“America’s Chickens are Coming Home to Roost”

March 15, 2008, 10:40 pm
  





by Daniel Pipes*

The Rev. Jeremiah Wright, Jr. of Chicago’s Trinity United Church of Christ, and Barack Obama’s pastor since 1988, told his congregation in a sermon on Sept. 16, 2001 that U.S. terrorism had precipitated Al-Qaeda’s attack. “We bombed Hiroshima, we bombed Nagasaki, and we nuked far more than the thousands in New York and the Pentagon, and we never batted an eye. We have supported state terrorism against the Palestinians and black South Africans, and now we are indignant because the stuff we have done overseas is now brought right back to our own front yards.” Wright concluded that “America’s chickens are coming home to roost.”

That last phrase has a history.


Barack Obama and the Rev. Jeremiah Wright.

On Dec. 1, 1963, immediately after the assassination of John F. Kennedy, the Nation of Islam leader Malcolm X responded to that event with the comment that, “Being an old farm boy myself, chickens coming home to roost never did make me sad; they’ve always made me glad,” prompting the audience, according to a newspaper account, “to loud applause and laughter.” When, shortly after, Malcolm X explained his comment in an interview with Louis Lomax, his views closely anticipated Wright’s:

I meant that the death of Kennedy was the result of a long line of violent acts, the culmination of hate and suspicion and doubt in this country. You see, Lomax, this country has allowed white people to kill and brutalize those they don’t like. The assassination of Kennedy is a result of that way of life and thinking. The chickens came home to roost; that’s all there is to it. America—at the death of the President—just reaped what it had been sowing

Malcolm X’s remark featured the next day in the New York Times (”MALCOLM X SCORES U.S. AND KENNEDY; Likens Slaying to ‘Chickens Coming Home to Roost’”) and led not just to his being silenced by Elijah Muhammad, head of the Nation of Islam, but it contributed to Malcolm X being thrown out of the Nation of Islam altogether, and then to his becoming a normative Muslim. Through the decades, “chickens coming home to roost” became one of his most famous remarks; it featured prominently, for example, in the 1992 Spike Lee movie, Malcolm X.


Malcolm X

Comments: (1) There can be no doubt that Wright knows of the Malcolm X statement and, conscious or not, forty-five years later, chose to echo, repeat, and confirm it in the context of another new American tragedy. (2) In 1963, Malcolm X denigrated the president; in 2008, Jeremiah Wright is closely tied to a presidential candidate – not a sign of progress.

*Daniel Pipes Weblog
March 13, 2008
http://www.danielpipes.org/blog/829
Cross-posted with permission



Related: Political Correctness, Elections, History


3 Responses to ““America’s Chickens are Coming Home to Roost””

  1. “America’s Chickens are Coming Home to Roost” « The Avid Editor’s Insights Says:

    […] Posted on March 16, 2008. “America’s Chickens are Coming Home to Roost”: ” […]

  2. Donnie I. Ali Says:

    Mr. Pipes,

    Very humbly, and with all due respect to your scholarship, I would like to offer some historical correction to your article titles “America’s Chickens are Coming Home to Roost”. Malik El-Shabazz nee Malcolm X, was never the “leader” of the Nation of Islam. His title was National Spokesman of The Honorable Elijah Muhammad, and Minister of Muhammad Temple of Islam no.7. Futhermore, Shabazz was never thrown out of the Nation of Islam, he resigned from his posistion as Minister, after being suspended from his duties within the Temple of Islam indefinately.

    As to Shabazz’s “becoming a normative Muslim”, that is a matter of debate. After Shabazz’s exit from the Nation of Islam, he traveled throughout Africa and various portions of Western Asia. Shabazz met with several revolutionary African leaders such as Gamal Abdul Nasser, who among many other things, came to power in Egypt via a coup. Nasser also maintained an excellent relationship with the Soviet Union. In fact, it was the Soviet MiG which was used by the Egyptian Air Force to strike Israeli civilians during the Six-Day War of 1967.

    Until is death in 1965, Shabazz vowed, planned, and pursued the filing of a law suit against the United States for “Crimes against Humanity”. In one of Malik El-Shabazz’s more famous speeches titled “The Ballot or the Bullet”, Shabazz states that America is on the brink of a “bloody revolution”. Moreover, he stated, “there is no such thing as a non-violent revolution…you don’t have a revolution where you love your enemy…”. Again, the idea that these statements qualify Malik El-Shabazz as “normative” is one built on questionable foundations.

    History is best qualified to condemn or exonerate the statements made by Malcolm X and The Reverend Dr. Jeremiah Wright. Let us be careful though, to represent history with all deliberate correctness.

  3. don knots Says:

    did anybody in the world trade center deserve the rotten scum flying air planes into buildings. Or as Wright, OBama and Malcolm X would say the chickens are coming home to roost.

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