Killing the Messenger: A Story of Radical Faith, Racism's Backlash, and the Assassination of a Journalist

Killing the Messenger: A Story of Radical Faith, Racism's Backlash, and the Assassination of a Journalist

Thomas Peele

Language: English

Pages: 464

ISBN: 0307717550

Format: PDF / Kindle (mobi) / ePub


When a nineteen-year-old member of a Black Muslim cult assassinated Oakland newspaper editor Chauncey Bailey in 2007—the most shocking killing of a journalist in the United States in thirty years—the question was, Why? “I just wanted to be a good soldier, a strong soldier,” the killer told police.   A strong soldier for whom?

Killing the Messenger is a searing work of narrative nonfiction that explores one of the most blatant attacks on the First Amendment and free speech in American history and the small Black Muslim cult that carried it out. Award-winning investigative reporter Thomas Peele examines the Black Muslim movement from its founding in the early twentieth century by a con man who claimed to be God, to the height of power of the movement’s leading figure, Elijah Muhammad, to how the great-grandson of Texas slaves reinvented himself as a Muslim leader in Oakland and built the violent cult that the young gunman eventually joined. Peele delves into how charlatans exploited poor African Americans with tales from a religion they falsely claimed was Islam and the years of bloodshed that followed, from a human sacrifice in Detroit to police shootings of unarmed Muslims to the horrible backlash of racism known as the “zebra murders,” and finally to the brazen killing of Chauncey Bailey to stop him from publishing a newspaper story. 
 
Peele establishes direct lines between the violent Black Muslim organization run by Yusuf Bey in Oakland and the evangelicalism of the early prophets and messengers of the Nation of Islam.  Exposing the roots of the faith, Peele examines its forerunner, the Moorish Science Temple of America, which in the 1920s and ’30s preached to migrants from the South living in Chicago and Detroit ghettos that blacks were the world’s master race, tricked into slavery by white devils. In spite of the fantastical claims and hatred at its core, the Nation of Islam was able to build a following by appealing to the lack of identity common in slave descendants. 

In Oakland, Yusuf Bey built a cult through a business called Your Black Muslim Bakery, beating and raping dozens of women he claimed were his wives and fathering more than forty children.  Yet, Bey remained a prominent fixture in the community, and police looked the other way as his violent soldiers ruled the streets.
 
An enthralling narrative that combines a rich historical account with gritty urban reporting, Killing the Messenger is a mesmerizing story of how swindlers and con men abused the tragedy of racism and created a radical religion of bloodshed and fear that culminated in a journalist’s murder.

THOMAS PEELE is a digital investigative reporter for the Bay Area News Group and the Chauncey Bailey Project. He is also a lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley, Graduate School of Journalism.  His many honors include the Investigative Reporters and Editors Tom Renner Award for his reporting on organized crime, and the McGill Medal for Journalistic Courage. He lives in Northern California.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

of men in white shirts and hats keeping their distance from the flames. More photos were taken on the ground. Smith’s charred leg, bent at the knee, protruded from a ball of flame on his torso. Among the onlookers were a woman in a long white dress and several children turning away. “Burning of the Negro Smith at Greenville TX, 7-28-08,” someone wrote across the bottom of the picture. No one was charged with Smith’s killing. Years later, the county sheriff said he doubted that the girl had been

lieutenant of the Fruit of Islam and appoint a head of the Muslim Girls Training School to teach women proper conduct and housekeeping. Word spread quickly in Santa Barbara that the Black Muslims were active there. The local newspaper ran an unflattering story. Though the Stephens brothers found it impossible to reconcile the Nation’s teachings with running a hair salon catering to whites, the newspaper story had scared away most of their clients anyway, and the salon closed. In the city’s small

with the same blade in a failed suicide attempt. He returned to prison. 13 A Boy in Seaside “When he told me that I was made for his use, made to obey his command in every thing; that I was nothing but a slave, whose will must and should surrender to his, never before had my puny arm felt half so strong.” —HARRIET JACOBS, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl The little girl cut her pinky slicing carrots. She dropped her paring knife. It was a baking day; she was making muffin

by practicing plural marriage. Bey also intended to copy another of the Nation’s secrets: its reliance, late in Elijah’s life, on criminal enterprises to add to the royal family’s wealth. The FBI suspected the Nation of involvement in credit card fraud, auto theft, and other scams in the early and mid-1970s. The Nation financed, among other things, the private jet that whisked Elijah between Chicago and his desert retreat in Phoenix. Bey had no aversion to such crimes, beginning with his

against them both. Under enormous pressure, though, Farrakhan soon removed Muhammad as spokesman, saying he took issue with “the form, not the truth” of Muhammad’s remarks, whatever that meant. When both the U.S. House and the U.S. Senate formally condemned him, Muhammad accepted the votes as if they were gold medals. Although he was relatively unknown prior to the Kean speech, afterward Muhammad claimed that he was overwhelmed with invitations to speak around the country, mostly on college

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