Imam W. Deen Mohammed
Imam W. Deen Mohammed was born
October 30, 1933, to the builder and leader of the Nation of
Islam, the late Honorable Elijah (Poole) Muhammed and the late
Clara (Evans) Muhammad. He is the leader of the largest
identifiable constituency of Muslim Americans and is recognized
world wide as a leading Islamic Thinker and representative.
He
succeeded his father in 1975 as the leader of the Nation of
Islam with unanimous support of its followers and began its
transformation to "Islam proper" as practiced by over 1 billion
Muslims worldwide. He opened the Nation of Islam membership up
to all races of Muslims and encouraged Muslim Americans to
register to vote and become full participants in the politics
and economics of America.
In 1977, he led the then largest
delegation of Muslim Americans, most former members of the
Nation of Islam, on Hajj, Pilgrimage to the Sacred House in
Mecca, Saudi Arabia. That same year he toured China with
"American Friends of China".
He has represented Muslims at the
World Parliament of Religious Leaders for the survival of the
Earth, in Oxford, England.
He signed the Williamsburg Charter
at Williamsburg, VA celebrating the First Amendment/First
Freedom of the U. S. Constitution.
Following the invasion of Kuwait by
Iraq, in 1990 at the invitation of Saudi Arabia's King Fahd Bin
Abdulaziz, Imam Mohammed and a delegation traveled to Saudi
Arabia in a consultative role to discuss the concerns of Muslims
over the Gulf War.
In 1992 he delivered the Invocation
opening the U. S. Senate in Washington, D.C., the first ever
given by a Muslim. He toured the Pentagon and addressed Muslims
in the U. S. Military and its Chaplains.
He delivered an address on the floor
of the Georgia State Legislature - the state of his father's
birth, the first ever given by a Muslim.
In 1993, Imam Mohammed participated
in the Inaugural Interfaith Prayer Service for President William
(Bill) Jefferson Clinton.
In December of 1994, Imam Mohammed
was presented the "Cup of Compassion" Award from the Hartford
Seminary in Hartford, Connecticut.
In 1995, he was selected as a
President of the World Conference on Religion and Peace (WCRP),
and addressed its Governing Board in Copenhagen, Denmark.
In 1995, Imam Mohammed delivered the
Keynote Address at the Muslim-Jewish Convocation, the first
serious public dialogue between top leaders of Islam and
Reformed Judaism, in Glencoe, Illinois; and in the same year,
Forbes Magazine officials hosted an address given by Imam
Mohammed in Naples, FL on the topic "How Do We Save Our Youth?"
In 1996, Imam Mohammed visited
Malaysia at the invitation of Dr. Mohammed Nuir Manuty,
President of the Muslim Youth Movement, which resulted in
a Muslim American student exchange program, for several years.
He met privately with Malaysia's Deputy Prime Minister and was
interviewed on Malaysian national television.
In 1996, Imam W. Deen Mohammed led a
delegation of Muslims to The Vatican in Rome, Italy, where he
met with Pope John Paul II and with Cardinal Francis Arinze, The
Vatican's Chief of Staff for Inter-religious Affairs.
As an international humanitarian,
Imam Mohammed supported the Peacemaking and Human Rights Efforts
of Bishop Samuel Ruiz Garcia and traveled to San Cristobal de
las Casas (Chiapas), Mexico, as a member of The Peace Council to
hear concerns of the Chiapas Rebels.
He also led a delegation of Muslim
Americans to Jerusalem and areas under rule of the Palestinian
Authority led by Palestinian leader, President Yasser Arafat,
visiting Palestinian cities, government agencies, hospitals and
homes throughout the West Bank. The visit culminated on
Christmas Eve with a meeting in Gaza City with President Arafat
at his headquarters, where he discussed the difficulties of
Palestinian life.
In 1997, President Clinton, in his
re-election Inauguration, invited Imam Mohammed to the White
House for the 1st Annual Ecumenical Breakfast, and requested
Imam Mohammed to read from the Holy Qur´an at the Presidential
Inauguration Day National Prayer Service.
Later that year, Imam Mohammed
attended the Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC) in Tehran,
Iran.
In 1998, Imam Mohammed traveled to
Auschwitz, Poland, where he participated in the Conference on
Religion and Peace hosted by the Center for Christian and Jewish
Understanding of Sacred Heart University. From there, he went
to Dhaka, Bangladesh, to explore business opportunities for the
Collective Purchasing Conference (CPC), which he established as
a member organization of distributors and investors, in order to
strengthen the economic status of the Muslim Americans and to
enhance the buying power of small businessmen and women
throughout the economically strained African-American
communities in the United States.
