This is Kabir’s America. It is our America. And our
shame.
By Chris Hedges
July 29, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - NEWARK, N.J. — Robert
“Kabir” Luma was 18 when he found himself in the wrong
car with the wrong people. He would pay for that
misjudgment with 16 years and 54 days of his life,
locked away for a crime he did not participate in and
did not know was going to take place. Released from
prison, he was tossed onto the street, without financial
resources and, because of fines and fees imposed on him
by the court system, $7,000 of debt. He ended up broke
in a homeless shelter in Newark, populated with others
who could not afford a place to live, addicts and the
mentally ill. The shelter was filthy, infested with lice
and bedbugs.
“You have to chain your food up in the refrigerator,”
he said, wearing a worn, ripped sweatshirt, when I met
him at the Newark train station. “There’s a chain on the
door. There’s no stove. There’s one microwave that is on
its way out. It stinks. I’m trying to stay positive.”
Kabir — his nickname means “big” in Arabic and was
given to him in prison because of his powerful
6-foot-2-inch, 270-pound frame — lives in the
netherworld of America’s criminal caste system. He is
branded for life as a felon, although he was locked away
for a crime that in most other countries would have seen
him serve a tiny sentence or no sentence at all. He is
denied public assistance, food stamps, public housing,
the right to vote, the right to serve on a jury, the
ability to collect Social Security for the 40-hours a
week he worked in prison, barred from obtaining hundreds
of professional licenses, burdened with old fees, fines
and court costs he cannot pay, as well as losing the
right to be free from employment discrimination because
of his record.
Kabir is one of America’s tens of millions of
second-class citizens, most of whom are poor people of
color, who have been stripped of basic civil and human
rights and are subject to legalized discrimination for
life.
One-third of all black men in America are classified as
ex-felons. Kabir, through no fault of his own,
unless being poor and black is a fault, lives trapped in
a social hell from which there is almost no escape. This
social hell fuels the street protests around the country
as much as the outrage over indiscriminate murders by
police — an average of three a day — and police
violence. It is a hell visited on nearly all of those
trapped in what Malcom X called our “internal colonies.”
This hell was constructed by corporate billionaires
and their lackeys in the two major political parties who
betrayed the working class and working poor to strip
communities of jobs and social services, rewrite laws
and tax codes to amass staggering fortunes and
consolidate their political and economic power at the
expense of the citizenry. While they were fleecing the
country, these billionaires, along with the politicians
they bought and owned, including Joe Biden, methodically
built brutal mechanisms of social control, expanding the
prison population from 200,000 in 1970 to 2.3 million
today and transforming police into lethal paramilitary
forces of internal occupation. Kabir is one victim, but
he is one victim too many.
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I met Kabir in 2013 in a college
credit class I taught through Rutgers University in East
Jersey State Prison. A devoted listener to the Pacifica
Station in New York City, WBAI, he had heard me on the
station and told his friends they should take my class.
The class, which because of Kabir attracted the most
talented writers in the prison, wrote
a play called Caged that was put on by
Trenton’s Passage Theater in May 2018.
The play was sold out nearly every night, filled
with audience members who knew too intimately the pain
of mass incarceration. It was
published this year by Haymarket Books. It is the
story of the cages, the invisible ones on the streets,
and the very real ones in prison, that define their
lives.
Kabir’s sweet and gentle disposition and
self-deprecating, infectious sense of humor made him
beloved in the prison. Life had dealt him a bum hand,
but nothing seemed capable of denting his good nature,
empathy and compassion. He loves animals. One of his
saddest childhood experiences, he told me, came when he
was not allowed to visit a farm with his class because
he had ringworm. He dreamed of becoming a veterinarian.
But the social hell of urban America is the great
destroyer of dreams. It batters and assaults the
children of the poor. It teaches them that their dreams,
and finally they themselves, are worthless. They go to
bed hungry. They live with fear. They lose their
fathers, brothers and sisters to mass incarceration and
at times their mothers. They see friends and relatives
killed. They are repeatedly evicted from their
dwellings; the sociologist Matthew Desmond estimates
that 2.3 million evictions were filed in 2016 — a rate
of four every minute. One in four families spend 70
percent of their income on rent. A medical emergency,
the loss of a job or a reduction in hours, car repairs,
funeral expenses, fines and tickets — and there is
financial catastrophe. They are hounded by creditors,
payday lenders and collection agencies, and often forced
to declare bankruptcy.
