In these days of systemic
US corporate fascism, the pathetic spinelessly opportunistic
Democrats, and spit-in-your-face
Republicans there is to be found in the persons of Lynne Stewart
and Ralph Poynter, a breath of revolutionary fresh air that has
been actively blowing inside this nation for at least four decades
now. Allow me please to share it with you, for this is as Ralph
Poynter and Lynne Stewart would say, "The tale of two stories;" their
stories.
Few have not heard of the fiery, passionate,
and yet gentle & well
reasoned legal defenses that Lynne Stewart, as a true people's
lawyer, has provided for members of the Black Panther Party,
the Black Liberation Army, the Weather Underground, the May 19th
Communist organization, American protesters at the presence in
New York of the US-backed South African apartheid government's
Rugby team, Muslims unjustly targeted by US authorities, and
certainly neither last nor least, for her enormously successful
defense of Black American Larry Davis, against the racist brutality
of the New York City police department.
Never far away was Ralph Poynter, providing
Lynne with inspiration, crucial case research, and logistical
data which insured the
best and most effective legal defense possible for those who
were being defended by Lynne. Ralph Poynter came out of a highly
politicized Black American family in Pittsburgh, PA where the
name of Paul Robeson, among others "was revered." Ralph's
father was a union organizer and worked in the steel mills. At
the tender age of five Ralph's father began taking him to union
meetings. The horrible social and economic inequities of white
racism in America were something Ralph directly learned about
while growing up at home.
But let's start somewhat from the beginning. How did a then
fairly sheltered, young twenty-two year old white American New
York City public school librarian evolve into a highly politicized,
no-nonsense, passionate people's lawyer who to this very day
incurs the ire and consternation of the US government? How did
a young Black American man from a politicized family in Pittsburgh
cross paths with this mild mannered white American public school
librarian in New York City? What really happened and how were
two revolutionaries created from such a seemingly innocuous scenario?
The year was 1963. The so-called "civil rights" movement
in America was beginning to come to fruition and the cold war
between the US and the former Soviet Union was in full force.
African liberation movements were forming and waging independence
struggles against the colonial powers on the African continent.
Malcolm X was alive and preaching in New York City and elsewhere.
John F. Kennedy was the US President and white racism was, like
today, running rampant in America.
It was against this back drop that the paths
of then school librarian Lynne Stewart and then newly appointed
school teacher
Ralph Poynter were about to cross at Harlem's all Black New York
City PS 175 [Henry Highland Garnet] elementary school. Ralph
Poynter, then a recent graduate from Duquesne University in Pittsburgh
and newly appointed school teacher at Harlem's PS 175 in New
York City, saw the deplorable physical and social conditions
under which Black students were being miseducated and setup to
fail. Thus, he began to openly raise embarrassing and important
questions addressing these issues, but to no avail. Most of the
virtually all white teaching staff were appalled at Ralph's audacity
in raising questions at teacher's meetings and his demanding
an accounting from his fellow teachers and the school administration.
Thus, Ralph was compelled to do the unthinkable: he began passing
out informational fliers and organizing in the community. There
was however, one lone white voice at PS 175 who persisted in
openly raising similar questions to the consternation of most
of her colleagues. That lone voice was the young, school librarian
Lynne Stewart. About librarian Lynne Stewart's dogged political
persistence Ralph was to comment, "Who is that white lady
in the back with her hand up?"
Ralph, who was but a few years older than
his school librarian colleague Lynne Stewart, was not new to
community organizing.
As Ralph commented re his organizing, "You never cut it
loose." Lynne was intensely observing and becoming ever
more radicalized and politicized by those events at PS 175. Ultimately
Ralph was fired from PS 175 for his efforts, but as a result
of sustained community support was rehired, notwithstanding a
brutal physical beating that was inflicted on him by New York
City police who were not surprisingly, in opposition to the Black
community's efforts to attain a decent education for its children.
Nevertheless, an important victory had been won by the Black
community at that Harlem school, and Lynne Stewart's direct,
political education and radicalization had begun in earnest.
