Mumia Abu-Jamalâs spiritual advisor confronts DA Krasner and the FOP
May 21, 2021
An interview with Mark Lewis Taylor, founder of Educators for Mumia Abu-Jamal
This new mural featuring Pam and Ramona Africa alongside other Black women community activists was unveiled on May 11, 2021 directly across the street from Philadelphia City Hall, on the very same block where the infamous statue of Frank Rizzo once stood. Photo: Jamal Journal staff photographer Joe Piette
by the Jamal Journal
May 21, 2021 â Mark Lewis Taylor has been a professor in religion and society at Princeton Theological Seminary since 1982. He is also the founder of Educators for Mumia Abu-Jamal (EMAJ), which was first known as Academics for Mumia Abu-Jamal (AMAJ). In recent years, he has also been working as Mumiaâs spiritual advisor.
In U S , thousands support heroic Palestinian fightback
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Crown: Freedom – Tribute to Black women activists – Workers World
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In Photos: Remembering the MOVE bombing, 36 years later
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On the anniversary of MOVE bombing, fresh pain and calls for accountability on Osage Avenue Oona Goodin-Smith, The Philadelphia Inquirer © YONG KIM/The Philadelphia Inquirer/YONG KIM MOVE members speak to a crowd at Malcolm X Memorial Park in West Philadelphia on Thursday.
Thirty-six years to the day after Philadelphia police dropped a bomb on the MOVE rowhouse in Cobbs Creek, killing 11 people, including five children, and razing 61 homes, the pain is fresh on Osage Avenue.
“There are a lot of thoughts running through my mind,” said Mike Africa Jr. with a heavy sigh, looking out to the crowd of 200 dressed in white at Osage Avenue and Cobbs Creek Parkway. “Before we get to those, we have to say their names.”