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RBGz New Afrikan Freedom Fighters ( Political Prisoners and Prisoners of War) Portal

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Hometown:
One of Hundreds of Amerikkka's Gulags
About Me:
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Who are Political Prisoners and Prisoners of War:

Political Prisoners and Prisoners of War are not in prison for committing social "crimes", nor are they criminals. Different PP/POWs participated in progressive and revolutionary movements in varying levels. Some in educational and community organizing, others in clandestine armed and offensive people's armies. All are in prison as a result of conscious political action, for building resistance, building and leading movements and revolution... for making change. Many of us in some way or another are part of these very movements, part of that resistance that PP/POWs helped to build. As people continuing to struggle for change, we are obligated and it is our duty to support those people who are in prison as a result of struggling to make change. Though some have a wider definition of Political Prisoners, we maintain that even if the definition of a Political Prisoner was expanded and widely accepted to include social prisoners of conscience, it needs to be clear that those prisoners who went to prison as a result of political action taken on the street would still demand our priority support. For movements to support other prisoners before we support the prisoners who have gone to prison for building the very movements we now participate in is backwards and criminal.

From:http://www.abcf.net/index.htm




Website:
http://www.thejerichomovement.com/
Favorite Afrikan Scholars, Revolutionaries and/or Activists
PPs and POW, The People and Revolution

RBG New Afrikan Freedom Fighters ( Political Prisoners and Prisoners of War) Portal

RBG Documentary-Jalil Muntaqim

"More FACTS, I, MUMIA ABU-JAMAL, declare..."



"More FACTS, I, MUMIA ABU-JAMAL, declare..." Go to RBG Worldwide for More.. ---UPDATED--- I, MUMIA ABU-JAMAL, declare: 1. I am the Petitioner in this action. If called as a witness I could and would testify to the following from my own personal knowledge. 2. I did not shoot Police Officer Daniel Faulkner. I had nothing to do with the killing of Officer Faulkner. I am innocent. 3. At my trial I was denied the right to defend myself, I had no confidence in my... Read Full Story


Dr. Khallid On Free Mumia and Mumia On Dr. Khallid, plus Assata Speaks



RBG Street Scholars Think Tank is Dedicated to the Memory of Dr. Khallid Abdul Muhammad DR. KHALLID AT FREE MUMIA RALLY Mumia Abu-Jamal in Memoriam of Dr. Khallid / 1997 The news of the recent passing of former Nation of Islam spokesperson and, more recently, chairman of the New Black Panther Party came as a shock. The on-again, off-again reports of his demise led many to once again distrust the media sources that he was so critical of during his lifetime. One is reminded of the... Read Full Story

Dr. Mutulu Shakur on "Like It Is" and more


http://www.mutulushakur.com/ BIOGRAPHY OF DR. MUTULU SHAKUR Date of Birth: August 8, 1950 Nationality: New Afrikan Incarcerated at: Coleman, FL Dr. Mutulu Shakur is a New Afrikan (Black) man whose primary work has been in the area of health. He is a doctor of acupuncture and was a co-founder and director of two institutions... Read Full Story

“The Framing of Mumia Abu-Jamal,” by J. Patrick O’Connor


At this critical juncture in Abu-Jamal’s case, an explosive new book is set for release in May, titled “The Framing of Mumia Abu-Jamal,” by J. Patrick O’Connor, and published by Lawrence Hill Books. O’Connor explains that he “was an associate editor for TV Guide at its headquarters in nearby Radnor, Pennsylvania during the time Officer Faulkner was killed and Abu-Jamal was put on trial and convicted of murdering him…" The Framing of Mumia Abu-Jamal: an interview with author J. Patrick... Read Full Story

The Eyes Of The Rainbow: Assata Shakur Documentary, Plus "STATEMENT OF FACTS"


"Like most poor people in the United States, I have no voice. The Black press and the progressive media, as well as Black civil rights organizations, have historically played an essential role in the struggle for social justice. We should continue and expand that tradition. We should create media outlets that help to educate our people and our children, and not annihilate their minds. I am only one woman. I own no TV stations or radio stations or newspapers. But I believe that people need... Read Full Story

