(Image: PM Press)
Through recounting the incarceration of activists
fighting for black liberation, Native American sovereignty, Puerto Rican
independence, economic justice, the abolition of nuclear weapons and more,
author Dan Berger illustrates how imprisonment serves as a political tool
deployed by the state to maintain the status quo.
Defining “political prisoner” is a risky endeavor,
historian Dan Berger notes in the introduction to his recently released book on
the topic, The Struggle Within: Prisons, Political Prisoners, and Mass
Movements in the United States. Too often, it’s assumed that political
prisoners are people who “haven’t done anything” - who are imprisoned simply
because of their beliefs. However, as Berger articulates throughout this
engrossing, fact-packed primer, most political prisoners did do
something: They participated actively in movements to resist state power, often
acting outside the bounds of the law. And so, rather than limiting
conversations about political prisoners to determinations of “innocence” and “guilt,”
it’s much more useful to discuss how and why the state attempted to suppress
those movements. Through recounting the incarceration of activists fighting for
black liberation, Native American sovereignty, Puerto Rican independence,
economic justice, the abolition of nuclear weapons and more, Berger illustrates
how imprisonment serves as a political tool deployed to maintain the status
quo.
The activists Berger introduces us to aren’t usually
protesting legislation or railing against particular politicians housed within
current power structures. They’re working to disrupt the deep groundings of
those structures - including the legitimacy of the law itself. In other words,
they’re shaking the foundation of the very laws that are later used to confine
them.
In the foreword to The Struggle Within,
activist and scholar Ruth Wilson Gilmore points to the recent enthusiasm for
prison “reform,” noting that reform-oriented advocacy often ignores the
existence of political prisoners, because their struggles contradict the notion
that prisons can be fixed. These prisoners - working to wholly upend
existing systems of oppression - belie what Gilmore calls “the sentimental
maxim that whatever’s wrong with the United States will be fixed by what’s
right with it.”
This book is about people who are locked up for
revealing what’s wrong with the United States, and Berger’s meticulous documentation
of activist struggles shows how incarceration serves as an attempt to erase
their dissent. Like the “reformers,” the government can’t acknowledge political
prisoners; if it did, it would have to acknowledge the existence of the
problems they’re fighting. “The prison can be seen as an extension of the
repression that drove many of these people to undertake militant action in the
first place,” Berger notes. “It is part of the government’s arsenal to destroy
revolutionaries.”
The image of the arsenal is at home in this book
about systemic struggle. Occasionally, The Struggle Within paints the
landscape of the push toward revolution as a battlefield; incarcerations, like
casualties, may come with the territory. Of the Black Liberation Army’s arrests
for “expropriations” (the bank robberies the group’s members used to sustain
their survival), Berger writes, “As members of a clandestine army fighting to
free a colonized people, most captured BLA combatants have defined themselves as
‘prisoners of war.’“ Many Puerto Rican independence activists in the ‘70s also
assumed this position; Berger talks about how some began to “refuse to
participate in their own trials, asserting the position of prisoner of war,
thus not subject to the colonial courts of the United States.”
The activists that Berger profiles break laws to
break down chains, walls, systems, norms and entrenched assumptions. While the
law is deployed to repress them, they resist by continually revealing its
flimsiness and mutability; they demonstrate that it can not only be “broken,”
but that it can, potentially, be broken down.
Though armed struggle plays a large role in The
Struggle Within, breaking down systems isn’t simply about literally
fighting back. One of the book’s most interesting and nuanced sections delves
into movements of revolutionary nonviolence. Berger notes that radical
pacifists, though they usually aren’t given long sentences, are known for the
way in which they continually go back to prison: “For more than forty
years, [nonviolent resistance] has been the political tendency most oriented
toward civil disobedience.”
This points to a striking characteristic of many of
the prisoners Berger chronicles: Instead of simply being victimized by a
repressive government that incarcerates them in order to silence their message,
these activists are usingtheir own political imprisonment to amplify
their message. Many such activists also draw on their experiences of
incarceration to speak out against the prison system itself. And of course,
even for those who weren’t aimingto be imprisoned, the amplified attention that
prominent incarcerated activists receive still draws attention to the
prison-industrial complex: Think of how the movement around Mumia Abu-Jamal
mobilized opposition to the death penalty, and how Angela Davis and others
began to build the foundations of prison abolitionism while incarcerated.
