MUMIA ABU-JAMAL is an African-American writer and journalist who has spent the last 24 years on Pennsylvania’s death row. His demand for justice and a new trial is supported by heads of state from France to South Africa, by Nobel Laureates, the European Parliament, city governments from Detroit to San Francisco to Paris, France, scholars, religious leaders, artists, scientists, the Congressional Black Caucus and other members of U.S. Congress, and by countless thousands who cherish democratic and human rights the world over.
Since the attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon on September 11, 2001, Jamal’s journalistic skills, historical analysis and eloquent pen have only confirmed his reputation as “voice of the voiceless.” With judicious historical insight and pointed probing of the issues, he continues to question and enlighten his readers through scores of columns, illuminating such issues as U.S. empire, terrorism, poverty, the U.S. support of Pakistan during the war in Afghanistan, the U.S. war and occupation of Iraq, and so much more. (See the “
Mumia Index” on this site.) His columns and essays continue to find place in scholarly books as well as in the street newspapers of the homeless.
Working people have expressed their support for Jamal through their leading regional, national and international trade union bodies. The International Longshore and Warehouse Union closed down West coast ports for the day of April 24, 1999, to support Mumia’s bid for a new trial.
Jamal’s books and over 500 published columns have been adopted as resource material for the teaching and inspiration of a growing number of students, youth, and educators who have come to see their futures as intimately tied to the outcome of this case. The 1982 trial that convicted Jamal of killing Philadelphia police officer Daniel Faulkner has been challenged by leading legal analysts and scholars, from Stuart Taylor writing in the prestigious American Lawyer magazine, to Per Walsoe of the Supreme Court of Denmark, to Amnesty International which issued a special report in February 2000, claiming that “justice would best be served by the granting of a new trial…” to Jamal.
While Jamal has worked while confined as an advocate for so many others, he has maintained his own innocence from the beginning, and does so in ever clearer and more emphatic tones to the present day. His attorneys have presented compelling evidence that key witnesses were intimidated or coerced to provide false testimony, that a purported “confession” by Mumia was likely fabricated by police, and that vital evidence pointing to his innocence was withheld from the defense. A key eyewitness has now recanted critical court testimony she gave under police intimidation and which was used against Jamal.
The confused and flagrantly-biased character of the prosecutors’ case against Mumia has only mushroomed over the years: yet another affidavit has been offered that casts doubt on the original witnesses’ claims that Mumia had confessed to the murder; another man now has even stepped forward to claim that he is the one who killed the officer Mumia was convicted of killing; and a court stenographer swears in another affidavit that she heard Mumia’s original judge, Albert Sabo, say during a court recess, “Yeah, and I’m gonna help ’em fry the nigger.” (Up to the time of his death just a few years ago, Judge Sabo maintained he had been racially unbiased throughout Mumia’s trial.)
Jamal was forced to appeal his conviction before this same judge who had sentenced him to death in 1982. Judge Sabo was notorious for presiding over capital cases resulting in 33 people being sentenced to death (all but two, people of color), more than twice the number of any sitting judge in the United States.
So confused and biased is the case against Mumia that a U.S. District Judge finally had to acknowledge just one of the problems of Mumia’s conviction, and in 1999 he thus vacated the death sentence against Mumia. The prosecution, however, with the help of police unions like the Fraternal Order of Police, are still working tirelessly and vigorously to see that he is executed. Mumia remains on death row while the prosecution appeals the suspension of a death sentence. Meanwhile, Mumia’s attorneys press on to gain an overturning of the judgment of guilt against Mumia toward the end of achieving his freedom. His life still hangs in the balance, with death just a few callous and cruel decisions away.
WE EDUCATORS ARE UNITED IN SAYING NO TO JAMAL’S EXECUTION. We invite you to study this web site, explore the case and the issues – for Mumia’s sake and that of so many others on U.S. death row.
■ Jamal has long been a POLITICAL TARGET as a prominent journalist critic of police brutality and racism in Philadelphia since the days of Mayor Frank Rizzo.
