- Datum: Freitag, 24. April 2009 16:25
- via: Greg Ruggiero
- ===============
- In Her Own Words: An interview wit‘ Angela Davis
- Source: The Liberator Magazine
- http://weblog.liberatormagazine.com/2009/04/in-her-own-words-interview-wit-angela.html
- [2-day liberatormagazine.com featured story]
- JR Valrey is the Minister of Information for the Prisoners Of
- Conscience Committee, an Oakland based organization founded by Fred
- Hampton, Jr. with the mission to liberate the minds and hearts of
- African and colonized people. The POCC takes the stand that all
- prisoners are political. JR is a regular contributor to The Liberator.
- In Her Own Words. An interview wit‘ Angela Davis: Angela Davis is a
- legendary political activist professor in the U.C. System who has a
- history of resistance. She is a former political prisoner who has done
- work with the Communist Party, and she is also author of 8 books
- analyzing race, class, and gender. She also is a cofounder of the
- prison abolitionist group, Critical Resistance. She recently wrote a
- foreword to political prisoner Mumia Abu Jamal’s new book „Jailhouse
- Lawyers“, in which the Block Report did an interview with her to help
- promote.
- I was first taught about Angela Davis being a political prisoner,
- later on the first jailhouse lawyer that I met through the mail was
- her codefendant who is still locked up, Ruchell Magee, whom I used to
- write occasionally. So this book gave me a better insight into what
- life as a jailhouse lawyer really is like. I dug the fact that Mumia
- picked a subject that is rarely discussed on this side of the walls. I
- learned a lot and it wet my appetite to wanting to learn more about
- these legal warriors. Check out Angela Davis as she talks about her
- foreword in Mumia’s new book, in her own words…
- M.O.I. JR: I want to talk to you today about your foreword in Mumia
- Abu Jamal’s new book, „Jailhouse Lawyers“. Since I know a lot of
- readers do not have the book, I want to start off with reading a few
- quotes, and I will ask you questions in relation to the quotes. You
- say in your foreword, „Mumia points to me what was for me a startling
- revelation. Jailhouse lawyers comprised the group most likely to be
- punished by the prison administration, more so than political
- prisoners, Black people, gang members, and gay prisoners whereas
- jailhouse layers are punished by what Mumia calls ‚cover charges‘.
- Historically they could be charged with internal violations for no
- other reason that they used the law to challenge prison guards, prison
- regimes, and prison conditions. In your opinion what is the importance
- of Mumia choosing jailhouse lawyers to be the subject for his new book?
- Angela: Well first of all, this is an amazing book. Everyone should
- read this book. And I was extremely excited to learn that he was
- working on a book on jailhouse lawyers because the story of jailhouse
- lawyers is a hidden story. Most people in this country are not aware
- of the extent to which resistance to the regimes of prisons, state
- prisons, federal prisons all over the country, has been shaped through
- the work of jailhouse lawyers. There is a long tradition of
- resistance. And Mumia, himself, is a jailhouse lawyer. And if one
- thinks about how many men and women have used the law in order to
- challenge the prison regimes, one gets a sense of what a powerful
- legacy that resistance is.
- M.O.I. JR: In another quote in your foreword you say, „Mumia argues
- that the passage of the Prison Litigation Reform Act is a violation of
- the Convention Against Torture for in ruling out psychological or
- mental injury as a basis to recover damages such sexual coercion that
- was represented in the Abu Ghraib photographs if perpetrated inside of
- a U.S. prison, would not have constituted evidence for a lawsuit. Why
- did you point this out in your foreword?
- Angela: Many people assume that the the P.L.R.A., the Prison
- Litigation Reform Act, as I tried to point out in the foreword, simply
- prevents prisoners from engaging in frivolous lawsuits. But as Mumia
- points out, it is a pointed attack on the capacity of prisoners to use
- the law itself. It is not about frivolity at all, it is about taking
- away from prisoners one of the only instruments that they’ve been able
- to develop to challenge the whole system. So we can’t assume that
- under the Clinton administration the P.L.R.A. was passed, and that put
- prison lawsuits to rest. It’s important for those of us on the outside
- to support the rights of prisoners to use the law to resist the
- violence of the state.
