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NEWS & LETTERS, August-September 2002

Prisoners talk change

New York--At the end of June the Women’s Prison Association and Home Inc. hosted the tenth National Roundtable for Women in Prison. It was a unique gathering of former women prisoners, prisoner advocates, criminal justice professionals and social services providers.

The opportunity for the women prisoners to participate was the highlight. It was the purpose of the roundtable to have an exchange of ideas about what change would look like, how can we work together.

For the former prisoners willing to talk, just the fact of their sharing their story was an act of courage and a contribution. Helping other women, still in prison or just getting out, was their first priority. The social service providers pointed to those success stories and made their case that better programs would make a difference. The academics presented their research. The activists pointed out that for every prisoner who makes it on the outside, there are a thousand who don’t. Thus, they argued, putting band-aids on the problem is not a solution, we have to work to abolish prisons altogether.

The former prisoners pointed to how they re-created themselves from abused, neglected victims into strong women fighting for others. But there is a danger in focusing so much on individual needs. What gets lost is the fact that this social system creates the poverty and “crime.” The call for a systemic change, a revolution, has to start and come back to the individual. Becoming new people in the process of fighting what’s wrong highlights the point of revolution, which is not a change as an event, but the continual re-creation of our common humanity in each individual.

—Urszula Wislanka

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