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Tynnetta Muhammad
Tynnetta Muhammad
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Tynnetta Muhammad (10 May 1941 – 16 February 2015) was an American writer. In the 1960s, she wrote articles and columns for the Nation of Islam (NOI) newsletter Muhammad Speaks. She was one of Elijah Muhammad’s four wives and mother of four of his children.[1]

Key Information

After Louis Farrakhan revived the NOI, she wrote the weekly column of NOI theology and numerology, Unveiling the Number 19, in The Final Call.[2] She was regularly referred to as "Mother Tynnetta Muhammad" in the movement; she is considered one of the "Mothers of the Faithful."

Early life and education

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Born Tynnetta Alethea Nelson, she grew up in Detroit.[3][4] After her conversion to the NOI in 1958, she worked as a secretary for Elijah Muhammad.[5] Under the name Tynnetta Deanar she wrote for the Women in Islam column in Muhammad Speaks.[6] In some publications her first name is spelled "Tynetta".

Family

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She gave birth to four of his children; Madeeah, Ishmael, Rasul, and Ahmad.[7][8]

Ideology

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In Muhammad Speaks

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In the 1960s, Tynnetta wrote regularly in Muhammad Speaks on women's issues, and teaching about modesty and value of virtue. She concentrated on the subjects of proper deportment, dress and behavior of a female Muslim. She emphasized modest attire and cautioned "the Black Woman" to put away "the short western style of dress and social habits."[9] She also stated that "the white woman" apparently "does not feel the sense of modesty in the strict manner of her darker associates".[10]

In addition to her women's column she wrote articles quoting Biblical and Quranic passages to affirm Muhammad's prophetic status. She defended black separatism on the grounds that "as all bona fide divine spokesmen of the past, the Honorable Elijah Muhammad is carrying out the divine work of separating our people from the nation and people responsible for our captivity."[11]

In The Final Call

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After departure of Elijah Muhammad in 1975, Tynnetta rejected the reforms of his son Warith Deen Muhammad and sided with Louis Farrakhan's faction, becoming one of his earliest supporters.[12] She praised Farrakhan as a great visionary and as the modern equivalent of John of Patmos. In her writings in the 1980s and 1990s, she became increasingly preoccupied with The Wheel sightings and a supposed forthcoming apocalypse, predicted by Elijah Muhammad, in which a "Mother Plane" from space would destroy the white race. She predicted this event using numerological analyses based on the sacred number 19, an idea derived from Rashad Khalifa.[13]

She stated that the UFO was seen after the 1986 bombing of Tripoli. She also argued that the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster in the same year was divine punishment delivered on the USA, because "the aim and purpose of America's Space Program beginning in the 1960s with the landing on the Moon in 1969, was to prepare for war against the Great Mother Ship and its companion wheels harnessing an entire New Civilization and an Advanced Technology that is not of this world."[14]

Her predictions were most fully communicated in her magnum opus entitled The Comer by Night in 1986, in which she asserts that Elijah Muhammad is still alive, living in a "space craft".[13]

By the early 1990s she was arguing that it would be "the final decade" before the apocalypse, which would occur in 2001.[15] The September 11 terrorist attacks, came to be viewed by some as confirmation of her predictions, with Muhammed herself claiming the destruction of the World Trade Center was accompanied by UFO manifestations.[16]

Tynnetta Muhammad continued to support Farrakhan's vision for the Nation of Islam until her death on 16 February 2015.[17]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Tynnetta Muhammad (born Tynnetta Alethea Nelson; May 10, 1941 – February 16, 2015) was an American author, journalist, and religious figure within the (NOI), where she served as a wife of its leader and a principal supporter of Louis Farrakhan's efforts to rebuild the organization in the late 1970s. Born in , , she accepted under 's teachings at age 16 and became a registered member of the NOI. As the first Muslim woman columnist associated with the group, she wrote articles and columns for NOI publications, including in the 1960s and later "Unveiling the Number 19" in The Final Call, focusing on theological interpretations, numerical patterns in the Qur'an, and cosmological themes central to NOI doctrine. Muhammad authored several books exploring these subjects, such as connections between Islamic scripture, ancient cultures, and modern phenomena, while traveling extensively across the world—including multiple visits to the —to disseminate NOI teachings and foster cultural links among diverse communities, including Indigenous and African groups. Beyond writing, she distinguished herself as a businesswoman, fashion designer, , and , embodying a model of scholarly and artistic engagement with Elijah Muhammad's principles of and . Her work emphasized bridging families and nations through shared spiritual knowledge, contributing to initiatives like the Millions More Movement by promoting unity across racial and cultural lines.

