118 lines
6.1 KiB
Plaintext
118 lines
6.1 KiB
Plaintext
REMEMBER
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We're Still Here
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What is the Anarchist Black Cross?
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The origins of the Anarchist Black Cross date back prior to the
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Russian Revolution. An Anarchist Red Cross was formed in Tsarist Russia
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to organize aid for political prisoners and their families, and self-
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defense against political raids by the Cossack army.
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During the Russian Civil War, the organization changed its name to
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the Black Cross in order to avoid confusion with the Red Cross who
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were organizing relief in the country. After the Bolsheviks seized power
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the Black Cross was moved to Berlin.
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It continued to aid prisoners of the Bolshevik regime, as well as
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victims of Italian fascism and others.
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Despite the increasing demand for its services, the Black Cross folded
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in the '40s due to a simultaneous decline in availavle finances.
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In the late '60s the organization resurfaced in England, where
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it initially worked to aid prisoners of the Spanish resistance
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to Franco's fascist regime. In the 1980's the ABC expanded and
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now has groups in many different regions of the world.
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Working Towards Liberation
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We believe that prisons serve no function except to preserve the
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ruling classes. We also believe that a free society must find
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alternative, effective ways of dealing with anti-social crime.
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But a decrease in anti-social crime is only likely to happen
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(and therefore prison abolition can only be a realistic option)
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accompanied by a dramatic change in our economic, social, and political
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systems. These conditions lie at the root of both anti-social crime
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and the reasons for a prison system. Our primary goal is to make these
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fundamental changes. We work for a stateless, cooperative/classless
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society free from privelege or domination based on race or gender.
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But it's not enough to build the grassroots movements necessary
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to bring about these changes in society, we must also be able to
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defend them. The ABC defends those who are captured and persecuted
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for carrying out acts on behalf of our movements.
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Support for Imprisoned Activists
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The ABC aims to recognize, expose and support the struggles of
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prisoners in general, and of Political Prisoners and
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Prisoners of War in particular. The form our solidarity takes
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depends on each individual's situation. To some we send financial or
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material aid. With others we keep in contact through mail, make
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visits, provide political literature, and discuss strategy and tactics.
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We do whatever we can to prevent prisoners becoming isolated from the
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rest of the movement. We fundraise on behalf of prisoners or their
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defense committees for legal cases or other needs, and organize
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demonstrations or public campaigns of solidarity with prisoners we
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support.
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We regard prisoners as an active part of our movement and seek to
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maintain their past and potential contributions by acting as a link
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back to the continuing struggle. Increased communication between
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activists both inside and outside prison inspires resistance
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on both sides of the prison walls. We hope that we can encourage other
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activists by providing assurance that even if you are persecuted for
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your activities, the movement will not abandon you: we will take care
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of our own. Through the ABC, we are building organizational support
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for resistance.
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Defending Resistance
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Outside of prisoner support work, the ABC is committed to the
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wider resistance in which many of these prisoners are engaged.
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We see a need to be highly organized if we are to effectively
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meet the organized repression of the state and avoid defeat.
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When power is challenged, be it in South Africa, occupied Palestine,
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Chile, Ireland or Canada, it inevitably turns to violent repression
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and political imprisonment to maintain itself.
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In 1989 we set up an "Emergency Response Network"(ERN) to respond
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to political raids, crackdowns, death sentences, hungerstrikes,
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torture or killings of members of or prisoners from groups and
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communities we work in solidarity with. An ERN mobilization means
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ABC groups and others around the world send telegrams and phone calls,
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organize demonstrations or other actions within 48 hours of the network
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being alerted. For instance, two Greek anarchist prisoners reported
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to be held incommunicado and subject to torture were released
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from solitary confinement and allowed access to lawyers after the ERN's
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first mobilization brought demonstrations, calls, faxes and telegrams
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to Greek embassies around the world. The ABC's international network
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plays the one trump card grassroots movements have in our deck:
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solidarity.
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Remember: We're Still Here
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We decide what prisoners to support and what work we will do on
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a case-by-case basis. We put priority on the cases of political/
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politicized prisoners and POWs as this corresponds to our committment
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to building resistance. Although imprisonment is in itself "political",
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Political Prisoners and Prisoners of War are being held specifically
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for their beliefs or actions.
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Unlike Amnesty International, we don't place judgements on what are
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valid and invalid expressions of resistance: non-violence is not
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a criterion of support.
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Unlike other organizations supporting political prisoners, we include
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those who were "politicized" by the prison experience and have since
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become organizers inside prison. Many "politicized" prisoners face
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increased harrassment in return fot their activism.
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Getting Involved
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There are many ways of getting involved in this work.
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You or your group can:
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-Join your local ABC group
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-set up your own ABC group
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-donate labour, materials or money to the ABC
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-become active in the Emergency Response Network
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-or help as an individual by spreading information about
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prisoners, writing to them, making visits, sending reading materials and more
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