EDITORAL " • • • • • • , READERS WRITE IN THE NORTHERN districts o.fNew York. a group of politicized prisoners are beginning to frame a unique response to this plague of *ack encagement. ' , In late November 1991, some 64 Wisoners at New York's Comstock Prison put their signatures to a docu­ ment formally renouncing their citizenship in a nation bent on spit­ dng on their alleged "freedoms." the document expresses historical and contemporary beliefs that demand serverance from the land of tertured birth. : It is called the "Petition for Renunciation of U.S. Citizenship by Brothers Incarcerated in the Com­ slock Correctional Pacility... ovember, 1991: : We, the undersigned, renounce tie citizenship United States Con­ g1ess thrust upon us without our con­ �nt. : We believe the act of incorporat­ ing Africans and Indians into the U.S. framework serve to nullify the ar crimes against our ancestors. ; We believe America is an il­ legi timate country founded on genOCide, kidnapping, rape, theft, dppre ion and racism. , We believe America' ystem of tJ:onomics perpetuates oppression, pover\y nd crime. Eurocentric q.pita m cannot exist without ex­ ",oitatiqn. We 6elieve 'that this y tem of nerve. lnterated perSOM «king mor« ill/ormation may colltllCt: Joan Gibbs, Attorney Center for COIIStiJu-­ tional Rights 666 Broadway, 7th Fl. Hew York, H.Y. 10003.' VIEWS OPINIONS Bl c politici political te e nd uncrit cal b e to emersce any Democratic candidate that p­ pea "electable." 0 negotiatio , no ainln , no evera , j t pic winner nd Sign on. . In t nee of a Bl c A da and some rm commitmen by a political party or their candid to nce that agenda, t it that the Bl c politicia expect to gain by upportin candida bo are soft pedalin or igoorin Black is- uc and concerns? This kind of disorientation, d ar­ ray, dl organization and lac of leadership constitutes a very d tate of affairs in terms of the Black Agenda, the Black vote and the '92 election. A the 1992 National Black Political Agenda put it, "both partie have betrayed whenever their in­ tere t conflicted with ours (which w mo t of the time), and whenever our force ere unorganized and de­ pendent, quiescent and compliant." The cri e we face a Blac people are far to serious to blindly entrust our fate to either of the estab­ lishment parties. NO PARTY or candidate who doe not have Black people PUBUCL Y on their agenda deser­ ves the slightest comideratlon from Black people. If our �ues and con- protra�ed struggle. STANDING AT the side of Dunham's bed was her physician, Dr. Lee Blount, Jr., who has been one of the physicians that has rendered decades of ervice to the African liberation movement here and abroad. As we walked in and greeted sister Dunham, she milcd and said, "1 hope you are not coming to tell me to stop fasting!" And of course we said, "Oh, no: We are here to support' you and tell you that millions of istets and brothers throughout the nation, in Haiti and in other parts of the world are praying for you and stand behind you all. the way." Dick Gregory journeyed to East St. Louis to show upport for Dunham' fast and protest Local and federal authorities, however, did not like the fact that brother Gregory was in town and immediately urested him for "demoDitrating" at a federal building. Once Gregory w released, be w subsequently rc-arrested twice to "harass" him out of time. DUNBA ded:lCa"� tr4*101Il ft Ier. ne to urat j ee II crone on behalf of Hal tian refugees de erves the involvement of millionl. Sister Dunham is making her contrlbudoDl at great personal ut 0 tr it P Ii Uy non cus dof ln th thr r for dto . on tri 1 for di ppin o 2. million. . Court w tchers flip on th nightly n w to h r th 1 t t ut th 'Chief' rom n : th tri ith com 0 to Germany and Arizona; th nt mon y �d or ubur n di , the 1 nd tin m ting in the m 11 par n 10 ..•• Th whol nd 1 h uld not om ny urpri . H rt i th t kind of cop who mad a car er ch ing down BI c . Wh n Bl c er f w nd far b tw non th 0 troit force Hart was th re to slip into Blind Pi c in the. ft rhou� join 0 that th raids could follow. He h s don hite fol dirty or for y rs.It w s the p tt m ofb h vior th t brought . him up through th ran and put him where h is now. He wa nitch. long as h ood at eeping Blac fo'l in lin , h wa allowed to do he did. When he b cam el s to the powers that be, he w brought up hort, ubjected to scandal and pro ecution. ow, th taxp yers h ve to keep on paying. We'r paying for the whole spectacle seen on nightly new and page one. As long as our leadership is pick d for us, we '1,1 get the more of the same. It is humiliating to hear all the details , The most recent testimony r veal that Hart did not "realize" the companies set up by Deputy Chief Ken Weiner were dummy corporations, real only on paper. . Had