Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

CHICAGO DAILY NEWS: LAST WEEK IN HISTORY

-

In the early 1960s, not much was known about the Nation of Islam or its leader and Chicago resident, Elijah Muhammad. Did the group promote violence? What doctrine did members follow? What did meetings of Black Muslims really look like?

In 1962, the Chicago Daily News sent Ben Holman, the paper’s first Black reporter, undercover to learn more about the NOI and what really went on at its meetings. The paper published his series of reports beginning Aug. 13, 1962.

“Holman, using an assumed name, posed as a follower of Muhammad,” the paper explained. “To gain further insight into the Black Muslim movement, he investigat­ed the group’s activities in Los Angeles and New York, and interviewe­d scores of persons, white and [Black], in and out of the movement.”

Holman’s first report came from a meeting at Temple of Islam No. 2, 5335 S. Greenwood Ave. (Part of the building still stands today.) He created the alias Nathaniel W. Parker, an unemployed South Sider who came to learn more about Elijah Muhammad’s Black supremacy movement on a quiet Sunday afternoon.

Holman was led into a largely empty 500-seat auditorium, the report said. Women sat in the center section and men to the left and right. One of the men led Holman up to the front row where four other men — “new blood” — sat.

“In spite of the Black Muslims’ claims of rapid growth, I never found more than 10 or 15 persons in this section in any of the many weeks I was to return to the temple,” Holman wrote.

On the stage, Minister James, a Muhammad lieutenant, spoke to the crowd in a style that Holman described as a “blend of a revival preacher and a ward-heeling politician, delivered in a calm voice full of unctuous earnestnes­s.” He appeared to not need a script, but Holman soon found out that he gave the same speech every Sunday.

Initiation began after the meeting. James wished Holman a warm “welcome to the flock, brother” and sent him to the adjacent building, where a secretary handed him a letter of applicatio­n.

“We were instructed by her to copy carefully the model handed us and mail it to the designated address,” Holman explained. “The addressee was ‘Allah’ and his address, 4847 S. Woodlawn, the plush Hyde Park mansion of Elijah Muhammad.”

Each week, Holman needed to ask the secretary about his letter, and by the fourth week, she handed him back his letter with correction­s marked in red.

Holman rewrote and resubmitte­d his letter and continued attending meetings. Finally, after about two months, the secretary announced he’d been approved. He could now call himself Nathaniel X.

Holman’s reports ran all week long, covering the group’s ideology, its publicity strategies and violence connected to the movement. According to Holman’s obituary (he died in 2007), the paper promoted his report by plastering his face on the side of their delivery trucks, which led to him being beaten for his reporting by those unhappy with what they read.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States