Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Writing On The Wall by Mumia Abu-Jamal
Writing On The Wall by Mumia Abu-Jamal
Contents
Foreword by Cornel West xiii
Introduction by Johanna Fernndez xxi
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
Christmas in a Cage 1
Court of Law or Hall of Oppression? 7
Different Sides of the Same System 11
Long Live John Africa 13
900 Years for Surviving 16
The Mothers Day Massacre 20
The Power of Truth 25
Christmas in a Cage II 29
The Philadelphia Negro Revisited 35
Birth of a Rebel 42
Community Service for a Contra Colonel 45
Cmon In, the Waters Fine 47
Ronald Reagan Fiddled While the Poor Froze 50
Blues for Huey 53
Opposing Anti-Arab Racism 56
Rodney King 58
Never Again 60
Legal Outlaws: Bobbys Battle for Justice
September 62
Gangsters in Blue 65
Voting for Your Own Repression 67
Welfare Reform or War on Women? 69
The State of Pennsylvania Has Every Intention of
Killing Me 71
The Passing of Kunstler: Peoples Lawyer 73
Fugitive From Justice, Veronica Jones 76
When a Child Is Not a Child 78
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
35.
36.
37.
38.
39.
40.
41.
42.
43.
44.
45.
46.
47.
48.
49.
50.
51.
52.
53.
54.
55.
56.
57.
58.
59.
60.
61.
62.
63.
64.
65.
66.
67.
68.
69.
70.
71.
72.
73.
74.
75.
76.
77.
78.
79.
80.
81.
82.
83.
84.
85.
86.
87.
88.
89.
90.
91.
92.
93.
94.
95.
96.
97.
98.
99.
00.
1
101.
102.
103.
104.
05.
1
106.
107.
Appendix
10 Reasons Why Mumia Abu-Jamal
Should Be Freed By Johanna Fernndez 314
Endnotes323
Acknowledgments331
About the Authors 335
REVOLUTIONARY LOVE
AND THE PROPHETIC TRADITION
By Cornel West
Based on conversations
with Johanna Fernndez in September 2014
Introduction
By Johanna Fernndez
Two years ago, the New York Times featured an illustrated article on the discovery of a manuscript penned by hand in a dank,
19th-century cell by a black prisoner, Austin Reed. The memoir elicited great interest among contemporary historians,
activists, scholars of African American literature, and the general public. The Yale professor who is editing the manuscript
celebrated its lyrical quality and the singularity of Reeds
message in the American canon. But Reeds text is also significant because it forms part of a body of searing black prisoners
narratives on freedom that destabilize, through their humanism, the demonization reserved for the black outlaw in U.S.
history. Reeds writing exemplifies what Cornel West calls the
black prophetic voice in American historya voice committed to illuminating the truth about black oppression and its
systemic causes, and to advancing the project of true justice
and freedom.
Because they speak uncomfortable truths, black prophetic
voices of living men and women are vilified or swept under
the rug by those who, in Wests words, are well-adjusted to
injustice. This hard reality has defined the lives of those we
celebrate today, from Harriet Tubman and Frederick Douglass
to Angela Davis and the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
In our lifetime, one American, not unlike Austin Reed,
articulates todays uncomfortable truths. His voice reveals the
centrality of black oppression to the project of American capitalism and empire, the unbridled racism of the U.S. justice
system, the immediate and rippling horrors of war, the unfinished project of American democracy, and the possibilities of a
liberated society not just for black people at home, but for everyone, everywhere. This living black writer enriches the black
xxi
xxii Introduction
prophetic tradition and our social prospects, giving ordinary
people a sense of their own power and inspiring those on the
margins of society to stand up and fight. From the solitude of
a harsh prison cell, not unlike the one in which Austin Reed
penned his memoir 150 years ago, this brave and selfless man
has dedicated thousands of hours to articulating a rich and resonant message of social redemption.
This man is Mumia Abu-Jamal.
Since his incarceration 33 years ago, Mumia has authored
seven unique books and recorded thousands of incisive and
eloquent radio commentaries. His critically acclaimed bestseller, Live From Death Row, humanized death row from the
inside and exposed its racist character. As a revolutionary, his
study, literacy, and fostering of connections among people
confronting injustice the world over are relentless, even as the
powers that be conspire to censor his message and criminalize
his speech.