Hart taken the time to read the names of the compam out loud, he might have had a clue. Sonigro. Say it ou�oud. It' as if Weiner was laughing all the way to th· bank WIth Hart' checks. , Nor is it surprising to read this weekend that one out of five policemen on the D troit force has been. sued in court for improper or violent behavior. These are suits, not complaints. • · Corruption at the top will breed the same all the way down the � ranks. There are good police out there, but they have a hard time staying that way. There is the corruption of drugs and all the money that flows with the drugs. It is the drug slush fund that Hart is accused of dipping into. The police department, aided by the mayor, has fought long and hard to keep its slush fund away from public scrutiny. , . . Citizens have to take control of their commumty. One way to reclaim the police department would be to have an elected police review board. The board should not be elected at-large as the city council is, but rather from and for each precinct. Civilian Review Boards should have the power to review all expenditures of money, civilian brutality complaints and recommend promotions. Right now, everyone but us control this city. Taking control of the'police who are nearest to the �'.!Y in terms 0 daily service would be a real first step. Detroit' Finest can withstand the light of continual p blic . crutiny. omanizers and hustler would have to go Somewhere else. The Black agenda, the Black vote and the '92 el ction: TBEDEMOCRATIC Party, the elltwhile "friend" of Black people held the Blac vote hostage for decad because there is the percep­ tion that the Black vote has nowhere toao· African Americans have been the most loyal and devoted constituency within the Democratic Party, hold­ ing firm to deliver elections and the attendant poils to the Democrats when others came and went at will. Indeed, it was defection of white voters froin tHe Democratic Party, enchanted by the reactionary and racist message of Ronald Reagan, which resulted in Republican control of the White House for the last decade. ' pite the fact that there are some 70 million people in the U.s. who are not registered to vote, tbe Democratic Party has embarked on a desperate course of attempting, to reclaim the so called "Reagan Democrats. " The white male voter, "Joe six­ pack," the "bubba vote," is the prize which the Democratic Party seeks to court and capture in hopes of fielding an "electable" candidate for the White House in "92. . Since the election is about power and spoils instead of principle, the issue of racism in U.S. society and the deteriorating condition of the masses of Black people can and must, be put on the back burner or bid. Therefore ilence prev The only time t t Bl people come up in the deba in the coded me ed in th competition be­ tween the Democr t and Republican for the white vote. Reagan ed th idea of the "burden of government" n the backs of the people his code word for BI clcs. George B h exploited the image of ·Willie Horton to transmit hi racial me age. Thi year both parties, responding to the succ of David Duke in at­ tracting white voters in Loui iana, have adopted "welfare reform," their new found code word for elec­ tion '92. Once again Black people are being battered as the two estab­ lishment parties fight for power and influence within a system which i woefully neglecting tl\e m ges of Black people. Who will break the silence and peak for the masses of Black people? . THE RFAL TRAGEDY is that virtually none Of the mainsteam, es­ tablished Black political leadership has tepped fO$ to boldly and un- 'f , , o DA VA TAGE POI T At the wisdom age of 82, Katherine Dunham continues to provide effective leadership and inspiration for million of persons tbroughou; the world for the cause of justice and human dignity. For more than four weeks, this strong African American woman has sacrificed and risked her own life to portest the inhuman and immoral natfilent of Hiatian refugees by the government of the United States. Katherine Dunham has refused to eat until the United States changes its current policy of "forced repatriation" of Haitian refugees from the United States back to the reprssive situation in Haiti. The bold determination of Dunham has won the prayerful admiration of millions. She has helped to keep the national and international spotlight on the plight of thousands of Hiatien regugees who are still being mistreated terribly by the Bush Administration. From her hopsital bed in St. Mary's Hospital in East St. Louis, lllinois, Dunham wrote to President Bush appealing for an end to the inhumniaty toward the Haitian refugees, she stated, "I find the most recent dccis pns regarding Haitian­ refugees shocking. Please believe. me, Mr. President, those