The Sexuality of Malcolm X

This article engages the controversy over whether Malcolm Little, who would become Malcolm X, had same-sexual encounters. A minute sifting of all evidence and claims, augmented by new findings, yields strong indication that Malcolm Little did take part in sex acts with male counterparts. If set in the context of the 1930s and 1940s, these acts position him not as a “homosexual lover,” as has been asserted, but in the pattern of “straight trade” – heterosexual men open to sex with homosexuals – an understanding that in turn affords insights into the black revolutionary's mature masculinity.

because Perry sought out as sources a great number of Malcolm's friends and acquaintances from his youth.
Malcolm Little was born in  in Omaha, Nebraska, but the family moved soon afterward to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and then in  to Lansing, Michigan. There in  when Malcolm was six, his father Earl Little, a Marcus Garvey admirer, died in a streetcar accident that the family conjectured was a murder by white supremacists, leaving them impoverished and struggling in a mostly white working-class neighborhood. Decades later, Perry contacted many of their surviving Lansing acquaintances. Bob Bebeea friend of Malcolm's who was a "short, freckle-faced redhead"told Perry that he and Malcolm had sex with a white neighbor girl outside the Nazarene church late one night. Malcolm, panicky, urged Bebee to withdraw before he made her pregnant. After Bebee finished, he coaxed the girl into having sex with Malcolm as well. On another occasion, Bebee and Malcolm encountered a boy they knew named Robert in the woods. Robert was "tall, broad-shouldered, and muscular," writes Perry, "the very image of the all-American boy," but "also effeminate and considered a sissy." He was the rebellious son of "puritanical" parents, his brother "the apple of their eye." Earlier, Malcolm came across Robert masturbating, and that day Malcolm directed him to do it again. "He wanted me to see Robert's huge phallus," said Bebee. Then Malcolm "instructed him to masturbate him," and Robert complied. Subsequently Malcolm told Bebee that "Robert had performed fellatio on him," and "Bob had no reason to doubt his friend, for Robert had yielded similarly to him."  If these accounts are true, then some of Malcolm's earliest adolescent sexual experiences included intercourse with a white girl and genital stimulation by a white boy. The positioning of the stories in Perry's narrative, combined with Malcolm's anxiety about impregnation, suggest a timing of around  or  in East Lansing, when Malcolm was thirteen or fourteen, between when his mother Louise Little became pregnant and was abandoned by her boyfriend and her institutionalization for madness in December . A few months before, Malcolm was expelled from his Eastside school in the seventh grade and taken in by a white foster family in West Lansing at age thirteen so he could attend a new school. In the next three years, he would  Perry, Malcolm, , -; see also Perry, "Malcolm X and the Politics of Masculinity," .
The passage mentions only Bob Bebee as source for this story, but the endnotes (at ) also credit an interview with Ray Bebee, his brother. The surname of the boy in the woods, Robert, is never stated. The correspondence of the names Bob and Robert, combined with the intimacy with which Robert's family is described, down to the two brothers, hints that Bebee might actually have been "Robert," although their physical descriptions do not match.
sometimes return home to the disintegrating Little household, headed momentarily by his nineteen-year-old brother; be placed by the state in a juvenile home in Mason ten miles to the south; and live briefly in two black foster homes in Lansing. A visit from his half-sister Ella Collinswho sensed his plight and impressed Malcolm as "the first really proud black woman I had ever seen in my life"resulted in her sponsoring a summer  visit to her home in Boston, Massachusetts, and gaining permanent custody of him, when he was fifteen, in February . Living with her in Roxbury, Boston's African American district, and working in a drug store, on railways, and at an assortment of other jobs, Malcolm entered his storied zoot-suit phase.  In that period Malcolm had additional same-sex encounters, according to Perry, who also confirmed that Malcolm avidly pursued women and embarked on a series of hustles that included steering white male customers to female black prostitutes in Harlem, as is consistent with The Autobiography of Malcolm X. When Malcolm returned to Michigan at age seventeen to take up work at Christmas  in an AC Sparkplug factory in Flint, a stint lasting only a few months, he stayed at the rooming house of Delia Williams, writes Perry: One of Malcolm's roommates had jokingly suggested that he might be able to raise some rent money by striking a deal with a fellow boarder called "Miss Jones." Shortly thereafter, the roommate began noticing that Malcolm wasn't sleeping in the room they had been sharing. Instead, he began stealing down the hallway to Miss Jones's room. But Miss Jones, who sported a bright yellow jumper with matching slacks and umbrella, was not a woman. He was a well-known transvestite named Willie Mae. Malcolm's roommate concluded that Willie Mae was sleeping with him.  Returning east in March , Malcolm would spend most of the next three years, between ages seventeen and twenty, living in Harlem and Boston. In New York one night, writes Perry, Malcolm ran into two Michigan friends who had joined the merchant marine and were visiting New York at the YMCA. They asked what he was doing there. "Hell, with all these little 'girls' here, I'm going to make some money," he replied. Malcolm later told them about two "queers" at the Harlem YMCA willing to pay. "It's not that bad," he said. "They suck dick!" He then, writes Perry, "arranged a 'party' in the six-by-nine-foot YMCA cubicle of a man who called himself 'Reverend Witherspoon.' The arrangements were businesslike. Each man closeted himself with Witherspoon and emerged, minutes later, with an embarrassed grin on his face." Witherspoon promised chicken dinners in return.  The return of Malcolm to Massachusetts in October  led to the episode that would resonate most in scholarship subsequent to Perry. This concerned William Paul Lennon, "a wealthy Boston Brahmin whose living quarters overlooked the Boston Common," for whom Malcolm worked in household tasks. Malcolm Jarvis, basis of the character "Shorty," Malcolm's best friend in The Autobiography of Malcolm X, told Perry that Malcolm had said Lennon paid him and another man "to disrobe him, place him on his bed, sprinkle him with talcum powder, and massage him until he reached his climax."  This echoes a homoerotic passage in the Autobiography referring to "Rudy," a friend of Shorty and Malcolm's identified as being of black and Italian parentage: Rudy worked regularly for an employment agency that sent him to wait on tables at exclusive parties. He had a side deal going, a hustle that took me right back to the old steering days in Harlem. Once a week, Rudy went to the home of this old, rich Boston blueblood, pillar-of-society aristocrat. He paid Rudy to undress them both, then pick up the old man like a baby, lay him on his bed, then stand over him and sprinkle him all over with talcum powder.
