The Phnom Penh Post

FBI monitored Muhammad Ali connection­s to Nation of Islam

- Victor Mather

THE FBI monitored Muhammad Ali and his ties to the Nation of Islam, released documents from 1966 show. The FBI said in the 142 pages of documents that it had informants close to the Nation of Islam who let them know the details of Ali’s involvemen­t with the group.

That involvemen­t first came into full view right after Ali first won the heavyweigh­t title, by beating Sonny Liston in 1964.

It was then that Ali affirmed he was a member of the group and that he would no longer be known as Cassius Clay but as Muhammad Ali.

Years later, Ali converted to orthodox Islam. But in 1966 the FBI focus was on the Nation of Islam, which a hodgepodge of agency documents refer to as an “all-Negro, semi-religious, anti-white” organisati­on.

The records, which refer to Ali as Clay, show that the bureau was paying particular­ly close attention to the group’s leader, Elijah Muhammad.

Any sign that Ali was growing closer to the group received scrutiny. His ordering and wearing of a captain’s uniform from the Fruit of Islam, the group’s paramilita­ry wing, was worth an entire memo.

The documents released late last week also note several supposed disputes between Ali and the Nation of Islam, or Ali and Elijah Muhammad.

One memo suggests Elijah Muhammad was “most upset” that Ali had allowed a reporter to follow him with a tape recorder.

The bureau was a lso interested in any developmen­ts on the possibilit y t hat Ali would be drafted into the Army and whether he would seek conscienti­ous-objector status. (The next year, Ali did decline to accept a draft ca ll-up, resulting in t he loss of his heav y weight tit le, a lthough years later he won it back more than once.)

The significan­ce of many of the documents was hard to gauge immediatel­y because of redactions. Names of informants and others have been deleted. In a number of cases, Ali’s own name seems to have been redacted. Several pages are completely blank.

Few details seemed too small for the FBI to record. Ali’s divorce proceeding­s and traffic tickets are worth memos. All of the reports are cast in relation to the Nation of Islam and Ali’s faith in general.

One memo highlights that in divorcing his first wife, Sonji, Ali said she had not lived up to the Mus- lim faith, dressing immodestly and wearing lipstick.

Although some of the documents are based on informatio­n from informants, others are simply newspaper and magazine clippings.

One memo merely repeats a gossip item from Jet magazine speculatin­g that Ali would marry one of the daughters of Gamal Abdel Nasser, then the president of Egypt. Ali did not, but the memo concludes, “The 9/29/66 issue of ‘Jet’ magazine is being retained in Chicago file 10035635-B.”

The documents include an angry letter from General Lewis B Hershey, then the head of the Selective Service system, blasting Ali and complainin­g that the news media were overly favourable to him.

‘Under continuous investigat­ion’

The letter, addressed to the VoiceJeffe­rsonian newspaper in Kentucky, said of the possibilit­y of Ali’s travelling to Montreal for a fight, “This will be good riddance for the crowd supporting Cassius and his ilk.”

In one document, the FBI expresses displeasur­e with an article by the Chicago Daily News Service that contended that the bureau was watching Ali. The memo says the article was “irresponsi­ble journalism based on suppositio­n or a desire for sensationa­lism with a total disregard for or lack of the true facts.”

That memo did acknowledg­e that the Nation of Islam was “under continuous investigat­ion by this bureau for a number of years” but claimed that Ali himself was not the subject “of an active investigat­ion”.

In a May 1966 memo, the bureau says it is interested in Ali because of his notoriety and his “close relationsh­ip” with the Nation of Islam. But it says that it will not conduct an investigat­ion into his activities for fear that he would charge the bureau with harassment.

It concludes: “Should informatio­n be received indicating Clay is a definite security threat, we would, of course, then institute active investigat­ion of all his activities.”

 ?? CONSOLIDAT­ED NEWS PICTURES/AFP ?? Muhammad Ali (left) and Leon Spinks fight on February 15, 1978, in Las Vegas for the world heavyweigh­t title. Ali lost the fight and his belt to Olympic light-heavyweigh­t champion Leon Spinks.
CONSOLIDAT­ED NEWS PICTURES/AFP Muhammad Ali (left) and Leon Spinks fight on February 15, 1978, in Las Vegas for the world heavyweigh­t title. Ali lost the fight and his belt to Olympic light-heavyweigh­t champion Leon Spinks.

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