OCT-NOV 97 - HOME

The Meaning of Attica 25 Years Later
BY SUNDIATA ACOLI
Twenty-five years ago, Sept, 14, 1971, the bloodiest prison rebellion in
U.S. history took place. Four days earlier, prisoners had taken over Attica
and demanded more humane treat-ment and better prison conditions. Now, realizing
that an assault to retake was imminent, the prisoners marched their 9 guard-hostages
to the top of the prison walls and held a knife to each guard's throat.
Sharpshooters zeroed their rifles' scopes between each prisoner's eyes,
and opened fire.
Forty people, 31 prisoners and 9 guards, died during the retaking of Attica.
Forty-three died in total. Immediately after the assault, State officials
flooded the media with lurid accounts of prisoners cold-bloodedly slitting
guards' throats in the midst of the sharp­p;shooter's barrage.
It was all a "Big Lie." About a week later the coroner announced
that all guards and prisoners killed during the retaking of the prison had
been killed by state troopers' bullets. A 10th guard died probably at the
hands of other prisoners.
The Attica rebellion occurred during the era of the nationwide prison reform
movement. It was part of the cost that prisoners, their families and supporters,
paid to roll back the inhumane prison policies that had stood for centuries.
Prison struggles during that period, led mainly by politically conscious
prisoners, gained the rudimentary privileges of contact visits, adequate
law libraries, the right to a disciplinary hearing before punishment; college
courses; Black, Hispanic and Native American Studies; religions and cultural
programs with participation by outside community representatives; more humane
treatment; and numerous other privileges that are taken for granted today.
Now, many of these same privileges are being taken away. Prisoners everywhere
are being harshly repressed. Control units and control complexes abound,
mass arrest, mass imprisonment, building more and harsher prisons, the death
penalty, more police, more guards, and the "lock 'em up and throw away
the key" mentality, is the order of the day. Prison guards' unions
have grown as powerful as the policemen's PBA in bankrolling law-and-order
politicians to pass more repressive crime legislation. Nothing is too cruel
to be done to prisoners today, particularly since most prisoners are Black,
Brown, or other people of color.
The "Big Lie" reigns supreme. Nobody wants to hear about Reagan's
use of the CIA to flood the ghettoes, barrios, and reservations, with cocaine
to create the "crack"/crime epidemic in the first place-in order
to fund the Contra War. Nor does anyone want to hear about Clinton's passage
of NAFTA and other corporate legislative schemes that send U.S. jobs overseas
to be done at cheap wages, creating massive underemployment here. And definitely
no one wants to hear of the current rush by transnational corporations to
make even bigger profits by opening factories in U.S. prisons to replace
overseas labor.
Prison slave labor is even cheaper than overseas workers, plus there's no
overseas shipping costs, no health insurance, unemployment or retirement
costs, and most of all, prisoners can't strike. Everyone is profiting off
the law-and-order "Big Lie" that scapegoats prisoners and people
of color. Everyone, that is, except the underemployed U.S. worker who must
now work two jobs to make ends meet and is expected to cheer because the
stock market goes through the roof, as the transnational corporations laugh
all the way to the bank.
If Attica represents a high point of the unity and consciousness of the
prison struggle movement, then today represents a low point in prison conditions,
consciousness, solidarity, and struggle. The real lesson of Attica is that
it serves as a beacon to remind us of where we were, and how we got there.
Today's prisons are filled with mostly younger, less politically aware,
but rebellious prisoners who were swept up during the Big Lie "War
on Drugs." Actually it was, and is, a war on people of color. We changed
the prisons before and we can again, even further this time. To do so it's
necessary to politically educate and activate a whole new generation of
prisoners, and community and legal supporters. Building a National Prison
Organization (NPO) is as good a place to start as any.
-Sundiata Acoli (Squire) #39794-066 Box 3000 USP Allenwood White Deer, Pa.
17887

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