Rudy said the old man would actually reach his climax from that.  According to Jarvis, two men actually took part in these powderings. In a footnote, Perry supplied a letter from Jarvis, reproduced without correction: The final allusion to homosexuality in Perry comes after Malcolm's November  arrest in Boston for theft of a fur coat, which prompted him to return to Lansing to wait tables and bus dishes. There, writes Perry, Malcolm lived with a "-pound homosexual named Jimmy Williams, who supplied him with bed and board." Malcolm turned on Williams, robbing him at gunpoint, but Williams stuck by him and gave him a job making mattresses at the Capitol Bedding Company where Williams was a supervisor, employment that Malcolm would quit in July  to return to Boston.  To recapitulate, Perry's book attested primarily to Malcolm's sexual involvement with women but also suggested ties with five homosexual counterparts: Robert (Lansing), Willie Mae (Flint), Reverend Witherspoon (Harlem), William Paul Lennon (Boston), and Jimmy Williams (Lansing). These associations vary in intensity. One is merely a roommate (Jimmy Williams); another (Willie Mae) was sensed by a housemate to be Malcolm's sexual partner. More categorical are the earliest episode (the masturbation and fellatio with Robert), witnessed by a named source, and the remaining two (Reverend Witherspoon and William Paul Lennon), each of whom hired Malcolm for what Perry terms "income-producing homosexual activity."  Yet in the Malcolm X renaissance of the s, few took these claims seriously, largely because Perry was a white writer perceived to be maladroit at African American history. He graduated with a degree in economics from Bates College in Maine in , enrolled in Harvard Law School in - and again in  without completing a degree, and finally obtained a PhD in international relations from the University of Pennsylvania in  with a dissertation on Senator J. William Fulbright. Malcolm X's radicalism, Perry held, arose from mental instabilities generated by a fractured childhood. In conservative David Horowitz's Heterodoxy, he wrote that Malcolm was plagued by "doubts about his virility" across "a lifetime of self-destructiveness"; he "projected onto whites his own imperfections, real and imagined." However Freudian, this portrait of Malcolm's mind focussed less on sexuality than on claims of a harsh parental upbringing and unresolved inner strife over racial identity, but insofar as samesexuality figured in the mix, it signified aberration. Malcolm's "male-to-male encounters, which afforded him sexual gratification without the attendant risk of rejection by women," wrote Perry, showed his "partial, vacillating flight from women" and "rebellion against his biologically appointed role," being "purchased at a considerable cost in self-esteem."  This psychobiography and its casting of Malcolm X's objection to white supremacy as irrational in origin met with a resounding repudiation from African American intellectuals. David Bradley called Perry's approach "a reductive, mechanistic, and ultimately behavioristic interpretation of Malcolm's career" that "cannot be divorced" from "liberal-racist attitudes." A Baltimore Sun columnist called the book a "hatchet job," while Amiri Baraka called it a "calumny." Robin D. G. Kelley faulted Perry for "an incredible ignorance of black culture." John Edgar Wideman proposed that the book be "read as a work of fiction whose every word is suspect," saying Perry had actually written "an autobiography, the tale of his own life." To Hazel Carby, it "could not be a more devastating attempt to undermine the political significance of the life of Malcolm X had it been written by the CIA as an exercise in disinformation." Such fundamental distrust persists to the present. While admitting that the book was denounced in part out of "anger at the very thought of the icon of black manhood sleeping with men," Ta-Nehisi Coates calls Perry's Malcolm X biography "pretty worthless": "big on telepathy and small on skepticism," with its "any claim" to be taken with "a grain of salt." A genuine quandary, therefore, exists over how to weigh Perry's evidence of Malcolm Little's same-sexual encounters. He said he interviewed  (or "nearly ") of Malcolm's teachers, friends, peers, and family.  Certainly no one else canvassed Malcolm's youthful acquaintances on anywhere near the same scale.  Because most of Perry's oral-history subjects are no longer alive, his book is the only medium affording access to their recollections about Malcolm's early sexual history. By embedding these memories within an overbearing psychoanalytic interpretation, Perry gave subsequent scholars the near-impossible task of determining whether his commitment to detail makes his accounts trustworthy or whether his evident antagonism toward Malcolm X caused him to inflate impressionistic evidence to achieve a portrait that he believed would be damning. Compounding these problems are irregularities in citation. Perry did not date his interviews, although by inference most were conducted in the early s. Furthermore, anonymity veils many sources. The Flint boarding house tale, for example, is ascribed to "two confidential sources," with a third verifying Willie Mae's homosexuality. The Reverend Witherspoon anecdote cites interviews with "Johnny Davis, Jr., and two confidential sources." The Williams cohabitation story comes from "Vince" (without surname) and one additional, unnamed source.  If such obscurities leave the impression of an amateur sleuth contaminating a historical crime scene, it should be said that few factual errors have been exposed in Perry's work and that he provided named sources for three of his five main stories: Robert in the woods (Bob Bebee and Ray Bebee), Reverend Witherspoon (Johnny Davis Jr.), and William Paul Lennon (Malcolm Jarvis). A number of Perry's details are verifiable, moreover. Federal records exist for Michigan residents Robert M. Bebee (-) and Ray C. Bebee (-), their lifespans making them Malcolm's contemporaries at puberty and showing that Bob Bebee was alive when Perry's attributions to him were published. The story of sex with the white girl is reminiscent of a passage in The Autobiography of Malcolm X that white boys in Lansing would "push me to proposition certain white girls," since if they broke "the terrible taboo by slipping off with me somewhere, they would Politics of Cultural Identity," Yale Review, ,  (July ), ; Ta-Nehisi Coates, "The Sexuality of Malcolm X," The Atlantic,  April , at www.theatlantic.com/national/ archive///the-sexuality-of-malcolm-x/. Carby's suspicion of Perry as police agent is echoed in Amiri Baraka, "Malcolm as Ideology," ; and Abdul Alkalimat, "Rethinking Malcolm Means First Learning How to Think: What Was Marable Thinking? And How?" in Boyd et al., By Any Means Necessary, .  Perry, Malcolm, xv; and Perry, "Blackwash," .  Marable, by comparison, conducted oral histories with only  people who all knew him as Malcolm X, not in his youth; Marable, Malcolm X, .  Perry, Malcolm, xii, , ; Perry, "Blackwash," .
