Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Organizing for Freedom
Congressman Conyers brings attention to Angola State Prison, Louisiana's last slave plantation
At the heart of Louisiana's prison system sits the Louisiana State Prison at Angola, a former slave plantation where little has changed in the last several-hundred years. Angola has been made notorious from books and films such as Dead Man Walking and The Farm: Life at Angola, as well as its legendary bi-annual prison rodeo and The Angolite, a prisoner-written magazine published within its walls. Visitors are often overwhelmed by its size -- 18,000 acres that include a golf course (for use by prison staff and some guests), a radio station, and a massive farming operation that ranges from staples like soybeans and wheat to traditional Southern plantation crops like cotton.
Recent congressional attention has again brought Angola into the media limelight. The focus this time is on the prison's practice of keeping some inmates in solitary confinement for decades, especially two of Angola's most well-known residents -- Herman Wallace and Albert Woodfox. Woodfox and Wallace are the remaining members of the Angola Three, political activists widely seen as having been interned in solitary confinement as punishment for their political activism.
Modern Plantation
Norris Henderson, co-director of Safe Streets/Strong Communities, a grassroots criminal justice organization in New Orleans, spent twenty years at Angola -- a relatively short time in a prison where 85 percent of its 5,100 prisoners are expected to die behind its walls. "Six hundred folks been there over 25 years," he explains. "Lots of these guys been there over 35 years. Think about that: a population that's been there since the 1970s. Once you're in this place, it's almost like you ain't going nowhere, that barring some miracle, you're going to die there."
Prisoners at Angola still do the same work that enslaved Africans did there when it was a slave plantation. "Angola is a plantation," Henderson explains. "Eighteen-thousand acres of choice farmland. Even to this day, you could have machinery that can do all that work, but you still have prisoners doing it instead." Not only do prisoners at Angola toil at the same work as enslaved Africans hundreds of years ago, but many of the white guards come from families that have lived on the grounds since the plantation days.
Nathaniel Anderson, a current inmate at Angola who has served nearly thirty years of a lifetime sentence, agrees. "People on the outside should know that Angola is still a plantation with every type and kind of slave conceivable," he says.
Prison Organizing
In 1971, the Black Panther Party was seen as a threat to this country's power structure -- not only in the inner cities, but even in the prisons. At Orleans Parish Prison, the New Orleans city jail, the entire jail population refused to cooperate for one day in solidarity with New Orleans Panthers who were on trial. "I was in the jail at the time of their trial," Henderson tells me. "The power that came from those guys in the jail, the camaraderie...Word went out through the jail, because no one thought the Panthers were going to get a fair trial. We decided to do something. We said, 'The least we can do is to say the day they are going to court, no one is going to court.'"
The action was successful, and inspired prisoners to do more. "People saw what happened and said, 'We shut down the whole system that day,'" he remembers. "That taught the guys that if we stick together we can accomplish a whole lot of things."
Herman Wallace and Albert Woodfox were members of the Black Panther Party, and as prison activists, they were seen as threats to the established order of the prison. From their first day, they were organizing among the other prisoners, conducting political education, and mobilizing for civil disobedience to improve conditions.
Robert King Wilkerson, like many inmates, joined the Black Panther Party while already imprisoned at Orleans Parish Prison. He was transferred to Angola, and immediately placed in solitary confinement (known at Angola as Closed Cell Restriction or CCR) -- confined alone in his cell with no human contact for 23 hours a day. He later found out he had been transferred to solitary because he was accused of an attack he could not have committed -- it had happened at Angola before he had been moved there.
In March of 1972, not long after they began organizing for reform from within Angola, Wallace and Woodfox were accused of killing a correctional officer. They were then moved to solitary, where they remained for nearly 36 years, until March of this year, when they were moved out four days after a congressional delegation arranged a visit to the prison. Legal experts have said this is the longest time anyone in the US has spent in solitary. Amnesty International recently said that "the prisoners' prolonged isolation breached international treaties which the US has ratified, including the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Convention against Torture."
Wilkerson, Wallace, and Woodfox became known internationally as the Angola Three -- Black Panthers held in solitary confinement because of their political activism. Wilkerson remained in solitary for nearly 29 years, until he was exonerated and released from prison in 2001. Since his release, Wilkerson has been a tireless advocate for his friends still incarcerated. "I'm free of Angola," he often says, "but Angola will never be free of me."
This history of struggle and resistance brings a special urgency to the case of the Angola Three. Kgalema Motlante, a leader of the African National Congress, said in 2003 that the case of the Angola Three "has the potential of laying bare, exposing the shortcomings, in the entire US system."
