Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire
  • omnibus

Letters of Life from Slow Death Row
David Gilbert
18 Nov 2020
🖨️ Print Article
Letters of Life from Slow Death Row
Letters of Life from Slow Death Row

Tiyo Attallah Salah-El’s exemplary life (without parole) is testament
to the human spirit and the cause of abolition.

“We learn a lot about the realities of prison, see a stellar example 
of a wonderfully productive life.”

(OR Books, New York and London). 240 pages. 
E-book version, read by the actor Carl Weathers: 
ISBN 97816821930

This inspiring book consists of a selection of 92 of the 568 letters prisoner Tiyo Attallah Salah-El sent out to Paul Alan Smith over the course of l4 years—and that was just one of Tiyo's  richly engaged correspondences.  In the course of reading it, we learn a lot about the realities of prison, see a stellar example of a wonderfully productive life despite all kinds of obstacles, and feel the passion for social justice.

Tiyo was incarcerated in 1975 in Pennsylvania, where 60% of the prisoners are Black or Latinx.  Pen Pal is not about his case, and we only learn in passing that it involved drugs, guns and murder, and that he is ashamed of the person he was then.  He's sent to SCI-Dallas, a prison built to house 950, but that ends up holding 2,480, and is placed on "slow death row," the unit for 453 lifers, with little or no chance at all for parole.  Pennsylvania holds 5,370 such people.  He remained there until he died in 2018, at the age of 85.  On slow death row Tiyo formed deep friendships with Phil and Delbert Africa, of the revolutionary Black liberation and environmental MOVE organization. Mike Africa, Jr., the son of two other MOVE activists who each did four decades in prison, wrote the touching preface to this book.

“Tiyo remained on slow death row until he died at the age of 85.”

While Pen Pal is not at all an effort to provide a detailed picture of prison life, Tiyo's various references in passing give the readers a better sense of the realities than I've been able to do even with direct descriptions.  We feel life in a 5' by 8' cell, where you never sleep next to a loved one, and the cold before the heat gets turned on on November 1, or the high 90 degrees when the block bakes in July.  There's the censorship, whereby he can't even receive a book on prison abolition that includes one of his essays.  We're reminded of the frequent lock-downs where you're in your cell for the duration, eating peanut butter sandwiches, and hoping that the SWAT team doesn't trash your cell too badly. Tiyo could expect the worst as he was listed as a "political educated trouble maker"; one time the guards searching his cell called him "a smart nigger!"  We read about Tiyo stopping a rape, advocating for gay rights, sitting with a dying prisoner in hospice.  We also get glimpses of the overall brutalities of beatings, suicides, medical neglect.  

In April, 2005, he wrote of 14 deaths during the preceding two months. 

Perhaps the hardest part of prison is not being there for loved ones during trauma or death. Here it’s most vivid with Tiyo’s older sister, Bette, who had always been his champion. Once she had a debilitating stroke, he had no way to even talk with her on the phone, let alone care for her and hold her hand from her illness to her death.  

“He can't even receive a book on prison abolition that includes one of his essays.”

But overall this is not at all a grim book. His letters are laced with a jaunty sense of humor and affection for Paul. And emotional support, as we see a number of times, does not have to be a one-way street;  the prisoner can have something to give too. We see this most poignantly when he writes Paul, "I am hurting deep within the marrow of my bones because I know you are hurting due to the passing away of your father." 

Tiyo's accomplishments from inside that 5' by 8' cell--despite all the lockdowns, prison violence and his health issues, which became increasingly severe as he aged--are nothing short of spectacular.  He earned a B.A. and then a master’s degree; was a jazz musician, not only playing the sax but also writing music and organizing in-prison shows; did effective work as a jailhouse lawyer; had several essays published (he also wrote an autobiography, but for friends to read, not for publication); and was a founder of the Coalition for the Abolition of Prisons (CAP).

The talent and determination that went into those accomplishments are dazzling.  But from these letters we can see that what meant the most to Tiyo was the superb work in prison education.

Only 8% of Dallas-SCI's prisoners had a high school degree or its equivalency (by passing a GED exam).  Tiyo set up a tutorial program, first with four prisoners.  When that was a striking success, he got over a hundred new requests -- this in a program with no official sanction or help, where his outside correspondents provided the funds for school supplies. 

“What meant the most to Tiyo was his superb work in prison education.” 

