Dear (JPP Contributor)

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Dear (JPP Contributor) Journal of Prisoners Journal of Prisoners on Prisons Telephone: 613.562.5246 c / o University of Ottawa Press Fax: 613.562.5247 on Prisons 542 King Edward Avenue Email: [email protected] Ottawa, Ontario, Canada Website: www.jpp.org K1N 6N5 Volume 15 Number 2 / Volume 16 Number 1 2006: Special Anniversary Issue Black Panther Party 1966-2006 Status: Available Pages: 250 Editors’ Introduction: Responding to Centuries of Violence, Imprisonment and Oppression, by Viviane Saleh-Hanna and Ashanti Omowali Aslton Articles: Introduction: American Apocalypse, by Dylan Rodriguez Liberation or Gangsterism: Freedom or Slavery?, by Russell Maroon Shoatz The Ethics of Black Atonement in Racist America: The Execution of Stanley Tookie Williams, by Dhoruba al-Mujahid Bin-Wahad The Perverse Slave Mentality, by Jalil Muntaqim Soledad Brother George Jackson – Memories of Comrade George, by Kiilu Nyasha Before Guantanamo or Abu Ghraib were the Black Panthers, by Mumia Abu-Jamal How the US Destroyed the Black Panther Party and Continues to Persecute its Veterans, by John Bowman The New York Panther 21 Trial: Fighting “Democratic Fascism”, by Dhoruba al-Mujahid Bin-Wahad A Woman’s Journey in the BPP and BLA: Safiya Bukhari, 1950-2003, by Safiya Bukhari My Prison Experiences and What Keeps Me Struggling, by Sundiata Acoli Neutralize and Destroy: The Continuing Vendetta Against the Panthers, by Larry Pinkney and Gerald Sanders Let 100 Mandelas Bloom: Who Needs Prisons and Who do the Prisons Need?, by Veronza Bowers On Being a Black Panther, by Herman Bell Release Ruchell Cinque Magee: Sole Survivor of the August 7, 1970 Courthouse Slave Rebellion!, by Ruchell Cinque Magee with Kiilu Nyasha Bismillah Ir Rahman Ir Raheem, by Bashir Hameed Interview with Hugo Pinell, by Hugo Pinell and Kiily Nyasha Parole Denial Appeal, by Robert ‘Seth’ Hayes Two More Black Activists Resist and are Jailed: October 5, 2005, by Claude Marks Revive the Federal Parole System, by Sundiata Acoli Marshall Law: Excerpts from a Memoir, by Eddie Conway The Journey of a Thousand Miles Begins with the First Step: May 2006, by Robert ‘Seth’ Hayes Prisoners’ Struggles: Dedication to Yuri Kochiyama On-going Organizing: Black August Organizing Committee Resources and Links .
Recommended publications
  • The Dragons Fire
    1 The Dragons Fire “When the prison doors are opened, the real dragon will fly out” Ho Chi Minh THE NATIONAL JERICHO MOVEMENT NEWSLETTER in Fierce Determination Since 1996 August 15-Sept 15, 2020, Vol. 30 http://www.thejerichomovement.com P.O. Box 2164 Chesterfield, Virginia 23832 Steering Committee Advisory Board 1. Chair: Jihad Abdulmumit 1. Paulette Dauteuil 2. Secretary: Adam Carpinelli 2. Anne Lamb 3. Treasurer: Ashanti Alston 3. Frank Velgara 4. Fund Raising Chairperson: A’isha Mohammad 4. Kazi Toure 5. Dragon Fire Newsletter Editor: A’isha Mohammad 5. Jorge Chang 6. Tekla Johnson Revolutionary Greetings, Welcome to our National Jericho Movement Newsletter. Thank you to all of our members and affiliates who contribute critical information regarding our Political Prisoners/Prisoners of War as well as updates on activities, events and actions. Moving forward, we stand in fierce determination and solidarity to free our remaining Political Prisoners and Prisoners of War still languishing behind the dungeon walls. Much work has been done by Jericho and other organizations, and there is still much more work to do. With 20 years behind us and much work ahead, Jericho is growing and is taking on new projects and missions. Our shared vision is that we will reach a time in this country (and others) wherein there will be no more Political Prisoners/Prisoners of War. We envision the day when they all will walk free and into their family’s arms-who have been waiting for decades. We hope you join us in making this a reality. “Do what must be done, discover your humanity and your love in revolution." Fallen Black Panther Field Marshal, Comrade George L.