returned will receive no welcOme. Having lived in Haiti sporadicall y for over fifty years, I find Haiti too '. I I " --_.,' , # cems are too hot for the Democratic : Party to handle, then it i imperative that we form our own Bl ck led third .. force or new political party to pe :. for the mas of Bl c people, � minoriti , omen, nd poor and � working people in this country. ; - Our challenge is not to beg the • Democrats for the Republicans to : consider the Black Agenda in '92. : Our challenge i to po e the vital ;: alternative to the establishment par- t' tl� , We must ttuggle to repl ce them. If That i precisely the mi ion of my independent pre idential crusade in : '92 - to forge a formidable mass :: ba ed, democratic, independent, � progre ive movement that can con- : test for power; the power to govern in the intere t of the vast majority of • Black people, minorities, women, � and poor and working people. � � Ron Daniels serves as President -I of the Instiua« for Community Or- · ganization and Development in Youngstown, Ohio. He may be COII- : ' tacted at (216) 746-5747. valuabble' to ignore or allow to disntegrate. " DUNHAM, WHO is a world-renowned dancer and teacher, is a living legend. It eems that Katherine Dunham is now willing to risk death in order to wake up this nation to confront the ongoing tragedy of our Haitian sisters and btothers. Will the African-American communi ty respond to the challenge of one of the "mothers of the freedom movement"? Will the millions of persons of good conscience in this nation stand up -with Dunham and others to demand justice for Haitians? We thank sister Dunham for her courage and for her sacrifice. At a time when there are many who are seeking out leadcIShip models, we thank si ter Dunham for her consistent leadership for over six decades. Dunham' life eEmplifies the be t of African tradition: persistent struggle for the freedom of all. Recently, we visited with Katherine Dunham in St. Mary's Hospital. Although she bad not eaten food for many days, her spirit strong and vibrant. In fact, e impreased with her ben of moral and soci81 responsibility well as a profound commitment to and unders tanding of African beri.tage amid t the pres ,ute of omstock brothers " . renounce citizenship � MUMIA ABU-JAMAL ' economics condemned Africans In- . ' :, According to recent U.S. govern- dians, Latinos and poor whites to �ent statistics, over 50,000 people ghetto col�nies. tre in New York prisons. Of that We believe the 13th Amendment Jstonishing number al ost SO per- never freed slaves. We were Et are African-�erlcan. And a "released" into a totally im­ er, though significant, percent- poverished condition wherein many g of roughly 30.7 percent are orourpeerswere forced to engage in fiispanics. a de�perate sub-culture in order to : This is so even though only 13'.68 survive. rcent of New York' state popula- We believe the 13th Amendment n is Black and Hispanic. is also unconstitutional as it commits prisoners to the station of a slave, by violating the premise of rehabilita­ tion and by not allowing, the notion of self-determination, We believe many major religious bodies should ask for the world's forgiveness for its crimes against' Africans, Indians (indigenous), and poor whites, and should pay indem­ nity for its part in the European slave holocaust and expansionism. We believe the names of the founding families and plantation owners should be revealed in our history books. We believe America should tell the descendants of the slave holocaust, the nations we come from, that we can ask for political asylum there or be repatriated back to those original natioDl." Signed by 64 Black Inmates of Comstock Correctional Facility, (NY State)." Denied the mo t fundamental. rights guaranteed by the Untied Nations Declaratio governing the rights of imprisoned persons, sub­ jected to dally brutality and utter humiliation, caged by a system born in racist imbalance, the Comstock Brothers' Pet,ition touch a deep Helping Haitian : The inspiration of Katherine Dunham BENJAMIN CHAVIS CIVIL RIGHTS JOURNAL risk at the age of 82. We must not let Dunham make this important challenge alone. Let us with one' united voice and joint action demand: justice for Haitian refugees. · We recommend that everyone: take the time to do the following immediatel y: 1) Telegram President Bush, calling for stronger action by the' United States to help restore the' legitimate democratically-elected: government of President' Jean-Bertrand Aristidc and to stop repatriation of Haitian refugees until ' President Aristide is restored back to : office in Haiti. 2) Contact members of the U. Congress to authorize support for Or lion of American Sta (OM) to oversee acttrid in to enaur'C the return of dcmoc Haid.