Umar Lee

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Umar Lee
BornSeptember 18, 1974 (1974-09-18) (age 47)
St Louis, Missouri, U.S.
NationalityAmerican
OccupationWriter

Umar Lee (born Brett Darren Lee; September 18, 1974 in St Louis, Missouri) is an American writer, media personality and political activist.[1]

Religion[]

Coming from a white Protestant background, Lee converted to Sunni Islam in the 1990s and quickly associated himself within the Salafi movement.[2] In 2007, Lee authored a ten post blog series entitled The Rise and Fall of the Salafi Movement, which focused mostly on black converts to Salafism in the United States, in a lineage of interest in Islam which he traced from Malcolm X onward.[2] Lee's writing about the movement, which was mostly lamentful, portrayed a disillusionment with various aspects of the Salafi movement such as a separation from the real world, divisions, and overseas influence.[3] During this time, Lee's blog won the award for "best series" in the Brass Crescent Awards.[4] In 2017 Lee criticized the Georgetown Islamic Studies Professor Jonathan Brown after he attended his lecture on slavery.[5]

Political activity[]

Lee, while working as a cab driver, campaigned against the introduction of ride-share companies to the St. Louis Market.[6][7] In 2014, Lee covered the Ferguson Unrest and was interviewed on several national outlets. During his coverage of the Ferguson unrest, Lee was arrested on two occasions [8] Lee was subsequently fired as a cab driver and contended that it was for his political activities in Ferguson.[9] In 2016 Lee briefly announced he was running for St. Louis Mayor as a Republican.[10] Lee also writes Noir Literature that is based in St Louis.[11]

Since June 2018, Lee hosted St Louis Speaks, a podcast that fosters dialog about St Louis and the surrounding area. The podcast was co-created and is produced by historian Mark Loehrer [12]In 2020 the podcast changed its name to Informal History STL and added several local historians and writers while adding a quarterly print publication.

Personal life[]

Umar Lee[13] was born to James D. Lee and Karen Arnold, in St Louis, Missouri into a blue collar family. Lee's 19-year old nephew, an aspiring SoundCloud rapper named Shelbyon Polk (also known as "Lil' Chubb"), was found dead with gunshot wounds to his torso on Thanksgiving Day 2017 in St Louis.[14] Lee's mother, Karen Arnold, was murdered on December 18, 2018 in Kirkwood, Missouri by unknown assailants who broke into her apartment while she was sleeping and shot her.[15]

References[]

Footnotes[]

  1. ^ "Umar Lee - The Nation". 12 March 2016.
  2. ^ a b Kahn 2016, p. 125
  3. ^ Kahn 2016, p. 126
  4. ^ "The Thirteenth Annual Brass Crescent Awards".
  5. ^ "Professor Uses Lecture to Defend Islamic Slavery". 15 February 2017.
  6. ^ Lee, Umar (April 19, 2014). "Why Progressives Should Think Twice About Embracing Uber and Lyft".
  7. ^ Pistor, Nicholas J.C. "St. Louis cab driver compares Lyft to Walmart, blasts 'hipsters'".
  8. ^ "Police abuses can't stand scrutiny of social media, live-streaming".
  9. ^ Holleman, Joe. "High-profile STL cabbie says he was fired for political stances".
  10. ^ Holleman, Joe. "Protest figure Umar Lee withdraws from mayoral race".
  11. ^ Post-Dispatch, Harry Levins Special to the. "'St. Louis Noir' isn't the sunny side of our city".
  12. ^ "With his new podcast, St. Louis Speaks, Umar Lee wants to spark a conversation about the region". 6 June 2018.
  13. ^ "BOP Federal Prisoner Search for BOP # 09576-055 Brett D Lee Released 1/19/2001". Federal Bureau of Prisons.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  14. ^ "Police release IDs of 6 killed in St. Louis from Thanksgiving through Sunday".
  15. ^ "Woman, 64, killed at Kirkwood apartment complex".

Bibliography[]

  • Kahn, Jonathon S. (2016). Race and Secularism in America. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0231541275.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""