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Who is Mumia Abu-Jamal?
Mumia Abu-Jamal is an
award-winning Pennsylvania journalist who exposed police
violence against minority communities. On death row since 1982,
he was wrongfully sentenced for the shooting of a police
officer. New evidence, including the recantation of a key
eyewitness, as well as new ballistic and forensic evidence
points to his innocence. Mumia had no criminal record.
For the last 20 years, Abu-Jamal has
been locked up 23 hours a day, denied contact visits with his
family, had his confidential legal mail illegally opened by
prison authorities, and put into punitive detention for writing
his book, Live From Death Row.
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His case is currently on appeal before the Federal District
Court in Philadelphia. Mumia's fight for a new trial has won the
support of tens of thousands around the world, including
Subcomandante Marcos, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Nelson Mandela,
The European Parliament, Alice Walker, Paul Newman, Maya
Angelou, Sister Helen Prejean, Danny Glover, Rage Against The
Machine, the Detroit and San Francisco City Councils, Amnesty
International, and many others. Mumia Abu-Jamal's fate rests
with all those people who believe in every person's right to
justice and a fair trial.
"I remain innocent. A court cannot make an innocent man
guilty. Any ruling founded on injustice is not justice. The
righteous fight for life, liberty, and for justice can only
continue." - Mumia Abu-Jamal , Oct. 31, 1998
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Facts about
Mumia's 1982 trial:
- The policeman was
killed with a 44 caliber gun. Abu-Jamal's gun which he was
licensed to carry as a night-time taxi driver, was a 38
caliber.
- The police never tested
Abu-Jamal's gun to see if it had been recently fired. They
never tested his hands to see if he had fired a gun. They
have never shown Abu-Jamal's gun to be the fatal weapon.
- No police officers
present at Abu-Jamal's arrest claimed to have heard Jamal's
"confession" until two months after it allegedly
occurred. This was right after Abu-Jamal had filed police
brutality charges.
- Abu-Jamal's doctor said
that Abu-Jamal, who was unconscious, said nothing. He
reported that a nurse found police with loaded guns pointed
at Mumia as he lay unconscious in his hospital bed.
- William Singletary, a
Vietnam veteran and local businessman, saw the whole
incident and has testified that Abu-Jamal was not the
shooter. However, the police forced him to change his story
and intimidated him into leaving Philadelphia.
- Other key witnesses,
such as Veronica Jones -- who now testifies in support of
Abu-Jamal, were harassed into giving false testimony. Two
prosecution witnesses were given special favors, including
exemption from criminal prosecution, for their testimony.
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Elements in an
unfair trial:
The Judge, Albert Sabo, sentenced more
people to death than any other sitting judge in the US.
The public defender
didn't interview a
single witness in preparation for the trial, and didn't have
funds for defending a capital case.
The prosecutor removed 11 qualified
African Americans from the jury. He also argued for the death
penalty because of Mumia's membership in the Black Panther
Party, a practice later condemned as unconstitutional by the US
Supreme Court.
The racial bias of Philadelphia's courts
has resulted in 120 people on death row, all but 13 non-white.
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Further information
about Mumia's case:
International
Concerned Family and Friends of Mumia Abu-Jamal
NY
Free Mumia Abu-Jamal Coalition
Mobilization to
Free Mumia Abu-Jamal - SF
Refuse
& Resist!
International
Action Center
Amnesty
International
Political Prisoner
Support:
Anarchist
Black Cross Network
ABCF Montreal
The
Jericho Movement
SOA
Prisoners
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A Birthday
Letter of United Colors
from Subcomandante
Insurgente Marcos
to Mumia Abu-Jamal
Mister Mumia:
I am writing to
you in the name of the men, women, children and elderly
of the Zapatista Army of National Liberation in order to
congratulate you on April 24, which is your birthday.
Perhaps you have
heard of us. We are Mexican, mostly indigenous, and we
took up arms on January 1 of 1994 demanding a voice,
face and name for the forgotten of the earth.
