Black Panther Alumns Pay Tribute to ‘Sister, Mentor, Comrade, Leader’ Afeni Shakur

By Akiba Solomon May 05, 2016

The National Alumni Association of the Black Panther Party (NAABPP) has issued a touching official statement about Afeni Shakur, the organizer, poet and mother of Tupac Shakur who died at 69 on Monday (May 2). Below is the statement and reflections from former Panthers sent to Colorlines and other media:

STATEMENT FROM THE NATIONAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF THE BLACK PANTHER PARTY

We are deeply saddened by the passing of our sister Afeni Shakur. 
 
Afeni was a sister, mentor, comrade and leader within the New York chapter of the Black Panther Party. As the section leader of the Harlem branch, Afeni was the one who personally welcomed many of us into the party. As the communications secretary, she was one of the highest ranking members on the East Coast and her leadership was the reason many young women joined. 
 
Afeni had a deep and profound love for the community and a passion for the people that made her a dynamic organizer and dedicated activist. She embodied the spirit of what it meant to be a Black Panther, waking up at 5AM to cook for the free breakfast program, coordinating the day to day office duties and personally being in the field. 
 
Afeni’s organizing laid the seeds for a legacy we still bear witness to today. While working with tenant organizations, Afeni led numerous rent strikes, resulting in several tenant owned buildings, some of which still exist today. She was instrumental in organizing health care professionals and patients at Lincoln Hospital and Harlem Hospital to develop the first patient bill of rights, a fore runner of the patient bill of rights now posted in every hospital.
 
After the Black Panther Party, Afeni continued her work in the community as a paralegal helping save hundreds of families from eviction and criminal convictions.  She left an everlasting impact on the community and the arts world with her life long contributions that will never be forgotten. 
 
We send our deepest condolences and heartfelt sympathy to Sekyiwa, Jean and the entire Shakur family. We ask that young people everywhere continue Afeni’s legacy by lifting up her name and continuing to organize in their communities wherever they see injustice. 
 
We Love you dear sister Afeni. Long live your revolutionary spirit!
All Power To The People!

Here are reflections from former Panthers:

"Afeni Shakur was not a Panther who was an activist.  She was an activist who became a Panther and energized the Black Panther Party with her love of the community and her incredible organizing skills. She mentored and taught young Panthers and young people across the country. She is truly a mother of the hip-hop generation and an inspirational light to the artist movement"

Jamal Joseph, Panther 21 exoneree, filmmaker, founder of Impact Repertory Theatre and Columbia University professor
 
"Afeni, herself was a poet. So when we heard TuPac’s poetry, for those of us who knew Afeni, it made sense that this young man who had grown up around the Black Panther Party with a mom who was an artist, would become a talented artist himself. It was her poetic nuances that gave her the ability to craft her moving piece, ‘A Letter to My Unborn Child,’ while on trial in the Panther 21 case."

Yasmeen Sutton, former Black Panther Party member and current member of the NAABPP
 
"Afeni was the reason I joined the Black Panther Party. She helped form how I gave service to the people, the community and the party. It was an interaction I had with her after a young brother was shot that forever changed how I saw my participation. Because of her words, from that moment on it became my business when something happened in the community. To this day it still informs how I act. While TuPac was on trial, she would go support him all day and come back and still have so much energy to care about how we each were doing. I really appreciated her ability to give of herself even when under direst. That is the type of person Afeni was."

—Pam Hannah, former member of the Black Panther Party

For more information about the alumni association’s work, visit naabpp.org.