In the Autobiography of Malcolm X,
as told by Alex Haley, Malcolm goes on a pilgrimage to Mecca and completes the
Hajj, a religious journey within Islam that all Muslims are urged to make. He
returns from Mecca having gone through a completely transformative experience
during which many of his beliefs about the American white man shift. Malcolm’s
change is often understood as a very simplistic duality: as if he leaves
America hating the white man and comes back loving him.
However, it seems troubling and unlikely
that a person’s ideals and beliefs could change so diametrically over such a
short period of time. And when looking deeper within Malcolm’s metamorphosis, it’s
clear that his change isn’t (wasn’t?)
that simple. So it becomes interesting to investigate what it is (was?) that Malcolm did realize after Mecca.
The assumption that Malcolm hated the white man, somehow instantly changed, and began to love him is one that is very shallow and limited. And not looking more closely at his transformation means not giving Malcolm enough credit for the depth and sophistication of his change. What Malcolm did realize, in fact, was something much deeper than the black man versus the white man; beyond skin color. He rethinks America’s systems and comes to understand that it’s power that seperates and oppresses people. Through Malcolm’s journey in Mecca we notice that the lack of equality in America is due to the uneven distribution of power, and that it is not the color of their skin that makes the white man evil, it is their dominance in the economic, political, and social system. It is the white man’s deeply rooted idea that he is the superior that caused discrimination and prevented equality. Clearly, Malcolm’s transformation was one of great complexity that deserves to be explored.
The assumption that Malcolm hated the white man, somehow instantly changed, and began to love him is one that is very shallow and limited. And not looking more closely at his transformation means not giving Malcolm enough credit for the depth and sophistication of his change. What Malcolm did realize, in fact, was something much deeper than the black man versus the white man; beyond skin color. He rethinks America’s systems and comes to understand that it’s power that seperates and oppresses people. Through Malcolm’s journey in Mecca we notice that the lack of equality in America is due to the uneven distribution of power, and that it is not the color of their skin that makes the white man evil, it is their dominance in the economic, political, and social system. It is the white man’s deeply rooted idea that he is the superior that caused discrimination and prevented equality. Clearly, Malcolm’s transformation was one of great complexity that deserves to be explored.