This episode shares an interview with prisoner Amu Gib (they/them) about their hunger strike inside, conditions inside prison, plants of the prison gardens, resisting imperialism and more!
Links & resources from this episode
- Write to Amu – https://prisonersforpalestine.org/prisoner/amu-gib/
- The Prisoner’s Herbal – https://solidarityapothecary.org/prisonersherbal/
- Herbalism, PTSD and Traumatic Stress Course – https://solidarityapothecary.org/herbalismandptsdcourse/
Find them all at solidarityapothecary.org/podcast/
Music from Sole & DJ Pain – Battle of Humans | Plant illustrations by @amani_writes | In solidarity, please subscribe, rate & review this podcast wherever you listen.
Transcript
Welcome to the Frontline Herbalism Podcast with your host, Nicole Rose from the
Nicole:Solidarity Apothecary.
Nicole:This is your place for all things plants and
Nicole:liberation.
Amu:Let's get started.
Amu:Hello.
Nicole:Welcome back to the Frontline Herbalism Podcast.
Nicole:I'm sorry for not putting out an episode recently again.
Nicole:Just same old stuff of my little one getting sick.
Nicole:Foolishly went to a soft place so that he could see his daddy and picked up some sort of
Nicole:ming.
Nicole:As soon as I walked in there, I was like, oh God, there's.
Nicole:It was just like full of kids.
Nicole:But anyway, he's doing better now, thank God.
Nicole:But yeah, today I have something really, really special.
Nicole:So I have an interview with a prisoner called amu and if you have been involved in like
Nicole:Palestine solidarity stuff, you've probably heard about the hunger strikers who, yeah,
Nicole:were on strike with various demands relating to Palestine and their cases and you know,
Nicole:their lack of trials and things like this.
Nicole:And yeah, AMU was, was part of that and has been a very, very active prisoner in terms of
Nicole:like, agitation around the conditions and yeah, public writing and organizing and all
Nicole:the things.
Nicole:So yeah, I got an email being like, oh, AMU would really love to connect about prisoners
Nicole:herbal stuff and things we're doing.
Nicole:And I was like,
Nicole:yeah,
Nicole:so we have done this interview and it's kind of like asynchronous, if that makes sense.
Nicole:So I emailed the questions and then they recorded them to a friend and then they sent
Nicole:me the audio and then another friend because some of my childcare stuff has chopped them
Nicole:together for me.
Nicole:So like, he's done an amazing job and it is like extremely smooth.
Nicole:But I think maybe not every answer syncs to like every question perfectly, if that makes
Nicole:sense.
Nicole:But didn't want to leave anything out because AMU just, yeah.
Nicole:Shares a lot of like,
Nicole:painful insights into the prison system.
Nicole:A lot of kind of like beautiful humbleness
Nicole:around like political organizing and resisting imperialism and all the things they talk
Nicole:about.
Nicole:So yeah, I'm just really, really, really
Nicole:grateful for their,
Nicole:their time and energy and answering the questions and hopefully we can do like future,
Nicole:future things like this.
Nicole:I just, yeah, again I just feel bad because of my like,
Nicole:very limited working hours and millions of commitments.
Nicole:So.
Nicole:But yeah, I think what they share is really, really special and I guess just like content
Nicole:warning around references to things in prison, like self harm and suicide attempts and things
Nicole:Also, I guess because people,
Nicole:yeah.
Nicole:Know me as an anarchist, I'm quite kind of
Nicole:like public about that.
Nicole:I have, you know, like, all of my work is centered around state Violence pretty much,
Nicole:and resistance to the state and acknowledgment of the state as the ******* near enough
Nicole:primary cause of, you know, harm and oppression.
Nicole:And before, you know, after we were doing this interview and things like, it did come out
Nicole:that AMU is like, running to be elected in like a local election.
Nicole:I think they're standing for, like, Islington or something.
