Who is Mumia Abu Jamal?
Mumia Abu Jamal is a innocent man, Son, Brother,Father, Grand-Father,Great-Grand-Father, revolutionary,was Deputy Minister of Information Black Panther, Journalist, Radio Broadcaster/Supervisor, writer, author of some best selling books, and Political Prisoner, Innocent and Framed for the December 9th, 1981 un-aliving of Philly Cop Daniel Faulkner the false evidence. The manufactured guilt used by Philadelphia corrupted Police and Philadelphia corrupted Officials that created this frame-up. Mumia has wrongfully served 44 years in prison for a crime he did not commit. To wrongfully secure a Death sentence serve 30 years, and turn around remove Mumia off Death-row without a re-sentencing hearing is draconian and placed into general population for another 14 years totaling 44 years with Life No-parole.
Rise Up, Comrades! Free Mumia Abu-Jamal—Now!
Brothers and sisters in the struggle, hear this revolutionary call from the front lines of resistance! For over 43 years, our brother Mumia Abu-Jamal actually innocent and framed was born into a world rigged against Black lives—a working-class crucible of racism, poverty, and police terror that forged the unbreakable revolutionary. From the ashes of oppression, he emerged as a titan of truth, a Black Panther warrior, a fearless journalist, and now, a global icon of defiance against the chains of injustice. His life is not mere biography; it’s a battle cry for liberation, a testament to the indomitable spirit that refuses to bow to a system built on lies and brutality.
At just 14, in 1968, Mumia answered the call of revolution, joining the Philadelphia chapter of the Black Panther Party—the vanguard of Black empowerment, armed with Marxist-Leninist fire and unapologetic nationalism. As Minister of Information, he wielded words like weapons, crafting speeches, pamphlets, and articles that exposed the state’s savage grip on Black communities. He championed the Panthers’ Ten-Point Program: demands for freedom from police violence, economic justice, healthcare, housing, and self-determination. Organizing against poverty’s stranglehold, Mumia stood tall amid FBI’s COINTELPRO onslaught—a shadowy war of surveillance, harassment, and assassinations designed to crush the movement. Undeterred by the Party’s fragmentation in the early 1970s, Mumia’s Panther ethos endured: a blueprint for dismantling white supremacy and igniting collective power. Transitioning to journalism, Mumia became “the voice of the voiceless,” broadcasting raw truths on radio waves that pierced the veil of silence. As a former President of the National Black Journalists Association, he dissected police brutality, racial injustice, and governmental hypocrisy, earning reverence among activists and enmity from the powerful. His reports weren’t neutral—they were revolutionary indictments, amplifying the cries of the oppressed and challenging the empire’s narrative.
Then, in 1981, the system struck back. Framed for the murder of Officer Daniel Faulkner—a crime he did not commit—Mumia was ensnared in a sham trial riddled with racial bias, fabricated evidence, and corrupt testimonies from officers later convicted of other crimes. Convicted and sentenced to death, he languished on death row for 30 years until 2011, when it morphed into life imprisonment: a “slow death row” of deliberate torment. Exculpatory proof abounds—Arnold Beverly’s confession that he and another, killed Officer Faulkner. Not Mumia—yet courts weaponize indifference, burying truth under layers of complicity. This isn’t justice; it’s judicial lynching, targeting Mumia for his Panther past and unyielding critique of state violence. Mumia is actually innocent. He endures the slow torture of mass incarceration, his body ravaged by deliberate medical neglect: denied urgent eye surgery that threatens his sight, his heart weakened from battles with hepatitis C and COVID-19, his spirit unbroken but his life hanging by a thread. Imagine the pain—a father, a grandfather, and Great-Grandfather, a freedom fighter, a beacon of Black liberation—rotting in SCI Mahanoy’s dungeons while the oppressors procrastinate.
The corrupted courts refusing clear exculpatory evidence of Arnold Beverly’s confession that he and another un-alived officer Daniel Faulkner, NOT Mumia. Why was not the strong lead on Kenneth Freeman (Poppie) not pursued or investigated clearly he was present and fled the scene. His demise 3 1/2 years later on May 13, 1985 the same day of Move Bombing Philadelphia over 60 homes on both sides of Osage Ave. burned to the ground. Kenneth Freeman (Poppie) detailed description of how his naked and handcuffed hog-tied body was found in empty lot is beyond disturbing is barbaric and very intentional murder. Not a mere heart attack or natural causes. The weaponizing of the judicial courts and prosecutors to openly suppress or disregard the truth of exculpatory evidence. But openly accept lies from the corrupted arresting and investigating officers’ manufacturing guilt. Later, these ranking officers and other officials criminal convictions for other crimes. But still allowing their inaccurate testimonies, witness coercion, evidence tampering among other corruptible actions in Mumia’s court proceedings to stand as truth while plotting his demise through indifference. This is not just Mumia’s agony; it’s the collective wound of our people, the daily injustice inflicted on the framed innocent, fueling the beast of corrupted cops and corrupted officials and weaponizing the judicial system that frame-up our political-prisoners.
