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

Southern Panther Malik Rahim
Ann Garrison, BAR Contributing Editor
14 May 2025
Malik Rahim
Common Ground Founders Sharon Johnson and Malik Rahim, and Occidental College Professor Dr. Caroline Heldman

In “A Southern Panther,” movement elder Malik Rahim talks about his lifetime of battling racism and fighting for peace and environmental justice.

Former Louisiana Panther Malik Rahim first came to national and international attention in the wake of Hurricane Katrina and the flooding of New Orleans. “This is criminal” is his harrowing account of how mostly poor Black people struggled without water, electricity, food, or sanitation, many trapped in the upper floors of flooded buildings waiting for rescue if they hadn’t drowned. Mary Ratcliff, Editor of the San Francisco Bay View Newspaper, managed to reach Rahim on the phone two days after the flood and transcribed it. “There are gangs of white vigilantes near here riding around in pickup trucks, all of them armed,” he said, “and any young Black they see who they figure doesn't belong in their community, they shoot him.”

He also said that most of those struggling during and after the flood had already lost touch with the only community they'd ever known, the only place where they knew everybody, when the Hope VI program, initiated in the early 1990s, demolished public housing units, scattering residents and making way for gentrification.

Shortly after the publication of “This is criminal,” Amy Goodman and Democracy Now! arrived for one of a series of interviews with Malik between 2006 and 2015.

From Vietnam to the Panthers, Katrina and Common Ground

“A Southern Panther: Conversations with Malik Rahim,” a new 56-page e-book from AK Press, is one of their “Legacy Left” series interviewing movement elders about the lessons they want to share with the generations that follow. It’s a collection of interviews conducted primarily by its editor, author, activist and college lecturer James R. Tracy, but also by Malik Ismail of “The Vanguard Show,” a Black Power Media podcast, Jessica Gingrich of the “Many Roads to Here” podcast, and Mansa Musa of “Rattling the Bars” on The Real News Network.

The book begins with Rahim’s rendition of a Malian proverb: “We have a saying in my community that when an elder makes his transition without passing down his life experiences to the next generation, a library has just been burned. I truly believe that those who have lived their lives for peace and environmental justice have a responsibility to make sure that their libraries don’t turn to ashes.”

Rahim traces his family history in New Orleans’ Algiers neighborhood, once known as Freetown, back to a community of Garveyites and Maroons. His own political engagement began during his service in Vietnam, when he realized that he was fighting other people of color dehumanized like Black Americans and universally referred to as “gooks” within the US military. His growing political consciousness earned him a discharge.

He first came into contact with the Black Panther Party in Los Angeles and later became a founding member of the New Orleans chapter, which, like other Panther chapters, organized free breakfasts, literacy classes, containment of the drug trade in public housing, and collective self-defense.

On September 25, 1970, New Orleans and Louisiana State Police famously forced a showdown and exchange of fire with the Panthers headquartered in the Desire Housing Project. “When we had our shootout,” says Rahim, “it was a twenty-minute shoot-in. Because we had over one hundred police with long guns shooting at us. And they shot at us for twenty minutes.”

Police arrested fourteen Panthers, including Rahim, after the  gun battle. The Orleans Parish DA then charged them with the attempted murder of five policemen, for which they faced up to twenty years in prison.

Their lawyer argued that the Panthers had fired in self-defense, and they were acquitted by a jury of 10 Black men and two white men.

After their release, the community helped them set up a new headquarters in an abandoned building adjacent to the Desire Project, and the next time the police arrived, they came out to surround the building and prevent them from entering. Later the police came in dressed as priests, on Thanksgiving morning, and raided the office, but the community defense remains a powerful example of what people united can do. 

Another of Rahim’s central organizing efforts was the movement to free the Angola 3, Robert Woodfox, Herman Wallace, and Robert King, all three of whom had joined the Black Panther Party in prison and were then unjustly convicted of murdering a prison guard. They were sentenced to life in prison, most of which was spent in solitary confinement. Woodfox and King were released after decades in Angola Prison, and Herman Wallace died of cancer just three days after his release. Their struggle and that of the movement to free them continues to inspire prison abolitionist movements to this day. This history is recounted in “Malik Rahim and the Fight for the Angola 3 Interview with Jessica Gingrich.”

Another chapter, “The Politics of Housing in an Illiberal City,” is devoted to Rahim’s defense of public housing residents in the 1990s, when Bill Clinton initiated the Hope VI Project that demolished public housing all over the country, often leaving people, most of whom were Black, with nowhere to go. Rahim has said that Hope VI was the worst tragedy he saw his community suffer before Katrina.

Malik is best known for founding the Common Ground Collective, now known as Common Ground Relief, one of the largest mutual aid organizations in the US,

after Hurricane Katrina, but he traces its roots to the Black Panther Party. “I want to say that it wouldn’t have been a Common Ground if it wouldn’t have been for the Angola 3 Support Committee. And it wouldn’t have been Angola 3 Support Committee if it wouldn’t have been the Black Panther Party. I got to go all the way to the roots. Because you never seen a plant flourish without any roots.”

