Date: Fri, 12 May 2000 13:03:41 -0400 To: politics at polyconomics.com From: jwanniski at polyconomics.com (Jude Wanniski)
You may know that for the last four years I have been defending Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan against the almost universal belief that he is an anti-Semitic bigot. I recently persuaded the NYTimes to run a correction when it repeated the assertion that he had called the Pope the "anti-Christ," when in fact it was Khalid Muhammad who had done so in 1994 -- one of the reasons he was expelled from the NOI by Minister Farrakhan. There is no evidence that Minister Farrakhan ever said "Judaism is a gutter religion," which the NYT still insists he said, there being no correction on that.
Imagine my shock, then, when on Wednesday I was told by a friend who heard on the radio that Farrakhan had "confessed to being part of the plot to kill Malcolm X" and that he made the admission on "60 Minutes" show to be aired on Sunday. If this was true, I could only feel disgust for Farrakhan and for myself in being so gullible as to taken in by him. When I got home, my wife told me her father called to tell her he heard on the radio that "Farrakhan had confessed to complicity in the assassination of Malcolm X." My wife, who over the last four years has come to admire Minister Farrakhan as much as I have, was beside herself with feelings of revulsion. I'd known that Farrakhan had many times publicly blamed himself for having said angry things about Malcolm X that contributed to the atmosphere leading to his murder by other members of the NOI, but to be directly complicit was unforgiveable. My wife noted that he might be arrested and charged, because there is no statute of limitation on murder.
The next morning, I did get a call at home from Cedric Muhammad, telling me that CBS had "spun" the old story in a way that made it appear they had something new. He did not know what Farrakhan had told Mike Wallace in the interview, he said, but that what he had seen of the promotional clips, the Minister was repeating what he had said many times, beginning with a speech he gave at the Apollo theatre in 1995, with the wife of Malcolm X, Betty Shabazz, in the audience. Cedric told me he was posting a transcript of the speech at his website http://www.blackelectorate.com so that interested parties could read it in advance of "60 Minutes." They could then judge for themselves whether CBS was manipulating the story for rating points at the further expense of Farrakhan.
This made me feel much better, but I knew Mike Wallace would know the whole story, so why would he allow it to be put out this way? He and his wife were at the Apollo Theatre when Farrakhan made that speech in 1995. He had known and admired Malcolm X and knew better than almost any white guy the whole story. Why would he let this kind of garbage come out from CBS? He's 82 years old, for goodness sakes, he doesn't have to do this to further his career. Maybe Cedric is wrong and Farrakhan did go further than he has in the past, I wondered. So I called Leonard Muhammad, Farrakhan's son-in-law and chief of staff, who assured me that he had insisted on NOI cameras filming the entire four-hour interview alongside the CBS cameras and that Minister Farrakhan said only what he had said many times before. He told me they had audio and videotapes of his previous apologies for having said things that may have contributed to the atmosphere.
Now I'm getting irritated with Mike Wallace. Here's the story: In 1996, he talked Farrakhan into a "60 Minutes" interview that was professionally done, which persuaded Farrakhan that Mike, who is Jewish, was serious about helping him patch up his relationship with the Jewish political community. He arranged a July dinner in New York with Farrakhan and his wife and with Edgar Bronfman and his wife -- he the Bronfman of Seagram's whisky and president of the United Jewish Congress. Leonard Muhammad and his wife Donna, Farrakhan's daughter, also attended. By all accounts, the dinner went well and Bronfman told Farrakhan he would try to arrange private discussions with the 12 leaders of the Jewish community.
Wallace subsequently told me Mrs. Bronfman called him to complain two days later that Farrakhan was quoted in the NYT making "anti-Semitic" remarks in a speech in Brooklyn. Farrakhan had seen a story in the NYT about a UN report that cited the deaths of several hundred thousand Iraqi children in connection with the embargo. He compared this to the Holocaust, which Mrs. Bronfman took to be "anti-Semitic." Several months later, Wallace assured me the call did not disrupt the plans being made to get Farrakhan together with the 12 Jewish leaders. I was sure this was the case, because when I first met Leonard Muhammade in September 1996, three months after the dinner, he told me about how he and Farrakhan were awaiting for word from Bronfman on when the meeting might occur. New York financier Ted Forstmann, a friend of mine who I asked to host the dinner with Leonard Muhammad, heard this same story and told me and others how impressed with the presentations being made by Leonard Muhammad.
In early November, we were all shocked when Bronfman issued a statement to the Jewish press acknowledging the July dinner, but denouncing Farrakhan as being "inherantly evil." He cited the Brooklyn speech about the Iraqi children. What happened? I called Mike Wallace and he told me it was probably his fault. He said after the Bronfman dinner, Playboy asked him to be the subject of its monthly interview. In it, he boasted that he had brought Farrakhan together with Bronfman. He told me he felt safe because the interview would not run until the December issue. By then, it would have all been worked out. He did not know, he said, that the magazine would call Bronfman out of deference to the fact that his company spent so much money in Playboy on whisky ads. When he learned his "private" contact was being made public, Bronfman blew up. The Wallace interview was "adjusted" to reflect the failure of the dinner to produce results, and Bronfman issued the "inherantly evil" statement the day the December Playboy hit the streets in early November.
Wallace told me ruefully he should never have attempted to mix journalism with diplomacy. He closed the book on the subject, though, where I thought he should have made it clear to others what he had made clear to me. The WSJournal subsequently ran a front-page piece about how Wallace tried to bring about a reconciliation of Farrakhan and the Jewish community via Bronfman, but it made no mention of his screw-up with Playboy... and the story left the further impression that Farrakhan was to blame.
Why did he agree to this interview with Wallace after how he was treated before? Leonard tells me Farrakhan did not blame Wallace, but saw he had an opportunity to clear up the Malcolm X story and further his reconciliation with Malcolm's daughter, with whom he discusses the assassination on the program Sunday. He had carried the daughter in his arms when she was a baby and has wanted the same forgiveness from her that her mother, Betty Shabazz, gave him before her death. Tune in to "60 Minutes" Sunday and see how it turns out. As a warmup, I also suggest you read Farrakhan's 1995 Apollo speech at http://www.blackelectorate.com
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