Early life

Birth and upbringing

Tynnetta Muhammad was born Tynnetta Alethea Nelson on May 10, 1941, in , . She was raised in the city's Black community during a period of significant industrial expansion and demographic shifts driven by the Great Migration, which brought large numbers of from the rural South to urban centers like for manufacturing jobs. Nelson grew up on LaSalle Boulevard in , attending Custer Elementary School, which was later renamed Thurgood Marshall Elementary. From an early age, she demonstrated intellectual curiosity as a voracious reader with interests in diverse world cultures, reflecting the multicultural exposures available in mid-20th-century 's neighborhoods. This environment, marked by economic opportunities alongside and housing restrictions, shaped the formative years of many Black families in the city prior to heightened civil rights activism.

Conversion to Nation of Islam

Tynnetta Muhammad, born Tynnetta Alethea Nelson on May 10, 1941, first encountered the teachings of during her senior year of high school in , , in 1957. At age 16, she embraced these teachings, registering as a student under the 's framework, which emphasized the divine guidance of Master Fard Muhammad as interpreted by . Her conversion reflected broader appeals of the Nation of Islam amid the racial strife of 1950s , an industrial hub marked by segregation, economic disparity for Black residents, and events like the 1943 race riot that underscored systemic oppression. The NOI's doctrine of Black self-reliance, from white society, and reclamation of divine identity as the "original people" provided Muhammad with a framework for personal empowerment and escape from assimilated degradation, viewing Elijah Muhammad's message as a revelation of higher knowledge and self-improvement. Upon graduating high school in 1958, Muhammad relocated to , where she assumed an initial role as a secretary to , immersing herself in the NOI's organizational structure and advanced study programs. This early involvement, including mental discipline and direct exposure to NOI leadership, solidified her commitment, positioning her as a dedicated follower in the community's efforts toward collective uplift and separation.

Personal life

Marriage to Elijah Muhammad

Tynnetta Muhammad, then known as Tynnetta Deanar, entered into a secret marital union with , the leader of the Nation of Islam, as one of several such arrangements involving his secretaries and close associates. This marriage was part of 's private practice of , which contrasted with the organization's public emphasis on strict moral codes and monogamous ideals for members. The secretive nature of the union shielded it from broader scrutiny within the NOI and external observers, allowing Elijah Muhammad to maintain authority amid growing organizational challenges, including internal power struggles and federal investigations during the 1960s. As a wife, Tynnetta Muhammad gained privileged access to Elijah Muhammad's decision-making circles, reinforcing her role as a loyal supporter of his leadership at a time when the NOI faced defections and ideological pressures. This marital bond, conducted discreetly to preserve doctrinal consistency and hierarchical stability, underscored the personal dynamics that sustained 's control over the NOI's expansion and resilience against adversities in that era.

Family and children

Tynnetta Muhammad was the mother of four children with : Madeeah Muhammad, , Rasul Muhammad, and Ahmad Muhammad. These children were raised within the Nation of Islam (NOI), where familial emphasized adherence to NOI doctrines, including , moral discipline, and theological principles derived from 's teachings. As part of Elijah Muhammad's polygamous family structure, which included multiple wives and numerous children across unions, Tynnetta Muhammad played a role in fostering unity among the . NOI tributes describe her efforts in "bridging the families," involving travel and interpersonal mediation to maintain cohesion amid the complexities of , as sanctioned within NOI practices. Her commitment to familial loyalty extended to supporting her children's involvement in NOI activities, with emerging as a prominent figure in the organization's and .

Career

Journalism and publications

In 1959, Tynnetta Muhammad was selected as the first Muslim woman columnist for the , the Los Angeles Herald Dispatch, and , marking a pioneering role for women in (NOI) affiliated media. Her columns, often published under the name Tynnetta Deanar, appeared regularly in throughout the 1960s, focusing on topics such as women's roles in , modesty, and moral virtue. Muhammad's contributions extended into later NOI publications, including a highly popular weekly column in The Final Call, the successor to Muhammad Speaks. Following her death in 2015, The Final Call has continued to reprint her articles, such as those exploring prayer, Qur'anic interpretations, and spiritual themes, preserving her voice in the outlet's ongoing issues. These republications, often dated from her original writings spanning decades, underscore her sustained influence within NOI journalism.

