My people are rising Memoir of a Black Panther Party captain

Aaron Floyd Dixon

Book - 2012

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Subjects
Published
Chicago, Ill. : Haymarket Books c2012.
Language
English
Main Author
Aaron Floyd Dixon (-)
Item Description
Includes index
Physical Description
xiv, 345 p. : ill. ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781608461783
  • Foreword
  • Acknowledgments
  • Our Family Journey Begins
  • 1. Ancestors
  • 2. Our Family Journey Begins
  • 3. The Search for Home
  • 4. Rumblings in the South
  • 5. Sticking Together
  • The Tide of the Movement
  • 6. Slow Awakening
  • 7. Stokely Comes to Town
  • 8. The Tide of the Movement
  • 9. The Death of Martin Luther King Jr.
  • 10. The Panther Emerges
  • 11. 7th and Wood-April 1968
  • July 1968, Seattle
  • 12. The Panther Comes to Seattle
  • 13. Huey and the UN
  • 14. July 1968, Seattle
  • 15. The Unromantic Revolution
  • 16. Death in Winter
  • 17. The Purge
  • Cointelpro Is Unleashed
  • 18. COINTELPRO Is Unleashed
  • 19. The Chairman Is Kidnapped
  • 20. The Resurrection of the Seattle Chapter-September 1969
  • 21. The Murder of Fred Hamption
  • 22. Day-to-Day Survival
  • 23. Huey Is Set Free
  • 24. Seattle: Riot 18
  • A Party Divided: The Split
  • 25. A Party Divided: The Split
  • 26. Centralization-March 1972
  • 27. The Campaign-1973
  • 28. The Godfather on Lake Merritt
  • 29. Elaine's Rise to Power
  • 30. The Other Side of the Coin
  • The End of the Line
  • 31. The Death of Deacon
  • 32. Oakland Is Ours
  • 33. Huey's Return
  • 34. The Richmond Incident
  • 35. The End of the Line
  • 36. The Last Hurrah
  • Not Forgotten
  • Appendixes
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Dixon was 19 when, finding himself face-to-face with Bobby Seale in San Francisco in April 1968, he told the Black Panther cofounder, We want a Panther chapter in Seattle. Dixon does a fine job detailing the circumstances of his life that led to that moment and the consequences that would follow from it. The account seems strangely free of any judgment the 63-year-old Dixon might now have for the actions, criminal or otherwise, of his younger self. And the events are portrayed so vividly that they might have happened 5, not 40, years ago. As such, Dixon lays out the social context in which his anger at the establishment was forged and weapons brought to bear; the push-pull of a loving family and secure home life versus Dixon's need to correct social injustices, even at the risk of his personal safety; and the web of Panther alliances that he continually had to navigate. If the Seattle and Oakland settings seem limiting to a national audience, Dixon's story itself and Dixon has remained active in Washington State politics shouldn't be.--Moores, Alan Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The cofounder of the Seattle chapter of the Black Panther Party shares his personal journey through 10 years of the party's rise and fall, tracing the Black Power movement from 1968 through the late '70s. At age 18, inspired by Stokely Carmichael and Bobby Seale, distressed over the murder of Martin Luther King Jr., and rebellious, Dixon was swept enthusiastically into a leadership role in the party that fed his passion for political education and helping the black community, while allowing him to participate in stockpiling weapons and fighting against both local white police "pigs" and a U.S. government that saw the militarized Panthers as a serious threat. Dixon paints an intense picture of the party's next decade, from youth recruitment, through the purge of members involved in criminal activities, and finally to the split between those who wanted to work within the political system and those who felt it was time for a violent revolution. Dixon's deeply personal writing humanizes the movement: his pride in the success of social programs like free breakfast for school children coexists with his disillusionment and disappointment as top members are lost to incarceration, murder, and especially to internal disagreements and corruption, threatening both the survival of the organization and Dixon's personal ideals. Photos. (July) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved