Take action by telling Secretary Wetzel that you want Russell 'Maroon' Shoatz to be immediately removed from solitary confinement!
Why Russell ‘Maroon’
Shoatz Must Be Released From Solitary Confinement
--An interview with
Theresa Shoatz and Matt Meyer
By Angola 3 News
This month, a 30-day action campaign
was launched demanding the release of Russell ‘Maroon’ Shoatz from solitary confinement,
where he has been held for over 23 consecutive years, and 28 of the last 30
years, in Pennsylvania prisons. On April 8, when the campaign began, Maroon’s legal team sent a letter to the Pennsylvania
Department of Corrections (PA DOC), demanding his release from solitary
confinement and promising litigation against the PA DOC if he is not
transferred to general population by May 8.
The action campaign describes Maroon as “a former leader of
the Black Panthers and the Black freedom movement, born in Philadelphia in 1943
and originally imprisoned in January 1972 for actions relating to his political
involvement. With an extraordinary thirty-plus years spent in solitary
confinement…Maroon’s case is one of the most shocking examples of U.S. torture
of political prisoners, and one of the most egregious examples of human rights
violations regarding prison conditions anywhere in the world. His ‘Maroon’
nickname is, in part, due to his continued resistance—which twice led him to
escape confinement; it is also based on his continued clear analysis, including
recent writings on ecology and matriarchy.”
Writing that Maroon “has not had a serious rule violation
for more than two decades,” the campaign argues that he has actually been
“targeted because of his work as an educator and because of his political
ideas; his time in solitary began just after he was elected president of an
officially-sanctioned prison-based support group. This targeting is in
violation of his basic human and constitutional rights.”
On March 28, just before the campaign was launched, Maroon
was transferred from SCI-Greene to SCI-Mahanoy
An update released by the campaign on April 15 reported that Maroon had been told by officials at SCI-Mahanoy that he had
been transferred there with intent to move him into general population. Responding
to the news, campaign co-coordinator Matt Meyer (also interviewed below) said: “We
are encouraged by the words of the officials at Mahanoy, but we cannot rest
until those words are followed by deeds: by the ultimate action which will end
the current torture of Maroon.” Bret Grote, from the Pittsburgh Human Rights
Coalition, who is himself a longtime legal and political supporter of Shoatz,
added that, “while we are pleased that some of the concerns raised by the demand
letter have been met,” including Maroon’s “access to his anti-embolism
stockings and to a typewriter, we remain concerned that the timeline for
release from solitary has been left vague.”
The April 15 update also reports that “the assistants at the
office of PA DOC Secretary John Wetzel have confirmed that the Secretary
personally ordered Maroon’s recent transfer from SCI Greene to SCI Mahanoy for
the purpose of placing him in the general prison population. In conversations
with some of the many people who have called in to the DOC central office on
the first week of the 30-day pressure campaign, DOC personnel have suggested
that Maroon supporters be patient as the process to get him into general
population work its course. But Maroon and his family have been misled in the
past about these issues.” While the campaign began by asking supporters to
contact both Secretary Wetzel and SCI Mahanoy Supt. John Kerestes, it is now
asking supporters to just focus on Secretary Wetzel, since he is the “ultimate
decision-maker.”
This month also marked the release of the new book, entitled
Maroon the Implacable: The Collected Writings of Russell Maroon Shoatz (PM
Press), co-edited by Fred Ho and Quincy Saul, with a foreword by Chuck D. The
collected essays examine a wide range of topics that are perhaps most striking
for their honest self-criticism and for his commitment to confronting male
supremacy and misogyny in all its forms. For example, in one essay entitled, “The
Question of Violence,” after Maroon criticizes “the worldwide misogynist
‘gangsta’ genre of the hip hop culture” for being “a male, macho parody of
exhibitionist violence,” Maroon writes:
“More troubling is the fact that this male exhibitionist
violence has also permeated the minds, practices, and circles of otherwise
brilliant and well-meaning revolutionary thinkers. Such theorists as the
renowned Frantz Fanon, icons like Malcolm X and Kwane Ture (formerly Stokely
Carmichael) and others have unconsciously conflated the necessary utilization
of defensive revolutionary violence, in seeking meaningful revolutionary
socioeconomic and cultural change, with what they believed was a need for males
to use ‘revolutionary violence’ to also ‘liberate their minds and spirits’
from the subservience imposed on them by the vestiges of slavery and the colonialism
/neocolonialism of their times. These individuals failed to recognize that
their ‘revolutionary’ worldview would still leave in place the entire
male-supremacist /patriarchal framework, an edifice that we can term the ‘father
of oppression.’ The destruction of this edifice will signal the true liberation they sought. Otherwise,
the ‘revolutionary violence’ they formulated must also be recognized for what
it is: exhibitionist, ego-based male violence.”
