By profiling a man like Shujaa Graham; I am just wondering where can we find a matching example here in Nigeria? What we are witnessing today, are just self-serving leaders, who are hellbent on trampling the common man's rights without blinking!
We wakes up to lots of empty promises and all they preach is patience! Chief Obafemi Awolowo, of blessed memory spoke about the decay of public affairs, a year after independence! What was the reaction? It is rhetorical when many unanswerable questions are what we could tenders to the incoming generations!
Say No To Injustice!
Say No To Racial Segregation!!
Together we can make the world a better place to live in!!!
Happy reading!
We wakes up to lots of empty promises and all they preach is patience! Chief Obafemi Awolowo, of blessed memory spoke about the decay of public affairs, a year after independence! What was the reaction? It is rhetorical when many unanswerable questions are what we could tenders to the incoming generations!
Say No To Injustice!
Say No To Racial Segregation!!
Together we can make the world a better place to live in!!!
Happy reading!

A man who has shown by example that you can stand up for what you believe, and be victorious if you stand up for what you believe.
Shujaa Graham was born in Lake Providence, LA, where he grew
up on a plantation. His family worked as share-croppers, in the segregated
South of the 50s. In 1961, he moved to join his family who had moved to South
Central Los Angeles, to try to build a more stable life. As a teenager, Shujaa
lived through the Watts riot and experienced the police occupation of his
community. In and out of trouble, he spent much of his adolescent life in
juvenile institutions, until at age 18, he was sent to Soledad Prison.
Within the prison walls, Shujaa came of age, mentored by the
leadership of the Black Prison movement. Shujaa taught himself to read and
write, he studied history and world affairs, and became a leader of the growing
movement within the California prison system, as the Black Panther Party
expanded in the community.
In 1973, Shujaa was framed in the murder of a prison guard
at the Deul Vocational Institute, Stockton, California. As a recognized leader
within and without the prison, the community became involved in his defense,
and supported him through 4 trials. Shujaa and his co-defendant, Eugene Allen,
were sent to San Quentin's death row in 1976, after a second trial in San
Francisco. The DA systematically excluded all African American jurors, and in 1979,
the California Supreme Court overturned the death conviction.
After spending three years on death row, Shujaa and Eugene
Allen, continued to fight for their innocence. A third trial ended in a hung
jury, and after a fourth trial, they were found innocent. As Shujaa often says,
he won his freedom and affirmed his innocence in spite of the system.
Shujaa was released in March, 1981, and continued to
organize in the Bay area, building community support for the prison movement,
as well as protest in the neighborhoods against police brutality.
In the following years, Shujaa moved away from the Bay area.
Shujaa learned landscaping, and created his own business. He and his wife
raised three children, and became part of a progressive community in Maryland.
In 1999, Shujaa was invited to speak about his experiences
on Death Row at fund raiser for the Alabama Death Penalty project, sponsored by
the New York Legal Aid Foundation. This was a new beginning, and provided
Shujaa the opportunity to begin to tell his story, his experiences and grow
through work with other death penalty opponents.

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