The Assassination of Sandra Bland and the Struggle
against State Repression
By Ajamu Baraka
July 22, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
- During the struggle in South Africa
black activists who were captured by the state had a strange habit
of jumping to their deaths from the windows of jails and court
houses whenever the authorities would turn their backs. In the U.S.
the method of suicide black prisoners appear to choose is death by
hanging, that is when they are unable to pull a gun from an officer
and shoot themselves in the chest while handcuffed behind their
backs.In Waller County, Texas, Sandra
Bland, a young black woman from Illinois, an activist with black
lives matter, who was, according to friends and family, excited
about her new job in Texas is stopped for a minor traffic, beaten,
jailed and found dead two days later in her cell. Her death labeled
a suicide by the Waller County Sheriff Glen Smith.
Because Sandra Bland was an activist who advised
others about their rights and the proper way to handle a police
encounter, no one is accepting the official explanation that she
took her own life.
What does seem clear is that Sandra was a woman
who understood her rights and was more than prepared to defend her
dignity. However, for a black person in the U.S. defending one’s
dignity in an encounter with the police is a crime that that can
lead to a death sentence, or in the parlance of human rights, an
extra-judicial execution by state agents.
While many are calling for something called
justice for Sandra Bland, we would be doing Sandra and all those who
have had their lives taken by the agents of repression a disservice
if we didn’t place this case in its proper political and historical
context.
A psycho-analytic analysis of the dynamics
involved with Blands’ gender and blackness could easily conclude
that Bland was perceived as an existential threat to the racist male
cops who pulled her out of car. Being a conscious, “defiant” black
woman she probably disrupted their psychological order and meaning
of themselves by her presence and willingness to defend her dignity.
However, as interesting as the individualized
analysis and expressions of the psychopathology of white supremacy
might be, the murder of Sandra Bland has to be contextualized
politically as part of the intensifying war being waged on black
communities and peoples’ across the country.
And because the state is waging war against us and
will be targeting our organizations, as an activist, organizer and
popular educator, Sandra’s murder must be seen as a political murder
and receive sustain focus as such.
Coming right before the Black Lives Matter
Movement gathering in Cleveland, Sandra’s murder dramatically drives
home the ever present dangers of not just being black in a culture
of normalize anti-blackness, but the vulnerabilities associated with
being a black activist and especially a black woman activist.
Historically the tyranny of white power has always
had its most dehumanized expressions in relationship to black women.
The unrestrained and unlimited power of white supremacist domination
converged on the captive bodies of black women during slavery and
has symbolically and literally continued during the post-enslavement
period of capitalist/colonialist subordination of black people in
the U.S.
However, from Harriet Tubman, Ida B. Wells,
Claudia Jones, Fannie Lou Hammer through to Assata Shukur, Elaine
Brown, Jaribu Hill and countless others, revolutionary black women
held-up the sky and provided the vision of liberation over the ages.
When the South African government began to target
black women activists, the popular response was that now the racist
government had “struck a rock.”
This week, under the leadership of black woman
activists, much of the resistance movement to the escalating
violence of the state will gather in Cleveland to engage in
reflection and planning. Sandra Bland will be on the minds of those
activists as well as Malissa Williams who found herself at the
receiving end of 137 bullets fired by members of the Cleveland
police department that ripped apart the bodies of her and her
companion Timothy Russell. And the activists will certainly
highlight the case of 12 year old Tamir Rice who was shot point
blank two seconds after police arrived on the scene where he had
been playing with his toy gun in a park near his home.
Yet, the assassination of Sandra must be seen as a
blow against the movement. That is why the BLM must struggle to
develop absolute clarity related to the political, economic, social
and military context that it/we face.
The struggle in the U.S. must be placed in an
anti-colonial context or we will find ourselves begging for the
colonial state to violate the logic of its existence by pretending
that it will end something called police brutality and state
killings. The settler-state is serious about protecting white
capitalist/colonialist power while we are still trapped in the
language of liberal reformism demanding “justice” and
accountability.
Those demands are fine as transitional demands if
we understand that those demands are just that – transitional.
Authentic justice and liberation will only come when there is
authentic de-colonization and revolutionary power in the hands of
self-determinate peoples’ and oppressed classes and social groups.
The martyrdom of Sandra Bland and all that came
before her and who will follow – and there will be more – demands
this level of clarity. We did not ask for this war. But we
understand history and our responsibilities to our history of
resistance and our radical vision that we can be more than we are
today.
Our enemies want us to think that they are
invincible but we know their secrets and know that they can be
defeated. All we have to do is to be willing to fight.
Ajamu Baraka is a human rights defender whose
experience spans three decades of domestic and international
education and activism, Ajamu Baraka is a veteran grassroots
organizer whose roots are in the Black Liberation Movement and
anti-apartheid and Central American solidarity struggles.
http://www.ajamubaraka.com/