MUMIA ABU JAMAL
BOOK SUMMARY AND ANALYSIS
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©Copyright January 31, 31ADM (1996)
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Disclaimer: (Author's note) all spellings of amerika, overstand vs.
understand, i in lower case and We in capital, british and european in
lower case, etc. are totally intentional and seek to exclude the author
as victim to conforming to the euro-psychopathology that is dialectically
in opposition to the Afrikan centered ethos of which this author subscribes.
Mumia Abu Jamal: Cultural
Imperialism and the Courts
Many Afrikans in the Diaspora have had to suffer under the global oppressive
systems of cultural
oppression
and the court systems of those various white supremacist infrastructures.
Many euro-axioms are accepted by Afrikans as law. In reality, there is
no justice for Afrikans in white courts. Mumia Abu Jamal, an incarcerated
freedom fighter and political prisoner and author of Live from Death
Row offers an analysis of his incarceration and death sentence
and the court process as it relates to people of color. Herein, is an observation
of that analysis and the Afrikan centered tools needed in such an observation.
Mumia begins his book with a tribute to many named and unnamed Afrikan
freedom fighters, revolutionary nationalists, political prisoners, Afrikan
historians and scholars, Black nationalist and integrationist organizations,
the Black government:
Provisional Government Republic of New Afrika (PGRNA), entertainers,
his family both extended and nuclear and elders who have both been supportive
of his personal struggle or have had some influence in the overall struggle
of Afrikans in our reclamation of Afrikan centered cultural asilic values.
Asilic? The seed/germ, logos of Afrikan culture where various aspects cohere,
the essence, ideological core, the matrix of cultural entities which must
be identified to make sense of the Afrikan collective creations; this is
the Asili (Ani XXV). This Asili is what Mumia refers to when he gives final
tribute in his Acknowledgments to the "divine Source who revealed
the face of love in human form" (p. xv).
The Asili is one of the tools one must use to overstand any analysis
made from an Afrikan centered cultural matrix. There are two components
of the Asili, first, the Utamawazo, the cultural structure of thought,
how cognition is determined by a cultural Asili, way in which thought of
Afrikans must be patterned if the Asili is to be fulfilled (Ani XXV). And
the Utamaroho which is the vital force of Afrikan culture, set in motion
by the Asili. It is the thrust or energy source of a culture; that which
gives it its emotional tone and motivates the collective Afrikan behavior.
Both the Utamawazo and the Utamaroho are born out of the Asili and in turn,
affirm it. They should not be thought of as distinct from the Asili but
as its manifestations (Ani XXV).
Mumia's Preface reflects an overview of the prison system and the myths
that there is such a thing as:
"right to a fair and impartial jury of our peers;
the right to represent oneself;
the right to a fair trial" (Jamal xx)
All prison sentences and convictions handed down under these myths
are unjust. These "rights" are "not rights but rather privileges
of the powerful and rich. For the powerless and the poor, they are chimera
that vanish once on reaches out to claim them as something real or substantial"
(Jamal xx). This reality is not only an observation of Mumia but also a
part of his experience which contributed to his being sentenced to death
row, since these "rights" were denied to Mumia. Mumia overstands
something that all Afrikans born in amerika should, that We are not free.
Though quietly kept, Chief Justice Thurgood Marshall, after his resignation
from the court stated, "I'm still not free" (Jamal xxv). The
reality here is that without our own cultural Asili, Afrikans lack a knowledge
of self.
John Edgar Wideman's level of consciousness is relative and has some
reflections of psychopathic racial behavior. Wideman wrote the Introduction
to Mumia's book. Integration into a system which seeks to oppress Afrikans
and views us as "subjects to be governed with absolute and despotic
power" is psychopathic (Jamal xxiv). The part of the white institutional
infrastructure that teaches Afrikan children our various psychpathologies
is the educational system which is the "matador's cape that protects
whites from Black scientific inquiry which would expose an unthinkable
depth of psychopathology" (Wright 4). Wideman's psychopathology is
reflected in this statement: "My country, the [united states of amerikkka],
ranked third among the nations of the world in the percentage of its citizens
it imprisoned. Only [russia and south Afrika] surpassed us" (Jamal
xxvi, xxvii). For Wideman to refer to amerikkka as "my" country
and "us" assumes responsibility in his mind for the behaviors
of the white supremacist who con rol amerikan politics. Any Afrikan (if
Wideman is Afrikan) or any white who benefits from a system of oppression
even if he actively does not participate in that oppression; who thinks
of amerikkka in "my" and "us" terms suffers from the
psychopathology (brain washing) of white supremacy and its various parts
of its infrastructure, especially racism. Wideman also discusses such themes
as liberation, self definition, contradictions, status of Afrikans, parables
of oppression and the key to survival in his introduction.
