STROKE KILLS BLACK RACIST WHO WANTED ALL WHITES MURDERED
Khalid Abdul Muhammad dead from massive stroke
The Farrakahn Firebrand who advocated killing all whites, the children, the old people.... everyone... suffered a massive stroke and died! The NYPost is reporting.
We haven't heard anything from Jesse in a day or so... not since he put out the call for 1,000 black churches to give him $1,000. (I can't help but wonder if the new report about a second mistress is behind this. Did he need the money to buy HER a house too?)
I also can't help but wonder if this stroke for Khalid Abdul Muhammad was one out of the Langley Labs (at the George Bush Center for Intelligence -- the NEW name for CIA headquarters?)
Did someone tell Jesse that there is a "rash of strokes" going around, and that he better be careful or one might find him?
"In the tirade, he declared Jews the "bloodsuckers" of the black community, called the pope "a cracker" and exhorted blacks to kill all the whites in South Africa."
http://www.nypostonline.com/news/regionalnews/24026.htm
'MILLION YOUTH' BIG IS REPORTEDLY DEAD
Friday,February 16,2001
By DOUGLAS MONTERO and LARRY CELONA
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FIREBRAND:
Khalid Muhammad, leading the Million Youth March in '98, was tossed from the Nation of Islam for his hate speech.
- Mary Altaffer
Khalid Abdul Muhammad, the firebrand ousted from the Nation of Islam for racial rhetoric who went on to organize the Million Youth March, has reportedly died.
One area black leader told The Post that Muhammad, 53, suffered a massive stroke at an Atlanta area hospital.
His family has refused comment. The hospital also refused comment.
News reports were conflicting. WPIX reported Muhammad was gravely ill, but WNBC News said the black leader had passed away.
"The community is saddened," New York activist Sonny Carson said.
Carson calls Muhammad "a fighter, a person who believes in doing battle with the system for change in a more aggressive manner than a lot of the people that have been show their leadership in the black community."
Born Harold Moore Jr. in Texas, Muhammad began preaching as a child, was a standout football player in high school and won a scholarship to Dillard University in New Orleans.
It was while studying there that he first encountered Louis Farrakhan, then a lieutenant in the Nation of Islam, who came to the campus to speak.
"He said to me that day, 'You're going to be a great, great help in the salvation of our people,' " Muhammad recalled years later.
He joined the Nation of Islam and moved up through the ranks, eventually becoming its national spokesman. He had a high profile, but nothing compared to what was ahead.
In 1994, a speech Muhammad gave at Kean College in New Jersey touched off an inferno of criticism.
In the tirade, he declared Jews the "bloodsuckers" of the black community, called the pope "a cracker" and exhorted blacks to kill all the whites in South Africa.
After the Anti-Defamation League published excerpts of the speech, condemnations poured in and the Congressional Black Caucus severed ties with Farrakhan.
The furor prompted Farrakhan to demote Muhammad, but the punishment didn't silence him and his hate-filled speeches kept him in the spotlight in the coming months.
At one appearance, he said the Roman Catholic Church was full of "homosexuality and pedophiles." In another, he praised LIRR gunman Colin Ferguson for killing whites, saying: "God spoke to Colin Ferguson and said, 'Catch the train, Colin. Catch the train.' "
The tumultuous year was punctuated by violence in May, when an outsted Nation of Islam follower who had set up a splinter ministry shot and wounded Muhammad at a speech in California.
After his own split with Farrakhan - he acknowledged being banned from Nation of Islam mosques - Muhammad helped launch the militant New Black Panther Party.
The group made headlines in 1998 when he and 15 rifle-toting followers arrived in Jasper, Texas, to protest the death of James Byrd, a black man dragged to death by whites.
Later that year, Muhammad was back in the news - clashing with Mayor Giuliani over plans for the first Million Youth March.
He held two more youth marches in Harlem - 1999's drew about 1,000 people, and only 300 showed up at last year's rally - then faded from public view.