The Sexuality of Malcolm X  have that hammer over the girls' heads, to make them give in to them," although there Malcolm says he declined to do so. The Flint boardinghouse story is substantiated by the  census, which shows Delia Williams, forty, wife of Willie Williams, thirty-one, both Negroes from Arkansas, living at ½ Clifford Street, Flint, Michigan, with two lodgers, also Negro. Willie Williams is a striking match for Willie Mae, the alleged "Miss Jones," and his landlord status would square with paying the rent (although it is inconsistent with Willie Mae's description as "another boarder"). That Malcolm Little did work for Paul Lennon,  Arlington Street, Boston, as "butler and occ. house-worker," and for the Capitol Bedding Company in Lansing from April to June , are confirmed by his Masachusetts prison file. The Autobiography, finally, refers to "tablewaiting" at the "exclusive parties" of a "sensitive old man" and observes that Boston's rich whites "had their private specialty desires catered to by Negroes who come to their homes camouflaged as chauffeurs, maids, waiters, or some other accepted image."  In , Perry donated floppy disks related to his book to the Houghton Library at Harvard University, where they are sealed in a vault for fifty years, until . His book states that the disks will divulge his confidential sources' identities. One hopes that a quarter-century from now the computer disks will not have deteriorated and technology still exists by which they can be reador, better yet, that the Houghton Library converts the digital files in the interim. What they contain besides the promised list of names is unclear. No other records of Perry's have been donated to any repository. If he or his heirs were to place all his oral-history recordings, original notes, and correspondence in a secure archive, it would enable reproducibility of results and foster wider acceptance of his claims of Malcolm's adolescent same-sex experiences. Until that occurs, some will continue to dismiss Perry's research, even if it is perfectly possible to imagine differentiating its factual claims from his interpretations.  As Malcolm X passed from iconoclast to icon, scaling new symbolic and commercial heights in the s through rap music, a Hollywood movie, and X baseball caps, most scholars ignored the question of same-sexuality in his life, just as it was absent from the foundational works of the s and s. Malcolm X: Make It Plain (), The Malcolm X Encyclopedia mention it, a sign of antipathy to Perry's work and, undoubtedly, of fear of "seeing another black icon torn down, another black hero tarnished."  A few writers were prepared to concede the possibility that Malcolm was sexually involved with other men, albeit guardedly, as when Michael Eric Dyson expressed openness to the idea that Malcolm had "homosexual relations" but called Perry's handling of the issue "a rhetorical low blow" that reinforced "a line of attack against an already sexually demonized black leadership culture."  Only one black author -Karl Evanzz of the Washington Post research department, in his book on Malcolm X's assassination The Judas Factor ()stated categorically that Malcolm participated in same-sex acts: On occasion, when he needed money desperately, Malcolm allowed the men he called "punks" or "fags" to perform fellatio on him. It was easy money, and while homosexuals in the African American community have always been treated like lepers, exploiting them as a source of income was viewed as a sign of masculinity.  Evanzz's perception of a uniformly homophobic black community is contradicted by scholarship on the s and s suggesting that poor and working-class blacks were more tolerant of homosexuality than white society even as the black middle class, seeking respectability, sought its suppression.  Nevertheless, Evanzz's view that Malcolm's same-sex encounters might be reconcilable with masculinityindeed, with homophobic utterancesstood out as distinctive. X's nephew, relaying something he heard from either Malcolm Jarvis or Ella Collins; Rodnell Collins does not believe Evanzz got the story from him but confirms being told the same thing by Jarvis in a Roxbury park. Jarvis, recalled by both Collins and Evanzz as the source, is independent of the merchant marine seamen credited by Perry for the Another exception to the silence was Malcolm X: In Our Own Image (), edited by the talented Joe Wood.  A nuanced statement of "our own"that is, African Americanvoices, the collection paid homage to Malcolm X but exuded a sophisticated ambivalence about blackness as an organizing principle. While many of its contributors abjured Perry's psychoanalysis, giving the volume the quality of a rejoinder to him, they acknowledged that Malcolm's legacy could be marshaled for many subjective purposes, opening onto discussion of whether, among other topics, Malcolm was claimable as gay. Arnold Rampersad noted the "potent revelation" of possible "homosexual relations on Malcolm's part" and cautioned that "homophobia undoubtedly lies behind much of the general supposition that Malcolm could not possibly have had homosexual experiences."  In a sign of abounding uncertainty about Perry and his methods, however, even two openly gay contributors equivocated, calling Malcolm's sexual identity "enigmatic."  Malcolm X: In Our Own Image contained the most influential essay ever written on Malcolm's adolescence: Robin D. G. Kelley's "The Riddle of the Zoot." Kelley's luminous analysis was that Little's cultural rebellion in the s was progenitor, not antithesis, of his later race radicalism, turning The Autobiography of Malcolm X upside-down with obvious implications for the hip-hop generation's own politics of style. In a single sentence and footnote, Kelley addressed same-sexuality, calling Perry's evidence "slim, to say the least." This criticism was not entirely evenhanded. Kelley said that Perry claimed that "Malcolm pimped gay men," apparently in reference to the Reverend Witherspoon story, but there Perry had merely stated that Malcolm encouraged friends (not said to be gay) to participate. Kelley also faulted the "hearsay Perry's informant passed on," presumably a reference to Jarvis, although Perry's informants were plural and included Bebee, an eyewitness. Louis A. De Caro Jr. wrote similarly of "shabby, self-serving attempts to homosexualize Malcolm" reliant on "only one source of alleged proof." Reverend Witherspoon New York anecdote, suggesting this as a separate Boston instance of Malcolm as sex worker, although the provenance is obviously murky. Karl Evanzz, emails to author,  July ,  Sept. , and  Sept. ; Rodnell Collins, interview with author,  Sept. . For Evanzz's more recent positions see "Jared Ball Radio Interview with Karl Evanzz on WPFW . FM, April , ," in Ball and Burroughs, A Lie of Reinvention, -; and Evanzz, "Paper Tiger," in ibid., -, also in Boyd et al., By Any Means Necessary, -.   