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Abu-Jamal Mumia - We Want Freedom

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Abu-Jamal Mumia We Want Freedom

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Cover Praise for We Want Freedom praise for We Want Freedom Choice - photo 1
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Praise for We Want Freedom praise for We Want Freedom Choice Magazine - photo 2
Praise for We Want Freedom

praise for We Want Freedom

Choice Magazine Outstanding Academic Title

Mumia Abu-Jamal has forged from the furnace of death row a moving, incisive and thorough history of the Black Panther Party. This book is required reading for any who would seek to understand race, revolution, and repression in the United States.[G]iven the resurgence of overt and covert government suppression of dissent, true accounts of the popular struggles of the late 60s and early 70s are needed now more than ever. Abu-Jamal carefully imparts the history as passionate participant, skilled journalist, and critical historian.

Amy Goodman, journalist, Democracy Now!

An important and timely read, now as much as ever. In this new edition of We Want Freedom , Mumia provides with clarity and force the historical context for the Black Lives Matter movementanchoring Black struggle in a long history of militant self-defense. This book is both a guide and a light: full of hope, lessons, challenges, and profound insight into our collective struggle for freedom. I encourage all organizers, new and seasoned, to read and discuss with your people.

Page May, cofounder of Assatas Daughters

Mumia is a soldier in the war for the soul of America. He is fighting the good fight with the same weapons his ancestors fought with: words. He sings with his words; he sings with his heart; he sings with the truth. Mumia is a free man, no matter what his address because he is a man who knows who he is: a child of challenging God.

Nikki Giovanni, Poet

Mumia Abu-Jamal speaks in a voice as timeless as the resistance to oppression he personifies. His words, his mindindeed, his life itselfstand as inspirations to all of us who yearn for liberation, exemplifying the continuities of struggle joining one generation to the next in our common effort to attain the dignity of human freedom. This book is as necessary as it is unavoidable. It simply must be read by everyone endowed with the least twinge of social conscience.

Ward Churchill, author of Agents of Repression: The FBIs Secret Wars Against the Black Panther Party and the American Indian Movement

Writing eloquently from his prison cell, Mumia Abu-Jamal gives us a fascinating and unusual history of the Black Panther Party. His chapters A Womans Party and COINTELPRO would be enough to make this book an invaluable addition to anyones reading list.

Howard Zinn, author of A Peoples History of the United States

This book amazed and delighted me. Im still not sure how Mumia has managedfrom a maximum-security prison cellto encompass in one book the broad scope of US history, a global perspective, and many intimate, first-hand accounts of life, love, and politics in the Black Panther Party. Mumia tells this story with such energy and passion that reading it, I felt Id returned to the storefronts and battlefronts of the 60s and 70s. This is the Black Panther Partyand the social movements to which it was connectedin its historical context, its hopes and triumphs, as well as its tragedies and limitations. It is a story fundamental to understanding the US of the 20 th and 21 st centuries, and I am eternally grateful to Mumia Abu-Jamal for having written it.

Laura Whitehorn, former political prisoner

The republication of Mumia Abu Jamals We Want Freedom has come right on time. Mumias wonderful book is not only about the Black Panther Party and his experiences within it, but it is an urgent exposition of the long history of the Black Radical Tradition. Rich in historical detail and still attuned to ongoing contemporary discussions concerning Black liberation, We Want Freedom provides a new generation of activists, radicals, and revolutionaries with the politics and clarity necessary to sustain todays movement. Mumias critical voice, experience, and analysis in We Want Freedom written originally from death rowembody the courage and commitment necessary for any social movement to succeed.

Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, author of From #BlackLivesMatter to Black Liberation

Weaving his experiences in the Black Panther Party into the tapestry of Africans history in America, Mumia Abu-Jamals book is essential reading for all of us involved in the struggle for freedom.

George Katsiaficas, editor of Liberation, Imagination, and the Black Panther Party

Written from prison, this well-researched history of the Black Panther Party begins with a timely insight: the Black radical tradition matters if we are to win Black freedom. Originally published in 2004, this is Mumias greatest gift to todays young activists who are reigniting the demand for Black freedom. One of its most incisive chapters, on the women of the Party, argues compellingly that they were its life-blood. Mumias close examination of COINTELPROs destructive strategies in the Party offers perspective on the policies of incarceration and police militarization that came later: the deployment of violent repression against Black radicals in the Sixties emboldened state violence and broadened it to the Black community. In this beautifully written political memoir, Mumia conveys the power that is unleashed when young Black people in the US are mobilized with a mission and grounded in a revolutionary political platform.

Johanna Fernndez, Department of History, Baruch College, editor of Writing on the Wall and author of the forthcoming When the World Was Their Stage: A History of the Young Lords Party, 19681974

We Want Freedom is a welcome addition to the Oakland centered accounts of the Black Panther Party. Mumia Abu-Jamal provides a provocative and insightful narrative of local Panther activism in Philadelphia. He presents a superb and thoughtful critique of a myriad of organizational dynamics, including tensions between local Party affiliates and national headquarters, gender relations, and intrafactional conflict within the BPP. Mumias We Want Freedom enriches our understanding and appreciation of the Black Panther Party. His work will undoubtedly inspire his former Party comrades to document their experience of local Panther activism in the various communities across the United States.

Charles E. Jones, chair of the Department of African American Studies, Georgia State University and editor of The Black Panther Party Reconsidered .

[ We Want Freedom ] will have an important place in the literature of the Black Panther Party. Abu-Jamal has written a book which amplifies the voices and experiences of rank-and-file members and attempts to ground their stories in a local context. In the final analysis, We Want Freedom forces scholars to reframe their assumptions about the Panthers internal political culture, bottom-up realities, gender politics, and organizational history.

Robyn C. Spencer, author of The Revolution Has Come: Black Power, Gender, and the Black Panther Party in Oakland

Mumias keen analysis of the Panthers provides readers with a unique understanding of an organization J. Edgar Hoover deemed the greatest threat to the internal security in the country. Rewarding too is his fresh assessment of the role of women in the Party, which thoughtfully draws on the work of the late Safiya Bukhari.

Herb Boyd, author of Brotherman and Black Panthers for Beginners

We Want Freedom demonstrates once again Mumia Abu Jamals leadership and commitment to activism and social change. Abu Jamals accounts of the strengths and triumphs of the Black Panther Party give readers hope. However, for those who view the governments repression of the Black Panther Party as unique, the book also gives an opportunity to see what the USA PATRIOT Act portends for social justice activists of today.

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