Assata Shakur Is Alive and Well in Cuba I

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Assata Shakur Is Alive and Well in Cuba I THE INSURGENT Newsletter of the Committee to Fight Repression Vol. 3 No.2 Fall 1987 Assata Shakur is Alive and Well in Cuba I In This Issue: Interview with Puerto Rican Independence 16 Iran/Contragate Fighting AIDS in Prison Update on Lexington Control Unit and more. 75¢ THE INSURGENT 2 WRITE TO THE PRISONERS OF WAR AND POLITICAL PRISONERS: PUERTO RICAN NEW AFRIKAN/BLACK Mutulu Shakur #83205-012 PRISONERS OF WAR PRISONERS OF WAR AND MCC-9 South Edwin Cortes #92153-024 POLITICAL PRISONERS 150 Park Row Alberto Rodriguez #92150-024 Kalima Aswad sin Robert Ouren #B24120 NY, NY 10007 Ricardo Jimenez #88967-024 Duell Correctional Facility . Kazi Toure (sin Chris King) P.O. Box 1000 P.O. Box 600 Cambridge City Jail Lewisburg, PA 17837 Tracy, CA 95376 40 Thorndike St. Elizam Escobar #88969-024 Mohaman Geuka Koti #80-A-808 Cambridge, MA 02141 FCI Albert Nuh Washington #n-A-1528 Richard Mafundi Lake #79972 Box 1500 Auburn Cor. Facility 100 Warrior Lane EI Reno, OK 135 State Street Bessemer, AL 35023 Oscar Lopez #88765-024 Auburn, NY 13024-9000 Comrade Rikke Green #84244 MCC Jah sin Teddy Heath #75-A-0139 Oklahoma State Penitentiary 71 W: Van Buren Abdul Majid #82-A-0483 P.O. Box 97 Chicago, IL 60605 Attica Cor. Facility McAlester, OK 74501 Adolfo Matos #88968-024 ·P.O. Box 149 Gary Tyler #84156 P.O. Box 1000 Attica, NY 14011-0149 Louisiana State Pen. Lompoc, CA 93438 Herman Bell #79-C-262 Angola, LA 70712 Basheer Hameed (sin James York) William Guillermo Morales MOVE Prisoners Apto. 20-853 #82-A-6313 Col. San Angel Shawangunk William Phillips Africa #4986 Mexico 20-D.F. Box 700 Edward Goodman Africa #4974 Wallkill, NY 12585 P.O. Box 200 Dylcia Pagan #88971-024 Camp Hill, PA 17011 Lucy Rodriguez #88973-024 Cecilio Chui Ferguson Haydee Torres #88462-024 FCI, P.O. Box 1000 Debbie Sims Africa #6307 Carmen Valentin #88974-024 Lewisburg, PA 1~37 Consusuella Dotson Africa FCI Pleasanton Mark Cook #20025-148K Ramona Johnson Africa 5701 8th St. 3901 Klein Boulevard Alberta Wicker Africa Camp Parks Lompoc, CA 93438 . Sue Savino Africa Dublin, CA 94568 Janine Phillips Africa Haki Malik Abdullah Merle Austin Africa Alicia Rodriguez #N07157 sin Michael Green #C-56123 Janet Holloway Africa PO Box C Ruchell Cinque Magee #A92051 P.O. Box 180 Dwight, IL 60420 Hugo Pinell #A88401 Muncy, PA 1n56 Luis Rosa #N02743 Folsom Prison Represa, CA 95671 Charles Sims Africa #M4972 Box 711- Delbert Orr Africa #M4985 Menard, IL 60434 Robert Seth Hayes #74-A-2280 Carlos Perez Africa Alejandrina Torres #92052-024 Jalil Muntaqin #n-A-4283 Drawer K HSU Lexington Greenhaven Prison Dallas, PA 18612 P.O. Box 2000 Drawer 8 . Stormville, NY 12582 Mumia Abu Jamal Lexington, KY 40512 Michael Africa Carlos Alberto Torres #88976-024 Kojo Sababu-Bomani (sin Grailing Brown) Drawer R FCI MCC Huntington, PA 16652 902 Renfroe 71 W. Van Buren Talladega, AL 35160 Chicago, IL 60605 NATIVE AMERICAN Richard Thompson-EI PRISONERS OF WAR AND PUERTO RICAN P.O. Box 1000 ·POLITICAL PRISONERS POLITICAL PRISONERS Marion, IL 62959 · Rita Silk Nauni Julio Veras y Delgadillo #00799-069-E3 Geronimo Pratt #8-40319 Box 11492 FCI Charles Scott #C-19320 Mable Basset Cor. Inst. Petersburg, VA 23803 San Quentin Prison Oklahoma City, OK 73136 Filiberto Ojeda Rios #03167-069 Tamal, CA 94976 Leonard Peltier #89637-132 Juan Segarra Palmer Richard Dhoruba Moore #"72-A-0639 P.O. Box 1000 • Federal Detention Center Sullivan Corr. Fac. Leavenworth, KS 66048 P.O. Box 178 P.O: Box A-G Standing Deer sin Robert Wilson Hartford, cr 06101-0178 Fallsburg, NY 12733 McAlister State Prison Sekou Odinga .