The Soul Knows No Bars, "Free Mumia and H. Rap Brown"


"This book taught me a lot...I highly recommend it for All Serious Brothers" The Soul Knows No Bars: Inmates Reflect on Life, Death, & HopeA Review by Joy James By Drew Leder and Cornel West Rowman & Littlefield 224 pages Currently, some 70 percent of the 2 million people in U.S. jails, prisons and detention centers are people of color; approximately 1 million are African American. With the highest incarceration rate in the industrialized world, the United States is one of the few... Read Full





RBG New Afrikan Freedom Fighters # 1


Companion Learning Object: RBG Freedom Fighter Tribute: Feat, A Brief History of the New Afrikan Prison Struggle



Click This Poster for an audio-visual version of this outline

Q: What is the Black Liberation Army (BLA)?

A: The year was 1971. The FBI, CIA, and local police department's Counter-Intelligence Program planted degenerative seeds to increase tensions and factionalism within the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense (BPP). Their efforts culminated in the split between Huey P. Newton and Eldridge Cleaver. While Newton continued leadership of the broken BPP, Cleaver went on to lead what came to be known as the Black Liberation Army (BLA), which had previously existed as the underground faction and "fighting apparatus" of the BPP. The BLA is notorious for allegedly waging war against local police department oppressors through police car bombings.

Q: What are the principles of the Black Liberation Army?

A: The BLA, as a result of realizing the economical nature of the system under which we are forced to live, maintains the following principles:

1. That we are anti-capitalist, anti-imperialist, anti-racist, and anti-sexist.
2. That we must of necessity strive for the abolishment of these systems and for the institution of Socialistic relationships in which Black people have total and absolute control over their own destiny as a people.
3. That in order to abolish our systems of oppression, we must utilize the science of class struggle, develop this science as it relates to our unique national condition.

Q: Where can I find out more about the Black Liberation Army?

A: The Talking Drum

Message to the Black Movement

Black Militancy: Notes From the Underground

Retrieved from Bad Subjects: Issue #71, December 2004 Text written by Rashad Shabazz
If one were to examine, closely, the hegemonic discourses of black American history, one would be surprised to find a long history of militant armed struggle. Slave rebellions, urban "guerilla" insurgencies, rural defense leagues, are all part of a tapestry of black militant rebellion to subjugation. The most recent icon of black armed struggle, the Black Panther Party, is a linchpin in understanding the development of this phenomenon in the late 1960s, which saw its high point in the 1970s. But it was not the only organization that used or opening advocated the use of force against the state. Others did exist. They did not exist in the public or "aboveground" as the Panthers did between the years of 1966 and 1974. Other factions of the organization existed outside the public eye—clandestinely. Not coincidently, this history exists clandestinely. Clandestine is also a fitting way to describe some of the writers of this history. It is fitting because they, like the histories of armed struggle in U.S., don’t exist in the open, but they exist nonetheless.

Many of those who (clandestinely) trace the historical trajectories of armed struggle are (or were) prisoners of the state. Assata Shakur, George Jackson, Kuwasi Balagoon, and Geronimo Ji Jaga Pratt, all participated in armed struggle. Branded by the state as criminals, underground black radicals, as well as white underground radicals were part of a network of militant "paramilitary" insurgencies. By several accounts this movement lasted from the late 1960’s until the beginning of the 1980’s. Today, imprisoned underground activists continue to write of this subjugated history from the cells that hold them.

Black Panther logo

The birth of the Black Panther Party (BPP) in 1966 in Oakland, California, marked a significant transition away from the non-violent tactics of the Civil Rights Movement. Black women and men dressed in black leather jackets, sometimes armed, are the most popular and iconic images of the Party. The BPPs well know leadership including Huey Newton, Bobby Seale, and Kathleen Cleaver are also representative images. In many respects, they have and continue to play critical roles in tracing the historical trajectory of Black armed struggle. Thee BPP, although the public face of the black militant rebellion, was not the only organization committed to the tactic of armed struggle. In many respects, the Party, itself, had several faces. One of them being an "above-ground" organization that ran the day-to-day operations of the Party, protested, and organized Black communities. This is the public face of the Party. There is literature which suggests the BPP has another history, another form of organizing. This formation would exist as the clandestine wing; a wing that was committed to armed struggle.

