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  1. 23 de mar. de 2007 · 4.29. 49 ratings4 reviews. In The Name Of Allah: A History of Clarence 13X and The Five Percenters is the first definitive history every written about this powerful youth movement. Thousands of young Blacks and Latinos have pledged allegiance to the philosophy of the Five Percenters. Their influence has permeated throughout the streets of urban ...

  2. Clarence Smith (aka 13x) Clarence Smith (AKA 13x) Part 1 of 3 View. Clarence Smith (AKA 13x) Part 2 of 3 View. Clarence Smith (AKA 13x) Part 3 of 3 View. Filed under: Gangs/Extremist Groups. Vault Links: FOIA Home. Vault Home. Search Vault. Recently Added. A-Z Index. Categories ( click to retract )

  3. 16 de dic. de 2020 · Clarence Smith, also known as Allah and Clarence 13X, was the founder of the “Five Percent Nation of Islam.” Smith was born on February 22, 1928. As a young teenager moved from Danville, Virginia, to Harlem, where he joined the Nation of Islam.

  4. What we see through an examination of one of Malcolm X’s greatest acolytes, Clarence 13X Smith,1 is that African American rhetors have used God’s blackness as a refracted image of the human self to facilitate a conversation about racism and the shifts within the African American worldview about the relationship of self to society. 1Clarence ...

  5. This essay links Clarence 13X Smith and the Five Percent Nation of the Gods and Earths to Malcolm X’s rhetoric about the Black Man as God. Smith, one of Malcolm’s earliest students and chief lieutenants, demonstrates the use of Malcolm’s “Black Man is God” trope as an embodied rhetoric, highlighting its relationship to the African American freedom struggle.

  6. History of Clarence 13X and the Five Percenters, Volume 2 2009 0982161824, 9780982161821 Mountain Wales , Rhodri Owen, 2008, Mountains, 47 pages. A title in Graffeg's mini series, a souvenir of Wales, suitably displayed in point-of-sale displays in bookshops, gift shops and Tourist

  7. 23 de feb. de 2023 · 2. Clarence 13X: Malcolm was not moving like a man from the streets. According to Hebekah, Clarence 13X said, “‘Malcolm was making some mistakes that a man with street sense doesn’t make. You cannot have a man with that kind of people following him, as dangerous as these people are, you cannot just get up and say what you want to say.