Both he and Kelley faulted Perry for quoting late-life Malcolm X speeches to make judgments about Malcolm Little's mind in the s, although Perry did that kind of thing only in a footnoteand there more as suggestive traces than as proof. In retrospect, the derision of Kelley and De Caro primarily illustrates how the best Malcolm X scholars of the s, put off by Perry's psychobiography, dismissed his evidence.  Shortly thereafter, however, powerful new corroboration of Malcolm's youthful same-sexual activity appeared, particularly in regard to William Paul Lennon. In , Rodnell Collins, son of Malcolm X's half-sister Ella Collins, published a book billed as a memoir that featured quotations from his mother's papers and conversations before her death in . A credited assistant on the project was Peter Bailey, who belonged to the Organization of African American Unity (OAAU) under Malcolm X and edited its newsletter Blacklash. The book quotes Ella Collins as saying that she admired Malcolm's "rebelling against the hypocrisy and racial oppression so prevalent in the United States in the s and s" but didn't admire his using that rebellious streak against himself by using drugs and throwing away his money on zoot suits and conked hair and against his own people by selling them drugs and directing thrill-seeking whites to places where they could indulge in their kinky sexual fantasies with weak, money-mad black folks.  Most strikingly, the book introduced a letter Malcolm wrote from prison to Ella Collins on  September : The person that you said called me is a very good friend of mine. He's only worth some fourteen million dollars. If you read the society pages you'd know who he is. He knows where I am now because I've written and told him, but I didn't say what for. He may call and ask you. Whatever answer you give him will have to do with my entire future but I still depend on you … She assumed that Malcolm was seeking to facilitate parole by manipulating "one of those decadent whites whom he had been hustling." When she visited him in prison, her son writes, Malcolm told her about "a business deal he and Malcolm Jarvis had with an elderly, wealthy white millionaire named Paul Lennon, who would pay them to rub powder over his body" and said that "Lennon's current powderer was Frank Cooper, who had sometimes visited him with … Malcolm and Jarvis." However, this "friend" -Lennon -"never called again."  Although few apart from ardent Malcolm X aficionados read the Collins book, its contribution of a previously unknown letter of Malcolm's was significant, as was its placement of family members (Ella Collins and her son) on record for the first time in favor of Jarvis's memory that Malcolm was involved in the Lennon powdering. One of its details, moreover, is verifiable: the existence of Frank Cooper, a Roxbury resident sentenced at age twenty-three in May  to nine to twelve years in prison for assault. (That incarceration means he could no longer have been Lennon's powderer when Malcolm wrote to Collins, but Malcolm, imprisoned, might very well not have heard that news.)  A Malcolm Jarvis memoir appeared posthumously in , following his  death. In it he did not mention Paul Lennon but alluded to "many things Malcolm never told Alex Haley," saying, "I feel those things Malcolm never intended to become public news. I too shall respect Malcolm's wishes in this manner." Jarvis regretted collaborating with an author (Perry, evidently) whose book brought scorn on him in the black community after a false promise of monetary compensation.  Burnt by that experience, Jarvis seems not to have discussed Lennon on the record with anyone else, but he never denied anything Perry attributed to him.   Collins with Bailey, , . Neither the  letter from Malcolm in prison nor Ella Collins's tapes and notes have been placed in an archive accessible to scholars; if the Collins family did so, it would make this record more verifiable.  Rodnell Collins names Little, Cooper, and Jarvis as being involved in the Lennon powderings, but supplies no evidence for including Jarvis. Cooper and Little are the most likely participants because Jarvis named the other two, not himself, leading Perry to state only that Little and "another man" took part. Perry, Malcolm, ; "Sentenced for Attack," Boston Herald,  May , .  Jarvis wrote that his own "association with Malcolm, post-prison, has always been spirituality-based, not monetarily-based," but that he was "once falsely accused by someone close to him of selling him down the river for money … because I collaborated on a book about Malcolm. I did so out of the goodness of my heart and a deep, abiding respect for Malcolm X and all that he advocated. I was promised $ and was never paid. In , the question of Malcolm and same-sexuality was catapulted into the Internet age in a Guardian article by Peter Tatchell claiming Malcolm as gay icon. A longtime British gay rights campaigner, Tatchell drew solely on Bruce Perry's biography to hold that Malcolm had "sex for money" and "at least one sustained sexual liaison with a man" and to suggest that "some degree of queer desire" must have enabled "Malcolm to sustain his sexual experiences with men over a period of ten years." Given Malcolm's age of twenty when incarcerated, this dated his first same-sexual experience before he was ten, which no one else had suggested. In that and two other pieces, Tatchell cast the Nation of Islam as custodian of Malcolm's legacy when in actuality the two ended as bitter rivals, and depicted Perry, inexplicably, as "a great admirer and defender of Malcolm X." Tatchell proposed to refashion Malcolm as a gay hero for Black History Month since "Elton John has no black equivalent." His last article, for The Independent, called Malcolm "bisexual, out, and proud." These interventions, although obviously not scholarly, influenced subsequent black studies discussions and helped to seal a perception that the issue was primarily one of sexual orientation. Inevitably, a "bi-anymeans-necessary" meme spread across the Internet, propelled by Tatchell's indubitable flare: "Malcolm X was bisexual. Get over it."  