Racism and Resistance: The Struggle to Free The Jena Six

Almost a year ago, in the small northern Louisiana town of Jena, a group of white students hung three nooses from a tree in front of Jena High School. This set into motion a season of racial tension and incidents that culminated in six Black youths facing a lifetime in jail for a schoolyard fight.

The story that has unfolded since then is one of racism and injustice, but also of resistance and solidarity, as people from around the world have joined together with the families of the accused, lending legal and financial support, adding political pressure, and joining demonstrations and marches.

The nooses were hung after a Black student asked permission to sit under a tree that had been reserved by tradition for white students only. In response to the three nooses, nearly every Black student in the school stood under the tree in a spontaneous and powerful act of nonviolent protest. The town’s district attorney quickly arrived, flanked by police officers, and told the Black students to stop making such a big deal over the nooses, which school officials termed to be a “harmless prank.” The school assembly, like the schoolyard where all of this had begun, was divided by race, with the Black students on one side and the white students on the other. Directing his remarks to the Black students, District Attorney Reed Walters said, “I can make your lives disappear with a stroke of a pen.”

The white students who confessed to hanging the nooses never received any meaningful punishment. Nor did the white students who months later beat up a Black student at a school party, nor did the white former student who threatened two Black students with a shotgun. But, after these incidents, when Black students got into a fight with a white student, six Black youths were charged with attempted murder, and now face a lifetime in prison. The Black students may not have been involved in the fight, but they were known to be organizers of the protest under the tree. The white student was briefly hospitalized, but had no major injuries and was socializing with friends at a school ring ceremony the evening of the fight.

The Black students were arrested immediately after the fight, in December of last year. School officials and police officials took statements from at least 44 witnesses to the fight. The statements do not paint a clear picture of who was involved. Statements from white students refer to “Black boys”, but many testimonies are unclear as to the identities of who was involved. Some of the arrested youths are not implicated in the fight by any of the witnesses.

Despite this, when Mychal Bell, the first youth to go to trial, refused to take a deal in exchange for testifying against his friends, he was quickly convicted by an all-white jury. Bell’s public defender Blane Williams, visibly angry at Bell and his parents because the youth did not take the deal, called no witnesses and gave no meaningful defense. This attorney’s behavior gives a vivid example of our nation’s broken and underfunded public defender system. Some have called Jena a throwback to the past, but in fact Jena presents a clear vision of the current state of our criminal justice system.

In Paris Texas, a white teenager burns down her family’s home and receives probation. A black one shoves a hall monitor and gets 7 years in prison. Genarlow Wilson, in Atlanta, is sentenced to ten years in prison for participating in consensual oral sex with a 15 year old when he was 17. Like these and many other cases, the case in Jena is textbook proof that there are still two systems of justice functioning in this country, one for Black people, and one for white. No serious observer can doubt that the students of Jena would never have faced charges if a Black student had been beaten instead of a white student. The unpunished incidents in the days and months leading up to the fight clearly demonstrate this.

Local Resistance

Immediately after the arrests, parents of the accused began organizing. Their call, “Free the Jena Six,” was initially heard by activists from other parts of Louisiana, such as the Lafayette public access TV show, “Community Defender,” which was the first media from outside their immediate area to give coverage of the case. Noncorporate and grassroots media has been vital in spreading word of the case, beginning with blogs and YouTube videos, which then led to high profile stories on Democracy Now and in The Final Call.

Lasalle parish, where Jena is located, is 85% white. The town is still mostly segregated — from the white barber who refuses to cut Black hair to the white and Black parts of town, separated by an invisible line. Lasalle is also one of Louisiana’s most wealthy parishes, with small oil rigs in many back yards contributing to area wealth. The parish is a major contributor to Republican politicians, and former klansman and Louisiana gubernatorial candidate David Duke received a solid majority of local votes. Jena was also the former site of a notoriously brutal youth prison, which was closed after years of lawsuits and negative media exposure. The prison is now scheduled to be reopened as a private prison for the growth business of immigrant detentions

Three hundred supporters, most from the immediate region, but some from as far away as California, Chicago and New York, descended on Jena on July 31 to protest District Attorney Reed Walters’ conduct and call for dismissal of all charges. The largest groups included Millions More Movement delegations from Houston, Monroe and Shreveport, nearly fifty members of Families and Friends of Louisiana’s Incarcerated Children from Lake Charles and New Orleans. Other delegations from across Louisiana included members of INCITE Women of Color Against Violence, Critical Resistance, Common Ground and Malcolm X Grassroots Movement. The demonstration marched through downtown Jena — reported to be the biggest civil rights march the town of 2,500 residents has ever seen — and delivered a petition with 43,000 signatures to the District Attorney’s office.