#05228-054 P.O. Box 97 Sundiata Acoli (sin Clark Squire) McAlester, OK 74502 #39794-066 I USP Leavenworth list continues on back page P.O. Box 1000 Leavenworth, KS 66048 - THE INSURGENT 3 Editorial: Ira n/ Contragate: The Empire Has No Clothes! "One of the e s sent ial tasks of t he revolu­ What we have really s ~ en r evealed is t he o p­ t i onary left , i r regard l e ss o f the shadings erations of the U. S . imperi a lis t s t a te . The that repression assumes i n their countries , ruling class has under its con t ro~appar­ i s the demyst i fi c ation of the bourgeois atus to maintain i t s domination and po liti ­ state, especiall y its false 'democracy . '" cal power -- a n organizati on of viol e nce t o - La Liga S9ci a lista (LSP) maintain the status quo. That o rganiza tion Puerto Ri co is the state : the army , t he po l i ce, para mil­ itary organizations . I ran/ contragate showed The Iran/contragate h e aring s g a ve us only a us once again that this apparat us contains glimpse of the work ings of the U.S. imperial­ . both governmental a nd n on-g over nmenta l i st s 'tate (as d i stinguished from the U. S. structures . The U. &. military a nd private gove rnment.) In t he c ongressional hearings, paramilitray organizations, U. S . government Congress and the mass med i a pulled· the cur­ f unding and private donat ions -- al l are un ­ tains closed on t he t r uth. It remains the der the control of the U.S. ruling clas s. task of a l l of us to open those curtains, Military codes were given to Oliver No r t h to so that we know what we' re u p against in or­ secure private contra support ne t works. Th is de r to devise strategi es t o resist. is not the "priv atization" o f leg itimate U.S. military functions but rather t h e inter ­ Wh atever truth has come out is thanks to the change between officia l and priv ate ins t itu­ work of progressive rel ig i o us grou ps, leftist tions, all serving the same goals o f t he pol i tical ana l ysts and huma n rights advo­ same ruling class . c ates . They have reve a l e d a conspiracy to carry out the "Reagan Doc tr i ne" -- a global Of course the U.S. ruling cla ss wo u ld rather anti - communi st counter revolution labeled achieve its goals through legitimate chan­ "counterterrorism" -- outside o f congressional nels. They would have preferred there t e revi ew and hidden from t h e American public. have been more popular support in t his coun- Under the auspices .of t he National Security Council, Co l. Oliver North too k $ 1 . 4 million ON THE COVER: made in a secret arms dea l with Iran and : fun­ Assata Shakur is· alive and well and liv­ neled it to the contras . The investigation ing in Cuba! Just two weeks before the of this deal revea l ed t he shadowy .world of eighth anniversary of Assata's libera­ i mperiali sm 's c o v e ~t actions taken ~nder the tion from priso n, · she ha s r evealed t h a t war cry of 'defending n a tional security inter­ the Cuban government has g r anted her pol­ e s ts. ' itical asylum. Assata, a Black revolu­ tionary, former member of the Black Pan­ But we're in danger of miss i ng the real les­ ther Party, soldier of the Black Libera­ sons of the Iran/cont ragate affair if we don't t ion Army , was freed from Cl i n t on State go somewhat further