Recently, several re-readings and re-conceptualization of the BPP have made it abundantly clear that from the Party’s inception there existed another formation of the Party, "underground" armed paramilitary group committed to urban guerrilla campaigns. To the extent that there were competing personalities involved, the underground faction was more associated with Eldridge Cleaver. The tensions between Cleaver and Newton on the subject of armed struggle and the direction of the Party (Newton favored community-based organizing and building a strong public force, Cleaver did not share this vision), had strained, and by 1971 a full-on split was in place.

The black underground movement, which was associated with Cleaver, was not by any means homogenous. Although Cleaver was an advocate for armed struggle, no one individual controlled it. They were ideologically unified, but autonomous in terms of their actions. They went by several names: the New World Liberation Front, New African Independence Movement, the Black Underground, National Black Liberation Front. However, it is know mostly by the name Black Liberation Army (BLA).

Female Black Panthers

In her memoirs, exiled BLA member Assata Shakur suggests that the BLA, though not a cohesive organization, is a "concept," an analysis, a people’s movement, and idea:

The idea of the Black Liberation Army emerged from conditions in Black communities: conditions of poverty, indecent housing, massive unemployment, poor medical care, and inferior education. The idea came about because Black people are not free or equal in this country…The BLA arose because of the political, social, and economic oppression of Black people in this country. And where there is oppression there will be resistance.

The clandestine nature of the BLA does not mean it was marginal or fringe. Nothing could be further from the truth, according to some, throughout the 1970’s — its highpoint of activity — the BLA was involved in numerous clandestine actions. Heavily influenced by Marxist-Leninist philosophies and Fanonian readings of the world situation, the black underground movement saw "revolutionary violence" against the state as a necessary response to what many deemed an imperialist nation fixed on exclusivity and racism. White radicals were also involved in clandestine activity, in many cases collaborating with black radicals. The best-known group of this era, the Weather Underground, actively participated on the side of black activists. Philosophically, Marx, Lenin and Fanon also influenced them.

Many of those involved in the black underground were jailed for their activities. After the decimation of the BPP, the underground movement was left without aboveground assistance. Those brought to trail for their actions have been critical of the legal process. Many of them see it as nothing more than a means to maintain class and racial domination. This can also be said to be the case for several "aboveground" activists. In their most clearly articulated political and philosophical statement, "Message to the Black Movement: a political statement from the black underground", the BLA made their thoughts and ideas on revolution in North America public. They speak about numerous topics including the black bourgeoisie, Marx’s dialectical movement of history, law, and capitalist society. They write, "We must begin to determine our livers by creating community institutions of revolutionary justice outside the structure of capitalist law."

When arrested for their activities they stood before the court and denounced the charges against them. Many of them like Kuwasi Balagoon and Ray Luc Levasseur (a white Canadian and member of a underground faction named the Sam Melville/Jonathan Jackson unit) used their opening statements to show why they thought the state had neither the moral or legal authority of hold them in violation. In the opening statement of his trial Levasseur states:

In 21 years of political activity I’ve never done anything for personal gain or profit. Nothing. That his been part of my motivation and intent. The government wants to charge that bombing the office of the South African government is an act of racketeering? A bombing that was done in response to the massacre in South Africa and to support the struggle for freedom there. No, it’s an expression of the support for liberation. It is that simple.

Trial statements were used in a similar fashion in several cases where underground activists were involved. These statements were used to voice opposition to court procedures, condemn state actions in places like South America and South Asia. They used their statement to educate, and to save their own lives. Although I speak of this phenomenon in terms of underground activists, it is also applicable to those in the public eye.

