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INTRODUCTION TO THE MINISTRIES

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A Ministry is a collective executive.  It is responsible for providing public service in a specialized field of government, led by a senior public servant known as “minister”.    The verb ‘minister’ is from a Latin word meaning “to serve”.  The noun ‘minister’ refers to one who provides a service as an agent of a higher authority. Ministries afford or give things needed by the people to help sustain an acceptable quality of life in the society they serve.  They are the practical means through which every member of the society receives freedom, justice and equality in his or her daily life and their existence ensures a cohesive, flourishing society that improves and advances,  generation after generation, toward the ultimate goal of complete freedom, justice and equality for all persons, regardless of creed or class or color.

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​This Ministry bears responsibility for assisting the individual member of the community in the process of heeding truth and right guidance.   Respect, honor and obedience to the Authority of the Creator in all aspects of life are essential to peace, harmony, freedom, justice and equality.  In the words of the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan:  “…Self-development is an absolutely essential component of this microcosm of the new world.  It is not enough that we grow horizontally through the acquisition of farms, factories, banks, industry, trade, commerce, money, good homes…horizontal growth alone is death.  All dead things are on a horizontal level.  Therefore, we must grow vertically:  grow in uprightness, or we will be overcome by our horizontal growth.”  The foundation of this ministry are study and training units, “…designed on the Guidance of Allah(God) to produce: self-examination; self-analysis; self-correction and to quicken in each of us, the self-accusing Spirit. For it is only when we are awakened morally that we have to face the self-accusing spirit that leads to our resurrection.” (see, Letter of Introduction : Self-Improvement: the Basis for Community Development,  December 12, 1986.)

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  • Agriculture

  • Education

  • Information

  • Health

  • Trade and Commerce

  • Defense

  • Justice

  • Arts & Culture

  • Science and Technology

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