THE HANDSTAND |
LATE AUTUMN2008
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40ft mosaic for incarcerated Black Panthers.
by carrie reichardt ( info [at] freezulu.co.uk
)
Monday Aug 25th, 2008 9:48 AM
A spectacular mosaic has been
unveiled on the outside wall of a house in the west
London suburb of Chiswick to raise awareness of African-American
men confined in the notorious Angola prison, Louisiana.
The artwork, which took four months to create by a
dedicated group of activist artists, decorates The
Treatment Rooms, home of street artist Carrie Richards,
aka The Baroness, and her partner Mr. Spunky.
The mosaic depicts the so-called Angola 3 Herman
Wallace, Albert Woodfox and Robert King men
wrongfully convicted of murder at Angola prison in the
1970s and who subsequently spent decades in solitary
confinement. Though Woodfoxs conviction has been
overturned, and Wallaces recommended for such, both
men remain behind bars.
The extensive work is also dedicated to Kenny
Zulu Whitmore, who has similarly spent 33
years in solitary confinement at Angola, where the
majority of inmates are black and will die inside its
walls.
Zulu is a true warrior, Panther, a servant of the
people. Like Herman, and I he has fought a good battle,
for so long, unrecognized, unsupported! This must stop,
just as all of the many freedom fighters, fight everyday,
just to breathe, without any support, this must stop now!!!
So many political prisoners, prisoners of war, and
prisoners of conscious, have sacrificed their lives, and
freedoms, because they believed in the people but somehow,
the people have stopped believing in them!
Albert Woodfox
July 9th 2008
The only freed member of the Angola 3,
Robert King released in 2001 after his murder
conviction was overturned attended the unveiling
on June 21. One of the purposes of his stay in London was
to launch the Free Zulu campaign. He spoke to a crowd of
150 artists and activists from the UK, Europe and North
America who have rallied around the causes of the Angola
3 and Zulu.
Robert King spoke to Zulu after the unveiling and Zulu
said he now had hope in his heart. He has since seen
pictures of the unveiling and is overjoyed by the support
reaching him from the UK.
Zulu is at a critical point in his legal case, but is
currently without a lawyer. Those wanting to reach out to
help him can go to his new website for information and
you could always simply write to him and show the world
you know he is there;
Kenny Zulu Whitmore
86468 CCR, Upper C#11
LA State Prison
Angola
LA 70712
USA
http://www.freezulu.co.uk
http://www.angola3london.org
http://www.thetreatmentrooms.org
http://www.freezulu.co.uk
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