Although they were tried as criminals, many have argued that the cases of those who "fight" as members of underground factions transcend the boundaries of domestic legal discourse. Prison intellectuals like Marilyn Buck maintain that domestic law is not applicable in cases of those involved in armed struggle with the state.

It is from cells located across this country, the charting and unearthing of this history is done. It is an imprisoned history. The literature of incarcerated activists like Jalil Muntaqim, Marilyn Buck, and George Jackson is not only thought-provoking explication of the sordid uses of the prison system or mere polemics against the state. To read the literature of incarcerated activists in the black underground is to read the histories of the black underground movement. These histories are found in an assemblage of literature: opening trial statements, closing and sentence statements, personal letters, poetry, and paintings. They can be found in a myriad of dispatches from general population, secured housing unites, and death rows.

We should not be surprised that the histories of armed struggle in the U.S. escape the purview of hegemonic discourse, particularly histories of black resistance. Armed struggle in the United States, particularly against the state is not supposed to happen, because, for all intents and purposes, the U.S. holds itself up as the bastion of democracy and freedom. It claims to be a symbol of prosperity, dignity, and technological superiority. Given these longstanding assumptions about the U.S. are increasingly coming into question by many around the world, what do we make of armed struggle? This question takes on a new meaning given the daily reality of Iraq. How should we think about it, as well as its history, and what does the legacy of armed struggle within the U.S. suggest about our current political situation?

If nothing else, the histories of armed struggle in this country help us think more deeply about the gap between what is professed and what is practiced. As Shakur suggests, the black underground movement was born out of conditions of existence. For a generation of young activists, the reality of war, imperialism, racism and the growing fragility of democratic liberalism was too much to handle. Force became a means to wrestle with this tension. As the discourse of a "country torn" finds its way into mainstream political analyses (for many the deep divisions in this country are not a new political reality), we should reflect on the writings of political dissidents and radicals. We should recognize the diversity of political analysis that is very much alive. The histories of armed struggle, if taken seriously, provide us with a means to think more critically about the center, and complicate its claims of moral and political right.


Also see this curriculum:
RBG Freedom Fighter Tribute: Feat, A Brief History of the New Afrikan Prison Struggle

FBI Cointepro War on Black America

RBGz Free Em All Portal (PP and POW)'s Blog

RBGz Free Em All Portal (PP and POW)

RBG Street Scholar 2 on Myspace/BLA Tribute & Education



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RBGz Free Em All Portal (PP and POW)

The August 7, 1970 Marin County Courthouse Slave Rebellion



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RBGz Free Em All Portal (PP and POW)

Racism and the Death Penalty / You Tube Video, Current Cases & Readings


(Electric Chair at Sing Sing)

Bryan Stevenson - Racism
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RBGz Free Em All Portal (PP and POW)

Free the San Francisco 8 – Arrested on 30-year Old Charges




Eight former Black Panthers wer

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Posted on May 28, 2008 at 3:00am —

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At 10:29pm on May 29, 2008, RBGz Free Em All Portal (PP and POW) said…
RBG On Slavery Days, Called By Any Other Name, From Chattel to the Prison Industrial Complex

At 5:01am on May 28, 2008, RBGz Free Em All Portal (PP and POW) said…
http://www.lulu.tv/?p=13112

Follow the link for original photo-story if you experience text distortion in this app.



At 1:33am on May 28, 2008, RBG4Lif Original Black Panther Party Classroom said…


At 12:44am on May 28, 2008, RBGz Free Em All Portal (PP and POW) said…

Haki Malik Abdullah (s/n Michael Green) # C-56123 PO Box 3456, Corcoran, CA 93212
Mumia Abu-Jamal #AM 8335
SCI-Greene, 175 Progress Drive, Waynesburg, PA 15370
Birthday: April 24, 1954

Sundiata Acoli #39794-066
FCI Otisville, P.O. Box 1000, Otisville, NY 10963
Birthday: January 14, 1937

Charles Simms Africa #AM4975
SCI Graterford, Box 244, Graterford PA 19426
Birthday: April 7, 1956

