Politics & Government
Malcolm X Edges NU Educator Louise Pound For Induction Into The Nebraska Hall Of Fame
The civil rights leaders was born in Omaha.

By Paul Hammel
September 12, 2022
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LINCOLN β Applause broke out, and some tears were even shed Monday, as Malcolm X was voted in as the next inductee to the Nebraska Hall of Fame.
It was the third time the civil rights leader β who was born in Omaha β had been nominated, and he was inducted on a 4-3 vote.
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Ron Hull, the chairman of the committee and a longtime public television broadcaster, cast the deciding vote, saying that Malcolm X continues to have influence worldwide with his story of transformation and reformation.
βAll men are created equal, but we have to be reminded of that, because people have to fight for these rights all their lives β¦ and thatβs one reason my vote goes for Malcolm X,β Hull said.
Applause, tears
Applause broke out among most of the 30 people attending the commission meeting at the State History Museum in Lincoln.
Yshall Davis, a volunteer with the Malcolm X Memorial Foundation, pumped her fist in the air and wiped away tears as Hull stated his vote, which gave Malcolm X a majority of the seven-member commission.
βIt says a lot about what Nebraska is becoming,β Davis said of the vote by the commission, which has no members of color.
Davis, 39, said that reading the βAutobiography of Malcolm Xβ changed her life from that of a gang member who was βon the wrong pathβ to a community activist working for the Heartland Workers Center and an advocate during the more than decade-long campaign to get Malcolm X the state recognition.
βPeople changeβ
The T-shirt she wore, featuring a picture of Malcolm X in prison and one as an Islamic preacher, stated βPeople Change. Donβt give up on our youth.β
Malcolm X will become the first African-American to be inducted into the Nebraska Hall of Fame. The hall currently has 26 members, of which five are female and three are Native American.
The initial vote by the commission was four votes for Malcolm X and three votes for Louise Pound, an educator, folklorist and author at the University of Nebraska β and the only woman in NU history to earn a letter in a menβs sport (tennis). Howard Hanson, the third finalist and a Pulitzer Prize-winning composer, did not receive a vote.
Vote changed to unanimous
Later, one of the commission members who had voted for Pound, retired Peru State history professor Sara Crook, moved that the nomination of Malcolm X be made unanimous.
Crook said she had initially voted for Pound because Pound had spent her entire professional life in Nebraska and considered herself βa Nebraskan.β That was unlike Malcolm X, whose family fled harassment in Omaha from the Klu Klux Klan when their son, then Malcolm Little, was just over a year old.
When Hull cast his deciding vote, he said that βwhere you are born is where you are from,β noting that he had voted to induct Malcolm X a decade ago, when Alvin Saunders Johnson, an educator and co-founder of the New School in New York City was chosen.
βThere are a lot of disenfranchised people in this country,β Hull said. βMalcolm X turned his life around and was pivotal in the civil rights movement in our country. And he still has impact around the world.β
βHe was such an example. I think other people can say, βWe donβt have to stay in this rut,β β he added.
Commission member Aaron Wyatt of Lincoln said he voted for Malcolm X because his story of βchange, transformation, reformationβ is an important one to convey to schoolchildren who visit the State Capitol. Jill Dolberg, the interim director of History Nebraska, made similar comments in casting her vote.
Tim Heller of Omaha, another commission member, cast his vote for Malcolm X via an internet hookup from a pub in Dublin, where he was vacationing with his son. Heller said he talked to βfriends and other folksβ about his vote, and even asked around in Ireland and found βoverwhelming supportβ for Malcolm X.
βShockedβ he wasnβt in hall already
βThey were shocked that he wasnβt already in the Hall of Fame,β Heller said.
Born in 1925 in Omaha, Malcolm Little spent his early life in foster homes and living with relatives after his father died and his mother was hospitalized.
He was a street hustler and a criminal, who landed in prison for theft in 1946. But that is where he began reading and converted to the Nation of Islam. He became a minister and was a major figure in the civil rights movement during the 1960s, preaching black empowerment, and was a spokesman for the Nation of Islam.
After completing a pilgrimage to Mecca, Malcolm X adopted the name el-Hajj Malik el-Shabazz and denounced the Nation of Islam, which led to death threats against him. He was assassinated in 1965 in New York City, and three Nation members were charged.
Criticized by some
He was criticized by some for preaching that white people were βdevilsβ and for calling Martin Luther King βa chump.β
But advocates for Malcolm Xβs induction, during a public hearing in Omaha in July, said he sought βpeaceful changeβ and emphasized that African Americans needed to empower themselves, become educated and seek freedom, justice and equality βby any means necessary.β
That phrase was widely shared after the 1992 movie βMalcolm X,β directed by Spike Lee and starring Denzel Washington.
The movie was based on the Alex Haley book, βThe Autobiography of Malcolm X,β which was named as one of the 10 most important nonfiction books of the 20th century by Time magazine.
Birthplace museum
Several cities across the U.S. celebrate βMalcolm X Day,β and the Malcolm X Foundation has established a museum at his birthsite in North Omaha.
Hull said the next step is to commission a bronze bust of Malcolm X to be installed in the State Hall of Fame, which is in the second-floor hallways of the State Capitol. He said some state funds, perhaps as much as $20,000, had been set aside for the bust, which would be unveiled in 2024.
Former State Sen. Ernie Chambers, a longtime advocate for Malcolm X, shouted from the audience that even though he wasnβt a man of means, he would donate $1,000 to the sculpture.
Later, Chambers said that sometimes people canβt hear what he says and that he really meant to pledge $2,000 to the Malcolm X bust.
βIβll give $500,β said someone else in the audience. βIβll give $50,β said another.
JoAnna LeFlore-Ejike, the executive director of the Malcolm X Memorial Foundation, said her first step will be to notify Malcolm Xβs family of the honor.
βItβs overdue,β she said.
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