Showing posts with label Freedom Fighter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Freedom Fighter. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Top Ten Native American Freedom Fighters




Before anyone gets upset, this is MY list. These are the Freedom Fighters I admired growing up. They inspired me. They epitomized courage and sacrifice. All were true warriors.

10). Woqini or Woo-ka-nay (Roman Nose)- (ca. 1835-1868) Northern Cheyenne

9). Mahpiya Lu'ta (Red Cloud)-(ca. 1822- Dec 10,1909) Oglala Lakota

8). Metacom (King Phillip)- (ca. 1638- August 1676) Wampanoag

7). Hin-mah-too-yah-lat-kekt(Chief Joseph)-(March 3,1840-Sept.21,1904)
Nez Perce

6). Osceola (ca. 1804-Jan. 20, 1838) Muscogee

5). Goyaale'(Geronimo)- (June 16, 1829-Feb. 17,1909)Chiricahua Apache

4). Tecumtha (Tecumseh)- (March 1768-Oct. 5, 1813) Shawnee

3). K'uu-ch'ish (Cochise)- (ca. 1815-June 8, 1874) Chokonen
Chiricahua Apache

2). Thatha'nke Iyoyake (Sitting Bull)- (ca. 1831- Dec. 15, 1890)
Hunkpapa Lakota

1). Thasunke Witko (Crazy Horse)- (ca. 1840-1877) Oglala Lakota

This is just my list. There are hundreds of other warriors who deserve to be listed here, but, these are the charter members of the RealFreedomFighters Hall of Fame. Lest we forget.

Monday, July 27, 2009

Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin- AKA H. Rap Brown



This weeks Real Freedom Fighter is Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin AKA H. Rap Brown.

Born October 4, 1943 in Baton Rouge Louisiana. He became known as H. Rap Brown during the early 60s. His activism in the civil rghts movement included involvement with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), of which he was named chairman in 1967. That same year, he was arrested in Cambridge, Maryland, and charged with inciting to riot as a result of a fiery speech he gave there. He left SNCC and joined the Black Panther Party in 1968 where he later assumed the position of Minister of Justice.

He is perhaps most famous for his proclamation that "violence is as American as cherry pie."

After 18 months in hiding on trumped up federal charges, he was convicted of robbery in 1971 and sent to Attica Prison where he converted to Islam. After his release, he opened a Grocery store in Atlanta, Georgia and became a spiritual leader and community activist preaching against drugs and gambling in the West End neighborhood.

On March 16, 2000 two Atlanta police officers went to Brother Al-Amins' grocery store to serve a warrant for failure to appear in court on a traffic citiation for speeding and impersonating a police officer (he had showed a badge he recieved from the city for cleaning up the West End). A shootout took place resulting in the death of one police officer and the wounding of another.

Two years later Al-Amin was convicted of thirteen criminal charges and sentenced to life in prison. Since his conviction, his supporters have asserted that another man, Otis Jackson, who confessed to the shooting (but later recanted) is the real shooter. Brother Al-Amin was transferred from state to federal custody as Georgia officials decided he was too high-profile an inmate for the Georgia prison system.

Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin is currently serving time at the ADX Florence supermax prison in Florence, Colorado. Show him some love!