Delbert Orr Africa #AM4985
SCI Dallas Drawer K, Dallas, PA 18612
Birthday: June 21, 1951

Edward Goodman Africa #AM4974
301 Morea Road, Frackville, PA 17932
Birthday: October 21, 1949

Janet Holloway Africa #006308
451 Fullerton Ave, Cambridge Springs, PA 16403-1238
Birthday: April 13, 1951

Janine Phillips Africa #006309
451 Fullerton Ave, Cambridge Springs, PA 16403-1238
Birthday: April 25, 1956

Michael Davis Africa #AM4973
SCI Graterford Box 244, Graterford, PA 19426-0244
Birthday: October 6, 1955

William Phillips Africa #AM4984
SCI Dallas Drawer K, Dallas, PA 18612
Birthday: January 1, 1956

Debbie Sims Africa #006307
451 Fullerton Ave, Cambridge Springs, PA 16403-1238
Birthday: August 4, 1956

Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin # 99974-555
USP Florence ADMAX, P.O. Box 8500, Florence, CO 81226
Birthday: October 4, 1943

Zolo Azania #4969
Indiana State Prison, P.O. Box 41, Michigan City, IN 46361
Birthday: December 12, 1954

Herman Bell 2318931
San Francisco County Jail, 850 Bryant St., San Francisco CA 94103
Birthday: January 14, 1948

Haydée Beltrán Torres #88462-024
SCI Tallahassee, 501 Capitol Circle NE, Tallahassee, FL 32031

Kojo Bomani Sababu (Grailing Brown) #39384-066
USP Coleman 1, P.O. Box 1033, Coleman, FL 33521

Jalil Muntaqim (Anthony Bottom) #2311826
San Francisco County Jail, 850 Bryant St., San Francisco CA 94103
Birthday: October 18, 1951

Ray Boudreaux 2301300
Out on bail, but can be reached at:
Committee for the Defense of Human Rights
P.O. Box 90221, Pasadena, CA 91109, (415) 226-1120

Richard Brown 2300819
Out on bail, but can be reached at:
Committee for the Defense of Human Rights
P.O. Box 90221, Pasadena, CA 91109, (415) 226-1120

Veronza Bowers #35316-136
FCI Bennettsville, P.O.Box 52020, Bennettsville, So. Carolina 25912
Birthday: February 4

Marilyn Buck #00482-285
Unit B, Camp Parks, 5701 Eighth Street, Dublin, CA 94568
Birthday: December 13

Rubén Campa #58738-004
(envelope addessed to Rubén Campa,
letter addressed to Fernando Gonzáles)
FCI Terre Haute, P.O. Box 33, Terre Haute, IN 47808
Birthday: August 18, 1963

Marshall Eddie Conway #116469
MD. Correctional Training Center
18800 Roxbury Rd., Hagerstown, MD 21746
Birthday: April 23, 1946

Rodney Coronado #03895-000
FCI El Reno, P.O. Box 1500, El Reno, OK 73036

Bill Dunne #10916-086
USP BIG SANDY, P.O. Box 2068, Inez, KY 41224
Birthday: August 3

Romaine “Chip” Fitzgerald #B-27527
Centinela State Prison, FC-2-110, PO Box 921, Imperial, CA 92251
http://www.freechip.org/

William Gilday # W33537
MCI Shirley, PO Box 1218, Shirley, MA 01464-1218

David Gilbert #83A6158
Clinton Correctional Facility, P.O. Box 2001, Dannemora, NY 12929
Birthday: October 6, 1944

René González #58738-004
FCI Marianna, P.O. Box 7007, Marianna, FL 32447-7007
Birthday: August 13, 1956

Antonio Guerrero #58741-004
U.S.P. Florence, P.O. Box 7000, Florence CO 81226
Birthday: October 18, 1958

Bashir Hameed/York #82-A-6313
Great Meadow CF, Box 51, Comstock, New York 12821
Birthday: December 1, 1940