Other professional roles

Tynnetta Muhammad served as an educator within the Nation of Islam, focusing on disseminating its teachings through structured lessons and cultural programs. She collaborated with educators to adapt NOI's Supreme Wisdom materials into universal curricula, emphasizing and spiritual development for students. Her educational efforts aligned with Elijah Muhammad's directives for community upliftment, though conducted informally without certified teaching qualifications. As a , Muhammad created music promoting NOI principles, operating as a self-taught without formal training in theory or , which she attributed to . Her compositions included patriotic and spiritual songs for NOI members, such as recordings of "The Muslim Song and March of Victory" produced in settings like Cairo's television studios. These works served ceremonial and motivational roles within the organization, reflecting her multifaceted vocational contributions. Muhammad also pursued research and investigative roles framed as scholarly inquiry into NOI-aligned themes, earning descriptions as a "" and "investigator" in organizational contexts. This involved compiling historical and theological documents, such as analyses of NOI origins, but lacked peer-reviewed academic validation or conventional scientific credentials. Her approach integrated spiritual intuition with exploratory methods, prioritizing doctrinal affirmation over empirical standards external to NOI.

Ideological contributions

Promotion of Nation of Islam theology

Tynnetta Muhammad advanced the 's core doctrines by disseminating Elijah Muhammad's teachings on black and , framing them as practical responses to the causal effects of white supremacist domination throughout history. She promoted the NOI's "Do for Self" ethos, which demands economic independence, community-owned enterprises, and rejection of dependency on white-controlled institutions, as a pathway to reclaim black agency lost through enslavement and systemic exclusion. In her articles and columns, Muhammad defended as a divine strategy for survival and , urging the establishment of autonomous territories to escape ongoing and rebuild a rooted in original ingenuity. This positioned integration as illusory relief that sustains historical subjugation, contrasting with NOI's for modeled on prophetic separations in scripture. Muhammad reinforced NOI's racial theology by upholding Elijah Muhammad's account of the "Original Black Man" as humanity's founders, with the Yakub narrative depicting whites as a 6,600-year-old grafted race engineered for and domination, explaining persistent global inequities as inherent traits rather than mere social constructs. She integrated these elements into critiques of and Western systems, portraying NOI wisdom as a comprehensive unveiling of racial . Central to her advocacy was Elijah Muhammad's role as the eschatological messenger, divinely instructed by —NOI's of —to restore black consciousness amid America's judgment phase. Through writings like those in The Final Call, her efforts sustained theological coherence during the NOI's post-1975 revival under , aiding recovery from membership lows of under 10,000 to tens of thousands by the via reinforced doctrinal appeal to disenfranchised blacks.

Writings on mysticism and UFOs

Tynnetta Muhammad promoted the "Mother Plane," also known as the Mother Wheel, as a massive, human-engineered UFO central to eschatology, describing it in her writings as a wheel-shaped craft constructed by black scientists approximately 15,000 years ago to execute on corrupt civilizations. She asserted that this vessel, drawing from Ezekiel's biblical vision, measures one-half mile in thickness and width, revolves perpetually, and deploys 1,500 smaller saucer-shaped planes for and using advanced atomic weaponry. Muhammad linked contemporary UFO sightings to these smaller craft emanating from the Mother Plane, positioning it as Allah's "calling card" for the impending rather than extraterrestrial origins independent of NOI . In articles published in The Final Call, Muhammad explored UFO phenomena through a mystical lens, claiming government investigations into "so-called aliens" concealed the reality of NOI-predicted wheels as instruments of cosmic retribution, not benign visitors. She defended Louis Farrakhan's "more than a vision" encounter aboard a UFO—where he reportedly met —as empirical validation of the Mother Plane's existence, integrating numerological interpretations of Quranic verses and astronomical events to argue for its role in stellar descents and atomic reconfiguration for unlimited . Her book The Comer by Night (1986) further wove these elements into esoteric NOI thought, correlating comet trajectories and celestial alignments with prophetic "stars descending" as harbingers of transformation, while positing technologies enabling atomic fission into millions of fragments—far exceeding verified nuclear processes limited to dozens of fragments per event in particle accelerators. Such claims, derived from Muhammad's teachings, remain unsupported by empirical data from physics experiments, which demonstrate atomic splitting yields via predictable fission products without scalable "millions of parts" reconfiguration. Muhammad's posthumously republished pieces in The Final Call extended these ideas to alleged alien investigations, asserting UFO activity signals the activation of angelic hosts via the Mother Plane for global purification, distinct from mainstream ufology's unsubstantiated extraterrestrial hypotheses. She emphasized causal mechanisms rooted in divine engineering over speculative abduction narratives, cautioning that empirical dismissal ignores prophetic patterns in observed aerial phenomena, though no verifiable artifacts or substantiate the craft's specifications.