A former Black Panther and imprisoned radio journalist, Mumia Abu-Jamal was framed by the Philadelphia police,
railroaded in the courts, and wrongfully convicted and sentenced to death for the 1981 killing of Daniel Faulkner, a white
Philadelphia police officer. In the 1990s, Mumia Abu-Jamal
came dangerously close to execution, first on August 17, 1995,
and again on December 2, 1999. Had it not been for the mass
international movement that mobilized in the streets to save
his life, we would know less of the quiet power behind the person that the world knows simply as Mumia.
Mumias thoughtful and humane voice shatters the official narrative of him as monster and unrepentant cop-killer. As
politicians and pundits paint the incarcerated as ruthless and
worthless, Mumia counters with sober political critiques and a
warm message of human connection and caring that call into
question the assumptions and apparatus that have imprisoned
not just him, but the more than two million other mostly black
and brown people in our nations sprawling prison system.
Introduction xxiii
Today, in this moment of renewed upsurge against racist
state violence, his voice is more dangerous than ever.
The most powerful police organization in the world, the
Fraternal Order of Police (FOP), is the entity that has steadily
sought his execution, marshaling legal actions, lobbying the
Department of Corrections and the courts, and undertaking
coordinated and aggressive media campaigns that instill public
fear. In October 2014, when the FOP failed to prevent Mumia
from giving a pre-recorded commencement speech at his alma
mater, Goddard College, the Pennsylvania State legislature
passed a vindictive gag law, the Revictimization Relief Act. The
unconstitutional law threatens to dramatically curtail the free
speech of all Pennsylvania prisoners and sue those who help
amplify their voices under the pretext that such speech produces mental anguish among crime victims and their families.
The Abolitionist Law Project and the ACLU have each filed
challenges; their plaintiffs include prisoners, university professors, journalists, newspapers, and advocacy groups.
The FOP knows that the widespread discovery of Mumias
case and messages, both written and spoken, by todays generation of young black and brown activists undermines their credibility, existence, and very purpose. The sharp political analysis
and valiant history of a former generation of black radicalsa
significant number of whom are political prisoners today
could threaten the entire criminal justice system, and the system itself. The Black Lives Matter movement that has sprung
to life in response to the rampant murder of young black and
Latino men and women by police from Oakland to Ferguson
to New York City and North Charleston makes the injustices
of Mumias case all the more apparent, and his eventual freedom all the more likely.
xxiv Introduction
Mumias short prison commentaries. The volume covers the
entire span of time from his arrest in 1981 to the present. On
December 8, 1981, while moonlighting as a cabdriver, the
Philadelphia radio journalist witnessed through his rearview
mirror an altercation between a police officer and a car with
two men, one of whom he soon recognized as his brother, Billy
Cook. Mumia stopped his car and ran through a parking lot
to aid his brother. In the sequence of events that followed, a
police officer, Daniel Faulkner, was shot and killed. Mumia
was found semi-conscious, slumped nearby with a bullet from
Officer Faulkners gun in his stomach. A gun belonging to
Mumia, which he had recently acquired because he had been
held up while driving the cab, was allegedly found nearby. At
the crime scene, Mumia was brutally beaten by police, held in
a police vehicle for 30 minutes, beaten some more, and eventually driven to the entrance of the Jefferson Hospital emergency
room, where he was thrown on the sidewalk. Before long he
was charged with first-degree murder and railroaded in a capital trial. A discussion of the legal case and its violations can be
found in the appendix of this volume.
The earliest of Mumias writings, from the period immediately following his hospitalization and transfer to a local jail,
reflect on social injustice broadly as well as the personal abuse
he sufferedhis bullet wound and beating to the edge of death
by the police, his hospitalization, and his wrongful conviction
for the murder of Officer Faulkner.
I have finally been able to read press accounts of the
incident that left me near death, a policeman dead,
and me charged with his murder. It is nightmarish
that my brother and I should be in this foul predicament, particularly since my main accusers, the police,
were my attackers as well. My true crime seems to
have been my survival of their assaults, for we were
the victims that night.