As Lynne Stewart stated, her own "intellectual curiosity
combined with what [she saw] happen to Ralph" and the Black
community around the battles at PS 175 were to have an enormous
influence on her. As Lynne puts it, "I loved everybody who
fought back and in so doing kept their sanity." The once
fairly sheltered elementary school librarian would never be the
same again, nor would any who came in contact with her. Lynne
was now studying many works including those of John Brown, Booker
T. Washington, Mao Zedong, and WEB Du Bois.
Ralph continued his many community political activities including
personally accompanying and introducing brother Malcolm X to
residents of the East Elmhurst neighborhood in New York City,
and actively working on a host of political issues that impacted
the various Black communities throughout New York and elsewhere.
Lynne continued as a now politicized school
librarian from 1963 to 1971, but the relationship between Lynne
and Ralph, as active
cohorts, had already begun even if it was not totally consciously
known to them at the time. When Lynne left PS 175 she began politically
organizing in the Black/Puerto Rican/white neighborhoods of New
York. As Lynne and Ralph continued their political activities
ranging from union organizing, to struggling in the community
re justice issues, and demonstrating their opposition to the
Vietnam war, etc., Lynne states that "the early 1970s women's
consciousness movement" also played a key role in her development
and politics.
A primary personal mentor and political nurturer for Ralph was
the activist, organizer and esteemed elder Queen Mother Moore,
who encouraged, shocked, and politically educated him in so many
areas.
So why were these two people [Lynne Stewart and Ralph Poynter]
born as revolutionary defenders of the people? They weren't.
They developed into revolutionary defenders of the people.
Now fast forward with me, if you will, from
the 1960s through the 1990s, to February 2005. On February
10th, 2005, attorney
Lynne Portia Stewart, after having been targeted for many years
by the US Government for her vigorous defense of the rights of
Black and other people of color, found herself convicted of a
despicably and conspicuously bogus "conspiracy to aid and
abet terrorism" charge. Standing with Lynne Stewart was
her cohort of many years Ralph Poynter. Just as importantly standing
in solidarity with the former librarian were and continue to
be hundreds of thousands of freedom and justice loving people
in America and around the world.
Perhaps the most important miscalculation
made by the US Department of [In] Justice and the GW Bush regime's "White" House
in the prosecution of Lynne Stewart is the utter failure on their
part to understand that it was not Lynne's law degree which she
earned from Rutgers University that gave her credibility: it
was, is, and will continue to be--the love and deep respect of
the people--Black, Brown, Red, Yellow and White from whence her
credibility and strength is derived. No court in America can
boast such credentials. This is something that can never be taken
away from Lynne Stewart by any court or government. What motivated
and continues to motivate Lynne and Ralph is a very special kind
of "revolutionary love" for the people to which the
late Ernesto "Che" Guevara often referred. It is that
very love that today in 2007, finds Lynne and Ralph still speaking
out on behalf of the imprisoned Black Panther veterans known
as the San Francisco 8, on behalf of wrongfully imprisoned Native
activist Leonard Peltier, on behalf of Mumia Abul-Jamal, Jamil
Al-Amin [H. Rap Brown], on behalf of the US Government's victims
of hurricane Katrina, and on behalf of the down trodden everywhere
in the human family. As Lynne Stewart recently said, "Your
politics carry over in whatever you do." Her life and that
of Ralph Poynter demonstrate this.
No government or court can revoke or give
Lynne Stewart or Ralph Poynter that which they have already
repeatedly earned: the title
of being stalwart cohorts in the people's struggle. No government
or court can either give to or revoke from Lynne Stewart what
she is: The People's Lawyer. She has proven consistently that
one cannot truely represent the people without understanding
who the people really are. Or as Marvin Gaye would sing, "Ain’t
nothing like the real thing." We must keep it real by nurturing
that which is the best in all of us, remembering that as Black
Americans there are many more cohorts in the people's struggle
who may even now be being developed, honed, and coming into fruition.
BlackCommentator.com Columnist
Larry Pinkney is a veteran of the Black Panther Party, the
former Minister of Interior of the Republic of New Africa,
a former political prisoner and the only American to have
successfully self-authored his civil/political rights case
to the United Nations under the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights. Click
here to contact Mr. Pinkney. |