

Reposted from FinalCall.com
On October 16, 2023, which was the 28th Anniversary of the Million Man March, the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam (NOI) sued the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), its CEO, Johnathan Greenblatt, Simon Wiesenthal Center, and Rabbi Abraham Cooper of the SWC in the Federal Court of the Southern District of New York for 1st Amendment violations and for defamation.
This Saturday, October 28, 2023, The Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan will provide a statement concerning the recent lawsuit. Watch live at 12p CT at: NOI.org
Read the official press release at: NOI.org/noivadl
For immediate release
October 21, 2023
The Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam Sue the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) and the Simon Wiesenthal Center (SWC) for the Misuse of the Word “Anti-Semite”
Chicago—On October 16, 2023, which was the 28th Anniversary of the Million Man March, the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam (NOI) sued the ADL, its CEO, Johnathan Greenblatt, SWC, and Rabbi Abraham Cooper of the SWC in the Federal Court of the Southern District of New York for 1st Amendment violations and for defamation.
For over 40 years, the Defendants have falsely labeled Minister Farrakhan and the NOI as “anti-Semites,” and as “anti-Semitic” because of a difference in theological viewpoints, and for his pointing out misbehavior of some members of the Jewish community, among other things. This false labeling has hindered Minister Farrakhan in his Mission, which is to deliver the Truth taught by the Most Honorable Elijah Muhammad that will correct the condition of spiritual, mental and moral death of the Black man and woman of America that came as a result of the 310 years of chattel slavery and over 150 years of oppression and suppression thereafter.
Minister Farrakhan and the NOI, in bringing this action, are keenly aware that good, law-abiding citizens are likewise victims of this mischaracterization including, the late Nelson Mandela, President Jimmy Carter, Reverend Jesse Jackson, Bishop Desmond Tutu, and many more.
The Defendants have, at times, indiscriminately and arbitrarily mislabeled countless politicians, entertainers, athletes, authors, educators, public speakers, academicians, comedians, and others, as being “anti-Semites” and as “anti-Semitic,” simply because, in many instances, the speaker did not agree with the Defendants’ point of view and, in some instances, simply because the person made a favorable comment about Minister Farrakhan and/or the Nation of Islam.
The importance of this case extends far beyond the named Plaintiffs, but it encompasses every citizen of America who values the freedom of speech, the freedom to exercise his or her religion, and the freedom to associate with persons of like interests.
These unjust actions by the Defendants, over the years, have caused many to fear their censure and rebuke, which, thereby, significantly erodes, and has a chilling effect, on the protections woven into the fabric of the 1st Amendment of the U.S. Constitution and must not be accepted.
If it is the will of Allah (God), Minister Farrakhan will personally address the filing of the lawsuit at a press conference in the near future.
The Complaint and Exhibits may be accessed at NOI.org/NOIvADL
Email inquiries may be sent to: NOILawsuit@noi.org
Voicemail inquiries may be left at: 602-922-3536
On Sunday, October 15th at 2:00 p.m. CDT, Student Minister Ishmael Muhammad, National Assistant to The Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan, will deliver a special keynote message from Mosque Maryam in Chicago for the 28th Anniversary of the Historic Million Man March/Holy Day Atonement. The title of his message is, “Atonement and The Great War”.
We invite you to be in attendance at The Nation of Islam mosque or study group in your area to watch the live webcast or log onto NOI.org.
Lastly, in observance of the commemoration of the Historic Million Man March/Holy Day of Atonement which is Monday, October 16, there is no work, no school and no play that day. It is a day of Reflection, Reconciliation and Prayer.
by Traci C. Muhammad
Time is the measurement of motion. To say we live in a time like no other time before is to say, we are living in the measurement of motion that has never been before now. Through the pages of numerous religious and ecclesiastical texts we find the wise, through the ages sensing a day, an hour like this. Indeed, in Christianity we find the normally eloquent John the Evangelist writing from Ephesus in 1 John 3:2, “Beloved, now we are children of God; and it has not yet been revealed what we shall be, but we know that when He is revealed, we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is.” If we tarry, let us tarry here…”it has not yet been revealed what we shall be, but we know that when He is revealed, we shall be like Him.”