than even most of the Prison in New Jersey by a unit of the left's analysis. Co ng r e ss wa n t ed the public Black Liberation Army on November 2 , to concl ude that there were rog ue elements in 1979. Since then she has been hunted the White House -- a "sha dow g ov ernment . " natiowide by the FBI and the N.J. State Congr ess never quarre l ed wi t h the goals of Police. Assata Shakur had been serving the cover t maneuvers -- t h at' s why they al­ a life-plus-3D year sentence for the lowed the hearings to bec ome a platform for 1973 death of a N.J. State Trooper , counterterrorist i deol ogy . What did disturb killed during a highway assault on Assata them was how unprofess i onally these opera­ and two others. In the shoot-out, BLA tions were carried out . The resolutions member Zayd Malik Shakur was killed and that Congress proposes will be ways to pro­ Sundiata A.coli, also of the BLA , was ar­ fess i onalize the very s a me s trategy. rested. The left/liberal criti que expose s more of On Sunday, October 11, a front page story the facts, but it concentr ates on the "priv ­ in the New York ~ity newspape~ Newsday re ~ atization " of U.S. foreign polic y -- that vealed that Assata has been living in policy is carried out outs i de of the struc­ Cuba since 1984. They published a lengthy tures and control of "democr a tic" govern­ interview with Assata in which she reaf­ ment . They do argue that the Reag~n Doc­ firmed her commitment to the Black Lib ~r­ trine viol ates both internationa l and U. S . at ion S·truggle in the U.S.
Recommended publications
  • Annual Report September 1, 2019 - August 31, 2020 Welcome from the Principal
    ANNUAL REPORT SEPTEMBER 1, 2019 - AUGUST 31, 2020 WELCOME FROM THE PRINCIPAL Dear Alumnae, Family and Friends, As the first students to celebrate Graduation virtually, the Class of 2020 not only distinguished themselves academically, but also provided a lasting record of their resilience and courage as women of faith. Through Prayer, Study, Service and Community, our students embody the profile of an Aquinas Graduate: to lead, to advocate, to empower, and to treasure lasting relationships. In this report, we commend the Class of 2020: 9 AP Scholars 2 AP Scholars with Honors 5 Presidential Educational Excellence Awards 10 Presidential Outstanding Achievement Awards Mark A. Shultz 41 students earning a cumulative GPA of 80% or higher Aquinas Principal Receiving upwards of $10 million in grants and scholarships Completed more than 5,000 hours of community service While the listing of college acceptances, scholarships and grants are impressive, the consistent commitment and dedication of our entire Aquinas family are the main reasons for our success. Throughout these challenging times, we share building space and faculty-staff resources with Cardinal McCloskey Community Charter School (Grades K - 2). The opportunity to see others use our cafeteria, gym, and classrooms reminds us of the magnificence of our learning environment. What beautiful facilities! Once the DOH allows us to open these hallowed halls to visitors, you will receive an invitation to see your alma mater again. In the meantime, please check out our online bookstore filled with Aquinas apparel and memorabilia. Like many organizations, “Breakthrough New York,” who provides educational support during the summer and after school during the year to low-income middle schoolers, has chosen remote learning rather than our campus until further notice.
