Posts Tagged ‘Re-Entry’

Soros Fellowship for Woman Ex-Prisoner

Flozelle Woodmore, who served 20 years of a life sentence for killing her abusive partner, is among the rare few to have gained freedom after being sentenced to life in prison in California.  Woodmore will organize friends and family members of people serving life sentences to advocate for change in the parole system.

In August 2007, after 10 parole hearings (and being found suitable six times), Woodmore was finally released from prison.  While in prison, Woodmore obtained her GED, completed a vocational certification program, assisted with creating a battered women group, and became a member of an initiative to support youth at-risk of becoming ensnared in the criminal justice system.  Since her release, Woodmore has been active in advocacy campaigns with a range of local and statewide organizations, in an effort tot reduce California’s reliance on incarceration and harsh punishment.

Posted by hcdmedia

Incarceration Nation

Punishment
is the most potent stimulus
of violence
nothing corrodes the soul
as thoroughly as
vengeance.

(p.25, Hartnett)

Stephen John Hartnett, poet, musician, and prison activist, presents a collection of prison poems in varying tones and subjects in Incarceration Nation: Investigative Prison Poems of Hope and Terror. It is available for purchase on Amazon. Some excerpts are available to read for free  on Google Books.

Posted by hcdmedia

A Boy in a Man’s Prison

Fish: A Memoir of a Boy in a Man’s Prison is T.J. Parsell’s autobiographical coming-of-age story from inside prison. When Parsell was seventeen, he held up a photo mat with a toy gun and then sentenced to four and half to fifteen years in prison. Upon arrival, he was drugged and raped by four prisoners and then decidedly “owned” by one. He was forced into a code of silence on penalty of death. Parsell is now one of America’s leaders in prison reform advocacy. His memoir is not only an unflinching portrait of prison life, but of a teenage boy coming of age, searching for his identity.

You can buy the book on Amazon.com.

Posted by hcdmedia

Surviving Prison

Behind Bars: Surviving Prison“America is a nation of laws that reach into every aspect of public and private life. By just going about the daily routine of trying to make a living, you run the risk of transgressing one or more strands of this invisible web of legal strictures and restraints.”

Behind Bars: Surviving Prison by criminologists, Jeffery Ian Ross and Stephen C. Richards, (available on Amazon) is modeled after leaflets from the 60’s given to nonviolent demonstrators. Their book delves into surviving the criminal justice system on many more levels. It also includes a glossary of prison slang.

Posted by hcdmedia

The Prisoner’s Mother

To be a prisoner’s mother
Is to fee a piercing dart
That sets the mind a-whirling
And almost cleaves the heart.

To be a prisoner’s mother
Is, upon a holiday,
To visit him in prison
Then part and go away.

To be a prisoner’s mother
‘Tis, inside the lonely wall,
To say, “Farewell, my darling”-
Oh, I almost faint and fall.

No resting place but heaven,
No happy morn that dawns;
Our home so drear and lonely
Because our boy is gone.

An empty bed, a missing plate,
A grief that inward burns;
No balm on earth to heal our hearts
until our boy returns.

“Honor and shame from no condition rise;
Act well your part, there all the honor lies.”

“The Prisoner’s Mother” by Mrs. S. E. Wirick (p.22 Prison Poetry, McKnight.)

Hiram Peck McKnight’s collection of prison poems from 1896 was republished in 2008 by Kessinger Publishing, LLC. The poems are available in hardcover from Amazon. Or you can read and download the poems on Google Books.

Posted by hcdmedia

Poems from the Inside

When I desire solitude, the provide it.
When I need correction, they administer it.
When I require shelter, they become it.
By now you may know them…concrete, steel.

Excerpt from “The Two Prison Guards” from J.P. Keihl’s Tales From the Inside: Prison Poetry available to purchase on Amazon.

Posted by hcdmedia

Books Keep Inmates Busy

Inmates have a lot of time on their hands in prison, so many partake in activities such as lifting weights and playing cards.

For the inmates in Monroe prison, it is the library that draws their attention. Equipped with reading material from sports magazines to novels, the library gives these men more than just a way to pass time, but also a way to readjust to the world once they are eventually freed. There are practical reference books offered for inmates, such as The Ex-offender’s Job Hunting Guide and Job Interview Tips for People with Not-So-Hot Backgrounds.

Read more about this library here.

bilde

Posted by hcdmedia

Gabriel City © 2009  |  Powered by WordPress  |  Built by Bad Feather