Share

Khalil Gibran Muhammad biography

1 photo

Quick Facts

Best Known For

Dr. Khalil Gibran Muhammad is a professor, author and media commentator who is executive director of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture.


Quiz

Think you know about Biography?

Answer questions and see how you rank against other players.

Play Now

Synopsis

Born in Chicago, Illinois, in April 1972, Khalil Gibran Muhammad worked in finance before earning his Ph.D. in history from Rutgers University. He worked as a fellow at the Vera Institute of Justice before teaching at Indiana University. A writer and eminent scholar on African-American history, Muhammad became executive director of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in 2011.

Quotes

"History is the building block of all knowledge in our society, and it is the most important part of the most significant tradition that human beings have, which is storytelling."

– Khalil Gibran Muhammad

"The Schomburg Center is to me what F.A.O. Schwartz is to my three children. Except, I get to play with the Center's amazing 'toys' every day. Like any scholar, I'm a lifelong learner by nature and I’m always curious about things I do not know."

– Khalil Gibran Muhammad

"What drove me into academia was a pursuit of knowledge about how it is that we could live in a society that justified this sort of thing, that obfuscated the reality that black life was cheaper than other forms of life in America."

– Khalil Gibran Muhammad

"I am committed to promoting the voice of black people as they have engaged in the most significant issues of our times. What matters to me is that they and people of the African diaspora are able to articulate why their humanity matters, to show and showcase their contributions to the world, and to have in a sense a history that is validated and respected and made meaningful to humanity at large."

– Khalil Gibran Muhammad

Early Life, Background in Finance

Khalil Gibran Muhammad was born in Chicago, Illinois, in April 1972, with his name inspired by the famous Lebanese poet Kahlil Gibran. K.G. Muhammad is the great-grandson of Nation of Islam leader Elijah Muhammad and son of Ozier Muhammad, a photographer for The New York Times and a Pulitzer Prize winner.

Muhammad grew up in Chicago's South Side and went on to attend the University of Pennsylvania as an economics major. He was employed at the firm Deloitte & Touche LLP with the initial idea that he would reap the financial rewards of working in business, yet found himself moved in a different direction. The circumstances of the Rodney King beating along with the trial of O.J. Simpson inspired the future academic to reflect on his place in the world, as well as on the country's criminal justice system and the treatment of African-American citizens.

"So what drove me into academia was a pursuit of knowledge about how it is that we could live in a society that justified this sort of thing, that obfuscated the reality that black life was cheaper than other forms of life in America," Latimer said in a 2011 interview with journalist Tavis Smiley.

Becomes Professor and Publishes Book

Muhammad returned to school and attended Rutgers University, receiving his Ph.D. in history in 2004. Upon his graduation from Rutgers, he worked as an Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow for two years at the Vera Institute of Justice, a nonprofit and nonpartisan organization that helps create progressive initiatives for the U.S. criminal justice system. Muhammad then worked for several years as an assistant professor of history at Indiana University in Bloomington, where he also became associate editor of the Journal of American History.

In 2010, Muhammad released The Condemnation of Blackness: Race, Crime and the Making of Modern America, published by Harvard University Press. The book, which won the John Hope Franklin Publication Prize, looks at how racist ideology has shaped the treatment of criminality in urban America among African-American populations.

Appointed Director of the Schomburg

In fall of 2010, it was announced that Muhammad would become head of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, which is part of the New York Public Library. Chosen unanimously by a nine-member committee that included scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr., Muhammad became executive director in 2011, succeeding longtime library head Howard Dodson Jr.

"I am committed to promoting the voice of black people as they have engaged in the most significant issues of our times," Muhammad said of his new position, according to a statement from Indiana University.

ADVERTISEMENT

Resources

Black History People

Black History Videos

Black History Photos


ADVERTISEMENT

Celebrity Connections

Show More Connections
Fact Check: We strive for accuracy and fairness. If you see something that doesn't look right, contact us!