Women in Prison:
How It Is With Us
We sit in
the bull pen. We are all black. All restless. And we are all freezing.
When we ask, the matron tells us that the heating system cannot
be adjusted. All of us, with the exception of a woman, tall and
gaunt, who looks naked and ravished, have refused the bologna
sandwiches. The rest of us sit drinking bitter, syrupy tea. The
tall, fortyish woman, with sloping shoulders, moves her head back
and forth to the beat of a private tune while she takes small,
tentative bites out a bologna sandwich. Someone asks her what
she’s in for. Matter of factly, she says, “They say I killed some
nigga. But how could I have when I’m buried down in South Carolina?”
Everybody’s face gets busy exchanging looks. A short, stout young
woman wearing men’s pants and men’s shoes says, “Buried in South
Carolina?” “Yeah,” says the tall woman. “South Carolina, that’s
where I’m buried. You don’t know that? You don’t know shit, do
you? This ain’t me. This ain’t me.” She kept repeating, “This
ain’t me” until she had eaten all the bologna sandwiches. Then
she brushed off the crumbs and withdrew, head moving again, back
into that world where only she could hear her private tune.
Lucille comes to my tier to ask me how much time a “C” felony
conviction carries. I know, but i cannot say the words. I tell
her i will look it up and bring the sentence charts for her to
see. I know that she has just been convicted of manslaughter in
the second degree. I also know that she can be sentenced up to
fifteen years. I knew from what she had told me before that the
District Attorney was willing to plea bargain: Five years probation
in exchange for a guilty pleař a lesser charge.
Her lawyer felt that she had a case: specifically, medical records
which would prove that she had suffered repeated physical injunes
as the result of beatings by the deceased and, as a result of
those beatings, on the night of her arrest her arm was mutilated
(she must still wear a brace on it) and one of her ears was partially
severed in addition to other substantial injunes Her lawyer felt
that her testimony, when she took the stand in her own defense,
would establish the fact that not only had she been repeatedly
beaten by the deceased, but that on the night in question he told
her he would kill her, viciously beat her and mauled her with
a knife. But there is no self defense in the state of New York.
The District Attorney made a big deal of the fact that she drank.
And the jury, affected by t.v. racism, “law and order”, petrified
by crime and unimpressed with Lucille as a “responsible citizen,”
convicted her. And i was the one who had to tell her that she
was facing fifteen years in prison while we both silently wondered
what would happen to the four teenage children that she had raised
almost single-handedly.
Spikey has short time, and it is evident, the day before she is
to be released, that she does not want to go home. She comes to
the Bing (Administrative Segregation) because she has received
an infraction for fighting. Sitting in front of her cage and talking
to her i realize that the fight was a desperate, last ditch effort
in hope that the prison would take away her “good days.” She is
in her late thirties. Her hands are swollen. Enormous. There are
huge, open sores on her legs. She has about ten teeth left. And
her entire body is scarred and ashen. She has been on drugs about
twenty years. Her veins have collapsed. She has fibrosis epilepsy
and edema. She has not seen her three children in about eight
years. She is ashamed to contact home because she robbed and abused
her mother so many times.
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When we talk it is around the Christmas holidays and she tells
me about her bad luck. She tells me that she has spent the last
four Christmases in jail and tells me how happy she is to be going
home. But i know that she has no where to go and that the only
“friends” she has in the world are here in jail. She tells me
that the only regret she has about leaving is that she won’t be
singing in the choir at Christmas. As i talk to her i wonder if
she will be back. I tell her good bye and wish her luck. Six days
later, through the prison grapevine, i hear that she is back.
Just in time for the Christmas show.
We are at sick call. We are waiting on wooden benches in a beige
and orange room to see the doctor. Two young women who look only
mildly battered by life sit wearing pastel dresses and pointy-toed
state shoes. (Wearing “state” is often a sign that the wearer
probably cannot afford to buy sneakers in commissary.) The two
are talking about how well they were doing on the street. Eavesdropping,
i find out that they both have fine “old men” that love the mess
out of them. I find out that their men dress fly and wear some
baad clothes and so do they. One has 40 pairs of shoes while the
other has 100 skirts. One has 2 suede and 5 leather coats. The
other has 7 suedes and 3 leathers. One has 3 mink coats, a silver
fox and a leopard. The other has 2 minks, a fox jacket, a floor
length fox and a chinchilla. One has 4 diamond rings and the other
has 5. One lives in a duplex with a sunken tub and a sunken living
room with a water fall. The other describes a mansion with a revolving
living room. I’m relieved when my name is called. I had been sitting
there feeling very, very sad.
