Malcolm Little was born on May 19, 1925, in Omaha, Nebraska, to Earl Little, a Baptist preacher and devoted follower of Marcus Garvey's Black nationalist movement, and Louise Norton Little, a West Indian immigrant. The family's Garveyite activism made them targets of white supremacist violence from Malcolm's earliest years โ the Black Legion burned their Lansing, Michigan home when Malcolm was four, and his father Earl was found dead on a streetcar track when Malcolm was six, the family certain he had been murdered though authorities ruled it an accident. The subsequent collapse of the family was catastrophic: his mother suffered a mental breakdown and was committed to a state mental hospital for twenty-six years, and the seven children were separated and distributed among various develop families and state institutions. These early experiences of racial violence, family destruction, and state abandonment formed the bedrock of Malcolm's later analysis.
Despite the disruption of his childhood, Malcolm excelled academically and was elected class president in seventh grade. His trajectory changed when a white teacher told him that becoming a lawyer was 'no realistic goal for a nigger' and suggested carpentry as a more appropriate ambition. Malcolm later described this moment as the one that disconnected him from the promise of formal education. He moved to Boston and then Harlem in the early 1940s, working as a waiter and later running an interconnected set of criminal enterprises โ gambling, drug dealing, and burglary โ under the nickname 'Detroit Red.' He was arrested in 1946 for burglary and sentenced to eight to ten years in the Massachusetts state prison system.
Prison transformed Malcolm with total intensity. Through correspondence with his siblings who had joined the Nation of Islam, he encountered Elijah Muhammad's theological framework and recognized in it a full explanation for everything he had experienced. He devoted himself simultaneously to the NOI's teachings and to systematic self-education โ reading the entire prison library, copying the dictionary by hand to improve his vocabulary, and teaching himself debating by challenging the prison warden to arguments he was specifically not permitted to walk away from. He emerged in 1952 as Malcolm X โ the 'X' representing the African surname stolen by slavery โ and became within two years the NOI's most electrifying national spokesman. As minister of the Harlem mosque, he articulated Black nationalism with a confrontational precision that named the psychological damage of American racism with such clinical exactness that even opponents found it difficult to refute his diagnoses, however much they disputed his prescriptions.
His 1964 pilgrimage to Mecca proved to be a radical turning point. Experiencing genuine interracial Islamic worship โ praying alongside blond-haired, blue-eyed Muslims โ he found the Nation of Islam's explicitly racial theology incompatible with what he observed. He broke with Elijah Muhammad, founded Muslim Mosque Inc. and the Organization of Afro-American Unity, and began reformulating his politics in the language of international human rights rather than domestic civil rights. He was assassinated on February 21, 1965, while speaking at the Audubon Ballroom in Manhattan, at the age of thirty-nine, by gunmen widely believed to be acting under NOI direction. The Autobiography of Malcolm X, completed with Alex Haley just months before his death, has never gone out of print and remains one of the most important documents of twentieth-century American life.