Saved from Demolition ‘City of Roses' Black Portlanders Historic Victorian makes its way through the streets o f north Portland Memphis native users her camera to document life in the city See Page 5 See page 3 Volume XLIII www.portlandobserver.com Number 37 Wednesday • September 25, 2013 Estab I ¡shed I PI 1970 T Committed to Cultural Diversity r - photo by / k s i/H t i •'community ommunitv se service D onovan M. S mith /T he P ortland O bserver The Moorish Science Temple o f America was founded one hundred years ago by a self-proclaimed prophet named Noble Drew Ali. Members o f the Portland temple are working feverishly to spread its five core principles o f love, truth, peace, freedom and ju stice and promote a true nationality for people o f African descent across the globe. A Sense of Belonging Moorish Science embraces African roots D onovan M. S mith T he P ortland O bserver by It’s not a religion, it’s not a cult, and it’s not a secret society; it is a spiritual science, it is Moorish Science. The Moorish Science Temple of America has slowly been build­ ing a foundation in Portland whether it be through prison ministries, a weekly Portland Community Media television program or gang outreach. Currently the temple is in its centennial year; it was founded in 1913 by a 27-year-old man named Noble Drew Ali. Bom out of ancient knowledge of Africa, the temple works to instill five basic principles to black men and women in America. Those principles are love, truth, peace, freedom, and justice. The Portland sect, referred to as Temple #2, holds meet­ ings out of a small building located at 4725 N Williams. Since establishing themselves as a 501 (c)(3) non-profit, they are in talks with the Matt Dishman Community Center in north Portland to relocate. Membership stands at 15 heads, five of whom have joined since the beginning of the year. Brother Stanfill El, who approximates he’s practiced the science for about two years, has this to say about Ali, “H e’s a redeemer.” “He came to redeem a people that lost their identity. They took the physical shackles of slavery and put it on our mind,” El said. While the group’s principles are not seen as radical, some of their practices can draw controversy. The M oroccan flag flies in tandem with the Am erican flag every time a meeting is called to order. Why the M oroccan flag? The temple believes that most blacks brought to Am erica during the slave trade were of M oroc­ can descent, whose inhabitants were once comm only continued on page 5