This Day in History: 
Malcolm X Is Assassinated February 21, 1965 The African American nationalist 
and religious leader was 
assassinated by rival Black Muslims 
of the Nation of Islam in New York City. He had been addressing 
his Organization of Afro-
American Unity at the Audubon 
Ballroom in Washington Heights. Founded just months earlier by Malcolm, 
the organization advocated black identity 
and held that racism — not the white race — 
was the greatest foe of the African American. The Nation of Islam — from which 
Malcolm X had separated before 
his pilgrimage to Mecca — advocated 
black nationalism and racial separatism. Malcolm’s new movement 
steadily gained followers, 
becoming increasingly influential 
in the civil rights movement. An estimated 30,000 
mourners attended 
his funeral in Harlem.