." r 23, 1 1· Aug t 21, 1871 en h w w ted 70 from g tation. He pent th n t elev y in pri on, eight and half of them in olitary c nfin nt. In hi twenty ightb y ar, h w charged with th murder of a guard in Soled d Prison. Shortly r hi indictm nt for this murd r, thi boo of hi letters w publi bed in th United St t . (Bantam Boo ) Later, it wa al 0 publi h d in England, France, Germany, Italy d Sweden. Georg Jac on was ac­ claimed throughout the world .. as the most pow­ erful and eloqu nt Black writersince Malcolm X. H became a symbol for the struggle of all oppr ed people. The example of his extra­ ordinary courage, integrity and humanity made him a h ro to Blacks and whites ali e. On August 21, 1971, two days before the opening of hi trial, he was killed inside San Quentin Pri on. Pri on authorities tate that he was shot by a tower guard- during an escape attempt as he ran from the pri on's maximum securi ty section wi th a gun in his hand and "If I leave here alive, I'll/eave nothing behind. They'll never count me among the broken men, but 1 can't say that I'm normal either. I've been hungry too long, 1 've gotten angry too many times. I've . been '&ri 10 and in fred 00 nmny �. They've pushed m over the line from which there can be no retreat. I know uuu they will nat be satisfied until they've pushed me out of this existence' altogether. I've been the victim of so many racist attacks that I could never relax again ... l can still smile sometimes, but by the lime this thing is over I may not be a nice per­ son. And I just lit my eventy-seventh cigarette of this twenty-one hour day. I'm going to lay down for two or three hours, perhaps I'll sleep ... ra d for a tw nty foot wall. Georg's ord ter hi. broth r Jonathan' d ath . m hi own b t puaph: \.J "He wa free for a while. I guess that's more than most of u can expect. " Although in at lea tone s nse, George was al ways free. At no point did he ever accept anyone's right to imprison him. He continued to defy his jailers up to the very end with every single fibre of his being. George Jackson's letters are a galvanic out­ pouring of passion, grief, outrage, and defi­ ance. It is as if all the fierce longi ngs and suppressed rage of the e ad found complete and absolute expre sion in Jackson's 5' by 8' cell. . His letters to his mother are full of the ten­ derest concern. His letters to his father are the chronicle of a long and bitter emotional and ideological struggle between two men. They sum up the tragic gap tween the generations of Martin Luther King and the new Black militants ... " " . This shit i tarting to thicken. Six in Georgia two 10 Jackson, ha-d hats, counterdernonstratlons, much like . Germany in the thirties. That thing in Georgia and the one in Jackson were like turkey shoots. We die alto­ gether too easy. Each one of those' brothers has fathers, blood brothers, sisters, 'and mamas. But it's safe to assume that no positive response will be made, no eye- . for-eye reprisal. Something very wrong has swcp .. over us. We've grown S:1 accustomed to seeing murder done to us that no one tal.es it seriously anymore. We've crown numb, immune to the pain. Charles Evers and the �ntire world knows who killed Medgar Evers the murderer is still walking the streets. . . • ' Perhaps I houldn't even recognize people like Whit­ ney Young except as enemies, but the shit that they sling around does fall on some of us and consequently must be counterpoised. He has now gone on record as think- ing that we "should arm ourselves, but trictly for defense only." But then he goes on to contradict himself by commenting that if we used arms it would be like suicide. His words: "a beer can against a tank." Well, how docs one defend himself from an attacl er without at some point launching a counterauack=-especially when guns are the choice of weapons! . . . There is aIJ element of cowardice, great ignorance, and perhaps even treachery in blacks of his general type. And I agree with Eldridge and Malcolm, we are not protecting unity when we refrain from attacking them. Actually it's the reverse that's true. We can never have unity as long as we have these idiots among us to con­ fuse and frighten the people. It's not possible for any­ one to still think that Western mechanized warfare is absolute, not after the experiences of the third world _ since World War II. The French had tanks in Algeria, the U.S. had them in Cuba. Everything, I mean every trick and gadget in the manual of Western arms, has been thrown at the VC and they have thrown them back, twisted and ruined; and they have written books and pamphlets telling us how we could do the same. It's obvious that fighting ultimately depends upon men, not gadgets. So I must conclude that those who stand between us and the pig , who protect the marketplace, are either cowards or traitors. Probably both. . .. . One way of [ndirectly detecting the traitor is to draw him out regardi our enemies' enemies. Young and all the rest of those running dogs attack the while left. Young attacked the Chicago Seven and the other whites of the left who want to' help us destroy fascism. So did LeRoi Jones on national TV in the company of An­ thony Imperiale, a white racist KKKer, and a lot of high police officials. So what's hapening with a guy who ays he is for us but not against the government? Or one who ays he' for us and against all whites­ except the ones who may kick his ass? There i a great