Introduction xxv
Delivered at trial by Mumia during allocution, a right
to speak that is afforded to defendants after conviction and
before sentencing, this statement of July 1982 proclaims his
innocence:
I am innocent of these charges that I have been tried
for, despite the connivance of Judge Sabo, Prosecutor
McGill and Tony Jackson to deny me my so-called
right to represent myself, to assistance of my
choice, to personally select a jury of my peers, to
cross-examine witnesses, and to make both opening
and closing arguments. I am innocent despite what
you 12 people think, and the truth shall set me free!
Soon after his trial, Mumia begins to write with less frequency about himself, his case and his innocence. Its as if his
own unexpected clash with the state has made him a tribune
for every youth, adult, family and community of color forced
to endure similar abuses as a fact of everyday life. In the early
1990s, supporters published this statement and the seven essays
that follow it here in a pamphlet titled Survival Is Still a Crime.
Written between early 1982 and 1989, these pieces read like
quiet explosions. Social justice activists used the pamphlet to
help build the movement to free Mumia.
In these initial writings we feel the passion of a younger,
militant Black Panther who, steeped in the literature and history of revolutionary struggle, is eager to share his insights
with readers. The Panthers argued that, at core, American racism had never been about exclusion or discrimination alone,
but rather about the systematic superexploitation and control
of black America to advance the interlocking interests of capitalism and empire. Black people had more in common, the
Panthers argued, with other oppressed people of the world,
such as the Vietnamese, and with oppressed white workers
(however misguided by racist ideology) than with the growing
xxvi Introduction
ranks of black elected officials who were beginning to manage
urban centers.
Mumias life as a writer, radio journalist and political commentator had begun in the late 1960s, when at age 15 he started
writing for the Black Panther Party newspaper in Philadelphia.
In 1972, he discovered radio journalism at Goddard College,
and by the late 1970s he had become a respected, awardwinning voice among Philadelphias radio broadcasters. He
worked for local and national black radio stations, for the
citys National Public Radio affiliate, and for the national stations acclaimed signature program All Things Considered. In
1981, he became president of the local chapter of the National
Association of Black Journalists.
Yet despite having been lauded by Philadelphia Magazine
as one to watch for his talents as a radio journalist, Mumia
was fired from a number of local radio stations. Among them
were WWDB and WPEN, where he refused to submit to administrative directives to discontinue his on-air challenges to
the citys notoriously brutal police department and to the escalating harassment of a local black radical group, the MOVE
organization.1
MOVE was a Philadelphia-based group of black people
committed to a radical vision of cooperative, healthy and environmentally conscious living. Its members took the surname
Africa, reasoning that it was the original homeland of all man
kind. In the words of Mumias biographer, Terry Bisson, its
members were controversial, confrontational, belligerent and
profane, calling their detractors motherfuckers and niggers,
while pointing out that the real obscenity is the system that allows racism, exploitation, and injustice to flourish. While the
comparable white communes of the period retreated to rural
areas and were rarely targeted by the state, MOVE had developed anti-establishment politics defined by the violent state
repression visited upon black, urban social movements of the
1960s and 70s.
Introduction xxvii
The organization figures prominently in Mumias writings
and in his political worldview for many reasons. Long before
his arrest, the plight of MOVE engaged him as a microcosm of
state treatment of black people historically. MOVEs honesty
and commitment to a combination of personal, spiritual and
political upliftas well as its open denunciation of American
capitalism, which preyed on every aspect of human life and
the environmentinspired him. Mumia was perhaps the only
Philadelphia journalist who covered the organizations ongoing conflict with the police in a way that gave voice to MOVE
members perspectives and grievances. It was this that cost him
his job with mainstream radio stations, and later, his own trial
proceedings were prejudiced by his coverage, association with
and sympathy for MOVE.
Needless to say, MOVE became a priority target for harassment by Philadelphia law enforcement. Mumia writes with
indignation after each act of violence committed by the authorities, such as when police trampled a MOVE baby to death, carried out a military-style siege and destruction of a residential
MOVE house, or, on May 13, 1985, firebombed a neighborhood to ashes. On that day, the black mayor of Philadelphia,
Wilson Goode, in collaboration with the fire and police departments, had a military-grade aerial firebomb dropped on
the MOVE house. The bombing killed 11 peoplefive children and six adultsand burned down 61 homes, destroying the entire African American neighborhood of Powelton
Village. Mumia writes:
People mark time by events held in common, and
shared moments of joy and sorrow. Cities, although
artificial, non-organic bodies, mark time similarly.
