11 juni: Internationale dag van solidariteit met Marius Mason en alle andere lang vastzittende anarchistische gevangen

Oproep voor een internationale dag van solidariteit op 11 juni voor alle lang vastzittende anarchistische gevangen

Tegen nog een jaar met meer staatsinvloeden, tegen nog meer belemmering van (bewegings)vrijheid, onder het excuus van meer ‘veiligheid’, tegen nog meer geweld tegen onze kameraden in gevangenissen, doen we een oproep voor een jaarlijkse dag van solidariteit op 11 juni 2021: Dag van internationale solidariteit met Marius Mason en alle andere lang vastzittende anarchisten. Al 17 jaar lang is 11 Juni een gelegenheid om te feesten, verdriet te hebben en een tegengeluid te laten horen. Een moment om een adempauze te nemen, om te herinneren wie we verloren zijn, en te denken aan hen die op dit moment gevangen worden gehouden. Om onszelf te blijven herinneren waarom we anarchist zijn. Via brieven, demonstraties, crowdfunding en andere solidariteitsacties blijven we aan de mensen denken die jaren van hun leven verliezen voor de veroordeling dat zij de staat iets verschrikkelijks vinden. Deze gevangenen betaalde een hoge prijs voor die gedachten en dat dragen we verder uit.

 

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June 11, 2021 statement from Thomas Meyer-Falk

A Call from the Dark Dungeons – 2021

Millions of people are in the prisons and dungeons of the world’s rulers. Countless people are on death row, others are there for days, weeks or months, and still others have been there for decades. Only a few weeks ago, it was announced in Germany that Hans-Georg would be released in 2021. It was January 20, 1962, when the Berlin prison gates closed behind Hans-Georg – he has been in custody since that day. He had shot two people after a robbery.

Long-term incarceration is in some ways similar to the death penalty; only, perfidiously, with the death penalty the state is more honest, openly wanting to kill the delinquent. With decades of imprisonment, death is also the often realistic prospect of escaping the walls, but on the way there, body and soul wither away.

In Europe, in addition to life imprisonment, there is also the instrument of preventive detention. According to the official interpretation, people are no longer behind prison walls as a punishment, but purely as a preventive measure to prevent possible acts in the future. This is based on forecasts that are not much better and more reliable than the weather forecast for the next month.

Even if the material conditions of imprisonment may often ensure physical survival in these Western European dungeons, it is mentally grueling. Those who have contact with the outside world can compensate a little, but others lose their minds over the long periods of incarceration. Running into the concrete walls, hurting themselves – hurting others. They swallow the products of the pharmaceutical industry, generously distributed by the prison doctors, or supply themselves with drugs on the black market. Of course, this is not a peculiarity of long-term prisoners, but applies to short-term prisoners as well.

Long-term prisons are among the darkest, most sinister places in society. There, the alleged evil is supposed to be banished, imprisoned, eradicated, but one look at any daily newspaper, any TV programme is enough: the evil has not disappeared, it has not been banished. The idea that locking up hundreds of thousands of people for decades would improve the world one iota is an illusion. Perhaps one that societies and their rulers need, already as a threatening backdrop for coming uprisings: “Look here – we will throw you into the darkest holes and there you will vegetate until the natural end of your lives!”

This makes June 11 all the more important. The day gives individuals a face, a name, it brings people into the public eye. It gives strength. It sends a signal of courage and determination. The day proves that there are people who care about the fate of those who have been locked up for a long time and who want to fight for change.

Together with those who are behind bars!

Side by side: For a society without prison! Freedom! Now!