Nicole:And like, we haven't had a chance to talk about that in terms of like, like curiosity of
Nicole:like, why they're doing that and what they want to achieve.
Nicole:And I guess, like, I feel attention around tactics like that.
Nicole:Like, any tactic that kind of like, legitimizes the state, I really, really
Nicole:struggle with.
Nicole:So, like, it's just not my jam.
Nicole:Like, kind of,
Nicole:you know, I follow electropolitics because these people shape our lives.
Nicole:But I, yeah, I don't, you know, an anarchist.
Nicole:I believe in, like, direct action.
Nicole:I don't believe in the States.
Nicole:So anyway.
Nicole:But I didn't want to just be like, no, I'm not
Nicole:going to pub interview now, because I think what they share is like,
Nicole:powerful and important and I want to amplify prisoner voices.
Nicole:And if I only interviewed people that had identical politics to me, like, I wouldn't
Nicole:learn anything.
Nicole:Like, it wouldn't be interesting to anyone.
Nicole:Like,
Nicole:yeah, things are, you know, varied and complex and I,
Nicole:you know, I feel like I can learn something from every person I meet and that's like, my
Nicole:approach to life.
Nicole:So I was very, very grateful to learn from AMU
Nicole:and to start this conversation.
Nicole:So, yeah,
Nicole:and I guess just for context, what I think is interesting about the interview is that we
Nicole:were both like, in similar situations of.
Nicole:I was in prison for just under two years, but 19 months of that.
Nicole:I was on remand.
Nicole:And Amu has been on remand for a long time,
Nicole:probably at least 19 months by the time I'm publishing this.
Nicole:And obviously I was in for this campaign against this huge animal testing company and
Nicole:lots of ALF stuff and direct action and they're inside for an alleged,
Nicole:alleged action.
Nicole:So, yeah, like.
Nicole:And, you know, we've both been in HMP
Nicole:Bronzefield and obviously prisons don't ******* change because they're just designed
Nicole:to be hell holes.
Nicole:So it's kind of interesting, like, feeling
Nicole:that contrast like all these years later of what those conditions are like.
Nicole:And anyway, I'm gonna stop rambling, please check it out.
Nicole:Also, in terms of solid apothecary news, the herbalism, PTSD and traumatic stress course is
Nicole:opening again on the 22nd of March,
Nicole:spring solstice it's a ******* amazing offering.
Nicole:No one's turned away for lac of funds.
Nicole:Super, super comprehensive course all about
Nicole:trauma and the nervous system and the politics of trauma and in depth stuff around nervines.
Nicole:So 32 plants with an affinity for the nervous system.
Nicole:How to understand what's going on in your body in terms of anxiety and distress and stress
Nicole:hormones and all of the things.
Nicole:So yeah, and that course like funds pretty much 95% of what I do.
Nicole:So yeah, it's very,
Nicole:is very important to all the work I do around herbalism and state violence.
Nicole:So anyway, please check it out.
Nicole:I'll put a link in the show notes.
Nicole:Please join the waiting list if you can.
Nicole:It gives me a lot of relief to know that people are interested in it when I see that
Nicole:waiting list kind of grow before the launch and stuff.
Nicole:So anyway,
Nicole:all right, thank you for listening and I will be back soon.
Nicole:Okay, take care.
Amu:Hello.
Nicole:For people who don't know who you are or where you are or what has been happening in
Nicole:recent months, please can you share more about yourself?
Amu:I really don't know how to answer this, so I'm actually gonna skip the first question.
Amu:But I guess at the moment I can say that I've been trying to recover from this hunger strike
Amu:and I'm really enjoying eating again and being able to move and feeling this like growing
Amu:sense of energy internally.
Amu:And then like it feels like the world and the movement is like absolutely buzzing.
Amu:So I've been plotting a lot and thinking about the year ahead and what we're doing and why
Amu:we're doing it and like needing a lot of help researching that.
