The Honorable and Eminent, al-Imam Warith Deen Mohammed
(born Wallace D. Muhammad on October 30, 1933,
the son of Clara and Elijah Muhammad)
is an influential American Muslim leader with numerous awards.
Imam W. Deen Mohammed was collectively elected as
leader of his community after the 1975 passing of his father Elijah
Muhammad, the messenger, leader, and builder of the Nation of Islam.
Elijah Muhammad used Muhammad, and Imam Warith Deen Mohammed
now uses Mohammed.
Here's a list of common variants of his name:
W.D. Muhammad
Wallace D. Muhammad
Wallace Delaney Muhammad
Wallace Deen Muhammad
Warith Deen Muhammad
Warithuddin Muhammad
Warith Deen Muhammad
W. Deen Mohammed
Imam
Warith Deen Mohammed was
accepted by followers of the Nation of Islam as its leader, after his
father's death. After completing high
school, Imam Warith Deen Mohammed began working in the NOI hierarchy and
then formed the American Muslim Society
which transitioned the followers of the Nation of
Islam to traditional Islam.
Continuing his reform movement within NOI, W. D. Muhammad publicly
shunned his father's theology and black separatist views. He forged ties
with other American Muslim organizations and renamed his own the World
Community of al-Islam in the West in 1976. Two years later, he changed the
name of his organization to American Muslim Mission.
Farrakhan disagreed publicly with Imam Warith Deen Mohammed in 1977 over
NOI's move toward Sunni Islam, and took a minority of NOI members with him
into a splinter group.
W.D.
Muhammad's embrace of mainstream Islam was rewarded with political and
economic benefits. Imam Warith Deen Mohammed resigned as spiritual leader of
the American Muslim Mission in 1978. Headquartered in Hazel Crest, Ill.,
"Muslim Journal" was known as "Muhammad Speaks" when it was the official
publication of the Nation of Islam.
In
1981, Farrakhan announced restoration of the "old" Nation of Islam, and went
forward with Elijah Muhammad's NOI teachings.
Imam Warith Deen Mohammed
has been recognized with numerous awards and high
honors. In April, 2005, Imam Mohammed participated in a program that
featured a conversation with Imam W. Deen Mohammed and Cardinal George of
the Catholic Archdiocese.
Imam W. Deen Mohammed
with numerous awardsrepresents African American Moslems as
well as all moslems in North America.
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