Report from inside Attica: ‘Ready to die for their just demands’
Published Sep 7, 2011 9:05 PM
This is part of a report about what went on inside Attica Prison
during the rebellion written by Tom Soto of the Prisoners Solidarity Committee,
who was invited by the prisoners to witness their negotiations with the
authorities. Soto’s full report was published in the Workers World of
Sept. 17, 1971.
By Tom Soto
There is one scene I’ll never forget. I was leaving the prison for the
last time, late Sunday night. As I entered corridor A leading into the
liberated area there was a brother whom I happened to know personally standing
on security. His arms were folded as he faced 40 machine guns on the
administration side. On his shirt he was wearing a PSC [Prisoners Solidarity
Committee] button. Today, I don’t know if he is alive.
Another thing I’ll never forget —
a brother whom I rapped with a long time noted the ring on my finger and asked
about it. I told him it had been made from an American fighter bomber shot down
by Laotian women over Laos. I gave it to him, and he considered it to be a very
dear show of solidarity between the PSC and the prisoners and the Indochinese
people.
As I left, I knew that I might never see these men again. The atmosphere was
filled with tension. There were many hugs and kisses, many goodbyes, many
messages to families on the outside. Yet there was also an incredible strength
and determination among all the prisoners to fight for their just demands or
die in the attempt.
Finally, I’d like to add that the prisoners don’t view themselves
as criminals. They know that they — the Black people, the Puerto Rican
people, the poor white people — are not “criminals” but
oppressed people, driven by poverty. They know that they have been denied jobs;
they have families to support; and they know that the only way for poor people
to survive, for those with no hope of getting jobs, was through stealing $20 or
$100 or $200, in other words, crimes of survival.
They see themselves as victims of a racist society which oppresses and exploits
their people. They see the Rockefellers, the Mellons, the big corporations, the
banks, those who rob and steal their labor for profit, as the real
criminals.
The inmates always told me that they had no intention of killing any of the
hostages. They took them because there was no other way to redress their
grievances. The guard-hostages were the only thing that stood between the
prisoners and sudden death. As it turned out, Rockefeller decided to sacrifice
even the guards rather than to give in to the just demands of the prisoners.
The blood of all the dead is on his hands.
But one thing the rulers of this country never seem to learn — they think
repression, repression and more repression will end the oppressed
peoples’ uprisings. In fact, just the opposite is true. The men at Attica
were so oppressed, so tortured, so brutally treated that finally they chose to
revolt and even die rather than endure life behind those walls any longer. They
knew that many would die, yet they chose the dignity of struggle rather than
the misery of submission.
The Attica uprising was an historic event. It will live forever in the hearts
and minds of the oppressed around the world. If the class solidarity shown
there is any indication of the future, the cause of the oppressed and poor
cannot fail. No prison rebellion in U.S. history has ever been so politically
conscious and so determined. The Prisoners Solidarity Committee felt honored to
have been invited by the prisoners to support them and is pledged to continue
our work on their behalf.
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.
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