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Cesar Chavez on the Exploitation of Farm Workers
Cesar Chavez (March 31, 1927–April 23, 1993) was a civil rights, Latino, farm worker, and labor leader; a religious and spiritual figure; a community servant and social entrepreneur; a crusader for nonviolent social change; and an environmentalist and consumer advocate. In 1968, Chavez gained attention as leader of a nationwide boycott of California table grapes in a drive to achieve labor contracts.
Leila Khaled On Liberation and Freedom
Publisher: Freedom ArchivesCollection: La Lucha Continua: a talking mural in San Francisco
Leila Khaled (also Layla Khalid), long-time activist and Central Committee member of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), speaks on the right to resist and fight for her people's liberation.
Radio report of Lolita's arrest in 1954, including her statement
Publisher: Freedom ArchivesCollection: La Lucha Continua: a talking mural in San Francisco
Interview with Lebron after her arrest for the shooting of US Congressman Alvin Bentley in 1954.
Excerpt from "A Litany for Survival"
Publisher: Freedom ArchivesCollection: La Lucha Continua: a talking mural in San Francisco
Audrey Lorde reads her poem, "A litany for survival" from "The Black Unicorn".
Patrice Lumumba Speaks
Patrice Emery Lumumba was born July 2, 1925, Onalua, Belgian Congo [now Congo (Kinshasa)] and was killed on January 1961, in the Katanga province. He was an African nationalist leader and the first prime minister of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (June -- September 1960). Forced out of office during a political crisis, he was assassinated a short time later.
Archbishop Oscar Romero
Publisher: Freedom ArchivesCollection: La Lucha Continua: a talking mural in San Francisco
Oscar romero speaks on involving himself as clergy in the people's struggle.
A Vast Prison
Publisher: Freedom ArchivesCollection: La Lucha Continua: a talking mural in San Francisco
Said likens the pervasive Israeli occupation in Palestine to a "vast prison".
Legacy of Torture: Trailer
Publisher: Freedom ArchivesCollection: Freedom Archives Productions
In 2005 several former members of the Black Panther were held in contempt and jailed for refusing to testify before a San Francisco Grand Jury investigating a police shooting that took place in 1971. The government alleged that Black radical groups were involved in the 34-year old case in which two men armed with shotguns attacked the Ingleside Police Station resulting in the death of a police sergeant and the injuring of a civilian clerk. In 1973, thirteen alleged "Black militants" were arrested in New Orleans, purportedly in connection with the San Francisco events. Some of them were tortured for several days by law enforcement authorities, in striking similarity to the horrors visited upon detainees in Guant�namo and Abu Ghraib. In 1975, a Federal Court in San Francisco threw out all of the evidence obtained in New Orleans. The two lead San Francisco Police Department investigators from over 30 years ago, along with FBI agents, have re-opened the case. Rather than submit to proceedings they felt were abusive of the law and the Constitution, five men chose to stand in contempt of court and were sent to jail. They were released when the Grand Jury term expired, but have been told by prosecutors that "it isn't over yet."
Legado de tortura (Legacy of Torture with Spanish Subtitles)
Publisher: Freedom ArchivesCollection: Freedom Archives Productions
Documental que narra los atropellos y persecuciones de las que fueron objeto los activistas del Partido Pantera Negra, una organización política afroamericana de los Estados Unidos que dedico su lucha y esfuerzo a una meta básica: obtener para su integrantes "tierra, pan, vivienda, educación, vestido, justicia y paz"
Nuh Washington – Call Me Nuh & Last Statement
Publisher: Tiger TV; The Freedom ArchivesCollection: Freedom Archives Productions
Albert 'Nuh' Washington passed away April 28, 2000, at the Regional Medical Unit at Coxsackie Correctional Facility.
Nuh (the Arabic form of Noah) was a committed member of the Black Panther Party and was arrested on August 28, 1971 in San Francisco.
Call Me Nuh is based on an interview done with Nuh Washington in 1988 by Fiona Boneham and Paper Tiger TV and produced and edited by Lisa Rudman and Claude Marks in March, 2000. This was originally shown in Oakland, CA at a tribute to him on March 21, 2000, shortly before his passing. Nuh’s “last statement” was recorded for that same event. Each video runs 10 minutes.