Since then, the
Mexican government has made war on us and pursues us and
harasses us seeking our death, our disappearance and our
definitive silence. The reason? These lands are rich
with oil, uranium and precious lumber. The government
wants them for the great transnational companies. We
want them for all the Mexicans. The government sees our
lands as a business. We see our history written in these
lands. In order to defend our right (and that of all
Mexicans) to live with liberty, democracy, justice and
dignity we became an army and undertook a name, voice
and face that way.
Perhaps you wonder
how we know of you, about your birthday, and why it is
that we extend this long bridge which goes from the
mountains of the Mexican southeast to the prison of
Pennsylvania which has imprisoned you unjustly. Many
good people from many parts of the world have spoken of
you, through them we have learned how you were ambushed
by the North American police in December of 1981, of the
lies which they constructed in the procedures against
you, and of the death sentence in 1982. We learned about
your birthday through the international mobilizations
which, under the name of "Millions for Mumia",
are being prepared this April 24th.
It is harder to
explain this bridge which this letter extends, it is
more complicated. I could tell you that, for the
powerful of Mexico and the government, to be indigenous,
or to look indigenous, is reason for disdain,
abhorrence, distrust and hatred. The racism which now
floods the palaces of Power in Mexico goes to the
extreme of carrying out a war of extermination,
genocide, against millions of indigenous. I am sure that
you will find similarities with what the Power in the
United States does with the so-called "people of
color" (African-American, Chicanos, Puerto Ricans,
Asians, Northamerican Indians and any other peoples who
do not have the insipid color of money.)
We are also
"people of color" (the same color of our
brothers who have Mexican blood and live and struggle in
the American Union). We are of the color
"brown", the color of the earth, the color
from which we take our history, our strength, our wisdom
and our hope. But in order to struggle we add another
color to the brown: black. We use black ski-masks to
show our faces. Only in this way can we be seen and
heard. We chose this color as a result of the counsel of
an indigenous Mayan elder who explained to us what the
color black meant.
The name of this
wise elder was Old Man Antonio. He died in these rebel
Zapatista lands in March of 1994, victim of tuberculosis
which ate his lungs and his breath. Old Man Antonio used
to tell us that from black came the light and from there
came the stars which light up the sky around the world.
He told us a story which said that a long time ago (in
those times when no one measured it), the first gods
were given the task of giving birth to the world. In one
of their meetings they saw it was necessary that the
world have life and movement, and for this light was
necessary. Then they thought of making the sun in order
that the days move and so there would be day and night
and time for struggling and time for making love,
walking with the days and nights the world would go. The
gods had their meeting and made this agreement in front
of a large fire, and they knew it was necessary that one
of them be sacrificed by throwing himself into the fire
in order to become fire himself and fly into the sky.
The gods thought that the work of the sun was the most
important, so they chose the most beautiful god so that
he would fly into the fire and become the sun. But he
was afraid. Then the smallest god, the one who was
black, said he was not afraid and he threw himself into
the fire and became sun. Then the world had light and
movement, and there was time for struggle and time for
love, and in the day the bodies worked to make the world
and in the night the bodies made love and sparkles
filled the darkness.
This is what Old
Man Antonio told us and that is why we use a black ski
mask. So we are of the color brown and of the color
black. But we are also of the color yellow, because the
first people who walked these lands were made of corn so
they would be true. And we are also red because this is
the call of blood which has dignity and we are also blue
because we are the sky in which we fly, and green for
the mountain which is our house and our strength. And we
are white because we are paper so that tomorrow can
write its story.
So we are 7 colors
because there were 7 first gods who birthed the world.
This is what Old
Man Antonio said long ago and now I tell you this story
so that you may understand the reason for this bridge of
paper and ink which I send to you all the way from the
mountains of the Mexican Southeast.
And also so that
you may understand that with this bridge goes pieces of
salutes and hugs for Leonard Peltier (who is in the
prison at Leavenworth, Kansas), and for the more than
100 political prisoners in the USA who are the victims
of injustice, stupidity and authoritarianism.
And with this
letter-bridge walks as well a salute to the Dine (the
Navajo), who, in Big Mountain, Arizona, fight against
the violations of their traditional Dine religious
practices. They struggle against those who prefer the
large businesses instead of respect for the religious
freedom of Indian peoples, and those who want to destroy
sacred grounds and ceremonial sites (as is the case of
Peabody Western Coal Company which wants to take lands
without reason, history or rights-lands which belong to
the Dine and their future generations.)
