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1994 13:36:22 -0700 From: Freevoice <freevoice@igc.apc.org> Message-Id:
<199409202036.NAA03277@igc.apc.org> To: kevin.brandstatter@afrc.ac.uk
Subject: Lorenzo Bio Cc: deke@fido.wps.com, maile@fido.wps.com Status: OR

Here is Lorenzo's Bio.  Let us know if you need anything else.  His home
number is (404) 687-8324.  Sky's the limit. Josie


		ABOUT THE AUTHOR 
During the late 1960's Lorenzo Kom'boa Ervin was
a member of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee in Eastern
Tennessee, and later joined the Black Panther Party when the two groups
merged in 1967-68.  He was involved in anti-Klan and civil right s
activities in Chattanooga, Knoxville, Atlanta and other cities throughout
during that period, when the so-called "Black Power movement" began to
exert itself in opposition to the reformist civil rights leadership in the
Southern U.S. and other parts of North America. 

However, when the United States government instituted its repression
programs, (the most infamous of which were the FBI's "COINTELPRO" and the
Central Intelligence Agency's "Operation CHAOS") against the Panthers,
SNCC and the Vietnam anti-war movement, s cores were were beaten, killed,
or framed-up and imprisoned on criminal charges, or driven into exile in
foreign countries, and Kom'boa was one of those who received the lash of
government repression. When a so-called "Black Power" grand jury was
convene d in the Summer of 1968 in Hamilton County, Tennessee to
investigate SNCC and the Black Power movement's role in "planning"
disturbances in the city of Chattanooga, and he was summoned to testify
before the grand jury on purported "gun-running" charges ag ainst him and
other SNCC activists, he left the city when he discovered that the cops
and the Klan wanted him dead if he would not testify. The Klan ran the
government in those days, and got what it wanted; many police offic! 
 ers were open Klansmen and routinely brutalized and murdered Blacks while
on the job, and got away with it. If Komboa went to the County workhouse,
he was a good as dead! 

Thus he went into hiding in another city, but was pursued by the FBI, who
sought him for frame-up charges of bombing Klan offices and smuggling guns
to be used during the riots which broke out after the death of Dr. Martin
Luther King in April 1968. This
 latter charge was one of the so-called "Rap Brown" laws, hurriedly passed
by a frightened U.S. Congress in early 1968, making such bombings a
federal crime. (Note: Brown was the Chairman of SNCC).  The police and FBI
had "shoot to kill" orders for his a rrest or his death while resisiting
arrest, and Kom'boa felt he had to get out of the country if he wanted to
save his life. On February 25, 1969, he hijacked a plane to Cuba from
Atlanta, Georgia but because of Cuba's fear of the Black struggle in Nort
h America, he was later arrested and deported to Czechoslovakia. There,
American agents located him and tried to arrest him; he escaped, but
ultimately was arrested and brought back to the U.S., and tried before a
racist jur! 
 y in a small town in Georgia and given two Life prison terms. He didn't
give up the struggle after he went to prison however.  He was a prisoner
unionist, fighter for Black rights, a jailhouse lawyer, and one of the
first Black radicals to convert t o Anarchism during his incarceration. At
one time he was also one of the "Marion Brothers", political prisoners
held in the infamous Control Unit in Marion (IL.) federal prison, then the
most secure prison in North America. Ultimately, this association a nd the
resulting international notoriety on his case is what helped him to get
out. Millions of persons heard about the injustice of his case. He served
almost 15 years (1969-1983) before an international defense campaign won
his freedom. 

Since his release, he has worked as a community organizer in Chattanooga,
and served as the past President of the Concerned Citizens for Justice, a
local group fighting racism and police brutality. He is the author of the
forthcoming autobiography "Year s of Struggle, Years of Death", which will
be published by AK Press of Scotland sometime during 1994, as well as a
pamphlet series which includes Anarchism and the Black Revolution, which
is now being reprinted by Mid-Atlantic Publishing, and AK Press of
 Scotland (UK) will also print a longer version of these pamphlets along
with contemporary essays sometime in 1994. Kom"boa is also planning a
revolutionary Black Anarchist newspaper to make its appearance in the
Spring of 1994. 

Now 46 years old, he says he has devoted his entire life to the struggle ,
but says he will continue to resist oppression by working to build a mass
movement for revolutionary social change, based on Anarchist principles,
as well as working on behalf of the political prisoners in North America's
jails and prisons. 