Featured below is our interview with Theresa Shoatz and Matt
Meyer. Theresa Shoatz is the daughter of Russell ‘Maroon’ Shoatz. Theresa has
worked for decades as a public advocate for her father and through the Human Rights Coalition, she fights for all prisoners
in Pennsylvania and beyond. This month, Theresa has been traveling around the
US as part of a book tour promoting Maroon
the Implacable, and this week she is in the SF Bay Area.
Matt Meyer, a native New York City-based educator, activist,
and author, is the War Resisters International Africa Support Network
Coordinator, and a United Nations/ECOSOC representative of the International
Peace Research Association. Now the co-coordinator of the Campaign to Free
Russell Maroon Shoatz, Meyer also has a long history in solidarity with the
people of Puerto Rico. In 2009, Meyer edited Let Freedom Ring: A Collection of Documents from the Movements to Free U.S. Political Prisoners (PM Press), and in 2012, co-edited another book
entitled, We Have Not Been Moved: Resisting Racism and Militarism in 21st Century America (PM Press).
Please keep an eye out for part two our report on the 30-day action
campaign, which will further examine the legality of Maroon’s placement in
solitary confinement and take a closer look at his recently published book, Maroon the Implacable. In the meantime,
you can stay updated on the campaign for his release from solitary here. Below is a video interview with Theresa Shoatz, released by Solitary Watch in 2011.
Angola 3 News: Political
prisoners are often seen as symbolic of what is wrong with the US government, but
we don’t usually hear about the actual person and how their imprisonment has
affected their families. As fellow Pennsylvania political prisoner Mumia
Abu-Jamal has commented, “I am a man, not a symbol.” To begin our interview, can
you please describe your father, Maroon, for us, so we can better understand
who he is as a person?
Theresa Shoatz: Honestly, I can only define part of the
man that Maroon is because I only know the man from which I engage with from
behind the bullet proof glass. He is the man who pleads with me to save his
life when he is not getting proper medical attention, and to fight for him when
his living conditions are unbearable and his grievances aren't addressed.
However, there's so much more to Maroon. He loves his people.
It’s what's keeps him going. His wisdom protects our family. Even while in
solitary confinement today, he is still putting others first by denying any support
for his freedom until his comrades are freed throughout the United States.
Maroon is extremely concerned with issues affecting single
mothers and their children. He is drafting ways to not only put food on the
table, but also to grow and prepare meals for the community. He's the man. Even
when he's in no position to help, he connects to the outside with his attempts
to heal the Black communities.
A3N: How old
were you when he was first forced underground?
TS: I was about nine years of age when my dad
was forced underground.
A3N: What do
you remember about Maroon from your early childhood?
TS: My sister and I lived with him until I was
five years old. I remember that back when my sister and I were only three and
four years old, there was a black board hanging in the living room. Every
morning, Daddy used that black board to teach us political education alongside
physical education classes. Man, I love and miss those classes.
Daddy was cultivating young minds. With anything he did, I
was right behind him. He was preparing us to be future leaders, but this
preparation was halted when at the age five we were separated, and I stopped
living with him.
A3N: What
has your relationship with Maroon has been like as you’ve grown older?
Ever since the age of nine, I have honored and admired my
Dad. Today, he is still my hero. Maroon is a leader, educator, and father to
many young black males behind bars. At his core, he is about peace and love for
his people.
As Maroon approaches 70 years of age, he's a grandfather of
ten. Since I can remember, he has tried to educate his biological children from
behind bars. I can remember a prison contact visit from some thirty years ago,
when I sat on my dad's lap, comparing our physical similarities, and him using
the opportunity to update me on present-day issues.
After those few years of contact visits, I grew into
womanhood and was forced to visit him from behind a thick bullet-proof glass. During
one of our visits, I pointed this out, and through the thick glass while
chained at the wrist and ankles, he said: "I had to step away from my
family to protect my family and my community. I stepped away to secure a better
future for you and the youth coming behind me. I couldn't allow you to be brutalized
like those who came before and will come after you. I stepped away from my family
for the love of my people.”
A3N: How did
that visit influence you?
TS: Wow! That was so powerful. It hit me like
a ton of bricks. Ever since that visit with Maroon, I’ve been motivated by the
love of my people to do everything in my power to help us move forward,
including my work with the Human Rights Coalition (HRC)
in Philadelphia, and the HRC FedUp! chapter in Pittsburgh, which Maroon
started from behind bars.