But there are not
only stories of resistance against North American
injustice in this letter-bridge. There are the
indigenous, from the extreme south of our continent, in
Chile, the Mapuche women in the Pewenche Center of Alto
Bio-Bio who resist against stupidity. Two indigenous
women, Bertha and Nicolasa Quintreman are accused of
"mistreating" members of the armed forces of
the Chilean government. So there it is. An armed
military unit with rifles, sticks, and tear-gas,
protected by bulletproof vests, helmets and shields,
accuse two indigenous women of "mistreatment".
But Bertha is 74 years old and Nicolasa is 60. How is it
possible that two elderly people confronted a
"heroic" group of heavily-armed military?
Because they are Mapuche. The story is the same as that
of the brothers and sisters Dine of Arizona, and the
same which repeats itself in all America: a company (ENDESA)
wants the lands of the Mapuches, and in spite of the law
which protects the indigenous, the government is on the
side of the companies. The Mapuche students have pointed
out that the government and the company made a
"study" of military intelligence about the
indigenous Mapuche communities and they came to the
conclusion that the Mapuche could not think, defend
themselves, resist, or construct a better future. The
study was wrong apparently.
Now it occurs to
me that, perhaps the powerful in North America carried
out a "military intelligence" study (this is
frankly a contradiction, because those of us who are
military are not intelligent, if we were we would not be
military) about the case of the Dine in Arizona, about
Leonard Peltier, about other political prisoners, about
yourself, mister Mumia.
Perhaps they made
this study and came to the conclusion that they might be
able to violate justice and reason, to assault history
and lose the truth. They thought they could do this and
no one would say anything. The Dine Indians would stand
by and watch the destruction of the most sacred of their
history, Leonard Peltier would be alone, and you, Mister
Mumia, would be silenced ( and I remember your own words
"They not only want my death, they want my
silence").
But the studies
were wrong. Happy mistake? The Dine resist against those
who would kill their memory, Leonard Peltier is
accompanied by all those who demand his liberty, and you
sir, speak and yell today with all the voices which
celebrate your birthday as all birthdays should be
celebrated, by struggling.
Mister Mumia:
We have nothing
big to give you as a gift for your birthday, it is poor
and little, but all of us send you an embrace.
We hope that when
you gain your freedom you will come to visit us. Then we
will give you a birthday party, even if it isn't April
24th, it will be an unbirthday party.
There will be
musicians, dancing and speaking, which are the means by
which men and women of all colors understand and know
one another, and build bridges over which they walk
together, towards history, towards tomorrow.
Happy Birthday!
Vale. We salute
you and may justice and truth find their place.
From the mountains
of the Mexican Southeast,
Subcomandante Insurgente Marcos
Mexico,
April of 1999
P.S. I read
somewhere that you are a father and a grandfather. So I
am sending you a gift for your children and
grandchildren. It is a little wooden car with Zapatistas
dressed in black ski-masks.
Tell your children
and grandchildren that it is a gift that we send you,
the Zapatistas. Explain to them places that there are
people of all colors everywhere, just like you, who want
justice, liberty and democracy for people of all colors.
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"Solidarity
is the tenderness of peoples."
- Ernesto
Che Guevara
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Marcos:
Demand Justice in the Case of Mister Mumia Abu-Jamal
Zapatista
Army of National Liberation April of 1999
For:
The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, USA.
Mister Tom Ridge, governor of Pennsylvania
United States of North America
From
: Subcomandante Insurgente Marcos
Mexico
Gentlemen
Magistrate and Governor:
I
write to you in the name of the men, women, children and
elderly of the EZLN. Most of us are indigenous Mexicans
and we struggle for liberty, democracy and justice.