Mumia's text is divided into three parts and each part has many vinyet
type chapters. In part one Life on Death Row, the vinyet
titled Teetering on the brink between life and death, Mumia sites
that Afrikans are a "mere 11 percent of the national population, compose
about 40 percent of the death row population. Many of the vinyets reflect
the life of inmates on death row that "oscillates between the banal
and the bizarre. Death row inmates are the best behaved, have no hope,
are the least disruptive, are resistant and subjected to the regimented
rules and regulations of death row imposed on the human personality. For
death row inmates, the tools of liberation, a typewriter, is deemed security
risk. TV's are allowed but not a typewriter to use in effectively communicating
for appeals (Jamal 5-8).
Further statistics, Vinyet On death row fade to Black,
in 1988, state court administrator's office recorded 107 people on Pennsylvania's
death row and of that total, 50 from filthydelphia alone. Of that 50, 40
were of Afrikan blood, with 7 whites and 3 Hispanics. Statewide, Blacks
only 9 percent of the population, emerge as a clear majority on Pennsylvania's
death row.
Venyet of Humility: discusses how degrading and dehumanizing
the visits process is for inmates. Mumia expresses this process as follows:
Lemme see both sides of your hands.
This is a written version of the multi-body cavity strip search that
the visitor never sees. How can the system justify such searches prior
to and after NON CONTACT visits? Mumia sites Rhem v. Malcolm about
the conditions in New York prisons, Judge Lasker who describes non-contact
visiting as "the most unpleasant and most disturbing detail in the
whole prison" and a practice that is a "violation of ordinary
principles of humanity" (Jamal 11). Judge Lasker goes on to further
state that he feels so sorry for people and so ashamed of himself that
he leaves the room after only a few minutes. The ultimate effect of non-contact
visits is to weaken and finally sever family ties and to deny fundamental
expressions of humanity which is an ultimate goal of imperialism.
i have experienced these inhumane visits from both sides of the thick
glass. Mumia and i grew up together, We were both in Richard Allen City
(filthydelphia), attended the same broadcast school, were/are in the Black
Panther Party together, were/are Family Afrika (Move) supporters, and worked
together as community activists. Such activism led to my incarceration
for short periods of time where i was visited and did visit other comrade
brothers and sisters who suffered the same fate for daring to behave in
a self determined manner. The glass seems thicker when you are trying to
touch those who love you and those you love. Prison guards seem omnipresent
when you are trying to visit with loved ones. Children's and elder's eyes
seem filled with tears when you try to communicate through glass and by
metal black huge cumbersome phones with only high-end sound quality that
statics and cracks forcing one to repeat themselves over and over and over
again. Prisoners and those that love them become isolated psychologically
as well as temporally and spatially. Inmates in isolation are no longer
defined by their relations and relationships. Such a violation of the human
spirit and destroys any chance of reuniting with the asili.
Vinyet: Politics and "justice" of death: In
this vinyet Mumia discusses socio-political agendas of politicians in reference
to the death penalty, the disparagement between whites and Blacks who receive
death sentences, race as a variable and academic masturbation. McCleskey
v. Kemp (1987) is cited:
"The Supreme court majority, Justice Powell writing, assumed the
validity of the so-called Baldus study, which presented mounds of powerful
statistical data demonstrating gross racial disparity in Georgia's death
penalty tallies, but rejected the study's clear implications. Justice Brennan's
dissent telescoped the Baldus study's meaning: defendants charged with
killing whites are 4.3 times more likely to be sentenced to die than defendants
charged with killing Blacks; six of every eleven defendants convicted of
killing a white would not have received a death sentence had their victim
been Black. Thus the study showed that there was a significant chance that
race would play a prominent role in determining if [a defendant] lived
or died" (Jamal 14).
When race is a variable, whites are a-moral. This analysis
is consistent with observations of the cultural other defined as "a
conceptual/existential construct which allows europeans to act out their
most extreme aggression and destructiveness, while simultaneously limiting
their collective self destruction on a conscious level" (Ani xxv).
