Showing posts with label Imam Jamil Al Amin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Imam Jamil Al Amin. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Imam Jamil Al-Amin Needs Our Support

From dequi kioni-sadiki mxcc519@verizon.net

this is what Imam Jamil Al-Amin wrote:

"I am currently being denied telephone calls and my mail is being
diverted (some). If you would, can you get some people to call the
warden at ADX and Eric Holder to inquire as to why this action is
being done. I don't have any institutional violations and have not
been informed as to why this is being done."

Don't forget the Imam's number: 99974-555

and address when you call or write:

USP FLORENCE ADMAX
PO BOX 8500
FLORENCE, CO 81226

Warden:

CHARLES DANIELS, WARDEN OF USP FLORENCE
Same address as for Imam Jamil Al-Amin
Phone: 719-784-9464
Fax: 719-784-5290
E-mail address: <mailto:FLM/EXECASSISTANT@BOP.GOV>FLM/EXECASSISTANT@BOP.GOV

Eric Holder:

Eric H. Holder, Jr
Attorney General
Office of the Attorney General
(202) 514-2001

US Dept. of Justice
950 Pennsylvania Ave., NW
Washington, D.C. 20530-0001
Office of the Attorney General Public Comment Line - 202-353-1555

Monday, March 26, 2012

On The Left Side of History: Political Prisoner Imam Jamil Al Amin

Ten years ago, iImam Jamil Al Amin, the former H. Rap Brown was falsely convicted and sentenced to life in Georgia. When black, white, brown prisoners, Muslim and non-Muslim Georgia inmates openly acknowledged him as a leader and political prisoner, and public pressure mounted for a new trial and his removal from solitary, Georgia officials transferred him in the dead of night to the man-made supermax hell of Florence, Colorado, a federal prison some say is worse than Bagram or Guantanamo.

On the Left Side of History: Political Prisoner Imam Jamil Al Amin

by BAR managing editor Bruce A. Dixon

As a SNCC leader in rural Alabama, he helped lay the foundation for what black political power currently exists in the deep south today. “

Imam Jamil Al Amin has been on the right side, really the left side of history a long time. As a college student in the early sixties he joined and eventually led SNCC, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, the corps of fearless young people who risked their lives organizing freedom schools, cooperatives and registering voters in the violent, Klan-infested rural south. Summoned to a White House meeting with President Johnson at the age of twenty-one he fearlessly demanded federal action to ensure the safety of SNCC workers and ordinary African Americans, when older big time civil rights leaders present were too busy being grateful for a chance to meet with the president at all.

As a SNCC leader in rural Alabama, he helped lay the foundation for what black political power currently exists in the deep south today. Targeted by COINTELPRO and the FBI for his advocacy of black political and economic power, self-defense and the eradication of drugs, he was arrested dozens of times. Congress even passed a law with his name on it, specifcally intended to lock him up. While serving a 5 year prison sentence in New York, he converted to Islam, and upon his release Jamil Al Amin moved to Atlanta in 1976.

In the same spirit that guided his earlier political and human rights work, he set about organizing and community building in Atlanta's West End. He studied languages and traveled to the West Indies and the Middle East, to India, Pakistan, and Africa. He taught, learned and led by example, becoming Imam Jamil Al Amin, an internationally acknowledged leader among US Muslims. Along the way, he started several small businesses including a grocery store and helped organize youth sports, anti-drug and anti-violence campaigns.

But once you earn the FBI's attention, you don't lose it. Surveillance and harrassment of Al Amin continued the next quarter century. When a West End drug dealer was shot in 1995, Atlanta police arrested him despite a good deal of evidence pointing in other directions, and had to release him when another man confessed to the crime.

This week more than two hundred who hunger and thirst for justice gathered on the steps of Georgia's state capital to demand justice for Imam Jamil Al Amin, his return to Georgia for a new trial and his eventual freedom....”

In March 2000 two Fulton county deputies were shot in front of Imam Jamil Al Amin's home. The apparent shooter, one Otis Jackson fled to Nevada before turning himself in, and confessed his role to FBI interviewers there. Georgia officials however, declined to request his extradition, and Jackson was pressured into recanting his confession. Al Amin was not allowed his choice of attorneys, was denied proper discovery or the chance to present evidence of his innocence at trial, and the jury pool purged of those most likely to recall his civil rights work of the sixties.

Blatantly framed, Imam Jamil Al Amin was sentenced to life in prison, where his false conviction, status as a prominent Muslim leader and forty years of work in the service of human liberation made him Georgia's most high profile political prisoner, though he was confined to a tiny cell 23 hours of every day. In 2007, when local and international pressure began building in earnest for a new trial and his release from solitary confinement, Georgia prison officials spirited him away to federal custody 1400 miles away in the federal supermax prison at Florence, Colorado, a living tomb where conditions of enforced isolation and sensory deprivation are widely recognized as torture.

This week more than two hundred who hunger and thirst for justice gathered on the steps of Georgia's state capital to demand justice for Imam Jamil Al Amin, his return to Georgia for a new trial and his eventual freedom. “The next time we come back here,” declared Mauri Saalakhan of the Peace Thru Justice Foundation, “we can fill these steps, this street. We can. We must. And we will.” Brother Saalakhan is correct of course. We can and we must create the public pressure that ultimately leads to justice for our political prisoner Imam Jamil Al Amin. Only time will tell if we will. Instead retweeting and facebooking phony Kony2012 propaganda to each other, we should be “raising awareness” of and demanding justice for Imam Jamil Al Amin. Let's make some of that happen.