John the Evangelist assures us with this vague, yet pregnant description, that no we do not know what we will be like; nevertheless, we can rest assured, because what we do know, of certainty, is that we shall be “like Him.” The magnitude of the thought of this reality alone is enough to make the Believer weep, deeply. Matthew 8:27 brings what the Believer cannot fully articulate into the fullness of day when we read, “What manner of man is this…” What shall we become? We shall become like Him, but who is He?
He is, according to Hebrews 12:2, “the author and the finisher of our faith.” And these are the acceptable paradoxes of God and His divine orchestration of events. A paradox is a seemingly self-contradictory statement that upon greater investigation may actually prove true—despite the seemingly illogical chain of events leading to the truth of the paradox.
The Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan, explained during an October 23, 1994, lecture entitled, Belief in Allah that, “Faith is a confident belief in the truth, value, or trust worthiness of a person an idea or a thing but is a belief that does not necessarily rest on logical proof or material evidence. Logic is based on your ability to think on the material evidence, (and) work within the scope of what you in your mind are able to agree is possible. Logic sometimes conflicts with faith. Faith allows you to see beyond logic. Logic will restrict you to what you can logically see and understand. God don’t deal with logic.”
On a collective level, no matter the expressed religious affiliation, those who are spiritual can literally “feel” a change in the air. This nebulous space of change in turn can and does produce anxiety. With many in the media questioning what tomorrow will bring while reporting the dire news of the day. The question that arises in the mind is, what has happened to cause such an unsettled world and more importantly, can peace be found in this time?
We are warned that we must watch as well as pray. A deep truism that is often overlooked. On a superficial level, let us suppose what the turn of phrase really hides is a new manner of existence. One in which the Believer is both awake and simultaneously praying. Meaning, to watch is to be vigilant; however, to watch also means to look or observe attentively over a period of time. To watch also means an act or instance of carefully observing someone or something over a period of time. Time, again. To pray in its most technical term means an address, a solemn request or expression of thanks (gratitude) to a deity, or object of worship. The word pray has as one of its synonyms appeal. Taking these definitions into consideration, watch as well as pray then can mean, to observe closely over a period of time, with great attention, as we give thanks and make an appeal.
The appeal of the Believer in this hour is for true Christ Consciousness so that we can navigate through the turbulent waters ahead, as we work out our salvation. Salvation is not what is given it is what is earned. Time is where the labor of salvation is measured. No one is immune from the ebb and flow of the vicissitudes of life. The Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan defined life as “growth, reproduction, adaptation and change.” He further assures us that everything of value has a “difficulty factor” attached to it, inherent in the nature of that which is desired. Something must be overcome to attain what we desire and the most difficult thing to overcome is the self. So, the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan, like the most skilled doctor diagnosed our condition perfectly when He stated, “we are filled with excuses for our failures.” If we are going to make it, we have to decide, that we will do all in our power to make it.
No, we do not know what we will be like exactly; however, we have the best example before us now of what our ultimate potentiality is—the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan. The Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan is an example of what evolution into our personal divinity looks like. Through absolute obedience and submission to His Teacher, the Most Honorable Elijah Muhammad’s divine guidance, the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan has laid bare His heart and mind for those who are seeking after righteousness for righteousness’ sake to discover a deeply illuminated path to Allah (God). On this path, there is no darkness. The only darkness along this path is in the hearts of those who falsely believe that he draws His strength from the material things of this world. As the Bee Gee’s once sang “the New York Times don’t make no man.”
We are in a dark and dangerous time when children cannot attend school, mothers cannot shop with their children, families cannot take a peaceful flight to see relatives or take a vacation without fear of being a victim of some heinous act. We need light today, the right kind of light. A light without end. A light that provides both warmth and wisdom. A light by which we can grow.