Paris is known today as the City of Light, but the
dark shadow of the Nazi Occupation is still within
the memory of the living. . . . Yes, cities hold memories, locked in the minds and souls of its inhabitants.
xxviii Introduction
. . . Paris had its Occupation, Beirut its Sabra and
Shatila, and Philadelphia its MOVE bombing.
Against this backdrop, Mumias writings about MOVE
and respect for its leader, John Africa, whom he salutes at the
end of many of his public presentations, are profound acts of
solidarity. In 1986, in the immediate aftermath of both the
bombing of the MOVE house in Philadelphia2 and of his own
calvary in the courts, Mumia writes with indignation about
one of the major themes in this volumeliberation from oppression through political education and collective struggle
from below:
When will these dismal days of our mind-rending
pain, our oppression, our accustomed place on the
bottom rung of the human family, end? When will our
tomorrows brighten? It will come from ourselves, not
from this system. Our tomorrows will become brighter when we scrub the graffiti of lies from our minds,
when we open our eyes to the truths that this very
system is built not on freedom, justice and brotherhood but on slavery, oppression and genocide.
For the first 28 years of his incarceration, Mumia was on
death row, isolated for 22 hours a day in a prison cell the size of
a small bathroom. During this time he was denied all forms of
human contact and twice came within days of being executed.
Despite these harrowing conditions, Mumia read voraciously
and continued to write prolifically. In fact, the equanimity he
gained through the daily ritual of writing probably saved him
from the worst consequences of devastating isolation and living
with a date to die.
But writing was more than a therapeutic exercise. In prison
Mumia disciplined his prose, using his solitary time to develop
into a writer of great literary power. Throughout these years
Introduction xxix
he offered analyses of major developments in American society
and world politics, with emphasis on the varied contemporary
manifestations of racism and inequality; the changing character of work; the growth of class stratification and land dispossession under 20th- and 21st-century capitalism; the causes of
war; and the persistence of colonial structures of oppression in
Asia, Africa and Latin America in the post-colonial era.
Although most of Mumias commentaries are political in
nature and address the structural causes and historical roots
of social problems, his writing is devoid of dogmatic political
lines. Nuanced humanism and fierce solidarity pulse through
his writing about the vulnerability and resistance of the most
disadvantaged, elevating his work from journalism to literature. Who will sing of the wonder, the terror, the beauty, and
the madness of Black life in this new century? he asks in one
of his commentaries. His essays are those songsredemption
songs, to use Bob Marleys expression.
Writing on the Wall is heir to three historical currents of
freedom literature arising from the nations well of black experience with both oppression and resistance. First, the searing
narratives of black prisoners offer a compelling counter-narrative on freedom and disprove by example the ruthless demonization of the black outlaw in the United States.3 Second,
the black radical tradition, which seeks to understand and redress the root causes of social, economic and political inequity. Third, the black prophetic voice in American history, as
Cornel West elaborates in the preface to this volume.
For centuries, black voices have responded to the nations
callous indifference to the suffering of oppressed people with
calls for rebellion. From the abolitionist petitions written by
Prince Hall as the United States was declaring its independence to David Walkers Appeal, which called on enslaved black
persons to rebel against their white enslavers; from the antilynching journalism of Ida B. Wells-Barnett to the calls for
self-defense by black journalists writing in the Crusader and the
xxx Introduction
Black Panther, black voices of conscience have risen up against
the atrocities of racism and a racially exclusionary democracy
organized at its inception to serve the interests of land-owning
white men. At every juncture in American history, the struggle
for freedom embodied in these black voices has pried open
the narrow boundaries of U.S. democracy. It has compelled
society to afford its hallowed freedoms not just to those liberated from their enslavers and their descendants, but to those
who have been historically positioned outside of both citizenship and full personhoodamong them immigrants, women,
Native Americans, the impoverished, and, increasingly, Asian
Americans and Arab Americans.
Contributing to this great tradition, Mumia posits that we
can break free from our oppressive system. But he cautions that
justice and equality can be achieved only through the fundamental transformation of society, and that such a transformation can occur only through a democratic culture involving full
bottom-up participation of ordinary people and communities.
