Thorne Dreyer : Poet Marilyn Buck Freed After 25 Years in Prison

Poet-activist Marilyn Buck was released from a federal prison hospital on July 15, 2010. Photo taken at Dublin Fci, 1998. Photo from The Rag Blog.

Poet and political prisoner Marilyn Buck
Freed after 25 years in federal prison

By Thorne Dreyer / The Rag Blog / July 19, 2010

AUSTIN — Marilyn Buck is free.

Marilyn Jean Buck, 62, who served 25 years of an 80-year sentence in federal prison for crimes related to her actions in support of the black liberation movement, was released from the federal prison medical center in Carswell, Texas, July 15, 2010. She was paroled to New York City.

Buck, who was considered to be a political prisoner, became a respected and widely published poet while incarcerated.

Last December Buck — who grew up in Austin — was diagnosed with a rare form of cancer, a uterine sarcoma. She underwent surgery and chemotherapy for the cancer in prison, but treatment was eventually suspended after it was determined that her body could tolerate no more chemotherapy.

Representatives of her support group, the Friends of Marilyn Buck, announced on July 15:

Our beloved sister, friend and comrade, Marilyn Buck, is out free! She was released from the prison hospital this morning and is on her way to New York.

The Rag Blog’s Mariann Wizard spoke with Buck shortly after her release. Wizard reports:

She is elated, she is exhausted. Her spirits are high, in large part because of the strong support she has received through the years from hundreds of people around the world. She asked me to “please thank everyone” for their support.

The crimes for which Marilyn Buck was convicted included assisting in the 1979 escape from a New Jersey prison of Assata Shakur, who was a Black Panther and a member of the Black Liberation Army. She was also charged in the 1981 robbery of a Brinks armored car in which $1.6 million was stolen and two police officers were killed, and in the “Resistance Conspiracy” trial in which six activists were charged with several bombings, including a 1983 bombing of the U.S. Senate building. These bombings were preceded by warnings and involved only property damage.

There is substantial precedent for considering Marilyn Buck a political prisoner, even though some of the crimes for which she was convicted might not be viewed as explicitly political. Courts have determined that crimes committed with political motives or in a political context should be treated differently from other crimes.

Healing ceremony led by Austin shaman Maria Elena Martinez, at community benefit for Marilyn Buck on June 25, 2010, in Austin. Photo by Carlos Lowry / The Rag Blog.

Mariann Wizard, Marilyn’s friend since 1966 — and also a poet — was the primary organizer of a highly successful community-wide benefit for Marilyn Buck on June 25 in Austin, calling for Buck’s immediate release for humanitarian reasons. It featured live music, poetry reading, an art auction, a healing ceremony, and remarks of support from former Black Panther Robert Hillary King, who spent 32 years in Angola Prison as part of the Angola 3.

Wizard wrote a feature story, “Warrior-Poet Marilyn Buck: No Wall Too Tall,” that was published in The Rag Blog on May 19 and has been widely republished. In the article Wizard discusses the crimes for which Buck was charged, and places them in the context of the times in which they occurred.

Mariann wrote:

Marilyn was accused of sensational acts of insurrection… Many otherwise liberal-minded Americans are unable to get past the violence of the confrontations between the police and the small groups of Black and white revolutionaries with whom Buck was linked. Many committed leftists criticized the militants as foolhardy adventurists.

Neither give due weight to the extraordinary repressive measures undertaken by the U.S. government to crush lawful dissent against unjust policies at home and abroad. Behind the shadow of COINTELPRO (the FBI’s Counter Intelligence Program), law enforcement agencies operated outside the rule of law against Movement activists…

To be an African-American dissident, especially, meant walking around with a “shoot-to-kill” sign pinned on your chest.

While acknowledging that many, including Marilyn, now question or reject some of the tactics used at the time, Wizard said, “She dared to support with deeds what we only said we supported: the right of oppressed people to defend themselves.”

In 2001, Marilyn Buck told Monthly Review:

I think about the vision I had when I was a nineteen-year-old of justice and human rights and women’s equality. It was a wonderful vision. I think [that] how… we became rigid and rhetorical within that — took away from that vision. But without a vision, you can’t go forward.

Wizard wrote in The Rag Blog:

Reading her letters, poems, and essays over all these years, I’ve seen her extraordinary evolution, witnessed the maturation of an articulate, responsible, disciplined, ethical mind.