    [Show full text]
  • Still Black Still Strong
    STIll BLACK,STIll SfRONG l STILL BLACK, STILL STRONG SURVIVORS Of THE U.S. WAR AGAINST BLACK REVOlUTIONARIES DHORUBA BIN WAHAD MUMIA ABU-JAMAL ASSATA SHAKUR Ediled by lim f1elcher, Tonoquillones, & Sylverelolringer SbIII01EXT(E) Sentiotext(e) Offices: P.O. Box 629, South Pasadena, CA 91031 Copyright ©1993 Semiotext(e) and individual contributors. Printed in the United States of America. ISBN 978-0-936756-74-5 1098765 ~_.......-.;,;,,~---------:.;- Contents DHORUDA BIN W"AHAD WARWITIllN 9 TOWARD RE'rHINKING SEIl'-DEFENSE 57 THE CuTnNG EDGE OF PRISONTECHNOLOGY 77 ON RACISM. RAp AND REBElliON 103 MUM<A ABU-JAMAL !NrERVIEW FROM DEATH Row 117 THE PRIsON-HOUSE OF NATIONS 151 COURT TRANSCRIPT 169 THE MAN MALCOLM 187 P ANIllER DAZE REMEMBERED 193 ASSATA SHAKUR PRISONER IN THE UNITED STATES 205 CHRONOLOGY OF THE BLACK PANTHER PARTY 221 FROM THE FBI PANTHER FILES 243 NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS 272 THE CAMPAIGN TO FREE BLACK POLITICALPRISONERS 272 Contents DHORUBA BIN "W AHAD WAKWITIllN 9 TOWARD REnnNKINO SELF-DEFENSE 57 THE CurnNG EOOE OF PRISON TECHNOLOGY 77 ON RACISM, RAp AND REBEWON 103 MUMIA ABU-JAMAL !NrERVIEW FROM DEATH Row 117 THE PRIsoN-HOUSE OF NATIONS 151 COURT TRANSCRIPT 169 THE MAN MALCOLM 187 PANTHER DAZE REMEMBERED 193 ASSATA SHAKUR PJusONER IN THE UNITED STATES 205 CHRONOLOGY OF THE BLACK PANTHER PARTY 221 FROM THE FBI PANTHER FILES 243 NOTES ON CONTRmUTORS 272 THE CAMPAIGN TO FREE BUCK POLITICAL PRISONERS 272 • ... Ahmad Abdur·Rahmon (reIeo,ed) Mumio Abu·lomol (deoth row) lundiolo Acoli Alberlo '/lick" Africa (releosed) Ohoruba Bin Wahad Carlos Perez Africa Chorl.. lim' Africa Can,uella Dotson Africa Debbi lim' Africo Delberl Orr Africa Edward Goodman Africa lonet Halloway Africa lanine Phillip.
    [Show full text]
  • You've Gone Past Us Now
    the blue afterwards Felix Shafer November 25, 2010 2 You've gone past us now. beloved comrade: north american revolutionary and political prisoner My sister and friend of these 40 years, it's over Marilyn Buck gone through the wire out into the last whirlwind. With time's increasing distance from her moment of death on the afternoon of August 3, 2010, at home in Brooklyn New York, the more that I have felt impelled to write a cohesive essay about Marilyn, the less possible such a project has become. She died at 62 years of age, surrounded by people who loved and still love her truly. She died just twenty days after being released from Carswell federal prison in Texas. Marilyn lived nearly 30 years behind bars. It was the determined effort of Soffiyah Elijah, her attorney and close friend of more than a quarter century that got her out of that prison system at all. Her loss leaves a wound that insists she must be more than a memory and still so much more than a name circulating in the bluest afterwards. If writing is one way of holding on to Marilyn, it also ramifies a crazed loneliness. Shadows lie down in unsayable places. I'm a minor player in the story who wants to be scribbling side by side with her in a cafe or perched together overlooking the Hudson from a side road along the Palisades. This work of mourning is fragmentary, impossible, subjective, politically unofficial, lovingly biased, flush with anxieties over (mis)representation, hopefully evocative of some of the 'multitude' of Marilyns contained within her soul, strange and curiously punctuated by shifts into reverie and poetic time.
