From Portside Culture <[email protected]>
Subject Remembering the Women of the Black Panther Party
Date March 16, 2023 12:00 AM
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[Comrade Sisters centers photographs and personal accounts of the
women who made up over two-thirds of the party. ]
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PORTSIDE CULTURE

REMEMBERING THE WOMEN OF THE BLACK PANTHER PARTY  
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Taylor Michael
January 23, 2023
Hyperallergic
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_ Comrade Sisters centers photographs and personal accounts of the
women who made up over two-thirds of the party. _

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_Comrade Sisters 
Women of the Black Panther Party _
Photographs by Stephen Shames 
Text by Ericka Huggins 
ACC Art Books
ISBN: 9781788841757

Images of the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense need no captioning.
Black men and women in leather, perfectly rounded afros, guns crossing
the torso — the organization’s aesthetics dominate public
consciousness. Comrade Sisters: Women of the Black Panther Party,
co-authored by Stephen Shames and Ericka Huggins, presents these
photographs as well as more intimate ones of women coordinating free
grocery drives, free ambulatory services, or political education
classes.

Published last October, Comrade Sisters focuses on the women who made
up over two-thirds of the Black Panther Party. Shames’s many
portraits, candids, and landscape shots appear alongside first and
second-hand accounts; Huggins, an activist and leader in the party,
coordinated interviews and tributes that speak to the Panthers’
sense of purpose and community.

“I had a dream about saying the names of the women of the Black
Panther Party, some of whom have never been thanked,” Huggins said
during a panel at the Columbia University Institute for Research in
African-American Studies last October.

Shames spent seven years taking pictures of the Black Panther Party
and was one of the few outside photographers given access to its inner
workings. He was a student at the University of California, Berkley,
and came into contact with Bobby Seale and the Panthers through his
involvement with and photography of student activist groups and
anti-war organizing.

The co-founder of the party expressed interest in Shames’s work and
the pair developed a working relationship. He photographed the 60
“Community Survival Programs” organized by the party as well as
meetings and rallies, many of which were attended, staffed, and run by
women.

The words “purpose,” “family,” and “love” come up
frequently in their testimonies. “You have to love people to serve
them. I was so loved,” said Barbara Easley-Cox of the Philadelphia
and International Chapters. “So blessed on this earth because of my
sisters, all of us, who came into the Party.” This sentiment, that
the Panthers were a family who fueled their service with love for the
community, appears in some form across the many recollections.

“The women of the Black Panther Party are not special in some way
that separates them from others,” writes Huggins in her introductory
remarks for Comrade Sisters. “They are simply women who, whether at
12, 14, 16, 18, or 21, decided that there had to be ‘a way out of no
way’ for Black and poor people.” 

There are photos of women coordinating sickle cell anemia testing,
teaching at freedom schools, and registering Black residents to vote.
These programs filled basic needs for Black people across the country
and became prototypes for future national- and state-funded efforts.
For the Panthers, the goal wasn’t to run a charity organization.
Shames notes that the so-called “survival programs” were models
for a beloved community. Bags of food distributed at drives were
filled with whole chickens and fresh fruits and vegetables as opposed
to poor-quality “government cheese.” A photo shows children at a
Free Shoe Program opening boxes of brand-new sneakers and shiny
leather sandals.

However, the book doesn’t only represent women’s influence in
domestic or caregiving roles. Black women can be seen alongside men in
courtrooms, at podiums, and in positions of power.

Photos of Communications Secretary Kathleen Cleaver speaking at
“Free Huey” rallies in Oakland show the women on the national
leadership team. There is a portrait of Afeni Shakur, mother of rapper
Tupac Shakur, during the New York 21 trial where she was charged with
conspiracy to kill police officers (she was eventually acquitted.)
Another photo shows Assata Shakur in her early 20s, several years
before she was convicted and escaped to Cuba. 

The women in the interviews were there for it all, including the
incredible violence enacted on the Panthers by local and state police,
the FBI, and the federal government. Cheryl Dawson from the Berkeley
Chapter remembers driving by the FBI every morning on her way to feed
kids at the Free Breakfast for School Children Program — the program
that prompted FBI director J. Edgar Hoover to describe the Panthers as
“the greatest threat to internal security of the country.” A photo
shows a community center in LA that distributed free breakfast after a
police raid. 

An account by Lynn French from an Illinois Chapter describes the
trauma the Illinois Panther community experienced when Fred Hampton
was assassinated on December 4, 1969. “It’s something that never
leaves you,” French says.

Connecting past violence and organizing to the present, the women
interviewed in the book offer advice to the younger women of today.
They urge them to find their community and a way to serve it, but also
“encourage girls and women to take care of themselves,” as Cynthia
Norwood of the Winston-Salem chapter says. With a preface by Angela
Davis and afterword by Alicia Garza, co-founder of the international
Black Lives Matter movement, Comrade Sisters highlights the Panther
women whose platforms and efforts continue to resonate more than five
decades later. 

Taylor Michael is a staff reporter at _Hyperallergic_. Previously, she
worked as a public programs coordinator at the National Book
Foundation. She received an MFA from Columbia University School of the
Arts and was the inaugural A Public Space Editorial Fellow.

* Black History
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* Women's History
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* Black women's history
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* Black Panther Party
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* Photography
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