Amu:And then I guess that leads to who we're doing this with and how we're doing it together.
Amu:And then like when and always the feeling is like 100 years ago, like 800 years ago would
Amu:have been good to have this done by.
Amu:But failing that, it's like just like a
Amu:constant battle to try and not rush or let my anger turn into frustration or bitterness,
Amu:especially at my loved ones or at myself.
Amu:But yeah,
Amu:this is like.
Amu:Even though the world is on fire, it's still quite slow work sometimes.
Amu:Or there's just different paces that we're going at all the time.
Amu:So yeah, that's a bit about where I'm at.
Amu:And
Nicole:so when I was in HMP Bronzefield, a very long time ago now,
Nicole:the prison was rife with abuse by officers,
Nicole:neglect people, self harming and attempting suicide left, right and center.
Nicole:Can you describe what it's like at the moment,
Nicole:yeah.
Amu:In terms of the prison population, I'm meeting everyone that the system has failed
Amu:the way it was designed to.
Amu:So the unemployed cleaners,
Amu:you know, there's someone on my landing who thought she was going to go work in Abu Dhabi.
Amu:And then she.
Amu:And mothers and pharmacists and teachers and
Amu:data analysts, software engineers,
Amu:PhD students,
Amu:shoplifters,
Amu:drug takers, drug sellers and drug movers, the whole.
Amu:The whole cycle.
Amu:And yeah,
Amu:yeah, obviously, when you are meeting people that have sold drugs and they know who they've
Amu:been selling drugs to, I think the.
Amu:The classist nature of who ends up in prison and who are their customers, who are putting
Amu:them in prison just becomes a bit absurd really.
Amu:They're all survivors of domestic abuse or neurodivergent.
Amu:They're all,
Amu:or we're all, I guess, symptoms of 14 years of austerity government.
Nicole:What are the people like, who you were meeting?
Nicole:Inside, I found such a rich mix of amazing humans and the saddest of stories.
Nicole:So many histories of childhood abuse, domestic violence, poverty and more.
Amu:This is the bit that is quite long and quite explicit about some of the ways that
Amu:people are not coping with being in Bronzefield.
Amu:So,
Amu:yeah, as I said, it's maybe not the right place for it, but I'll just read it to you
Amu:anyway and then we can talk about it.
Amu:So it's on the question of, like, who are you meeting?
Amu:Childhood abuse, domestic and poverty.
Amu:The prison peels back every layer of care you have around yourself and then force feeds you
Amu:a version of care designed to make you unable to care about anything ever again.
Amu:I'll try to be concrete.
Amu:My neighbor El,
Amu:let's call her,
Amu:is suicidal and bizarrely considerate about it.
Amu:She makes her way upstairs at lockup every day and threatens to jump off the railing.
Amu:So we all get locked up while they assault her to put her back in her cell.
Amu:But we're all about to be locked in anyway.
Amu:She bangs her head against the wall, a sign that someone needs help written clear as day
Amu:on her forehead, but not at nighttime.
Amu:The next door along from her is another woman.
Amu:I'll call her A.
Amu:She banged on her door and the small glass window in it until it smashed, then cut
Amu:herself on the glass and smeared her blood on the wall.
Amu:On my 30th birthday, she also climbed over the railings and let go.
Amu:As I reached her in time to grab her legs,
Amu:I crocheted her a hat.
Amu:Two weeks later, she did the same thing again, but this time I walked away from her rather
Amu:than towards Her.
Amu:This is how the prison forces us to obey its reality,
Amu:changing us with its unchanging logic that we are not fit to be part of the world,
Amu:that we are not safe to be around,
Amu:that we can't be trusted, shouldn't be loved.
Amu:Another neighbor, S,
Amu:was on hunger strike as well, and first strike in Bronzefield for six months.
Amu:She was taken to hospital twice a week to be pumped full of fluids and intubated.