    [Show full text]
  • Warfare in the American Homeland: Policing and Prison in a Penal
    WARFARE IN THE AMERICAN HOMELAND WARFARE IN THE AMERICAN HOMELAND POLICING AND PRISON IN A PENAL DEMOCRACY Edited by Joy James Duke University Press Durham and London 2007 © 2007 Duke University Press All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper ♾ Designed by Heather Hensley Typeset in Minion Pro by Tseng Information Systems, Inc. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data appear on the last printed page of this book. Acknowledgments for previously printed material and cred- its for illustrations appear at the end of this book. TO: OGGUN AND OSHUN Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction. —THIRTEENTH AMENDMENT, SECTION 1, U.S. CONSTITUTION As a slave, the social phenomenon that engages my whole consciousness is, of course, revolution. —GEORGE JACKSON Contents Preface: The American Archipelago xi Acknowledgments xix Introduction: Violations 3 joy james I. Insurgent Knowledge 1. The Prison Slave as Hegemony’s (Silent) Scandal 23 frank b. wilderson iii 2. Forced Passages 35 dylan rodríguez 3. Sorrow: The Good Soldier and the Good Woman 58 joy james 4. War Within: A Prison Interview 76 dhoruba bin wahad 5. Domestic Warfare: A Dialogue 98 marshall eddie conway 6. Soledad Brother and Blood in My Eye (Excerpts) 122 george jackson 7. The Masked Assassination 140 michel foucault, catherine von bülow, daniel defert translation and introduction by sirène harb 8. A Century of Colonialism: One Hundred Years of Puerto Rican Resistance 161 oscar lópez rivera II.
    [Show full text]
  • Bombing for Justice: Urban Terrorism in New York City from the 1960S Through the 1980S
    City University of New York (CUNY) CUNY Academic Works Publications and Research John Jay College of Criminal Justice 2014 Bombing for Justice: Urban Terrorism in New York City from the 1960s through the 1980s Jeffrey A. Kroessler John Jay College of Criminal Justice How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! More information about this work at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/jj_pubs/38 Discover additional works at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu This work is made publicly available by the City University of New York (CUNY). Contact: [email protected] Bombing for Justice: Urban Terrorism in New York City from the 1960s through to the 1980s Jeffrey A. Kroessler John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City University of New York ew York is no stranger to explosives. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the Black Hand, forerunners of the Mafia, planted bombs at stores and residences belonging to successful NItalians as a tactic in extortion schemes. To combat this evil, the New York Police Department (NYPD) founded the Italian Squad under Lieutenant Joseph Petrosino, who enthusiastically pursued those gangsters. Petrosino was assassinated in Palermo, Sicily, while investigating the criminal back- ground of mobsters active in New York. The Italian Squad was the gen- esis of today’s Bomb Squad. In the early decades of the twentieth century, anarchists and labor radicals planted bombs, the most devastating the 63 64 Criminal Justice and Law Enforcement noontime explosion on Wall Street in 1920. That crime was never solved.1 The city has also had its share of lunatics.
    [Show full text]
  • Resistant Spirit: a Tribute to Marilyn Buck
    TRIBUTE TO POLITICAL PRISONER MARILYN BUCK FEATURING MITSUYE YAMADA WRITER POET STRAIGHT OUT SCRIBES STAAJABU AND VS CHOCHEZI POET FOR THE PEOPLE NELLIE WONGPOET ACTIVIST MUSIC BY TROUBLEMAKERS UNION BENEFIT RAFFLE JERICHO 98 CERAMIC SCULPTURE BY MARILYN TO RAISE FUNDS FOR HER EDUCATIONAL AND LEGAL EXPENSES AND SUPPORT OTHER POLITICAL PRISONERS SUNDAY JANUARY 24 1999 2OO5OOPM LA PEFIA CULTURAL CENTER 3105 SHATTUCK AVE4BERKELEY DONATION NO ONE TURNED AWAY MARILYN BUCK LONGTIME ACTIVIST FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE IS POLITICAL PRISONER IN FEDERAL PRISON IN DUBLIN CA FROM HER TEEN INVOLVEMENT IN ANTIRACIST ORGANIZING IN TEXAS SHE DEEPENED HER COMMITMENT TO THE BLACK LIBERATION MOVEMENT AND OPPOSITION TO THE VIETNAM WAR THROUGH SDS THIRD WORLD NEWSREEL AND WORKWITH THE BLACK PANTHER IS SERVING AN 80 YEAR SENTENCE FOR CONSPIRACY AND AIDING THE ESCAPE OF ASSATA SHAKUR SHE IS POET PEN AWARD WINNER AND SCULPTOR IN PRISON SHE CONTINUES HER ACTIVISM WRITING AND STUDIES SPONSORED BY FRIENDS OF MARILYN BUCK DO LSPC 100 MCALLISTER STREET SAN FRANCISCO CA 94102 ISPCIGCORG WWW IN JUNE JORDANS FOR IN THIS MARILYN BUCKS SCULPTURE JERICHO 98 ATED AND PARTICIPATES POETRY ACCOMPLISHING JOSHUAS THE REFLECTS HER OWN SPIRIT LIKE THE BLAST OF PEOPLE WORKSHOP PART OF THE OF THE RAFFLE WILL FOR TU HORN HER LIFE HAS LONG BEEN DIRECTED AT BLOWING PROCEEDS GO IN HAS BEEN ITION AND BOOKS AID THAT IS NEEDED THIS DOWN THE WALLS OF OPPRESSION SHE BEGAN HER ANTI FOR THE PAST FIVE YEARS MARILYN URGENTLY OHIO TIME OF EDUCATIONAL SOME RACIST ACTIVISM AS TEEN IN TEXAS ORGANIZED AGAINST