Controversies and criticisms

Association with NOI racial doctrines

Tynnetta Muhammad endorsed the Nation of Islam's (NOI) racial doctrines, which posit black people as the original divine race and whites as a genetically engineered "devil" race created by the scientist Yakub approximately 6,600 years ago on the island of Patmos. In her 2020 article "Why Did We Run Yakub's Made Devil from the Root of Civilization?", she invoked this foundational NOI myth to explain historical conflicts, framing the expulsion of whites from ancient black civilizations as a necessary response to their inherent opposition to black humanity. Similarly, in "The Nature of the White Race or Jinn Class of Beings and Their Opposition to the Black Man and Indigenous Family on Our Planet," she described whites as a jinn-like class predisposed to mischief and enmity toward blacks and indigenous peoples, aligning with Elijah Muhammad's teachings in Message to the Blackman in America that whites possess a genetic propensity for evil. These writings positioned anti-white rhetoric as a corrective to centuries of empirical white supremacist oppression, including slavery and colonialism, though NOI doctrine extends this to metaphysical racial inferiority rather than solely historical grievance. Through her columns in NOI publications like Muhammad Speaks during the 1960s and later in The Final Call, Muhammad reinforced these doctrines within frameworks emphasizing racial purity and traditional gender roles for black women. She advocated black self-separation from whites to preserve cultural and genetic integrity, echoing Elijah Muhammad's call for a separate black nation as a divine mandate, as articulated in her 2018 piece "A Time of Harvest, a Time of Separation," where she warned of divine judgment dividing the righteous (primarily blacks) from oppressors. Her contributions promoted black women's adherence to NOI ideals of modesty, family loyalty, and rejection of interracial mixing, framing these as bulwarks against white cultural dilution while tying female empowerment to racial uplift through economic self-reliance and moral discipline. NOI's racial , as propagated by Muhammad, contributed to by fostering self-sufficiency programs, reducing and in adherent populations, and instilling racial pride amid documented systemic —evidenced by NOI temples serving as hubs for business training and mutual aid since the 1930s. However, critics, including orthodox Muslim scholars and civil rights observers, contend these doctrines exacerbated racial division by normalizing supremacist narratives that demonize all whites indiscriminately, potentially hindering broader coalitions against injustice and echoing the very NOI decried in white society. Muhammad's unyielding defense of Elijah Muhammad's teachings post-1975, against his son Warith Deen Mohammed's shift toward racial universalism, underscored her commitment to these views despite mainstream academic and media portrayals often downplaying NOI's supremacist elements due to institutional sympathies for nationalist framing over candid scrutiny of causal racial animus.

Pseudoscientific and esoteric claims

Tynnetta Muhammad promoted the Nation of Islam's concept of the "Mother Plane," described as a massive, wheel-shaped constructed by ancient scientists, capable of deploying smaller "baby planes" for and atomic destruction, assertions rooted in Elijah Muhammad's teachings but extended through her writings and visions. These claims posit the craft as a divine instrument orbiting , visible during specific events like solar eclipses or disasters, yet no empirical observations from astronomical surveys, , or radar data have confirmed its existence, rendering it unverifiable by standard scientific methods. Muhammad further developed numerological frameworks, such as interpretations of the number 19 as a miraculous code embedded in the and cosmic events, linking it to prophetic fulfillments and UFO phenomena, including alleged abductions experienced by NOI leaders. From a causal realist perspective, such patterns lack or , as they rely on selective gematria-like correlations rather than mechanistic explanations grounded in physics or ; for instance, claims of divine atomic manipulation via the plane contradict established nuclear principles, which require verifiable energy inputs and particle interactions absent in NOI descriptions. Scholarly analyses frame these as syncretic elements blending Islamic , Afrocentric narratives, and tropes, accepted within NOI circles as revealed truth but dismissed in mainstream academia for evading empirical scrutiny. Reception outside NOI theology highlights the pseudoscientific nature of these assertions, with no peer-reviewed studies validating the Mother Plane's purported capabilities, such as sustaining 1,500 personnel or executing global judgments, which defy material limits like tensile strength for a 24-mile diameter structure under gravity and atmospheric conditions. Muhammad's endorsements, including linkages to contemporary UFO sightings, prioritize anecdotal and visionary accounts over reproducible evidence, a methodological shortfall that aligns the claims more with esoteric mythology than testable hypotheses. While NOI publications present these as factual cosmology, independent critiques note their insulation from falsification, perpetuating belief through communal reinforcement rather than data-driven validation.