Thomas Meyer-Falk
z.Zt. Justizvollzugsanstalt (SV),
Hermann-Herder-Str. 8
79104 Freiburg
Germany

https://freedomforthomas.wordpress.com
http://www.freedom-for-thomas.de

Thomas is an anarchist who is in prison since 1996 and was sentenced for a bank robbery by means of which it was planned to organize money for political projects. For his rebellious behaviour in prison he got 2 more sentences. In 2013 his official prison time was over but was kept in Sicherungsverwahrung (a form of “security detention” in Germany for convicts who have served full terms, but are still considered to be a risk to “public safety” and therefore detained past the end of their sentence) and still is. Now in 2021 he is in prison for 25 long years already and there is no way to tell when and if he ever comes out of prison, but he hopes to be released by 2023.

He writes a lot of statements to different topics from prison and is always happy to receive letters.

 


ALEMANIA: COMUNICADO DE THOMAS MEYER-FALK POR EL 11 DE JUNIO DE 2021

Millones de personas están en las cárceles y mazmorras de los gobernantes del mundo. Un sinnúmero de personas están en el corredor de la muerte, otras están allí durante días, semanas o meses, y otras han estado allí durante décadas. Hace sólo unas semanas se anunció en Alemania que Hans-Georg sería liberado en 2021. Fue el 20 de enero de 1962 cuando las puertas de la prisión de Berlín se cerraron tras Hans-Georg, que ha estado detenido desde ese día. Había disparado a dos personas tras un robo.

El encarcelamiento de larga condena es, en cierto modo, similar a la pena de muerte; sólo que, pérfidamente, con la pena de muerte el Estado es más honesto y quiere matar abiertamente al delincuente. Con décadas de encarcelamiento, la muerte es también la perspectiva a menudo realista de escapar de los muros, pero en el camino, el cuerpo y el alma se marchitan.

En Europa, además de la cadena perpetua, existe el instrumento de la prisión preventiva. Según la interpretación oficial, las personas ya no están entre los muros de la cárcel como castigo, sino como mera medida preventiva para evitar posibles actos en el futuro. Esto se basa en previsiones que no son mucho mejores y más fiables que la previsión del tiempo para el próximo mes.

Aunque las condiciones materiales del encarcelamiento pueden garantizar a menudo la supervivencia física en estas mazmorras de Europa Occidental, es mentalmente agotador. Los que tienen contacto con el mundo exterior pueden compensarlo un poco, pero otros pierden la cabeza durante los largos periodos de encarcelamiento. Se estrellan contra los muros de hormigón, se hacen daño a sí mismos y a los demás. Se tragan los productos de la industria farmacéutica, distribuidos generosamente por los médicos de la prisión, o se abastecen de drogas en el mercado negro. Por supuesto, esto no es una peculiaridad de los presos de larga condena, sino que se aplica también a los de corta duración.

Las prisiones de larga condena son uno de los lugares más oscuros y siniestros de la sociedad. Allí se supone que se destierra, se encarcela, se erradica el supuesto mal, pero basta con echar un vistazo a cualquier diario, a cualquier programa de televisión: el mal no ha desaparecido, no ha sido desterrado. La idea de que encerrar a cientos de miles de personas durante décadas mejoraría el mundo un ápice es una ilusión. Tal vez una que las sociedades y sus gobernantes necesitan, ya como telón de fondo amenazante para los próximos levantamientos: «Miren, los vamos a meter en los agujeros más oscuros y allí vegetaran hasta el final natural de sus vidas».

Esto hace que el 11 de junio sea aún más importante. El día da a loxs individuxs un rostro, un nombre, hace que la gente salga a la luz pública. Da fuerza. Envía una señal de coraje y determinación. El día demuestra que hay personas que se preocupan por el destino de lxs que llevan mucho tiempo encerradxs y que quieren luchar por el cambio.

¡Junto a lxs que están entre rejas!

Codo con codo: ¡Por una sociedad sin cárceles! ¡Libertad! ¡Ya!

