WRITINGS FROM THE OTHER SIDE OF THE CAGE
=======================================
[Col. Writ. 2/23/06] Copyright '06 Mumia Abu-Jamal
[For Ctr. for Black Lit./Medgar Evers College]

When I think of prison writings, I think, not of my own work, but of
those I read as a teenager, years ago, which fed me and sustained me
as a young revolutionary.

I think, first and foremost, of Malcolm X, who, when his autobiography
was published, was no longer a prisoner, but who movingly told of his
transformation from a convict called "Satan", to a clean, sober,
militant, Muslim minister, and later, leading Black Nationalist.
Malcolm's provocative lesson to us all came during a speech when he
said: "Don't be shocked when I say I was in prison; you're *still* in
prison!"
 From Malcolm's autobiography, an invisible but perceptible line leads
to the late Dr. Huey P. Newton's *Revolutionary Suicide*; to the late
Eldridge Cleaver's *Soul on Ice*; to George Jackson's *Blood in My
Eye*; to Dr. Angela Davis's *If They Come for Me in the Morning*... These
works opened the eyes of a generation, brought them into the Black
Liberation Movement, and opened eyes not just to the horrors and
repression of prison, but to the illusion of Black Freedom on the
other side of the bars.
We must remember that the long history of African captivity on this land
has lasted longer then the United States has existed. Ghettos and
other places of poverty are virtual open air prisons, where people walk
streets of fear (either from racist cops or from unconscious youth.)
Americans claim the freedom to travel, but Driving While Black can be
a capital offense. How nebulous, how ethereal is this 'freedom!'

Prison literature, therefore, performs a dual social function; it
reports on repression, resistance and survival behind the walls; and
it educates in forms and opens possibilities for freedom on the outside.

It unites the two sides in consciousness, and illuminates the true nature
of a society, as it pulls apart the curtains of its dark, hidden
machinery of fear.

No one knows more about freedom, than s/he who is denied it. In
America, more often than not, the quality of freedom was determined by one's
Africanity. As the famed black writer, Toni Morrison, has written in her
essay, "Playing in the Dark: Whiteness and the Literary Imagination":
"Africanism is the vehicle by which the American self knows itself as
not enslaved, but free; not repulsive, but desirable; not helpless, but
licensed and powerful; not history-less, but historical; not damned,
but innocent; not a blind accident of evolution, but a progressive
fulfillment of destiny." (Morrison 52: 1993).

Morrison's exposition gives us an almost mirror-image of Americanism as
freedom; and Africanism as *un*freedom. One knows what freedom is by
knowing what it is not.

Similarly, the prison writer, by telling us of the hells of life in the
joint, tells us of the underside of the 'free' state.

For centuries, Africans have known that when the high and mighty spoke
of 'freedom', it was but words, as empty as the space between the stars
and the heavens. Freedom, of course, meant 'white' freedom, and equally,
Black captivity. That uniquely American hypocrisy was pinpointed by the
rapier wit of English author Dr. Samuel Johnson, who, (at the time of
the American Revolution) quipped: "How is it that we hear the loudest
yelps for liberty among the drivers of [N]egroes?"

There was a time -- a long time -- when the entire South was a prison.
If you were Black; and many places in the so-called 'Free North' were,
at best, minimum security outposts for Africans, whether slave or
'free' -- where freedom, again, was but rhetoric.

Why, then, should it surprise us, when we look around us, today, only
to find a vast Prisonhouse, where millions are chained and shackled, as
politicians mouth vacuous phrases about a 'free country?'

And, in this land of prisons, the prisons aren't always the places with
bars. If you were to check for the most popular books among young
Black men in prison, you'd find the works of Iceberg Slim, or perhaps Terri
Woods. In short, you'll find novels about hustling, about street life,
about pimping and about drug-dealing. One would think that George
Jackson's work would be deeply popular, but, in truth, his name is not
well known among younger prisoners.

When one engages some youth on such issues, one is apt to hear the
response, "Man -- I ain't trying to hear that 'Black' shit!"

The dearth of cultural, historical and resistance consciousness that
one finds in prison, is but a reflection of the low level one finds in the
streets. The apparent triumph of the civil rights movement (I say
apparent because I believe it's more appearance then substance) has led
us to this age when millions of young Blacks not only don't know their
rich history of rebellion and resistance; they don't wanna know. Their
eyes seek only the streets. That is their battleground, and their
targets are each other.

A few years ago, I heard from several dozen college students who where
reading passages from my book, *WE WANT FREEDOM: A Life in the Black
Panther Party* (South End, 2004). Almost all of them, including several
graduate students, expressed surprise at the death of Black resistance
they learned from the book's opening chapter; history they never knew,
nor were ever taught, even in inner city schools. Many only learned
about Martin Luther King, or George Washington Carver in school, but
little beyond that. They received Black History Lite -- a sweet, almost
deracialized history, where things were once bad, but Rev. Dr. King
saved us, and our people finally got the vote.

When they read of the long, hard, and brutal freedom struggles of
Black folks, and about how our people still really ain't free, they're
surprised -- and angry.

Surprised at what they didn't know; angry that they weren't taught.
Meanwhile, while those destined to rule (those in college) learn about
the history of Black revolutionary resistance, those who are captives,
the descendants of those who fought those fierce battles for freedom,
show disdain for 'Black' shit, and study, if anything, how to hustle on
increasingly barren streets.

The dynamics could hardly be more dire.

Those of us who know our people's history, and who know the Power of
that history, must find some way to break through to our young; to reach
them. To surprise them. To anger them.

We are reminded of our brave ancestor, the revered Harriet Tubman, (a
woman called 'Moses'), who, single-handedly, brought 1,000 Black souls
out of slavery through the Underground Railroad.

Her response when honored for her freedom-fighting achievements are as
apt now, as they were then. She replied, "I would have been able to free
a thousand more slaves, if I could only have convinced them that they
were slaves."

Young people, especially those in modern-day captivity, must be exposed
to the works of people like Malcolm X, Dr. Huey P. Newton, Dr. Angela Y.
Davis, and George Jackson.

It is their history that they must own, if only to gain a knowledge of
freedom.

Copyright 2006 Mumia Abu-Jamal
[Check out Mumia's latest: *WE WANT FREEDOM:
A Life in the Black Panther Party*, from South
End Press (http://www.southendpress.org); Ph.
#1-800-533-8478.]
==============================================>
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