Purchasing Testimony
Wallace and Woodfox have the facts on their side. Bloody fingerprints at the scene of the crime do not match their prints. Witnesses against them have recanted, while witnesses with nothing to gain have testified that they were nowhere near the crime. There is evidence of prosecutorial misconduct, such as purchasing inmate testimony and not disclosing it to the defense. Even the widow of the slain guard has spoken out on their behalf. Most recently, their case has received attention from John Conyers, head of the House Judiciary Committee, and Cedric Richmond, chair of the Louisiana House Judiciary Committee, who has scheduled hearings on the issue to begin this month.
But this is more than the story of innocent men railroaded by a system. The story of the Panthers at Angola is both inspiring and shocking. It is a struggle for justice while in the hardest of situations.
"They swam against the current in Blood Alley," says Nathaniel Anderson, a current inmate at Angola who has been inspired by Wallace and Woodfox's legacy. "For men to actually have the audacity to organize for the protection of young brothers who were being victimized ruthlessly was an extreme act of rebellion."
Like many prisoners during that time, Norris Henderson was introduced to organizing by Black Panthers in prison, and later became a leader of prison activism during his time at Angola. The efforts of Wilkerson, Woodfox, Wallace, and other Panthers in prison were vital to bringing improvements in conditions, stopping sexual assault, and building alliances among different groups of prisoners. "They were part of the Panther Movement," Henderson tells me. "This was at the height of the Black power movement, we were understanding that we all got each other. In the night-time there would be open talk, guys in the jail talking, giving history lessons, discussing why we find ourselves in the situation we find ourselves. They started educating folks around how we could treat each other. The Nation of Islam was growing in the prison at the same time. You had these different folk bringing knowledge. You had folks who were hustlers that then were listening and learning. Everybody was coming into consciousness."
Insatiable Machine
The US has the largest incarcerated population in the world twenty-five percent of the world's prisoners are here. If Louisiana, which has the largest percentage imprisoned of any US state, were a country, it would have by far the world's largest percentage of its population locked up, at well over one out of every 100 people. Nationwide, more than seven million people are in US jails, on probation, or on parole, and African Americans are incarcerated at nearly ten times the rate of whites. Our criminal justice system has become an insatiable machine -- even when crime rates go down, the prison population keeps rising.
The efforts of the Angola Three and other politically conscious prisoners represented a fundamental challenge to this system. The organizing of Wallace, Woodfox, and Wilkerson, though cut short by their move to solitary, had an effect that continues to this day.
Prison activism, and outside support for activists behind bars, can be tremendously powerful, says Henderson. "In the early 1970s people started realizing we're all in this situation together. First, at Angola, we pushed for a reform to get a law library. That was one of the first conditions to change. Then, we got the library; guys became aware of what their rights were. We started to push to improve the quality of food, and to get better medical care. Once they started pushing the envelope, a whole bunch of things started to change. Angola was real violent then, you had inmate violence and rape. The people running the prison system benefit from people being ignorant. But we educated ourselves. Eventually, you had guys in prison proposing legislation."
This was a time of reforms and grassroots struggles happening in prisons across the US. Uprisings such as the famous Attica Rebellion were resulting in real change. Today, many of the gains from those victories have been overturned, and prisoners have even less recourse to change than ever before. "Another major difference," Henderson explains, is that "you had federal oversight over the prisons at that time, someone you could complain to, and say my rights are being violated. Today, we've lost that right."
Working for criminal justice is work that benefits us all, says Henderson. "Most folks in prison are going to come out of prison," he states. "We should invest in the quality of that person. We should start investing in the redemption of people."
After decades of efforts by their lawyers and by activists, Wallace and Woodfox have been released from solitary, but the struggle continues. Wallace and Woodfox remain behind bars, punished for standing up against a system that has grown even larger and more deadly. And the abuse does not end there. "There are hundreds more guys who have been in [solitary] a long time too," Henderson adds. "This is like the first step in a thousand-mile journey."
Jordan Flaherty is an editor of Left Turn Magazine (www.leftturn.org), and a journalist based in New Orleans. Most recently, his writing can be seen in the anthology Red State Rebels, released this month by AK Press. He can be reached at neworleans@leftturn.org.
A version of this article is featured in the Summer 2008 issue of Left Turn Magazine, and this week's issue of New York's Indypendent (www.indypendent.org).