Thomas Meyer-Falk
z.Zt. Justizvollzugsanstalt (SV),
Hermann-Herder-Str. 8
79104 Freiburg
Alemania.

https://freedomforthomas.wordpress.com
http://www.freedom-for-thomas.de

Thomas es un anarquista que está en la cárcel desde 1996 y fue condenado por el robo de un banco mediante el cual se planeaba organizar dinero para proyectos políticos. Por su comportamiento rebelde en la cárcel recibió dos condenas más. En 2013 terminó su tiempo oficial en prisión, pero se le mantuvo en Sicherungsverwahrung (una forma de «detención de seguridad» en Alemania para lxs convictxs que han cumplido la totalidad de sus condenas, pero que todavía se consideran un riesgo para la «seguridad pública» y, por lo tanto, están detenidos más allá del final de su condena) y todavía lo está. Ahora, en 2021, lleva ya 25 largos años en la cárcel y no hay forma de saber cuándo y si saldrá de ella, pero espera ser liberado en 2023.

Escribe muchas declaraciones sobre diferentes temas desde la cárcel y siempre se alegra de recibir cartas.

FUENTE: JUNE 11
TRADUCCIÓN: ANARQUÍA


[Statement zum 11.Juni] Thomas Meyer-Falk: Ein Ruf aus den dunklen Kerkern- 2021

From ABC Wein

quelle: per Brief erhalten, englische Übersetzung weiter unten

Ein Statement von Thomas zum 11. Juni, internationaler Tag der Solidarität mit Marius Mason & anarchistischen Langzeitgefangenen

Millionen Menschen sitzen in den Knästen und Verliesen der Machthaber*innen dieser Erde. Unzählige sitzen in den Todestrakten, andere sitzen für Tage, Wochen oder Monaten ein, und wieder andere seit Jahrzehnten. Erst von ein paar Wochen wurde in Deutschland vermeldet, dass Hans-Georg noch 2021 freikommen soll. Es ist der 20. Januar 1962, als sich hinter Hans-Georg die Berliner Gefängnistore schlossen- seit diesem Tag sitzt er in Haft. Er hatte nach einem Überfall zwei Menschen erschossen.

Langzeitinhaftierung ähnelt auf gewisse Weise der Todesstrafe; nur ist, auf perfide Art, bei der Todesstrafe der Staat ehrlicher, er will die Deliquent*innen ganz offen umbringen. Bei der jahrzehntelangen Inhaftierung ist auch der Tod die oftmals realistische Aussicht den Mauern zu entfliehen, aber auf dem Weg bis dorthin verkümmern Leib und Seele.

 

In Europa gibt es neben der lebenslangen Freiheitsstrafe auch das Instrument der Sicherungsverwahrung, der Preventive Dentention. Dort sitzen die Menschen dann nach offizieller Lesart nicht mehr zur Strafe hinter Gefängnismauern, sondern rein präventiv, um eventuell in der Zukunft mögliche Taten zu verhindern. Dabei gestützt auf Vorhersagen die nicht viel besser sind und zuverlässiger sind, als die Wetterprognosen für den nächsten Monat.

Auch wenn die materiellen Haftbedinungen das physische Überleben oftmals sichern mögen in diesen westeuropäischen Kerkern, seelisch ist es zermürbend. Jene die über Kontakte zur Außenwelt verfügen können dies dadurch ein wenig auffangen, aber andere verlieren über die lange Zeit des Wegsperrens geradezu ihren Verstand. Rennen gegen die Betonwände, verletzen sich selbst- verletzen andere. Schlucken die Produkte der Pharmaindustrie, von den Knastärzt*innen großzügig verteilt, oder versorgen sich auf dem Schwarzmarkt mit Drogen. Das ist freilich keine Besonderheit der Langzeitgefangenen, sondern gilt für die Kurzzeitgefangenen ebenso.

Langzeitknäste sind mit die dunkelsten, finstersten Orte der Gesellschaften. Dort soll das angeblich Böse gebannt, eingekerkert, ausgemerzt werden, dabei reicht ein Blick in eine beliebige Tageszeitung, in ein beliebiges TV-Programm: das Böse ist nicht verschwunden, es ist nicht gebannt. Die Vorstellung durch das Wegsperren von hunderttausenden Menschen über Jahrzehnte würde diese Welt nur einen Jota besser ist eine Illusion. Vielleicht eine die die Gesellschaften und deren Machthaber*innen benötigen, schon als Drohkullisse für kommende Aufstände: „Seht her- wir werden Euch in die dunkelsten Löcher werfen und dort werdet ihr bis zu Eurem natürlichen Lebensende dahinvegetieren!“.

