Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire
  • omnibus

Saladin Muhammad Presente!
​​​​​​​ Ajamu Baraka, BAR editor and columnist
28 Sep 2022
Saladin Muhammad Presente!

Saladin Muhammad was the founder of Black Workers for Justice. He played a key role in developing Black revolutionary labor organizing.

“African Americans need a national political framework with an anti-capitalist, anti-imperialist and internationalist program – a national liberation front…”  (Saladin Muhammad, Marxism, Reparations and the Black Freedom Struggle)

Our dear brother, leader, confidant, mentor and model servant of our people, Saladin Muhammad, joined our revolutionary ancestors on September 19, 2022 in Rocky Mount, North Carolina. Saladin was 76 and had been battling illness for a while.

When our revolutionary elders leave this material world, we often say another giant has fallen as a testament to their contribution and the love that we have for them. But sometimes, that characterization is just not enough. This is one of those times. Brother Saladin occupied a category that only a few have occupied. As one of only a handful of strategic thinkers and organizers of our movement that had not retired (how does a member of an oppressed nation and class retire from revolution?) Saladin continued to provide the leadership that he had given for well over five decades.

Sister Ashaki Binta, who worked with Saladin captures what he meant to all of us:

“Brother Saladin leaves an outstanding legacy of revolutionary commitment, leadership, consciousness, and direct organizing of our people’s struggle for liberation. He was a commander-in-chief of revolutionary forces throughout the Black Liberation Movement and a staunch fighter for the Black Working Class. He worked tirelessly and with phenomenal energy to organize, guide, and lead our people’s fights and battles against oppression. He was an internationalist, upholding the world-wide struggle against capitalism and imperialism. His intellect, insight and analysis was outstanding in the theory and practice of organizing class and revolutionary struggle and the tactics and strategy of social transformation, national liberation, and socialism for the African American people.”  

Asé!

I met Saladin around 1987, just a few years after I “went South” to organize. I was working for the last of the 1964 Mississippi Summer organizations, the Voter Education Project, at that time being run by another one of my mentors Ed Brown, the older brother of Jamil al-Amin (H. Rap brown). I was helping to organize a fightback in a Black community that was attempting to reconstitute itself as the municipality of Keysville in southern Georgia. Saladin was there representing the Black Workers for Justice that had been organized a few years earlier. I was immediately struck by his strategic vision, organizational skills and steady, humble revolutionary leadership.  A few years later I was a proud member of BWFJ and even though we parted ways, I maintained a relationship with the comrades and with Saladin over the years. He was always there for me with strategic advice and never hesitated to support me no matter if he agreed with every aspect of what I was attempting or not. That I will never forget.

Brother Abdul Akalimat, another of our revolutionary elders who worked with Saladin for many years, especially the last few years in the various efforts to build a national framework for Black left unity, shared some of the remaining strategic questions Saladin was still grappling with until the very end:

  1. What are the paths out of the working class into revolutionary movements for social transformation? What is the role of family, childhood friends, cultural practices, and neighborhood political culture?
  2. How does Black resistance become a conscious part of the Black liberation movement? What is the role of a progressive Black nationalism, and how can it link to working class issues?
  3. How has the struggle in the African Diaspora for national liberation from colonialism and imperialism impacted the Black liberation movement in the US? After post-independence reversal into neo-colonialism, especially in South Africa, what can be the relationship between the Black Liberation movement in the US and the fight for social transformation and social justice in Africa?
  4. What are the prospects for the fight of Black workers? What is the role of the Black workers struggle within the general workers movement?
  5. What is the necessary connection between the fight for Black liberation and the fight for socialism?

Thank you, brother Saladin. We will continue to grapple with and to solve these challenges/questions as you did in theory and practice.

Brother Saladin's Celebration of Life service by his family will be Saturday, October 1 at 2 pm eastern time at the Rocky Mount Event Center located at 285 NE Main St., Rocky Mount NC 27801 and can be viewed on Youtube.

There will be a memorial service organized by the Black Workers for Justice on November 12. Details will be forthcoming.

Rest in peace African. Know that those of us still in this ream of existence pledge to continue the redemption of our people. We will fight and we will win because in our heads and hearts will be the memory of you and all our people who sacrificed so that we could someday be free. We still hear the drums brother Saladin. And as long as we hear those drums of Africa calling African workers and the colonized everywhere to freedom, we will never give up.

That is what we learned from you, and it is a lesson we will keep with us until we see you again!

