The
Life of a Black Man
by
Alice Walker, June Jordan & Angela Y. Davis
A
stay of execution was issued October 26. Pending the outcome of
the habeas corpus brief filed for the defense of Mumia Abu-Jamal,
the third, and irrevocable, death warrant will be forthcoming
or a new trial granted.
He
must not die.
As
thousands crowding the streets of our country and far beyond our
borders continue to insist: He must not die. It is his one life
that provokes our persevering resistance. It is his one, persisting
life that permits us hope beyond our day-to-day irrelevance.
It is his living, still, as a black man sentenced to death that
condemns our complacency and puts all our acquiescent inclinations
to shame. We can ignite and sustain our outcry, our judicious
agitation, our public appeal, our steadfast seeking after rescue
and reprieve. We can do this. We can keep him alive.
He
must not die.
Even
though these United States detain the world's largest death row
population--
Even
though these United States lead the industrialized world in numbers
of people incarcerated and, correlatively, in total expenditures
for prison construction, prison maintenance and prison personnel--
Even
though these United States maintain a more aggressive, and growing,
commitment to the imprisonment of their citizens than to public
education of their peoples--
Even
though the past twenty years inside these United States have tolerated
a prison-spending growth rate of 823 percent versus 374 percent
for higher education, nationwide-- He must not die.
Even
though close to 70 percent of America's prisoners are people of
color-- Even though more than 90 percent of those on death row
are poor-- He must not die.
Even
though the October 13 signing of a death warrant on Mumia Abu-Jamal
means that Pennsylvania's Governor Thomas Ridge has now signed
176 death warrants in four years--which is to say five times the
number signed by two previous governors over a twenty-five-year
period--
Even
though the Philadelphia judge who presided over the trial of Mumia
Abu-Jamal is the judge who presided over more trials resulting
in death sentences than any other judge in the United States--
Mumia Abu-Jamal must not die.
Even
though the punishing, death-driven, merciless values of these
United States deliberately neglect or else destroy whoever may
oppose or fail to enable its profit-motivated policies here and
abroad--
Even
though such policies frequently overwhelm local and international
best efforts toward humanitarian relief and nonviolent interventions--
Even
though these United States achieve and retain domination through
the (actual and implied) violence that underlies, asserts and
expands its dominating power-- Mumia Abu-Jamal must not die.
Even
though these United States have yet to heed the American Bar Association's
1997 call for an immediate moratorium on death sentencing until
the processing of capital cases shall conform to minimal criteria
of consistency and fairness--
Even
though the 1997 UN special rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary
or arbitrary executions found that, in these United States, "race,
ethnic origin, and economic status appear to be key determinants
of who will, and who will not, receive a death sentence" and,
therefore, called for an immediate moratorium on death sentencing--
Even
though these United States have not acknowledged or abided by
this transnational call-- Mumia Abu-Jamal must not die. As the
state cannot take away what it has not given-- He must not die.
As
the state cannot retract what it has never conferred--the state
cannot kill this man. He must not die.
As
he still lives, a black man sentenced to death among so many millions
of his brothers and sisters sentenced to penury, contempt and
tragic short circuitries of choice and aspiration--
As
he still lives-- so he ennobles the rest of us to deepen, enlarge
and improve our political opposition to a state gone mad with
greed and the pathologies of uncontested, supremacist might.
We
begin here, where we can win.
We
can do this. We can keep him alive.
He
must not die. Join us in this fight for a new trial!
Write: The Honorable William H. Yohn Jr., c/o Leonard Weinglass
(Defense Attorney), 6 West 20th Street, Suite 10A, New York, NY
10011.
Angela
Y. Davis, June Jordan and Alice Walker
Artwork
by MEARONE and Chaz