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Date: Tue, 10 Nov 1998 22:31:22 -0600 (CST)
From: rich@pencil.math.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
Organization: PACH
Subject: CAQ: Assata Shakur in Cuba. Where are US Human Rights? (3/3)
Article: 47470
To: undisclosed-recipients:;
Message-ID: <bulk.20911.19981111181642@chumbly.math.missouri.edu>
/** reg.carib: 217.0 **/
** Topic: Final Assata Shakur in Cuba. Where **
** Written 5:36 PM Oct 28, 1998 by jclancy@pop.pegasus.com.au in cdp:reg.carib **
from: jclancy@peg.apc.org
subject: Final- Assata Shakur in Cuba. Where US HUMAN RIGHTS?
Critique of Interview of Assata Shakur with NBC journalist Ralph Penza
Assata Shakur, in Covert Action Quaterly [26 October 1998
In January of 1998, during the Pope's visit to Cuba, Assata agreed
to do an interview with NBC journalist, Ralph Penza, about her letter
to the Pope, her experiences in the NewJersey court system, and her
views on the treatment of Blacks in the U.S. during the last 25 years.
The interview, as edited and broadcast, read like something out of the
Police Gazette. It catapulted Assata Shakur into the limelight once
again, prompting the NJ state Police to state openly that they are
willing to do whatever is necessary to have her brought back from
Cuba It also prompted an unprecedented intervention by Governor
Christine Todd Whitman. Assata wrote a lengthy critique of the show,
which stated, in part:
I agreed to do this interview because I saw this secret letter to
the Pope as a vicious, vulgar publicity maneuver on the part of the
New Jersey State Police, and as a cynical attempt to manipulate Pope
John Paul II. I have lived in Cuba for many years,and was completely
out of touch with the sensationalist, dishonest, nature of the
establishment media today. It is worse today than it was 30 years
ago. After years of being victimized by the "establishment" media, it
was naive of me to hope that I might finally get the opportunity to
tell "my side of the Story." Instead of an interview with me, what
took place was a "staged media event" in three parts, full of distortions,
inaccuracies, and outright lies. NBC purposely misrepresented
the facts. Not only did NBC spend thousands of dollars promoting this
exclusive interview series" on NBC, they also spent a great deal of
money advertising this "exclusive interview" on Black radio stations
and also placed notices in local newspapers... In an NBC interview,
Governor Whitman was quoted as saying that "this has nothing to do
with race, this has everything to do with crime."
Either Governor Whitman is completely unfamiliar with the facts in
my case, or her sensitivity to racism and to the plight of Black
people and other people of color in the United States is at a
sub-zero level...
The NBC story implied that Governor Christine Whitman raised the
reward for my capture based on my interview with NBC. Whitman claimed
that she was writing Janet Reno for federal assistance in my capture,
based on what she saw in the NBC interview. The fact of the matter
is that she has been campaigning since she was elected into office to
double the reward for my capture... Anybody who knows anything about
NJ politics can be certain that her motives are purely political.
She, like Senator Robert Torricelli and several other opportunistic
politicians in NJ, came to power as part-time lobbyists for the
Batista faction-soliciting votes from right-wing Cubans. They want to
use my case as a barrier to normalizing relations with Cuba, and as
a pretext for maintaining the immoral blockade against the Cuban
people.
In what can only be called deliberate deception and slander, NBC
aired a photograph of a woman with a gun in her hand implying that
the woman in the photograph was me. I was not, in fact, the woman in
the photograph... It was a vile, fraudulent attempt to make me look
guilty. NBC deliberately misrepresented the truth... Not once have
the NJ State Police, Governor Whitman, or NBC come forth and stated
that I was not the woman in the photograph, or that I had been
acquitted of that charge...
In a clear attempt to discredit me, Col. Karl Williams of the NJ
State Police was allowed to give blow-by-blow distortions of my
interview. In my interview I stated that on the night of May 2, 1973,
I was shot with my arms in the air, then shot again in the back.
Williams stated, "that is absolutely false. Our records show
that she reached in her pocketbook, pulled out a nine-millimeter
weapon and started firing." However, the claim that I reached into my
pocketbook and pulled out a gun, while inside the car, was even
contested by Trooper Harper.