In the two weeks since the demonstration, more major allies have begun to come on board. The Congressional Black Caucus, representing 43 members, including Senator Barack Obama, issued a statement calling for charges to be dropped, while the city of Cambridge Massachusetts passed a resolution in support of the families of the Jena Six. Al Sharpton and other national leaders have visited Jena, while Jesse Jackson called members of the state legislative Black caucus on their behalf.

ColorOfChange.org, which has coordinated much of the outside support, has gathered 60,000 signatures on a petition to Louisiana Governor Blanco, calling for her to pardon the accused, and investigate District Attorney Reed Walters.

Blanco, a Democratic governor elected with the overwhelming support of Black residents of Louisiana, responded with a condescending statement, tersely informing petitioners, “The State Constitution provides for three branches of state government — Legislative, Executive, and Judicial — and the Constitution prohibits anyone in one branch from exercising the powers of anyone in another branch.” This is the same governor who, as Katrina approached, urged gulf coast residents to “pray the hurricane down” to a level two. When New Orleans was flooded and people were trapped in the New Orleans Superdome and convention center, she informed the nation that she was sending in National Guard troops, and “They have M-16s and they’re locked and loaded. These troops know how to shoot and kill, and they are more than willing to do so, and I expect they will.” More recently, Blanco created a program to bring federal money to homeowners rebuilding after Katrina — the “Road Home” — that has been a dismal failure on every level.

Mychal Bell’s sentencing is currently scheduled for September 20. The families are planning another demonstration for that date, and also have assembled a legal team for Bell and the other youths. National allies such as Southern Poverty Law Center and NAACP joined initial supporters such as Friends of Justice (from Tulia, Texas) and ACLU of Louisiana. Legal expenses for the youths could be hundreds of thousands of dollars, and funding is still needed. Except for Mychal Bell, who has a bail hearing scheduled for September 4, all of the youths are out on bail.

The case of Jena Six has served as a wake-up call on the state of US justice. It shows vividly the racial bias still inherent to our system. But is has also shown something else. That this group of families refuses to be silent in the face of injustice, and that hundreds of thousands of other people around the world have chosen to stand with them, and say that we are drawing the line, here, in Jena Louisiana.

Resources:

Donate to support the legal defense fund:
Jena 6 Defense Committee
PO BOX 2798
Jena, LA 71342

Donate online
Sign the petition

For more information or to offer concrete support, email: moc.liamgnull@esnefed6anej.

Jordan Flaherty is a journalist and TV and film producer based in New Orleans. You can see more of his work at jordanflaherty.org. Read other articles by Jordan, or visit Jordan's website.

8 comments on this article so far ...

Comments RSS feed

  1. Michael Rappaport said on August 15th, 2007 at 11:15am #

    I agree with much of what has been said here, but I really do believe we play right into the hands of the power elite when we make things an issue of black and white.

    The divide in this country, far more than racial, is economic. Middle-class and poor whites have been conned into believing people of color are their enemies, when we would be a far better country if those who aren’t wealthy would work against those who are to change the country.

  2. Nate Mezmer said on August 15th, 2007 at 7:46pm #

    Mr Rappaport is right.

    Whites and Blacks must unite if we are going to see real change in this nation. Moreover, Blacks, Whites, Browns and Yellows must embrace a more massive, more youthful and more vocal opposition to the injustice that continues to plague us as a people.

    The freedom of the Jena 6 is just as omni-important as the ousting of the Bush regime and the withdrawl of troops from Iraq.