He accepted the invitation of the
Honorable Chiara Lubich, a Catholic Sister and World War II
Survivor, to come to Rome, Itlay to address the Muslim Friends
of the Focolare Conference, which brought together
representatives from 24 nations.
In 1999, with Pope John Paul II and
The Dalai Lama present on stage, Imam Mohammed addressed a
gathering of 100,000 at The Vatican.
He participated in the Jubilennium
Interfaith Conference for World Peace held in Israel and the
World Conference on Religion and Peace Assembly VII in Amman,
Jordan. There, he was elected as an International President in
the U. S. for WCRP.
In 2000, he was appointed to the
executive Committee of Religious Alliance Against Pornography
(RAAP).
On September 11, 2001, Imam
Mohammed, in the strongest terms, immediately denounced the
Terrorists Attacks on the United States as un-Islamic and evil.
Later in the year, Imam Mohammed
participated in an "Evening of Religious Solidarity," joined by
Dr. Robert H. Schuller, Minister Louis Farrakhan and members of
the Parliament of World Religions at the Mosque Foundation in
Villa Park, Illinois.
The same year, Imam Mohammed
attended the Contribution of Religions to Peace Conference in
Assisi, Italy, at the invitation of Pope John Paul II, for
religious leaders to gather to pray for world peace.
In 2002, he was ceremoniously
inducted into the Martin Luther King Jr. International Board of
Preachers at Morehouse College, in Atlanta, Georgia, where his
portrait hangs in the International Chapel of Non-Violent
Religious Leaders at Morehouse.
As an International President of
WCRP, he participated in the Conference of Religious Leaders
Addressing the Devastation on Africa from HIV/Aids held in
Nairobi, Kenya.
Imam W. Deen Mohammed has lectured
at Universities/Colleges throughout the United States, among
them have been Yale University's School of Divinity, Fordham
University, Georgetown University, Emory University, Harvard
University, Washington University (St. Louis), and numerous
others.
The change and growth which has
characterized Imam W. Deen Mohammed's leadership since 1975 has
been a progression toward satisfying the essentials of Muslim
life and identity, and in the measure required by the authentic
sources of the religion of Islam - the Holy Qur´an and the life
example of Muhammed the Prophet (the prayers and the peace be on
him).
Through the arduous steps of
evolution from the ´Nation of Islam´ (1930-1976) to the ´World
Community of Al-Islam in the West´ (1976-1981) to the ´American
Muslim Mission´ (1081-1985) Imam Mohammed has piloted his people
to what is today a de-centralized and thriving society of Muslim
Americans. With Mosques and schools in every major city in
America, and in parts of Canada and the Caribbean, he has
garnered a respect and acceptance for Islam in the West not
known before. The facts and details of his record of
transforming a people depicted at the extreme of a
"proto-Islamic" idea which combined Black nationalism and
religion, into a community of Muslim Americans esteemed in the
international following of Muhammed the Prophet, stands as
testimony to his courage, dedication, wisdom, and firm faith in
G-d. But even more so, the message of Islam in its true
practice delivered by him over nearly thirty years to persons of
every race, sex, and class - leaders and common people alike has
been a quiet yet resolute factor for increased respect,
understanding, and cooperation between Americans of different
ethnic and religious backgrounds. It is precisely this message
that is destined to influence America and other nations across
the globe to acknowledge and invest in their greatest single
resource, the ability, excellence, and aspirations of common
human life.
Imam W. Deen Mohammed's record of
service for the promotion of universal human excellence is well
documented as he has established direct and genuine dialogue
between the leaders of Islam, Christianity, and Judaism. His
clear and appreciable representation of the religion of Islam
and unparalleled contribution toward building respect for
Islamic life in America has merited him countless awards and
many unprecedented acknowledgments.
His lectures are published weekly in
Muslim Journal Newspaper and his videos and audio tapes are also
listed. Imam Mohammed has a syndicated television program, "W.
Deen Mohammed and Guests," and is heard locally and nationally
on the World Wide Broadcast of "Imam W. Deen Mohammed" in over
100 cities.
For more information, write or
call: The Mosque Cares, P.O. Box 1061, Calumet City, IL 60409
-- 708-798-6750.