-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the May 24, 2001
issue of Workers World newspaper
-------------------------

IN SHADOW OF CITY HALL: CAMP FREE MUMIA STEPS UP 
FIGHT FOR DEATH-ROW PRISONER

By Leslie Feinberg
Camp Free Mumia
Dillworth Plaza, Philadelphia

For 48 hours beginning May 11 Dillworth Plaza was liberated 
by those who believe that Mumia Abu-Jamal must be free.

They traveled many hours to get to this patch of concrete 
and strip of trees on the east side of Philadelphia City 
Hall--from Alaska, New Mexico, Indiana, Missouri, South 
Carolina, Ohio, Massachusetts, Maryland, New Jersey, New 
York. And, most important, many came from Philadelphia.

This was a diverse crowd. They were clad in denim and khaki, 
kente cloth and Guatemalan weaves. They waved black, green 
and red flags and rainbow flags.

Their T-shirts quoted Mumia Abu-Jamal, Che Guevara, Assata 
Shakur, John Africa and Emma Goldman.

Scores of variously designed "Free Mumia" T-shirts--some 
faded almost beyond readability--demonstrated that long-time 
supporters of Abu-Jamal had been drawn to this urban protest 
encampment.

The solidarity growing out of the rising new youth movement 
was evident. A youth wore a sticker on his backpack that 
read "Rape-Free Zone." Other buttons and stickers read 
"Another Man for Choice" and "Straight but Not Narrow."

The plaza was bedecked with banners with militant slogans. A 
dozen colorful tents sprouted in front of City Hall. Booths 
provided registration forms, logistical information, 
literature.

Some 150 people camped out all over the plaza on the night 
of May 11. More than 100 camped out May 12 despite cold and 
wind and choking pollen levels. Members of the group Food 
Not Bombs provided everyone with something to eat.

The sounds of chanting, drumming, hip-hop and militant 
rallies could be heard non-stop.

Drummers kept up pulsating percussion from nightfall to 
dawn. They gave energy to hours of vocal chanting demanding 
Abu-Jamal's freedom.

And all night long people from the encampment--young and old-
-stood along the curbside, holding up posters reading "Honk 
if you support Mumia." From dusk to dawn cheers greeted the 
steady cacophony of car horns sounded in support.

Judi Cheng, a supporter from Jersey City, N.J., estimated 
there were "nine honkers for every heckler."

All told, it was a symphony of solidarity.

NON-STOP PROTEST

The encampment was a non-stop protest--from the moment the 
camp began to take shape on Friday afternoon to the time it 
was struck on Sunday.

It took great cooperation among strangers from diverse 
communities and far-flung regions. Many people commented on 
the mood of Camp Free Mumia--how relaxed everyone was with 
each other.

Particularly noteworthy were the bonds quickly forged 
between homeless African American men who regularly sleep in 
the shadow of City Hall and Abu-Jamal's supporters.

Some of the homeless men told Workers World about the 
violence and racism the cops unleash on them with impunity. 
On the nights of the encampment, the police backed off from 
their nightrider attacks in and around the plaza.

"All night long we looked out for each other," said Deirdre 
Sinnott, one of the International Action Center coordinators 
of the event. "Some of the most political people I've talked 
to have been the homeless."

Brad and Douglas were part of a group that drove about 14 
hours from Indiana to get to the encampment. The two white 
youths slept outdoors on May 11 in solidarity with the 
homeless.

Douglas told Workers World: "I wanted to have a little 
better understanding of what it's like to have to sleep 
outside. It sucks. It was noisy, it was uncomfortable, it 
was cold, it was hard. The wind was very nagging. It gave me 
a lot of respect for the people who have to live this way 
year round."

Brad found out about the encampment by visiting the 
www.mumia2000.org web site. He involved others by sending 
out "a bunch of e-mails. And I asked my school, Manchester 
College, to help fund our transportation. I got $350 from 
Peace Studies."

He said that Abu-Jamal's case "represents so much that is 
wrong with the prison system, the death penalty and the 
Justice Department. I fully believe Mumia is a political 
prisoner because he speaks out so against the system."

Brad explained: "I got involved through my anti-sweatshop 
group at Indiana University. Mumia is like one of the first 
activities for me--the birth of an activist."

Natalie, from Manchester College, added, "The death penalty 
has been a really big issue on our campus."

IN THEIR OWN WORDS

Johnnie Stevens, a co-coordinator of the People's Video 
Network, described the May 11 concert that opened the 
protest program: "The hip-hop concert was great. There was a 
constant flow--predominantly young people from Philly."

Stevens said that after the concert people stayed to watch 
videos about Abu-Jamal's case, the prison-industrial complex 
and the 1985 Philadelphia police bombing of the MOVE 
Organization. They were projected right onto the walls of 
City Hall.

A powerful tribute to the MOVE members closed the weekend's 
program.

Ramona Africa, the sole adult survivor of the bombing of 
MOVE, told Workers World, "This whole weekend is really 
important because it's dealing with major issues people 
can't afford to close their eyes to--like the death 
penalty."

She referred to the recent affidavits filed by Abu-Jamal's 
new legal team that contain a statement from a man 
confessing he was hired to kill Daniel Faulkner, the white 
cop Abu-Jamal is convicted of shooting. "Yet this man--Mumia 
Abu-Jamal--sits on death row. Why is that?"

And she emphasized: "Executions don't only happen so-called 
legally by lethal injection, but take place on the street. 
Mother's Day commemorates the 16th anniversary of the 
bombing of my family. This government has a lust for blood 
that has nothing to do with justice at all."