Meanwhile, Manning Marable, at work on his own Malcolm X biography, was unearthing new shards. Papers once kept in the family home of Malcolm X's widow, Betty Shabazz, were acquired by the New York Public Library's Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in . Contained in toward Malcolm for leading police to him in . This is unpersuasive. Little's prison file does show he cooperated with detectives after they offered to drop a gun-possession charge if he named accomplices, but there is no evidence Jarvis ever knew it. Jarvis's own prison file includes reports from authorities stating that he "attributes his present offense to his own stupidity," believing his fingerprints gave him away, while in his posthumous memoir Jarvis says that "two address books" found on Little enabled police to find him. (Malcolm X's autobiography, likewise, refers to "some papers they found on me.") Jarvis spoke fondly, never critically, of Malcolm in his two books and videotaped interviews. ).  Peter Tatchell, "Malcolm X: Gay Black Hero?" The Guardian,  May , at www.the guardian.com/world//may//gayrights.usa; Tatchell, "Malcolm X Was Bisexual: Get Over It," The Guardian,  Oct. , at www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/cifamerica/ /oct//malcolm-x-bisexual-black-history; "Peter Tatchell: Ignore the Refuseniks: Malcolm X Was Bisexual, Out, and Proud," The Independent,  Feb. , at www.independent.co.uk/ voices/commentators/peter-tatchell-ignore-the-refuseniks-ndash-malcolm-x-was-bisexualout-and-proud-.html. the trove was correspondence between the imprisoned Malcolm and his brother Philbert Little in Michigan, including a salient  letter which Marable cited for the first time in his  book: A very wealthy man, for whom I once worked, visited me today and is going to try and get me a reconsideration from the parole board (Insha Allah). The will of Allah will be done. By the way, he's not an original. However, he can give me a home and a job, which is something I lacked when I saw them before.
This letter, remarkably similar to that Malcolm wrote in  to Ella Collins, was taken by Marable, plausibly, to also refer to Lennon. ("Not an original" meant not black in Nation of Islam idiom.)  In Marable's book, indeed, the question of same-sexuality contracts wholly to Lennon, all other possibilities going unmentioned. This concentration was understandable given density of evidence, but other leads merited pursuit. Malcolm Little's draft evasion, for example, is according to legend a moment of race resistance when he threatened to turn his gun on white "crackers" if inducted.  His FBI file, though, ascribed the draft board's "psychiatric rejection" of Malcolm Little on  October  to "sexual perversion" and "psychopathic personality," with no mention of race or threatened violence.  His full psychological evaluation does not survive, but Selective Service records not cited elsewhere in Malcolm X scholarship confirm that he registered for the draft in New York City in  when residing at  Seventh Avenue, Apt. , in Harlem as an employee of Jimmie's Chicken Shack, and was classified  Frejection for physical, mental, or moral reasonsearly in  following "psychiatric investigation."  Khary Polk has rightly condemned the silence of Malcolm X scholars about homosexuality's pertinence in the determination of his draft status.  Neither interracial sex  The discovery is significant, but Marable overreaches by imbuing "home" with sentimental meaning. The phrase "home and a job" merely echoed the parole process's requirements, as in the file's very next letter, when Malcolm wrote his brother of his hope to join him in Michigan: "As you know, I see the parole board again in four months (May), and I may try to get paroled to Detroit. To do this I must have a job and a home there, and this information must be in the hands of the parole board here before I see them. nor prostitution steering, factors that Evanzz suggests may account for the phrase "sexual perversion," were among the military's indicators of "pathological personality types."  War Department guidelines stated: Sexual perversions. -Persons habitually or occasionally engaged in homosexual or other perverse sexual practices are unsuitable for military service and should be excluded. Feminine bodily characteristics, effeminacy in dress or manner, or a patulous rectum are not consistently found in such persons, but where present should lead to careful psychiatric examination. If the individual admits or claims homosexuality or other sexual perversion, he should be referred to his local board for further psychiatric and social investigation. If an individual has a record as a pervert he should be rejected.  Revealingly, all the medical terminology and stereotypes mustered in this definition focus on homosexuality, despite the passing nod to "other perverse sexual practices." That, historians have found, is precisely how it functioned.  The phrase "sexual perversion" in Malcolm Little's FBI file, thus, almost surely indicates declaration of same-sex encounters in order to evade conscription. Had Marable not overlooked such leads, he might have persuaded more readers, but he and his research assistants did uncover more on William Paul Lennon than ever before. They determined that Lennon was born in  (meaning he would have been in his late fifties when he began interacting with Malcolm Little), was the eldest of eight children of a successful merchant and newspaper publisher in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, attended Brown University for several years, was a naval officer in the First World War, and served as a hotel manager. These were valuable details, but a great deal more about Paul Lennon awaited discovery. .  Two Marable points cannot be confirmed. First, he claims that "Rudy," powderer of the wealthy man in the Autobiography, was Malcolm, but he supplies no evidence for it. Jarvis's memory that Cooper and Little both took part makes "Rudy" seem more likely a composite. Second, Marable cites New York Times classified ads seeking a male secretary defined as a "personable young man with good background; some driving." He claims these were placed by Lennon, but the ads supply no name, merely stating Apt. ,  Arlington St., Boston. Lennon shared that street address, but Lennon's specific apartment number is not provided in Boston city directories, Brown University records, Little's prison Lennon was wealthy, for example, a fact Marable was unable to verify.  His prosperity came from his marriage to a socialite, born Jeanne Marie Scott, daughter of a Wall Street banker who in  left her the bulk of an estate valued at $, ($. million today). In her debutante days in New York, Newport, and Palm Beach, she was known as Mimi Scott. During the First World War she volunteered as a Red Cross nurse in France, where she had a well-publicized romance with Hobey Baker, a files, or any other known source. His hiring of Malcolm did not occur until two years later. New York Times,  Oct. , C; and  Oct. , RE.  "There is no record indicating that Lennon ever became truly wealthy": Marable, Malcolm X, .
