{"title":"Radical Spirituality: A Conversation with Ramona Africa from MOVE","authors":"Jack Taylor, M. Shipley","doi":"10.14321/JSTUDRADI.11.2.0183","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"R amona Africa remains an active and vocal member of MOVE, a family of strong, serious, and deeply committed revolutionaries that was created and organized by John Africa in 1972. A predominantly African American interracial coalition of activists makes up MOVE’s constituents. As this interview demonstrates, MOVE was concerned not only with the black liberation struggle but also with animal and environmental rights, economic justice, and police brutality. MOVE centers their political and spiritual philosophy on “Life”—the force behind all living and sentient beings. In 1985, concerned with MOVE’s revolutionary activities, police bombed the communal house MOVE shared. One of the two survivors of the shooting and bombing, Ramona Africa, continues to advance the causes of the MOVE organization while also seeking freedom for the MOVE 9, members of MOVE imprisoned since 8 August 1978. In this interview, Morgan Shipley, Jack Taylor, and Ramona Africa discuss, among other things, the importance of life for MOVE’s political philosophy, the organization’s relationship with the broad counterculture of the 1960s (topics range from the Black Panther Party to the hippies), and their concern for animal and environmental justice. To quote from her essay “Long Live John Africa!”: “You can only be a revolutionary if you understand and believe in the principle of freedom, not in categories but the totality of the principle of freedom . . . JACK TAYLOR AND MORGAN SHIPLEY","PeriodicalId":39186,"journal":{"name":"Journal of the Study of Radicalism","volume":"11 1","pages":"183 - 199"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2017-09-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of the Study of Radicalism","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.14321/JSTUDRADI.11.2.0183","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"Arts and Humanities","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2
Abstract
R amona Africa remains an active and vocal member of MOVE, a family of strong, serious, and deeply committed revolutionaries that was created and organized by John Africa in 1972. A predominantly African American interracial coalition of activists makes up MOVE’s constituents. As this interview demonstrates, MOVE was concerned not only with the black liberation struggle but also with animal and environmental rights, economic justice, and police brutality. MOVE centers their political and spiritual philosophy on “Life”—the force behind all living and sentient beings. In 1985, concerned with MOVE’s revolutionary activities, police bombed the communal house MOVE shared. One of the two survivors of the shooting and bombing, Ramona Africa, continues to advance the causes of the MOVE organization while also seeking freedom for the MOVE 9, members of MOVE imprisoned since 8 August 1978. In this interview, Morgan Shipley, Jack Taylor, and Ramona Africa discuss, among other things, the importance of life for MOVE’s political philosophy, the organization’s relationship with the broad counterculture of the 1960s (topics range from the Black Panther Party to the hippies), and their concern for animal and environmental justice. To quote from her essay “Long Live John Africa!”: “You can only be a revolutionary if you understand and believe in the principle of freedom, not in categories but the totality of the principle of freedom . . . JACK TAYLOR AND MORGAN SHIPLEY
R amona Africa仍然是MOVE的活跃成员,MOVE是由John Africa于1972年创建和组织的一个由坚强、严肃和坚定的革命者组成的家庭。一个主要由非裔美国人组成的跨种族活动家联盟构成了MOVE的选民。正如这次采访所表明的那样,MOVE不仅关注黑人解放斗争,还关注动物和环境权利、经济正义和警察暴行。他们的政治和精神哲学以“生命”为中心——生命是一切生物和众生背后的力量。1985年,出于对MOVE的革命活动的关注,警察轰炸了MOVE的公共住宅。枪击和爆炸事件的两名幸存者之一拉蒙娜·阿非利加继续推进“移徙运动”组织的事业,同时也为自1978年8月8日以来被监禁的“移徙运动”成员寻求自由。在这次采访中,Morgan Shipley, Jack Taylor和Ramona Africa讨论了生命对于MOVE政治哲学的重要性,该组织与20世纪60年代广泛的反主流文化(主题范围从黑豹党到嬉皮士)的关系,以及他们对动物和环境正义的关注。引用她的文章《非洲约翰万岁!》“只有当你理解并相信自由的原则,而不是范畴,而是自由原则的整体,你才能成为一名革命者……”杰克·泰勒和摩根·希普利