We stand in this hour to say that the revelation is true—a man born of a woman has come and is standing with a torchlight held high for all who are seeking a way out of the darkness of the close of Satan’s world to be guided into the light of understanding. To the Believer, no matter the faith expression, know that the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan carries the blueprint of true salvation, salvation that will make us acceptable unto God, and it is available to all, if we would but see.
There are people working diligently to confuse the truth. They are experts at mixing lies with falsehoods and repacking it as truth. Do not be dismayed or deceived, the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan has been given the Sure Truth, and it is an Invincible Truth from the Honorable Elijah Muhammad. All Praise is Due to Allah!
Is peace available in an hour like this, yes, it is. The Most Honorable Elijah Muhammad makes that clear when He assures us, that “The Hereafter for my followers is now.”
“And let us not be weary in well doing: for in due season we shall reap, if we faint not.”
–Galatians 6:9 (KJV)
May Allah bless us all with the Divine Light of Understanding and the continued presence of the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan.
Reposted from Nation of Islam Research Group website
Dennis Speed, interviewer: I think that certainly for those who know your attachment to music, your practice and mastery of the violin, which has been part of your life for most of your life—almost your entire life—has shown a side to the world of Minister Louis Farrakhan that they never expected to see. It’s also posed an interesting question, which is: Why is it that you have this love of Classical music, and why is it that you don’t see any paradox between your love of this Classical music and its supposed European roots? Why is that a man of your stature and also of your persuasion, your entire orientation, sees this as complementary to what you do?
Minister Louis Farrakhan: Well, I know it’s complementary to what I do. The paradox is explained in growth. First of all, my mom gave me the violin and secured my teachers for me; and from an early age the only jazz violinist that I ever knew of was a man called Stuff Smith, whom Jascha Heifetz loved to listen to, because he was an absolute genius in playing jazz violin. I never was interested in playing jazz on the violin, although jazz was germane to the Black experience.
But the Classical music touched me. When I went to music school and we studied solfeggio, we studied the technical side of music, counterpoint, and then we had chamber music, we had orchestra, we had trio, and then we had our individual violin lessons, and I would stay in the music school all day, and during my free time I would go in a music room, and a dear friend of our family, who I think is still living, would give me hot chocolate, and I would sit in front of a huge, well, it was like a stereo system, but it wasn’t a stereo system at that time, and listen to Heifetz, and Joseph Segetti and Mischa Ellman and so many of the great violinists of that time—Efram Zimbalist. And I would sit for hours; and tears would fall out of my eyes at the beauty of this music.
Music comes out of the experience of people. There would be no jazz, no blues, no gospel, if it were not for our experience. So slavery and the suffering of the people gave rise to an expression out of that era. And if it’s not paradoxical for white folk to sing blues and play jazz and sing gospel, and we say “Whoa, look at this!”—they are tapping into our soul; and, through tapping into our soul, they’re tapping into the life experience that gave birth to that soul, that gave birth to this musical expression.
Now, European society, if you look at that society, in the Renaissance period and the period that gave birth to much of the great Classical genius of that period, when I listen to that music, I don’t hear “white.” I don’t hear “Jewish,” I don’t hear “black.” I hear God, speaking to human beings through a universal language from a unique experience historically and culturally at that time.
So I can tap into Beethoven, and I can live him, and to me, I find more harmony with that period than I find with slavery. Because my spirit has always been free. I don’t see myself as an enslaved person. I don’t like to sing blues. I like to hear them. But I don’t talk about how “I lost my baby.” I haven’t. “I ain’t got nobody.” I’ve got everybody. “I don’t have no money.” I’ve got money. I’ve got friends. So if that’s you, you sing the blues. I’ll enjoy it, but you sing it.
But for me, the free spirit that I feel in the expression of Handel, in the expression of Mozart, in the magnificence of Bach—I identify with that. “But these are white people.” I don’t know anything about their color. I never saw them. I wasn’t introduced to their color. I was introduced to the God in them, manifested in their music. And that’s the way the world is introduced to the God in us, through the manifestation of the art-form that comes from our cultural experience.
