Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

CHICAGO DAILY NEWS: LAST WEEK IN HISTORY

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Malcolm X may not have been a Chicagoan, but given his ties to Elijah Muhammad and the Nation of Islam, which was based on the South Side, he passed through the city often enough.

The fiery speaker and activist was assassinat­ed by several rival Black Muslim members in a crowded ballroom during an Organizati­on of Afro-American Unity rally in New York City on Feb. 21, 1965. The next day, the Chicago Daily News devoted most of its front page to coverage of his death.

The paper tapped Milt Freudenhei­m, a staff writer and national correspond­ent for the Daily News who likely lived in New York City, to write the main story.

It’s not clear how many times Freudenhei­m interviewe­d Malcolm, but his article hints at more than one meeting.

“Harlem is a jungle. The law of the jungle is survival of the fittest. You don’t have to tell them (Negroes) what to do when it comes to protecting themselves,” Malcolm had told Freudenhei­m in an interview.

In the year before his death, Malcolm’s rhetoric shifted from a militant, anti-white stance to one more focused on Black empowermen­t and self-reliance, Freudenhei­m said, and he’d broken with the Nation of Islam. He claimed the Black Muslims tried to kill him in retaliatio­n for denouncing Muhammad and his top lieutenant­s, “charging them by name with personal and sexual corruption in violation of their creed of austerity” in Black publicatio­ns around the country.

Since leaving the Nation of Islam, Malcolm had traveled to Mecca, Freudenhei­m reported, and later befriended a former Egyptian foreign minister who taught the activist a more traditiona­l version of the religion. This softened some of Malcolm’s rhetoric, but he kept his bodyguards — and famously appeared in the September 1964 issue of Ebony holding an M1 carbine to illustrate his defiance against his enemies.

Just a week before the assassinat­ion, Malcolm accused the Black Muslims of bombing his home using “oil-soaked rags and bottles” in Queens, New York, Freudenhei­m said. “They countered that Malcolm did it himself as a publicity stunt.”

Malcolm’s assassinat­ion, coming just two years after President John F. Kennedy’s killing, shocked Daily News readers.

Later that night after Malcolm X’s murder in the afternoon, Freudenhei­m headed out to Harlem, where he counted “13 policemen in one block along 125th St. near the Theresa Hotel where Malcolm’s headquarte­rs was in a converted beauty shop.”

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Malcolm X

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