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Home · Articles · Movies · Movie Reviews & Stories · To Die for the People
December 1st, 2004 David Walker | Movie Reviews & Stories
 

To Die for the People

The Murder of Fred Hampton recalls a dark chapter in American history.

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By 1969, Fred Hampton, leader of the Illinois Black Panther Party, was one of the most important and influential civil-rights leaders in America. The U.S. government thought he was one of the most dangerous.

Under Hampton's leadership, the Chicago-based party had grown into the largest and most powerful of all Panther chapters, operating successful programs such as Serve the People, which included a breakfast program for children, a free health clinic and political education classes.

Hampton had come dangerously close to recruiting the Blackstone Rangers into the ranks of the Panthers, which would have politicized the notorious street gang and transformed the party into a small army. And with key leaders of the Black Panthers either dead or in jail, Hampton had managed to move quickly through the ranks, until he was a key figure in the national party. At age 20, Hampton was charismatic, personable and outspoken, all of which, according to FBI director J. Edgar Hoover, made him a threat to domestic security.

In 1968, producer Mike Gray and director Howard Alk began filming a documentary about Hampton and the Illinois Black Panther Party. The film began as a straightforward portrait of the dynamic leader, and the first half of it consists primarily of rare footage of Hampton speaking at rallies. Even though the grainy black-and-white footage is sometimes out of focus or overexposed, from these clips it's easy to see the power Hampton possessed. He was part militant revolutionary, part street philosopher, and part fire-and-brimstone preacher.

But it's what happened next, when Hampton's life came to an abrupt, tragic ending, that turned Gray and Alk's film into such a revolutionary document.

On the morning of Dec. 4, 1969, 14 Chicago police officers broke into Hampton's apartment under the auspices of serving a warrant to confiscate a cache of weapons. The police opened fire on the sleeping occupants of the apartment, some of them party members, and no one was spared from the hail of bullets and indiscriminate beatings the cops served up.

Hampton's fiancée, Deborah Johnson, who was eight months pregnant, was dragged, naked, into the street and beaten. Fred Hampton, who was then 21 years old, was shot twice through the head by two police officers at point-blank range; he was killed along with fellow Panther Mark Clark.

News of the raid spread rapidly through the media, with detailed accounts provided by the police and state Attorney General Edward Hanrahan. Just hours later, Gray and Alk began filming at the scene of the crime, and what they saw and captured on film directly contradicted news reports.

Chicago newspapers published photos of doors and walls, riddled with bullets, along with claims that Panther Party members had fired at police from inside the apartment. But what the film proved was that the bullets had been fired by police weapons, from outside the apartment. The police claimed the Panthers had fired the first shots, but what the film revealed was that only one bullet came from a party member's weapon--the result of an involuntary muscle spasm after Clark was shot. The other 99 shots all came from police guns.

The Murder of Fred Hampton was instrumental in helping discredit police reports that were intended to cover up a cold-blooded killing. What the film doesn't reveal, because the facts didn't come to light until years later, was that Hampton's head of security, William O'Neal, was a paid FBI informant. O'Neal had drugged Hampton and the others the night of the raid after providing the police with a detailed map of the apartment. The raid and killings were part of the FBI's Counter-Intelligence Program, and Hampton's murder was part of a plan spelled out in a FBI memo that was designed to "prevent the rise of a black 'messiah' who could unite and electrify the militant black antinationalist movement."

This week marks the 35th anniversary of the murder of Fred Hampton. Gary and Alk's revolutionary film, which rarely screens in public, is showing in Portland this weekend in conjunction with Louder than Words, a touring photo exhibit curated by Bill Jennings, a former Panther. The photo exhibit will be at Reflections Bookstore (330 N Killingsworth St., 288-9003) on Saturday, Dec. 4. On Sunday, the exhibit will move to Reed College, where former Panther Billy X and Yippie founder Stew Albert will be speaking.

The film was never released on home video, so opportunities to see The Murder of Fred Hampton are rare. As a documentary it serves as a lasting memorial to Hampton's great legacy and tragic murder. Equally important, the film is an example of the power of independent media in providing the truth, when all the mainstream media choose to do is recycle the information they are given without digging beneath the surface.


The Murder of Fred HamptonReed College, Vollum Lecture Hall, 3203 SE Woodstock Blvd. 8 pm Sunday, Dec. 5. $3 suggested donation.

"I believe I'm going to be able to die doing the things I was born for. I believe I'm going to die high off the people. I believe I'm going to die a revolutionary in the international revolutionary proletarian struggle." --Fred Hampton

 
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12.01.2004 at 10:00 Reply
Hampton? What drivel!The Black Panthers and the Blackstone Rangers were of the same ilk. The BR's were nothing but street gangsters menacing and killing other blacks over drugs and drug dealing territory. Personally I lived near Chicago in those days and I felt then and still do that Hampton's demise was justifued based on the actions of other Black Panthers around the nation. They were a killing group.—daniel maher

 

12.04.2004 at 10:00 Reply
Re: the last post.Dear Mr. Maher,I find your remarks interesting. I wonder if you could tell me: is it alright for me to kill priests? And may I do so while they are sleeping? Under the auspices of some lying and corrupt authority? And also, may I beat their pregnant loved ones? I feel that, according to your logic, I must be able to do these things in a

 

12.05.2004 at 10:00 Reply
black panthersabout what I expected from your liberal rag. fred hampton was a catalyst for many of the nefarious activities of the bp party, like: killing police officers in most major cities of this country, torturing and murdering some of its own members because they were suspected informants, shaking down neighborhood businesses for protection money, assualt, weapons violations, and many other crimes. Your skewed version of the bp party is a diservice to the many fine police officers who were assualted or murdered for having the courage to stand up to the panthers.—randy banks

 

01.04.2005 at 10:00 Reply
TO DIE FOR THE PEOPLEDavis Walker has again painted an accurate picture of an era and a film. Thanks for being on the one.—Keedah The O.G.

 

02.04.2006 at 10:00 Reply
To Die for the PeopleThe film and its description here are accurate and truthful. I was not only in Chicago "in those days," I was a friend of Fred's before and during the Chicago chapter of the BPP. All too readily people believe government lies and misinformation. Fred and the BPP were 100% opposed to drugs; only advocated self-defense in response to the brutal police actions; did not extort businesses; and were generally anti-crime because of the devasting, arresting-development impact on the African American community. The BPP was not "a killing group" and they were nothing like the Blackstone Rangers: the Rangers received government support; Fred was never invited to Nixon inaugural parties. Also, Mr. Randy Banks, in 1969 the Afro-American Patrolmens League, as well as several individual officers (including white officers) condemned the murder of Fred Hampton. Some of us from those bad old days, may even recall a certain African-American FBI agent (assigned to monitor the Chicago Chapter BPP) who privately decried the murder.Now, at 57, I can realize that Fred was the most powerful 19-21 year old I have ever met or heard. This includes Dr. King (I've heard all his speeches) and Malcolm X (my father's friend). All three spoke truth to power. All three advanced the rights of all people. All three died by the hand of assassins affiliated with repressive government interests.Clearly, Mr. Maher and Mr. Banks have no sense of history.—Dr. Timothy A. Holly

 

 
 

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