Princeton star athlete turned fighter pilot. When she broke off their engagement and Baker crashed his plane at war's end, it prompted speculation that he committed suicide out of heartbreak. This has not endeared her to his admirers and biographers, who describe her as "a good-looking girl in a flashy sort of way" but "hard" and "vacuous" with "no sweetness" and "no charm at all." She instead married Philander Lathrop Cable, a US embassy official in Paris, divorcing him a decade later in  on "grounds of indifference and his formal refusal to live with her." In , she married Paul Lennon in Palm Beach to become Jeanne Marie Lennon. According to their wedding notices, Lennononce manager of hotels in Rhode Island, Florida, and New York, where he resided in Greenwich Villagewas by then in "the commission business" in Paris. "The wedding of the couple came as a complete surprise to friends as no engagement was announced," one news account observed. They called themselves "Mr. and Mrs. Paul Lennon of Boston and Paris" until the Nazi conquest of France led to building a "permanent residence" at Cape Cod in Sandwich, Massachusetts. They continued to winter in Florida, she arriving early some years while he was "detained in the North on business." Their childless union appears to have dissolved in , shortly after Malcolm Little's incarceration.  That Paul Lennon is the name by which Malcolm Jarvis and Ella Collins remembered him is significant, because he went by that rather than his full name. The apartment he kept at  Arlington Street on the Boston Common was supplemental to the primary residences he and his wife maintained in Palm Beach and Cape Cod, where they lived a life of leisure and charity, to judge by the society pages. Significantly, Lennon had a proclivity for hiring servants drawn from a rougher demographic to work for him at  Arlington Street. In the year prior to his hiring of eighteen-year-old Malcolm Littlea thirty-two-year-old houseman he discharged was arrested for stealing five of his suits and a topcoat worth $ ($, today) and charging another suit to his department store account.  A subsequent incident involving the rougher sort has also escaped the attention of scholars. In , Lennon was rescued by police who found him gagged and tied in bed at his Sandwich home in the middle of the day, with two naked male domestic employees bound and lying on the floor in the same room. Lennon told the press he was sixty-four, a few years younger than his actual age, and he was identified in the front-page Boston Globe coverage as a "wealthy Florida businessman," not a Bostonian. (He last made use of  Arlington Street in , to gauge by city directories.) It was reported that he was reading in bed when four gunmen in their twenties and thirties overpowered John I. Grant, his butler and chauffer, who had just "returned from the village post office with the morning mail," and Paul E. Chamberlain, his gardener, both twenty-five, and "marched them into the bedroom, forced them to disrobe and lie on the floor and bound them." A later report stated, "After the gunmen left, Chamberlain knocked over a phone and called police." Preoccupied with the sensational theft of valuables worth $, ($, today), the newspapers did not explain how a band of young Boston ex-convicts knew to target Lennon's Cape Cod home or why the criminals had made him and his young male household workers strip naked.   "Former Houseman Gets Threft [sic] Sentence," Boston Traveler,  Sept. .  One gunman, Gordon K. Stewart, , received mitigation in sentencing when Lennon testified that during the robbery he fed him a pill to alleviate his blood pressure. Barring some yet-undiscovered revelation, two camps of understanding are likely to persist among scholars. One will continue to talk of Malcolm Little's same-sex acts as "speculation," "conjecture," "rumor," and "hearsay," seeing the evidence as "not credible enough to really be able to measure it one way or the other."  The other will find the convergence of evidence more than hearsay and sufficient to indicate that Malcolm Little did at the very least participate in the talcum-powder rubdowns of Paul Lennon: The Autobiography of Malcolm X passage about the "blueblood, pillar-of-society aristocrat" who climaxed if a naked young man undressed him and sprinkled him with talcum powder; Malcolm Jarvis's attestation that Malcolm said he powdered and rubbed down "the queer" Paul Lennon; Ella Collins's statement that Malcolm told her of a "business deal" involving Lennon, "one of those decadent whites whom he had been hustling"; the two handwritten letters from Malcolm in prison, one to Collins in , the other to his brother in , indicating a "very wealthy man, for whom I once worked," whose name is in "the society pages" and who might support his parole; the prison file stating Malcolm's employment by Lennon as butler and household worker; and authentication here of Lennon's wealth and recurrent association with young male toughs. Those in this camp might credit, as well, the fellatio story of Bob Bebee, Perry's additional episodes from the Harlem YMCA to the Flint boarding house, or the Selective Service "sexual perversion" designation. If the first view seems to insist on a photograph or direct statement by Malcolm as proof, the second will observe that the amassed evidence is very difficult to explain in any other way, that history often entails probability, and that historians of sexuality in particular often rely on inference given the lacunae left by discretion and erasure compelled by social stigma. There is no purity of method in these respective approaches, though, for, as the historian Clarence Lang has observed, many who insist on categorical proof in regard to Malcolm's sexuality are perfectly open to inference and probability when it comes to whether government agencies were involved in his assassination.  For those who find the evidence of same-sexuality sufficient, what remains to be determined is its meaning. This requires sensitivity to acts, roles, and context. Virtually all who have written about the question presume that if Malcolm Little participated in same-sex acts it automatically determines his emotional involvement, sexual orientation, or sexual identity.  When Lennon hired him, writes Marable, "soon something deeper than an employeremployee relationship developed," an "intimate relationship" that made Malcolm a "homosexual lover," even if not one "actively homosexual" in later years. Such phrases are precisely what most riled others, such as Patricia Reid-Merritt, who called them "direct attacks on Malcolm's manhood."  Quite apart from their moral tonality, each of these positions is profoundly anachronistic, for neither shows awareness that in the s and s it was possible for a man to engage in sex with another and yet be considered heterosexual and manly, particularly in poor and workingclass culture and in the hustler world. The importance of two works to understanding this lost world of sexual consciousness cannot be overstated: George Chauncey's Gay New York () and Barry Reay's New York Hustlers (). Chauncey charted a varied and gendered Depression-era sexual culture of effeminate "fairies" and "pansies," predatory "wolves" seeking young "punks," middle-class "queers," andcrucially -"trade," heterosexual men who neither identified nor were perceived as homosexuals but were open to same-sex invitations. A "phallocentric economy of sexual pleasure," he explained, put male gratification above sexual object-choice, although by  a modern gay male identity, patterned on that of discreet middle-class queers, coalesced to eclipse the earlier ways of being. Reay's study extends this timeline past the Second World War, proving with copious pictorial-textual detail that trade persisted throughout the s and beyond.  good blow job just as much as he did a good screw. The only kind of censure that there was seemed to be connected with anal screwing. If a man let himself be screwed, then it was a step downward and he was subject to a lot of razzing or insult. But, when the mouth was used, it didn't seem to be important at all.
