‘We need a movement of millions’
Published Oct 13, 2005 2:12 AM
The following transcript is taken from an audio
commentary.
Long live John Africa.
On a move!
I want
to thank Minister Louis Farrakhan and the Millions More Movement for the kind
invitation to join y’all here. As we gather, in person or electronically,
we do so in a time of peril.
We do so in the aftermath of Hurricane
Katrina, when the state showed us all that they don’t give a damn about
Black life. But every day of our lives we see smaller but no less lethal
Hurricane Katrinas. Every year in public schools, millions of Black, Latin@, and
poor kids are miseducated, thereby destroying, as surely as any hurricane, their
life hopes and chances.
In our communities, our taxes pay for our own
oppression, as racist and brutal cops make our lives hell daily. We are
consumers of a media that is as dangerous as any hurricane, for it poisons our
minds and the minds of millions of others by wholesale lies designed to demean
and denigrate us.
Look at the tale of horrors that came out of Katrina:
the horror stories of mass rapes and mass murders, told by Black politicians and
Black cops to deflect attention from the armed, roving gangs of New Orleans
cops, who stole everything that they could get their hands on. By putting out
these lies, they turned hearts and minds from their betrayal of their own
constituency, Black and poor New Orleanians, who needed transport, food, clean
water, toilet facilities, and medical care and safety.
What’s the
point? That they represent, not the interests of those who voted for them, but
the wealthy and well-to-do. If you doubt me, ask yourself what percentage of the
tens of thousands of people in the Superdome or the convention
center—those people the government left to starve, in the dark, thirsty,
deathly afraid—were registered Democrat?
If we’re honest,
we’ll agree over 90 percent. What did it matter? It didn’t. Their
loyalty was rewarded with betrayal. Did it matter that there was a Democratic
governor? Kathleen Blanco’s first order was to send National Guard into
the streets, where she authorized them to shoot to kill to protect property. Did
any of you, in a week, see such governmental passion displayed to protect human
life? Did you see any interest in protecting Black life?
I didn’t
think so.
What we saw then was what we’ve always seen—the
government as adversary, not ally. In prisons all across America, in police
stations, and in courthouses, we experience daily hurricanes of hatred and
indifference. These institutions, just like other government branches, are
threats to our welfare, not tools of our will. They are tools of white
supremacy, even and sometimes especially when their leaders have Black faces.
We have Black politicians with virtually no political power which means,
once again, we pay for our own oppression. Our taxes pay for them, but they
don’t serve our people’s interests. They serve the state of white
supremacy. They serve the will of capital.
We need a movement of millions
to build true social power. To free our minds and our bodies from the mud that
we languish in.
We need a movement of millions to transform our current
social reality of repression and destitution. We need a movement of millions to
bring back light to the eyes of our people. To engage in a struggle for freedom,
for justice, and for liberation.
We need a movement of millions of the
poor, of workers, of women, of youth, of students, of prisoners, of all those
dedicated to change to build independent organizations that can’t be
bought or sold and will do the work necessary to be free.
We need a
movement of millions to bring freedom to the brothers and sisters of the Move 9,
to bring freedom to Sundiata Acoli, to bring freedom to Mutulu Shakur, to
Russell Maroon Shoats, and hundreds of other Black prisoners of war and
political prisoners.
We need a movement of millions to resist the state
oppression that has brought us Patriot Acts, but not patriotic actions, wars for
empire and countless attacks on the poor. We need a movement of millions to make
common cause with oppressed people the world over. In Cuba, yes in Iraq, in
Venezuela, in the Congo, in Haiti, in the Philippines.
We need a movement
of millions that is anti-imperialist, that is anti-racist, and that unites us,
not divides us. We need a movement of millions, and let us begin right here.
Thank you, on a move! Long live John Africa. Free the Move 9.
From death row, this is Mumia Abu-Jamal.
Articles copyright 1995-2012 Workers World.
Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved.
Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY, NY 10011
Email:
[email protected]
Subscribe
[email protected]
Support independent news
DONATE