Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

New Netflix series revisits the assassinat­ion of Malcolm X

- By Russell Contreras

ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M. — A new Netflix series is tackling questions around the 1965 assassinat­ion of civil rights icon Malcolm X.

“Who Killed Malcolm X?” dives into questions surroundin­g his accused killers and allegation­s of a botched investigat­ion. The show, which is available now on the streaming service, comes as Friday marked the 55th anniversar­y of Malcolm X’s death.

The series follows activist-scholar Abdur-Rahman Muhammad, who revisits the assassinat­ion through interviews and archives. Muhammad makes the argument in the series that at least two of the men charged with the slaying were innocent and that the real killers got away.

Three men — Muhammad Aziz, Mujahid Abdul Halim and Khalil Islam — were convicted of killing the civil rights leader and sentenced to life in prison. Aziz and Islam had long denied they were connected to any plot to kill Malcolm X, and Halim had said the two were not involved.

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance’s office announced earlier this month after the release of the series that it will revisit the 1965 assassinat­ion.

“[Vance] has determined that the district attorney’s office will begin a preliminar­y review of the matter, which will inform the office regarding what further investigat­ive steps may be undertaken,” district attorney spokesman Danny Frost said in a statement.

The assassinat­ion of Malcolm X has long interested scholars and activists, who point to the feud he had with Nation of Islam leader Elijah Muhammad after publicly breaking with the group.

A daughter of Malcolm X was charged in 1995 with trying to hire a hit man to kill Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan. Malcolm X’s widow, Betty Shabazz, said in a 1994 television interview that she believed Farrakhan was involved in her husband’s assassinat­ion.

Farrakhan, who was recruited into the Nation of Islam by Malcolm X, wrote in the Dec. 4, 1964, issue of Muhammad Speaks, the organizati­on’s newspaper: “The die is set and Malcolm shall not escape . ... Such a man is worthy of death.” Farrakhan was chief minister of the Nation of Islam’s Boston mosque at the time the civil rights leader was killed.

Farrakhan acknowledg­ed in a 2000 interview with CBS’ “60 Minutes” that his incendiary rhetoric played a role in the assassinat­ion.

The Omaha, Nebraskabo­rn Malcolm X, who had changed his name to El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz, was killed in Manhattan’s Audubon Ballroom by gunmen who opened fire during a speaking engagement. He was buried at Ferncliff Cemetery in Hartsdale, N.Y.

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