Vinyet Descent into hell: is brief but addresses a powerful
issue of drugs in prisons. Mind altering, powerful drugs are prescribed
to prisoners with the support of the u.s. supreme court ruling that allows
officials of prisons to have free rein to drug prisoners. These drugs either
kill or drive inmates to kill themselves like inmate Robert Barnes did
when he set himself on fire and 70 percent of his body was burned (Jamal
24).
Vinyet On death row fade to Black: the denizens of death
row are Black as molasses and the staff are white bread. Death row has
two yards, one for Blacks composed of cages; one for whites composed of
'free' space, water fountains, full-court basketball spaces and hoops,
and an area for running (Jamal 33). The heart of amerikkka's death penalty
is the crucible of race, exampled again in the citing of McCleskey v. Kemp,
"McCleskey's claims, wrote the court's centrist, justice Powell, cannot
prevail, because 'taken to its logical conclusion, McCleskey throws into
serious question the principles that underlie our entire criminal justice
system.' " (Jamal 35-6). Lockhart v. McCree similarly rejected the
same argument for systemic priorities. McClesky likens to Dread Scott.
The question for Mumia and other political prisoners and POW's is:
"What 'security' exists in a system that plotted, lied, connived,
and hid evidence to destroy one man's life, that took twelve years from
his life, his profession, his family?" (Jamal 43) There can be no
security within an oppressive system for Afrikan people. This lack of security
is defined in the word prison: repositories of rage, islands of socially
acceptable hatreds, where worlds collide like subatomic particles seeking
psychic release (Jamal 44). Mumia further defines life in prison as brutal
treatment where men are awakened from deep sleep, handcuffed, pulled, cuffed,
naked, bludgeoned, kicked, dragged, seized, thrown into cages, beaten,
dragged outside and bloodied. In Mumia's words? A Slavocracy for premeditated
racist raids (Jamal 47).
Vinyet Manny's attempted murder: yet another example
of prison medical beaurocracy that kills and mistreats inmates. Prison
medical officials prescribed medicine that caused convulsive seizures in
an inmate that didn't suffer from this disease prior to this prescription.
Manny was of physical stature, that of the likes of Jack Johnson and was
reduced to death's doorstep by a racist system of corruption that masquerades
as corrections.
Vinyet A toxic shock: prison water was contaminated by gasoline
spill. The revelation that the caged and un-caged are equal when
it comes to the air, water and hope which is shared by both categories.
In the words of John Afrika, the founder of the Family Afrika (Move), "All
life is connected." Toxic dumps both known and unknown are silent
springs of death (Jamal 62).
Vinyet Spirit death: further defines prison and the characteristics
of incarceration also asking some very pointed questions. "What societal
interest is served by prisoners who remain illiterate? What social benefit
is there in ignorance? How are people corrected while imprisoned if their
education is outlawed? Who profits (other than the prison establishment
itself) from stupid prisoners? (Jamal 66)
Vinyet A return to death: focuses on the changes in the
law. Commonwealth v. Beasley (1988) stated that the death penalty could
not stand. Two years later, Pennsylvania supreme court reversed the superior
court order thus reinstating the death sentence. Pennsylvania's superior
court cited Caldwell v. Baker error to lift Beasley's death sentence and
Pennsylvania's supreme court, cited Abu-Jamal, which gave back Beasley's
death sentence two years later (Jamal 69-70). Mumia says it best, inmates
are choking in silent pain, trying to create legal strategies in a system
"based on law that changes like the fickle central Pennsylvania weather
(Jamal 70).
Vinyet Days of pain -- night of death: questions "why
do they still call it 'corrections?' " (Jamal 74) Mumia sites Frank
Afrika's case (a member of the Family Afrika) who is incarcerated. Frank
sites the contradiction of the state's denial of health to inmates and
it's diet of death: "...this system's prisons supply a steady diet
of cigarettes, ...junk food, ...diet of perversion, ...diet of birth control,
....drug ridden foods and mind torturing medications" which deny inmates
health, teeth, sex, fertility and their very sanity. All this while denying
the Family Afrika, who are incarcerated, their vegetarian diet that they
requested.
