Assata Shakur Returns To Headlines: Civil Rights Activist Formerly Known As Joanne Byron-Chesimard
07 May 2013
By Karin Friedemann
Civil Rights activist Assata Shakur, formerly known as
Joanne Byron-Chesimard, has re-appeared in the
headlines after years of exile in Cuba, because on May
2, 2013, the State of New Jersey raised the bounty on
her head to $2 million after the FBI promoted the
66-year-old woman to its Most Wanted Terrorist list.
Many in the African American community are shocked to
learn that this astonishingly beautiful woman, whose
inspirational significance has been compared to Leila
Khalid, and whose contributions to the Civil Rights
movement are legendary, is now being treated like the
next Osama bin Laden!
Nick Chiles writes in the Atlanta Black Star that "to
many blacks Shakur is a hero for standing up to law
enforcement while she was a leader of the Black
Liberation Army in the 1970s and for her forceful
writings and commentary on the conditions of black
people after she fled to Cuba sometime around 1984.
She has been the subject of films, documentaries and
rap songs over the years."
Why would the government do this, and why now? Is this
an act of war against Cuba? Are they trying to create
a Black Messiah in order to instigate a racial civil
war in the US? Professor Julio Pino, who teaches
history at Kent State University, told TMO, "It's part
of the long Cold War against Cuba, but also a warning
to African Americans to act like Obama or else."
During the earlier part of the 1970s, Shakur, an
active member of the Black Panther Party and its
paramilitary arm, the Black Liberation Army (BLA),
assisted in clothing, educational and food drives
within many dilapidated communities, and gave speeches
at rallies in efforts to help empower the everyday
people. The BLA organization was known to mimic the
current tactics of other liberation movements around
the world by robbing banks, hijacking planes, and
bombing courthouses in order to make public the
grievances of American blacks. They also trained and
organized black people to stand up to police brutality
by shooting back when attacked. Importantly, they
appealed to International Laws protecting people
engaged in revolutionary struggle against tyrannical
government. They regarded themselves as warriors, as
political prisoners, not as criminals. While their
approach was very radical, the aggressive tactics of
the BLA paved the road towards acceptance of Martin
Luther King's message of human equality, in large part
out of white fear that if segregation did not end,
blacks would retaliate with organized violence.
Assata Shakur was convicted of killing a New Jersey
State Trooper during a shootout on the New Jersey
Turnpike in 1973, though she has always maintained her
innocence. Evidence shows she was shot by the police
while her hands were in the air. In the aftermath,
Zayd Shakur and a police officer lay dead.
Davey D writes in Hip Hop Corner, "If we're gonna talk
about Assata and say she's a ‘cop killer,' let's be
completely honest and put such accusations into
perspective. Everyone wants to forget that in the 60s
and 70s the FBI and police declared War on the black
community and organizations that formed in the
community to end oppression. The police and FBI went
all out to destroy Black leaders and these
organizations with undaunted impunity. The reason why
you had BPP (Black Panther Party), SNCC (Student
Non-Violent Coordinating Committee) and BLA (Black
Liberation Army) was because they responded to police
terrorism. They were tired of seeing the police come
into our communities and take them over like an
‘occupying army,' if I may quote Black Panther
co-founder Bobby Seale."
The FBI had long viewed Shakur as a black leader that
needed to be neutralized, but the police hatred of her
was intense. The white police officer who arrested
Shakur raped her with his gun and dragged her broken
and bleeding body on the street. That the New Jersey
government just contributed another $1 million to the
existing $1 million Federal reward for her capture on
the 40th anniversary of her arrest shows that there
remains a very personal sense of vendetta against her.
"Although I drifted in and out of consciousness I
remember clearly that both while I was lying on the
ground, and while I was in the ambulance, I kept
hearing the State troopers ask ‘is she dead yet?'"
remembers Shakur.
"Sundiata Acoli nor I ever received a fair trial. We
were both convicted in the news media way before our
trials. No news media was ever permitted to interview
us, although the New Jersey police and the FBI fed
stories to the press on a daily basis. In 1977, I was
convicted by an all-white jury and sentenced to life
plus 33 years in prison."
Shakur was treated in an extraordinary way, put in a
high security men's prison where she had to take care
of her bodily functions in front of male guards, and
was frequently tortured and beaten. She became
pregnant by another Black Panther who shared a cell
with her during her trial. She was then put in
solitary confinement in a women's prison. She gave
birth in her prison cell and her baby daughter was
immediately taken away from her. She was violently
brutalized while still in postnatal weakness.
On November 2nd 1979, BLA comrades broke Shakur out of
New Jersey's Clinton Correctional Facility for Women
by seizing the visiting area, brandishing previously
concealed 45 caliber pistols, taking two officers
hostage, and hijacking a prison van to escape the
premises, then switching vehicles at an undisclosed
area & fleeing further. Assata's brother, Mutulu
Shakur and Sekou Odinga along with two white women,
Silvia Baraldini and Marilyn Buck got life sentences
for aiding Shakur's escape. Shakur went underground,
and was given political asylum by Fidel Castro in
1983.
In 1997, the New Jersey State Police wrote a letter to
Pope John Paul II upon his visit to Cuba,
unprecedented in history, asking him to intervene in
order to get Shakur extradited back to the US. This
was combined with a vicious media smear campaign
against her, coordinated with then Governor Christine
Whitney.
"It is nothing but an attempt to bring about the
re-incarnation of the Fugitive Slave Act. All I
represent is just another slave that they want to
bring back to the plantation. Well, I might be a
slave, but I will go to my grave a rebellious slave,"
responded Shakur.
"They wanted to portray her as a terrorist, something
that was an injustice, a brutality, an infamous lie,"
Castro told Cuban TV.
Shakur addressed her own letter to the Pope:
"I first learned of the struggle and the sacrifice of
Jesus in the segregated churches of the South… It was
in the dungeons of prison that I felt the presence of
God up close, and it has been my belief in God, and in
the goodness of human beings that has helped me to
survive… I am not writing to ask you to intercede on
my behalf. I ask nothing for myself. I only ask you to
examine the social reality of the United States and to
speak out against the human rights violations that are
taking place."