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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : Mumia
Abu-Jamal
Ohio college students defend decision to hear US political
prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal
By Denise Enders and Helen Halyard
24 April 2000
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this version to print
Facing threats and pressure from the Philadelphia District
Attorney's office and police organizations, students and faculty
at Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio have defended their
decision to hear a taped address from Mumia Abu-Jamal at commencement
ceremonies on April 29. Earlier this year, the senior class voted
at the small liberal arts college to have Abu-Jamal give the keynote
address.
Mumia Abu-Jamal has spent 18 years on Pennsylvania's death
row after being framed up for the 1981 murder of Philadelphia
policeman Daniel Faulkner. Federal Judge William H. Yohn Jr. is
currently considering a habeas corpus appeal filed by Mumia's
attorneys to overturn his state conviction and grant him a new
trial. A decision from the court is expected this spring.
Mumia's fight for a new trial and opposition to the death penalty
have won widespread support in the US and throughout the world.
A number of Antioch students who spoke with the World Socialist
Web Site expressed sentiments that Mumia's case is indicative
of a criminal justice system that is rife with errors, frame-ups,
murders, racial profiling, coercion and outright fabrications.
The small college, located just outside the industrial city
of Dayton, Ohio, has received threatening phone calls, letters
from the Philadelphia District Attorney's office and has been
slandered in the local news media. Maureen Faulkner, Daniel Faulkner's
widow, has vowed to organize a counter-demonstration outside the
commencement ceremonies along with the Fraternal Order of Police
(FOP), which has waged a nationwide lobby for Mumia's execution.
Philadelphia First District Attorney Arnold H. Gordon called
the students impressionable and questioned the college's
sense of decency in a letter directed to college President Robert
Devine. Philadelphia DA Lynne Abraham labeled the students' choice
repugnant and said it should be condemned by all right-thinking
Americans.
The college president defended the decision made by students
and stated in a letter directed to the Pennsylvania authorities,
Like many students concerned with race and justice, a number
of Antioch College students have been researching this case and
its larger implications for several years. This case represents
a critical debate across the nation. In fact, given the recent
deaths of Amadou Diallo, Sgt. Cornel Young Jr., and Patrick Dorismond,
many students across the country have been engaged in studying
these issues and organizing around them. Many find, from looking
at the record, the trial transcript and the various briefs filed
in Abu Jamal's behalf, that the essential fairness of the case
warrants critical discussion. Amnesty International, which is
often very careful about such matters, has added their voice to
calls for a new trial. I don't know enough to make a judgment
but my point is that there are critical and substantive issues
involved that merit critical inquiry on the part of our students.
President Levine went on to organize a 90-minute public forum
prior to the commencement to which DA Lynne Abraham and Maureen
Faulkner were invited to present their views. Both refused, with
Abraham calling the event a pretense to cover up shameful
behavior.
Students at the college have reacted angrily to attempts by
right-wing political forces and the FOP to browbeat them into
canceling the speech. Commenting on the role of the media, Antioch
student Lance Russell said, Headlines usually send a message.
They normally read Cop Killer to speak at Antioch.' Whenever
former President Richard Nixon spoke, the headlines never read
Convicted Perjurer to Speak.'
Explaining his support for Abu-Jamal and opposition to the
death penalty, student William Atkins said, There is a lot
of social inequality that exists in this country. That inequality
is present in the criminal justice system. How can they just dole
out death sentences? It is a known fact that mentally handicapped,
innocent and psychologically impaired individuals who were in
need of intervention, but unable to receive help, have been executed.
See Also:
Rubin "Hurricane" Carter supports
campaign for US political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal
[7 April 2000]
Conference organizers direct
Mumia Abu-Jamal defense campaign to Democratic Party
[25 March 2000]
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