Showing posts with label Black Panther Party. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Black Panther Party. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 24, 2021

Durham City Council election is about police funding when what we need is trust

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COMMENTARY - I listened with profound interest as A.J. Williams shared his concerns with law enforcement. The 34-year-old Durham native is running to serve as the Ward III representative on the Durham City Council.

I was interested because grown folks need to spend more time listening to what young people have to say. My ears popped up like a dog upon hearing an approaching fire truck when Williams shared his views involving the history of American law enforcement.

His response came after a question about ShotSpotter, gunshot detection technology rejected by members of the Durham City Council in 2019. Williams participated in candidate interviews sponsored by the Durham Committee on the Affairs of Black People.

Williams says he was instrumental in opposing the technology. He offered two reasons. He noted how the FBI COINTELPRO program was used to dismantle the work of the Black Panther Party. He also discussed the genesis of American law enforcement was to track, punish and return runaway slaves. Williams shared the angst of his generation in witnessing the perpetual murders of unarmed Black men and women by law enforcement officers.

My ears perked up due to Williams’s interpretation of history. He’s not wrong. The FBI has used surveillance to attack the reputations of Black men and women involved in radical movements. They used it against Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Malcolm X, members of the Black Panther Party and Assata Shakur. The law has not been the friend of Black people – ever. True that. My spirit felt like an echo of amens followed by the reverberating hallelujah of a Black gospel choir.

I get the anguish of young people. I do pause when I hear young people make assumptions implying, they understand more than us old fogies. I’m reminded of what we experienced firsthand. We not only read about it and watched movies about it; we lived it. I’m old enough, barely, to remember the cry to “burn, baby burn” during the 1965 Watts Riots. I grew up as a middle and high school student shaped by Black Nationalism. I called the police “pigs” and screamed “say it, loud, I’m Black and I’m proud” inspired by the radicalism of the Black Panthers.

It could be argued, justifiably, few things have changed. Granted. What can’t be debated is old folks not understanding what it feels like to engage in brutal wars with law enforcement. This not being new business adds credence to the demand to rid our streets of those crooked police. All of them. Why? Because the entire system is muddied by institutionalized racism.

Still, there is more to the story.

Young people in Durham may remember the turbulent years of former Police Chief Jose Lopez. There was the pathetically mishandled treatment of Stephanie Nickerson, a Chapel Hill resident beaten by a Durham police officer. We should never forget the case of Carlos Antonio Riley, Jr., the cousin of hip-hop icon Boots Riley, who was charged with shooting a Durham police officer while wrestling.

The police officer who battered Nickerson was terminated and Riley was found not guilty. The dreadful end of the Lopez years followed the sad story of Jesus Huerta, a Riverside High School student, who died in the back of a Durham police officer’s patrol car. Lopez claimed Huerta died from a self-inflicted gunshot, something hard to believe given the evidence.

Durham’s has bad apples and miserable days. We’ve also had leadership that understands and affirms the correlation between root causes and crime.

I’m reminded, there is more to the story.

Police Chief Jackie McNeil (1992-1997) incorporated the weed & seed model to infuse input from residents. Police Chief Steve Chalmers (2003-2007) and Director of Parks & Recreation Carl Washington, along with a group of community leaders -Jackie Wagstaff, Steve Hopkins, Effie Steele, Lenora Smith, and numerous others – changed the way Durham managed human service delivery.

Beginning in 1992, the North East Central Durham Reinvestment Strategy Board worked with the police department to reduce crime within a 96-block focus area. The city council allocated $1.7 million for seed funding. By 1993, $18 million was leveraged from other entities to support the project.

Chalmers continues his work in tackling root causes with Men of Vision, a nonprofit organization he started when he was chief of police. McNeil and Chalmers are both born and raised in Durham. They are among the police officers who understand the enforcement of law fails when the root causes aren’t addressed.

Durham history teaches us the focus on root causes of crime began within the Durham Police Department. The police department helped build a coalition while pressing an agenda forcing input from residents prior to approving public policy. It was a bottom-up approach of human service delivery that made the entire city partners against crime.

Crime will not be solved by blaming it on the police budget. The answers are in celebrating who we are, owning our responsibility to hear from all residents and in honoring the lessons from history.

The NECD model proved what it takes to succeed in Durham. It starts with building trust. Trust can’t be built when more time is invested in making enemies. It’s not about the budget. It’s about building relationships.