So to me, that’s why music is so important to bridge the gap between human beings in time periods; because here’s how you can tell whether something is of God. It is ageless. It lives. And the Classics live. Elijah Muhammad loved the Classics, and he was the exponent of blackness. But blackness is not national, he said. Black is universal, since everything started in darkness and comes out into the light. So when you are universal, then you are embracing that which is universal. Truth is universal. God is universal. Life is universal. Music is universal.
So the paradox, if I may say that, is this: When I accepted Classical music and fell in love with this music, that music connected me to the human family. I loved black people. I hurt over the pain of black people and wanted to fight for black people, but not to the exclusion of the rest of the human family.
When I met Malcolm X and the Hon. Elijah Muhammad, they narrowed my focus. Elijah Muhammad took me right out of music. He said, “come on out of there. I want you to be a preacher.” So when I put that violin down and narrowed my focus to black people, it was not harmonious with my music. So I began writing a new kind of music, based on the calypsos, and the calypsos began to reflect the racial thing, so I wrote “A white man’s heaven is a black man’s hell.” Have you ever heard that?
Speed: Yes, I’ve heard that.
Min. Farrakhan: Then I wrote plays and whatnot around the experience of black people. Well, I’m not caring about Europe, or I’m not caring about Asia, or I’m not caring about Mexico, Central and South America, I’m caring about the suffering of black people in America, Africa, the islands of the Pacific, the Caribbean, wherever black folk are.
And then in 1973, I brought my violin to Chicago and I played for him, in late 1973. And he liked it. He said, “You really can play that thing!” Then in ’74 I played for him again, after the Savior’s Day convention, right in this house. My brother, God rest him, and a trio, played ballads, very few Classical pieces, we played show tunes, pop things. He really loved it. And then after that, he called me one day and said, “Could you come out and bring your violin with you?” He said, “There won’t be anybody here but me and you and Sister.”
So I came out and brought my violin. At the end of dinner, we came over here, by the piano, and I played. And after I played, he said, “Didn’t you play that for me the last time you were here?” I said, “Yes, sir.” He said, “Well, don’t you know anything new?” “No, sir, I don’t.”
And he frowned. That was ’74; and in ’93 I performed what I had never played in public ever before, the complete Mendelssohn violin concerto. And for two years, I had to work. Now you get me back into my Classical roots! Uh-oh. What does that mean for Farrakhan? His breast expands, his horizons expand, and he sees the pain of black people; but now, through music, he sees the pain of the total human family. This is preparation for a universal message, that he ultimately has to give to more of his people. So I see that Elijah Muhammad knew this, and he was telling me, “go back and get your music and play something new.”
So that’s my connection to Classical music, and I pray that God will allow me to live a little longer, because I’m working now on the Beethoven violin concerto, the Bruck violin concerto. I want to ultimately play the Tchaikovsky and the Brahms; and if I can do those five concertos, and do them well before I leave this planet, and get a violin that is a world-class violin, I’ll be, sho’nuff, a happy soul when I leave this earth, because I will have seen, by God’s grace, the empowerment of our people, a reconciliation, hopefully, of us, the wounds in our families being healed, the rise of a righteous group coming out of America, to affect the world. And I [will have] done what God wanted me to do; and I can leave happily, and look at this magnificent life that I’ve created. And I can thank Him and thank Him and thank Him, for just being alive, coming into this world, in this magnificent creation of His, and now it’s time to go.
But I will have produced children and young people who will take things on to new levels. And I believe God will give me a vision of those new levels, so that my end, death, will be so precious and perfect and meaningful; and I say this to you, in conclusion: What is life all about, but to live it in service to the Creator of life and to further the evolutionary development of His Creation toward perfection? What is better?
That’s why I believe death must come to us all, because we’re not perfect; and only through the attraction of male and female, and the production of new life that we can feed and develop to minimize our mistakes and make newer ones, but certainly not repeat ours, that they are more close to the perfection that God desires than we are, so we go off the scene and give rise to a better generation. And they go off the scene, giving rise to a better generation. And God continues in every generation.