Bathhouse patrons, Steward said, included "a lot of straight guys" open to mutual masturbation and the s' "language of love": "How'd you like to have your cock sucked, Buddy?"  The concept of straight tradesometimes called "rough trade" if the partner was a working-class toughmakes intelligible the otherwise baffling utterances of those interviewed by medical doctor George W. Henry for Sex Variants: A Study of Homosexual Patterns (). One said, "Sometimes I have relations with heterosexual men, but the homosexuals are better." Another, with opposite tastes, described his "ideal sexual object": "He must have no suggestion of homosexuality about him … A person defiant of convention, ruggedly individualistic, independent, frank, slightly coarse, even slightly brutal, outspoken, strong minded, virile in every way is preferred." One man interviewed by Chauncey struggled to explain the s and s: A lot of straight boys let us have sex with them. People don't believe it now. People say they must have been gay. But they weren't. They were straight. They wouldn't look for or suck a guy's thing, but they'd let you suck theirs. If you want to say they were gay because they had sex with a man, go ahead, but I say only a man who wants to have sex with a man is gay.
As late as , The Guild Dictionary of Homosexual Terms defined trade as "the male of masculine body type and build, usually heterosexual, who takes the positive, leading, inserter role in sexual relations with the homosexual." The pioneering gay historian Allan Bérubé acknowledged straight trade, writing that in the first half of the twentieth century, "Many men who came out … had learned to prefer 'servicing' straight men in semipublic places."  Trade helps make sense of the sexuality of Malcolm Little, who had none of the characteristics of the "fairy," "pansy" or "queer." Attraction to the opposite sex suffuses The Autobiography of Malcolm X and all other evidence. In Lansing, he recalled, "I really went for some of the white girls, and some of them went for me, too." In his zoot suit and conk years in Boston, he went lindy-hopping at the Roseland, "whirling girls so fast their skirts were snapping," boosting them "over my hips, my shoulders, into the air." He was involved with black women such as "Laura" (Gloria Strother) and white women such as his girlfriend and accomplice in crime "Sophia" (Beatrice Caragulian), and pursued by women less often remembered, such as the shapely Jaci Massey, who brought him home-cooked food in prison. "I met chicks who were as fine as May wine," he recounted, "and cats who were hip to all happenings." His scrawled youthful letters, written in a juvenile script, abound in sly flirtations, invariably with women. "Listen, will you send me a picture of you," he wrote one in Michigan in  after asking whether she was still seeing someone else. "I want to show the fellas out here that we have some fine girls in Michigan too & I want pictures of only the finest 'no jive.'"  That such a connoisseur of "only the finest" women could also have had same-sex encounters is perfectly credible. An initial analytical distinction must be made between the masturbation and fellatio with Robert in the Lansing woods relayed by Bebee and the subsequent episodes, for that occurred in early adolescence, its exhibitionism and group activity consistent with Alfred Kinsey's contemporaneous finding in Sexual Behavior in the Human Male that "many a boy exhibits his masturbatory techniques to lone companions or to whole groups of boys," almost half taking part in "mutual manipulation of genitalia."  Boys' greater access to one another in adolescence explained this, Kinsey wrote; such experimental sex play did not determine adult sexual orientation.
A gender analysis is essential to comprehension of both that and the four later cases: Willie Mae (Flint), Reverend Witherspoon (Harlem), Jimmy Williams (Lansing), and Paul Lennon (Boston). In each instance, Malcolm occupied a masculine position, whether in contrast to the "effeminate" and "sissy" Robert, Willie Mae with his bright yellow jumper, the theatrically self-named Reverend Witherspoon and other YMCA "queers," the pound "homosexual" Jimmy Williams, or the wealthy Paul Lennon, whom Jarvis called "the queer." Not only were these sexual partners or queer  The Autobiography of Malcolm X, , , -; Malcolm Little to "Dearest Pal,"  Nov.