Eddie Hatcher #0173499
PO Box 909, Taylorsville NC 28681

Robert Seth Hayes #74-A-2280
Wende CF, Wende Rd., PO Box 1187, Alden, NY 14004-1187
Birthday: October 15, 1948

Alvaro Luna Hernández #255735
Hughes Unit, Rt. 2, Box 4400, Gatesville, TX 76597
Birthday: May 12, 1952

Gerardo Hernández #58739-004
U.S.P. Victorville, P.O. Box 5500, Adelanto, CA 92301
Birthday: July 4, 1965

Freddie Hilton (Kamau Sadiki) #0001150688
Augusta State Medical Prison, Bldg 13A-2 E7
3001 Gordon Highway, Grovetown, GA 30813

Henry W. (Hank) Jones 2301301
Out on bail, but can be reached at:
Committee for the Defense of Human Rights
P.O. Box 90221, Pasadena, CA 91109, (415) 226-1120

Sekou Kambui (William Turk) #113058
Box 56, SCC (B1-21), Elmore, AL 36025-0056
Birthday: September 6, 1948

Mohamman Geuka Koti 80A-0808
354 Hunter Street, Ossining, NY 10562-5442

Jaan Karl Laaman #W 87237
MCI Cedar Junction, Box 100, South Walpole, MA 02071-0100
Birthday: March 21, 1948

Richard Mafundi Lake #079972
Donaldson CF, 100 Warrior Lane, Bessemer, AL 35023-7299

Mondo We Langa (David Rice) #27768,
Nebraska State Penitentiary, P.O. Box 2500, Lincoln, NE 68542
Birthday: May 21, 1947

Maliki Shakur Latine # 81-A-4469
Great Meadow CF, P.O. Box 51, Comstock, NY 12821

Oscar López Rivera #87651-024
FCI Terre Haute, P.O. Box 33, Terre Haute, IN 47808
Birthday: January 6, 1943

Jeffrey Luers (Free) #13797671
CRCI, 9111 NE Sunderland Ave, Portland, OR 97211-1708
Birthday: December 5

Ojore Lutalo # 59860
PO Box 861, #901548, Trenton NJ 08625
Birthday: August 6

Ruchell Cinque Magee # A92051
3A2-131 Box 3471, C.S.P. Corcoran, CA 93212

Abdul Majid (Anthony Laborde) #83-A-0483
Drawer B, Green Haven CF, Stormville, NY 12582-0010
Birthday: June 25, 1949

Thomas Manning #10373-016
MCFP, Springfield Medical Center,
P.O. Box 4000, Springfield, MO 65801
Birthday: June 28, 1946

Daniel McGowan #63794-053
FCI Oxford, P.O. Box 1000, Oxford, WI 53952

Luís Medina #58734-004
(envelope is addressed to Luis Medina, letter to Ramón Labañino)
USP McCreary, P.O. Box 3000, Pine Knot, KY 42635
Birthday: June 9, 1963

Sekou Odinga #05228-054
USP Florence ADMAX, P.O. Box 8500, Florence, CO 81226
Birthday: June 17, 1944

Sara Olson #W94197
506-10-04 Low, CCWF, P.O. Box 1508, Chowchilla, CA 93610-1508
Birthday: January 16, 1947

Richard O'Neal 2300818
Out on bail, but can be reached at:
Committee for the Defense of Human Rights
P.O. Box 90221, Pasadena, CA 91109, (415) 226-1120

Leonard Peltier #89637-132
USP Lewisburg, P.O. Box 1000, Lewisburg, PA 17837
Birthday: September 12, 1944

Hugo "Dahariki" Pinell # A88401
SHU D3-221, P.O. Box 7500, Crescent City, CA 95531-7500
Birthday: March 10, 1945

Ed Poindexter # 27767
Nebraska State Penitentiary, P.O. Box 2500, Lincoln, NE 68542
Birthday: November 1, 1944

Luis V. Rodríguez # C33000
Mule Creek State Prison, P.O. Box 409000, Ione, CA 95640