    [Show full text]
  • Bashir Hameed
    $ A B C F 2 U P D A T E Q UA R T E R LY P U B L I C AT I O N O F T H E A B C F F a l l / Win 2008 "Any movement that does not support their political internees is a sham movement." - O. Lutalo Issue #51 Bashir Hameed: A Fallen Comrade Remembered In the 80s, however, the ABC began to gain What is the Anarchist Black Cross Federation? popularity again in the US and Europe. For years, the A B C ’s name was kept alive by a The Anarchist Black Cross (ABC) began provide support to those who were suff e r i n g number of completely autonomous groups shortly after the 1905 Russian Revolution. It because of their political beliefs. scattered throughout the globe and support- formed after breaking from the Political Red In 1919, the org a n i z a t i o n ’s name changed ing a wide variety of prison issues. Cross, due to the group’s refusal to support to the Anarchist Black Cross to avoid confu- In May of 1995, a small group of A B C Anarchist and Social Revolutionary Political sion with the International Red Cross. collectives merged into a federation whose Prisoners. The new group, naming itself the Through the 1920s and until 1958, the org a n- aim was to focus on the overall support and Anarchist Red Cross (ARC), began to pro- ization worked under various other names defense of Political Prisoners and Prisoners vide aid to those Political Prisoners who but provided the same level of support as the of Wa r.
    [Show full text]
  • From Mass Education to Mass Incarceration." a History of Education for the Many: from Colonization and Slavery to the Decline of US Imperialism
    Malott, Curry. "From Mass Education to Mass Incarceration." A History of Education for the Many: From Colonization and Slavery to the Decline of US Imperialism. London,: Bloomsbury Academic, 2021. 165–174. Bloomsbury Collections. Web. 27 Sep. 2021. <http:// dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781350085749.ch-10>. Downloaded from Bloomsbury Collections, www.bloomsburycollections.com, 27 September 2021, 09:00 UTC. Copyright © Curry Malott 2021. You may share this work for non-commercial purposes only, provided you give attribution to the copyright holder and the publisher, and provide a link to the Creative Commons licence. 10 From Mass Education to Mass Incarceration Introduction: Connection to the Previous Chapter In Chapter 9 we saw the systemic crisis of realization and the mobilization of teachers and activists in response. In the present chapter we explore the expansion of education in the post-Second World War era as capitalism’s labor needs shifted with the continued development of labor-saving technologies, which coincided with the emergence of a new era in mass mobilizations spearheaded by the African American Civil Rights movement and its leaders. New crises of realization develop as the labor-saving technologies eventually render large segments of the US working-class redundant. Unlike previous manifestations of racism designed to either justify the super- exploitation of slavery or maintain a form of the plantation system through prisoner-leasing schemes after Reconstruction, the particular form of “super- predator” anti-Blackness of the post-Second World War mass incarceration era was a response to Black workers especially being expelled from production as a by-product of automation (Puryear 2012).
    [Show full text]
  • Arm the Spirit
    August-December 1992 No. 14/15 The Spirit Price: $2.00 Autonomist/Anti-Imperialist Journal For A Free And Independent Kurdistan! y , 33: 1ft : r lll||||il||ll|l|lli|i l^ i iliiliiiiiiB The Spirit from our e-mail address. We're Still Here! We wish to end ihis "editorial" with a correction and a call for solidarity. First off, in our last issue we After an absence of many months we're finally reprinted a "Revolutionary Cells (RZ)" communique back with a new issue. As always, the usual problems from a group that claimed to carry out an action against seem to plague us, with money being our biggest neme- fascists. We have learned that this action was not success- sis. Our last issue came out August 1992, and since then ful and was not carried out by the RZ's. Comrades in we have slowly been putting together this issue. As one Europe have informed us that the bombs that had been month turned into another, we realized that a lot of the placed did not detonate and if this had occured, people information and articles in this issue were becoming may have been injured or killed. This is not the practice dated. This was particularly problematic in light of the of the RZ's. If people could be injured or killed as the ;|ip;}it:;|s;|$^ fact that we are a bi-monthly publication and we attempt result of an armed action by them, they will not cany it to be up-to-date in our coverage of various revolutionary out.
    [Show full text]
  • The Dragons Fire
    1 The Dragons Fire “When the prison doors are opened, the real dragon will fly out” Ho Chi Minh THE NATIONAL JERICHO MOVEMENT NEWSLETTER in Fierce Determination Since 1996 July 15-August 15, 2020, Vol. 29 http://www.thejerichomovement.com P.O. Box 2164 Chesterfield, Virginia 23832 Steering Committee Advisory Board 1. Chair: Jihad Abdulmumit 1. Paulette Dauteuil 2. Secretary: Adam Carpinelli 2. Anne Lamb 3. Treasurer: Ashanti Alston 3. Frank Velgara 4. Fund Raising Chairperson: A’isha Mohammad 4. Kazi Toure 5. Dragon Fire Newsletter Editor: A’isha Mohammad 5. Jorge Chang 6. Tekla Johnson Revolutionary Greetings, Welcome to our National Jericho Movement Newsletter. Thank you to all of our members and affiliations who contribute critical information regarding our Political Prisoners/Prisoners of War as well as updates on activities, events and actions. Moving forward, we stand in fierce determination and solidarity to free our remaining Political Prisoners and Prisoners of War still languishing behind the dungeon walls. Much work has been done by Jericho and other organizations, and there is still much more work to do. With 20 years behind us and much work ahead, Jericho is growing and is taking on new projects and missions. Our shared vision is that we will reach a time in this country (and others) wherein there will be no more Political Prisoners/Prisoners of War. We envision the day when they all will walk free and into their family’s arms-who have been waiting for decades. We hope you join us in making this a reality. 2 “Now the torch bearers who articulated the logic of struggle against the oppressor nation have either been confined in prison cells for a long time or have a comfortable job.
