Hundreds March Against “Legal Lynching”
Free the Jena 6!
by Li Onesto and Alice Woodward
Revolution #098, August 13, 2007
The “Jena 6” are six Black students
who face the possibility of going to prison for many, many
years because of a schoolyard fight. This story began on September
1, 2006 in the small town of Jena, Louisiana. A group of Black
students sat under a “whites-only” tree in the
schoolyard. Racist students responded immediately and the
next day nooses were hanging from the tree for all to see.
Tina Jones, the mother of Bryant Purvis who
is one of the Jena 6, told Revolution what it was like hearing
about the nooses hanging on the tree:
“I was like, what? [My son], myself
and a lot of family members were really upset about that because
to Black people that is offensive because you know over the
years Black people were hung in trees. So I mean we felt like
the white people were saying, ‘Well if you sit under
this tree, we’re going to hang you.’ That’s
how us as Black people felt, even though the white people
said it was a prank. How could it be a prank when something
like that was done to Black people over the years? And then
they walk under this tree and then you hang nooses. And you
know what that represents and that means to us -- if you go
under this [tree] we’re going to hang you. I mean there’s
no other way to look at that, and there’s nothing funny
about that.”
Soon after the nooses were hung, most of
the 93 Black students (out of a total student enrollment of
546) at Jena High School stood together under the tree, in
a courageous act of protest. After this, a school assembly
was called where a white district attorney told the Black
students to keep their mouths shut about the nooses. He told
them if he heard anything else about it, he “can
make their lives go away with the stroke of his pen.”
When racist white students jumped a Black
student, one white student got probation. But when a fight
broke out that sent a white student to the hospital for an
hour, the law came down on Mychal Bell, Robert Bailey, Theo
Shaw, Carwin Jones, Bryant Purvis, and an unnamed minor--arresting
these youth, who are now known as the Jena 6, and initially
charging them with attempted murder. (see “Free
the Jena Six! Jim Crow Injustice in Jena Louisiana,”
Revolution #96).
Mychal Bell has already been convicted of
second degree battery and conspiracy to commit second degree
battery and could be sentenced to up to 22 years in prison.
And the system is trying to make good on the threat to ruin
the lives of the other five youth who still face serious charges.
Many people still do not know about this tremendous outrage.
But a nationwide struggle to free the Jena 6 is beginning
to grow--and MUST get much bigger. The next court hearings
for Mychal Bell and the rest of the Jena Six are scheduled
to begin on September 4. Bell’s sentencing is scheduled
for September 20.
“We Want the Entire World to Hear”
On July 31, some 300 people rallied in support
of the Jena 6 at the courthouse where Mychal Bell was scheduled
to be sentenced. People came from all over the country, including
people from New Orleans fighting for justice in the wake of
Hurricane Katrina. And a massive stack of petitions, which
organizers said contained 43,000 signatures, was delivered
to the Assistant District Attorney of Jena. On August 5, Al
Sharpton spoke at a church in Jena. And while the story of
the Jena 6 has been way downplayed in the mainstream media,
these events helped get more national and international coverage.
Mychal Bell has now been sitting in jail
since December 4 and was not able to graduate. His trial was
a complete outrage, with the court-appointed lawyer not even
calling any witnesses! Now, a group of lawyers from Monroe,
Louisiana have come forward to take up Bell’s case.
Bell’s new legal team says their goal is to overturn
Bell’s conviction. Bob Noel, one of the lawyers now
on the case, said they got involved not only because Bell
came to them, but because it was the right thing to do. "The
interest of justice cried out [for us] to get involved,"
Noel said.
The weekend before the July 31 scheduled
sentencing of Mychal Bell, the “whites-only”
tree in front of the high school was cut down. NPR reported
that “Jena High School had the big shade tree in the
courtyard chopped into firewood.” But the tree disappearing
hasn’t in any way lessened people’s anger and
their determination to spread the word about this case and
build the struggle to free the Jena 6.
Talking about the significance of the July 31 rally, Caseptla
Bailey, mother of one of the defendants, Robert Bailey, Jr.,
said, "This is a beautiful thing that I’m seeing
here today— all types of browns, seeing all types of blacks,
all types of whites. We love that, people coming together."
And Khadijah Rashad, representing Lafayette’s Community
Defender television show, said, "We must remember that
the entire world is watching… When there is going to be
sentencing again, we need to flood this area with as much people
as we possibly can. We want the entire world to know”
(thetowntalk.com).
Bell’s father, Marcus Jones, agreed:
“Justice, that’s the main thing we want. He’s
still in jail, and we want justice for him and the other boys.
And now the whole world sees the wrong done to these boys.”
Bell’s mother, Melissa Bell, told The
Town Talk (a paper in Alexandria, Louisiana) that the actions
on July 31 should send a message to the community: “We
are serious, and everyone is serious about freeing these kids.”
Confronting Reality in Jena and Beyond
School starts on August 17 and the school
board is already setting a repressive tone and atmosphere.
