Jalil Muntaqim

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Jalil Muntaqim



Average rating: 4.45 · 99 ratings · 15 reviews · 9 distinct worksSimilar authors
We Are Our Own Liberators: ...

4.43 avg rating — 37 ratings — published 2002 — 4 editions
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The New Abolitionists: (Neo...

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4.42 avg rating — 31 ratings — published 2005 — 4 editions
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Panther Vision: Essential P...

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4.82 avg rating — 11 ratings — published 2015 — 2 editions
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Escaping the Prism... Fade ...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 8 ratings — published 2015 — 2 editions
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This Country Must Change: E...

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4.60 avg rating — 5 ratings — published 2009
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On the Black Liberation Army

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Use & Effects of Control Un...

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John Brown 2000:  U.S. Poli...

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The Soul of the Black Liber...

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More books by Jalil Muntaqim…
Quotes by Jalil Muntaqim  (?)
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“The Haunt The haunt walks counting the bodies held in cubicle chambers; each night the rattle of his keys reminds one of the living dead who are keyless. The Turnkey continues his nightly watch to ensure none of the living dead commits suicide. To be truly dead is forbidden, unless the State sanctions the kill. This ritual first began as a means of penitence, and Auburn was the first N.Y.S. penitentiary and silence was the means to repentance, silence and reading the bible. Back then, the penitent memorized the portions of the bible: when Cain killed Abel, Joshua’s war on Jericho, and all about Ruth, Mary, and Esther — with little thought of God. Over 100 years, the haunt walks with the sanctimonious sentiments of a sentinel, with self-righteous indignation which the living dead attempt to repel with false braggadocio — but when the lights go out, the sudden screams, and all- night talk to prohibit nightmares — awaiting the dawn — permit the haunt to smile with arrogant knowing. The torture of the night is the haunt’s pleasure, making the rounds smelling the decay of dreams deferred, the putrid stench of justice, like the full bowels of slave ships. Gun towers stand reminiscent of the hanging trees with its strange fruit that the haunt picks at leisure appraising its ripeness in terms of life sentences. As steel bangs against steel, chains clang with the echoes of gangs dressed in strips of day and night, black and white; the fright prohibits flight as jail cells constrict and severely depict the absence of liberty. The haunt of Auburn, year by year decade by decade, in a century has never escaped the nightly count of tormented souls, himself chained to the ball of the imprisoned — a spirit’s horror of lost freedom.”
Jalil Muntaqim, Escaping the Prism... Fade to Black: Poetry and Essays by Jalil Muntaqim



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