UFD
stands for the Ujamaa Field Dynasty. This article describes more of what
it’s all about. MIM(Prisons) solicited contributions for this Peace
Issue of ULK from many comrades both in prison and out. We are
aware of many efforts to make peace and take on the real
correctional tasks that none of the capitalist run “DOC”s seem
capable of or interested in. UFD stands out among these projects as it
is explicitly part of the anti-imperialist United Front. This is so
important, because ultimately we know there can be no peace without an
end to oppression and injustice. We also know that capitalism only
benefits the worlds minority, most of whom live in the imperialist
countries. All the job training programs in the world can’t change the
fact that capitalism requires a concentration of capital that sucks
every resource it can from the majority of the world.
Q. How would you describe UFD, what is its purpose?
A. I describe UFD as it states in our code, “…a counter-gang of
ex-gangbangers, ex-hustlers, ex-prisoners and prisoners, and youth
committed to collectively raising up each other to become conscious and
prosperous New Afrikans.” Our purpose is stated in our mission, “[t]o
serve as a positive and constructive alternative to gangs street and
prison life, especially for our youth, who we focus on bringing into our
movement through UFD, and to build a brotherhood and sisterhood through
which our ndugu can improve themselves and their circumstances while
making a better life for themselves and their families.”
Q. How does UFD relate to lumpen organizations (LOs), commonly
known as gangs, and how do these LOs relate to UFD considering that
UFD’s purpose seems to seek to undermine them?
A. Look, UFD isn’t in competition with any LO. Unlike some of them who
fall victim to the divide and conquer tactics of the Establishment, we
don’t view other oppressed people as enemies just because they rock
different colors. Plus, we have a law that states, “Avoid conflicts with
others and dead beef: before they get physical…” For the most part, the
LOs our ndugu are around have been cool toward us. We don’t actively try
to recruit their members, but nor do we hide our purpose. Those who
choose us, we accept them. Those who don’t, we work to teach and help
them.
Q. But part of your code says “UFD is devoted to leading others
away from gang …life…” Don’t you think certain elements within an LO may
take that as meaning you’re after their members?
A. Maybe, if they don’t understand our meaning. To lead one away from
gang life doesn’t have to mean we seek to coax them out of their
affiliation. By UFD doing right, we set an example for the LOs to follow
as a whole. If our only means to lead one away from gang life is to get
them to leave their affiliation, then we’re ignoring our greater purpose
– to serve the people. As much as we disagree with some of the bullshit
LOs get caught up in, they’re still oppressed like us.
Q. What efforts can UFD make to bring peace between
LOs?
A. Once we’ve established ourselves as a positive and constructive force
here to stay, and ourselves avoid the trap of warring with LOs, we’ll
garner a certain respect in the prisons and on the streets. At that time
we can counsel LOs to consider the damage they do to themselves by
warring among themselves. Through UFD’s success, we get to show them
their potential strength in doing better.
Q. Do you honestly think it’s possible they’ll hear
you?
A. UFD takes political direction from the New Afrikan Maoist Party being
that the Party politically leads the New Afrikan Liberation Movement.
Our parent organization, the New Afrikan Ujamaa Dynasty, is a part of
this movement. We tend to agree with the Party’s assessment that, until
there is a revolutionary change within urban subculture that is
dominated by the colonial/criminal mentality of which George Jackson
spoke, LOs will themselves not fundamentally change. But UFD can play a
significant role in decreasing the conflict between LOs by first being a
good example and second, by educating those who’ll listen to us.
Q. When will that revolutionary change take place?
A. Hard to say, UFD is poised to lend its hand when the time is upon us.
For now we’ve focused on doing all we can to help our ndugu change and
better themselves and do what they can to uplift their families which in
turn empowers our communities.
Q. How can interested youth join up with UFD?
A. Either by hollering at one of our ndugu authorized to bring them home
or by contacting our executive assistant Taraji Vuma at New Afrikan
Ujamaa Dynasty, PO Box 40799, San Francisco, CA 94140.
Q. How does UFD deal with the repression of its incarcerated
members?
A. NYSDOCS [New York State Department of Correctional Services] has
charged a couple of our ndugu with possessing unauthorized
organizational materials. This is bullshit because UFD isn’t an
unauthorized inmate group and the ndugu charged weren’t accused of using
our literature to recruit other inmates to an unauthorized inmate
chapter of UFD. We have a federal lawsuit in against NYSDOCS over this
issue. They’ve been repressing members and supporters of the different
NALM-affiliated organizations like ours since at least 2004.
Q. If UFD isn’t an unauthorized group, then why does NYSDOCS
discipline its members for possessing its literature?
A. Because NYSDOCS is reactionary like any other state bureaucracy. It
seeks to protect its existence. UFD represents more of a threat to
NYSDOCS not because we advocate violence or disobedience (which we
don’t), but because we have the potential to do what NYSDOCS can’t do
effectively: correct the behavior of our incarcerated ndugu. Could you
imagine the public relations nightmare for them? Some obscure, fraternal
group comes along, recruits prisoners in large numbers who actually
reform themselves. Hell no! There are other implications involving the
exposure of corruption and abuse only an organized group can expose. The
less common identity and unity prisoners have, the easier it is to abuse
them and cover it up. Just having a growing number of prisoners who join
an outside organization not subjected to NYSDOCS control, even if its
prison members aren’t organizing among themselves without permission, is
a threat to prisoncrats’ cover-up abilities. So, prisoncrats will do all
in their power to discourage prisoners from joining up.
Q. Would you say this affects the ability to bring peace among
LOs?
A. Definitely. NYSDOCS officially doesn’t recognize gangs. Stupid,
because they exist. Humans are social beings, we clique up for the bad
or good. As steel sharpens steel and people sharpen people, so too
groups sharpen groups. In other words, if you suppress positive and
constructive groups, you destroy the very thing that can encourage
groups on the wrong path to choose a better one. The positive and
constructive groups NYSDOCS does approve are kept so isolated and
ineffectual that they might as well not exist at all.
Q. What message do you stress to your UFD ndugu?
A. Do better, be better, and know better and push and challenge each
other to do the same. The establishment, law enforcement and prison
officials in particular, along with even some regular folks, will call
us a gang just because some of us are ex-lumpens (that is, used-to-be
gang bangers, hustlers, etc.) and some of us are in prison. Many have
come before us claiming how positive they were only to fall right into
the trap of the colonial/criminal mentality. This always seems to
happen. In our case, it CANNOT! Though we must accept the bad with the
good and recognize that none of us can be perfect, we need to be more
good than bad, suppressing the bad at every turn. We need to break old
habits that aren’t productive and learn new habits. If not, we will fail
and become just another group hanging onto a banner, doing nothing
productive, and deceiving ourselves that we rule or are almighty while
under the foot of law enforcement and prisoncrats. This is absurd! And
I’m not prone to embracing too much absurdity, though I fall short, too.
But this is why we’re together. Each one help one! We have a better
chance at succeeding together than alone.
Q. Any final words?
A. Yeah. To my UFDeez, many will doubt you, some will hate you, but we
must earn the respect of all by living up to our ideology and laws. To
do this we must have faith in ourselves, in each other, and in our
leadership. Be strong and resolute. Love the people and they’ll love
you. UFDeez, Dynasty Forever!!