Marilyn Buck earned a masters’ degree while incarcerated.

Her poems can be found in many collections, in her chapbook, Rescue the Word, and on her CD Wild Poppies. She was awarded the P.E.N. American Center poetry award in 2001. In 2009 City Lights Books published her translation of Uruguayan poet-in-exile Cristina Peri Rossi’s collection, State of Exile.

Her political writings have also been widely published.

1966 UT-Austin police surveillance photo from anti-war rally. From left, Liz Jacobsen (Liz Helenchild), Terry Dyke, and Marilyn Buck. Photo from The Rag Blog.

Marilyn Buck was born in Temple, Texas, but grew up in Austin where her father, the late Louis Buck, was an Episcopal priest at a predominantly African-American church. Louis Buck, an avid civil rights activist, was removed from his ministry after his sharp criticism of the church hierarchy over the refusal of a local segregated Episcopal school to admit two black members of his congregation.

As a student at the University of Texas she became involved in civil rights organizing and in the movement against the war in Vietnam. She was active with the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) and worked with Austin’s underground newspaper, The Rag.

She later edited the SDS national newspaper New Left Notes and worked in the women’s movement. In the 1970s she became increasingly involved in the fight against racism and in opposition to U.S. imperialism, and committed to active support for the black liberation struggle.

Mariann Wizard reports:

Marilyn is now on parole in New York — and with her 80-year sentence that is unlikely to change — so her first tasks are to comply with her parole requirements and try to stabilize her health, but it is very clear that she still has much to contribute to the struggle for human rights and economic justice, as well as to poetry. It has been a very long road to freedom.

[Thorne Dreyer lives in Austin where he is a director of the New Journalism Project, edits The Rag Blog, and hosts Rag Radio, a weekly radio show on KOOP 91.7 FM. He was active in SDS in the Sixties and was a founding editor of The Rag in Austin and Space City! in Houston. He can be reached at tdreyer@austin.rr.com.]

UPDATE: Marilyn Buck died on August 3, 2010, in New York City. Please see Mariann Wizard’s article on The Rag Blog.

The Rag Blog

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8 Responses to Thorne Dreyer : Poet Marilyn Buck Freed After 25 Years in Prison

  1. Mike Klonsky says:

    Welcome back Marilyn. Thanks to all those who worked so hard for her freedom

  2. Anonymous says:

    Marilyn:

    Marilyn is one of the dignified, and beautiful human being I have ever met, and ever done time with.
    I met Marilyn inside Dublin. I knew of Marilyn before actually meeting her. After meeting Marilyn, and observing her for years, I found through early morning travels, how she quietly helped others learn how to read. Damn, I thought we were close, yet she never told me. She carries the dignity of royalty and I love Marilyn and glad she is finally out of that prison.
    Sistah Love Ida McCray

  3. Jack Hirschfeld says:

    Thanks to a Newsreel colleague for dicting me to this notice; I would otherwise not have known of Marilyn’s release. Through this blog I send her all the healing energy I can muster, and rejoice in her return to society— I wish I could say “return to freedom”.

  4. It is encouraging that there is some truly good news in these times. Wonderful that Marilyn has topped the high wall and is free. May her health improve. She is young by the standards of many civil rights protesters from the 60’s at UT . . .the photo of Liz is wonderful, and she is as gorgeous today and still holding forth on FM radio out on the left coast as “Late Night Liz.” Thank you for this, Thorne.

    Larry

  5. Satori says:

    Marilyn has been the illumination of my own path. Hearing of her freedom was a day without equal

  6. Jake Billingsley says:

    Marilyn was imprisoned the day that Madela was released from prison, what a good way to celebrate Mandela’s 92nd birthday. Freedom so long overdue. Tears of Joy.

  7. Hey Marilyn you are GREATLY missed by Me (Gleneisha Metz) and My mother (Danielle Metz). You have been such a help . Mother deeply misses there will be a service held for you. You had such a HUGE heart. You have touched hearts from all races. I love you and so does my mother we talked about you this weekend. You are truly the 3 B’s Beautiful Bountiful and Blessed. RestInPeace

  8. J. Talbot says:

    Marilyn, I was incarcerated with you in Dublin Unit A and B. Congratulations on your long awaited release. I know you were an inspiration and great teacher while you were there. Get feeling better and good luck in all you do.

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