 acquaintances less masculine, they were female. Willie Mae is "Miss Jones," Malcolm paid visits to "little girls" at the YMCA, and Jarvis referred to "Mrs." Paul Lennon. Insofar as specific acts are described, Malcolm is fellated rather than fellator, masturbated rather than masturbator, and powderer rather than powdered, correlating to a sexual ideology of dominance and submission, penetrator and penetrated, trade and queer, male and femalewith Malcolm on the "manly" side of every antinomy. The four later encounters all took place from  onward, when Malcolm Little was drifting restlessly between homes and states; edging ever more deeply into hustling; dealing marijuana; and using cocaine, amphetamines, and opium. These were his hustler years as "Big Red" (or "Detroit Red" in the Autobiography), spent mostly in Harlem in - and Boston in -. "Almost everyone in Harlem needed some kind of hustle to survive," he states in the Autobiography, "and needed to stay high in some way to forget what they had to do to survive." All of the encounters entailed material reward, whether rent (Willie Mae), a chicken dinner (Reverend Witherspoon), housing (Jimmy Williams), or money (Paul Lennon). His hustler masculinity, as Douglas Taylor has perceptively argued, deserves to be distinguished from his zoot-suit frenzy of -, for the hustler pose was "cool," the dress style more conservative (when moving a brick of weed, an attention-getting zoot was a liability), and the mindset more callous in which women, particularly white women, were commodities and manhood was defended in "showdowns" against any who might threaten it. Bill Fletcher finds the possibility that Malcolm "engaged in a same-sex encounter for pay" useful to explain "the criminal, parasitic life that Malcolm Little lived prior to prison," yet few others have been willing to entertain the idea that Malcolm's urbane hustler masculinity not only governed him as reefer pusher, prostitution steerer, and numbers runner but also in sexuality with menthat being seen as merely of "salacious interest."  The chapter of The Autobiography of Malcolm X entitled "Hustler" has always seemed to refer to his life as a thief and dope dealer, but as a homonym the word can mean a go-getter, a con artist, a criminalor a male prostitute. In this last sense, hustling was coextensive with trade. One interviewee in George Henry's Sex Variants spoke of trade that "is bisexuals who "recognize their homosexual activity as indicative of their own psychosexual orientations."  Evidence abounds that in the s and s young heterosexual men often serviced homosexual clients, just as female prostitutes could be lesbians servicing men.  One aficionado of trade in New York and Washington was Henry Gerber, credited with establishing the first American gay rights organization. "Boys and men who prostitute themselves to homosexuals for money," he wrote in , "are almost always heterosexual[s] who care nothing for the homosexual except his money."  In Tom Kramer's  proletarian romanà-clef Waiting for Nothing, the protagonist accepts the advances of a "rouged" and "perfumed" man, "Mrs. Carter," because "a stiff has got to live": "These pansies give me the willies, but I have got to get myself a feed."  This phenomenon was transatlantic. A Danish study of three hundred adolescent prostitutes found  percent to be heterosexual, · percent bisexual, and · percent homosexual, while in London male prostitutes were "primarily heterosexual" and "likely to spend their best energies, as well as their immoral earnings, upon girlfriends."  Malcolm Little showed no trace of homosexual or bisexual orientation. No morals charge appears on his otherwise extensive rap sheet. His same-sex hustling appears to have been an opportunistic sideline, and an entirely unsurprising one given the informal economies of Harlem and Roxbury, where race and sexuality converged as redlining, vice enforcement, and white middle-class "slumming" fads shaped urban space in the first half of the twentieth century, with racism accentuating forbidden desire.  Malcolm's same-sex transactions, like his other illicit hustles, supplemented low-wage proletarian drudgery (jobs were "slaves"), enabled evasion of military racism, and underwrote a life of highs and jazz in the clubs. "I was a true hustleruneducated, unskilled at anything honorable," he told Alex Haley, "and I considered myself nervy and cunning enough to live by my wits, exploiting any prey that presented itself."  A friend from Harlem days, Clarence Atkins, said, "He was just wild, man. He didn't give a shit about nothing … Whatever he thought was the thing for him to do at a particular time, that's what he would do."  When Malcolm Little became Malcolm X, the transformation was born of the perception that his hustler self-image was delusory, that the criminal life made him prey, that he had sunk into "more and more, worse and worse, illegality and immorality."  His religious conversion in prison coincided with the postwar shift in American sexual consciousness toward "normality" and defining one's sexual orientation by the biological sex of one's partner.  As he excoriated "white devils" in the Nation of Islam, Malcolm X embraced normative s sexualitymarital, reproductive, heterosexualand turned those norms against white society, decrying the history of white male lust and violence, especially rape of black women. The hustling life, he said, had given him insight into "the cesspool morals of the white man" and "the sick things he wanted."  To refute racist assumptions of black depravity, the Nation cultivated a puritanical-patriarchal moral code that preached respect toward women in the context of their subordination to men. Women were segregated at meetings, enjoined to dress modestly, and forbidden from dancing except with their husband. Nation adherents abstained from pork, alcohol, tobacco, drugs, gambling, profanity, and "fornication," including extramarital sexuality and homosexuality. If this mandated a sharp behavioral turnaround for Malcolm, its gender conservatism was continuous with his past sexism, its heterosexism with his statements of contempt for the homosexuals he hustled. Malcolm X's forceful rhetoric and advocacy of armed self-defense, which so excited white journalistic sensationalism, bear comparison with the performative "potential for violence" and "possibility of sudden death" in rough trade, which one New York hustler recalled provided patrons with "intensity" and "excitement" to "animate the eroticism."  The transgressive antiracist politics of Malcolm X, this is to say, owed something tacitly to the transgressive interracial sexuality of Malcolm Little.
Malcolm X's first act of protest as a Nation of Islam member occurred in prison, when he wrote the commissioner of the Massachusetts Department of Corrections to object to religious persecution of black Muslims. "Yet," he objected, "the homosexual perverts in here can get job-changes whenever they work to change or acquire new 'husbands.'"  That sentence, with its distinction of homosexuals from their husbands, took for granted a gendered male world in which same-sexuality did not automatically make one homosexual; simultaneously, it equated homosexuality with perversion. Nobodyincluding Jarvis, who entered prison with him in would claim that Malcolm X ever engaged further in homosexual acts as he forged new identities as believer, minister, husband, and father. None are noted in his prison file, and his daughter Ilyasah Shabazz and follower Peter Bailey have posited that as Malcolm X he was under surveillance so heavy that such activity would hardly have escaped the government's notice. 