OPEN LETTER TO THE WEATHER UNDERGROUND by the New York Panther 21

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BREAKTHROUGH/page 59

1971: OPEN LETTER TO THE WEATHER UNDERGROUND by the New York Panther 21 BREAKTHROUGH is reprinting a criticism of the Weather Underground Organization (WUO) made by the New York Panther 21 in early 1971. We believe that this statement is still relevant and important today, when many of the practices and politics it criticizes are still alive and active. The statement is also an important contribution to the development of a strategy for revolutionary activity by Black people in the heartland of the US empire. The New York Panther 21 were Black Panther Party members and associates who were subjected to a lengthy frame-up and trial by the state on explosives and conspiracy charges. These charges were based primarily on the testimony of agents and police informers. The Panther 21 were the targets of intense harassment, including the beating of defendant Joan Bird, the orchestrated campaign against them in the media, and prohibitive bails. A number of the 21, including Richard 'Dharuba' Moore, became fugitives. (Moore was later busted for allegedly taking part in the Black Liberation Army attacks on repressive state forces, and is still imprisoned.) Through a strong political defense, including militant courthouse demonstrations of solidarity, the Panther 21 were eventually acquitted, as the jury summarily rejected the state's trumped-up and unsupported charges. During the trial, nine of the New York Panther 21, who were still in prison, were expelled from the Black Panther Party by Huey P. Newton, after the statement criticising the WUO was released, because it contained remarks

which were interpreted as also critical of the BPP. The Panther 21 open letter to the WUO was a response to the Weather communique entitled "New M o r n i n g , Changing Weather" issued earlier, which the 21 saw as a retreat from previous WUO practice of armed revolutionary action in solidarity with national liberation. "New Morning" contained a self-criticism by the WUO for what they termed a "military error", which actually tended to obscure or divert political struggle within the white left about armed struggle and its relationship to selfdetermination for internal oppressed nations, and had aspects of liquidating WUO support for national liberation and revolutionary war. "New Morning" laid out a strategy for basing the WUO in a developing 'white youth nation'. The WUO never answered the 21's criticisms of the direction expressed in the New Morning document. Two-line struggle within the WUO continued in various forms in its practice and statements, through the publication of the book Prairie Fire. Details of the adoption of a consolidated opportunist political line by the WUO and forces upholding the line of Osawotatnie, can be found in "The Split of the Weather Underground Organization" and in the first issue of BREAKTHROUGH, available from the John Brown Book Club (see order form elsewhere in this issue). It is especially timely to reprint this criticism now, as some of the same forces persist in these bankrupt white and male supremacist politics, and are trying to reorganize on this opportunist basis yet again.


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