Amu:Force feeding is only illegal if you're of sound mind.
Amu:Lots of things are only illegal if you can act normal enough that the state can easily
Amu:discredit you.
Amu:Can't easily discredit you.
Amu:Disappear you.
Amu:Anyway,
Amu:S recently smashed her TV and used a glass to cut herself to the bone.
Amu:She might get freed on Friday, so she's handing me back the crochet stuff I lent her,
Amu:along with patches for a blanket we're collectively making for Kesa.
Amu:These are some of the women who wear their pain on their sleeves,
Amu:who have razor blades in their stomachs and staples in their necks, tweezers in their
Amu:forearms.
Amu:And the ones who exhibit less attention seeking behavior,
Amu:the ones who aren't white.
Amu:I can't say why or how exactly their whiteness defines how they behave.
Amu:I have some ideas,
Amu:but of course it does.
Amu:And the ones who cry themselves to sleep every night,
Amu:the ones who never leave their cells,
Amu:the ones who are always locked in,
Amu:the ones who don't speak English,
Amu:are in prison for six months past their release date.
Amu:My friend M was in Peterborough for over a year for stealing a gold necklace,
Amu:then in Bronzefield for months over her sentence,
Amu:waiting to get immigration bail until she was released onto the street.
Amu:Having to make her way to Croydon with no phone to sign in at a probation centre.
Amu:She was told she was HIV positive as she left the prison.
Amu:She'd been HIV positive the whole time she was in jail, but no one had told her.
Amu:Or maybe they told her, but without bothering to get a translator.
Amu:Either way, she almost walked onto the train tracks.
Amu:She left me a shawl she'd made her first and only crochet.
Amu:Project C was remanded on arson charges for trying to kill herself with an oven.
Amu:I made her a hat too.
Amu:She has very sensitive ears.
Amu:She said she was going to plead guilty to the charges because she felt bad feeling bad,
Amu:feeling guilty and pleading guilty.
Amu:She couldn't deal with the noise levels and would bang her head to drown it out,
Amu:pick her skin off her forearms when she was locked in, throw chairs and fight guards when
Amu:overwhelmed,
Amu:flood and bang, scream and rip and then play hide and seek trying to sneak up and pounce.
Amu:She likes skips and Cherry Aid,
Amu:milk chocolate, digestives and word searchers.
Amu:But what about the murderers?
Amu:It's worth noting here that there are people who have killed and wear uniforms in
Amu:Bronzefield.
Nicole:How are you spending time during Bang Up?
Amu:During Bang Up I yap a lot on the phone with all my loved ones,
Amu:expensively.
Amu:And I read a lot.
Amu:I just finished reading against the Loveless World by Susan Abelhawa and I think a mutual
Amu:friend, Alex gave the same book to my co defendant in Bristol,
Amu:Louis.
Amu:So we have this little book club going.
Amu:I'm writing a lot.
Amu:It's become a big part of my life in prison.
Amu:Not that I've ever written anything before,
Amu:but yeah, like a lot of people it becomes.
Amu:Yeah,
Amu:yeah, it becomes an important part of your life.
Amu:And like everyone, I guess, like we're all like my friends and I, trying to find ways to
Amu:be in solidarity with Palestine and also more recently with the women's revolution that's
Amu:under attack in Rojava.
Amu:Also building connections between the arms trade, war, displacement and mining.
Amu:So yeah, Bang up is kind of,
Amu:kind of a dreaded part of the day because of short staffing.
Amu:It's often like indefinite time behind a locked door.
Amu:But I try and see it as an uninterrupted time to plot the demise of imperialism, you know?
Amu:Yeah,
Amu:I just, yeah, I'm like already in prison, you know, so if they're going to lock me up, I'm
Amu:definitely going to make them regret it.
Nicole:I know getting outside on quote unquote association can feel like a rarity,
Nicole:but can you describe what the prison courtyards are like?
