Nation of Islam Minister Randy Muhammad
Min. Randy Muhammad heads Mosque 11
Randy Muhammad’s involvement with the Nation of Islam began almost by happenstance, when, as a 16-year-old, he bought a cassette tape of one of Minister Louis Farrakhan’s speeches and was Intrigued by Farrakhan’s message of self-empowerment.
Muhammad first heard of Farrakhan in the music of Public Enemy MC Chuck D.
“He had a complicated lyrical flow,” Muhammad said of Chuck D. “He kept dropping the name of Farrakhan in his lyrics.”
The Farrakhan cassette further piqued the teen’s interest.
“I had never listened to a sermon before,” he said. “I wasn’t religious. But I was captivated by him. He had this message of unity, of Black, brown and red people working together. As a Puerto Rican of African descent, that appealed to me.”
It wasn’t a likely fit — the Nation of Islam’s insistence on clean living contrasted with the teenager’s admittedly dissolute lifestyle. The eighth child of parents who were born in Arroyo, Puerto Rico, Muhammad said he and his brothers began running the streets after their father left home. Living in what was then the Orchard Park housing project, Muhammad was a founding member of the Trailblazers gang that operated in the development.
“I was out there doing what the
young brothers were up to — selling drugs and getting high,” Muhammad
said in a Banner interview last week, sitting in a carpeted office next
to Muhammad’s Mosque No. 11 in Grove Hall, wearing the standard NOI
uniform — polished black shoes, crisp charcoal-gray suit, bowtie, and
gold star-and-crescent ring.
Oddly
enough, some of the skills Muhammad displayed in his teenage years —
the lyricism of his rapping and his ability to be a leader, albeit in a
youth gang —– helped him move up through the ranks of Mosque No. 11. In
2018, he was tapped to replace Minister Don Muhammad as the leader of
the local NOI community.
It’s
a position Muhammad said he doesn’t take lightly. The mosque was among
the first opened by the late Elijah Muhammad. Founded as a study group
in 1952, the chapter opened its first temple on nearby Intervale Street
in 1957.
Don Muhammad,
who led the mosque from the late 1970s, served as an advisor to
Farrakhan and served as a leader of the Nation of Islam on the East
Coast.
While Randy
Muhammad was still a teenager, Minister Don put him to work in the
Mosque’s prison ministry, a line of work that eventually led to his
becoming a chaplain in the South Bay House of Correction.
Randy
Muhammad learned to look up to Minister Don, who excelled as a
peacemaker, helping to broker truces between warring gangs and to build
bridges between the mosque, the community and the police.
“As
the leader of the mosque, Minister Don always had a healthy and good
working relationship with everyone,” he said. “He was very diplomatic,
but in such a beautiful way that he never compromised our core beliefs
and principles.”
While
Minister Don preferred to use diplomacy to settle squabbles, anyone who
knew the Nation knew his followers were willing to use their hands when
needed. In one incident that became legendary in the lore of the local
NOI chapter, in the mid-1980s, Muhammad and his fellow NOI members
disarmed and beat members of a New York gang that had insisted on
selling drugs in the vicinity of the Grove Hall mosque over the
minister’s objections.
Now occupying the seat Minister Don long held, Randy Muhammad said he is humbled.
“Coming
behind Minister Don, who was one of the greatest men in the Nation of
Islam, is a daunting task,” he said. “These are very big shoes to fill.”
As the leader of Muhammad’s Mosque No. 11, Randy Muhammad oversees the chapter’s various ministries and study groups.
In
non-pandemic times, he delivers the Sunday sermon, Wednesday evening
lectures, Friday night study groups and Saturday prayer services. The
mosque has ministries in nine state prisons and runs a food pantry that
distributes produce and dairy from local farms.
The
mosque also runs a science, technology, engineering, arts and math
program for teens and has launched a new initiative to reach out to
people experiencing homelessness and substance abuse in Nubian Square.
Randy
Muhammad and others in the mosque also have continued their outreach to
gang members in an effort to reduce violence and negotiate truces.
While
crime is down and the days when New York gangs tried to turn Grove Hall
into an open-air drug market are long gone, Randy Muhammad said the NOI
members remain committed to keeping the area clean.
“There
are those who test us and have to be corrected,” he said. “We’re not
going to tolerate things happening on our property or in our community.”
But the main work of the mosque, he said, remains one of uplifting members of the community.
“What
gives me the most satisfaction is seeing people transforming their
lives,” he said. “I’ve been in the prison ministry for more than 27
years. You see people who you’ve met in maximum-security facilities, or
even in solitary, transform from being aggressive and violent to being
caring, successful citizens. Men are able to become husbands, fathers
and mentors. To me, that’s the greatest.”