Umar Johnson

Activist

Birthday August 21, 1974

Birth Sign Leo

Birthplace Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.

Age 49 years old

Nationality United States

#10490 Most Popular

1974

Umar Rashad Ibn Abdullah-Johnson (born Jermaine Shoemake; August 21, 1974) is an American activist, social media personality, school psychologist, and motivational speaker.

A controversial figure, Johnson is a Pan-Africanist who condemns homosexuality and interracial marriage.

Johnson is a native of North Philadelphia.

His stepmother, Bernice Elizabeth Dockins Abdullah-Johnson, was a preschool teacher.

2011

In 2011, he was featured on The Untold History of People of Aboriginal, Moor, and African Descent, directed by Tariq Nasheed.

2012

Johnson graduated from Millersville University before graduating in 2012 from the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine with a Psy.D. in clinical psychology.

2013

In 2013, Johnson published Psycho-Academic Holocaust: The Special Education & ADHD Wars Against Black Boys, a book in which he contended that attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) was increasingly misdiagnosed in Black communities and that the American education system used ADHD to stigmatize black children.

2014

In June 2014, Johnson said he would raise $5 million to buy the former campus of Saint Paul's College in Lawrenceville, Virginia, which had closed down in 2013 due to financial struggles, and rename it to Frederick Douglass Marcus Garvey Academy, which he said would be a boarding school for Black boys.

He claimed to have sufficient funds to buy the Saint Paul's site in 2014, but did not do so.

2015

In 2015, Johnson claimed that he would open the school the following year; he failed to do so.

Charing Ball, writing in the online magazine MadameNoire, discouraged donations for the project, citing Johnson's "homophobic and misogynistic" commentary in YouTube videos.

In 2015, he opened a GoFundMe to raise money to "acquire and rehabilitate" either the former Saint Paul's or Chamberlain-Hunt Academy in Port Gibson, Mississippi.

Although Johnson claimed to have applied for 501(c)(3) tax-exempt nonprofit status in 2015, there was no record of an application with the IRS as of 2017.

2017

In a 2017 video clip, Johnson claimed that ADHD and learning disabilities do "not exist."

In 2017, The Root criticized Johnson for failing to provide financial documentation demonstrating whether he actually used any of the funds for the school.

In April 2017, Johnson founded the National Independent Black Parent Association in Leimert Park, Los Angeles.

2018

In 2018, Johnson said that his main Facebook and GoFundMe accounts had been shut down, but that his Instagram (then with 342,000 followers) remained active.

His Instagram following had risen to 789,000 by late 2021; at that time he also had 163,000 Twitter followers.

Johnson's commentary is pan-Africanist (which Johnson renders as "Pan-Afrikanist"); he has called for Black Americans to identify with the African people globally rather than with individual religions, nationalities, professions, and fraternal organizations.

He referred to himself on his website as the "prince of Pan-Africanism."

He engaged in a Twitter feud with Feminista Jones, a Philadelphia-based black feminist commentator and activist.

He has criticized black Americans for celebrating Independence Day.

He has denounced various Black public figures, including actor Jonathan Majors (for dating a white woman), college football coach Deion Sanders (for leaving the historically black Jackson State to coach at Colorado), and Oprah Winfrey (for being identified with feminism and LGBT rights).

In speech and social media posts, Johnson has promoted misinformation, including a viral Instagram post falsely claiming that Bill Gates sought for "at least 3 billion people" to die as part of a population control scheme.

Johnson has also baselessly accused the Population Council and Planned Parenthood of "using homosexuality as a population control strategy in the black community."

In contrast to mainstream psychology, he has referred to homosexuality as a mental disorder and claimed to be able to "treat" it.

In a 2021 speech at Lehigh University, Johnson criticized former President Barack Obama, claiming that his administration "gave my civil rights over to the LGBTQ, ... the feminist movement, ... the Mexicans."

In various speeches, Johnson also criticized President Joe Biden, contending that he had not done enough to protect Black people from police violence.

In a 2023 interview on The Breakfast Club radio show, Johnson discouraged Black people from voting, said he had not voted for many years, and described the Democratic Party as "a White, racist institution" that "is just as racist as the Republican Party."

In a 2023 interview on Joe Budden's podcast, Johnson criticized Black people who believed that Eminem was the greatest rapper of all time, asserting that it "speaks to how psychologically ill we are as a race of people" and "No non-African can ever be the best of anything African. It's an insult to the ancestors. It's an insult to the race."

In social media posts, Johnson has criticized interracial marriage, opposed same-sex marriage, and promoted various conspiracy theories.

2019

In 2019, a Root commentator criticized Johnson for never providing a business plan, obtaining a license, publishing receipts, or taking other steps toward construction of the school, despite Johnson's claim in 2017 to have raised $400,000 or $700,000 for the school.

In April 2021, Johnson said that construction was complete but that the school was not ready for classes.

As of 2024, Dr Umar Johnson continues running his youtube page & occasionally walks around the inside of his school.

He continues to ask for donations through cash app.

The school has yet to be completed & no opening date in the near future.

Johnson is most known for his divisive social media commentary, and his provocative remarks over the years, mostly on race.

2020

In January 2020, after the death of Kobe Bryant, Johnson falsely suggested that the helicopter was sabotaged as part of an assassination attempt ordered by the NBA and the pharmaceutical industry.

In 2020, after NFL player DeSean Jackson was disciplined for making antisemitic Instagram posts, Johnson suggested that Jackson's views were valid and that he should not apologize for them.

In May 2021, Johnson criticized Kevin Samuels saying that he was "slandering and criticizing Black women who don’t emulate Eurocentric standards of beauty and success."