Michael X

Activist

Birthday August 17, 1933

Birth Sign Leo

Birthplace Belmont, Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago

DEATH DATE 1975-5-16, Port of Spain Royal Gaol, Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago (41 years old)

Nationality Spain

#29932 Most Popular

1933

Michael X (17 August 1933 – 16 May 1975), born Michael de Freitas, was a Trinidad and Tobago-born self-styled black revolutionary and civil rights activist in 1960s London.

He was also known as Michael Abdul Malik and Abdul Malik.

1957

In 1957, he emigrated to the United Kingdom, where he settled in London and worked as an enforcer and frontman for Peter Rachman, the notorious slum landlord.

He professed to dislike the role, but it paid for his lifestyle.

Appearing to look for a way out, he became involved in the radical politics and groups active in and around Notting Hill.

1958

This was after his speech at an event in Reading when he said, referring to the Notting Hill race riots: "In 1958, I saw white savages kicking black women in the streets and black brothers running away. If you ever see a white laying hands on a black woman, kill him immediately."

He also said "white men have no soul".

1960

By the mid-1960s, he had become known as Michael X. "Michael X" became a well-known exponent of Black Power in London.

1965

Writing in The Observer in 1965, Colin McGlashan called him the "authentic voice of black bitterness."

In 1965, under the name Abdul Malik, he founded the Racial Adjustment Action Society (RAAS).

1967

In 1967, he was involved with the counterculture/hippie organisation the London Free School (LFS) through his contact with John "Hoppy" Hopkins, which both helped widen the reach of the group, at least in the Notting Hill area, and create problems with local police who disliked his involvement.

Michael and the LFS were instrumental in organising the first outdoor Notting Hill Carnival later that year.

Later that year, he became the first non-white person to be charged and imprisoned under the UK's Race Relations Act, which was designed to protect Britain's Black and Asian populations from discrimination.

He was sentenced to 12 months in prison, having been arrested on the accusation of using words likely to stir up hatred "against a section of the public in Great Britain distinguished by colour".

1969

In 1969, he became the self-appointed leader of a Black Power commune on Holloway Road, North London, called the "Black House".

The commune was financed by a young millionaire benefactor, Nigel Samuel.

Michael X said, "They've made me the archbishop of violence in this country. But that 'get a gun' rhetoric is over. We're talking of really building things in the community needed by people in the community. We're keeping a sane approach."

John Lennon and Yoko Ono donated a bag of their hair to be auctioned for the benefit of the Black House.

In what the media called "the slave collar affair", businessman Marvin Brown was enticed to The Black House, viciously attacked, and made to wear a spiked "slave" collar around his neck as Michael X and others threatened him in order to extort money.

1970

The Black House closed in the autumn of 1970.

The two men found guilty of assaulting Marvin Brown were imprisoned for 18 months.

The Black House burned down in mysterious circumstances, and soon Michael X and four colleagues were arrested for extortion.

1971

His bail was paid by John Lennon in January 1971.

In February 1971, Michael X fled to his native Trinidad and Tobago, where he started an agricultural commune devoted to Black empowerment 16 mi east of the capital, Port of Spain.

"The only politics I ever understand is the politics of revolution," he told the Trinidad Express.

"The politics of change, the politics of a completely new system."

1972

Convicted of murder in 1972, Michael X was executed by hanging in 1975 in Port of Spain's Royal Gaol.

Michael de Freitas was born in Belmont, Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, to an "Obeah-practising black woman from Barbados and an absent Portuguese father from St Kitts".

Encouraged by his mother to pass for white, "Red Mike" was a headstrong youth and was expelled from school at the age of 14.

He began another commune, also called the Black House, which, in February 1972, also burned down.

Police who had come to the commune to investigate the fire discovered the bodies of Joseph Skerritt and Gale Benson, members of the commune.

They had been hacked to death and separately buried in shallow graves.

Benson, who had been going under the name Hale Kimga, was the daughter of Conservative MP Leonard F. Plugge.

She had met Michael X through her relationship with his associate Hakim Jamal.

At the time of the discovery, Michael X and his family were in Guyana by invitation of the Guyanese Prime Minister Forbes Burnham.

He was then captured in Guyana and charged with the murder of Skerritt and Benson, but was never tried for the latter crime.

The trial was held in Trinidad; it was alleged that the killings were carried out by his followers Stanley Abbott and Edward Chadee.

A witness at his trial said that Skerritt was a member of Michael X's "Black Liberation Army" and had been killed by him because he refused to obey orders to attack a local police station.

Michael X was found guilty and sentenced to death.

1975

The Save Malik Committee, whose members included Angela Davis, Dick Gregory, Kate Millet and others, including the well-known, self-described "radical lawyer" William Kunstler, who was paid by John Lennon, pleaded for clemency, but Michael X was hanged in 1975.