■ Jamal is made more vulnerable by sweeping JUDGMENTS AGAINST DISSENTERS as “terrorists,” and he has become less protected today, as many progressive activists in post-9/11 USA turn more of their attention and energy toward the war in Iraq, tensions in the Middle East and general surveillance issues in the U.S.
■ Jamal’s life is increasingly put at risk because even in post-9/11 USA he remains a vigorous critic of POLICE REPRESSION AND LAW ENFORCEMENT USE OF EXCESSIVE FORCE. Whether writing about the outrage of torture at the Guantánamo Base detention center, or in the jails and lockups of Brooklyn, New York, and Austin, Texas, Mumia’s as “voice for the voiceless” puts him at ever greater risk.
■ Jamal has challenged the present political priorities of SPENDING MORE FOR WAR AND PRISONS THAN FOR EDUCATION. The youth who increasingly rally to Mumia’s cause in the name of justice and fair play know that we build jailhouse cell blocks more rapidly than schoolhouse classrooms.
AS EDUCATORS, IN PENNSYLVANIA, ACROSS THE UNITED STATES AND THE WORLD, WE STRONGLY OPPOSE THE EXECUTION OF MUMIA ABU-JAMAL. While there are those who believe Mumia is innocent and should be FREED NOW, and others who have no opinion about his innocence, we are all united in viewing Mumia’s 1982 trial as a travesty of justice, and affirm that he MUST have a NEW TRIAL!
Last Update: Jun 15, 2009
Our Goal
The purpose of EMAJ (“Educators for Mumia Abu-Jamal) is to mobilize educators in the broad public movement seeking freedom and justice for Mumia, doing all we can as teachers (1) to educate about Mumia’s case, (2) to stop all plans to execute Mumia, and (3) to overturn Mumia’s conviction, whether this comes about through an executive order or judicial mandate for his immediate release, through an evidentiary hearing, or through a new trial.
EMAJ begins with the simple fact that Mumia is a person, with family and friends, a human being now suffering grievous injustice.The specifics of his particular case have called forward our advocacy on his behalf, just as many other citizens have fought for the release of over 119 other individuals who, just since 1973, have been released from death row after having been wrongfully convicted and condemned. Mumia’s personal struggle for his own life as a human being, and for his right to have all evidence on his behalf considered, is enough to warrant our efforts on his behalf.
EMAJ’s special interest in Mumia Abu-Jamal also arises from the fact that his personal struggle, even before his 1982 condemnation to death row, has been a struggle for and with whole peoples: his own African-American community in the USA, but ultimately the multitude of those who are voiceless, confined in many different ways by structures of oppression and exclusion. Consequently, the scores of columns and the several books he has penned relate citizen struggles in criminal justice systems to racism, to U.S. nationalism, to economic injustice, to corporate exploitation of working women and men – in U.S. and global settings.
EMAJ’s special task, then, is in continuity with an educational aim of Abu-Jamal’s own work, i.e. to educate about the connections between the failure of prisons and criminal justice systems in the U.S., on the one hand, and the life of agony and repression suffered by so many throughout the nation and world, on the other. Mumia has always immersed himself in this broad and diverse global struggle; never posing as “poster boy” or individual hero figure for any one issue, be it abolishing the death penalty, reforming prisons, or for any other one selected issue or limited group of issues. What shapes the unique vocation of EMAJ is the need to reflect on the connections between Mumia’s personal struggle and the larger set of struggles that concern a whole nation, and a global humanity.
This is why each month, the EMAJ website will feature on its home page not just the image of Mumia Abu-Jamal, but also other “Images of Incarceration” in its photo inset box. Through art or photography, these images of incarceration will be evocative of the breadth of our struggles with unjust confinement in its myriad forms, one version of which has been borne so egregiously by Mumia in an imprisonment that now has lasted for nearly a quarter of a century. These are the connections and the images upon which EMAJ seeks to reflect for informed action.