Brothers and sisters, beloved family, listen closely...
On this day, sixty years ago, our shining Black prince, El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz—known to the world as Malcolm X—was martyred on the battlefield in Harlem’s Audubon Ballroom. They didn't just assassinate a man; they tried to extinguish a movement, a spirit, a revolutionary fire that was too powerful to be contained.
The enemy—yes, the enemy!—feared the truth that Malcolm spoke. A truth so raw, so unfiltered, so unapologetic, that it shook the very foundation of white supremacy. He didn’t come to beg for freedom; he came to demand it. Not tomorrow. Not through legislation. But by any means necessary!
Malcolm was a warrior—a General—for Black liberation. He stood tall, shoulders broad, with the courage to call out not only the open oppressors but also those who betrayed us from within. Oh yes, family!—he was clear about the house Negro and the field Negro. He made us look in the mirror and see our condition, not with comfort but with the urgency of revolution.
They feared his evolution. From Malcolm Little to Detroit Red, to Minister Malcolm X, and finally to El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz—a man who transcended the narrow confines of any one ideology. They couldn't handle a Black man who could unite us beyond borders, beyond religions, into one global struggle against oppression.
But let me tell you something they didn’t understand—you can kill the revolutionary, but you can’t kill the revolution!
Sixty years later, his words still cut through the lies. His legacy still walks with us, whispers in our ears, and roars in our hearts. We owe him not tears, not empty words, but action. Real action.
So I ask you today, family—are you ready?
Are you ready to stand where Malcolm stood?
To speak truth to power, no matter the cost?
To love your people enough to fight for their liberation?
Because as Brother Malcolm taught us, the future belongs to those who prepare for it today.
Áṣẹ. Long live Malcolm X. Long live the spirit of Black liberation!
Eιɖεર Dરε
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