The Guardian (USA)

Albert Woodfox, held in solitary confinemen­t for 43 years, dies aged 75

- Ed Pilkington in New York

Albert Woodfox, who is thought to have been held in solitary confinemen­t longer than any individual in US history, having survived 43 years in a 6ft x 9ft cell in one of America’s most brutal prisons, has died aged 75.

Woodfox’s death was made public on Thursday by his long-term lawyers, George Kendall and Carine Williams, and by his brother Michael Mable. They said he had died from complicati­ons caused by Covid.

Woodfox was a member of the socalled “Angola Three” – prisoners who were wrongfully convicted of the 1972 murder of a prison guard, Brent Miller, in Louisiana state penitentia­ry. The prison was built on the site of a former slave plantation and was commonly known as Angola, after the country from which most of the plantation’s enslaved people had been transporte­d.

Before the murder, Woodfox and his fellow Angola Three member Herman Wallace had set up a chapter of the Black Panther party inside the prison. They used it to protest against the segregatio­n of prisoners and the unpaid cotton picking to which Black prisoners were subjected in chain gangs in the outlying fields.

He always insisted that his false conviction and consequent treatment were punishment for his Black radicalism. Soon after his conviction in Miller’s death, Woodfox and Wallace were both placed in solitary confinemen­t, where they both remained almost without break for more than 40 years.

Wallace was released after a concerted legal battle in 2013, even as prison authoritie­s continued to try to get him back inside. He died from cancer two days later.

Woodfox was released in 2016 on his 69th birthday. Days after walking free, he told the Guardian that he had managed to endure decades of solitary, despite frequent terrifying bouts of claustroph­obia, through sheer force of willpower.

“We made a conscious decision that we would never be institutio­nalized. As the years went by, we made efforts to improve and motivate ourselves,” he said.

In later interviews with the Guardian over the years, and in his 2019 book Solitary, which was a finalist for the Pulitzer prize, he gave more detail on the extraordin­ary strength that allowed him and Wallace – “the other part of my heart”, as Woodfox described his friend – to withstand solitary. The conditions they endured have been known to cause mental breakdown in individual­s within a week, let alone 40 years.

Woodfox said that he buried himself in prison books, studying Frantz Fanon, Malcolm X and Marcus Garvey. He organized games played up and down the line of solitary cells by shouting down the tier or banging on pipes – that way they held maths tests and general knowledge quizzes about Black history.

He was most proud of having in similar fashion taught several young prisoners how to read.

“Our cells were meant to be death chambers but we turned them into schools, into debate halls,” Woodfox told the Guardian. “We used the time to develop the tools that we needed to survive, to be part of society and humanity rather than becoming bitter and angry and consumed by a thirst for revenge.”

In the six years of freedom that Woodfox enjoyed he devoted himself to educating the public in the US and beyond about the atrocities of the US criminal justice system. He travelled widely domestical­ly and around the world to address audiences of school children and judges.

At home back in New Orleans, he found joy wherever he could. He visited the grave of his beloved mother, Ruby Mable Hamlin, who had died while he was still incarcerat­ed, and enjoyed untrammele­d time with his daughter, Brenda Poole, his grandchild­ren and great-grandchild­ren, and his life partner, Leslie George.

He also adopted a stray dog found wandering on a levee near Lake Pontchartr­ain. He named the pup Hobo.

Notwithsta­nding all the institutio­nal cruelty that was rained down on him over so many years, Woodfox remained an incurable optimist to the end. In his book he writes: “I have hope for humankind. It is my hope that a new human being will evolve so that needless pain and suffering, poverty, exploitati­on, racism, and injustice will be things of the past.”

 ?? ?? Albert Woodfox with his brother Michael Mable, as he walks free in 2016. Woodfox was thought to have been held in solitary confinemen­t longer than any individual in US history. Photograph: Billy Sothern, attorney for Albert Woodfox/EPA
Albert Woodfox with his brother Michael Mable, as he walks free in 2016. Woodfox was thought to have been held in solitary confinemen­t longer than any individual in US history. Photograph: Billy Sothern, attorney for Albert Woodfox/EPA

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