Nicole:Have you been able to find any weeds and plants?
Amu:Yeah, the.
Amu:The prison courtyard is 124paces from main
Amu:street to the house block.
Amu:I counted it the other day.
Amu:So from activities to residents, it's just like not that much space really.
Amu:But in that space is cherry trees and New Zealand flax and rose bushes and lavender
Amu:bushes.
Amu:But best of all there's the irises, which in summer are so lovely to look at as they are
Amu:green and they kind of flip and flop in the wind.
Amu:But when they dry out and before the rot sets in,
Amu:then you can weave them,
Amu:which I've had a lot of fun with actually.
Nicole:What was your relationship like with land before being in prison?
Amu:I would say our relationship with land has been deliberately sabotaged, you know,
Amu:since the closing of the commons and people during the Industrial revolution needing to
Amu:move from the land to cities for work and,
Amu:you know,
Amu:opportunities and just because that's how things were going.
Amu:But yeah, like in these cities, people just were living in buildings without any kitchens
Amu:in them.
Amu:And just like, I feel like immediately is so
Amu:clear, like how that connection was like chipped away at, you know.
Amu:Yeah.
Amu:But personally, I've always been privileged enough, even though I grew up in London, to
Amu:have lots of access to outdoor spaces.
Amu:And I've always done gardening with my mum or at these allotments.
Amu:Yeah. But it's actually weaving that really makes my heart sing.
Amu:So harvesting rush from the river near our boats on the Thames with a neighbor's
Amu:paddleboard and a pair of scissors.
Amu:Or gleaning willow from community willow beds in the Highlands or yeah, the irises leaves in
Amu:prison courtyards.
Amu:That feels to me like more rooting than
Amu:anything else and how we resist the pressure to be industrialized or institutionalized.
Amu:Yeah. For me, that's how everything comes together and connects.
Nicole:I heard you were an active member of the Land Workers Alliance.
Nicole:Can you share more about what they do and why you feel it's important?
Amu:So the UK branch of La Villa Campesina is LWA Land Workers alliance,
Amu:but La Villa Campesina represents 200 million peasant farmers.
Amu:Like one of the other branches, for example, in Brazil is Momento center,
Amu:which I think we all should draw a lot of inspiration from.
Amu:There's these massive landowners,
Amu:obviously in Brazil,
Amu:but there are also these people that even though they don't technically,
Amu:because of just a lot of corruption, basically have access to land.
Amu:They just show up to different sites with tools and materials and wood, and they build
Amu:schools and housing and a bar so they can have a party as.
Amu:As Jyoti always says,
Amu:and they just reclaim that space, you know.
Amu:So I think we have a lot to learn from them.
Amu:Yeah,
Amu:of course.
Amu:Yeah. Like the, the scale, the power and the
Amu:urgency of.
Amu:Of that kind of work is vital to all of us
Amu:because it's our climate collapsing and it's food, not bombs, that will keep us alive.
Amu:So nothing and no one really is more important than farmers.
Nicole:You've been a passionate supporter of Palestinian liberation, a struggle inseparable
Nicole:from land.
Nicole:How do you feel land struggles relate to those
Nicole:of us in the so called uk?
Amu:I would say that land struggles in the UK connect to Palestine in the way that all land
Amu:struggles are linked and that we are strongest when we are our most connected, our most
Amu:rooted in relationship,
Amu:which have always sustained us.
Amu:So of course, settlers, colonizers, Zionists and imperialists will always target our
Amu:ability to feed and sustain ourselves,
Amu:which Asike Janu,
Amu:an incredible comrade and.
Amu:Yeah,
Amu:yeah, incredible comrade from Kerala, taught me is our birthright.
Amu:Roaming and foraging and being able to stop and sleep wherever you want.
Amu:Yeah,
Amu:there's no way that isn't the way we should be living, you know?
Amu:Yeah. And the.
