THE BLACK PANTHER PARTY : REVOLUTIONARY SUICIDE

  • Thread starter Thread starter New Editor
  • Start date Start date

BIGG WILL

New member
PART II :

BUNCHY CARTER AND JOHN HUGGINS

syrrdg.jpg


HUGGINS

302nyw1.jpg


CARTER

In the early 1960s Carter was a member of the Slauson street gang in Los Angeles. He became a member of the Slauson "Renegades", a hard-core inner circle of the gang, and earned the nickname "Mayor of the Ghetto". Carter was eventually convicted of armed robbery and was imprisoned in Soledad prison for four years. While incarcerated Carter became influenced by the Nation of Islam and the teachings of Malcolm X, and he converted to Islam. After his release, Carter met Huey Newton, one of the founders of the Black Panther Party, and was convinced to join the party in 1967. In early 1968 Carter formed the Southern California chapter of the Black Panthers and became a leader in the group. Like all Black Panther chapters, the Southern California chapter studied politics, read BPP literature, and received training in firearms and first aid. They also began the "Free Breakfast for Children" program which provided meals to the poor in the community. The chapter was very successful, gaining 50–100 new members each week by April 1968. Notable members included Elaine Brown, and Geronimo Pratt.

THEIR MURDERS :

At a Black Student Union meeting at UCLA's Campbell Hall on January 17, 1969, Bunchy Carter and John Huggins, another BPP member, were heard making derogatory comments about Karenga, the founder of Organization Us. Other versions mention a heated argument between Organization Us members and Panther Elaine Brown. An altercation ensued during which Carter and Huggins were shot to death.

BPP members originally insisted that the event was a planned assassination, claiming that there was a prior agreement that no guns would be brought to the meeting, that BPP members were not armed, and that Organization Us members led by Ron Karenga were. Organization Us members maintained the meeting was a spontaneous event. Former BPP deputy minister of defense Geronimo Pratt, Carter’s head of security at the time, later stated that rather than a conspiracy, the UCLA incident was a spontaneous shootout. The person who allegedly shot Carter and Huggins, Claude Hubert, was never found. During the Church Committee hearings in 1975, evidence came to light that under the FBI's COINTELPRO actions, FBI agents had deliberately fanned flames of division and enmity between the BPP and Organization Us. Death threats and humiliating cartoons created by the FBI were sent to each group, made to look as if they originated with the other group, with the explicit intention of inciting deadly violence and division

Heres an detailed account of what took place:
http://sixties-l.blogspot.com/2009/01/how-wrong-we-were-bunchy-carter-john.html

FRED HAMPTON
http://community.allhiphop.com/discussion/510719/fred-hampton-you-cant-kill-the-revolution?new=1
 
Last edited:
Karenga the guy who set up Bunchy Carter was an FBI informant and the founder of Kwanzaa. His organization were rivals of the bpp. Just goes to show that cats who might have agreed on some thin still found reasons to fight.
 
jono;6764516 said:
Karenga the guy who set up Bunchy Carter was an FBI informant and the founder of Kwanzaa. His organization were rivals of the bpp. Just goes to show that cats who might have agreed on some thin still found reasons to fight.

Yea, was thinking of covering them in an "enemy of the people" thread.

 
Links? I will definitely when I'm a bit free

I'm a Black Panther enthusiast

Read the biography of Stokely Carmichael in its entirety
 

Members online

No members online now.

Trending content

Thread statistics

Created
-,
Last reply from
-,
Replies
10
Views
0
Back
Top
Menu
Your profile
Post thread…