Ase to all the ancestors who made their transition this month: Fred Batin, my dad, Comrade George Jackson, Jonathan Jackson . . . and to those who were born this month such as Gen. Harriet Tubman. Wishing all the children a healthy and fun school year. May you remain free from disease. May you be receptive to new ideas. May your creativity be fostered and grow.
Ase to Albert Cinque Woodfox (Feb. 19, 1947-August 4, 2022)
We grieve the loss of our former client and friend, Albert Woodfox, who passed away August 4 of complications caused by COVID-19. He was 75.
A member of the “Angola 3,” Mr. Woodfox was one of three men who were wrongfully convicted after the April 1972 murder of a prison guard at the Louisiana State Penitentiary, a former slave
plantation turned prison, also known as “Angola.” Narrowly escaping death sentences—which the Supreme Court had, at the time, declared unconstitutional—each of the Angola 3 would
instead become permanently isolated in a 6 by 9 foot cell, under 23-hour a day lockdown conditions, for durations ongoing decades. Fellow prisoner Robert King was released in 2001, and Mr. Woodfox’s co-defendant Herman Wallace, was released in 2013, just days before he passed away of cancer.
The wheels of justice turned, tortuously, even more slowly in Mr. Woodfox’s case. After decades of having his conviction overturned and then reinstated, Mr. Woodfox was finally released in February 2016. By then he had been held for over 40 years in solitary confinement. In exchange for freedom from the cells, Mr. Woodfox maintained his innocence and entered a plea deal to lesser offenses. Mr. Woodfox is widely believed to have been held in solitary confinement longer than anyone else in the history of United States.
Throughout the decades of his incarceration, Mr. Woodfox’s case, and the rank injustices exposed by his wrongful conviction and confinement, were widely publicized. (https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2008-may-03-na-angola3-story.html;
https://www.npr.org/2008/10/28/96199165/favors-inconsistencies-taint-angola-murder-case;
https://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/13/us/louisiana-angola-albert-woodfox.html). Since his 2016 release, however, Mr. Woodfox grew to be even more widely venerated as an activist and author (https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2017/01/16/how-albert-woodfox-survivedsolitary; https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2019/mar/04/after-40-years-in-solitaryactivist-albert-woodfox-tells-his-story-of-survival; https://groveatlantic.com/book/solitary/).
Even while held in isolation for a crime he did not commit, Mr. Woodfox relentlessly sought to share with others the mental and emotional freedom he had found within himself. On the inside,
that meant teaching fellow prisoners to read by creating and sliding workbooks down the prison tier; doing legal work to help others with their cases; and, together with Herman Wallace and Robert King, going toe-to-toe with officials and administrators to protest, file grievances and win lawsuits that made Angola prison ever so slightly more humane. But as a returning citizen, Mr. Woodfox continued to dedicate his life to liberation. He spoke unflinching truth to power about the atrocities of our criminal legal systems. He addressed audiences all over our country and across the world—from school children to federal judges, and from all walks of life in between—to talk about the transformative power of collective organizing,
solidarity, and resistance.
Mr. Woodfox’s mother, Ruby Edward Mable Hamlin, taught him that “[a] man ain’t nothing without his word.” And we are fortunate that Mr. Woodfox left the world a beautiful book full. In 2019, Mr. Woodfox published Solitary: Unbroken by Four Decades in Solitary Confinement. My Story of Transformation and Hope, a searing biography that tells the story of his extraordinary unbroken spirit and relentless activism. Critically acclaimed, Solitary was a Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award finalist, and winner of the Stowe Prize and American Book Award. As one publication put it, as concerns mass incarceration, Solitary, “should make every reader writhe with shame and ask: [w]hat am I going to do to help change this?”
There is no way to name all those who live on to love Mr. Woodfox in spirit. He will be missed by his legion of incredible family and friends. Apart from being survived by his brothers James Bob Mable, Haywood Mable, Michael Mable, and Donald Mable, Mr. Woodfox is survived by his life partner and co-author, Leslie George; his daughter Brenda Poole; three grandchildren, and four great grandchildren. He will be missed by countless people—most of whom he never met—who have been inspired by Mr. Woodfox’s legacy. Inspired to think more deeply about mass incarceration, prison abuse, and racial injustice; to create more beauty and truth in artful antidote to the ugly inhumanities of our world; and to join him in the perennial struggle against ongoing, intersectional oppressions. Mr. Woodfox will be missed even, maybe especially, by the stray pup who adopted him and Ms. George just a few years ago on the levee, Hobo. And certainly, Mr. Woodfox will be missed the lineage of lawyers, paralegals, experts and others who worked to secure his freedom for nearly half a century.
Bay Area Playwrights Festival 2022
I have been really loving the second closing weekend of this 45th Anniversary Season of Bay Area Playwright Foundations signature program. The theatre experience is one I can’t explain. You have to be there. The presentation I am watching now, How to Say Goodbye to Your Lover by Elana Dykewomon. It is live online. Tonight is the closing program. I think there are 100 people online now and there are others at the theatre. Don’t miss this season. Visit BAPF.