Mumia Abu-Jamal
Lynne Stewart, people’s lawyer, freedom fighter, presente!
by Mumia Abu-Jamal
Lynne Stewart, after 78 winters in America, has died, after battling for years against breast cancer.
But those were just some of her battles and, like most of us, she won some and lost some. But she never stopped fighting!
For decades, she and her husband, Ralph Poynter, fought for New York’s political activists and revolutionaries, like Black Panthers and Young Lords, a Puerto Rican socialist collective. But mostly, they fought for the freedom of the poor and dispossessed of New York’s Black and Brown ghettoes.
She – they – fought often and fought well in the city’s courts.
Her husband, Ralph, was a stalwart of the Black Panther Party and her most committed defender.
When Lynne was targeted by the U.S. Justice Department, and she was tried and convicted for putting out a press release for her client, the blind Egyptian sheikh, Omar Abdul Rahman, Ralph stood in the hot Washington, D.C., sun with a sign in front of the White House, demanding his wife’s release.
Her defense of her client was in the best tradition of criminal defense lawyers, and she received significant support from a broad swath of the Bar – from lawyers, yes; judges, no.
Initially sentenced to 28 months, the 2nd Circuit sent it back for resentencing – and she got 10 years! Her support only grew.
The late activist lawyer Bill Kunstler once opined that defense lawyers should be officers of their clients, instead of officers of the court.
Lynne Stewart was an officer of her clients, a People’s Lawyer, beloved and respected.
May she ever be so.
(Español) Libro “Agosto Negro”: historias de presxs políticxs del Movimiento de Liberación Negra en EU (Descarga)
En conmemoración a la tradición de Agosto Negro (Black August) que surgió en los años 70 para honrar a George Jackson y otros compañeros del movimiento revolucionario dentro de las prisiones de California, nos solidarizamos con decenas de presas y presos políticos del Movimiento de Liberación Negra encarcelados en las prisiones de Estados Unidos durante décadas.
En este libro compartimos el espíritu revolucionario de personas de enorme compromiso y valor, con impresionantes historias de lucha en sus comunidades y dentro de las prisiones. Estos hombres y mujeres se han mantenido dignos e inquebrantables ante todo tipo de trato cruel y degradante. A pesar de la guerra desatada contra ellos a través del programa COINTELPRO del FBI y los continuos esfuerzos de la policía organizada y los medios comerciales para borrarlos de la historia es posible encontrar información verídica sobre sus casos en algunos libros, documentales o sitios web, pero casi todo en inglés.










