Freedom Fighter

My Life as a Soldier in the Black Liberation Army

Sekou Odinga, asha bandele

EPUB
ca. 27,99 (Lieferbar ab 06. Oktober 2026)

The New Press img Link Publisher

Sachbuch / Biographien, Autobiographien

Beschreibung

A memoir of a man and a movement, here is a defining and never-before-shared contribution to the story of Black Power

Freedom Fighter is the searing, urgent story of an elder statesman of Black political activism—whose story has never been fully told until now.

A recently freed political prisoner who served a thirty-three-year sentence, Sekou Odinga is the co-founder of the New York Black Panther Party chapter and the person responsible for liberating fellow Black revolutionary Assata Shakur from prison in 1973, allowing her to escape to Cuba—where she still lives.

Written in collaboration with celebrated author asha bandele, Freedom Fighter explores Odinga’s political awakening, his years in struggle as a member of the Black Panther Party in the United States and Algeria, his role in the Black Liberation Army, and his decade living underground as a soldier fighting to end America’s war against Black people—before his capture, torture, and imprisonment by the U.S. government. Odinga’s story excavates some of the most important Black-led organizing and political strategies of our lifetime, which laid the foundation for radical Black organizing, advocacy, and culture for decades to come.

For listeners of the Mother Country Radicals podcast and readers of Albert Woodfox’s National Book Award finalist Solitary, this biography of a man and a movement is required reading for all who seek to truly understand the modern age of Black struggle.

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Schlagwörter

radical movements, cointelpro, Marilyn Buck, Black liberation, Brinks, Eldridge Cleaver, Solitary confinement, prison, torture of prisoners, Black liberation army, criminal justice, parole, jail, Cuba, movement building, Sekou Odinga, political prisoners, Black resistance, political exile, Black lives matter, Black power movement, Black power, Huey Newton, expropriations, Black Panthers, prison escape, Assata Shakur, activism, police violence