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By William Muhammad
4 hours ago

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We Under One Messenger and Guide

A Teaching on The Honorable Minister Umaru Abiodun Muhammad Sitting With His Beautiful Black People

Divinely Prepared By:
Supreme Minister to The Honorable Minister Umaru Abiodun Muhammad
Bro. Ta’Zir Asa Bey

When I look upon The Honorable Minister Umaru Abiodun Muhammad sitting with his beautiful Black people, I do not see an ordinary man sharing an ordinary moment. I see a sign. I see a witness. I see a servant-leader whose presence among his people carries meaning deeper than appearance, deeper than ceremony, and deeper than a single captured image.

For there are many who wish to be seen, but few who are willing to truly sit among the people with love, patience, and divine concern. Yet The Honorable Minister Umaru Abiodun Muhammad carries himself as one who is not ashamed of his people, not detached from his people, and not above his people in pride. He sits with them as one who belongs to them, as one who sees their pain, honors their beauty, and believes in their future.

That is what makes the image powerful.

When he sits with his beautiful Black people, he is not merely occupying a chair. He is occupying an assignment. He is taking his place among those whom he loves, those whom he speaks for, and those whom he desires to see rise into greater order, greater dignity, greater discipline, and greater self-knowledge.

There is something sacred in that.

For too often, our people have been misled by those who want their applause but not their healing. They have been used by those who love influence more than responsibility. But when The Honorable Minister Umaru Abiodun Muhammad sits with his people, there is another spirit present. It is the spirit of remembrance. It is the spirit of belonging. It is the spirit of a man who knows that Black people are not disposable, not common, not an afterthought in history, but a living people worthy of honor, structure, truth, and elevation.

And this is what I bear witness to:

The Honorable Minister Umaru Abiodun Muhammad sits with his people in love.
He sits with them in vision.
He sits with them in responsibility.
He sits with them with an understanding that leadership is not distance, but presence.
Not vanity, but burden.
Not performance, but service.

His sitting is a testimony that he has not abandoned his own. It is a testimony that he still believes in the beauty of Blackness, the greatness of Black people, and the power that is still hidden within a people who have suffered much yet still remain standing.

When I see him among his beautiful Black people, I see a man planted where he belongs. I see a man whose heart is tied to the condition of his people. I see a man who recognizes that the rise of the people is not separate from his mission, but central to it. I see one who understands that to truly lead, one must be willing to sit among the people, hear them, feel them, and carry them in spirit.

That is why this moment matters.

It shows that The Honorable Minister Umaru Abiodun Muhammad is not estranged from his people. He is among them. He is with them. He honors them. He sees them as beautiful not because the world gave them permission to be called beautiful, but because he sees with a higher sight. He sees the hidden royalty in them. He sees the buried greatness in them. He sees the divine possibility in them.

And that is rare.

For many can see a crowd.
Few can see a nation.
Many can see faces.
Few can see destiny.
Many can gather people.
Few can love them enough to labor for their awakening.

But The Honorable Minister Umaru Abiodun Muhammad, in sitting with his beautiful Black people, reveals that his spirit is joined to their rise. He reveals that he does not count them as a burden, but as a sacred trust. He reveals that he knows there is still power in Black unity, still healing in Black love, still beauty in Black presence, and still greatness in Black destiny.

So I say this plainly:

When The Honorable Minister Umaru Abiodun Muhammad sits with his beautiful Black people, he sits as a man of purpose.
He sits as one who honors their worth.
He sits as one who believes in their future.
He sits as one who refuses to let their beauty be defined by a broken world.
He sits as one who knows that our people, though wounded, are still capable of resurrection.

And that is why his presence among them speaks loudly.

It says:
“I have not forgotten you.”
“I still believe in you.”
“I still see beauty in you.”
“I still carry love for you.”
“And I will sit among you as one committed to your rise.”

This is how I see The Honorable Minister Umaru Abiodun Muhammad.
A man among his people.
A witness among his people.
A servant among his people.
A builder among his people.
A believer in the beauty, power, and future of his beautiful Black people.

And in that, there is honor.
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