Amu:The pattern of imperialism is always the same,
Amu:even though they weave with all these different colored threads.
Amu:The commonality is disconnection through displacement or extraction,
Amu:high taxes or poisoned water,
Amu:burning olive groves, or in the UK context, releasing sewage into the Thames.
Amu:You know,
Amu:this is always the work of those whose relationship to the world is one of, like,
Amu:utter entitlement and possessiveness,
Amu:which,
Amu:yeah, I guess it's closest to.
Amu:Closest to rape, really, and is enabled in the same way with silence.
Nicole:You've been incredibly brave to undertake a hunger strike during your time
Nicole:inside.
Nicole:Can you share more about why you did this and
Nicole:what it has felt like in your body?
Amu:Because we've watched the genocide play out live on our phone screens for two years
Amu:and we've been trained as bystanders and forced to look and feel as though there's
Amu:nothing we can do as Palestine and Sudan and the Congo are violated and destroyed,
Amu:and as Palestinians have shown us and as prison has shown us, even from a prison cell,
Amu:you can act,
Amu:not asking for change, but demanding it.
Amu:And I think being imprisoned is an
Amu:intensification or a concentration of that disconnection.
Amu:And if disconnection is a pattern and fascism and capitalism and war are the threads, then
Amu:prison is like a tightening.
Amu:It constricts until you can barely imagine breathing.
Amu:John told me that in Czech they call a rib cage a rib basket.
Amu:I don't know why we call it a rib cage in English.
Amu:I'd really rather have a rib basket,
Amu:but, yeah, anyway, I decided to resist and to break free of that logic and control in the
Amu:way that people always will as long as they're detained and incarcerated.
Amu:In a way, it's the only way that I could think to take action and call for urgent
Amu:mobilization.
Amu:And, yeah, it was tough.
Amu:Hunger strike is a daily commitment to a dream, really.
Amu:But resisting gave me a euphoria that can only come with the understanding that you belong to
Amu:the world again,
Amu:you belong to yourself.
Amu:And there's always energy and always grief in resistance,
Amu:and always victory and defiance and in laughter.
Nicole:I've never done a hunger strike.
Nicole:Like, sadly, we had next to no organized
Nicole:prisoner support or much like outside solidarity.
Nicole:However, like, hunger was a really familiar experience in prison.
Nicole:I remember regularly not being able to sleep from Being so hungry.
Nicole:And it really didn't help being vegan in prison.
Nicole:But yeah, it was like an undercurrent of my prison experience.
Nicole:How is hunger used as a weapon in prison?
Amu:Hunger as a weapon in prison is such a precise line of questioning.
Amu:And I'm really sorry.
Amu:Firstly, that you went to sleep hungry while you were in Bronzefield.
Amu:It's absurd that anyone goes to sleep hungry.
Amu:And I guess that's the way that they ensure scarcity.
Amu:Today they actually told another landing on 2B that they wouldn't allow seconds.
Amu:So even though there's enough food, they won't let prisoners line up for seconds because
Amu:apparently prisoners are unruly about it or something, you know,
Amu:which.
Amu:Yeah, it's just one of the many ways that
Amu:prisoners are punished for like planned scarcity and incompetence, you know.
Amu:So, yeah, I'm not sure what it was like when you were here, but the kitchen's still under
Amu:order every day.
Amu:There's supposed to be 2 pound spent per prisoner per day on food,
Amu:which is not much out of the £63,000 a year that they get as a private company from the
Amu:public government funds.
Amu:But, yeah, hunger is definitely a weapon of the state.
Amu:Yeah, on Christmas Day, there was a bag of popcorn served for Christmas dinner.
Amu:Yeah, it was.
Amu:It was an interesting time.
Nicole:Can you speak to nutrition or a lack of it in a present diet
Amu:in terms of nutrition?
Amu:So I think.
Amu:I'm not sure what number question we're on
Amu:now, but I think it's the last section of the plants and land struggle.