There are no criminals here at Riker’s Island Correctional Institution
for Women, (New York), only victims. Most of the women (over 95%)
are black and Puerto Rican. Many were abused children. Most have
been abused by men and all have been abused by “the system.”
There are no big time gangsters here, no premeditated mass murderers,
no godmothers. There are no big time dope dealers, no kidnappers,
no Watergate women. There are virtually no women here charged
with white collar crimes like embezzling or fraud. Most of the
women have drug related cases. Many are charged as accessories
to crimes committed by men. The major crimes that women here are
charged with are prostitution, pick-pocketing, shop lifting, robbery
and drugs. Women who have prostitution cases or who are doing
“fine” time make up a substantial part of the short term population.
The women see stealing or hustling as necessary for the survival
of themselves or their children because jobs are scarce and welfare
is impossible to live on. One thing is clear: amerikan capitalism
is in no way threatened by the women in prison on Riker’s Island.
One gets the impression, when first coming to Riker’s Island that
the architects conceived of it as a prison modelled after a juvenile
center. In the areas where visitors usually pass there is plenty
of glass and plenty of plants and flowers. The cell blocks consist
of two long corridors with cells on each side connected by a watch
room where the guards are stationed, called a bubble. Each corridor
has a day room with a t.v., tables, multi-colored chairs, a stove
that doesn’t work and a refrigerator. There’s a utility room with
a sink and a washer and dryer that do not work.
Instead of bars the cells have doors which are painted bright,
optimistic colors with slim glass observation panels. The doors
are controlled electronically by the guards in the bubble. The
cells are called rooms by everybody. They are furnished with a
cot, a closet, a desk, a chair, a plastic upholstered headboard
that opens for storage, a small book case, a mirror, a sink and
a toilet. The prison distributes brightly colored bedspreads and
throw rugs for a homey effect. There is a school area, a gym,
a carpeted auditorium, two inmate cafeterias and outside recreation
areas that are used during the summer months only.
The guards have successfully convinced most of the women that
Riker’s Island is a country club. They say that it is a playhouse
compared to some other prisons (especially male): a statement
whose partial veracity is not predicated upon the humanity of
correction officials at Riker’s Island, but, rather, by contrast
to the unbelievably barbaric conditions of other prisons. Many
women are convinced that they are, somehow, “getting over.” Some
go so far as to reason that because they are not doing hard time,
they are i really in prison.
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This image is further reinforced the pseudo-motherly attitude
many of the guards; a deception which all too often successfully
reverts women children. The guards call the women inmates by their
first names. The women address the guards either as Officer, Mis
--- or by nicknames, (Teddy Bear, Spanky, Aunt Louise, Squeeze,
Sarge, Black Beauty, Nutty Mahogany, etc.). Frequently, when a
woman returns to Riker’s she will make the rounds, gleefully embracing
her favorite guard: the prodigal daughter returns.
If two women are having a debate about any given topic the argument
will often be resolved by “asking the officer.” The guards are
forever telling the women to “grow up,” to “act like ladies,”
to “behave” and to be “good girls.” If an inmate is breaking some
minor rule like coming to say “hi” to her friend on another floor
or locking in a few minutes late, a guard will say, jokingly,
“don’t let me have to come down there and beat your butt.” It
is not unusual to hear a guard tell a woman, “what you need is
a good spanking.” The tone is often motherly, “didn’t I tell you,
young lady, to…”; or, “you know better than that”; or, “that’s
a good girl.” And the women respond accordingly. Some guards and
inmates “play” together. One officer’s favorite “game” is taking
off her belt and chasing her “girls” down the hall with it, smacking
them on the butt.