Part Two: Crime and Punishment
Vinyet Human waste camps: herein, Mumia captures prison
violations and maximum lockdown in Marionization form. Spokespersons for
maximum control units also known as RHU, SMU, SHU and supermax defend these
units as "rural isolated reserves for the 'worst of the worst' "
and this justification is the basis for infamous lockdown Marion federal
penitentiary. Many political prisoners, POWs, Black Panthers, AIM and anti-imperialists were dumped there. Sundiata Acoli, Leonard Peltier and Dr. Alan Berman with Tim Blunk still languish in amerikkkan concentration camps known as correctional institutions. "In 1987, Amnesty International reported that Marion violates almost every one of the United Nations' Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners" (Jamal 90).
Vinyet Slavery daze II: Mumia discusses poor people and
the government and their relationship to drugs, how drugs were/are flooded
into the Black community, the precedent for drug scheme and questions if
We will survive the plague. With the incarceration of political prisoners
mentioned in the previous vinyet, Black neighborhoods were flooded with
drugs to silence radicals in neighborhoods of color. "Big brother
opened the floodgates of drugs to drown out the Black revolutionary fires
of urban resistance (Jamal 97). The counter intelligence program of the
fbi implemented this attack on Afrikans.
Vinyet Two bites of the apple in Dixie: focuses on the
lack of a national consensus for retarted inmates. Horace Dunkins was retarted.
He was sentenced to legal murder (the electric chair). The execution took
an abnormal SEVEN minutes as the switch had to be thrown three times because
Horace was still alive every time the executioner pulled it. The description
of the execution is heart wrenching. Burning flesh. Horrid odors. Body
slamming and convulsing. Horace was a retarded Black Alabama man. This
execution was heartless and showed incompetence on the part of the state.
(Jamal 106-11)
Vinyet Expert witness from hell: Medical examiners are
thought of as expert witnesses. They are accorded high respect in amerikkkan
courts, thought to be impartial and allies of science. Fred Zain a forensic
expert sent thousands of innocent men and women to prison and to death
row because his work was systematically deficient. How many of these so
called "experts" are contributing to the false incarceration
of hundreds of thousands of Afrikans across this country? Zain's lawyers
made him appear to be the victim while Zain has not been charged with any
offense in either of the two states where he worked. Mumia's sense of humor
emerges when he answers the question that Zains lawyers asks: "...[Zains]
cannot find a job in his profession. He has nowhere to go." Mumia's
humorous response? "i'm sure several thousand prisoners in West Virginia
and Texas have some ideas about where to send him" (Jamal 112-21).
Vinyets Already out of the game and A bill that is a crime:
Mumia sites prison costs v. education $600 (for prisons) per year vs. $2.7
per year for education; prison health care; tough on crime campaign that
doesn't work; who produces what (amerikkka builds prisons); amerikkka's
job programs are prisons; the characteristics of u.s.a. president clinton's
crime bill; erroneous eurocentric thoughts: more cops equals less crime
and outlawed knowledge for inmates where government funding is cut for
college education for inmates (Jamal 125-130).
Part Three:
Vinyets Musings on Malcolm and Deadly deja vu: Non violence
themes and how the u.s.a. government manipulates them are discussed. Also,
Black Panthers, Malcolm
X, northern Black response to Malcolm vs. King, media misleadings about
Malcolm and the difference between overseas whites, objectives of human
rights struggle vs. civil rights struggle and amerikkkan whites are the
focus of this section. The theme of progress equals surrender, fbi bombing
Dravidians, how fbi said Dravidians committed suicide, the bombing of the
Family Afrika (Move) and a comparison of the two bombings and how they
were handled, government perception are included in these sections. People
under government siege are portrayed by the government as:
1. insane
2. daring to resist the state
3. terrorists - bad niggers
4. fanatics suspected of physical and sexual abuse as children thus
psychologically expendable.
These are government justifications for its treatment of those who
dare to challenge its right to imperialism and rule over their lives (Jamal
133-39).
Vinyets Rodney wasn't the only one, L.A. Outlaw and Absence of
power all address the routine brutality that Afrikans experience
at the hands of the white supremacist system of oppression and racism.
Reports of police brutality revealed Afrikans born in amerikkka and Latinos
were victims of brutality 97 percent of the time in such cases and white
cops were centrally involved in over 93 percent of the beatings (Jamal
141). Various police brutality statistics are cited, acquittals of guilty
cops, 5th amendment violations, Black prominence brutalized (Lucien Blackwell's
wife) wife of city councilman, police out of control and Malcolm and Black
Panther Party sentiments. These sentiments include the "police are
agents of white ruling-class, capitalist will-period. Neither Black managers
nor Black politicians can change that reality. The people themselves must
organize for their own defense, or it won't get done (Jamal 148).