The
purpose of the following letter is to demand justice in
the case of Mister Mumia Abu-Jamal, condemned unjustly
to the death penalty in 1982. As you know, the judicial
process against Mister Mumia Abu-Jamal was plagued with
lies and irregularities: the police who accuse him lied
about a supposed confession of his, one of the witnesses
has changed testimony and declared that he was forced to
lie or face prison, the ballistic evidence has proved it
was impossible that Mister Mumia Abu-Jamal fired the
weapon which killed the policeman. This should be enough
evidence for a new trial, but even this recourse has
been denied to Mister Mumia Abu-Jamal. If the Judicial
system of Pennsylvania and the governor are certain of
the guilt of Mister Mumia Abu-Jamal, they should not
fear a new trial which adheres to the truth.
I do
not ask clemency, pardon, nor mercy of you for Mister
Mumia Abu-Jamal. I demand justice, something which I
believe is within your powers. No one within the Supreme
Court of Pennsylvania or governor Tom Ridge has anything
to lose. A new trial can bring the truth forward, and
justice, supposedly, is all that should matter.
That
is all.
From
the mountains of the Mexican Southeast
Subcomandante Insurgente Marcos
Mexico,
April of 1999
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THE
SCHOOL OF THE AMERICAN EMPIRE
by Mumia Abu-Jamal
..."A
society that becomes accustomed to using violence to
solve its problems, both large and small,is a society in
which the roots of human relations are diseased."
-- Ignacio Martin-Baro, O.J.
It
is virtually impossible for anyone to consider the
horrific violence that has taken place in Central and
Latin America, without accounting for the hideous roots
of that violence, that grow and thrive in America.
For decades, the bloody flood from murders, massacres,
rapes, torture and carnage, created a trail that could
be traced to the doorsteps of a U.S. military training
institution known as the School of the Americas, in Fort
Benning, Georgia. Human rights activists have held
increasingly swelling demonstrations at the SOA, and
have dubbed it the "School of Assassins."
For years the Pentagon dismissed such criticism, and
defended the SOA as an elite international training
academy for "counter-insurgency," or, more
obliquely, for "teaching democracy."
The graduates of SOA, however, constituted a kind of
rogue's gallery of military despots and dictators, like
Bolivia's Gen. Hugo Banzer Suarez, who brutally
suppressed progressive church workers and striking tin
miners; like Guatemalan dictator Gen. Romeo Lucas Garc�a
(1978-82), whose rule saw over 5,000 political killings
and about 25,000 civilians murdered by the
Guatemalan army; and Gen. Juan Rafael Bustillo, of El
Salvador, former airforce chief, who, according to a
U.N. report of 1993, both planned and then covered up
the massacre of six Jesuit priests, their housekeeper,
and her daughter, for starters.
If you mention a massacre, the chances are great that
the men who either ordered or committed the deed were
SOA grads. The El Mozote, El Junquillo, Las Hojas, and
San Sebastian Massacres were all the work of SOA-
trained "death squads." When four U.S.
churchwomen were raped and murdered, when Archbishop
Oscar Romero was assassinated, when union members were
killed, it was SOA grads who led in the carnage.
U.S.-trained and armed SOA people have been involved in
so many military coups that in Latin America the school
is known as the escuela de golpes-coup school.
Recently, the Defense Deptartment, stung by decades of
negative publicity, officially "closed" SOA,
only to immediately reopen it under the name Western
Hemisphere Institute for Security Co-operation (WHISC).
Although not as catchy as SOA, WHISC promises to play
the same game, by another name. Shortly after the Jesuit
murders, U.S.-trained Salvadoran troops surrounded the
office of the Catholic archdiocese, and shouted,
"Ignacio Ellacuria and Ignacio Martin-Baro have
already fallen and we will continue murdering
communists!" Ellacuria and Martin-Baro were
two Jesuit priests involved in Christian base
communities, where the poor learned literacy, history
and how to organize for human rights in the midst of
monstrous repression.
Martin-Bar�
was a brilliant liberation theologist and psychologist,
who, like the revolutionary Frantz Fanon, chose the side
of the oppressed rather than the rich and powerful
oppressors.
For this he was targeted by the U.S.-trained terrorists
of the SOA, and it is for men and women like him, who
seek an end to economic and social oppression, that
imperial training camps, like SOA/WHISC exist.
Its name has changed, but the game remains the same.
Text
copyright 2001 by Mumia Abu-Jamal. All rights
reserved. Reprinted by permission of the author.
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