Still Black
Still Strong is an essential document of the Black
Panther Party written by three leading thinkers and party
activists who were jailed following the FBI’S 1969
mandate to destroy the organization “by any means
possible.”
First published in 1993, Still Black, Still Strong is
partly based upon the 1989 videotape Framing The Panthers by
producers Chris Bratton and Annie Goldson. It recounts the stories
of Dhoruba Bin Wahad, Mumia Abu-Jamal and Assata Shakur, all of
whom were arrested and jailed during the COINTELPRO probe of the
Black Panther Party.
Dhoruba Bin Wahad, who organized chapters of the Black Panther
Party in New York and along the Estern Seaboard and worked with
tenants in Harlem and on drug rehabilitation in the Bronx, was
accused of murdering two officers while still in his teens and
imprisoned for 19 years. He always maintained his innocence and
won his freedom by forcing the FBI to release thousands of classified
documents proving that he had been framed. The justice department
eventually rescinded Bin Wahad’s conviction and he was released
in 1990, seven months after the documentary premiered.
Mumia Abu-Jamal, a journalist who headed the Black Panther free
breakfast program for inner-city school children in Philadelphia,
was also accused of the murder of an officer and sent on death-row,
where he still is today.
Assata Shakur was a college educated social worker in her twenties
when she was accused of shooting a cop, then arrested and tortured
and denied medical treatment. Her interview was conducted in Cuba
where she has been exiled since her escape from a New Jersey women’s
prison in 1975.
Bin Wahad, Shakur and Abu-Jamal offer a little-known history and
an incisive analysis of the Black Panthers’ original goals,
which the U.S. Government has tried to distort and suppress. As
one confidential, 1969, memo to J. Edgar Hoover put it, “The
Negro youth and moderates must be made to understand that if they
succumb to revolutionary teaching, they will be dead revolutionaries.” |