Malcolm Little's life encompassed the Great Depression, World War II, and the Civil Right's Movement. His parents, Earl and and Louise Little have always told him, along with his brothers and sisters (Wilfred, Hilda, Philbert, Reginald, Wesley, and Yvonne), that they can achieve anything. 'Up, Up, You mighty Race!" - by Marcus Garvey- was preached to them through their parents. However, as Malcolm grows up, he realizes what his parents told him before, was a pack of lies. He got in trouble for stealing food in Lansing to put food on the table, otherwise they would have starved, and instead of being let off the hook as he expected, the police and people around him showed no mercy on him/his family. The result of his action, was his family split up by the government. The government put the children in all different foster homes and sent their mother to the States (Michigan) Asylum because she was "crazy" and deemed unfit for her to keep acting as a mother to her own children! I find this astonishing and just absurd- she provided their family with food, shelter, water, clothes, and money daily! She may have not had ample amounts of food like the other white families surrounding her in their neighborhood, but she lost her husband, it was the Great Depression, and she received unfair work pay because of her skin color. She showed love, taught them about black power/history, and treated her children as like any other ordinary mother would. The government just wanted to get her and their family out of the house so they can later sell their land to a white family with higher pay. 6 years before, Malcolm's/the children's father was murdered on the railroad tracks to what was believed to be an "accident". In the black community, they knew the truth- Earl Little was murdered by the Ku Klux Klan (aka the Black Legion) for his preaches about black power/greatness and standing up for equality. The white either refused to believe this or sided with the KKK- either way they disregarded Earl Little's murder completely and there was no further investigation.
His father has been murdered, his mother taken away, his dreams of becoming a lawyer have gotten him laughed out of school, and his brothers and sisters have been relocated away from him. Malcolm thinks there's no point in trying anymore and he becomes lured by the nightlife in the big cities of Boston and New York, so he escapes Lansing and decides to go live with his half-sister, Ella, for a little while. He dives into a world of fancy suits, jazz, girls, reefer, drugs, and crime. Malcolm's efforts of leaving the past have worked so far, but eventually is catching up with him as he enters dangerous territory belonging to West Indian Archie (a known Hustler and criminal) as his small-time hustling spins out of control. Deep down, Malcolm is smarter than he appears during his teenage/youth years- he knows that the freedom he's currently found is only an illusion that stays temporarily- and that he can't run forever from reality. Soon, his criminal acts of hustling and theft get caught by the police and he is sent to jail, along with his other friends who participated in his activities with him, for 6 years. The time Malcolm spends in prison sheds a new light on what was his old dark life. When Malcolm was 6 years old, he took the biggest punch of his life (his father's murder) and he still hasn't figured out how to get up yet. Malcolm has tried so hard to forget about his history, instead of rather learning how to deal with it and move on. Malcolm is angry at whites for having it good while blacks everywhere are struggling and suffering beneath their nose. In desperation, he writes a letter to the Honorable Elijah Muhammad. His family just now has found wisdom in Muhammad's teachings, which, to Malcolm, this guy sounds very much like his father.
"I don't want to fight Papa any longer, to forget him. I want to remember. I want to come home, " (344).
Soon after, Malcolm receives a letter back from Elijah Muhammad. His black power inside his soul has been put back in place. It doesn't matter what he has been called (ex: Son, Brother, Negro, Malcolm, Nigger, Red, Homeboy, Detroit Red, or 22843), a number is all he is now. He can rise out of this prison hole to become a man of his own choosing and fulfill his father's left footsteps.
"The guards may come for me. The devil may come. The chains and the darkness. All the wrongs of the world may come. The noose. Every force that thirsts for the destruction of the black man in America.
I am my father's son. They will always come for me. But I will never succumb, " (348).
"X" is a fictional novel based on historical text/facts/history. Most of the characters are real, but some people/events are fiction. Ilyasah Shabazz is the third daughter of Malcolm X and is a civil right's activist like her father. Grief, pain, and confusion prevented Malcolm from seeing his father's footsteps laid out for him in his youth, but overtime/the end Malcolm embraced his destiny and became one of the most powerful/popular civil right's black activist. This was a very good novel and I highly recommend everyone to go down this long and unforgettable journey!