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جمعه ۸ اسفند ۱۴۰۴ | FRI 27 Feb 2026
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  • تاریخ انتشار:1404-08-2900:20:57
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New York bids goodbye to beloved activist and Imam Talib Abdur-Rahshid


New York bids goodbye to beloved activist and Imam Talib Abdur-Rahshid

Abdur-Rahshid served his congregation and the wider community for more than 50 years
Imam AL HAJJ TALIB ABDUR-RASHID (bottom left) speaks as members of the Muslim American Civil Liberties Coalition (MACLC) and supporters gather at City Hall for a news conference, calling for the resignation of Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly and his public affairs commissioner Paul Browne on 26 January, 2012. Kelly and Browne were criticized for the production of an anti-Muslim movie for police training (Bryan Smith/ZUMAPRESS.com/Reuters)
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Hundreds of people packed out three floors of the iconic Malcolm Shabazz mosque in Harlem for the funeral/janaza of Imam Talib Abdur-Rashid in spite of it being held at 9am on a Monday morning.

At his funeral, his daughter Hawwa Minnie Gilmore told attendees that her father and beloved imam of the historic Mosque of Islamic Brotherhood (MIB) finally got to ‘rest’ after a life he spent tirelessly serving his congregation, the Harlem community, and Muslims across the city and beyond in a tearful tribute. 

“Everything that you all think of him, he was so much more as a father,” she said between sobs. “He was so kind, so loving, so caring. There was nothing we couldn’t go to him with. This is such a tremendous loss for us.”  

She mentioned how he had taken care of her when she was ill, and uplifted her when she was sad.

“He was everything to us,” she added. “It was hard sharing him with everybody all the time. All the time. I’ve tried to wrap my head around this, and I know that this is the only way he can rest. He was always doing something for somebody. It’s just never been about him. It was always about all of us.”

Her tribute followed more than half a dozen given by faith and community leaders, academics and politicians in the hour-long service including co-founder of MIB and professor Halima Toure, Imam Zaid Shakir, New York City council member Yusef Salaam, and mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani.

People of all generations and walks of life turned out to pay their respects to “a giant” who dedicated his life to service, including working at MIB for more than 50 years.

Attendee Abdul Rahman Bilal, 84, of Harlem told Middle East Eye he had known Abdur-Rashid for decades and had met him when he first went to the Mosque of Islamic Brotherhood. 

“He was a wonderful, kind, thoughtful, caring individual,” he said. “A very nice man.”

Bilal said he admired him because he was “one of the few people that didn't follow Elijah Muhammad”, the former Nation of Islam leader. 

Abdur-Rashid converted to Sunni Islam in 1971 when he was 20 years-old at MIB before its brick-and-mortar foundation, and where Shaykh Ahmed Tawfiq - a student of Malcolm X- was the imam and one of the founding members there. 

In addition to serving his congregation, Abdur-Rashid was a prison chaplain at both a state level for facilities such as Sing Sing and NYC prisons such as Rikers. 

Luqman Yunus, 74, told Middle East Eye at the funeral that he had known Imam Abdur-Rashid since 1978 when he was a chaplain at the prison Yunus had served time at. 

“He’s always been there for us, you know,” Yunus said. “All I can say is he’s a very good guy and I was sorry and shocked to learn about his passing”.   

Shaykh Abdul Rashid, 73, of Brooklyn, told MEE he had come “to pay tribute to an icon and legend of the Muslim community in general, but the Black American Muslim community specifically. He was a bedrock, as you can see by the multitudes who turned out to pray for him. 

“He loved his Harlem. Harlem loved him. He loved Malcolm. We’re at Masjid Malcolm Shabbaz on Malcolm X Boulevard, so he's home.” 

He then prayed for Abdur-Rashid to be granted the highest levels of paradise and be reunited with his “beloved” El-Hajj Malik el-Shabbaz (Malcolm x).

He said he met Abdur-Rashid almost 50 years ago when they were both students of Shaykh Tawfiq, and then had worked together when they were both part of a chaplains’ association in New York.

‘Everything to everybody’

Batina Bamba, who has worked at MIB for 20 years, told MEE in person she had first heard of Abdur-Rashid when he was a Sunday school teacher at a Lutheran church before he converted to Islam, which gave him “a solid foundation in the Christian faith”. She herself had been in the Lutheran Church. 

“One of the other things that Imam Talib was really big about was interfaith relationships”, she said. She recalled how he maintained relationships with many pastors, including his sister’s pastor, and had once been entrusted to give a Sunday sermon at a Lutheran church in downtown Manhattan while Muslim. 

She also believes his positive relationships with other faith leaders meant he was able to collaborate on effectively championing civil rights for people like Amadou Diallo and Yusef Salaam

“That's one thing about Imam Talib - nobody else can meet that standard of being able to cross boundaries and reach people's hearts,” she added. “It's a loss, not just to our mosque, but a loss to the world. If there's any hope or chance for interfaith peace, he's the kind of person that could have been a broker of that.”

She recalled how Abdur-Rashid had campaigned for the community at large in city government, including winning the right to have the Adhan be called on loud speaker at the mosque, for people not to be issued parking tickets on Eid, to have halal options in public schools, for Eid to be added to the public school calendar of holidays. 

She also recalled him issuing a lawsuit against the New York Police Department for invading the mosque’s privacy after 9/11. 

“There were a lot of things that he did that people did not know about”, she said.

“He was everything to everybody, and he always made himself available to the point where I'm actually happy for him that he gets a break now,” she added.


 

Abdur-Rashid was born in 1951 as Barry Lee Hicks in North Carolina. His family moved to the Bronx when he was a child. 

According to historian Rasul Miller, who was born and grew up in Harlem and flew in from California to attend the funeral, Abdur-Rashid grew up in the era of black power, the anti-war movement, pan Africanism, and black nationalism and was “influenced by all of that”. 

Abdur-Rashid was also an actor and dancer and was influenced by the Black Arts movement that sprung up after Malcolm X’s death. He was friends with poet and writer Askia Toure, who Miller said was “a major part of MIB at the time”. 

After he took his shahada in 1971, Miller said he became a dedicated member of MIB and ended up assisting with imam duties by 1974 to 1975 and editor of the Western Sunrise newspaper, MIB’s flagship publication. 

After MIB was established at its current location on 113th St, Miller also recounted how MIB was welcoming of the arts and of organisers and he was told that people like Dr Mutulu Shakur had come to juma with Tupac (Shakur) in a stroller. Miller says that Abdur-Rashid continued to uphold the same respect for the arts when he took over as imam of MIB in 1989. 

Abdur-Rashid also went on to serve as President Emeritus of the Islamic Leadership Council of New York (Majlis Ash-Shura) and served as the Vice President of the Muslim Alliance in North America.  

He was also on the advisory board of the  ‘After Malcolm Digital Archive,’ a university-based repository that documents African American Muslim contributions to the struggle for justice in the United States.

He passed away on Saturday at home, the same day as signage for the Malcolm X plaza was being installed to officially designate it as a community plaza in Harlem. He was due to recite prayers at the event. 

Bamba said that while Senator Cordelle Cleare organized everything, Abdur-Rashid was “the brains behind it”. 

“For him to pass away on the day that they were naming Malcolm X Plaza is so symbolic and it's also like Allah saying, ‘Your mission is complete’,” she said.

Following his janaza, he was buried in Rosedale Cemetery in Linden, New Jersey on Monday.


 

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