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The "Tama-Re" compound as it stood in 2002 Flag used by the Nuwaubian Nation, featuring a Star of David and an Ankh.[1] [2] [3]The Nuwaubian Nation, Nuwaubian movement, or United Nuwaubian Nation [4] [5] [6] (/ n uː ˈ w ɔː b iː ən /) is an American new religious and black supremacist movement founded and led by Dwight York, also known as Malachi Z. York. [4] [5] [6] York began founding ...
Dwight D. York [2] [3] [4] (born June 26, 1945), [1] [5] [6] also known as Malachi Z. York, [2] [3] Issa al-Haadi al-Mahdi, [3] et alii, [2] [3] [1] is an American criminal, black supremacist, pedophile, and convicted child molester, best known as the founding leader of several black Muslim groups in New York, most notably the Nuwaubian Nation, a black supremacist, new religious movement that ...
There are approximately another 400 more Nuwaubians within Putnam County (population 14,000). At this current complex the Nuwaubians have constructed an Egyptian-style village with two pyramids, obelisks, and statues of Egyptian leaders. The two pyramids are distinct in appearance and in usage. There is a gold pyramid that serves as a trade center.
An alternative version of the story was told by the Nuwaubian Nation, a black supremacist new religious movement run by Dwight York: this is set out in a roughly 1,700 page book called The Holy Tablets. In the Nuwaubian telling of the Yakub myth, 17 million years before the first of many "intergalactic battles", the ancestors of black people ...
A UK version is published by Telegram Books. In its Italian translation, the novel is retitled Islampunk. The narrator of The Taqwacores, Yusuf Ali, is a Pakistani American engineering student from Syracuse, New York , who lives off campus with a diverse group of Muslims in their house in Buffalo.
The Pursuit of the Millennium: Revolutionary Millenarians and Mystical Anarchists of the Middle Ages (1957, revised and expanded in 1970) is Norman Cohn's study of millenarian cult movements. Covering a wide span of time, Cohn's book discusses topics such as anti-Semitism and the Crusades , in addition to such sects as the Brethren of the Free ...
Clarence 13X, [a] also known as Allah the Father (born Clarence Edward Smith) [1] (February 22, 1928 – June 13, 1969), was an American religious leader and the founder of the Five-Percent Nation [b], sometimes referred to as the Nation of Gods and Earths (NGE/NOGE).
Lowe for Nova Religio writes that the book is a "fascinating example of a nonacademic telling academics what they already know with a clarity that seems like revelation". [2] Academic Jennifer Wilson for The New Republic writes that "most people who read Cultish will feel convinced they have, at some point in their lives, been in a cult ". [ 7 ]