FREE MUMIA ABU JAMAL!! FREE ALL POLITICAL PRISONERS!! We, the people, are the storm that will shatter these chains! Join the MUMIA FREEDOM TOUR, founded by the Freedom From Frame-Up Foundation, Inc., a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt non-profit dedicated to exposing frame-ups, securing releases, and rebuilding lives stolen by this rotten system. Our tour thunders across cities, countries around the world amplifying Mumia’s innocence and Frame-Up, mobilizing masses to National and International. From Philly to the Bay Area, Atlanta to Cuba, we mobilize masses, turning grief into guerrilla warfare. Rally at events thundering across nations: raise funds for Mumia’s urgent health battles, investigative exposes, and legal assaults on his chains. Mumia Freedom Tours at these events, we gather not just to remember, but to revolt—to raise critical funds for Mumia’s dire health needs, investigative break through, and legal warfare that will bring him home. Feel the fire in your chest, comrades—the same fire that fueled the Panthers’ ten-point program, that demands freedom for all political prisoners.
Your support isn’t charity; it’s ammunition in the fight! Sign up today! Subscribe! Join! Donate now, every dollar fuels medical advocacy to stop the state’s slow execution, funds probes into corrupt evidence, and powers appeals for exoneration. Give generously—become a recurring donor, sponsor the tour, or rally your crew. Tax-deductible contributions to Freedom From Frame-Up Foundation, Inc., empower us to free Mumia and dismantle the prisons preying on our communities. The revolution won’t wait—neither can Mumia. Stand with us! Free Mumia! Free all framed and innocents! Power to the People! Donate Today: [www.freedomfromframeup.org/donate] Join the Tour: Subscribe[www.freedomfromframeup.org] In Panther Solidarity, Freedom from Frame-Up Foundation, Inc.
Who is Kamau Sadiki?
Kamau Sadiki: A Revolutionary Life in Chains
Kamau Sadiki, born Freddie Hilton on February 19, 1953, in New York City, embodies the unyielding spirit of Black resistance against systemic oppression. At just 16 years old, in 1969, he joined the Black Panther Party (BPP) in Jamaica, Queens, igniting a lifelong commitment to his community’s survival and liberation. As a rank-and-file Panther, Sadiki rose early each morning to serve in the Free Breakfast for Children Program, nourishing hundreds of kids in underserved neighborhoods before food stamps existed—a direct challenge to poverty engineered by white supremacy. He then hit the streets, selling the BPP newspaper to spread revolutionary ideology, organizing against police brutality, and building self-determination through education, health clinics, and mutual aid.
The FBI’s COINTELPRO—a vicious counterinsurgency to dismantle the BPP—forced Sadiki and countless others underground in the early 1970s, where he aligned with the Black Liberation Army (BLA), the Party’s clandestine arm for armed self-defense. “My joining the Black Panther Party and consequently the Black Liberation Army was a response to the oppressive climate that existed in America at the time,” Sadiki declared in his 2003 sentencing statement, framing his actions as a moral imperative amid “decades of oppression” that demanded “armed resistance.” Prior arrests for alleged assaults on police—tactics to neutralize threats—only hardened his resolve. Decades later, the state’s vendetta resurfaced. In 1999, the FBI, obsessed with recapturing exiled Panther Assata Shakur (biological mother of one of Sadiki’s daughters), coerced him: cooperate or face fabricated charges. He refused. In 2001, Atlanta authorities dusted off a 30-year-old cold case—the 1971 shooting death of Fulton County officer James Green outside a gas station—and pinned it on Sadiki, despite zero physical evidence, failed witness identifications, and a prosecutor’s prior refusal to try due to lack of credibility. Exonerating testimony from associates, including the late Mtayari Shabaka Kafele (formerly William Stephens), was suppressed; a conspiracy charge was invented without proof; and inflammatory BLA rhetoric poisoned the trial. Convicted in 2003, Sadiki was sentenced to life plus 10 years—a political lynching disguised as justice.
Now 72, Sadiki (inmate #0001150688) languishes at Augusta State Medical Prison in Grovetown, Georgia, his body ravaged by deliberate neglect: Hepatitis C, liver cirrhosis, sarcoidosis, high blood pressure, open wounds, and vision loss. A devout Muslim, devoted father of two daughters, grandfather of five, and elder statesman of the New Afrikan Independence Movement, he remains a beacon of dignity. “A true Muslim is a true revolutionary. There is no contradiction between being a Muslim and being a revolutionary,” he affirms. Sadiki’s story is the unfinished saga of the BPP: a casualty of empire’s war on Black self-determination. Global campaigns, from the International Campaign to Free Kamau Sadiki NOW! to Black August teach-ins, demand his release alongside comrades like Mumia Abu-Jamal and the late Imam Jamil al-Amin. Write him: Freddie Hilton #0001150688, Augusta State Medical Prison, 3001 Gordon Highway, Grovetown, GA 30813. Free Kamau Sadiki—The People Will Free Our Innocent & Framed Political Prisoners. Power to the people.