Detroiter Iola Corbett shares her journey through Detroit, meeting Malcolm X and becoming a union president
Nargis Rahman February 28, 2025Iola Corbett, also known as Sister Ameedah, is the author of the book “Growing Up Muslim and the Journey Continues.”

Iola Corbett holds up a copy of her book, "Growing Up Muslim."
February is Black History Month and WDET’s Detroit Evening Report is collecting Black History stories from listeners.
Iola Corbett, also known as Sister Ameedah, is the author of the book “Growing Up Muslim and the Journey Continues,” a story about being born and raised in Detroit.
Corbett’s family was a part of the Nation of Islam when she was a child.
“That was unbelievable, because I remember it like my first time going with [my father] to the temple. At that time, because it was we had a restaurant, the temple was right around the corner,” she shared.
Over the years she met Malcolm X, who visited her family’s restaurant in Detroit often.
“My mother was an excellent cook, so he had dinner with my dad every day, so I got to hear him, and I would serve him. He was a big influence in my family’s life,” she said.
As part of growing up in the Nation of Islam, Corbett said she was a part of something bigger.
“It still gave me a purpose of who I was, who I wanted to be close with my community,” she explained.
There were many businesses, an apartment building and a bookstore that were part of the network.
“We were about African American people, because back in the day, and I’m sure when my dad come up here, I was amazed that he came here and drove, you know, because I remember going down south with him, and it was you couldn’t go in the bathroom. You couldn’t drink out of the faucet. So when we got around people that looked like us and were happy to and treated us royally, you couldn’t have anything but love for that,” she said.
“When we got around people that looked like us and were happy to and treated us royally, you couldn’t have anything but love for that.” — Iola Corbett
Her family converted to Sunni Islam as part of a mass conversion under the guidance of Imam Warith Deen Mohammed in the 1970s.
Corbett worked in Detroit in several roles, including as a factory worker and machine operator for the Detroit Oil Company. She also became first Black female president of Local Lodge 82 of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAMAW).
“I conduct the meetings and all that. But I also went on a tour of some of the unions around the city. I got to go to Halifax, Nova Scotia, you know, you travel to see what other unions or other of your union members were doing,” she explained.
The larger union 698 took over local union 82.
She says she wrote “Growing Up Muslim” as a way to preserve her family’s legacy.
“We need to know things about our history, and I wanted the community to know children and my grandchildren, and now I have lots of great grandchildren. I got to really expound about how I grew up, so they would know. Because, you know, my mom is gone, my dad is gone, so they never met him. I want them to know what great people that they were.”
Corbett said she’s working on a new book expanding on her life in Detroit.
Hear our full conversation with Corbett using the audio player above.
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Author
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Nargis Hakim Rahman is the Civic Reporter at 101.9 WDET. Rahman graduated from Wayne State University, where she was a part of the Journalism Institute of Media Diversity.