Travels and international engagement

Global journeys and cultural interactions

Tynnetta Muhammad undertook extensive international travels beginning in the 1980s, often linking her expeditions to explorations of ancient roots and cultural preservation, while facilitating connections aligned with (NOI) outreach. Her journeys included visits to and in 1984, where she experienced visions extending to Mexico's Tepotzlan region and the , prompting later physical expeditions to verify these insights. These trips emphasized interactions with indigenous and spiritual leaders, aiming to promote understanding and what she described as bridging familial ties across global communities. In the late 1980s, Muhammad traveled to , establishing early ties that evolved into collaborative ventures. By , she accepted an invitation to from and Lloydine Arguelles, founders of the Foundation for the Law of Time, marking the start of joint efforts in cultural and calendrical studies. This partnership culminated in a 2001 summer expedition to the Altai Republic's Himalayan regions, where the group engaged with local scientists, including Dmitriev, and cultural officials such as Minister Elizaveta C. Yalbakova, who presented traditional Altai garments as gifts. The visit focused on discussions of , shamanic traditions like Ak-Burkhan, and potential educational exchanges between NOI affiliates and the Arguelles' foundation, fostering international networks for peace and ecological conservation. Subsequent travels reinforced these diplomatic engagements. In late 2001, Muhammad met with Russian scientists and Altai spiritual shamans, guided by indigenous leader Danile Mamiyev of the Spiritual Ecology School, visiting sites like a Buddhist honoring shaman Bo’or and advocating for biospheric preservation. Extending eastward, her November 2002 journey to Korea and , hosted by leaders Rev. and Mrs. , traversed the and built on prior visions to explore shared spiritual heritage. These interactions, including conferences with the Arguelles, emphasized NOI's message of unity amid diverse cultures, distinct from domestic activities by prioritizing physical and exploratory mobility.

Death and legacy

Final years and death

In her later years, Tynnetta Muhammad maintained active engagement with the Nation of Islam, contributing columns to The Final Call that delved into themes of , the power of as electrical thought transmission, and the dawn of a divine new world characterized by enlightenment and prosperity. These writings underscored motifs of eternal spiritual endurance and abundance through alignment with Qur'anic principles and NOI doctrine, reflecting her ongoing role as a theological interpreter. She also served as a designated spiritual assistant to Minister , appointed by her husband to aid in sustaining the movement's mission. During her final year, Muhammad resided with her granddaughter Jamilah Muhammad, imparting life lessons and NOI teachings while adhering to a routine of daily Holy Qur'an recitation, completing the text weekly to reinforce personal and communal spiritual resilience. Her health eventually declined, leading to her death on February 16, 2015, at age 73. A funeral service convened on February 25 in , —her birthplace—followed by burial at in Wayne County.

Posthumous honors and influence

In 2017, the City of officially designated a segment of Puritan Avenue at Linwood Street with the secondary name "Tynnetta Muhammad Avenue" to recognize her lifelong contributions as a , , and member of the Nation of Islam (NOI) community in her birthplace. The renaming ceremony drew hundreds of attendees, including family members and NOI representatives, underscoring her role in promoting NOI theology and cultural preservation within 's Black Muslim circles. Within the NOI, Muhammad's legacy endures through sustained tributes portraying her as a model of unwavering devotion to Elijah Muhammad's teachings and Islamic scholarship, with commemorative events and publications in The Final Call highlighting her as a foundational figure even a after her 2015 death. These honors emphasize her embodiment of NOI principles, including global outreach and esoteric interpretations of scripture, influencing contemporary members' understanding of the organization's doctrinal continuity. Her impact extends to subsequent generations, particularly her granddaughter Aida Saffiyah , whose and public endeavors explicitly draw from Tynnetta's example of resilience, , and adherence to NOI values, as articulated in interviews where Saffiyah credits her grandmother's life as a guiding force. This familial transmission sustains her influence beyond formal NOI structures, fostering creative expressions aligned with her mystical and theological emphases.

References

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