Striking Back Against Prison Slavery Zine
Rashid was interviewed by James K. Anderson, a member of the IWW Freelance Journalist Union, and the September 2016 prison work strikes against prison slavery. This interview can be read on this website (part one and part two), but can now also be downloaded as a zine. Click here to download laid out for printing and folding, or click here to download to read on a screen. It can also be purchased from leftwingbooks.net here.
From Behind the Walls: Rashid Johnson on the 2016 Prison Strike
This searing interview with Kevin “Rashid” Johnson—prisoner, revolutionary theorist, and cofounder of the Revolutionary Intercommunal Black Panther Party—offers a firsthand account of the lead-up, politics, and legacy of the September 9, 2016, prison strike. Speaking with freelance journalist James K. Anderson of the IWW, Rashid reflects on the strike’s roots in the long struggle against prison slavery, its coordination across racial and ideological lines, and the tensions between prisoner-led organizing and outside political currents.
More than a retrospective, this dialogue is a trenchant critique of “abolitionism” as it’s come to be defined in the mainstream and a passionate defense of revolutionary intercommunal struggle from inside the belly of the beast. Rashid’s analysis unflinchingly connects the modern prison system to slavery, capitalism, and imperialism—and calls for solidarity grounded not in tokenism, but in shared struggle and political clarity.
A vital document of resistance from within.
Leave a Reply