Malcolm X Went to Mecca — and Came Back a Different Man

For much of his public life, Malcolm X spoke with certainty sharpened by anger. His words divided the world cleanly—oppressor and oppressed, white and Black, enemy and victim. Then, in 1964, he boarded a plane and traveled to Mecca. What happened there did not erase his past, but it cracked open something far more dangerous than rage: doubt. When Malcolm returned, those closest to him noticed the change immediately. His tone shifted. His language widened. The man who came back was not quieter—but he was no longer the same. The Malcolm the World Thought It Knew Before Mecca, Malcolm X was the most uncompromising voice of the Nation of Islam. He rejected integration, distrusted white allies, and framed racism as…
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