Description
I’m in a tomb for the living, locked in a box.
My clothes are all white except my gray socks.
It’s 95° or so I hear; it’s 120° plus inside here.
Cruel but usual to say the least,
I’m only a number, not a man,
So I’m treated like a beast.
I want to send this message to the streets–
To young homies on the front lines bust’n the heat,
To my little sister half-dressed, working the streets,
Open ya eyes — ya peep.
The pigs on our corners are trying to creep and put us all to sleep.
I hope you hear my voice from afar.
Heed this warning from a Prisoner of WAR.
The war on crime, the war on drugs, are wars on US.
What I mean by US?
Lumpen-proletariat, look these words up!
Socialism, capitalism – you need to know the difference.
We want freedom, we want Power; that’s our mission.
Free all KKKaptives; I’m talking prison abolition.
Did I mention the set up?
The conspiracy to lock us all up–
Shackled, isolated, deranged and chained.
This is the reality of the criminal a.k.a. the new slave.
Am I telling you to behave?
I’m not telling you to behave.
Instead, no, redirect your rage.
Adjust your vision and join the mission.
Class society is a society of Prisons inside of Prisons–
Those caged and those without.
There’s much injustice in the imperial world.
I could go on forever and I’ll still be here.
I’m sentenced to forever, so, as you read this, I’ll still be here.
I’m incapable of redemption or transformation, or so I hear.
If you ever come here, you’ll see me in my all white gear,
Buried alive in the tomb for the living.
I want to see my fatherless children.
Locked in a box, all white except my gray socks,
Envisioning a world without locks — I’ll set my keys afar.
I never thought I would be a Prisoner of War.
In the USA is there such a thing?
They haven’t heard millions of KKKaptives scream.
Listen to millions of poor KKKaptives scream.
This is a message to the streets.
Where I sleep, there is no Peace.
Prison is daily sorrow, bloodshed and fear–
Prisoners of War fighting for our lives in here.
All Power to the People!
[Author’s note: The above poem is dedicated to all POWs in occupied Turtle Island, USA]
Monsour Owolabi
Monsour is an incarcerated writer in Houston, Texas. He spent a combined total of eight years in solitary confinement. His work is part of a collection of work aggregated by Zo Media Productions and edited for publication by Stony Brook University Humanities Department staff and students.
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