Drawing links between the prison-industrial complex
and other issues shines a light on the core institutions that drive many
different forms of oppression. As Gilmore writes in the book’s foreword, “The
Struggle Within is about those who believe hierarchies of race, gender,
wealth, colonialism and planetary exploitation will never just time out and
disappear.” In fact, the recognition of the enduring enormity of these
oppressions - and a consciousness of the necessity of building new ways
of being - are critical parts of how Berger frames “struggle.” For many of the
activists profiled in The Struggle Within, dismantling power structures
goes beyond breaking laws; it’s also about acts of creation. Given the concrete
reality of what prison does - confining people within a set physical space - it’s
significant that many political prisoners’ actions, both before and after
incarceration, involve the reclamation of space. Their actions free their
physical environment from the confines of the law and its oppressive
deployment.
Berger chronicles the efforts of the Republic of New
Afrika, which, in the late ‘60s, proclaimed five southern states “the territory
of the Black Nation”; the indigenous activists who occupied Alcatraz (drawing
an analogy between reservations and “abandoned prisons”); the occupation by the
American Indian Movement of Wounded Knee, the site of the bloody 1890 massacre;
the seizure of the Statue of Liberty by Puerto Rican independence activists;
and the occupation of Columbus Park by Chicano activists, who renamed it La
Raza. The book tells of the “occupation” of prisons themselves: For example, in
the Attica rebellion, prisoners maintained control of the western New York
state prison for four days, holding negotiations with the state until the
governor sent in troops to retake the prison, leaving 43 people dead. Beyond
Attica, Black Panther chapters formed in prisons throughout the country,
enacting a type of ongoing “occupation” - using prison space to organize. The “Angola
3” - Herman Wallace, Robert Wilkerson and Albert Woodfox - for instance, formed
a chapter of the Black Panthers in Angola prison, a former Louisiana plantation
that has long been known as one of the most oppressive prisons in the country.
Revolutionary occupations of space often resulted in
incarceration - the denial of space - or, for those within prison already, even
worse space deprivation, like solitary confinement. (The Angola 3, for example,
were convicted of murder based on concocted evidence and thrown in solitary
confinement for decades; Albert Woodfox remains in confinement, despite his
conviction having been repeatedly overturned, and Wallace was released only
just before his death.) Still, those spaces’ moments of existence demonstrate
that other ways of living are possible - that through creative action, not only
our minds and our bodies but also our environments can be taken back from
dominant power structures.
In The Struggle Within’s afterword, activist,
author and filmmakerdream hampton notes, “If prisons are an ‘index of
injustice,’ as Berger says, then our resistance to them and connection to those
inside can be a measure of our movements as well.” It’s crucial, hampton says,
to build links with people behind bars, not only to make sure that their ideas
don’t die, but also to support their survival as people: “We must know
that we will catch each other when we fall or care for each other if and when
the state seeks to treat us in the same way as those who came before us.”
This brings us back to that “risky endeavor” -
defining a political prisoner - because so many people who are not allied with
specific movements are also targeted by the state for committing acts of
resistance. In fact, in the book’s introduction, Berger draws our attention to
how “political” doesn’t always mean “movement”-driven. He points to how women
of color are targeted for acts of self-defense, mentioning Marissa Alexander,
the Florida mother of three who fired a warning shot to stave off an attack by
her abusive husband and faces a possible 60 years in prison, and CeCe McDonald,
a young trans woman who was locked up for defending herself against a man who
attacked her and some friends while walking to the grocery store. “The United
States has always had more political prisoners than can be summarized in one
small book,” Berger writes.
Nevertheless, the activist portraits sketched in The
Struggle Within make allof the many varieties of repression that comprise
the criminal legal system more visible. In order to build a liberated future,
we’ve got to remember what people have been incarcerated for historically - and
why. “Social movements,” Berger writes, “cannot afford to forget.”
The Struggle Within: Prisons, Political Prisoners,
and Mass Movements in the United States is available from PM Press.
Copyright, Truthout. May not be reprinted without permission.
Maya Schenwar is Truthout’s editor-in-chief and the
author of Locked Down, Locked Out: Why Prison Doesn’t Work and How We
Can Do Better. Follow her on Twitter @mayaschenwar.
Previously, she was a senior editor and reporter at
Truthout, writing on US defense policy, the criminal justice system, campaign
politics, and immigration reform. Prior to her work at Truthout, Maya was
contributing editor at Punk Planet magazine. She has also written for the Guardian,
In These Times, Ms. Magazine, AlterNet, Z Magazine, Bitch
Magazine, Common Dreams, the New Jersey Star-Ledger and others. She also
served as a publicity coordinator for Voices for Creative Nonviolence. Maya is
on the Board of Advisors at Waging Nonviolence.
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