For Black Agenda Radio, I'm Bruce Dixon. Find us on the web at www.blackagendareport.com.

Bruce A. Dixon is managing editor at Black Agenda Report and a member of the state committee of the Georgia Green Party. He lives and works in Marietta GA, and can be reached at bruce.dixon(at)blackagendareport.com.

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Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Return Imam Jamil Al-Amin to Georgia

Imam Jamil Al-Amin on Facebook wrote: We have a
goal of 1000 signatures by the rally on March
19th! Please take a moment to sign this petition
for Imam Jamil Al-Amin and share it with your friends.

http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/movetheimam/

The Petition

On Thursday, August 2, 2007, the public learned
that Imam Jamil Al-Amin, formerly known as H. Rap
Brown, no longer was in the custody of the State
of Georgia; he had been moved, without
notification to his attorneys or family
members,from the Georgia State Prison at
Reidsville, Georgia into the custody of the
Federal Bureau of Prisons. Information provided
to the press indicated that Imam Jamil was moved
to Oklahoma City and then within a day to the
ADMAX federal prison in Florence, Colorado.

Imam Jamil continues to challenge the abrupt and
unwarranted transfer out of the State of Georgia.
The transfer to federal custody in a facility
over 1,400 miles away removes him from the
Georgia area where family and friends would be
able to visit on a regular basis. The move
continues to isolate him from other inmates and
the opportunity to worship with others, and it
further imposes harsh conditions which Imam Jamil
challenged while incarcerated in the Georgia prison system.

Attorneys questioned the Georgia Department of
Corrections as to the reason for Imam Jamil's
transfer to federal custody, even though he has
not been charged or convicted of a federal crime.
Devon Orland, Department of Law, State of Georgia, responded:

"The decision to transfer Mr. Al-Amin was made in
conjunction with the federal government and was
based upon legitimate security concerns. As for
the specific events that led to his transfer I am
not at liberty to discuss those but can tell you
that there were legitimate security concerns.
Neither I, nor anyone with the Department of
Corrections has control over where Mr. Al-Amin
will be housed within the federal system. He will
be subject to the same rules for transfer as any
other prisoner within that system and you will
need to check with them as to his current status,
likelihood of his being housed within Georgia and
rules regarding attorney contact and legal mail.
Mr. Al-Amin is in the custody of the Federal
Bureau of Prisons but is under a State of Georgia
prison sentence so "responsibility" is hard to
define out of context. The Bureau of Prisons is
responsible for the care and incarceration of Mr.
Al-Amin if that is the question you are asking."

Help us let them know that we won't stand for this, bring him home.

www.freeimamjamil.com

Friday, May 13, 2011

Atlanta Event on Imam Jamil Al Amin AKA H Rap Brown

Friday May 13
From: ssadequee@gmail.com

Greetings of Peace,

A very important event taking place in Atlanta, GA on Imam Jamil Al Amin aka H. Rap
Brown. "People of good will (irrespective of race, creed or political orientation)
need to be present in order to understand how yesterday still colors today." Come
join us and bring your friends!

A CONVERSATION ON THE LIFE & LEGACY

OF

IMAM JAMIL ABDULLAH AL-AMIN


FRIDAY, MAY 13, 2011...6 PM
(reception @ 5:30)

Georgia State University
Student Center Auditorium
Courtland & Gilmer Sts.
Atlanta, GA

Featured panelists for this very important event will be: Karima Al-Amin, activist,
civil attorney, and the wife of Imam Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin; Fay Bellamy-Powell, a
former SNCC officer who worked closely with H. Rap Brown during one of America's
most turbulent revolutionary periods; and Professor Akinyele Umoja, who undertook an
in depth study of COINTELPRO and how it targeted Imam Jamil from the days when he
was known as H. Rap Brown.

El-Hajj Mauri' Saalakhan, Director of Operations for The Peace Thru Justice
Foundation, will conclude the forum with information on why the case of Imam Jamil
is so important, and offer advice on initiatives thatconcerned citizens can
undertake to help breathe new life into a campaign for justice.

The forum will be moderated by Imam Khalid Fattah Griggs, resident imam of The
Community Mosque of Winston-Salem, North Carolina.

Principle Sponsors for this event are: The Sankofa Society & The Peace Thru Justice
Foundation

Supporting Co-sponsors (in alphabetical order):

Institute of Contemporary Islamic Thought - Atlanta, GA
Jamaat al-Muslimeen - Baltimore, MD
Malcolm X Grassroots Movement - Atlanta, GA
Masjid At-Taqwa - Brooklyn, NY
Masjid Mujahideen - Philadelphia, PA
Majlis Ash-Shura (Islamic Leadership Council) of NY, Justice Committee
Majlis Ashura of Philadelphia. PA
Muslim Alliance in North America (MANA)
Mosque of Islamic Brotherhood, Inc. - Harlem, NY
National Jericho Movement

Project SALAM - Albany, NY
Shifa & Haris Support Committee - Atlanta, GA
The Community Mosque of Atlanta, GA
The Community Mosque of Winston-Salem, NC

--
www.freeshifa.com
www.youtube.com/user/FreeShifa
www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=62107787609&ref=mf
www.ipetitions.com/petition/FreeShifa
www.lettersforshifa.wordpress.com
www.flickr.com/photos/freeshifa