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Apr-21-2012 16:24TweetFollow @OregonNews Literature in a Locked Down LandDr. William T. Hathaway Salem-News.com"I've been in prison my whole life" - Mumia Abu-Jamal
(OLDENBURG, Germany) - Working class literature is alive and well and living in prison. It is "well" not in the sense of being contented and happy but rather of being vital and impassioned. And it is imprisoned not just in the sense of being locked behind bars but also of being locked into poverty. Some prisons have walls of iron and stone, others walls of economics and racism. It is their efforts to escape from this second prison that get most inmates incarcerated in the first. As Mumia Abu-Jamal said, "I've been in prison my whole life." The life-constricting pressures in both types of prisons can crush some psyches and produce diamonds of art and wisdom in others. Struggle: A Magazine of Revolutionary Proletarian Literature has been publishing the diamonds (along with some glass) since 1985. Reading it is to rediscover the power of art to give us insights and inspire us to action, an invigorating change from the vapid musings and trivial subjectivity that pass for "literary" these days. By showing us the multi-layered oppression surrounding us and the strength of the human spirit caught within that, Struggle is contributing to a culture of resistance and eventually of revolution. Doing time in Folsom StateBy Arvan Washington IIISleep slips away like tendrils of fog before a Lompoc Valley breeze, a morning sun dawns upon another moonless night. I amble aimlessly, wandering twisted corridors inside a convoluted mind seeking the solace of an earthly slumber, yet find myself lost amidst the wreckage of yesteryear: a Bermuda Triangle existence where disappearing smiles vanished without ever leaving a trace upon a heart hardened by aloneness. The passage of time mocks me as I search for my truths, though I dread their discovery. Thus, I find comfort in lies: origami constructs of paper figurines dancing in the funeral pyre like marionettes dangling from a hangman's noose. My country does to theeBy J. Glenn EvansYour children walk barefoot through raw sewage Behemoths lumber through your streets Spitting death and destruction to ancient icons Armed men burst into your homes Terrify your women and children Take a father and uncle a cousin a brother Hold them in bondage Humiliate defile torture Through your land sacred rivers flow Tigress - Euphrates birth of civilization Brown people of the desert I grieve for your suffering And for the soldiers Who just want to go home But are trapped like you In a fatal conflict not of their making I would rather walk or ride a horse Than rob you of the black sea That lies under your ancient sands This feeble pen seeks justice for what you suffer I spill only ink you spill your blood If the world be brave and not tremble At the action of this teenaged nation It would rebuke this brutal war Declare perpetrators war criminals All predatory war are criminal Against peoples of the world Like all empires of the past This one too will have its fall From Captive AudienceBy Michael MonroeI write my poems for the homeless and friendless, parched by the sun of the searing day, freezing in the chill of the callous night as the cold slices skin like razors and indifference multiplies like malignant cells. I write my poems for the working people slaving in the heat of the cavernous foundry, humping crates in eternity's shipyard, coughing in mines deep underground, farming our food and harvesting life, laying bricks at the noise-drenched construction site like Sisyphus pushing his boulder up that lonely hill in hell. I write my poems for the prisoners living out their lives in concrete closets, in rows of chicken-coop cells, dreams locked behind steel bars; they traded their lives for liquor store cash, and now they pay the price as the years blend together and disappear like dirty water down a shower drain. The March on Washington, 1963By Tim HallTwenty-four years have passed since my heart first pulsed with hope for a better world when I saw those black youth marching, arm-in-arm, their faces bold and clear in purpose, under the trees beside the pool at the Lincoln Memorial. I didn't really listen to the melodic words of Martin Luther King; they seemed to be a little rhetorical, not quite down-to-earth enough compared to the vibrant, rebelling life on the march, the young people arm-in-arm, under the trees, chanting, singing -- militant choirs, their voices welling up from the long years of black resistance and bursting forth into the air that day in a pure joy at seeing half a million faces dedicated to burying racism. I didn't listen at all to the pompous, empty oratory of Walter Reuther; inexperienced as I was, it revolted me nevertheless. I saw even then that it lacked the depth and resonance to express the lives of the oppressed and turbulent people; I didn't even much like the uniform, stale, detached slogans on the unions' perfect picket signs; I sensed in them something bureaucratic, not poetic, and I demanded poetry to express the feelings of the people. But I loved the faces of the workers, warm, resolute, lively, varied, experiences of great depth evident in the lines on their faces, in their unevenly developed muscles, and I noticed that the hundreds and hundreds of buses of workers carried the most vivid variety of people -- they, more than anyone else at the March, already trying to live out our belief in equality. I was too naive to notice a slight difference in tone in the speech of John Lewis, the young SNCC field worker from the rural South who knuckled under to the big shots and, moments before he spoke, hastily removed all militancy from his text and lost any chance of presenting a radical alternative to innocent but questioning characters like me. I was also too ignorant to question the absence of Malcolm who would have scourged the union hacks and official black "leaders" With a fiery exposure and sent an insurrectionary spirit running among the gathered masses like a flame sweeping across a spill of gasoline. There were many things I missed that day, many a lesson that went past me, but that one fragrant blossom of hope embodied in those singing, marching youth and in those hundred thousand united workers' faces changed my life for good.
