07/16/2021
HAPPY BIRTHDAY ASSATA SHAKUR
On May, 2nd In 1973, Assata Shakur allegedly participated in a fire fight that led to the death of a state trooper and the wounding of another. Assata was taken in and dragged to Rikers Island where she gave birth to a child under the harsh conditions of solitary confinement. In her Autobiography, she recalls a moment where a razor blade is slipped under her prison door by an officer attempting to push the activist to su***de.
In a letter published by The Black Scholar (April 1978) Assata describes her fellow inmates:
“There are no big time gangsters here, no premeditated mass murderers, no godmothers. There are no big time dope dealers, no kidnappers, no Watergate women. There are virtually no women here charged with white collar crimes like embezzlement or fraud. Most of the women have drug related cases. Many are charged as accessories to crimes committed by men. The major crimes that women here are charged with are prostitution, pick-pocketing, shop lifting, robbery and drugs....The women see stealing or hustling as necessary for the survival of themselves or their children because jobs are scarce and welfare is impossible to live on. One thing is clear: amerikan capitalism is in no way threatened by the women in prison on Rikers Island”
In November of 1978, Assata was broken out of prison with the aid of the Black Liberation Army. After laying low in Pittsburgh for a while, she escaped to Cuba, where she was granted political Asylum.
Today, we honor Assata for her example, words, and action.