Hanif Shabazz Bey (Beaumont Gereau) #295933
Keen Mountain CC, P.O. Box 860, Oakwood, VA 24631
Birthday: August 16, 1950

Mutulu Shakur #83205-012
USP Florence ADMAX, PO Box 8500, Florence, CO 81226
Birthday: August 8, 1950

Byron Shane Chubbuck #07909-051
USP Coleman I, P.O. Box 1033, Coleman, FL 33521
Birthday: February 26, 1967

Russell Maroon Shoats #AF-3855
SCI Greene, 175 Progress Drive, Waynesburg, PA 15370
Birthday: August 23, 1943

Harold Taylor 2305584
Out on bail, but can be reached at:
Committee for the Defense of Human Rights
P.O. Box 90221, Pasadena, CA 91109, (415) 226-1120

Carlos Alberto Torres #88976-024
FCI Pekin, P.O. Box 5000, Pekin, IL 61555
Birthday: September 19, 1952

Francisco Torres 2307534
Out on bail, but can be reached at:
Committee for the Defense of Human Rights
P.O. Box 90221, Pasadena, CA 91109, (415) 226-1120

Gary Tyler # 84156
Louisiana State Penitentiary, ASH-4, Angola LA 70712

Herman Wallace #76759
CCR Lower B Cell #3, Louisiana State Penitentiary, Angola, LA 70712
Birthday: October 13, 1941

Gary Watson #098990
Unit SHU17, Delaware Correctional Center,
1181 Paddock Road, Smyrna, DE 19977

Albert Woodfox #72148
CCR Upper B Cell #14, Louisiana State Pen, Angola LA 70712
Birthday: February 19, 1947
National Jericho Movement • P.O. Box 1272 • NY, NY 10013
 
 

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In The Beginning There Was Law It was carved in stone The Angels ordained prophesies a King the orders carved in stone. There’s no script rehearse Law is law Allah the Almighty God is God Let it be herd. Oh thy feet, Oh thy feet, the blood of thy...

THE MIS-EDUCATION OF THE NEGRO


The education of any people should begin with the people themselves.... The chief difficulty with the education of the Negro is that it has been largely imitation resulting in the enslavement of his mind. Dr. Carter G. Woodson,

The Miseducation of the Negro(1933), Full Online Text

THE MIS-EDUCATION OF THE NEGRO | AUDIOBOOK


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Comprehensive Media Files Index

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RBG Afrikan- Centered Cultural Development and Education

Public Enemy

Rap Music

Black History Month
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The Black Liberation Army Presents: THE CHOICE, An Interactive Story Board

Huey P. Newton and 1800-FTP Call In : Police State v Freedom Fighters

"The Revolution is in the Music": A Kol Lesson, Feat. Pac "Only God Can Judge Me" and Outlawz

A History of The Republic of New Afrika


RBG DEFINED: 2008 Updated Lesson


Mumia Abu Jamal Demo in Philadelphia Apr. 19th, 08 plus Mumia Teaching Video Player

A Message to the Hip Hop Grassroots from former Political Prisoner & Black Panther Dhoruba Bin Wahad

Betta B Ready by Ras Ceylon (EXLUSIVE WORLD PREMIERE!!!)

AFRIKAN INSURRECTION MUSIC and T.V. / United Front

RBG: SDL (Self Directed Learning) Black Studies Outline for Advanced Learners

Hip Hop History 101 : A Refreshing Audio Chronology 1970-2005

The RBG SSTT-Aset University Black / New Afrikan Creed... and more

RBG on Computers, SDL (Self Directed Learning) and the Internet as Tools in Liberation

RBGz Hip Hop and Rap Music Wikizine" CLASSIC"

The Honorable Robert F. Williams: "The Teacher They Don't Want You To Know About"

New Afrikan Socio-Educational Networking Is Here, "Decolonizing The African Mind"

The RBG4Lif Revolution of the Mind: "What Dat Be Bout"

RBGz Anti-Niggerization Studies: Ridding the World of Niggers (Niggas)!

RBGz "Be Down Wit Tha Reparations Clique"

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