    [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]
  • Diss'ing the "Discovery
    Diss'ing the "Discovery Political Prisoners and Prisoners of War in U.S. Prisons De-Celebrate the Columbus Quincentennary and affirm 500 Years Of Resistance with contributions from * Sundiata Acoli * Marilyn Buck * Mark Cook * Edwin Cortes * * Elizam Escobar * Larry Giddings * David Gilbert * Jaan Laaman * Mondo Langa * Ray Levasseaur * Alberto Rodriguez and updates on * Mumia Abu-Jamal * Norma Jean Croy * Leonard Peltier * BY WAY 8 From the first Native American warriors captured by Columbus' soldiers, political prisoners have been both part of and a result of resistance to imperialism and genocide. In the Spring of 1992, several of us who have done defense work in support of political prisoners and prisoners of war in the u.s. wrote and asked the prisoners to comment on the Columbus madness. This booklet represents the unedited complete text of all the responses we got. As such, this collection is not reflective of the breadth of national struggle within these borders, nor of the proportion of revolutionary women spending their lives behind bars. To the prisoners who responded: Thanks! To those who didn't, we hope that our letters reached you through the prison censors. What a year this has been. Smirking at the end of the war en Iraq, the imperialists started celebrating 500 years of genocide, rape, racism and conquest All over the world, their celebrations have been met with resistance. Wherever the replicas of the Nina, Pinta and Santa Maria have landed, Native American activists and others have demonstrated and disrupted. Right now, the corporation which contracted to bring the boats over is nearly bankrupt, and some of their engagements have been canceled.
    [Show full text]
  • District of Columbia
    U.S. Department of Justice United States Attorney District of Columbia Judiciury Cenrer 555 Fourrh St. N. W. Washington, DC 20001 PRESS RELEASE Jay 8. Stephens United States Attorney for the District of Colu~nbi-a United States Attorney Jay a. Stephens today announced that a federal grand jury has returned an indictment charging seven individuals with acts of violence against tne gnite5 States, includi-nj bombing the united States Capitol on Xovenber 7, 1993 and several other government buildings here in Washinyton, D.C. In announcing the indictments Mr. Stephens stated, "Let this be a warning to those who seek to influence. the policies of ths units3 States Gaverninent ti~rough violence and terroc isln that \lie will seek unrelentingly to bring then to justice. Those who attack our sacred instit~tionsof government and seek to destr.3~ the symbols of our democratic system ultimately will have to pay the price." The grand jury returned a five-count indictment charging seven individuals -- Laura Whitehorn, ~indaEvans, Marilyn Buck, Susan Rosenberg , Timothy Blunk , Alan Ber kman and Elizabeth Duke - - with participation in a far-reaching conspiracy to bomb various governxent and private buildings and with involvement in the boinbings of the United States Capitol and three Washinyton area military facilities -- the National War College at Fort XcNair, the Computer Center at the Washington Navy Yard, and the washing ton Navy Yard Cf f icer ' s Club. Tile indictment charges that the defendants and tneir co- conspirators were part of a secret
    [Show full text]
  • Abolitionist a Critical Resistance Publication Letter from the Editors