This social hell is relentless. It wears them down.
It makes them angry and bitter. It drives them to
hopelessness and despair. The message sent to them by
the dysfunctional schools, the decrepit housing
projects, the mercenary financial institutions, gang
violence, instability and ever-present police abuse is
that they are human refuse. That Kabir and my students
can retain their integrity and humanity under this
assault, that they can daily defy this hell to make
something of their lives, that they are the first to
reach out to others with compassion and concern, make
them some of the most remarkable and admirable people I
have ever known.
Kabir — he refers to his legal name, Robert Luma, as
his slave name — was raised by his mother in Newark. He
only met his father, who was from Haiti and spoke little
English, three times. Kabir does not speak Creole. They
could barely communicate. His father died in Haiti while
Kabir was in prison. Kabir was the middle of three
children. The family lived on the first floor of a house
at Peabody Place, a few blocks from the Passaic River.
His great-aunt, who had adopted his mother, and who he
refers to as his grandmother, lived on the second floor
with her husband. His grand-uncle’s pension and savings
provided for the family. But by the time of his mother’s
generation, well-paying jobs that came with benefits and
pensions, and with them stability and dignity, were
gone.
“That was one of my gripes against my mother.
Damn, if you can’t save me, and my father’s not
around, who the hell gonna save me?”
There were difficulties. His mother, who often left
him in the care of his grandmother, cycled through
boyfriends, some of whom were abusive.
“That was one of my gripes against my mother,” he
said. “Damn, if you can’t save me, and my father’s not
around, who the hell gonna save me?”
He was teased and bullied when he was small because
of his tattered second-hand clothes. Sensitive and
introspective, the bullying shattered his childhood. It
made it hard to pay attention. He would grow up to be
big and strong, aided by his passion for weightlifting,
but the awkward silences that punctuate his stories of
bullying show that the pain is still there.
Catastrophe struck in fifth grade when his
great-uncle, who assumed the role of his grandfather,
died. Stability evaporated. They lost their home. They
moved to a dilapidated house on Hudson Street. On the
night they moved in, it caught fire. They lost
everything. They moved back to squat in their old house
with nothing. The family eventually moved to North Park
Street in East Orange. Life became a series of sudden
evictions and moves. He was shipped from school to
school. The family squatted in abandoned houses without
electricity that were also homes to drug dealers and
addicts.
“It killed my spirit to live,” he said. “I used to
contemplate suicide. I felt I had no haven. Everywhere I
go, there was some type of abuse. Even at home, there
was no peace. Why be here? What’s the point of being
here? My family life is in disarray. No father. My
mother is ignoring me. The other family members we do
have, they’re not really present. Our structure was so
damaged, there’s no help from my aunt or uncle. We were
all mixed up, living in our own world.”
“I felt I had no haven.
Everywhere I go, there was some type of abuse. Even
at home, there was no peace. Why be here? What’s the
point of being here?”
One day, when Kabir was eight or
nine, a man was speaking to his mother on the porch.
Another man pulled up in a car and started shooting at
the man speaking with his mom. The man with the gun
chased his victim into the house.
“My little brother is in the tub naked,” Kabir said.
“I’m in the living room next to the hallway. My
grandmother is upstairs. He starts shooting. I run, get
my little brother. He gets out the tub naked. We haul
out the back and run next door. My mother was in the
hallway pleading for them to stop. It was one of those
things. I can’t feel safe in my own dwelling.”
His schooling effectively ended in the eighth grade.
He began smoking weed, “being disruptive, being a
clown.” He was “very depressed.” He drank most of the
night and slept most of the day.
“I hustled a little bit, selling drugs,” he said. “I
was never good at that. I was not patient. I’m
idle-minded. I’m more of a philosopher. I have a heart
for people. I’m not a street person, even though I was
in the streets.”
Three months after he turned 18, he was arrested. It
was his first arrest. He was in a car with three older
men. The older men decided to rob “Ol’ Man Charlie,” who
ran a convenience store. The older men went into the
store. He remained behind in the car listening to the
song “Wanksta,” by rapper 50 Cent.
“They got this spooked face. They said, ‘Man, I
had to kill Charlie. He was reaching. Mu told me to
hit him.’”