A “Resource Officer” from the La Salle
Parish Sheriff's Department will be at Jena High School this
year.
Meanwhile, an editorial in the local Jena
Times, attacked the “outside” and “liberal”
media for supposedly distorting the situation in Jena, saying,
“The ‘racial unrest’ that has continually
been reported simply does not exist here.” (“Outside
Media has transformed Jena” 8-8-07) Things in Jena are
very polarized—right now, there are very few, if any,
white people who are even speaking out against the nooses
on the trees or the unjust way the Jena 6 are being treated--let
alone, taking a clear stand against white supremacy. And this
reactionary editorial gave voice to those backward whites
in Jena who continue to claim, “We’re good
people. This is a good town”--which really amounts
to defending the racist status quo.
In contrast to what anyone might declare
about how nice a place Jena is, we’ve heard stories
which show how the hanging of nooses on the tree at Jena High
School and the violent enforcement of white supremacy afterwards
is not an exception but is consistent with day-to-day reality
in Jena. Black people say they cannot get their hair cut at
the barber shop in Jena. Someone showed us photos of nooses
that had been put on an offshore oil rig, laying about, and
hung up in a bathroom--meant to intimidate Black workers.
One parent told us that she overheard white people talking
about how the “n*ggers“ who were relocated
to Jena from New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina “are
worse than the n*ggers here in Jena.” This is the
ugly history--and present reality--of not just Jena, Louisiana,
but the USA.
At the same the whole struggle around the
Jena 6 is shaking things up, forcing a lot of white people
to think about the reality of relations between Black and
white people in not only Jena, but this whole country. We
walked in on a discussion going on among four Jena residents
who were taking a break at the office where they work. One
Black person was openly talking about how what was happening
to the Jena 6 was outrageous—and bringing out the history
of resistance and rebellion against racism and injustice,
like the 1992 L.A. Rebellion. The white people were listening—one
somewhat reluctantly, another with some interest nodded his
head in agreement. A third said, “I don't think
Jena's racist, it's not racist is it, do you think it is?”
This shows how people fighting back and sharply polarizing
things creates the basis for a realignment in society.
The significance and stakes of this struggle
go far beyond Jena. Alan Bean, an attorney who works with
the group Friends of Justice, recently wrote: “You
probably won’t find 'white trees' and nooses in New
York and Los Angeles—that’s a Southern thing.
But you will find the same kind of racial profiling regime
that insures that young black males are disproportionately
watched, hassled and arrested by the police; and you will
discover that the over-prosecution of young black males is
just as rife in our coastal paradise as it is in our southern
purgatory. That’s what Friends of Justice calls ‘the
New Jim Crow’; and it ain’t just a Southern thing.
Jena is America.”
Spreading Resistance
People need to seriously ask: Why are the
school and local authorities, courts, and federal officials
all working together to ruin the lives of these six Black
youth? Is it because they got into a schoolyard brawl where
another kid was (not very seriously) injured? Or is it because
these youth and nearly every other Black student at the school
went and stood under the “white only” tree in
defiance of the openly racist threat of the nooses on the
tree? In the eyes of the system of white supremacy, these
students crossed the line, they “forgot their place,”
and must be punished.
Black students at Jena High have been talking
about what to do on August 17, when school begins. One idea
they have been thinking about is all wearing “Free
the Jena 6” t-shirts on that day. And as people
across the country learn about what’s happening in Jena,
many are outraged and feel compelled to act, to stand with
the Jena 6. In Cambridge, Massachusetts the City Council passed
a resolution, going “on record in support of the
young men and their families in Jena in their pursuit of justice”
and stating that “This frightening example
of racism calls to mind an earlier time in the United States
in which segregation and the ‘lynching’ of African-Americans
was common practice.” Some people in New York City
who have heard about the case have put a call out to others
to help organize support for the Jena 6. On August 14, Al
Sharpton is scheduled to return to Jena, along with Martin
Luther King Jr. III, to voice support for the Jena 6 with
a service at Antioch Baptist Church and a town hall meeting.
*****
People of conscience who know about the
case of the Jena 6 cannot stand on the sidelines, which
would amount to a form of complicity in this great injustice.
The struggle to free the Jena 6 must be
spread far and wide. And a lot more people need to learn
from the Black students at Jena High School who stood stood
beneath the “whites only” tree and
through their defiant action, said “NO MORE.”
Right away, and especially when Mychal
Bell is scheduled to be sentenced on September 20, many,
many more people should come to Jena and help build the
movement to free the Jena 6. And there should be rallies
in many other places as well. In small towns, cities and
suburbs, in colleges and high schools, people of ALL nationalities
should make it clear that we will NOT tolerate white supremacy
in any form and demand that ALL the charges be dropped on
the Jena 6.
Everyone must take a stand. Are you for
or against everything represented by those nooses hanging
on the tree?
This article is posted in English and Spanish on Revolution
Online
http://revcom.us
Write: Box 3486, Merchandise Mart, Chicago, IL 60654
Phone: 773-227-4066 Fax: 773-227-4497
|