I’ve learned just to look at my life, and look at life, and to just be thankful for being a little speck of dust that God allowed and formed into a human being. And I’ve got to serve Him in this in return, to the best [of my ability]. And I can never die; because the I in me, is Him, who is eternal. And I don’t think I would have known that lesson if Mr. Muhammad hadn’t given me the nod: “Don’t you know something new?” and then frowned.
Now I can tell him: “I’m learning a few new things.”
So may God bless you and thank you for the interview. I feel very good about it, because sometimes I don’t even know what I know, until I’m asked; and the most beautiful thing of all is to probe somebody, to extract from them what is revealing, so that they don’t return to the dust keeping things that should have been and could have been shared with others.
By Charlene Muhammad, National Correspondent
“If you’ve taken the shot, I pray that Allah will lessen the effect of that shot because it was designed to harm you, your ability to reproduce yourself. But if you ask Allah to save you from what you did against yourself, call him by the Name ‘Allah, Who Came in the Person of Master Fard Muhammad,’ and ask him ‘in the Name of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad’ and I do believe, even if you’ve made that mistake, He’ll save you from the mistake that you made.”
–The Honorable Minister Farrakhan
“The Swan Song” February 27, 2022
On August 4, South Africa’s health regulator reported “a causal link between the death of an individual and Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine, the first time such a direct link has been made in the country,” reported Reuters.com. The deceased, whose identity remains undisclosed, suffered the rare neurological disorder Guillain-Barre Syndrome soon after being given J&J’s Janssen vaccine, after which they were put on a ventilator and later died, according to senior scientists during a news conference. “At the time of illness, no other cause for the Guillain-Barre Syndrome (GBS) could be identified,” said Professor Hannelie Meyer.
In July of 2021, U.S. authorities added a new warning to a factsheet saying data suggested there was an increased risk of GBS in the six (6) weeks following the J&J shot. At the time it noted 100 preliminary reports of GBS in vaccine recipients, including 95 serious cases and one reported death.
Meanwhile, a growing number of vaccine recipients are expressing post-jab regrets. Some have long ago recovered from a bout with coronavirus, but one year later are still grappling with severe harmful effects of the shot.
One member of this tragic group told The Final Call that within eight (8) hours of receiving Pfizer’s COVID-19 injection on April 12, 2021, she woke up from sleep to a nightmare. Shiara DeLoach of Houston, Texas, was paralyzed. Over the next year, she said, she struggled to regain use of her body, despite horrific treatment by healthcare providers. At first, she could only move her eyes. Then, just her head.
“I saw my phone on the nightstand and had to cry myself to sleep, praying to God, because I couldn’t reach it,” said Ms. DeLoach. “I have a regret, because they’re not being honest about this vaccine, whether it’s Moderna or Pfizer. If they would have been honest and said there‘s a possibility that you can end up permanently paralyzed, partially paralyzed, or you can end up dead or whatever, there‘s no way in the world I would have taken the injection,” she stated.
She took the shot, because she caught COVID and spent a gruesome four days in the hospital in January 2021. But 20 minutes after the injection, she complained of pain in her shoulder, neck and center of her head. Ultimately, she lost 75% mobility on her right side, along with tremors. “They have snatched my commercial driver’s license. I had a Class A truck driver’s license for over 30 years, over 200 million miles safe driving, accident-free. [READ FULL ARTICLE]
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CHICAGO—The Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan of the Nation of Islam will deliver a major message July 4 concerning the current state of affairs in America, the world, the coronavirus global pandemic and other critical subjects.
Minister Farrakhan’s message, “The Criterion,” will be delivered on Independence Day, which also marks the 90th anniversary of the existence of the Nation of Islam in America. It will be his first public address since February.
His critical guidance and divine warning are of particular importance for President Trump, international leaders and the leaders of global faith communities. The world has entered a final period of divine reckoning, and a coming famine, said Minister Farrakhan.
“The judgment is not approaching; it is present,” he warned.