13 Comments so far
Show AllOK..Now, bring attention to impeachment. Here's a chance to vote for impeachment on the MSM
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/10562904/
Impeachment articles....Thank you Mr. Kucinich!
http://chun.afterdowningstreet.org/amomentoftruth.pdf
Sounds like a Soviet Gulag, only warmer. Nice to live in America, ain't it?
Veteran '66-68
Angola: Louisiana's Auschwitz.
Does anyone wonder why people coming out of prison just cause more crime? It is because of the inhuman treatment at the hands of the system, supported by the "free" citizen.
There are two main ways to reduce the prison population. The first is to work on actually rehabilitating as many as possible so they can be released with lower incidence of recidivism. The second is to get rid of as many as possible of those who cannot be salvaged.
If you watch the MSNBC documentary series, Lockup, you will see several life inmates admitting to stabbing and otherwise cutting up and murdering their cellmates because they don't like living with other inmates. They should have been shot dead rather than receiving another hundred years on their already 200-year sentences. You will also see prison gang leaders making the rehab of other inmates impossible through intimidation. Likewise the remedy. Shot dead when in the act of brutalizing.
Can't do that? Can't find a way to mandate any civility in prison that makes rehab possible? Then expect to have larger and larger prisons AND more criminals coming out of them who are meaner and worse than when they were first put in.
This article would have us believe the main prison problem is the state abusing inmates. Nonsense. The main prison problem is the state allowing inmates to abuse each other.
I read the comments of people like Daniel David, whose opinion is directly above mine, and I see how widespread the ignorance actually is. I would lay odds that Mr. David does not interact with prisoners, but bases his views on a combination of his assumptions and what he hears on the corporate press. The problem with his argument is only secondarily that it ignores the fact that the system dehumanizes inmates and often drives them to violence. Worse, his argument buttresses the second of the same two arguments the Nazis made. First, lock 'em up. Second, kill 'em.
Were Mr. David to spend a mere 30 days inside the system as an inmate, I suppose he would experience a great epiphany, borne through his own first-hand suffering. But it is his inability and unwillingness to empathize with the oppression of others, primarily men of color, that render his perspective and that of similar American viewpoints fodder for the juggernaut of the post-modern prison-industrial complex.
key89,
You didn't mention YOUR unique prison experience or mention YOUR qualifications to slam my opinion. You likewise did not address at all the main issue with prison, which is inmates brutalizing and controlling each other to the point of making rehabilitation impossible. You just use a bunch of big words to justify warehousing millions forever and molly-coddling the very "prison-industrial complex" that you pretend to criticize.
The "empathy" I have and you don't is to recommend actually releasing as many as possible and permanently preventing the remainder of hard-core predator animals from preying on all the others. What EXACTLY did you propose? (Nothing, you cowardly blowhard.)
Prisons is america are disgusting. The notion that violent criminals should be able to rape and steal from less violent inmates is absurd and completely contradicts the entire point of prison in the first place.
Daniel David, something tells me that you have never set foot in a prison or even on prison grounds, and you don't know anyone who has ever been locked up or worked in a prison. Why do I think that ? Because you have the classic outsider mentality, all inmates are sh*t and deserve to be tortured or killed.
Just remember, some of those inmates are innocent.
Of the remainder, most will get out of prison sooner or later, and you're going to have to deal with them. Think about what will, in the end, make all of our lives easier. Don't get caught up in the stereotypical thinking that inmates can't turn into productive law abiding citizens. I know they can, I've witnessed it firsthand.
atheist,
Though you imagine I have no connection to prisons, you're quite wrong about that. Further, you didn't actually read either of my posts. If you had, you would notice that I am arguing exactly the same point you are. Treat prisoners humanely and get as many as possible OUT sooner, rather than later, and preferably somewhat rehabilitated. The key to doing that is to protect the less violent and more thoughtful of them from some others who will kill you, cut you or rape you in a New York minute, if allowed, just because you "disrespected" them or their gangs. This REQUIRES actually getting totally rid of some, based on their inside behaviors.
Unlike you and key89, Ariel Sharon, above, actually "gets it" as to what our main prison problem amounts to.
In connection with Mr. Daniel David's challenge to my experience and credentials, I am a social worker employed at a local county jail, and I have a Masters Degree in Social Work. However, I do not believe that one needs this level of education or experience to hold an opinion. If this were the case, I'm certain Mr. Daniel's opinion would be disqualified.
May I suggest that when we disagree, that we avoid the name-calling that so many with opinions just like Mr. Daniel have a tendency to hurl.
Have a nice day!
You working at the jail has hardend your heart. What happend to compasion, justice and love cant get that from any type of school. We all have done good and bad things in our life.