But beneath the motherly veneer, the reality of guard life is
every present. Most of the guards are black, usually from working
class, upward bound, civil service oriented backgrounds. They
identify with the middle class, have middle class values and are
extremely materialistic. They are not the most intelligent women
in the world and many are extremely limited.
Most are aware that there is no justice in the amerikan judicial
system and that blacks and Puerto Ricans are discriminated against
in every facet of amerikan life. But, at the same time, they are
convinced that the system is somehow “lenient.” To them, the women
in prison are “losers” who don’t have enough sense to stay out
of jail. Most believe in the boot strap theory - anybody can “make
it” if they try hard enough. They congratulate themselves on their
great accomplishments. In contrast to themselves they see the
inmate as ignorant, uncultured, self-destructive, weak-minded
and stupid. They ignore the fact that their dubious accomplishments
are not based on superior intelligence or effort, but only on
chance and a civil service list.
Many guards hate and feel trapped by their jobs. The guard is
exposed to a certam amount of abuse from co-workers, from the
brass as well as from inmates, ass kissing, robotizing and mandatory
overtime. (It is common practice for guards to work a double shift
at least once a week.) But no matter how much they hate the military
structure, the infighting, the ugliness of their tasks, they are
very aware of how close they are to the welfare lines. If they
were not working as guards most would be underpaid or unemployed.
Many would miss the feeling of superiority and power as much as
they would miss the money, especially the cruel, sadistic ones.
The guards are usually defensive about their jobs and indicate
by their behavior that they are not at all free from guilt. They
repeatedly, compulsively say, as if to convince themselves, “This
is a job just like any other job.” The more they say it the more
preposterous it seems.
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The major topic of conversation here is drugs. Eighty percent
of inmates have used drugs when they were in the street. Getting
high is usually the first thing a woman says she’s going to do
when she gets out. In prison, as on the streets, an escapist culture
prevails. At least 50 percent of the prison population take some
form of psychotropic drug. Elaborate schemes to obtain contraband
drugs are always in the works.
Days are spent in pleasant distractions: soap operas, prison love
affairs, card playing and game playing. A tiny minority are seriously
involved in academic pursuits or the learning of skills. An even
smaller minority attempt to study available law books. There are
no jail house lawyers and most of the women lack knowledge of
even the most rudimentary legal procedures. When asked what happened
in court, or, what their lawyers said, they either don’t know
or don’t remember. Feeling totally helpless and totally railroaded
a woman will curse out her lawyer or the judge with little knowledge
of what is being done or of what should be done. Most plead guilty,
whether they are guilty or not. The few who do go to trial usually
have lawyers appointed by the state and usually are convicted.
Here, the word lesbian seldom, if ever, is mentioned. Most, if
not all, of the homosexual relationships here involve role playing.
The majority of relationships are either asexual or semi-sexual.
The absence of sexual consummation is only partially explained
by prison prohibition against any kind of sexual behavior. Basically
the women are not looking for sex. They are looking for love,
for concern and companionship. For relief from the overwhelming
sense of isolation and solitude that pervades each of us.
Women who are “aggressive” or who play the masculine roles are
referred to as butches, bulldaggers or stud broads. They are always
in demand because they are always in the minority. Women who are
“passive,” or who play feminine roles are referred to as fems.
The butch-fem relationships are often oppressive, resembling the
most oppressive, exploitative aspect of a sexist society. It is
typical to hear butches threatening fems with physical violence
and it is not uncommon for butches to actually beat their “women.”
Some butches consider themselves pimps and go with the women who
have the most commissary, the most contraband or the best outside
connections. They feel they are a class above ordinary women which
entitles them to “respect.” They dictate to fems what they are
to do and many insist the fems wash, iron, sew and clean their
cells for them. A butch will refer to another butch as “man.”
A butch who is well liked is known as “one of the fellas” by her
peers.
Once in prison changes in roles are common. Many women who are
strictly heterosexual in the street become butch in prison. “Fems”
often create butches by convincing an inmate that she would make
a “cute butch.” About 80 percent of the prison population engage
in some form of homosexual relationship. Almost all follow negative,
stereotypic male/ female role models.
There is no connection between the women’s movement and lesbianism.