“They come back to the car,” he remembered. “They got
this spooked face. They said, ‘Man, I had to kill
Charlie. He was reaching. Mu told me to hit him.’ In my
head, it didn’t even seem real. I didn’t witness it. It
was like they were telling me a story. I couldn’t fathom
it. Even though I knew they were going into the store to
rob him. I’m in a daze. We continue to ride around in
this car. They hoppin’ out robbing people. They don’t
stop. At the same time, I feel like I’m stuck. If I
leave, there could be repercussions.”
The police brought him in for
questioning. He was taken to a room that had contents
from the crime scene, including the gun used to kill
Charlie. He tried to be as vague as possible, but he
didn’t want to lie.
“Now there’s a room full of these motherfuckers,” he
said. “There had to be seven of them. This old, fat
white dude. He had blotches on his skin. Like he smoked
too much. As soon as he walks in, he just smacked the
shit out of me. He’s fat and tall. He slapped me good
time. Pow! He said, ‘This shit don’t make no sense. You
need to tell us what the fuck is going on.’ In my head,
I felt so guilty about the whole ordeal. He slaps the
shit out of me. Pow! It was the first time I was
arrested for anything. I just come out and tell them
what happened. They do the ballistics, eventually it
comes back a match. The gun was used for that crime that
killed Charlie. They start collecting people. One of the
last people were my two [co-defendants].”
“I felt guilty as hell. Someone’s life was taken
behind this shit.”
“I felt guilty as hell,” he said. “Someone’s life was
taken behind this shit. If I were intelligent, I would
have known this was the cost of robbing somebody. You
got the power of life or death in your hands. I
snitched, rolled over. The guilt was more than anything.
They eventually started grabbing people. I got charged
with felony murder. A homicide in the act of committing
a robbery. Even though I never left the car. I never had
a weapon discharged. But the law charges everyone there
equally.”
He spent three-and-a-half years in the county jail
before being sentenced and going to prison.
“My strongest asset is that I have a connection to
people,” he said. “At times, I can be a little depressed
because it’s overwhelming. I felt like I never got out
of poverty. You know what I mean? If it wasn’t my
upbringing, it was prison. Now I’m spit back out as an
adult. I never really achieved anything I feel a grown
man should have. I can’t drive. I was never taught to
drive. I went away at 18. I don’t have my own place. I’m
35. If it ain’t a room, it’s the shelter. When you meet
people of affluence, some people with money, how they
look at you. You can almost pierce their eyes and read
their mind. You know, when people feel like they’re
above you. You know when you’re treated wrong, whether
it’s in school, whether it’s in a store, or in a certain
neighborhood where they feel like you don’t belong. And
then, you’re constantly fed these lily-white dreams on
TV, knowing this is the farthest thing from our reality.
Then we look at black reality — it’s like they make
mockery out of it. It’s either overly funny so it’s
desensitized. Or, it’s not even true.”
The pandemic created an urgent
need for frontline workers, those desperate enough to
work for low wages and accept being expendable. Kabir, a
few weeks ago, was able to get a job in a supermarket.
On the days he has to be at work at 6:00 am he walks
over a mile of the 2.3 miles from where he is living to
the supermarket because of the erratic bus service at
that hour in Newark. It is dark when he sets out. He
walks past the unhoused, which sometimes include
children, sleeping on the street, the handfuls of
prostitutes trying to scare up a few clients, and the
junkies passed out, propped up against buildings. This
is his America. It is our America. And our shame.
Chris Hedges is a Pulitzer
Prize–winning journalist who was a foreign correspondent
for fifteen years for The New York Times, where
he served as the Middle East Bureau Chief and Balkan
Bureau Chief for the paper. He previously worked
overseas for The Dallas Morning News, The
Christian Science Monitor, and NPR. He wrote a
weekly column for the progressive website Truthdig for
14 years until he was fired along with all of the
editorial staff in March 2020. [Hedges and the staff had
gone on strike earlier in the month to protest the
publisher’s attempt to fire the Editor-in-Chief Robert
Scheer, demand an end to a series of unfair labor
practices and the right to form a union.] He is the host
of the Emmy Award-nominated RT America show On
Contact.
[Chris writes
a regular original column for Scheerpost twice a
month.
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