  3. Hue Longer said on August 16th, 2007 at 12:51am #

    “We make things an issue”? The issue was made before this writer said anything. Guilt’s a bitch and all us white folk can always cut our hair and shave if patronizing black folks get’s too difficult and we need to capitalize on our privilege that exists with or without us creating that privilege

  4. Dave On Fire said on August 16th, 2007 at 8:46am #

    To Michael Rappaport:
    Racism is an issue whether those who would oppose it – strategically as part of a class struggle or simply out of moral revulsion and compassion – choose to discuss it or not. Pretending it doesn’t happen won’t make it go away, but only allows it to continue, prolonging the injustice – and “playing into the hands of the elite”.

  5. Doris Lewis said on August 17th, 2007 at 8:40am #

    To deny and ignore that the Jena six issue is not based soley on race is the same as denying that slavery was based on economics rather than race. Racism/white supremecy is a problem today as it has been in the past. All the events that have taken place in this case is directly the result of race. The fact that black children would have to get permission to sit under a tree is racist; the statement made by the DA in reference to making the lives of black students difficult because they had the courage to stand up for their God given rights was racist. To suggest otherwise contributes to destructive action of the system of racism/white supremacy.

    As black people, if we don’t take to the streets, contribute to funds that can legally attack these injustices, pressure our representatives to speak out, and boycott businesses, if necessary, to demand that we are respected, and send a loud message that our children will not be unjustly accused, things will continue without any consequences.

  6. john said on August 28th, 2007 at 7:36am #

    How can anyone NOT see this as Racism? I worry about the one that just looks at this and says “Well these kids jumped this boy and practically killed him.” No, this doesn’t make it right, No they were not justified in doing so. This town has been a racial powder Keg since BEFORE you or I walked this earth and because no one has done a damn thing about it…It finally comes down to this! If these boys are to be tried, even though there are no specific indentification as to who participated in what, then the white kids also need to be tried for the nooses, the one that pointed the shotgun at the chest of the other black students, who mind you were arrested and charged with assault AFTER they wrestled the shotgun away from the white kid. WTF? how about the white kids that jumped and beat the black child for showing up (INVITED MIND YOU) to a party predominantly occupied by whites? Where are they, Oh yeah That’s right they are at school getting an education. Not sitting in a jail cell, missing out on the valuable years of their life, you know the ones that are supposed to form our minds and set us up to become fine upstanding adults int his world…yeah that one! Crime is Crime no matter who was hurt, when they were hurt or how they were hurt and for those of you that say the nooses were not a crime then walk into a crowded store, office or movie theater and scream Fire! or make reference to some terrorist attack and see if you’ll be arrested for inciting a riot, or even sued if a stampede results and someone gets injured, oh but that’s no crime I forgot it was just a joke!

  7. Selena Waite said on August 30th, 2007 at 5:57pm #

    I keep reading all of these articles about the Jena Six and it makes me want to cry. This is a tragedy but it happens everyday and no one knows about it or cares enough to do anything! There are an abundance of Black children and men in prison for crimes that do not warrant such harsh punishment. The legal system is set up so that they have an up hill battle in life. If a person commits a crime because they have not had opportunities to see that education works and that there are alternative ways to rise above their meager birth rights (poverty, lack of education, broken homes, etc.) they are imprisoned and are further shut out of the American Dream. Thus creating a cycle of joblessness, crime and incarceration.

    My question is this after the Jena Six are set free… what next? Are we going to sit back reveling in our pious victory? Claiming that at least we won one! Because they will let us have our victory… if we will shut up and go calmly back into the night.

    Look at the Imus situation… he’s coming back on the air (now that everything has blown over). And… besides they got M. Vick! No offense to the animal lovers out there but he did not personally kill any of the animals. He made a series of bad decisions and now he is paying for them. But what we are really saying is that a Black man’s life is worth less than a dog’s… come on people, anyone else would have gotten a fine for what he did. People kill dear, bears, rabbits, etc. and gut them and stuff them for entertainment. What’s the difference…

  8. seeker said on August 31st, 2007 at 11:06am #

    I am seeking to move to the south. I travel the world, 50 years old and want to live in Lafayette, Louisiana or Lake Charles and work a few years . If this is an example of the human race (Jena Six ) then we should just the terroist of 9-11 have a party here too (?).