Amu:The nutrition is mostly iceberg lettuce.
Amu:I read in east of Eden by John Steinbeck.
Amu:Sorry, this is such a tangent.
Amu:That trains,
Amu:like refrigerated trains, were invented partially to transport iceberg lettuce to New
Amu:York.
Amu:Or they weren't invented because of that, but
Amu:that was one of the first things that they transported.
Amu:And there's something like hundreds of thousands of tons of ice were made in a week
Amu:to be able to let New Yorkers have crispy lettuce in their burgers.
Amu:Anyway,
Amu:I think if you took the iceberg lettuce off our plates, most days there would only be
Amu:warburton sliced white bread and these chips that regularly break prisoners teeth.
Amu:There's a prisoner who like buried one of her chipped teeth in the prison courtyard.
Amu:Like, apparently that brings good luck.
Amu:But I'm like.
Amu:To who? You know.
Amu:Yeah, obviously it can definitely always be worse,
Amu:but it's the root of a lot of conflict and body shaming and mental health and Also
Amu:because there's like the mother and baby unit and these pregnancy wings.
Amu:It's the issue in the development of baby health as well.
Amu:If prisoners could decide what to eat rather than relying on,
Amu:ironically, a French catering company, then obviously things would be really different.
Amu:And they kind of are different already in government run jails and in Peterborough, you
Amu:know, Sodexo's other UK prison.
Amu:But yeah, Bronzefield is,
Amu:well, like Pentonville is like under investigation for human rights abuses.
Amu:Yeah, I'm always just feeling that Sodexo should have stuck to feeding school kids, you
Amu:know, rather than killing their mothers.
Nicole:The hunger strikers have done an amazing job at shining light on the conditions
Nicole:of UK prisons.
Nicole:As they say,
Nicole:rot doesn't grow where the sun shines.
Nicole:What do you want to bring to light about the prison system
Amu:in terms of bringing stuff to light?
Amu:Just that anyone could end up here in prison.
Amu:It doesn't matter what you've done or whether
Amu:you've done anything.
Amu:There are 500 prisoners in Bronsfield and each one of us is an evidence bag of the failings
Amu:of the state and the world, not the cause of it.
Nicole:Sometimes people can end up like exceptionalizing political prisoners.
Nicole:And yeah, I know full well how prisoners inside for involvement in different social
Nicole:struggles are often treated differently,
Nicole:especially in terms of surveillance.
Nicole:But I'd regularly feel frustrated when repression of political prisoners was not
Nicole:connected to broader repression and the regular routine violence of the state.
Nicole:For example, quote unquote, social prisoners, a really imperfect term, also face very, very
Nicole:high usage of remand, disruption to posts, visits and calls, physical abuse from
Nicole:officers,
Nicole:solitary confinement and segregation, excessive license, conditions on release,
Nicole:stitch ups from the cps, the Crown Prosecution Service, falsifying evidence and all the
Nicole:things.
Nicole:So yeah, like how can we make this more explicit in our movements?
Nicole:Like, what do you think needs to happen for people to connect the dots between social and
Nicole:political prisoners and like the broader oppressive nature of the prison system.
Amu:As for me, no one should be in prison, full stop.
Amu:So it doesn't or shouldn't matter whether as a political prisoner you broke the rules on
Amu:purpose or as a social prisoner you broke the rules by accident.
Amu:I don't know.
Amu:The point is that the rules are breaking all
Amu:of us.
Amu:And then when you're here for whatever apparent reason,
Amu:it's quite a radicalizing process understanding that things need to change now
Amu:with your probably racialized, probably Muslim, probably neurodivergent, probably poor
Amu:body in one of His Majesty's prison cells as a living proof.
Amu:Yeah, I would say this is Me learning what we should be doing.
Amu:I think that's part of the reason that I wanted to be in touch with you.
Amu:Like Prisoner's Herbal keeps coming up.