Jason Corwin from the Seneca Nation said: "I've been a long-
time supporter of Mumia. I came into awareness of his case 
while working for Leonard Peltier [an imprisoned leader of 
the American Indian Movement]. Mumia really represents the 
finest qualities of human beings. He's a caring family man, 
a strong, outspoken person for truth, and unwavering in his 
commitment to see all oppressed people--all oppressed life--
gain their freedom."

Rainbow bunting for Philadelphia's annual Pride Fest hung 
from lampposts on all major thoroughfares. But none waved 
more proudly than the rainbow flags at Camp Free Mumia.

On the afternoon of May 12, Tim Eubanks, who described 
himself as a queer Black activist from New York, explained 
why he took part. "When I heard it was an encampment, the 
idea of that sparked my mind. It adds something to it to 
stay overnight. Walking up here today and seeing all the 
signs, the Rainbow Flags for Mumia banner, I got really 
excited."

A group of Lesbian Avengers--Gunner, Jillian, Matie, Katie 
and Kate--explained why they traveled from Boston to be 
here.

Matie: "People are marginalized by the system and an injury 
to one is an injury to all. We all need to stick together."

Katie: "Racism is so linked to queer oppression. Anyone who 
is not a white, straight, Christian, non-trans rich man is 
marginalized. Mumia has spoken out for queer rights."

Jillian: "Coming with the Lesbian Avengers, there's power 
behind that name and the power of the organization. Bringing 
that power to a cause that's worthwhile adds rather than 
just coming as out individuals."

Gunner: "It's important to have a place to dialogue with 
people, to create spaces like this one here about causes and 
to be able to also dialogue with others about other issues."

Corwin, the Avengers and Eubanks were speakers at the 
afternoon rallies that day.

'THE PEOPLE UNITED CAN NEVER BE DEFEATED!'

The range of speakers demonstrated the broad solidarity that 
Abu-Jamal's struggle has inspired.

Monica Moorehead, a national leader of Millions for Mumia, 
and Leslie Jones, youth coordinator of International 
Concerned Family and Friends of Mumia Abu-Jamal, co-chaired 
the rally.

The program wove together the struggle to free Native 
warrior Leonard Peltier, oust the U.S. Navy from Vieques, 
defend the Charleston 5 dock workers, win a living wage for 
Harvard's most impoverished workers, and defend Palestinian 
self-determination with the battle to free Abu-Jamal.

Speakers included Ramona Africa; Larry Holmes, International 
Action Center co-director and organizer of Camp Free Mumia; 
Pam Africa, national coordinator of ICFFMAJ; Marlene Kamish, 
one of Abu-Jamal's new legal team members; Ray LaForrest, 
Haitian activist and union organizer; Mark Taylor of 
Academics for Mumia; Katie Herzig and Matie from the Boston 
Lesbian Avengers; Clark Kis singer, leader of Refuse & 
Resist; and Minnie Bruce Pratt, a national organizer for 
Rainbow Flags for Mumia.

One thousand marchers then stepped off from Dillworth Plaza 
to take their message to downtown shoppers. The march moved 
slowly down the broad avenues, making a whole lot of noise.

Borrowing a popular chant from the AIDS movement, protesters 
chanted: "Our brother Mumia is under attack. What're we 
gonna do? Act up, fight back!"

Throbbing percussion of scores of drums, cowbells and other 
instruments accompanied the chants.

Many pedestrians, shoppers and drivers greeted the marchers' 
demands with raised fists of solidarity, applause and 
cheers. One clapping bystander told her friend: "That's 
right! They need to free him."

Nodding at the powerful march, Pam Africa told Workers 
World: "People are organizing all over the world against 
this most terroristic government--in the face of the 
Republican National Convention, in the face of Seattle. Even 
the most traitorous tricks of this government haven't been 
able to divide this movement."

A whole row of people carried a 65-foot quilt made by 
Fatirah Aziz to demonstrate support for Abu-Jamal. Aziz had 
put out a call over the Internet for 8-1/2-inch squares, and 
got responses from Kentucky to Senegal. She quilted them 
together in three weeks.

Aziz told Workers World: "I wanted to make something to show 
how many care about him--people who couldn't be here. It was 
a labor of love. "

The marchers passed a site of the Underground Railroad. 
Painted on the side of the building was a two-story mural of 
Harriet Tubman looking down on demonstrators, holding up her 
lantern to show the way to freedom for those escaping 
slavery.

Abu-Jamal demonstrators won overwhelmingly more support than 
heckling as thousands of predominantly white, middle-class 
runners and walkers passed by in a Mother's Day "Race for a 
Cure" for breast cancer.

A sanitation worker who brought up the rear of the race was 
chanting along with demonstrators. And the municipal workers 
who cleaned the park afterward found many concrete ways to 
express their solidarity with the encampment.

By the time marchers returned to Camp Free Mumia, a strong 
wind had blown in a cold front. But the chanting, drumming 
and car horns blaring for Abu-Jamal throughout the night 
brought reporters back to the encampment at 2 a.m. and again 
at 4 a.m.

On Sunday morning, as protesters prepared to make their way 
to the closing MOVE event, Larry Holmes told those gathered: 
"The media hate to cover Mumia. But we made them do it. We 
were on every television channel, in every newspaper, we 
even got national coverage."

The organizers had had to go to court just to get permits 
from the city to hold the encampment. Holmes concluded: 
"We've been here for 48 hours. We won this battle. But it's 
not over. Not until Mumia is free."

- END -

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