Saladin Presente – the African Nation will be free!

Ajamu Baraka is the national organizer of the Black Alliance for Peace and an editor and contributing columnist for the Black Agenda Report. Baraka serves on the Executive Committee of the U.S. Peace Council and leadership body of the U.S. based United National Anti-War Coalition (UNAC) and the Steering Committee of the Black is Back Coalition.

Saladin Muhammad
Black Labor

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles. Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


Related Stories

Charisse Burden-Stelly, PhD
Harry Haywood, Black People, and the 2024 U.S. Election
27 November 2024
Harry Haywood’s work is a guiding light to help Black people analyze our position in the U.S.
Understanding the White Supremacy at the Center of the 'Class Over Race' Debate
Jon Jeter
Understanding the White Supremacy at the Center of the 'Class Over Race' Debate
20 September 2023
Any talk of discussing class instead of racism is disingenuous in a country which uses every opportunity to indulge in anti-Black racism.
SPEECH: Forge Negro-Labor Unity for Peace and Jobs, Paul Robeson, 1950
Editors, The Black Agenda Review
SPEECH: Forge Negro-Labor Unity for Peace and Jobs, Paul Robeson, 1950
12 April 2023
Paul Robeson’s 1950 speech to the delegates of the National Labor Conference for Negro Rights should remind us that there is no Black liberatio
INTERVIEW: A Talk with Sylvia Woods, 1974
Editors, The Black Agenda Review
INTERVIEW: A Talk with Sylvia Woods, 1974
15 March 2023
An inspiring interview with Sylvia Woods highlights the role of Black women in labor organizing and demonstrates that Black women should a
Laboring Beyond Black Representation
Too Black
Laboring Beyond Black Representation
06 April 2022
The allure of Black representation in high places can be very dangerous.
Bessemer Alabama Amazon Workers Continue Struggle to Unionize
Saladin Muhammad
Bessemer Alabama Amazon Workers Continue Struggle to Unionize
23 March 2022
The mostly Black labor force at an Amazon fulfillment center in Bessemer, Alabama will have a second opportunity to vote for unionization.
The Realities of Temp Work
Eugene Puryear
The Realities of Temp Work
16 February 2022
Poverty, wage theft, injuries, and even death are features of the temporary employment system.
Ben Fletcher: The Life and Times of a Black Wobbly
Brian Shuffler
Ben Fletcher: The Life and Times of a Black Wobbly
28 April 2021
The struggle for workers’ rights in this country has been an ongoing battle for hundreds of years.
Organizing in the South 
Joseph B. Atkins 
Organizing in the South 
15 April 2021
Strong condemnations from the NAACP and Black Congressional Caucus of Amazon’s treatment of its workers might have made a difference in the strike
The UAW Strike, Blacks, Unions, and Capitalism
Ken Morgan
The UAW Strike, Blacks, Unions, and Capitalism
16 October 2019
The current strike is driven by gross inequalities in earnings among workers, as well as between labor and management.

More Stories


  • congo
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    The Congo and Trump's Mineral Deal
    02 May 2025
    The Democratic Republic of Congo and the Republic of Rwanda recently signed a Declaration of Principles in Washington. Is Rwanda ending its M23 group’s incursion into the DRC?
  • NBROC
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    National Black Radical Organizing Conference
    02 May 2025
    The second National Black Radical Organizing Conference will convene in Indianapolis, Indiana, from May 30 through June 1. The conference theme is “Base-Building for Collective Power.” We are joined…
  • Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
    Graylan Hagler: Capitulation Masquerading as Political Thought
    30 Apr 2025
    Liberals continue to condemn anyone who didn’t support Kamala Harris and the latest iteration of neo-liberal treachery. Black people are told to stand down when there is a fight worth waging.
  • North-South Project for People(s)-Centered Human Rights , Black Alliance For Peace
    The Black Alliance for Peace Calls for International Popular Mobilizations to Stop Israel’s Genocidal Campaign to Starve Palestinians to Death!
    30 Apr 2025
    The Israeli state’s starvation campaign in Gaza—backed by the U.S. and Europe—is a livestreamed genocide. As malnutrition ravages children and the West vetoes ceasefires, the 'rules-based order'…
  • Editors, The Black Agenda Review
    COMMENTARY: The American Dollar, Marcus Garvey, 1934
    30 Apr 2025
    “This is not high-way robbery; it can be better called international burglary.”
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us