Introduction xxxi
for change or were coopted into mainstream institutions.
Ironically, Mumias death row imprisonment, where concrete
reminders of the states repressive character were a daily reality,
preserved and enlarged his revolutionary perspective.
Many of Mumias commentaries offered humanistic descriptions of the prisoners he observed around him, as well as
those on the outside who were dedicating their lives to justice.
Among the many he honors are the sole adult survivor of the
1985 MOVE bombing in Philadelphia, Ramona Africa; Black
Panthers Fred Hampton and Huey P. Newton; and Attorney
William Kunstler. It is also in this period that Mumias first
book, Live From Death Row, is published and becomes a critically acclaimed best-seller.
In prison, the writing process was arduous. For the first
18 years of his isolation on death row, Mumia did not have
access to a typewriter. With careful attention to penmanship,
he wrote his commentaries longhand, in tightly compressed
block letters, pressing firmly on two blank sheets separated by
carbon paper. Mumias literary agent, Frances Goldin, often
recalls the big lump on Mumias hand during those daysa
quarter-inch callus produced by the ritual exercise of writing
with a clenched grip on his pen.
Mumia mailed both copies of each new commentary to
volunteers, who then typed his texts. Like a message in a bottle,
these commentaries, once transcribed, were then passed on by
hand or mailed and reproduced within movement circles. The
tireless women who transcribed Mumias work consistently include the late Susan Burnett (the wife of Ali Bey Hassan of
the Black Panther 21) and Sister Marpessa Kupendua. Today,
Sister Fatirah Aziz, also known as Litestar01, receives Mumias
commentaries for transcription and distributes them via email
and other online outlets. In the early years of his incarceration,
activists in the movement to free Mumia, especially MOVE
members, hand delivered the commentaries to community
newspapers. The Philadelphia Tribune and the African American
xxxii Introduction
weekly newspaper Scoop USA, published in Philadelphia and edited by R. Sonny Driver, were among the first to print Mumias
prison writings.
During the first decade of his incarceration, more than 20
newspapers published his commentaries, including the Voice of
Detroit; the Democrat in Green County, North Carolina; the San
Francisco Bay View; and the Atlanta Journal and Constitution. By
the 1990s that number had more than doubled, and with the
advent of the Internet, the international Free Mumia movement was among the first to use online methods to raise his
profile, educate international audiences on the violations in his
case, and distribute his writings to a broad readership.
In the late 1980s Mumia went back to his beloved radio
broadcasting. He had first been recognized for his radio journalism in 1981, when he won Columbia Universitys coveted
Edward Howard Armstrong Prize in broadcasting for his report on Pope John Pauls visit to Philadelphia. In 1988, Mumia
began broadcasting meditations on the meaning of freedom via
a portable telephone delivered twice a week to his death row
cell. Since 1992, Noelle Hanrahan has systematically recorded
and distributed a majority of these to radio stations around the
world through the nonprofit Prison Radio Project. From this
period forward, Mumias commentaries reflect his shift to radio
and a consistently shorter format.
Radio was the single most important influence on his writing style: When youre doing radio and are under the gun of
the clock, you have to focus and concretize your message succinctly and evocatively. The goal is always to paint a picture that
captures the listener. Recording for radio broadcast also demanded a broadening of his subject matter, so Mumia began to
write about the major political events and flashpoints occurring
in American society and world politics, as seen in this volume.
Introduction xxxiii
Mumia Abu-Jamals prolific body of work is anchored in the
understanding that the trafficking and enslavement in North
and South America of 10 million Africans financed Western
European colonies and the industrial revolution that brought
capitalism to maturity. The study of international systems of
oppression, and their impact domestically and abroad, frame
his perspective. From Mumias point of view, the historical experience of bondage continues to be manifested in the cruel,
violent and repressive role of the state today: systems of oppression operative since the nation accommodated enslavers
remain intact, even if recast. Prisons, Mumia writes, are just
steel-and-brick slave ships, and the impunity with which
police violence is perpetrated in black communities is just the
most current form of lynching. But the cops are not the problem, writes Mumia:
They are the symptom of a total systemic disease.