His message, Saturday, July 4, will be available at www.noi.org and Final Call Radio via www.finalcall.com. The message will air at 11 a.m. EDT, 10 a.m. CDT, 8 a.m. PDT, and at 16:00 Greenwich Mean Time for the United Kingdom, Europe and international audiences.
“This message will not just be for Muslims; it is not just for Christians; it is not just for Jews, it is for every inhabitant of this planet,” said Minister Farrakhan.
“I say to you with deep humility from the 25th Surah of the Qur’an: ‘Blessed is He Who sent down the Discrimination upon His servant that he might be a warner to the nations,’ ” the Minister added. The 25th Surah or Chapter of the Holy Qur’an is titled, “Al-Furqan” or “The Discrimination/The Criterion,” meaning to discern or distinguish truth from falsehood.
This is not an ordinary time, Covid-19 is not an ordinary virus and we will not get out of this easily, he cautioned. The country is divided, and people are angry, the Minister noted. God Himself is upset, Minister Farrakhan said.
On July 4, 1930, Master Fard Muhammad—the teacher of the Hon. Elijah Muhammad, patriarch of the Nation of Islam—made himself known in North America. He fulfils prophecy and, as the Hon. Elijah Muhammad taught, represents the coming of God in Person, the Great Mahdi of the Muslims and the long-awaited Messiah of the Christians. Read more at www.noi.org.
–30–
(FinalCall.com) PHILADELPHIA—As the COVID 19 virus continued to ravage America over 100 participants making up a global audience joined a unique virtual press conference. They were listening to speakers who passionately spoke on why journalist and political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal should be immediately released from prison.
Mr. Jamal was arrested in December 1981 and later convicted in the shooting death of Philadelphia police officer Daniel Faulkner. For decades Mr. Abu-Jamal and his supporters have maintained he is innocent.
Pam Africa of International Concerned Family and Friends of Mumia Abu-Jamal opened the conversation held April 23 by thanking those who have supported Mumia for four decades.
“John Africa taught us the power is with the people,” she said. “This has been a long battle, but it has been an invigorating battle. Mumia is innocent, and we need you to help continue this work.”
Information was shared outlining Mr. Abu-Jamal’s vulnerability and the urgency in having him released. False stories began circulating that the former Black Panther had contracted coronavirus. Santiago Alvarez, a UC Santa Cruz student, reported an incident in mid-April where he says he was told by corrections officers that Mr. Abu-Jamal was taken to the hospital for Covid-19. “It was a sick and wicked thing to do. It is a reminder of the urgency of how vulnerable Mumia is and how we need to get Mumia out of prison immediately,” he said.
Philadelphia journalist and Temple University Professor Linn Washington is considered an expert on the Mumia Abu-Jamal case. Mr. Washington cited the double standards that have been used in the judicial system against Mr. Abu-Jamal and pointed out the corruption in the appellate court system going as high as the U.S. Supreme Court. He referenced the lack of judicial ethics demonstrated in the case where justice is never mentioned. “Mumia has never received justice from the Pennsylvania Supreme court or the federal court,” he said while calling for continued support. [FULL STORY]
CHICAGO-From its inception in 1979 until today, The Final Call newspaper has consistently delivered a message dedicated to the resurrection of the Black man and man of America and the world.
“The Final Call has a unique mission and purpose and when you look back at our first edition, essentially it was about the survival of the Black nation. Forty years later that still is the question, concern and mission-in particular coming after the first Black president. We have seen a whitelash … a president who has really shown what is deep in the hearts of the people and how vulnerable our people remain,” said Final Call editor in chief Richard B. Muhammad.
At the upcoming Nation of Islam national convention in Detroit, Saviours’ Day 2020, Feb. 21-23 in the Motor City, The Final Call will mark 40 years of publishing with a banquet and celebration that will also pay tribute to the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan, the founder and publisher of the award-winning newspaper. The dinner, which is open to the public, will be held Friday, Feb. 21, at the TCF Center Ballroom, in downtown Detroit. The doors will open for the evening program at 6 p.m. EDT. Tickets are $100 and a table of 10 seats is available for $1,000. Individual tickets and table tickets can be ordered at www.noi.org.