Umso wichtiger ist der 11. Juni. Der Tag gibt Einzelnen ein Gesicht, einen Namen, er holt Menschen an das Licht der Öffentlichkeit. Er spendet Kraft. Er sendet ein Zeichen von Mut und von Entschlossenheit. Der Tag beweist: es gibt Menschen, welchen das Los derer, die seit langem weggesperrt sind, nicht egal ist, die für eine Veränderung kämpfen wollen.
Zusammen mit jenen die hinter Gittern sitzen!

Seit‘ an Seit‘: Für eine Gesellschaft ohne Kerker! Freiheit! Jetzt!

Thomas Meyer-Falk, z.Zt. Justizvollzugsanstalt (SV),
Hermann-Herder-Str. 8, 79104 Freiburg
https://freedomforthomas.wordpress.com
http://www.freedom-for-thomas.de

11 juin 2021 : Journée internationale de solidarité avec Marius Mason et tou.te.s les prisonni.èr.es anarchistes de longues peines

Ci-dessous, nous publions la traduction en français d’un appel publié initialement sur june11.noblogs.org.


Contre une nouvelle année d’ingérence de l’État dans nos vies, contre la restriction de la libre circulation sous les auspices de la « sécurité », contre la brutalisation continue de nos ami.e.s en prison, nous appelons à un renouvellement de la solidarité le 11 juin 2021 : Journée internationale de solidarité avec Marius Mason et tou.te.s les prisonnièr.e.s anarchistes de longues peines. Depuis 17 ans, le 11 juin est une occasion de célébration, de deuil et de révolte. C’est un moment pour respirer, pour se souvenir de celleux qui sont tombées et de celleux qui sont en cage, pour nous rappeler pourquoi nous restons attaché.e.s à la Belle Idée de l’anarchisme. Par nos lettres, nos manifestations, nos collectes de fonds et nos attaques solidaires, nous gardons le phare allumé pour celleux qui ont donné des années de leur vie par conviction que l’État est une horreur contre laquelle nous devons parier nos vies.

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11. Juni: Internationaler Tag der Solidarität mit Marius Mason & allen anarchistischen Langzeitgefangenen

Gegen ein weiteres Jahr staatlicher Übergriffe, gegen die Einschränkung der Bewegungsfreiheit unter dem Deckmantel der „Sicherheit“, gegen die andauernde brutale Behandlung unserer Freund*innen im Gefängnis, rufen wir zu einer Bekräftigung der Solidarität am 11. Juni 2021 auf: Internationaler Tag der Solidarität mit Marius Mason & allen anarchistischen Langzeitgefangenen. Seit 17 Jahren ist der 11. Juni ein Anlass zum Feiern, zum Trauern und zur Revolte. Es war ein Moment zum Durchatmen, zum Gedenken an die Gefallenen und die in den Käfigen, um uns daran zu erinnern, warum wir der schönen Idee des Anarchismus verbunden bleiben. Durch unsere Briefe, Demonstrationen, Spendensammlungen und solidarischen Angriffe halten wir das Leuchtfeuer für diejenigen am Brennen, die Jahre ihres Lebens für ihre Überzeugung gegeben haben, dass der Staat ein Grauen ist, gegen das wir unser Leben einsetzen müssen.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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11 DE JUNIO – 2021 SOLIDARIDAD CON LXS PRESXS ANARQUISTAS DE LARGA CONDENA