Vinyets Another side of Glory, Blues for Huey and Philly daze:
an impressionistic memoir reflects Mumia's assessment of David Hilliard's
book This Side of Glory: The Autobiography of David Hilliard and the
Story of the Black Panther Party and reflects on Mumia's experience
as a Black Panther, how Jessie Jackson pimps Black Panther Fred Hampton's
style, and why no one lifted Black Panther and political genius Huey P.
Newton up when he fell. Huey's death, Black youth unawareness of Huey,
the Panther office on Columbus Avenue (i was at the office on Susquehanna
Avenue) and the nationwide counter intelligence attack on the Black Panther
Party are discussed. The older members were quite protective of me and
other youth who were only 13 years old when We joined. Counter Intelligence
agents who infiltrated the BPP caused a major split in the party. i remained
with the Susquehanna Avenue Black Panther Party even when there was a split
as filthydelphia basically was not a part of the split in the party. Mumia
chose to leave the party and joined Move.
Mumia concludes his book with the vinyet Philly daze: an impressionistic
memoir where he talks about Alabama governor wallace's visit to
filthydelphia and how he and three other young Black youth went to protest
his visit. His years of brainwashing and how the BPP rescued him from that
brainwashing and psychopathology are expressed. His meeting of Move and
becoming a champion of their cause and the mistakes that he made in not
covering their story when police murdered their baby are heart-feltly shared
with the reader. i remember that incident and many others like it and i
remember the filthdelphia cops kicking Move's doors in, neighbors doors
in and my doors in and trampling me and my children on horseback and causing
me to miscarry as Move women had suffered many times and the death of Move
baby Life Afrika. Mumia reminds me and other readers who were there and
not, how the Black community was constantly under attack. Mumia's militancy
grew with the death of Life Afrika as he had refused to cover the sto y
cause of the crude manner in which Move had approached him. He never forgot
it, nor forgave himself. He worked relentlessly after that to cover any
and ever story that addressed police and government attacks on the Family
Afrika.
Mumia's book concludes with an Afterward by Mumia's lawyer Leonard
I. Weinglass titled The trial of Mumia Abu-Jamal. The facts of the trial
are cited along with the injustices of the case. These injustices include:
1. Mumia denied self representation and participation and removed from
courtroom
2. Nothing done to assist Mumia in following the proceedings such as
transmissions into his holding cell
3. no provisions of transcripts
4. without Mumia's presence in court room, public defender was clueless
5. his case was rushed to trial without continuance
6. Mumia given three weeks to prepare his case
7. no lineup identification; identification done at counsel table
8. contradictory testimonies
10. no witness saw prosecutions version of the incident
11. prosecution sets stage to attack Mumia's politics and disrespect
of the system thus violating his rights
12. misfocus on Mumia's politics instead of the facts of the case leads
jury to allow for the death sentence
Among the many character witnesses for Mumia was Mumia supporter and
extended family sister to Mumia and myself, Sonya Sanchez testified at
Mumia's trial. She is a renowned poet, author, scholar and professor.
In conclusion, Mumia is like a brother to me. He is known to be a gentle
spirit, committed father and brother, loving friend, reliable principled
comrade and a quiet fire. There is a passion for justice that burns within
him that is ignited by the asili of Afrikan centered cultural matrix. An
unjust society would have us think that our experiences are invalid. But
having known Mumia and having known my own experience with racist, imperialistic,
white supremacist amerikkka, i know that justice rings false and is not
a variable which includes us Afrikans. Mumia is one of those who is blessed
because he dares to struggle for freedom, land and independence for Afrikan
people in the Diaspora. For him, a reflection of all who work for independence,
the struggle continues.
Note: There are many committees to support Mumia's efforts for
a new trial. There is a committee here in the Ohio area called Miami Valley
Committee to Support Mumia Abu Jamal of which i am co-founder and spokesperson.
Works Cited
Abu-Jamal, Mumia. Live from Death Row. Reading; Addison-Wesley
Publishing Co., 1995.
Ani, Marimba. Yurugu An Afrikan-centered Critique of European
Cultural Thought and Behavior. Trenton; Afrika World Press, Inc.,
1994.
Wright, Ph.D., Bobby E. The Psychopathic Racial Personality and
Other Essays. Chicago; Third World Press., 1984.
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