One that sacrifices the poor, the Mexican, the African
American and the powerless to the system. It is in this
context, then, that one must examine the rising incidence and severity of cop violence. Why do we speak
of police brutality? Why not call it what it is? It is
police terrorism. And the state is not a solution to the
problem; indeed, it is the problem.
Like other imprisoned dissidents such as Antonio Gramsci,
Sacco and Vanzetti, Eugene Debs, Malcolm X and George L.
Jackson, Mumia commits to articulating the voices of millions.
He presents not just a black counter-narrative to the prevailing
formulations of white supremacy, but a redemptive script that
strives to achieve a society in which social domination, violence
and indignity are both unconscionable and impossible.
Regarding the impact of globalization, he declares that
the United States uses the illusion of free trade to crowbar
into local and national economies. His commentaries docu-
xxxiv Introduction
ment the ways in which ordinary working people organize to
protect themselves from capitalisms relentless incursions. He
also aims to increase public solidarity with social movements
around the world. In the spirit of an injury to one is an injury to all, he addresses crises in Palestine, Egypt, Mexico,
Venezuela, Puerto Rico, Iraq, Afghanistan and Canada, and
does so with the same sense of urgency he applies to events
in Ferguson. To help bring foreign matters into focus here at
home, he often makes connections to U.S. political philosophy
and doctrine. So, for example, to give a better understanding
of programs to help the poor in Venezuela, he discusses them
through the lens of Thomas Paine. What would he think,
asks Mumia, about an America that tried, unsuccessfully, to
spark a coup in Venezuela several years ago, because oil companies and money men didnt want that country to spend its
national wealth on the nations poor? Would he find in Seor
Presidente Chvez, and his struggle to empower the poor, an
enemy or an ally?
Mumias voice has offered enduring resistance to the
forces of globalized violence. When the photos of orange-uniformed prisoners from the U.S.-controlled Abu Ghraib prison
near Baghdad spread around the world, Mumia was among the
first critics to note that the dehumanizing treatment of Iraqis
at Abu Ghraib had its awful precedents in prisons and police
stations across the United States. In 2004 he wrote: The roots
of Guantnamo, of Abu Ghraib, of Bagram Air Force Base, of
U.S. secret torture chambers operating all around the world,
are deep in American life, and its long war against Black life
and liberation.
Ironically, Mumias transfer in 2012 from death row to the
general prison population came with new revelations about the
national crisis of imprisonment. He had believed he knew its
contours, yet when he was able to see and physically mix with
the multitudes of men warehoused in the nations prisons, he
realized that the general population was profoundly different
Introduction xxxv
from that of death row. He was especially struck and troubled
by the number of elderly prisoners who walk with canes or are
in wheelchairs, and by the many others who look like children.
I thought I had read and mastered all there is to know about
prisons, he writes. Ive been humbled. . . . Now, I regularly
go back and rethink and reread what I thought I knew.
xxxvi Introduction
may prove a wake-up call. A call for youth to build social, radical, revolutionary movements for change.
Although the state has relentlessly persecuted Mumia for
over 33 years, painting him as a hardened and hateful killer, his
voice is without bitterness. His resilience shows the ability of
the human spirit to withstand the worst that this system can do
to a person. He enables us to read the writing on the wallto
believe that the days of this system are numbered, and that another world is possible. Like Nelson Mandela, Mumia defies his
captors by preserving his integrity and compassion in the face
of the hateful repression orchestrated against him. Nowhere is
this contrast more apparent than the moment when his death
sentence was found unconstitutional. Immediately after his
transfer to the general prison population, he wrote a letter to
the men and women he was leaving behind on the row:
I write to tell you alleven those Ive never met
that I love you, for we have shared something exceedingly rare. I have shared tears and laughter with you,
that the world will neither know nor see. . . . But,
Brothers and Sisters of the Row, I write not of death,
but of life. . . . Love fiercely. Learn a new thing. . . .
Keep your mind alive. Keep your heart alive. Laugh!
. . . No matter what the world says of you, see the best
in each other and radiate love to each other.
Love and solidarity define Mumias writings and life behind bars. His voice is defiant and transgressive, yet measured
and rational, and always resonating with hope. This book is
offered in the spirit of Mumias uncompromising commitment to love, justice, community and the highest aspirations
of humanity.