Although in three official reports, and when he testified before the
grand jury, he stated that he saw me take a gun out of my pocketbook,
he finally admitted under cross-examination that he never saw me with
my hands in a pocketbook, never saw me with a weapon inside the car,
and that he did not see me shoot him.
The truth is that I was examined by three medical specialists:
(1) A neurologist who testified that I was paralyzed immediately
after being shot. (2) A surgeon who testified that "It was absolutely
anatomically necessary that both arms be in the air for Mrs. Chesimard
to receive the wounds." The same surgeon also testified that the
claim by Trooper Harper that I had been crouching in a firing
position when I was shot was "totally anatomically impossible." (3) A
pathologist who testified that "There is no conceivable way that it
[the bullet] could have traveled over to hit the clavicle if her arm
was down." He said it was impossible to have that trajectory.
The prosecutors presented no medical testimony whatsoever to refute
the above medical evidence...
In an obvious maneuver to provoke sympathy for the police, the NBC
series juxtaposed my interview with the weeping widow of Werner
Foerster. While I can sympathize with her grief, I believe that her
appearance was deliberately included to appeal to people's emotions,
to blur the facts, to make me look like a villain, and to create the
kind of lynch-mob mentality that has historically been associated
with white women portrayed as victims of Black people. In essence,
the supposed interview with me became a forum for the New State
Police, Foerster's Widow and the obviously hostile commentary of
Ralph Penza...
As I watched Governor Whitman's interview, the one thing that
struck me was her "outrage" at my joy about being a grandmother, and
my "quite nice life," as she put it, here in Cuba. While I love the
Cuban people and the solidarity they have shown me, the pain of
being torn away from everybody I love has been intense. I have never
had the opportunity to see or to hold my grandchild. If Governor
Whitman thinks that my life has been so nice,that 50 years of dealing
with racism, poverty, persecution, brutality, prison, underground,
exile, and blatant lies has been so nice, then I'd be more than happy
to let her walk in my shoes for a while so she can get a taste of how
it feels. I am a proud Black woman, and I'm not about to get on the
television and cry for Ralph Penza or any other journalist, but the
way 1 have suffered in my lifetime, and the way my people have
suffered, only God can bear witness to...
It has been a long time since I have lived inside the United States.
But during my life-time I have seen every prominent Black leader,
politician, or activist come under attack by the establishment media.
When African Americans appear on news programs, they are usually
talking about sports or entertainment, or they are in handcuffs. When
we have a protest, they ridicule it, minimize it, or cut the numbers
of the people who attended in half. The news is big business and it
is owned and operated by affluent white men. Unfortunately, they
shape the way that many people see the world, and even the way people
see themselves.
Too often Black journalists and other journalists of color mimic
their white counterparts. They often gear their reports to reflect
the foreign policies and of the domestic policies of the same people
who are oppressing their people. In the establishment media, the
bombing and murder of thousands of innocent women and children
in Libya or Iraq or Panama is seen as "patriotic," while those who
fight for freedom, no matter where they are, seen as "radicals,"
"extremists," or "terrorists."
Today Assata Skakur's voice remains fresh and strong She refuses
to be silenced even in exile. She poses even more of a threat as her
messages are read on the Internet or in magazines like Covert Action
Quarterly. Concerned about issues particularly those which affect the
youth of this country, she extols.
Like most poor and oppressed people in the United States, I do not
have a voice. Black people, poor people in the U.S. have no real
freedom of speech, no real freedom of expression, and very little
freedom of the press. The Black press and the progressive media have
historically played an essential role in the struggle for social
justice.
We need to continue and to expand that tradition. We need to create
media outlets that help to educate our people and our children, and
not annihilate their minds. I am only one woman. I own no TVstations,
or radio stations, or newspapers. But I feel that people need to be
educated as to what is going on, and to understand the connection
between the news media and the instruments of repression in America.
All I have is my voice, my spirit, and the will to tell the truth.
But I sincerely ask those of you in the Black media, those of you in
the progressive media, those of you who believe in truth and freedom,
to publish my side of the story and to let people know what is
happening.
We have no voice, so you must be the voice of the voiceless. Free all
Political Prisoners.
I send you Love and Revolutionary Greetings From Cuba, One of the
Largest, Most Resistant and Most Courageous Palenques (Maroon Camps)
That has ever existed on the Face of this Planet.
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