Sunday, June 2, 2019
Searching for Assata :: essays research papers
Searching for Assata     I thought long and hard about the type of creative project I wanted to do for my sex activity & Society class. This project is a really cool one, in which gender and the things I learned in class would be combined. At first, I was going to interview four teenage African-American girls about their experiences about being Black and female in this society. Due to technical difficulties (raggedly camcorder), I was not able to complete that task. Then I thought about doing a feminist critique of Scarlett OHara, the main character from Gone with the Wind scarce that type of thing is for a ten-page paper, not a creative project. Finally, I decided to do a collage depicting the life of Assata Shakur, one of the some wrongly convicted individuals in U.S. history. Her story is a sad chapter in American history, in which the color of her skin, social class, political affiliation, and gender played a parting in her subsequent exile from her ho meland.     On May 2 1973, racial prejudice would change the life of Assata Shakur for ever. An incident of what would now be labeled racial profiling takes place on the New Jersey Turnpike. Ms. Shakur, an active participant in the Black Liberation Army (BLA), was traveling with friends, Malik Zayad Shakur and Sundiata Acoli when estate troopers stopped them, reportedly because of a broken headlight. A trooper explained that they were suspicious because they had Vermont license plates. The three were made to exit the car with their hands up. All of a sudden, shots were fired. When it was all over, state trooper Werner Foerster and Malik Shakur were killed. Ms. Shakur and Mr. Acoli were charged with the deaths of state trooper Foerster and Zayd Malik Shakur. While held in jail, she was shackled and chained to a bed, with bullet wounds still in her chest. She was also forced to permit the jabs of shotgun butts of the New Jersey State troopers and heard their voic es shouting Nazi slogans and threats to her life. In the history of New Jersey state, no female prisoner had ever been treated as she, confined to a mens prison, under twenty-four hour surveillance of her most intimate bodily functions.Ms. Shakur and Mr. Acoli were eventually sentenced to 30 years plus life. Although the verdict was no surprise since it was an all-White jury who convicted them, many questioned the racial injustice of the trial because it was riddled with many human rights violations and constitutional errors.
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