    The AbolitionistA Critical Resistance Publication ISSUE #15 Free to People in Prisons, Jails, and Detention Centers SUMMER 2011 ESPAÑOL AL REVES Marilyn Buck tribute collage by Miranda Bergman and Jane Norling Bergman Marilyn Buck tribute collage by Miranda Letter From the Editors Dear Readers, our lives in a way in which we do not perpetuate throughout the Arab world organized protests and strengthen the ideologies that create the against their autocratic rulers that successfully Welcome to Issue 15 of The Abolitionist! We hope material inequality and devastation we face in the threw out dictators across the region. Beginning that this issue of the paper reaches you in the best first place? In other words, how can we dismantle in Tunisia in December 2010 and inciting and possible health and spirits. the prison industrial complex while we need to inspiring revolts across national borders, this survive within it? How do we continue to build off intifada (literally: standing up) wakes us up to the We’ve been interested in delving into the tensions of momentous eras of courage and strategy rather vast potential of oppressed people seizing power between reform and abolition, the relationship than struggling through the same tensions? We’ve and rising up against injustice. of services and resources to abolition, and how included some more study questions throughout to nurture and grow a movement that builds the paper for you to discuss and are eager to hear Our News Briefs section offers more information off of our collective history and legacy. Since a your thoughts. to the current status of revolution.
    [Show full text]
  • Who Is Marilyn Buck? R.I.C.O. Case Resistance Conspiracy Case
    Who is Marilyn Buck? R.I.C.O. Case Resistance Conspiracy Case In March 1982, Marilyn Buck and 10 In 1988, Marilyn Buck was also indicted Marilyn Buck is an anti-imperialist politi- others were indicted by a federal grand along with six other North American anti- cal prisoner. Her involvement in the libera- jury under a set of U.S. conspiracy laws imperialists (Linda Evans, Laura tion movement has spanned over nearly five called "Racketeer Influenced and Whitehorn, Susan Rosenberg, Ti m o t h y decades. Her activities in the anti-colonial Corrupt Organization" (RICO) laws. Blunk, Dr. Alan Berkman and Elizabeth movement has resulted in the US labeling These conspiracy laws were ostensibly Duke) in the Resistance Conspiracy case. her as a threat to national security developed to aid the government in its The seven were identified as being mem- She began her anti-racist activism as a prosecution of organized crime figures; bers of a group that variously called itself teenager in Texas, participating in protests h o w e v e r, they have been used with vary- the Revolutionary Fighting Group, the against racism and the Vietnam war. In ing degrees of success against revolu- Armed Resistance Unit, and the Red 1967 she became part of Students for a tionary organizations. Guerrilla Resistance. Democratic Society (SDS) and worked with Marilyn Buck was charged with con- The Armed Resistance Unit had previ- SF Newsreel, a radical filmmaking and spiracy and participation in a clandes- ously claimed responsibility for the Nov. propaganda collective, showing films as an tine paramilitary unit that carried out 7, 1983 Capitol bombing in protest of the o rganizing aid at community meetings, high actual and attempted expropriations U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Marilyn Buck ­ Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia Marilyn Buck from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia
    10/7/2016 Marilyn Buck ­ Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Marilyn Buck From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Marilyn Jean Buck (December 13, 1947 – August 3, 2010) was an American Marxist revolutionary, and feminist poet, who was imprisoned Marilyn Buck for her participation in the 1979 prison escape of Assata Shakur, the 1981 Brink's robbery[1] and the 1983 U.S. Senate bombing. Buck received an 80­year sentence, which she served in federal prison, from where she published numerous articles and other texts. She was released on July 15, 2010, less than a month before her death at age 62 from cancer.[2] Contents 1 Early life and education 2 1960s and 70s activism 3 Support for the New Afrikan Independence Movement 4 Resistance Conspiracy case 5 As an author 6 Death 7 References Born Marilyn Jean Buck 8 Works 9 External links December 13, 1947 Midland, Texas Died August 3, 2010 (aged 62) Early life and education Brooklyn, New York Nationality American [3] Buck was born December 13, 1947 in Midland, Texas, the daughter of Alma mater New College of California Louis Buck, an Episcopalian minister. Her mother was a nurse; both are Occupation poet deceased. The family was active in the civil rights movement; when Dr. Buck opposed segregation at St. Andrew's Episcopal School in Austin, Texas, picketed, and harshly criticized the bishop, crosses were burned on their lawn and he was removed as minister from the congregation of St. James in Austin, Texas, a congregation which had been integrated by the previous clergyman and his family.