Tiyo was always conscious of the need to develop new leadership. Once those seeking help surpassed 100, he trained and developed previous graduates to become tutors, putting them in teams of two to lead four or five groups of 20 to 25 students each.  Over the course of four years, 280 men entered the program and 242 got their GEDs. (He later wrote a GED handbook to help those at other prisons to set up similar programs.) Some of his graduates went on to college.  Tiyo also saw a remarkable change like what I noticed in the men I trained to become AIDS educators in the 1980s and 90s:  people feel a lot better about themselves when they find a way to do something worthwhile with and for other people.  The negative ways of proving oneself go way down and the enthusiasm for contributing to the community goes way up.

While the in-prison tutoring program and the outside CAP organization (I would have liked to see an appendix that described its work) may seem to be two very different realms, they're really two halves of the same whole:  when we call for abolition it's because we need to replace the terribly destructive punishment paradigm with the resources and programs that allow the best in people to flourish, that move in the direction of community development, control and self-determination for the oppressed. 

The last words of this review will be Tiyo's, from the very brief excerpt from his autobiography appended to these letters: "...[U]nless major cultural and political changes are made not only in regard to the prison-industrial complex and criminal justice system but also the reconstruction of the social, economic, and political policies for the benefit of all races, genders, sexual preferences, and workers of all kind... the United States is headed towards catastrophe and tragedy."  That 2006 warning is not written in the spirit of defeatism but very much from someone who also says, "I choose to go in the direction of my dreams, and help bring about revolutionary change in the world."

David Gilbert has been incarcerated in New York State since 1981.

COMMENTS?

Please join the conversation on Black Agenda Report's Facebook page at http://facebook.com/blackagendareport

Or, you can comment by emailing us at comments@blackagendareport.com 

Prison Abolition

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


Related Stories

Orisanmi Burton
An open letter to prison officials on the censorship of Tip of the Spear
09 October 2024
Orisanmi Birton's groundbreaking book, Tip of the Spear, has been listed as contraband in prisons across the country, not only preventing incar
Super (Maxed Out): The Demise of Alabama Prisons
Kriston Dowdell
Super (Maxed Out): The Demise of Alabama Prisons
28 June 2023
In Alabama Covid funds are used for prison construction, opportunities for the incarcerated to be released have been eliminated, and viole
Answering to Martin Sostre’s Ghost
Stephen Wilson
Answering to Martin Sostre’s Ghost
01 February 2023
Martin Sostre (1923-2015) was a political prisoner, jailhouse lawyer, and Black anarchist of Puerto Rican descent.
Document: Notes of a Prison Collective: Marion Political Collective, 1976
Editors, The Black Agenda Review
Document: Notes of a Prison Collective: Marion Political Collective, 1976
25 August 2021
In 1976, prisoners in the United States Penitentiary at Marion, Illinois wrote a collective document explaining the status of the prisoner with
Spirit of Self-Emancipation Continues to Rise at the St. Louis City Justice Center
Adofo Minka
Spirit of Self-Emancipation Continues to Rise at the St. Louis City Justice Center
15 April 2021
Like Christ on the third day, detainees in St. Louis jails have risen to challenge state oppression.

More Stories


  • Roberto Sirvent, BAR Book Forum Editor
    BAR Book Forum: Françoise N. Hamlin and Charles W. McKinney, Jr.’s Book, “From Rights to Lives”
    26 Feb 2025
    In this series, we ask acclaimed authors to answer five questions about their book. This week’s featured authors are Françoise N. Hamlin and Charles W. McKinney, Jr.  Dr. Hamlin is Royce Family…
  • Julia Wright
    What Happens When You Cannot Describe What Your Eyes See?
    26 Feb 2025
    State and corporate media control through censorship is intended to have a psychological effect on the masses. The genocide in Palestine reveals the dangers of this depraved effort.…
  • Bruce Dixon
    Another Black Face on MSNBC: Good News For Joy Ann Reid, Not So Much For The Rest of Us
    26 Feb 2025
    If Fox News is the Republican ministry of TV propaganda, MSNBC is the mouthpiece of the White House and corporate Democrats. The last real journalist in an MSNBC host spot was Phil Donahue, fired for…
  • Ryan S.
    Elon Musk and DOGE Slash Funding for Major Black Kansas City Neighborhood Councils
    26 Feb 2025
    Elon Musk & DOGE are targeting one of Kansas City’s most prominent Black-led neighborhood councils—slashing a federal grant and threatening a vital food sovereignty movement.
  • Chuck Squatriglia
    Feds Lend Tesla $465 Million to Build Model S
    26 Feb 2025
    Elon Musk is Donald Trump's right-hand man and viewed as an evil incarnate, but it was Barack Obama's administration which bailed out Tesla with a $465 million loan in 2009. Both wings of the duopoly…
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us