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America : Mumia
Abu-Jamal
Thousands rally in New York in support of Mumia Abu-Jamal
By Tom Bishop and Alan Whyte
19 May 2000
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this version to print
Some 5,000 supporters of death row inmate and political prisoner
Mumia Abu-Jamal attended a rally May 7 in New York City's Madison
Square Garden.
A former leader of the Black Panther Party and radio journalist
in Philadelphia, Abu-Jamal was framed up for the murder of Philadelphia
policeman Daniel Faulkner in 1981. He has spent 18 years on Pennsylvania's
death row. Abu-Jamal's fight for a new trial and opposition to
the death penalty have won widespread support in the US and around
the world.
Advocates for Abu-Jamal's defense have documented the politically
motivated nature of the case against him and the denial of due
process that characterized his trial. Federal Judge William H.
Yohn, Jr. is currently considering a habeas corpus appeal filed
by Abu-Jamal's attorneys to overturn his state conviction and
grant him a new trial. Yohn's decision is expected some time this
summer.
The May 7 rally was sponsored by Millions for Mumia, an umbrella
group of various organizations that is politically directed primarily
by the Workers World Party and Refuse and Resist.
A promised mass counter-demonstration called by the Fraternal
Order of Police of Philadelphia did not materialize. About 70
New York City police officers and supporters demonstrated across
the street from the rally. Only a few policemen from Philadelphia
attended.
The three-hour event included dozens of speakers from civil
rights, student and youth groups, as well as leaders of Workers
World and Refuse and Resist. Also speaking were former Attorney
General Ramsey Clark and a number of artists and entertainers,
including actors Ossie Davis and Ed Asner, comedian and activist
Dick Gregory, poet Sonya Sanchez, and comedian Marga Gomez. Music
was provided by Earth Driver, Mos Def and others. Significantly,
the platform was also given over to former New York Mayor David
Dinkins.
The event attracted a considerable number of high school and
college youth, reflecting growing support for Abu-Jamal and opposition
to the death penalty, police brutality, racism and attacks on
democratic rights. The presence of these forces showed the potential
for building a far broader movement of young people and working
people in defense of Abu-Jamal and democratic rights.
However, the orientation of the rally organizers, particularly
Workers World and Refuse and Resist, was toward what passes for
the liberal wing of the Democratic Party, rather than the masses
of working people. This was most directly shown in the prominent
place given to Dinkins. In a subsequent report on the rally, Workers
World newspaper favorably reported the remarks of Dinkins,
who was described as New York's first African-American mayor.
To open the rally, Ossie Davis introduced a taped message from
Abu-Jamal who said: We gather here today in protest and
equally in celebration. We stand in protest of the death-oriented
social order. We celebrate our united resistance rooted in the
centrality of life, the necessity of justice and the radical determination
for freedom.
He went on to say that in a nation where over 2 million men,
women and children were in prison, freedom was a revolutionary
word, concluding, We stand for freedom, yes. And if you
are here, you surely are opposed to the state's intimidation of
witnesses, its erasure of fingerprints, its creation of false
confessions.
The opening section of the presentation was on The Rizzo
Years, which placed Abu-Jamal's arrest in the context of
his political activities as a youth during the years of Philadelphia's
notorious police commissioner and then mayor, Frank Rizzo. It
was explained that Abu-Jamal was radicalized when he was brutally
attacked by the police while protesting a campaign appearance
of racist presidential candidate George Wallace.
Philadelphia reporter Linn Washington recounted how police
killings reached epidemic proportions while Rizzo was mayor in
the 1970s. Philadelphia police shot and killed 162 people between
1970 and 1978. During just one year, 1974, Philadelphia police
shot and wounded 148 people, more than double the number in New
York City, which was five times the size. Washington explained
that the frame-up of Mumia Abu-Jamal in 1981 was a continuation
of the police brutality and judicial abuse that was well established
in Philadelphia in the 1970s.
Romona Africa is the only adult survivor of the 1985 police
bombing of the home of the MOVE organization, in which eleven
people died, including five children. (This atrocity was carried
out under the direction of Mayor Wilson Goode, a black Democrat.)
Romona Africa told the rally that not a single official who carried
out the MOVE bombing was sitting on death row, in contrast to
Abu-Jamal, who committed no crime.
She was followed by attorney Michael Tarif Warren and C. Clark
Kissinger from Refuse and Resist, who detailed the frame-up of
Abu-Jamal.
Attorney and a former leader of the Black Panthers, Kathleen
Cleaver, spoke of the FBI's COINTELPRO program, which employed
government informants and provocateurs to undermine left-wing
organizations. She said the FBI made the Black Panther Party one
of its primary targets, promoting internal dissention, neutralizing
the leadership, discrediting the organization, and preventing
black youth from joining the party. She said the picture of Abu-Jamal
in the FBI file showed him in a black beret and a black leather
jacket at a Black Panther rally. His file number and the word
dead were written on the back of the photograph.
Lawrence Hayes, a wrongfully convicted former death row inmate,
said the fact that 86 people nationwide have had to be released
because their convictions were overturned was evidence that the
judicial system was unjust. Henry Gatson, who served 25 years
in prison as a result of a frame-up, said it was very easy for
the authorities to set up anyone they chose to target. He explained
that he was alive today only because the state of New York did
not have the death penalty when he was incarcerated.
Njeri Shakur, leader of the Texas Death Penalty Abolition Movement,
gave an account of conditions in Texas prisons. She reported that
213 people had been executed in Texas since the death penalty
was reinstated. She pointed out that 126 of these executions have
taken place under Governor George W. Bush, the Republican presidential
candidate.
Shakur said, They have executed a woman, a juvenile,
an innocent man, a mentally ill man, and revolutionary activist
Kamau Wilkerson this year alone, and are preparing to execute
another innocent man, Shaka Sankofa, on June 22. She said all
150 men on Texas's death row were in a super-maximum prison. She
described the conditions: the cells have solid steel doors; the
prisoners eat, shower, and take recreation alone; there is no
TV and no human conversation. They live in absolute isolation,
she explained.
Leonard Weinglass, lead attorney for Abu-Jamal, cited polls
showing that support for the death penalty has fallen dramatically
in the last eight years. Nevertheless, in 1999 twice as many people
were executed as in 1998, and in 1998 twice as many people were
executed as in 1997.
Weinglass noted that the district attorney who ordered Abu-Jamal's
trial and death sentence was now the national chairman of the
Democratic Party. He also explained the Pennsylvania Governor
Tom Ridge, who twice signed a warrant for Abu-Jamal's execution
and indicated he would do it a third time, was now a frontrunner
to be George W. Bush's vice-presidential candidate.
A very moving part of the rally consisted of remarks by family
members of unarmed black and Hispanic men killed by the police.
The family of Patrick Dorismondwho was shot by New York
plainclothes police on March 15spoke passionately about
the pain they continue to suffer, not only from the murder of
26-year-old Patrick, but also from his subsequent vilification
by New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani. The mother of Aaron Forbes,
killed by Lower Merion police in a suburb of Philadelphia, spoke
of the murder of her college-aged son last January.
Nicholas Heywood, Sr. spoke of his 14-year-old son killed by
police in 1994. He said, Mumia must be set free and the
cops who murder and brutalize our children must be tried, convicted
and jailed. Stop police repression and the criminalization of
a generation!
The mother of Anthony Baez, who was murdered by the police
in 1994, also spoke passionately about the brutal role of the
police.
In sharp contrast to these moving accounts, former New York
Mayor David Dinkins evoked boos and catcalls from a section of
the audience when he stressed that the vast majority of
the women and men of the New York Police Department are good and
honorable people who put their lives on the line for the rest
of us. They have a tough and dangerous job.
Ignoring a series of scandals which have exposed rampant criminality,
brutality and corruption in police departments from New York to
Los Angeles, Dinkins repeated the official line that the problem
was a few bad applesisolated cops who, in his
words, are rude, crude, and brutal and criminal.
While condemning the abuse of police power under the current
administration of Republican Mayor Giuliani (who defeated Dinkins
in 1993), he praised his own administration as a model of police
conduct: Our program and so many others adopted by cities
across the country put more cops on the street and offered young
people alternatives to anti-social, illegal behavior.
In point of fact, when Dinkins was mayor in 1992 there were
four times as many killings by the police as occurred last year
under Giuliani. Dinkins' administration was also marked by corruption
scandals involving whole police precincts implicated in illegal
operations.
Dinkins' speech exposed the contradiction between the stated
purpose of the rallyto oppose police brutality and state
repressionand the political orientation advanced by the
main organizers. Dinkins bears direct political responsibility
for the very social and political conditions against which those
who came to defend Abu-Jamal and fight capital punishment were
protesting. None of the other speakers offered any criticism of
Dinkins' remarks, or sought to disassociate themselves from this
long-time political representative of big business.
The former presidential candidate of the Workers World Party,
Larry Holmes, identifying himself only as a representative of
Millions for Mumia, put forward the main proposals of the rally
organizers for further action in defense of Abu-Jamal. These consisted
of packing the courtroom when Abu-Jamal has his upcoming
hearing in federal court, and lobbying the Republican and Democratic
national conventions, to be held in late July and mid-August.
Workers World speakers make a practice of lending their reformist
and pro-Democratic Party politics a militant and even revolutionary
gloss by means of bombast. Holmes was no exception. But in this
case the contrast between rhetoric and political content reached
the point of absurdity.
Speaking of the conventions of two parties, both of which emphatically
support the death penalty, law and order, social reaction and
militarismas will the presidential candidates they nominatehe
declared: This is where the fat cats, power brokers, governors,
candidates and all the billionaires behind them will be. We've
got to be at these conventions in the tens of thousands to force
them to put a new trial for Mumia on the agenda.
From Holmes's own description of these gatherings, it is self
evident that it would more realistic to propose the immediate
establishment of a revolutionary workers government than to suggest
that the Democratic or Republican party would even consider supporting
Abu-Jamal's fight for a new trial.
Such bathos underscores the dead end of the type of protest
politics championed by groups such as Workers World and Refuse
and Resist. A viable strategy to free Mumia Abu-Jamal, defend
democratic rights and end state repression requires a fundamentally
different perspective. It must be based on a struggle to politically
mobilize the working class independently of all the representatives
of the profit system. This requires the building of a party based
on a socialist and internationalist program, which is the perspective
that guides the work of the Socialist Equality Party and the World
Socialist Web Site.
See Also:
Conference organizers direct
Mumia Abu-Jamal defense campaign to Democratic Party
[25 March 2000]
Mumia
Abu-Jamal
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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