Contra otro año de abusos del Estado, contra las restricciones de la libertad de movimiento bajo los argumentos de la «seguridad», contra la continua brutalidad de nuestrxs compañerxs en prisión, llamamos a renovar la solidaridad el 11 de junio de 2021: Día Internacional de Solidaridad con Marius Mason y todxs lxs presxs anarquistas de larga duración. Durante 17 años, el 11 de junio ha sido una ocasión para celebrar, llorar y rebelarse. Ha sido un momento para respirar, para recordar a lxs caídxs y a lxs que están en las jaulas, para recordarnos por qué seguimos comprometidxs con la Bella Idea del anarquismo. A través de nuestras cartas, manifestaciones, recaudación de fondos y ataques solidarios mantenemos la llama para aquellxs que han dado años de su vida por su convicción de que el Estado es un horror contra el que debemos apostar nuestras vidas.

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June 11, 2021

2021 Callout [En Español]

2021 Callout [Deutsch]

2021 Callout [Finnish]

2021 Callout [Français]

2021 Callout [Nederlands]

[PDF for printing] [PDF for reading]

Against another year of state encroachment, against the restriction of free movement under the auspices of “safety,” against the continued brutalization of our friends in prison, we call for a renewal of solidarity on June 11, 2021: International Day of Solidarity with Marius Mason & All Long-Term Anarchist Prisoners. For 17 years, June 11th has been an occasion for celebration, mourning, and revolt. It has been a moment to breathe, to remember those fallen and those in cages, to remind ourselves of why we remain committed to the Beautiful Idea of anarchism. Through our letters, demonstrations, fundraising, and solidarity attacks we keep the beacon lit for those who have given years of their lives for their conviction that the State is a horror against which we must wager our lives.

MEMORY REMAINS A WEAPON

June 11th is, in the words of Christos Tsakalos, a day against oblivion. The architects of prison society would have prison function as a memory hole, casting our dear rebels into the void and producing in free souls a stifling amnesia. They want us to forget those who took action against the state and economy and those who continue their rebellion behind bars. Our work of solidarity with imprisoned anarchists is a hammer blow against forgetting: against the prison walls and the narcotizing technological society that shatters all meaning.

As such, we remember not only our friends behind bars, but those who have died. Marilù Maschietto in Italy. Former political prisoner Alexei “Socrates” Sutuga in Russia. Robert D’Attilio, who kept alive the memory of Sacco & Vanzetti. Doris Ensinger, whose decades of activity as a subversive, organizer, and author stretches from the student revolt of the ’60s to the present. Tireless anarchist abolitionist Karen Smith. Lucio Urtubia, whose life of expropriation in service of struggle remains an inspiration.

Finally: Stuart Christie. Stuart’s life and example cast a massive shadow in our efforts. From his time as a young prisoner in Franco’s Spain and his reanimation of the Anarchist Black Cross in the 1970s, to his persecution in the Angry Brigade trials and work in archiving anarchist history through Cienfuegos Press and Christie Books, Stuart’s tireless work will not be forgotten. He and all of our fallen companions, whether we knew them personally or not, are alive in spirit in our work this year.

TO COMBAT THE PRESENT ORDER

Prison administrations around the world have responded to the COVID-19 pandemic by implementing lockdowns and banning in-person visits, building upon prior movement to replace face-to-face visits with video chat. Physical mail is also threatened, with the United States federal prison system initiating a program to scan letters and make them only accessible on expensive tablets provided by a contracted company, Smart Communications. This allows for easier surveillance and is lucrative for Smart Communications, who can charge exorbitant rates for access to its services. It’s likely that this trend will continue in prisons around the world. With the pandemic as an alibi, prison administrations and profiteering companies have accelerated the abolition of direct human connection and the shifting of prisoners’ lives into the techno-sphere. Anarchist prisoners have been on the forefront of opposition to this regime of control, with anarchist prisoner Mónica Caballero going on hunger strike in 2020 to demand restoration of in-person visits.

