
via Wikimedia
The fiery passion of the Nation of Islam (NOI) leader Malcolm X burned hot within Clarence 13X.
Determined to see Black men rise in his own Harlem community, though, he left the NOI and ventured to create a brand new faith that made gods out of ordinary men.
Between 1963 and 1964, Father Allah, as Clarence 13X was later known, created the Five Percenter Nation of Gods and Earths organization.
Its disciples affirmed Black men as gods and Black women as “earths,” each holding a responsibility to teach the enlightened truth.
Belonging to the ultra-exclusive “five percent” of mankind aware of this wisdom created a community-stabilizing responsibility to be self-reflective, personally accountable, and incredibly learned.
Father Allah made it his priority to connect with fatherless Black men in need of mentorship, esteem, and a purpose greater than the problems that plagued them.
When 1980s and 90s hip hop MCs made music, respected artists like Rakim, the Wu-Tang Clan, Nas, and Poor Righteous Teachers considered it their duty to speak noble Five Percenter truths - infusing rhymes with Supreme Mathematics and Alphabets, drawn straight from Father Allah’s lessons.
Although Father Allah was assassinated in June 1969, the scientists (instructors) of his Harlem-based Allah School In Mecca maintain his legacy of uplift and intellectual curiosity for the benefit of the next generation.