passing away of Imam W D Mohammed American Muslim Voice September 8 2008 Life The Final Battlefield W D M Publications Chicago 2008 page 2 Focolare Pays Tribute to Imam Warith Deen Mohammed Focolare us September 11 2008 Archived from the original on August 12 2011 Retrieved January 7 2014 Muslim Journal Vol 22 No 52 October 10 1997 a b c W Deen Mohammed Speaks biography Archived March 25 2009 at the Wayback Machine Muslim Journal December 3 1999 page 15 United States Conference of Catholic Bishops Cardinal Francis George OMI Archbishop of Chicago September 12 2008 a b Muslim Journal April 7 2000 page 14 New Africa RadioAn Internet Radio Station Bilalian News Muslim Journal May 14 1976 Prayer and Al Islam Muhammad Islamic Foundation Chicago 1982 Library of Congress Card Number 82 61077 page xxiii Research Center for Islamic History Art and Culture Archived from the original on September 3 2009 Retrieved March 10 2009 a b Gardell Mattias In the Name of Elijah Muhammad Louis Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam Duke University Press 1996 page 108 Al Islam Unity and Leadership The Sense Maker Chicago 1991 a b c Islam s Climate for Business Success The Sense Maker Chicago 1995 Library of Congress Card Number 95 071105 ISBN 1 879698 01 3 Ocular News Magazine of W D M Ministry Fall 1996 page 9 Organization of the Islamic Conference OIC Muslim Journal Vol 23 No 27 April 17 1998 Muslim Journal Vol 25 No 11 December 24 1997 a b The Black Muslims in America Third Edition C Eric Lincoln William B Eerdmans Publishing Company Grand Rapids Michigan page 265 1994 About Imam W Deen Mohammed Ar Razzaq Islamic Center 2007 Retrieved January 6 2014 a b Life The Final Battlefield W D M Publications Chicago 2008 a b Masjid Al Mu minun 1127 Hank Aaron Dr SW Atlanta GA 30315 Imam W D Mohammed Imam W Deen Mohammed s Patriotism Day Celebration In The Name of Elijah Muhammad Louis Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam Mattias Gardell Duke University Press Durham North Carolina 1996 page 112 113 Evolution of a Community WDM Publications 1995 page 35 Al Islam Unity and Leadership The Sense Maker Chicago 1991 Library of Congress Card Number 91 061449 ISBN 1 879698 00 5 Al Islam Unity amp Leadership The Sense Maker 1991 page 90 Al Islam Unity amp Leadership The Sense Maker 1991 page 162 169 Muslim Journal February 1 amp 8 1991 p 1 Imam W Deen Muhammad speaks from Harlem N Y Challenges that Face Man Today pp 34 38 Imam Warith Deen Mohammed If we become independent thinkers we can make a contribution Patheos September 11 2008 Archived from the original on May 9 2012 Retrieved January 6 2014 A Madhhab based on Race and Nationality Al Basheer March April 1994 p 3 7 Sharif Imam Sidney Rahim The African American Bilalian Image in Crisis New Mind Productions Jersey City New Jersey page 115 Mohammed Speaks WDM Publications Chicago 1999 The Imam s Corner Imam Murad Abdul Zahir Masjid Freehaven Archived from the original on October 6 2011 Retrieved January 6 2014 Gardell Mattias In the Name of Elijah Muhammad Louis Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam Duke University Press 1996 page 1111 Muhammad Mukhtar 2000 Genesis of New American Leadership Jacksonville Florida FAMACO Publishers W DEEN MOHAMMED A leap of faith page 4 Chicago Tribune Video on YouTube Laila Mohammed The Estate of Imam Warith Deen Mohammed 09 16 by AmericanMuslim360 Religion Podcasts Khadijah Siddeeq Mohammed Widow of Mujaddid WDM Brachear Manya September 11 2008 Daughter of Imam W Deen Mohammed urges Muslims to unite and continue his vision Chicago Tribune Retrieved January 12 2014 Life and ministry of Imam W Deen Mohammed remembered Ramirez Margaret Ahmed Ullah Noreen September 12 2008 Thousands gather in Villa Park for funeral of Imam W Deen Mohammed Chicago Tribune Retrieved January 14 2014 Bilalian News Muslim Journal Vol 3 No 2 November 18 1977 A M Journal Muslim Journal January 21 1983 Sharif Imam Sidney Rahim The African American Bilalian Image in Crisis New Mind Productions Jersey City New Jersey page 120 Muslim Journal June 17 1988 Jose Santos W Deen Mohammed Islamic scholar and spiritual leader of the American society of Muslims Luminosa Award for Unity to Imam W D Mohammed Focolare Movement recognizes Muslim leader for his work for interreligious dialogue Archived from the original on January 22 2000 Retrieved March 4 2009 Muslim Journal Vol 25 No 12 December 31 1999 100 Most Influential Black Americans Ebony 2002 CAIR Honors W Deen Mohammed Muslim Journal September 30 2005 Farewell America s Imam Cable News Network Muhammad Mukhtar 2000 Genesis of New American Leadership Jacksonville Florida FAMACO Publishers p 48 ISBN 0 9672724 1 6 External links editChicago Tribune Bio WDM Ministry WDM Publications Life and ministry of Imam W Deen Mohammed remembered Brother Malcolm Speaks Wood Daniel B February 14 2002 America s Black Muslims close a rift The Christian Science Monitor Retrieved December 10 2007 Appearances on C SPAN Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Warith Deen Mohammed amp oldid 1204000391, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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