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Bobby Seale
The Chicago 10 Interview KW: Hey, Bobby, it's an honor to speak with you. Thanks for the time.
BS: Sure, the director [Brett Morgen] has since admitted to me that when
he heard I was 70 years-old, he didn't even consider me. He expected
that I was going to be an old guy with a shaky voice going, ’Well, you
know, back in the day’’ I said, ’No, brother,’ and got to reciting
strings of historical facts about the Black Panther Party, and he said,
’My God! You run off at the mouth like you're 19!’
KW: Other than the title and not using your voice, what did you think of
Chicago 10? KW: Charles Garry was your attorney, right?
KW: Did you behave yourself after the restraints came off? BS: No. For instance, after the defense attorneys finished
cross-examining an FBI agent on the witness stand, the judge would say,
’Are there any more questions?’ I would jump up and say, ’Well, I want
cross-examine the witness.’ And I'd walk over to the lectern and say,
’Looka here, what the hell were you doing following me around in the
first damn place?’ I wasn't a learned lawyer, but I but I was still
doing my best to defend myself by asking logical questions. The judge
would interrupt and say, ’No, no, no, you don't have to answer him’ And
I'd ask, ’Why not? Why shouldn’t he have to answer the question? I've
been denied the right to defend myself. Somebody has to answer these
pointed questions if I'm going to be given a fair chance to prove my
innocence.’ At that point, Hoffman decided to charge me with 16 counts
of contempt, and to sever my trial from that of the others. So, really,
he got rid of me because he couldn't handle me.
KW: The big sister of a friend of mine was married to one of the Panther
21 arrested in NYC in 1969. I remember him telling me they had all been
framed on bogus charges. Did you ever determine exactly when the FBI
began infiltrating the Panthers and to what lengths it went to bring
down the organization?
BS: No, we weathered everything they threw at us. At a certain point,
the U.S. Senate started investigating their attacks on us. When the FBI
couldn't give a good explanation as to why they were attacking all our
offices, the raids finally stopped.
KW: So, what would you say politicized you? BS: The first thing that began to politicize me was Jomo Kenyatta's
’Facing Mount Kenya.’ I started reading that in the Spring semester of
1962. From there, I went to hear Martin Luther King speak. In the early
part of ’63, I was working on the freedom of Nelson Mandela and on
ending apartheid. Next, I was listening to Malcolm X after he’d left the
Nation of Islam. I was thinking about joining his new organization, the
OAAU, but that never happened, because he wound up getting assassinated
before I had an opportunity. I was steeped in African-American history
and in and out of many different organizations in the Oakland area. I
was a programmatic organizer. I quit my engineering job after three
years to work at the grassroots level. I wasn't married and had no kids,
so I was able to do those things. BS: Yep, college lectures. I do about 20 lectures a year. I haven't
written any books for a while, although I have two books in the works.
I've almost finished ’The Eighth Defendant.’ I'm looking for a top
publisher who’ll give me a half-million dollar advance for it. I need a
big advance to make my family secure. Are you going to write include
that in the article? KW: Bookworm Troy Johnson wants to know, what was the last book you read?
BS: The last book I read, digested and loved was ’Shades of Love’ by Leon Higginbotham. KW: I haven't read that one, but I loved his book ’In the Matter of
Color.’ Do you still live in Philly?
Related links
Bobby Seale Website
CHICAGO 10 will
have its broadcast premiere on Tuesday, October 22, at 9 PM ET
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