Love and Struggle: My Life in SDS, the Weather Underground, and Beyond
Love and Struggle: My Life in SDS, the Weather Underground, and Beyond, by political prisoner David Gilbert

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Black August

Marilyn Buck

Would you hang on a cliff's edge
sword-sharp, slashing fingers
while jackboot screws stomp heels
on peeled-flesh bones
and laugh
     "let go! die, damn you, die!"
could you hang on
20 years, 30 years?

20 years, 30 years and more
brave Black brothers buried
in US koncentration kamps
they hang on
Black light shining in torture chambers
     Ruchell, Yogi, Sundiata, Sekou,
     Warren, Chip, Seth, Herman, Jalil,
and more and more
they resist: Black August

Nat Turner insurrection chief executed: Black August
Jonathan, George dead in battle's light: Black August
Fred Hampton, Black Panthers, African Brotherhood murdered: Black August
Kuwasi Balagoon, Nuh Abdul Quyyam captured warriors dead: Black August
Harriet Tubman, Sojourner Truth, Ella Baker, Ida B. Wells
Queen Mother Moore – their last breaths drawn fighting death: Black August

Black August: watchword
for Black liberation for human liberation
sword to sever the shackles

light to lead children of every nation to safety
Black August remembrance
resist the amerikkan nightmare
for life


Marilyn Buck was an Anti-Imperialist political prisoner, who spent 25 years in prison for her anti-imperialist actions carried out in support of national liberation, women's liberation, social and economic justice. In 1985 she was captured and and faced 4 separate court trials. She was charged with conspiracy to support and free PP/POWs and to support the New Afrikan Independence struggle through expropriations. In 1988 she was indicted for conspiracy to protest and alter government policies through use of violence against government and military buildings and received an additional 10 years for conspiracy to bomb the Capitol. While in prison she developed uterine cancer, which resisted treatment. Seriously ill, she was released on July 15, 2010. She died a couple of weeks later, on August 3. This poem is also read by writer/artist Staajabu on Marilyn's poetry CD Wild Poppies, produced in 2004 by Freedom Archives and available from leftwingbooks.net - click here for more details.