Only Chiapas?By Tamar Diana Wilson(with homage to Allen Ginsberg) I have seen the best minds of five generations destroyed by poverty struggling naked moaning sobbing howling in despair fighting battles often lost infants dying before one year mothers fathers anemic shrunken crippled haggard hungering Who dragged themselves through dusty streets at dawn searched for a way to survive laborers for others who had more lands or capital sellers servants shiners of shoes bone pickers great grandfathers who rented clothes from roadside stands they hadn't even rags or cloth spare walked barefoot queued up beside construction sites mines railroad lines begged for a day's employment at any wage hawked platanos and mangoes tomatoes and onions while they did without or did with less offered woven blankets embroidered lengths of cloth supplied by middlemen work of wives and daughters straw hats and mats and cane backed chairs serapes rebozos silver rings and broaches carved statues of dogs cats burros children saints madonnas to people passing by mostly tourists from nearby far off richer lands where exploitations had occurred earlier in history but now were exported mainly not exclusively Who sowed hoed cut harvested tended sheep cattle horses goats burros on haciendas from age seven or eight beside fathers indebted by their fathers at the hacienda store cross-generational peonage sweated in the sun drenched in the rains shoeless bootless illiterate their mothers sisters daughters worked free in the big house washing ironing grinding corn cooking meals they never shared emptying slop jars and spittoons sweeping floors and fountain adorned patios amidst the bougainvillea for the privilege to remain indebted without lands of their own or any hope of any until they revolted 80 years ago Who after 16 years of civil strife after more than a million men had died after dislocations unrepaired after houses and scant possessions burned after sons murdered after brothers lost after daughters sisters mothers wives raped and disappeared some became ejidatarios others pequeno proprietarios some rural proletarians owning little more than life most flocked into state capitals in Distrito Federal U.S. border towns some to sell their labor power in fluorescing factories sweatshops talleres cantinas on construction sites and brickyards some to vend manzansas Marlboros contraband radios and relojes to neighbors better off Mickey Mouse hand puppets ceramic hamburgers slopping mayonnaise rearing stallions made of stone mixed with traditional handicrafts woven dyed embroidered carved painted to visitors from far off nearby richer lands some to cross the raya to plant and harvest crops in California Arizona Michigan Oregon Arkansas Texas or on the railroad lines across the west or in factories foundries sweatshops in Gary Chicago Los Angeles Detroit San Antonio until deported when no longer needed 60 years ago 40 years ago 20 years ago today Who then joined their urban cousins some to live on lonely brickyards no electricity no fans no refrigerators no running water no schools for their children mold bricks to build the malls houses hotels industrial complexes tourist complexes banks provide a subsidy wrung from sweat of self and family to burgeoning urban conglomerations inhabited by the dispossessed and those parasitic on them Some to invade unused lands to form squatter settlements shanty towns colonias paracaidistas colonias perdidas colonias populares to build shacks of tarpaulin scrapwood cardboard crushed aluminum cans trashed by Budweiser and Coca Cola drinkers to tap the holes against the rain Who arrived in greater numbers after the Green Revolution Rockefeller inspired chemicals fertilizers monocropping imported John Deere tractors International Harvesters the lucky buy land from the luckless those whose crops failed those with nothing left to mortgage most day laborers deprived of work on farms now mechanized no lands to sharecrop anymore machines replaced men machines displace men imported machines 50 years ago and today and more tomorrow now that Salinas has revised and mangled Article 27 for which the Zapatistas fought in 1910 Whose children labored beside them from an early age in icy mud to mold the bricks to mix the clay toenails rotted fungus growing on ever damp hands and feet as ambulant vendors selling tacos fruit vegetables serapes carved wooden statues carved stone statues white ceramic ducks quartz pipes and bookends silver earrings hot dogs as garbage pickers collecting metals cardboard bottles for recycling as itinerant construction workers washers of windshields on myriad corners singers on buses jugglers clowns ice pick swallowers shoeshine boys dotting plazas sometimes selling glue or pingas newspaper boys amidst the traffic which sometimes grinds them down anything for a spare coin beggars without eyes without legs Who malnourished never obtained full growth who poor could not pay school fees books notebooks pencils crayons though now there were schools unlike back on the ranchos at least they learned to read some of them Who built and build Acapulco Cancun Cabo San Lucas Mazatlan Puerto Vallarta Cuernavaca tourist hotels the Hyatt the Hilton the Westin the Lucerna the Continental Plaza the Fiesta Americana World Trade Centers conference halls for businessmen and academics shopping malls Plaza Mexicana Plaza del Sol Plaza Cachanilla La Zona rosa hippodromes country clubs restaurants adorned with Riviera murals and hanging plants in multi-colored ceramic pots places they cannot enter and enjoy for lack of funds lunch for one at the Rosarito Beach Hotel once a favorite haunt of Hollywood stars costs one day's minimum wage no drink included two beers at the Westin and the day's pay is gone they build them then return to their colonias perdidas their scrapwood dirt floored shacks since 40 years or