I like to think we should never make decisions based on our worst mistakes. It also helps to consider the accomplishments of our best days.

Hopefully, this election will be decided after listening to a variety of stories from old folks and young people.

It helps recognizing old fogies like me remember when Black Power was more than a slogan on a bumper sticker

 

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

"Mumia - Long Distance Revolutionary" to examine the life behind the long run

Many consider Mumia Abu-Jamal a political prisoner.  They contend it isn’t the death of a police officer that keeps him in prison.  His voice hasn’t been silenced since the night he was arrested while moonlighting as a taxi driver to make money to add to what he made as a journalist.

He didn’t stop writing.  He continues to lead and inspire others to liberate the masses.  Abu-Jamal says he has been “punished for communicating.”

Mumia- Long Distance Revolutionary documents Abu-Jamal’s childhood, his work as a journalist with the Black Panther Party Newspaper, the FBI’s COINTELPRO program, and the reason behind him being forced to moonlight as a taxi cab driver the night he was arrested for killing Daniel Faulkner, an officer with the Philadelphia police department.

The film will be shown at the Carolina Theatre in Durham on June 3 & 4. There will be two showings on Monday (7:00 pm & 9:20pm), and one showing on Tuesday (7:00 pm). A panel discussion follows the June 4 show with a special introduction of the new short film Manufacturing Guilt, about Abu-Jamal’s innocence.

Jamal Hart, Abu-Jamal’s son, will participate on the panel. 

“I became a priority adverse target to further punish my father,” Hart says. Mumia – Long Distance Revolutionary has helped Hart deal with some of that hurt.

“It’s like being brought back in time – a glimpse of the past,” Hart says. “Seeing an active journalist doing what he loves. My beloved father being the voice of the voiceless.”

Keith Cook, Abu-Jamal’s brother, will also be on the panel.  Cook, who lives in Hillsborough, NC, says the film has made him much more knowledgeable of the details of his brother’s case.

“If you grew up in Philadelphia, very rarely did the press say anything positive about Mumia. They portrayed him and convinced a large portion of the city that he was guilty of a crime that he did not do,” Cooks says. “This film has been good for me and Mumia and all the people around the world who have been struggling hard to get positive pictures and words out about Mumia and his case.”

Rachel Wolkenstein will also be on the panel. She is an attorney, political activist and spokesperson in the fight to free Mumia Abu-Jamal since 1987.

“Long Distance Revolutionary, is a powerful explication of and testament to the character of this man--innocent of everything except being an uncompromising voice for justice against the forces of race and class oppression,” Wolkenstein says.

Noelle Hanrahan will also serve on the panel.  Hanrahan began recording Abu-Jamal’s voice in prison when she recorded him on death row at Huntingdon State Prison in July of 1992. These recording sessions lead to her recording the controversial censored series on National Public Radio as well as Abu-Jamal’s first bestseller “Live From Death Row.”

Stephen Vittoria directed and produced Mumia – Long Distance Revolutionary.  Vittoria says his first goal was to tell a good and strong story that is well-researched.

“Mumia Abu-Jamal's life is a remarkable story, one of courage, compassion, and love, oftentimes under harsh an inhuman conditions,” Vittoria says. “In fact, the so-called public narrative of Mumia's life told by the lap dogs in the mainstream media and their corrupt masters, the power-brokers pulling the strings, has been a combination of myths, innuendo, and outright lies.”

Vittoria says he has been surprised that Abu-Jamal’s lifelong struggle against racism and class oppression has not been fueled by the politics of rage but rather by love.

“I've told many people that this film, for me, is the film of a lifetime,” Vittoria says. “If I never make another film after this one, that's okay. This film captures the essence of its subject, Mumia, as well as my essence as a filmmaker - both creatively and politically.”

Vittoria says the response to the film has been one of the best parts.

“The audiences are passionate, inspired, and very vocal with their embrace of the film - and that's because Mumia's spirit is one that inspires people everywhere: his struggle, his steadfastness, and his uncompromising approach to telling the truth,” Vittoria says

Cook says he’s optimistic that his brother will be released.

“I go bed sometimes thinking about what I can do next or what are the next steps,” Cook says. “And I am concentrating on having him free in my lifetime.”

It’s a long run to freedom.  It’s even longer when you’re a revolutionary.

Mumia Abu-Jamal keeps running the long distance to freedom.