The story of Common Ground’s founding is told in a riveting interview with James R. Tracy about how Rahim and others responded from one day to the next during the hurricane and flood and thereafter.

The collective established health and legal clinics, set up distribution of food and essentials, gutted and restored flooded houses, and attracted thousands of volunteers from across the US. It eventually became Common Ground Relief, a multi-racial, volunteer collective that works to restore the vital wetlands of Southeast Louisiana and protect its coastland to prevent another disaster like Hurricane Katrina. Among its achievements it claims five thousand bottomwood trees planted per year, 65,000 volunteers in wetland restoration, 16,000 plugs of marsh grass planted per year, and 40 million dollars in estimated value of volunteer labor.

In a recent KPFA Radio interview, Rahim [1] [2] noted that Trump had fired the head of the FEMA, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, and vowed to dissolve it, leaving its responsibilities to the states. FEMA was a notorious failure after Katrina, but as Rahim noted on KPFA, the State of Louisiana has never prioritized the safety and well-being of Black people either, so they need to be collectively organized to protect and care for each other.

In the tradition of the Black Panthers, Common Ground also operates a free pantry serving the New Orleans Lower 9th Ward with fresh produce and essential supplies, supporting 90 families weekly and 10,000 individuals annually, while also acting as a disaster relief hub during emergencies.

I highly recommend “A Southern Panther: Conversations with Malik Rahim” as, for one, a fascinating, first- person story told from the front lines, and as a guide for organizers and mutual aid organizations across the US and beyond.

Muldari had Rahim as a guest?!

Kate Raphael was guest hosting.

Ann Garrison is a Black Agenda Report Contributing Editor based in the San Francisco Bay Area. In 2014, she received the Victoire Ingabire Umuhoza Democracy and Peace Prize for her reporting on conflict in the African Great Lakes region. She can be reached at [email protected]. You can help support her work on Patreon.

Black Panther Party
environmental justice
white supremacy

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


Related Stories

Teri Frick
Black People, Palestine, and the Maintenance of Empire
14 May 2025
Black support for Palestine underscores the fight against empire, revealing how Israel’s violence in Gaza serves U.S.
Roberto Sirvent, BAR Book Forum Editor
BAR Book Forum: Brittany Friedman’s Book, “Carceral Apartheid”
07 May 2025
In this series, we ask acclaimed authors to answer five questions about their book.
Editors, The Black Agenda Review
SPEECH: White Supremacy in U.S. History, Theodore W. Allen April 28, 1973
09 April 2025
“The principal aspect of United States capitalist society is not mere
Editors, The Black Agenda Review
LECTURE: A Humanist View, Toni Morrison, 1975
26 March 2025
Toni Morrison on art, archives, knowledge, and the long history of wh
Mark P. Fancher
The Folly of So-Called Foundational Black Americans
26 March 2025
So-called Foundational Black Americans may tell themselves they are noble protectors of ancestral legacy, but they are, in fact, little differe
Editors, The Black Agenda Review
Essay: The Caucasian Problem, George S. Schuyler, 1944
12 March 2025
“While we may dismiss the concept of a Negro problem as a valuable dividend
Jon Jeter
From Bernhard Getz to George Zimmerman to Daniel Penny: Using Vigilantes to Police a Racist Social Order
18 December 2024
The state and vigilante lynchings of Black men and boys in the U.S.
Jon Jeter
The White Settlers’ Bizarre Economic Strategy of Terrorizing Black People
11 December 2024
Jordan Neely's killing and the subsequent acquittal of Daniel Penny can be seen as part of the reactionary existential panic felt by whites whe
NY Panther 21
Dhoruba bin-Wahad
55th Anniversary of the NY Panther 21 Case
03 April 2024
The trial of the New York Panther 21 was the moment in the Black liberation movement that ushered in an era of intensified state repression and
Eddie Conway Tribute
Mali Collins
Eddie Conway Tribute
15 March 2023
The late Eddie Conway was a young member of the Black Panther Party who was framed for the killing of a police officer and spent more than 40 y

More Stories


  • Raymond Nat Turner, BAR poet-in-residence
    Saturday Mornings
    14 May 2025
    "Saturday Mornings" is the latest from BAR's Poet-in-Residence.
  • Moussa Ibrahim
    How Western Churches Hijacked African Christianity—and How It's Fighting Back
    14 May 2025
    The future of the Christian church on the continent depends on the ability to develop an authentic African Christianity, moving away from its westernized forms.
  • Teri Frick
    Black People, Palestine, and the Maintenance of Empire
    14 May 2025
    Black support for Palestine underscores the fight against empire, revealing how Israel’s violence in Gaza serves U.S. hegemony and white supremacy, with Palestinian freedom as a catalyst for global…
  • Hanna Eid
    Whole Process People's Democracy: The Path Forward
    14 May 2025
    Growing socialist and people's democratic projects, like we see in China and Bolivia, must be seen as examples of how revolutionary forces in the United States can be used to build a system of…
  • The Cradle News Desk
    US abandons 'Hamas disarmament' demands in Gaza truce talks: Report
    14 May 2025
    A reported rift between Trump and Netanyahu continues to widen ahead of the US president's first visit to West Asia since regaining power.
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us