    [Show full text]
  • To Download V26 N3 Jul-Sept 2013
    A Significant Challenge to DON’T WORRY, BE HAPPY Conventional Revolutionary Thought by Mumia Abu-Jamal Excepts From a Review by Steve Bloom In the wake of the revelations by As for Congress, it may do some things Maroon the Implacable--The Collected refused to adapt to white settler-colo- intelligence contractor Edward Smowden, well, but oversight ain’t one of them. L. Writings of Russell Maroon Shoatz, edited nial society, and disaffected whites who that the US government reads billions of Fletcher Prouty, an Air Force officer who by Quincy Saul and Fred Ho, 2013, dropped out of that society. Creating an American’s records, and noted tens of worked with the Joint Chiefs of Staff on PM Press, Oakland, CA., 294 pages, $20. independent culture within territories millions of Americans’ cell phone records, various CIA missions, tells of meeting considered by others to be unsuitable for apologists for the PATRIOT Act’s draconi- with a Senator to brief him on undercover Reading this book was a rare experi- habitation. These maroon communities an snooping program rushed to defend this operations. According to Prouty, the Sen- ence: both revelatory and challenging. battled for decades against all attempts to governmental intrusion, by citing court ator told him before the briefing began, There are ideas here that you have not wipe them out, providing a refuge for es- and Congressional approval and oversight. “Keep it short. What I don’t know about heard before and that deserve to be caping slaves and a fighting force that was It sounds good, but what does it really it, won’t hurt me.” In other words, don’t engaged and discussed in a serious way.
    [Show full text]
  • National Jericho Newsletter Volume 28
    1 The Dragons Fire “When the prison doors are opened, the real dragon will fly out” Ho Chi Minh THE NATIONAL JERICHO MOVEMENT NEWSLETTER in Fierce Determination Since 1996 June 15-July 15, 2020, Vol. 27 http://www.thejerichomovement.com P.O. Box 2164 Chesterfield, Virginia 23832 Steering Committee Advisory Board 1. Chair: Jihad Abdulmumit 1. Paulette Dauteuil 2. Secretary: Adam Carpinelli 2. Anne Lamb 3. Treasurer: Ashanti Alston 3. Frank Velgara 4. Fund Raising Chairperson: A’isha Mohammad 4. Kazi Toure 5. Dragon Fire Newsletter Editor: A’isha Mohammad 5. Jorge Chang Revolutionary Greetings, Welcome to our National Jericho Movement Newsletter. Thank you to all of our members and affiliations who contribute critical information regarding our Political Prisoners/Prisoners of War as well as updates on activities, events and actions. Moving forward, we stand in fierce determination and solidarity to free our remaining Political Prisoners and Prisoners of War still languishing behind the dungeon walls. Much work has been done by Jericho and other organizations, and there is still much more work to do. With 20 years behind us and much work ahead, Jericho is growing and is taking on new projects and missions. Our shared vision is that we will reach a time in this country (and others) wherein there will be no more Political Prisoners/Prisoners of War. We envision the day when they all will walk free and into their family’s arms-who have been waiting for decades. We hope you join us in making this a reality. 2 “Now the torch bearers who articulated the logic of struggle against the oppressor nation have either been confined in prison cells for a long time or have a comfortable job.
