Who Is She?
Assata Shakur
Assata Olugbala Shakur (birth name JoAnee
Deborah Byron, married name Joanne Chesimard) was born on July
14, 1947. Shortly after her birth, her mother and father
divorced. Consequently, Shakur lived with her mother, her aunt,
and her grandmother and grandfather (Lula and Frank Hill), in
Jamaica, New York. At the age of three, she moved with her
grandparents to the house where her grandpa was raised in
Wilmington, North Carolina.
Shakur's grandparents opened up a business on their beachfront
property. Her early childhood was spent working for her
grandparents in the restaurant and on the beach. Her grandfather
instilled in her a love of reading, and she spent a great deal
of her time reading to satisfy her lively imagination.
After returning to live with her mother and stepfather in
Queens, Shakur began her political education. She began to
confront issues of racism and discrimination she was
experiencing (The Washington Post). When she was in her early
teens, her mother and stepfather divorced. Soon afterward,
Shakur ran away from home and began to search for answers to her
questions about the world in which she lived. At the age of
seventeen, she dropped out of high school and officially moved
out of her mother's house.
In the late
1960's, Shakur became involved with the controversial Black
Panther party and her political problems began. Between 1973 and
1977 Shakur was indicted ten times and stood trial for two bank
robberies, the kidnapping of a drug dealer, attempted murder of
several police officers, and the murder of a New Jersey state
trooper (The Washington Post).
In 1973, on the New Jersey Turnpike, Shakur and her two friends-
Malik Zayad Shakur and Sundiata Acoli- were stopped by state
troopers because of a shattered headlight. When stopped, the
trooper had said they were "suspicious" because they had Vermont
license plates. The troopers made the three exit the car with
their hands up. All of a sudden, shots were fired. Not much is
known about who did what -- but in the end, state trooper Werner
Foerster and Malik Shakur were killed. Shakur and Sundiata were
charged with the death of trooper Foerster. The subsequent trial
contained many flaws, including racial injustice by the jury and
admitted perjury by the trial's star witness.
With the help of some of her "comrades," Shakur escaped from
prison in 1979. In 1987, she published her first book, simply
titled Assata Shakur: An Autobiography. Shakur had been missing
for eight years until she published the book, at which time she
established her whereabouts in Cuba, where she was granted
political asylum. The U.S government, under the lead of New
Jersey governor Whitman, is actively trying to extradite Shakur
on charges of killing state trooper Foerster.
In the book, she tells her side of the story, describing her
upbringing, her reasoning for becoming a revolutionary, and the
events before, during and after the shooting of trooper Foerster.
The book is also complemented by many poems written by Shakur.
For Shakur, "she who struggles," the struggle is not
over. Though in Cuba, she is still an active voice in the
struggle for equal rights in America.
Assata Shakur has been living in Cuba since
1986, after escaping from prison where she was serving a life
sentence imposed in a highly disputed trial. Assata was a Black
Panther and a Black Liberation Army (BLA) leader in the early
'70s, so she was a target of the FBI's COINTELPRO operation.
Assata was captured in a shoot-out resulting from resistance to
yet another "driving while black" police action in 1973 on the
New Jersey State Turnpike. This time a State Trooper was
killed. Zayd Shakur, traveling in the car with Assata, was also
killed.
The third person in the car,
Sundiata Acoli, is still serving time over 20 years later
and has recently been denied parole for another 20 years.
According to one of Sundiata' attorney, Joan P. Gibbs, "Assata,
at the time of her arrest, was 'wanted' on federal and state
charges in New York, all of which juries subsequently found her
not guilty of or were dismissed." COINTELPRO...
Assata was the subject of a 1997 documentary, "Eyes
of the Rainbow," by AfroCuban film maker
Gloria
Rolando, who toured the US in October '99 to show it.
The following passage is excerpted from
Assata: An Autobiography by Assata Shakur and was originally
delivered by Assata Shakur as part of her opening statement
while acting as co-counsel in her own defense for charges
stemming from the New Jersey Turnpike incident where she was
critically wounded and then tortured at the hands of the State
Police Nazis (no hyperbole here, they were
WWII Nazis
brought to America). Assata Shakur was ultimately convicted
in 1977, but had already served four years in prison. Before her
daring escape from prison in 1979, Assata Shakur served a total
of six years behind bars where she would also give birth to her
daughter Kakuya.
"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. Because
ninety percent of the men and women in this country's prisons
are Black and Third World. Because ten-year-old children are
shot down in our streets. Because dope has saturated our
communities, preying on the disillusionment and frustrations
of our children. The concept of 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 BLA is part of that resistance movement. The
Black Liberation Army stands for freedom and justice for all
people. "
Love is contraband in Hell,
cause love is a acid
that eats away bars.
But you, me, and tomorrow
hold hands and make vows
that struggle will multiply.
The hacksaw has two blades.
The shotgun has two barrels.
We are pregnant with freedom.
We are a conspiracy.
It is our duty to fight for our freedom
It is our duty to win
We must love each other and support each other.
We have nothing to lose but our chains.
--Assata Shakur, An Autobiography
Source:
http://www.afrocubaweb.com/assata.htm
http://voices.cla.umn.edu/authors/assatashakur.html