Most of the women at Riker’s Island have no idea what feminism
is, let alone lesbianism. Feminism, the women’s liberation movement
and the gay liberation movement are worlds away from women at
Riker’s.
The black liberation struggle is equally removed from the lives
of women at Riker’s. While they verbalize acute recognition that
amerika is a racist country where the poor are treated like dirt
they, nevertheless, feel responsible for the filth of their lives.
The air at Riker’s is permeated with self-hatred. Many women bear
marks on their arms, legs and wrists from suicide attempts or
self-mutilation. They speak about themselves in self-deprecating
terms. They consider themselves failures.
While most women contend that whitey is responsible for their
oppression they do not examine the cause or source of that oppression.
There is no sense of class struggle. They have no sense of communism,
no definition of it, but they consider it a bad thing. They do
not want to destroy Rockefella. They want to be like him. Nicky
Barnes, a major dope seller, is discussed with reverence. When
he was convicted practically everyone was sad. Many gave speeches
about how kind, smart and generous he was; no one spoke about
the sale of drugs to our children.
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Politicians are considered liars and crooks. The police are hated.
Yet, during cop and robber movies, some cheer loudly for the cops.
One woman pasted photographs of Farrah Fawcett Majors all over
her cell because she “is a baad police bitch.” Kojak and Barretta
get their share of admiration.
A striking difference between women and men prisoners at Riker’s
Island is the absence of revolutionary rhetoric among the women.
We have no study groups. We have no revolutionary literature around.
There are no groups of militants attempting to “get their heads
together.” The women at Riker’s seem vaguely aware of what a revolution
is but generally regard it as an impossible dream. Not at all
practical.
While men in prison struggle to maintain their manhood there is
no comparable struggle by women to preserve their womanhood. One
frequently hears women say, “Put a bunch of bitches together and
you’ve got nothin but trouble”; and, “Women don’t stick together,
that’s why we don’t have nothin.” Men prisoners constantly refer
to each other as brother. Women prisoners rarely refer to each
other as sister. Instead, “bitch” and “whore” are the common terms
of reference. Women, however, are much kinder to each other than
men, and any form of violence other than a fist fight is virtually
unknown. Rape, murder and stabbings at the women’s prison are
non-existent.
For many, prison is not that much different from the street. It
is, for some, a place to rest and recuperate. For the prostitute
prison is a vacation from turning tricks in the rain and snow.
A vacation from brutal pimps. Prison for the addict is a place
to get clean, get medical work done and gain weight. Often, when
the habit becomes too expensive, the addict gets herself busted,
(usually subconsciously) so she can get back in shape, leave with
a clean system ready to start all over again. One woman claims
that for a month or two every year she either goes jail or to
the crazy house to get away from her husband.
For many the cells are not much differt from the tenements, the
shooting galleries and the welfare hotels they live in on the
street. Sick call is no different from the clinic or the hospital
emergency room. The fights are the same except they are less dangerous.
The police are the same. The poverty is the same. The alienation
is the same. The racism is the same. The sexism is the same. The
drugs are the same and the system is the same. Riker’s and is
just another institution. In childhood school was their prison,
or youth houses or reform schools or children shelters or foster
homes or mental hospitals or drug programs and they see all institutions
as indifferent to their needs, yet necessary to their survival.
The women at Riker’s Island come there from places like Harlem,
Brownsville, Bedford-Stuyvesant, South Bronx and South Jamaica.
They come from places where dreams have been abandoned like the
buildings. Where there is no more sense of community. Where neighborhoods
are transient. Where isolated people run from one fire trap to
another. The cities have removed us from our strengths, from our
roots, from our traditions. They have taken away our gardens and
our sweet potato pies and given us McDonald’s. They have become
our prisons, locking us into the futility and decay of pissy hallways
that lead nowhere. They have alienated us from each other and
made us fear each other. They have given us dope and television
as a culture.
There are no politicians to trust. No roads to follow. No popular
progressive culture to relate to. There are no new deals, no more
promises of golden streets and no place else to migrate. My sisters
in the streets, like my sisters at Riker’s Island, see no way
out. “Where can I go?”, said a woman on the day she was going
home. “If there’s nothing to believe in,” she said, “I can’t do
nothin except try to find cloud nine.”