more ago until today Who recycle metals cardboard newspapers collected in the local dumps to national multinational companies who gather dented cans of food thrown out from newly established supermarket chains tomatoes oranges rotten on only one side collected in the local dumps fishheads for fishhead soup thrown out by the fish shop after filleting clothing discarded by those so better off they have no one to hand the garments down to collected in the local dumps a fork spoon mattress broken chair anything of human use found in the local dumps up to now Who rise early to make tacos burritos fruitades to sell to factory laborers maquiladora workers who made it through primary school at least Who sometimes cross to U.S. cities to work in Taco Bell in Beverly Hills gardens in L.A. N.Y. Miami garment factories Milwaukee Chicago Pittsburg Detroit foundries in construction cleanup carwashes gas stations as janitors busboys waiters gardeners maids in old folks' homes in rich folks' homes in the countryside to plant cultivate weed prune harvest lettuce apples broccoli oranges peaches tomatoes grapes melons cabbage onions still Whose children will secure lots in newer squatter settlements self-build housing pay one third of infrastructural costs in installments for electricity running water sewage buy bricks from the brickmakers still living on lonely isolated unserviced brickyards their children still the family's labor force like that of the peasants from which they sprang their children their only welfare system Whose growth as those of parents grandparents is still stunted due to lack of food though not as much as previously the population is growing taller and more can read Who will couple with daughters of fathers like their own see a movie or two Predator Rocky III Robocop Superman Batman Pretty Woman Deep Throat Fantasia Total Recall dubbed in EspaƱol give them circuses if not bread and the girls tint their hair yellow to look more like some Hollywood star and spent their maquiladora savings on mini-skirts lipstick Clairol Whose parents now have second hand television sets electric lights if they have been extended to the newest squatters local politicians do that now listen to music from cassette players bought with a week's wages at the local tianguis or smuggled in when returning from California fields Wisconsin factories Arkansas show horse stables dance in someone's lot on Saturday nights to celebrate quinceaneras baptisms bodas birthdays Whose mothers gave birth without doctor's care whose wives now go to the Red Cross free clinic or to the General Hospital erected for those who have no steady formal sector job the IMSS is overflowing anyway Who will bring up children less of whom will die before the age of five Who are the only precious possession they will have of which they cannot be deprived until later Who will be unable to go to college but may complete ninth grade now it became the law in '95 at least those can afford books cuadernos uniforms shoes cuotas for new desks chairs a roof a real floor take factory jobs become cashiers nurses aides mechanics bank tellers if they study long enough paid for the week what is paid across the border for a day that's why the multinationals move there from the US from Japan from Germany Who hope their children will continue the upward movement their past four generations have described for many except those who dropped died gave up were killed in strife along the way Although now in the cities there are more gangs defending space some of the muchachos sniff glue smoke that old rancho weed gobble down acids and pills designed in laboratories on the other side take a sniff of cocaine on its way to the north international exchange that keeps those in the barrios on both sides of the border unorganized quiescent stupified jobs last a few weeks a few months some cycled out so the company need pay no benefits and the factory managers and the construction engineers and the supermarket supervisors comply And the peso has fallen just this year multinationals arrive like carpetbaggers the wage in dollars has been halved prices have doubled in the countryside the Zapatistas unite For more, scroll down their site: http://www.strugglemagazine.net/ William T. Hathaway is an adjunct professor of American studies at the University of Oldenburg in Germany. His latest book, Radical Peace: People Refusing War, presents the experiences of war resisters, deserters, and peace activists in the USA, Europe, Iraq, and Afghanistan. Chapters are posted on a page of the publisher's website at http://media.trineday.com/radicalpeace. He is also the author of Summer Snow, the story of an American warrior in Central Asia who falls in love with a Sufi Muslim and learns from her an alternative to the military mentality. Chapters are available www.peacewriter.org _________________________________
William T. Hathaway is author of the novels A World of Hurt, CD-Ring,, Summer Snow and a nonfiction book, Radical Peace: People Refusing War. He also wrote the screenplay for Socrates, an educational film starring Ed Asner that was broadcast on PBS. Hathaway began his writing career as a newspaper reporter in San Francisco, then joined the Special Forces to research a book about war. Based on his experiences on a combat team in Vietnam, A World of Hurt won a Rinehart Foundation Award for its portrayal of the psychological roots of war. After the war Hathaway became a peace activist. In his latest book, Radical Peace, he wrote, "Since then my books and articles have centered on this theme, as do many of my nonwriting activities. It's become my beat, as they say in the newspaper business." A selection of his writing is available at http://www.peacewriter.org. You can drop William an email at this address: william.hathaway@ewetel.net
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