    [Show full text]
  • Preventive Detention: Prevention of Human Rights? Preventive Detention
    Whitehorn and Berkman: PREVENTIVE DETENTION: PREVENTION OF HUMAN RIGHTS? PREVENTIVE DETENTION. PREVENTION OF HUMAN RIGHTS? By Laura Whitehorn with Alan Berkman* Justice Rehnquist: "In our society liberty is the norm and detention without trial is the carefully limited excep- tion .. ." Justice Rehnquist's words describe an ideal that * Laura Whitehorn and Alan Berkman are two of the six many of us would like to believe is an integral part of the political prisoners who are co-defendants in the Resistance U.S. system of laws. Ironically, his pronouncement is Conspiracy Case (U.S. v. Whitehorn et al., 710 F.Supp. 803, from a 1987 Supreme Court decision that upheld the con- D.D.C. 1989). The others are Susan Rosenberg, Marilyn Buck, stitutionality of preventive detention and thereby guaran- Linda Evans, and Timothy Blunk. The six were indicted in teed that the gap between the ideal and the reality of the May, 1988, for conspiracy to "influence change, and protest criminal justice system would widen. policies and practices of the U.S. government concerning vari- ous international and domestic matters through the use of His words have given me little comfort during the violent and illegal means," and with carrying out a series of five and a half years that I've spent in jail. Only one year bombings against U.S. government and military targets, includ- was a result of a conviction; the rest of the time, I've ing the Capitol building following the invasion of Grenada and been held in preventive detention awaiting trial. the shelling of Lebanon in 1983.
    [Show full text]
  • In-The-Belly-Vol-3-Booklet
    IN THE BELLY an abolitionist journal VOL. 3 JANUARY + FEBRUARY + MARCH 2020 In The Belly Journal PO Box 67 Ithaca, NY 14851 Contents Write for In The Belly! Send us your abolitionist writing and artwork! We are eager to publish the work of incarcerated writers, Dear Comrades ���������������������������� 4 artists, intellectuals, and organizers. At the moment, we are unable to pay you for your writing, as we only have enough Letter from Stevie �������������������������� 6 money for printing and postage. In the future, we hope to be able to pay our writers. Letter to In The Belly ���������������������� 10 Our still-developing guidelines on publication are: Inside the Belly ���������������������������� 12 1. All work must be abolitionist, or reflect serious engage- ment with abolition. The Concept & Practice of Dual Power: 2. This means that we will never publish work reflecting The Opportunity to Rebuild a Movement ������ 13 reformist or reactionary ideas, such as racism, misogyny, transphobia, homophobia, or ableism. Stone Walls ������������������������������� 19 3. We will not publish work that we believe puts anyone inside at risk of harm. What I Need ������������������������������ 20 4. We prioritize first-time publishers. 5. We strongly encourage dialogue — responses to previous Prison Poetry ������������������������������ 25 articles, critiques made in good faith, and questions asked in earnest and with care. Untitled ����������������������������������� 27 Questions to answer with your submission: Freedom for Who? ������������������������ 28 1. Under which name would you like to be published? 2. Would you like your address to be published, so people Ignorance is Subjugation ������������������ 32 can write to you? 3. When/if you are published, would you like to be notified A Tribute to Black Lives Lost ��������������� 34 via snail mail beforehand? 4.
    [Show full text]