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| Editors | Herb Boyd andIlyasah Shabazz |
|---|---|
| Author | Malcolm X |
| Published | 2014 |
| Publisher | Third World Press |
| Pages | 236 |
| ISBN | 978-0-88378-351-1 |
The Diary of Malcolm X is a record of the thoughts ofMalcolm X during his 1964pilgrimage to Mecca and two trips to Africa. Following a legal dispute delaying its initial publication, theDiary was released in August 2014.
The diary is part of the collection of Malcolm X's papers that his daughters loaned to theSchomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, a division of theNew York Public Library, in 2003.[1] It is the private journal kept by the human rights leader during 1964, a year he largely spent traveling in Africa and the Middle East,[2] and scholars consider it "a document of incalculable historical importance".[3]
In 2013,Third World Press launched anIndiegogo campaign to raise money to help publish the diary, which was edited by journalistHerb Boyd and Malcolm X's daughterIlyasah Shabazz. Publication was expected on November 15, 2013.[2]
Days before the scheduled publication date, Third World Press was sued by X Legacy LLC, a corporation that represents the daughters of Malcolm X. X Legacy won a temporary restraining order, claimingThird World Press did not have the right to publish the book. Third World Press said it had a valid, signed contract. An unnamed source familiar with the suit said the plaintiffs were "probably [Ilyasah’s sisters]Attallah,Quibilah, and Gamela Shabazz", adding that of the remaining sisters, Malaak supported Ilyasah and Malikah was not involved.[3]
At a hearing on November 22, JudgeLaura Taylor Swain extended the restraining order until a hearing can be held in January 2014. Lawyers for X Legacy said that there had been reports that Third World Press was selling the diary online despite the restraining order, a claim denied by the publisher's lawyer. The publisher's lawyer argued at the hearing that they had a contract with one of Malcolm X's daughter's to publish the diary; a lawyer for X Legacy said that no contract was valid unless all six daughters agreed.[4]
The legal disputes were resolved and the diary was published in August 2014.[5]