deal of cowardice and treachery and confusion here. The black bourgeoisie (pseudo-bourgeoisie), the right reverends, the militant opportunist , have left us in a quandary, rendered us impotent. How ridiculous we mu t seem to the rest of the black world when. we beg the government to investigate their own protective agen- From Dacttau with love George" May 21,1970 Dear Angela," I think about you all of the time. I like thinking about you, it gives me occasion for some of the first few really deeply felt ear-to-ear grins. And I've had to increase the number of my daily push-ups by half. That will make me stronger. The contact has been good for me in a hundred ways. . But then my thoughts return to your enemies. They are mine too, of course, but thinking of them as your • enemies calls up the monster in me, the dark, terrible things that I keep hidden in the pit, fanged, clawed, armored-they are more awful by far when you become involved. I've been finding and developing these things for many year 'now, As soon as you isolate, identify, and number your enemies I'll set these thing loose on them. And you won't be disappointed this time. I. promise, weet sister. This time nothing will be held back.· ... Your enemies will bl made .humbler and wiser men. " J on is a young brother and he is just a little with .. drawn, but he is intelligent and loyal. . . . He is at that dangerous age where confusion sets in and sends brothers either to the undertaker or to pri on. He is a little better off than I was and than most brother hi age. He learns fast and can distinguish the real from .the apparent, provided someone takes the time to present it. Tell the brothers never. to mention' hi green eyes and skin tone. He is very sensitive about it and he_.will either fight or withdraw. Do you under tand? You know that some of us don't bother to be righteous with each other. He has had a great deal of trouble the e last few years behind that i sue. It i n't right. He is a loyal and beau­ tiful blackinan-chi.1d. I love him. • Angel Davis I. cies. Aren't the vild hip-shooting pigs loose among us to protect the property rights of the people who formed the g�>vernmen�? I've bet" sitting in here ten years watching that kind of shit go down. It's always the same !?lack.: J sure h 't' . t ntional. y'r not with us, you understan. xpenence, trial and error would �ave changed them if they ere. Who is the black work­ ing.for, who docs he love when he screams "Honky"? He would throw us into a fight where we. would be outnumbered 1 to 14 (counting the blacks who would \fight wi��/f?r the other side �n � �ace �ar). War on the honky, It s Just another mystificatlon, If not an outright mo.ve by the fascist. I don't know, I don't pretend to claU'Voya�ce. I can't read all thoughts, and I do know some whites that I WOUldn't count as enemies but if all whites were my enemies would it make sense' for me to fight them all at the same time? The blanket indict­ !'1e�t.of the white race has done nothing but perplex us, inhibit us. The theory that all whites are the immediate �ne�y and �l �Iaeks our brothers (making them loyal) I� sill� and indicative of a lazy mind (to be generous, smce It could be a fascist plot). It doesn't explain the black pig; there were six on the Hampton-Clark kill. It doesn't explain the black paratroopers (just more pigs) who put down the .great Detroit riot, and it doesn't explain the pseudo-bourgeois who can be found almost ev�rywhere in the halls of gov.ernment working for white supremacy, fascism, and capitalism. It leaves the average brother confused. In Detroit they just didn't know what to do when they encountered the black para­ troopers. They were �. unned when tker saw those bl.ack. fools shooting at them that they probably. never wIl� listen to another black voice regardless of what it's saying. If I were at I !'2:,'., and wanted to help revolutionize the black community so that in a short a time. as pos­ �ible it w .uld b� made ready to take up the vanguard ill an all tie. tablishment war, I would st rt like this: 1 .. Lay my hand on some money any way I could. 2. Quietly, without even a hint of political flavoring, 1 would have my fronts open as many skeet, trap, rifle, and, pistol ranges as I could rent space for in and around the black community. I would 01-- crate . these places at cost and advertise. 3. Next door to these places (figura­ tive) I would quietly, without political flavoring, open schools that deal with the close- er combat arts . ostensibly as community project to keep the childre� off the streets. The real intent, of course, is. to instill the . "atta�k as defense" idea that we los� somewhere along the h.ne. 4. Apart from the two business ventures just mentioned, I. would provide. myself with printing or c pymg machines, and make the salient points of urban guerrilla warfare, antitank warfare, and revolutionary culture as easy to get, as close to hand, as a glass of water. Now that ju t-rncntioned activity would, be a ide from the hard and eriously needed revolutionary wor dis­ cussed early this morning, and the stuff you will find in the writings I mentioned in my la t letter. "One doe n't .wait f r all conditions' to be' right to start the rev lution, the force of the revolution it elf wi.ll ma the conditions right." Che said something like. this. Write me and let me have it straight. . Power to the People. . 1 love you, little sister. .. George - .