Amu:I think there's two copies of it in reception for me that people have sent in that reception
Amu:won't let me have at the moment.
Amu:But I know that other prisoners in here have
Amu:read it and are doing these herbal foot baths and taking care of themselves as best they can
Amu:using Prisoners Herbal,
Amu:you know.
Amu:So I think,
Amu:yeah, I think I have loads to learn.
Nicole:What are your thoughts on prison abolition?
Nicole:Have they changed since becoming a prisoner?
Amu:And I couldn't really say whether they've changed since I became a prisoner.
Amu:Actually a friend of mine was asking me about this yesterday and I think it's more like the
Amu:framework of my understanding has become a bit more colored in like the,
Amu:the.
Amu:The point that the world is failing people and
Amu:prisoners are the result of those failures.
Amu:Like we're symptoms of these wider issues
Amu:rather than the cause of them.
Amu:Has. Has been kind of a constant as,
Amu:as been a constant since.
Amu:Since I was kind of like doing a sleepover at the occupation of Holloway Women's Prison with
Amu:sisters Uncut.
Amu:Or since they don't stop people from doing
Amu:crime or since they don't rehabilitate people.
Amu:You know, there's like a thousand examples of how prisons don't work and there's a lot of
Amu:people that have been doing that work of like defunding the carceral state and the police.
Amu:So I would really defer to them.
Amu:I think what I'm trying to do at the moment is
Amu:be in touch with people and like make this point that the arms trade and these weapons
Amu:manufacturers and these massive budgets for defense spending,
Amu:like this 2 billion pound contract to Raytheon that the MOD has just given out.
Amu:It's like 2 point whatever billion pounds on what?
Amu:You know, like each one of these armored cars that are being made in Wales and parts of that
Amu:are being used in Sudan or whatever.
Amu:You know, wherever this money ends up being used,
Amu:it's on misery elsewhere.
Amu:And there's like health and education and
Amu:housing in the UK that are underfunded deliberately and have been for forever.
Nicole:What trajectories do you think movements need to take in terms of ending
Nicole:imprisonment?
Amu:Trying to.
Amu:Well, I'm trying to disband the Met Police in
Amu:like a short term and like do some troublemaking in prison while I'm here.
Amu:But I also just want to talk to these groups that are kind of coming into my awareness that
Amu:have just been doing this work so well,
Amu:Like. Yeah, like NEJMA Collective or Bent Bars and Beyond Bars.
Amu:Also sds and I would love to see whether there are people that are still working on Detained
Amu:Voices.
Amu:I'm not sure if you've heard of it, but it's
Amu:like it.
Amu:It was a place that people that were in detention centers could record things directly
Amu:over the phone and then would be played.
Amu:I don't know whether it was radio or like a podcast series, but yeah, I think that
Amu:Detained Voices might have kind of stopped.
Amu:Yeah.
Amu:And I think Prisoner Solidarity Network as well.
Amu:I'm not sure what's going on with that, but yeah, again, just kind of trying to join the
Amu:dots and learn from other people.
Amu:Yeah. I've heard that there's a black mama bailout in the US for example.
Amu:Like.
Amu:Like people.
Amu:Yeah.
Amu:Anyway,
Amu:you probably know much more than I do, so I'm just gonna stop talking now.
Amu:Yeah, I think maybe that's enough for now.
Amu:Sorry. Yeah, I kept thinking that I was going to be more coherent and I just wasn't.
Amu:So I thought I would just give you material and you can decide whether to use it rather
Amu:than.
Amu:Yeah.
Amu:Rather than try and do it better, because that's been.
Amu:Anyway, I'm just going to stop talking again.
Amu:Okay.
Amu:Thank you.
Nicole:Thanks so much for listening to the Frontline Herbalism podcast.
Nicole:You can find the transcript, the links, all the resources from the
Nicole:show@solidarityapothecary.org podcast.
