Socialist Action /April 1999

Youth in Action
'Mumia's Life is in Our Hands'
Paul McKim, a high school student in San Francisco and
a member of Youth for Socialist Action, spoke at a high school workshop
at the Match 6 conference for Mumia Abu-Jamal in Berkeley, Calif.
Portions of his remarks follow:
I am going to talk about the state of Mumia's case right now and what
it is going to take to free him.
Last October, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court unanimously rejected Mumia's
appeal for a new trial. This decision was not because there was a lack of
evidence on behalf of Mumia. On the contrary, they had plenty of evidence
that Mumia was innocent. They rejected Mumia's appeal because of what Mumia
represents.
There is a war going on between oppressed people and oppressors. Prisons
are being built at the same time as our schools are falling apart. Police
brutality is on the rise. Our generation is the first generation in history
to have our standards of living decline from that of our parents.
Mumia is like a soldier on the side of social justice and equality for
all people. That is why the reactionary forces of racism and exploitation
are determined to take Mumia's life.
There is more evidence being uncovered every day that Mumia is not guilty
of the crime for which he sits on death row. But we can't count on the courts
to give him justice because they want him dead for what he represents.
Mumia's life is in our hands. Mumia says that. His attorneys say that.
So the question is-what do we have to do to win Mumia's freedom?
We can't free Mumia by waiting for the courts or expecting liberal politicians
to come to our rescue. The only way to free Mumia is by mass action. By
mobilizing hundreds of thousands of people in the streets to demand that
Mumia receive a new trial where his innocence can be proven....
Every gain and right that people have won has come from mass struggle.
Women's right to vote, for example. Or social security.
Let's take the civil rights movement. Even though we still live in a
very racist society, and in some areas it's maybe even worse today than
it used to be, there were considerable gains made by the civil rights movement.
This is because it was a mass movement that organized great numbers of Black
people.
The Montgomery bus boycott was not just about Rosa Parks. It involved
the whole Black community to organize their own means of transportation
for a really long period of time. You had marches through Selma, Alabama.
There were marches going on in the North as well.
You had the March On Washington. Even the campaign to register Black
voters was done in a mass way. That is why the civil rights movement made
the gains that it did.
It was the same thing with the movement against the war in Vietnam. When
the anti-war movement started it was very small. But the organizers had
it in their minds to reach the American people and mobilize them against
the war.
Because they took that approach, it became a huge movement with demonstrations
of hundreds of thousands of people. At one point, on April 24, 1971, there
were close to a million in New York and half a million in San Francisco
marching at the same time! Campuses were shut down and huge marches were
bringing whole cities to a halt.
This is the reason why our government pulled its troops out of Vietnam.
They saw the power of the people in the streets and they were forced to
end the war.
I also want to mention one other case that parallels Mumia's case in
some respects. This is the case of the Scottsboro Brothers.
In 1931, which was the time of Jim Crow segregation and racist lynchings,
nine African American men were arrested for riding the train. This was during
the Depression and a lot of people illegally traveled on trains in order
to look for work.
Two white women were also found on the train. In order to escape their
own charges, the white women claimed that they had been raped by the Black
men. This charge was often used against Black men in order to incite racist
lynchings.
An all-white jury sentenced eight of the African American men to die
and the other one to a life sentence because he was very young. Eventually,
the convictions of these men were overturned and they were set free and
escaped execution.
The reason that they were set free was because a mass movement arose
that mobilized large numbers of people in their defense. Mass demonstrations
were held all over the country and tens of thousands of people went into
action.
This is the exact strategy that must be adopted in Mumia's case. It is
only through this kind of action, where people join together and realize
their power, that we will be able to free Mumia.
The key is to make the price of Mumia's death one which the rulers of
America decide they don't want to pay. That is, we must make sure that so
many people will be outraged by Mumia's execution, and so many people will
be disillusioned with our system by Mumia's execution, that the rulers decide
that they don't want to kill him.
If you think about it, a majority of the American people probably believe
that people should receive fair trials. So the potential exists for organizing
the same kind of mass movement for Mumia.
That is what April 24 is all about. Every one from the West Coast will
come to San Francisco, and the East Coast will demonstrate in Philadelphia.
We want to get as many people as possible into the streets to demand a new
trial for Mumia.
As young people, we need to be in the forefront of this struggle. We
should have students from every high school marching on April 24, representing
their school. If we did that, they couldn't kill Mumia. That is the power
that we have.
I want to read a short quote by Mumia right now, "A Call To Action":
The choice, as every choice, is yours:
To fight for freedom or be fettered,
To struggle for liberty or be satisfied with slavery,
To side with life or death
That is the choice that young people need to make.
YSA ON THE NET!
Youth for Socialist Action is now on-line! you can view the YSA website
at http://www.geocities.com
/capitolhill/lobby/2684/
Check out out links, our recommended readings, and our suggestions for
how you can get involved in the fight for socialism!
Socialist Action /April 1999 |