“This will be an incredible night, an historic night and an opportunity to recognize those who have worked hard to establish The Final Call and to show love, appreciation and gratitude to the man whose vision, sacrifice and integrity lie at the cornerstone of any success that Allah and His Christ have allowed us to have,” said Mr. Muhammad.”
“Those of us who read Muhammad Speaks were delighted when we discovered that the Minister was relaunching it under a new masthead, The Final Call, because nowhere else could we get the kind of editorial content that was published in Muhammad Speaks,” said Dr. Conrad Worrill, chairman emeritus of the National Black United Front (NBUF) and longtime Final Call reader and contributing columnist.
Launched in the basement of Min. Farrakhan’s home in 1979, The Final Call has a reputation in the Black community by being a fearless, uncompromising seeker of truth. The year 2019 marked its 40th year of continuous publication. “Our people need a voice. They need a guardian, a watchman, someone who will stand and point out these dangers, and contradictions, call us to unity and to the word and mission and the saving message of the most Honorable Elijah Muhammad, which Min. Farrakhan has been delivering to us now for 44 years in the absence of his teacher. An essential part of delivering that message is The Final Call newspaper,” added Mr. Muhammad.
The Final Call remains Black America’s sole nationally distributed, independent, Black-owned print newspaper. It also has a digital edition and an active presence on social media platforms. But before social media that brought news to people across the country in real time, The Final Call had reporters and writers connecting the dots by showing Black people in New York what was happening in Los Angeles and vice versa and covering all in between. In 1996, The Final Call amplified the three-part series by investigative reporter Gary Webb of the San Jose Mercury News that exposed a cocaine distribution network connected to the Central Intelligence Agency and the Nicaraguan Contras that helped ignite the South Central Los Angeles crack epidemic and feed the drug crisis in different parts of the country.
“The Final Call is really the only national weekly Black newspaper that we have in the United States,” said Dr. Ray Winbush, director of the Institute for Urban Research at Morgan State University. “The Final Call gives me news I can’t see anywhere else. Whether it was Trayvon Martin, the massacre in Charleston, and other similar events, The Final Call went into depth in these stories. Other publications just reported the facts, but The Final Call puts things into historical context.”
“Additionally, I love the repetition of What the Muslims Want section. Since the days of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, the Muslims have been consistent on reparations. To repeat that every week reminds us of the task still ahead of us,” added Dr. Winbush. The Final Call championed the wrongly convicted, many rotting in jail for decades, long before mainstream media took notice.
“Last year I was staring death in the face but I am alive to keep fighting. I know it was due in large part to the support of Minister Farrakhan and the story that appeared in The Final Call newspaper. The Final Call helped to save my life. Without that story, my plight would not have spread as fast and my wrongful execution would have been carried out in darkness,” said Reggie Clemons in a Final Call interview referring to an article the newspaper published in June 2009. Furthermore, Minister Farrakhan has been able to send reporters overseas to conferences and to get firsthand accounts of international issues affecting Black people.
“Thanks to the brothers selling the paper, we are the only Black newspaper with the resources to send reporters throughout the world. We went to Switzerland to cover our people’s fight against genocide, Sudan to cover the North vs South issues, to Liberia to cover the war, to Kenya to investigate AIDS’ treatment discovery, to Zimbabwe to cover the land dispute and many more issues, events and conferences in South Africa, Nigeria, and Ghana,” said James G. Muhammad, a former Final Call editor in chief. He continues to work for the institution he helped build as a valuable and active contributing editor.
“The Final Call is the best paper in America. Not only Black America, it’s the best. It covers news that not only White newspapers but other Black papers don’t cover,” said Rev. Albert Sampson, a Chicago-based pastor, activist and longtime friend of Min. Farrakhan. “It has no corporate advertising and the distribution is phenomenal,” he said.
CONTACT
Toure Muhammad
(773) 531-8798
toure.muhammad@gmail.com