    [Show full text]
  • ACTIVITY: PRISON WRITING RESPONSE in This Activity, You Have the Opportunity to Select Any Piece of Prison Writing. in Your
    ACTIVITY: PRISON WRITING RESPONSE In this activity, you have the opportunity to select any piece of prison writing. In your 2-3 page response, you will want to give a little background on who wrote the piece, their intended audience, and the context in which they are or were writing. Your response should be open and honest and you should feel free to make connections to personal and social issues going on today. Imprisoned writers to choose from: ● Choose any writing by: Mumia Abu Jamal, Assata Shakur, Jalil Muntaqim, Albert Woodfox, Mutulu Shakur, Sundiata Acoli, Veronza Bowers, Alvaro Luna Hernandez, George Jackson, Ruchell Magee, Leonard Peltier, Joy Powell, Russell Maroon Shoatz, David Gilbert, Stephen Wilson, [since freed:] Albert Woodfox, Janine Phillips Africa, Jannet Holloway Africa, Herman Bell, Anthony Bottom, Doruba Bin Wahad, Marshall Eddie Conway, Oscar López Rivera, Laura Whitehorn; [since passed away:] Safiya Bukhari, Geronimo ji Jaga [Elmer Pratt], Raul R. Salinas, Marilyn Buck, Claudia Jones, Angelo Herndon, Austin Reed. ● Or, find and pick your own piece of writing by anyone who has been imprisoned! Primary source archives: ● CCWP, The Fire Inside, Archive: https://womenprisoners.org/the-fire-inside-archive/ ● American Prison Writing Archive: http://apw.dhinitiative.org/ ● Freedom Archives: https://freedomarchives.org/ Secondary sources for reference: ● AAIHS Forum on the Imprisoned Radical Tradition: https://www.aaihs.org/online-forum- the-imprisoned-black-radical-tradition/ ● Joy James, ed., Imprisoned Intellectuals Write on Life, Liberation and Rebellion (2004) ● Dan Berger, The Struggle Within: Prisons, Political Prisoners, and Mass Movements in the United States (2014) .
    [Show full text]
  • Writing on the Wall: Selected Prison Writings of Mumia Abu-Jamal
    “Abu-Jamal’s writing tends to be forceful, outraged, and humorous, but he also engages in the bombastic approaches of another era … [T]he author offers powerful columns on diverse subjects ranging from the plight of black farmers to the crushing of dissent after 9/11. Some remain all too relevant—e.g., those decrying systemic police brutality as seen in flashpoints from Rodney King to Ferguson or the rise of racial disparities in drug sentencing. Abu-Jamal meditates on central figures in the black political narrative, ranging from Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. to Trayvon Martin … As a collection that spans from 1982 to 2014, these topical essays testify to the effects of incarceration on mind and spirit. While his prose has sharpened over time, Abu-Jamal remains enraged and pessimistic about an America that, in his view, remains wholly corrupt: ‘[Blacks] know from bitter experience that while Americans may say one thing, they mean something quite different.’” —Kirkus Reviews “Hope and the seeds of revolution can come from the depths of isolation. Writing from his cell on death row, where he was held in solitary confinement for nearly 30 years, Abu-Jamal has long been a loud and clear voice for all who suffer injustice, racism, and poverty. Edited by Fernandez, this selection of 100 previously unpublished essays includes a foreword by Cornel West.” —Evan Karp, SF Weekly “The power of his voice is rooted in his defiance of those determined to silence him. Magically, Mumia’s words are clarified, purified by the toxic strata of resistance they must penetrate to reach us.
    [Show full text]
  • COINTELPRO: the Untold American Story
    COINTELPRO: The Untold American Story By Paul Wolf with contributions from Robert Boyle, Bob Brown, Tom Burghardt, Noam Chomsky, Ward Churchill, Kathleen Cleaver, Bruce Ellison, Cynthia McKinney, Nkechi Taifa, Laura Whitehorn, Nicholas Wilson, and Howard Zinn. Presented to U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Mary Robinson at the World Conference Against Racism in Durban, South Africa by the members of the Congressional Black Caucus attending the conference: Donna Christianson, John Conyers, Eddie Bernice Johnson, Barbara Lee, Sheila Jackson Lee, Cynthia McKinney, and Diane Watson, September 1, 2001. Table of Contents Overview Victimization COINTELPRO Techniques Murder and Assassination Agents Provocateurs The Ku Klux Klan The Secret Army Organization Snitch Jacketing The Subversion of the Press Political Prisoners Leonard Peltier Mumia Abu Jamal Geronimo ji Jaga Pratt Dhoruba Bin Wahad Marshall Eddie Conway Justice Hangs in the Balance Appendix: The Legacy of COINTELPRO CISPES The Judi Bari Bombing Bibliography Overview We're here to talk about the FBI and U.S. democracy because here we have this peculiar situation that we live in a democratic country - everybody knows that, everybody says it, it's repeated, it's dinned into our ears a thousand times, you grow up, you pledge allegiance, you salute the flag, you hail democracy, you look at the totalitarian states, you read the history of tyrannies, and here is the beacon light of democracy. And, of course, there's some truth to that. There are things you can do in the United States that you can't do many other places without being put in jail. But the United States is a very complex system.
    [Show full text]