REBELLION & REACTION

A year after George Floyd was murdered, our context is still strongly infused by the surge of protests, riots, and organizing that followed. In addition to the new energy, friendships, and practices that came out of the uprising, the repression that followed will affect us and our struggles for years to come. Over 13,000 arrests were made, with at least a few hundred state-level felony cases and over 325 federal cases. An unknown number have already taken pleas or are still incarcerated pretrial. Those arrested include all kinds of people: some young, some old; some long-term activists, some newly radicalized; some very connected to movements or struggles, and some very isolated. Existing bail funds and jail support projects have greatly expanded their reach, and many new ones have popped up all over the country. And some have already begun to contract, due to activity in the streets slowing down and from over-work in unsustainable models. These are part of the same continuum of anti-repression as supporting our long-term prisoners.

Some uprising defendants will most likely end up serving long prison sentences. While both immediate jail support and long-term prisoner support continue, we are now in a collective transition period between the two. Bail/jail support, court support, and prisoner support must all be done in a way that makes us stronger instead of draining us. Some connections have already begun to be made between movement prisoners and the uprising in the streets. Jeremy Hammond and friends recorded a video of a small protest and message of solidarity from Grady County Jail. Former black liberation political prisoner Dhoruba Bin-Wahad spoke about a BLM that means Black Liberation Movement and the importance of political education. This year, we seek to deepen the connection between different aspects of anti-repression, to bring the names and the wisdom of our long-term prisoners into current struggles – whether that’s in the streets against the police, in the forest against pipelines, or in the night against monuments of power – and strengthen networks and practices to support more comrades going to prison.

GIVE FLOWERS TO THE REBELS CAGED

The past year has given us the release of two long-term anarchist prisoners in the United States: Jeremy Hammond and Jay Chase. In Spain, anarchist Lisa was released on parole in April 2021. We send love and fraternal greetings to all of them as they adjust to a new terrain of life.

Sadly, many of our comrades remain behind bars, and for them we continue to fight. Eric King awaits trial (currently set for October 2021) for an incident in which he was assaulted in prison. Michael Kimble and Jennifer Rose both had their parole rejected. Sean Swain has been forced again to fight the perennial restrictions on his communications by the prison authorities.

Marius Mason continues to struggle through another year of imprisonment and could always use letters and printed articles to keep him connected to the world outside. He, like others in the US prison system, has not had an in-person visit in over a year. Marius is currently taking correspondence courses to become a paralegal. The pandemic has limited fundraising opportunities, and donations can help offset this change.

At least six anarchists have been imprisoned as the Belarusian state continues to repress the 2020-2021 uprising. They include Dmitry Dubovsky, Igor Olinevich, Sergei Romanov, Dmitry Rezanovich, Mikola Dziadok, and Akihiro Gaevsky-Hanada, many of whom have been imprisoned before.

In Greece, anarchists and others took part in bold attacks on corporate and state targets in solidarity with Dimitris Koufontinas, an imprisoned Communist urban guerrilla who began a hunger strike earlier this year. The anarchist prisoners Giannis Dimitrakis and Nikos Maziotis went on hunger strike in solidarity with him for over a month to help generate solidarity.

Mónica Caballero and Francisco Solar were again arrested in July 2020, this time facing charges related to incendiary attacks on government ministers and a real estate company. They, along with other prisoners, began a hunger strike on March 22, 2021 demanding the repeal of extremely punitive measures against prisoners. They also demanded the release of autonomous prisoner Marcelo Villarroel as well as the Mapuche, anarchist, and subversive prisoners.

In Italy, Nicola Gai was finally released from prison, while Anna Beniamino and Alfredo Cospito have been sentenced to 16 and 20 years respectively for allegedly taking part in bombing attacks associated with the Informal Anarchist Federation (FAI). In 2020, anarchist prisoners Beppe and Davide Delogu began a hunger strike in response to punitive measures taken against them by prison administrators and were soon joined by other anarchist prisoners.

