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Islam In America Shari'ah: The Term Paper

(Prophet Noble Drew Ali) Ali came to Chicago in 1925 and his movement took on its greatest force here. He saw Marcus Garvey as a motivation for his own work. Ali, like Garvey preached the significance of forming unity among all the people of the African Diaspora. Marcus Garvey was particularly acclaimed as a John the Baptist who set the way for the emergence of Noble Drew Ali at Moorish Science Temple meetings. (What was the relationship between Noble Drew Ali and Marcus Garvey?)

Warith al-Din Muhammad:

Many foreign countries have exercised substantial power on the lives of American Muslims by ascertaining to increase the religious knowledge. Saudi Arabia has enhanced the image of Islam in the West. It has supported the actions of the Muslim World League -- MWL in America. Saudi Arabia has also promoted good relations with the Afro-American Muslim community. In all possibility, under foreign pressure, Warith al-Din Muhammad started a sequence of reforms to bring his movement near to conventional Islam. He discarded many of his father's deviating teachings regarding the superiority of the blacks over the whites. The movement that used to support racist ideology now publicizes Islamic brotherhood due to the force applied by foreign forces. (The Politics of External Influences on American Muslims)

Warith al-Din also renamed the temples as mosques and declared the savior's day as celebrating the birthday of the founder of the movement who was Wallace D. Mohammed. He has also given regular appearances on television with religious bureaucrats from Saudi Arabia. Warith al-Din has also widened his organization to outer power, which had until then looked at the Nation with much doubt. Warith...

By the Gulf States of Saudi Arabia, Abu Dhabi and Qatar in 1978. (The Politics of External Influences on American Muslims)
Kunta Kinte:

Kunta Kinte is the main figure in Alex Haley's 1976 book Roots. According to research, by Haxley, Kinte was 17 when he was arrested and taken to America as a slave on board the ship named Lord Ligonier in 1767. Roots sketch the lives of Kinte and his children down to Haley himself who was Kinte's great great-grandson. (Kunta Kinte: (www.who2.com)

As per the research done by Alex Haley, Kunta Kinte was an African from The Gambian town of Jufferee. As per the Haley family history he was vended into slavery in a town called Naplis. Haley's research found a slave ship, the Lord Ligonier, which drifted from Gambia River on July 5, 1767, with 140 imprisoned Gambians. It came to Annapolis, Maryland on September 29 in the year 1767, with only 98 alive. Haley found that one of those survivors was a seventeen-year-old Kunta Kinte. The Africans were vended into slavery. Kinte would have been bought at the ship or in one of the local inns or restaurants. He was then taken to a farm in Virginia where he carried on with his American heritage. Kinte's coming in Annapolis is representational of the slave trade period when millions of African men, woman and children were imprisoned and sent to the New World. Kinte was alive to narrate his story, a story that was narrated in the book Roots by his descendent Alex Haley. (Kunta Kinte: (www.kintehaley.org)

Tablighis movement:

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