I am also the Director of a free after-school program for
youth with a loved one in prison. Last
year, I became a foster parent and I have since fostered eight kids in my
home, caring for two seventeen-year-old teenagers, a thirteen-year-old, a
three-month-old, a two-year-old, a six-year-old, a four-day-old, and a pregnant
teen. This is all for the love of my people.
Some think I’m crazy, but they're crazier than I am when
they pretend not to see how so many youth in our community are lost and headed
towards the prison system. If they pretend not to see what the system is doing
to our youth, shame on them. I love my people. I'm just like my daddy Maroon--it’s
in my blood.
(PHOTO: Theresa Shoatz at a protest for Mumia Abu-Jamal in Philadelphia on July 4, 2008, outside the Constitution Center, across the street from Independence Hall and the Liberty Bell.)
A3N: A key
feature of your father’s being held in solitary confinement at, until recently,
SCI Greene, a supermax prison, is to not allow contact visits with family and
friends. If Maroon is transferred to general population, he will then be able
to have contact visits once again. How long has it been since you had a contact
visit with him?
TS: It’s been almost thirty years since I've been
able to touch my father.
A3N: How has
this aspect of his imprisonment affected you personally?
TS: It is extremely painful and mentally
challenging. I am still that little girl who craves hugs, and reassurance from
her daddy.
A3N: How has
the policy of no contacted visits affected the rest of your family?
TS: The no-contact visits cause stress,
leading to emotional and physical breakdowns. The fear this creates often paralyzes family
members, and is so debilitating that it prevents some from visiting him.
A3N: What is
a no-contact visit with him like?
To reach the solitary no-contact visiting room, there’s a
tunnel spanning two city blocks, and a barbed-wired fence surrounds this
‘prison inside of a prison.’ The visiting room is cold and 99 percent of the
time there are no other family members visiting prisoners.
It is mind blowing to think of this 69-year-old man with
both ankles shackled, both wrists shackled, all attached by a chained waist belt.
This contraption forces him to walk hunched over, and appear older than his
real age.
A3N: To
underscore the importance of the new campaign to have Maroon transferred to
general population, how significant will it be, if he’s transferred, to have contact
visits with him after all these years?
TS: After so many years of no-contact visits,
I could really use some contact with my daddy. It’s well overdue. Contact
visits would be nourishing. My soul is constantly in an uproar and the pain
runs deep, yet I continue straight ahead, keeping my eye on freedom.
Outside of my daddy, there’s no man on this earth who could
turn this pain around. The remedy is an end to all control units, the present
day prison system, and freedom for Maroon and all my extended family: the
political prisoners who stood on the front lines for our freedom.
A3N: Thank
you, Theresa, for sharing such a personal story with us.
The second part of
this article now begins by interviewing longtime activist Matt Meyer. Matt, the
afterword for Maroon the Implacable that you
co-wrote with Nozizwe Madlala-Routledge asserts: “We believe that all people
who believe in peace and nonviolence must work for justice, especially in these
most grievous cases of injustice and especially at times when oppressive forces
would have us distanced from colleagues and comrades such as Maroon, who are
cast as ‘violent criminals’ unworthy of our support...Russell Maroon Shoatz
must be freed now. His release must become a priority for all human rights
activists, peace activists, pro-democracy advocates, environmentalists,
anti-imperialists, students, churchgoers, and even progressive
Parlimentarians.”
Building on the quote
above, why is it that you are going beyond the immediate call for Maroon’s
transfer to general population, and also calling for his release from prison?
Matt Meyer: For me, the position for peace activists
working in the context of restorative justice is clear: there can be no
reconciliation without release.
Nozizwe and I also say in our afterword that “we must face
the truth about the uprisings of forty years ago.” As you know, Nozizwe herself
was a chief negotiator in the process which ended legal apartheid in South
Africa, and the two of us respect the work of Archbishop Desmond Tutu, whose
commitment to truth and reconciliation has always been coupled with a
commitment to ‘heal’ by working for people’s power and the rights of the most
oppressed.
Here in the US, we must face the truth that the legacy of
the 1960s and 1970s remain an open wound so long as key leaders such as Maroon
are invisible to the majority of us, tortured in dungeons for decades upon
decades.
Even one day of the type of treatment Maroon has faced would
be wrong in any human rights framework that is not centered on simplistic
revenge, hatred, and a cycle of murder and violence. The US criminal justice
system, filled with the injustices of centuries passed--based as it is on land
theft, slavery, and greed--cannot be understood as ‘democratic’ in any sense of
that word so long as Maroon remains behind bars.