- M.O.I. JR: Again to quote you, you say in the foreword of „Jailhouse
- Lawyer“, „The way he situates the P.L.R.A. historically as an
- inheritance of the Black Codes, which were themselves descended from
- the Slave Codes, allows to recognize the extent to which historical
- memories of slavery and racism are prescribed in the very structures
- of the prison system, and have helped to produce the Prison Industrial
- Complex.“ Can you discuss the importance of Mumia making this
- connection in „Jailhouse Lawyers“?
- Angela: Well this is one of the things that I really loved about
- Mumia, he knows how to make these historical connections. He makes
- connections with what might appear to be very dispirit and different
- kinds of phenomenon, for example he points out that the P.L.R.A. was
- passed at the same time as the disestablishment of the welfare system,
- and that there is a connection between preventing women primarily from
- having access to safety nets for their families, and this assault on
- prisoners being able to defend themselves. So I really like the way
- that he makes those connections with slavery. I think of the prison
- system today in this country, and especially the system of capital
- punishment, I think of it as a historical memory of slavery, as a
- palpable inheritance of slavery. And as a matter of fact, the
- existence of those systems provide us with real evidence of the fact
- that slavery was not fully abolished. So I like the way in which he
- can show us the similarities between the Black Codes, that were
- produced in the aftermath of slavery to basically replicate the system
- of slavery after slavery was allegedly abolished. And the P.R.L.A.
- serves a similar contemporary purpose.
- M.O.I. JR: Again, you write in „Jailhouse Lawyers“, in the last
- sentence, „He (Mumia), allows us to reflect on the fact that
- transformational possibilities often emerge where we least expect
- them.“ Why did you end your foreword with that statement in this book?
- Angela: Well you know because people don’t usually think of prisoners
- in general as defending democracy. They think of the prison as the
- underside, the underbelly, of democracy; as the place where you send
- people who no longer have the right to be citizens. But I think that
- what Mumia does, he manages to portray jailhouse lawyers in such a
- ways as to persuade us regardless of what our political persuasions
- might be, the jailhouse lawyers have been, in a sense, on the front
- line of the defense of democracy. I’m not talking about capitalists
- democracy. I’m not talking about neo-liberal democracy. I’m talking
- about the kind of democracy that would also tend to not only political
- equality, but racial equality, economic equality, and sexual equality
- as well.
- M.O.I. JR: What is the importance of us recognizing that Mumia is
- facing deathrow right at this second, right when he released such an
- eloquent book on jailhouse lawyers? You also pointed out in this
- foreword that he rarely speaks of himself, so in the midst of this
- being a time of the first Black president of America, what does
- Mumia’s imprisonment, with all the flaws in his case, say about the
- real political climate in America?
- Angela: Well, first of all, Mumia’s case is so important for us to get
- involved in. We have to save his life. We have to free Mumia. And
- yeah, as many people acknowledge he rarely uses his amazing talent and
- capacities to advocate for himself. He’s always advocating for others,
- and that is all the more reason to be passionate advocates for him. I
- have traveled in other parts of the world a great deal, and there are
- movements to free Mumia all over the world. Sometimes I feel very
- embarrassed that we have not managed to overcome the power of the
- Fraternal Order of Police for example and the other conservative
- forces that are determined to put Mumia to death. But this book is yet
- another reason why we need to defend him, and why we need to use
- whatever is available to us, whatever knowledge, whatever instruments
- are available to us to guarantee that his life is saved and that he is
- eventually set free.
- ##
- Excerpts from Mumia’s book Jailhouse Lawyer’s, including Angela Y.
- Davis’s complete foreword can be downloaded as a PDF for free from
- the City Lights Web site.
- http://www.citylights.com/book/?GCOI=87286100448090&fa=complements
- FREE MUMIA!
Interview mit Angela Davis über Mumia’s neues Buch “Jailhous Lawyers” (nattyreb)
– 24. April 2009Eingestellt unter: Infos über Mumia und die Solibewegung von 1999 bis 7. Dezember 2011