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What of our Past? What of our History? What of our Future?
I can imagine the pain and the strength of my great great grandmothers
who were slaves and my great great grandmothers who were Cherokee
Indians trapped on reservations. I remembered my great grandmother
who walked every where rather than sit in the back of the bus.
I think about North Carolina and my home town and i remember the
women of my grandmother’s generation: strong, fierce women who
could stop you with a look out the corners of their eyes. Women
who walked with majesty; who could wring a chicken’s neck and
scale a fish. Who could pick cotton, plant a garden and sew without
a pattern. Women who boiled clothes white in big black cauldrons
and who hummed work songs and lullabys. Women who visited the
elderly, made soup for the sick and shortnin bread for the babies.
Women who delivered babies, searched for healing roots and brewed
medicines. Women who darned sox and chopped wood and layed bricks.
Women who could swim rivers and shoot the head off a snake. Women
who took passionate responsibility for their children and for
their neighbors’ children too.
The women in my grandmother’s generation made giving an art form.
“Here, gal, take this pot of collards to Sister Sue”; “Take this
bag of pecans to school for the teacher”; “Stay here while I go
tend Mister Johnson’s leg.” Every child in the neighborhood ate
in their kitchens. They called each other sister because of feeling
rather than as the result of a movement. They supported each other
through the lean times, sharing the little they had.
The women of my grandmother’s generation in my home town trained
their daughters for womanhood. They taught them to give respect
and to demand respect. They taught their daughters how to churn
butter; how to use elbow grease. They taught their daughters to
respect the strength of their bodies, to lift boulders and how
to kill a hog; what to do for colic, how to break a fever and
how to make a poultice, patchwork quilts, plait hair and how to
hum and sing. They taught their daughters to take care, to take
charge and to take responsibility. They would not tolerate a “lazy
heifer” or a “gal with her head in the clouds.” Their daughters
had to learn how to get their lessons, how to survive, how to
be strong. The women of my grandmother’s generation were the glue
that held family and the community together. They were the backbone
of the church. And of the school. They regarded outside institutions
with dislike and distrust. They were determined that their children
should survive and they were committed to a better future.
I think about my sisters in the movement. I remember the days
when, draped in African garb, we rejected our foremothers and
ourselves as castrators. We did penance for robbing the brother
of his manhood, as if we were the oppressor. I remember the days
of the Panther Party when we were “moderately liberated.” When
we were allowed to wear pants and expected to pick up the gun.
The days when we gave doe-eyed looks to our leaders The days when
we worked like dogs and struggled desperately for the respect
which they struggled desperately not to give us. I remember the
black history classes that did mention women and the posters of
our “leaders” where women were conspicuously absent We visited
our sisters who bore the complete responsibility of the children
while the Brotha was doing his thing. Or had moved on to bigger
and better things. I
Most of us rejected the white women’s movement. Miss ann was still
Miss ann to us whether she burned her bras or not. We could not
muster sympathy for the fact that she was trapped in her mansion
and oppressed by her husband. We were, and still are, in a much
more terrible jail. We knew that our experiences as black women
were completely different from those of our sisters in the white
women’s movement. And we had no desire to sit in some consciousness
raising group with white women and bare our souls.
Women can never be free in a country that is not free. We can
never be liberated in a country where the institutions that control
our lives are oppressive. We can never be free while our men are
oppressed. Or while the amerikan government and amerikan capitalism
remain intact.
But it is imperative to our struggle that we build a strong black
women’s movement. It is imperative that we, as black women, talk
about the experiences that shaped us; that we assess our strengths
and weaknesses and define our own history. It is imperative that
we discuss positive ways to teach and socialize our children.
The poison and pollution of capitalist cities is choking us. We
need the strong medicine of our foremothers to make us well again.
We need their medicines to give us strength to fight and the drive
to win. Under the guidance of Harriet Tubman and Fannie Lou Hamer
and all of our foremothers, let us rebuild a sense of community.
Let us rebuild the culture of giving and carry on the tradition
of fierce determination to move on closer to freedom.
Assata Shakur / Joanne Chesimard
published in The Black Scholar, April 1978