Aside from many questions which could be raised about the
political context of the initial charges and court case against him, the length
and nature of his sentence and the way it has been carried out signal grave injustices
which make a mockery of any attempt to characterize US jurisprudence as fair or
color-blind.
A3N: What is
the significance of Maroon’s identification of himself as a ‘prisoner of war’
(POW)? How is this different than simply identifying as a political prisoner?
MM: The United Nations outlines the specific
legal definition of the prisoner of war position, definitions which are
generally accepted by most participating nation-states, including the US. This
definition is rooted in history which goes back as far as 1660, when
international military protocol accepted that anyone who is held in custody by an enemy power during or immediately
after an armed conflict, whether combatant or non-combatant, should be
classified as a POW. After World War Two, with the Geneva Convention of 1949 to
which the US is a signatory, conditions were clearly outlined which require
that POWs be treated humanely.
For those who
lived through the tremendous upsurge of the Black liberation movement of the
late 1960s, the position underscores a clear analysis of the relationship
between “the Black nation” and the US empire. That relationship, simply put, is
one AT WAR. Though the battles may appear to many as covert, and the military
powers deeply imbalanced, the position of extreme conflict is nonetheless
expressed. This includes the position taken by some people of African descent
(i.e., “Black folk, New Afrikans, African-Americans, etc.) that the political
status of US citizenship was never chosen by them, but rather, was imposed.
In any case, by using
the international legal term ‘prisoner of war,’ the question of humane
treatment and appropriate jurisdiction in a case of extreme conflict must be
squarely faced.
A3N: You
edited the book Let Freedom Ring: A Collection of Documents from the Movements to Free U.S. Political Prisoners and co-edited We Have Not Been Moved: Resisting Racism and Militarism in 21st Century America. In your opinion how do popular movements resisting US military
aggression abroad relate to movements at home seeking the release of
COINTELPRO-era political prisoners & opposing the rise of the police state
and mass imprisonment since COINTELPRO’s official end in the 1970s?
MM: We must connect the dots between the
military-industrial-complex and the prison- industrial-complex. We must begin
with the fact that, on the one hand, the military has for too many become the
job of choice in an era of vast economic depression and crisis. On the other
hand, the ever-increasing rates of incarceration--where now there are more men
of African descent behind bars than there were enslaved in the years leading up
to the Civil War--suggest that cheap labor is being replaced by forced free
labor as authorized by the 13th Amendment, which abolished slavery, except for prisoners.
We must do more than understand that an empire in decline
requires ever-cheaper means of producing whatever it can still produce and an
ever-stretched military to police its dwindling holdings.
We must act, in ways faithful to the vision of Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr., who called for a “true revolution” in the American practices
of racism, militarism, and materialism. We must be moved to go beyond the false
dichotomies of race, and the false splits of tactical difference which seek to
make Martin and Malcolm into irreconcilable opposites.
We must build coalitions and united fronts against empire,
ones which understand that the many US political prisoners represent not only
acts of repression from past generations but reminders to current and future
movements that we must never stray beyond the confines of polite protest, OR
ELSE.
Freeing all US political prisoners is both a just and basic
human rights demand, but it is also a necessary step in building future
movements which can act with militancy, creativity, soul, and a free spirit
which we need to envision the ‘beloved communities’ which will build just and
peaceful tomorrows.
A3N: How
does Maroon’s case fit into this? What is the broader political significance of
Maroon’s imprisonment and his contributions to radical political movements
since?
MM: One should not be reading this interview for
the answer to that question. Maroon’s broader political significance, and his
contributions to current movements, is well revealed through a careful reading
of the essential new essay collection Maroon
the Implacable.
His writings on his own reflections on the Black Panthers,
on the nature of sexism and matriarchy, on the environment and the need for
eco-socialism, on the Occupy movement and how to build effective new movements,
go far beyond the current discourse which we find in blogs and what passes for
the left press. It is a challenging course in building for lasting social
change.
(PHOTO: Matt Meyer, LaKeisha Wolfe, Fred Ho and Theresa Shoatz at a Pittsburgh event for We Have Not Beeen Moved in February 2013)
--Angola 3 News is a project of the International Coalition to Free the
Angola 3. Our website is www.angola3news.com where we provide the latest news
about the Angola 3. We are also creating our own media projects, which
spotlight the issues central to the story of the Angola 3, like racism,
repression, prisons, human rights, solitary confinement as torture, and more.
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