June 11th comes from a legacy of defense of animals, the earth, and the wild. While we do not seek to ascribe our anarchism to them, we support land defenders and water protectors on their own terms. Red Fawn Fallis, in federal prison on charges related to opposing the Dakota Access Pipeline, was released last year. Rattler, another No DAPL prisoner, was released to a halfway house early this year. Until his recent release, water protector Steve Martinez was held in federal detention for refusal to cooperate with a grand jury. Some of the Kings Bay Plowshares sit now in prison cells for their radical Christian witness against the horrors of nuclear war and omnicide.

We condemn the repressive operations against anarchists in the UK and worldwide counter-information networks. The raid on the nostate.net servers by the Dutch state is a blatant attack on international communication and solidarity. As with previous attacks on counter-information and prisoner solidarity projects, the state’s actions make clear that combative solidarity with prisoners and coordination of informal attack are a danger to order. The police thugs would have us shrink back from solidarity in the face of their persecution, but we refuse. We stand in full solidarity with those facing repression in the UK as well as the comrades of 325, Anarchist Black Cross Berlin, Northshore Counter-Info, Montreal Counter-Info, and Act for Freedom Now.

We also want to express solidarity with those outside of self-identified anarchists and those taking part in social struggles. We see anarchy as a tension through which we strive in daily life. This leads us to look beyond the world of official struggles and anarchist milieus, and to find anarchy and subversion throughout the world more broadly.

People everywhere act anarchically, including many who are currently imprisoned. These are not necessarily special people to romanticize, bulldozers of revolt in all aspects of life. We don’t pretend that everyone is a secret anarchist who, when psychic repression is removed, will flower as such. People may act in a way we find beautiful one moment but then do something we disagree with the next. We still express solidarity with these people because they engage in acts of refusal and revolt. We see anarchy not as a pure identity that fixates on special people, but instead as a spirit that emerges from activity that opens space for freedom and community. As anarchists, we share in the joys and difficulties of freedom, its contradictions and complications. We are not above others, pure arbiters of freedom, but individuals capable of the most cowardly submission and the most audacious rebelliousness. Rather than worship those who appear to embody our values the most, we will instead tend to the fire of anarchy wherever we find it.

ABOLITION, AND OTHER SLIPPERY WORDS       

Despite the mainstreaming of prison abolition, well over 10 million people are currently locked in the world’s dungeons, a figure rising faster than increases in population. At the same time that we have seen the idea of abolition generalize, we have also seen it mutilated. While this has largely related to the abolition of police, the same distortions must be challenged in discourse on prison abolition. The city of Camden, New Jersey “abolishing” their police department in 2013 was touted as a successful example that other cities could follow to address a racist and violent police force, but the city police department was merely replaced with a county one. This is not abolition. Just as decreased funding or fewer police are not abolition; as civilian review boards have not and will not hold anyone accountable; as less money, fewer COs, or oversight committees will not abolish prisons. We know that police and prisons cannot be abolished from this society: they need each other. Political prisoners, prison rebels, and those who refuse to submit will be some of the last to be granted the reprieves from the state that come from reforms. When we say we want “abolition,” we mean we want police, prisons, and the society that necessitates them to cease to exist.

LET THE GAMES BEGIN

We stand at a crossroads. Do we allow anarchism to become flat and colorless, a new word to describe an old corpse? Do we evaporate into vague leftism and its tired theater of activism? Do we surrender our principles – solidarity, mutual aid, direct action, cooperation – to the new managers of revolt?

Or do we keep to our own light, our own vision, our own project? June 11th remains a light in the darkness: for our comrades in prison, but also for us. Our work renews our fidelity to freedom and a life in common. It affirms to us, in our doubt and confusion, that anarchy lives in our day to day lives and connects us to a rich and vibrant history of free spirited revolt. It asserts that anarchy will be combative or it will be dead. Solidarity with anarchist prisoners is not, for us, a humorless endeavor, a duty-infected routine. It is generative play and the substantiation of free community. Will you join us?

 

Please send us your event information, poster designs, reportbacks, and communiques at june11th at riseup dot net.