Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Release the Angola 3 Now!!



I will be in class today. I will be talking about religion as a social institution and the sociology of gender. I will be holding office hours and speaking with students on the campus about their grades or their extra credit or their problems. But my heart will be in Baton Rouge, standing on the State House steps with the other Angola 3 campaign supporters, with representatives of Amnesty International, the Congressional Black Caucus, the National Action Network, and others, to present a petition with tens of thousands of names from all over the world calling for the immediate release of Albert Woodfox and Herman Wallace, the remaining members of the Angola 3 still incarcerated after forty years in solitary confinement.

Forty years. Forty years. Forty years. My heart cries. Because ten days ago, I stood in the visiting room, hugging Albert's neck and leaving him behind...again. Because solitary confinement is torture (see the film above). And because the administration at my place of employment demands that my presence in the classroom take precedence over my taking a stand personally on the State House steps today.

We are kept in position by our slavery to wages, but my soul will stand tall beside Albert's and Herman's on the State House steps this afternoon. If you look very hard at the faces in the crowd, you will see us there. As we always and forever will be wherever truth speaks to power.

3 comments:

changeseeker said...

At 10:31 last night, an anonymous individual posted a comment about this post. Unfortunately, it was addressed to my name instead of to my internet identity. I am not faulting the person, who probably knows who I am and didn't realize that I don't use my "real" name here. So I deleted the comment. However, I have saved the comment so that I can copy it without my name included to a separate blog post in response within the next couple of days.

Cheap Flights to Luanda said...

Who would venture upon the journey of life, if compelled to begin it at the end? It is good to have an end to journey towards; but it is the journey that matters in the end.

changeseeker said...

Ah, yes. I'm going to add this to the quotes I put on my office wall. Thank you.