Check out our new video with Marshaun Barber and Devon Knowles talking about the dependency system and why the County should not be investing more money in a system that targets poor families and families of color.
Upcoming Events
WISH is excited to announce that we have two upcoming events!
First, on Thursday, January 16, please join API Chaya, Washington Incarceration Stops Here, and Incarcerated Mothers Advocacy Project UW for a free workshop about the Marissa Alexander case and others focused on women of color who have defended themselves in response to personal violence. This workshop is organized in solidarity with the nationwide movement to free Marissa today.
Marissa Alexander is a black mother of three and survivor of domestic violence from Jacksonville, FL. In August 2010, nine days after she had given birth, she fired a warning shot at the wall to defend herself from her estranged husband, who was threatening her life. Despite the fact that Marissa Alexander caused no injuries and has no previous criminal record, despite the fact that there is a documented history of domestic violence, and despite the fact that Florida’s self-defense law includes the right to “Stand Your Ground,” she was subsequently arrested, prosecuted, and sentenced to a mandatory minimum of 20 years in prison. Her conviction was overturned on a legal technicality, and Florida has decided to retry Marissa on the same charges. Come discuss how women of color and other marginalized people are especially likely to be blamed and criminalized while trying to navigate and survive the conditions of violence in their lives.
Act with us, as now is the time for us to stand up, to collectively raise our voice against the criminalization of survivors of domestic violence.
Read API Chaya’s full statement of support here: https://sites.google.com/site/apichayamarissaalexander/
More info:
http://freemarissanow.tumblr.com/
https://www.facebook.com/FreeMarissaNow.
Want to Help Out? – Contribute to Marissa’s Legal Defense Fund:
http://www.indiegogo.com/projects/justice-for-marissa-a-fundraiser-for-freedom
COMMUNITY WORKSHOP:
Location:
2100 Building
Community Room B
2100 24th Avenue South
Seattle, WA 98144
The 2100 Building is located on 24th Avenue South between South Hill and South Walker Streets. It is one block east of Rainier Avenue South. On-street parking is available in the surrounding area, and in a street-level garage accessed through the alley. Please do not park in the fenced in area across the street! That is private parking, and your vehicle will be towed!
The space is wheelchair accessible, but NOT scent free! I apologize for any inconvenience.
For more information, or to request an interpreter, please email priya@apichaya.org. (For interpreter requests, please ask by 01/06/13).
Watch our new video!
We’re making a series of videos of our members talking about why they oppose King County’s plans to spend $210 million and build a new youth jail and family court buildings. Here’s the first video, with the awesome DeDe speaking the truth! Watch on Youtube and press the CC button if you want to watch with captions.
Free Nestora Salgado, indigenous leader & political prisoner! Rally Tuesday 12/10!
Free Nestora Salgado, indigenous leader & political prisoner!
Protest at the Mexican Consulate
2132 3rd Ave in Downtown Seattle
(Corner of 3rd & Lenora St)
International Human Rights Day
Tuesday, Dec. 10, 11am-1pm
FB event here
Who is Nestora Salgado?
Nestora Salgado is an indigenous leader, a naturalized U.S. citizen and political prisoner in Mexico. She was seized without an arrest warrant by Mexican federal soldiers last August and as a result of her leadership role in community policing against organized crime, which has swept through the indigenous communities of the state of Guerrero over the last several years. Read more about her here
WYCI was recently able to speak in more detail with Nestora’s family about Nestora, the town of Olinala, and the efforts by the Mexican government to control the community police not just in Olinala but across the state of Guerrero. Nestora was arrested on August 21, 2013 on kidnapping charges. Prior to her arrest, the community policing group to which she belonged had received wide support for their work. Nestora had even been provided with body guards by the state at one point. All that changed with the community police’s arrest of a government representative for tampering with evidence. The state military was sent in and, instead of providing relief to families, has been harassing the town’s people to speak against Nestora. Luckily, Nestora has a strong family who is working tirelessly to not only obtain freedom for Nestora, but for the other community leaders of Guerrero like her. Listen to them share their story at Tuesday’s rally.
WISH supports the efforts to free Nestora, and thanks Who You Callin’ Illegal and other partner organizations and collectives for their work in this struggle.
Last regular meeting of the year, some thoughts on what we do, and wonderful news from Marissa Alexander
This Monday, 12/9, will be our last regular meeting of 2013. As we look forward to working against youth incarceration, destructive family courts, and gentrification in 2014, we’re also looking back on what we’ve been a part of over the last months.
A few weeks ago, we were visited by Cindy Milstein, an anarchist writer and participant in numerous collective struggles (you can read more about Cindy here.) After our meeting, she wrote the piece below:
“More & more, in the face of macro-needs that seem unmeetable, like the Philippines, I’m noticing how simply engaging in meeting micro-needs—seeing & acting on the deprivation & hurt right in front of us—is part of knowing we can meet each others’ needs (& desires) in ways that strive to not replicate hierarchy & oppression. Those micro-moments of making a difference while modeling new social relations often go so unseen. They not only give us practice for those “bigger” moments but also are, in many ways, just as big.
Last night, after a phenomenal weekend of collectively practicing the creation of social spaces of caring in Unceded Coast Salish Territories (in so-called Vancouver), I got to listen in on a meeting of folks in Seattle (Duwamish lands) fighting the construction of a new juvenile jail (the Washington Incarceration Stops Here [WISH] group) in a huge old hall filled with organizing history & living struggles. One person there had a friend who’d just been dragged a few days ago by the cops to the old juvenile jail a block or two away & was visibly upset by it. So we grabbed 3 spoons and 1 pot from the meeting space, walked to the jail, and did a 9:30 pm, 6-person noise demo. Youths inside held their fingers and hands up to the milky-glass windows, and we could see their shadows, signaling recognition and acknowledgement to us. Then we heard some of the youths calling out to us, so walked up as close as we could to those high windows, and spent about 10 minutes trading names, thanks, and solidarity with each other. A passerby on the quiet street stopped to ask us for directions, then thanked us for being there, for doing what we were doing. And the person from the meeting shared their sorrow with us about their friend inside, but also lit up with the sense of the WISH group having their back in this moment.
It was all just a tiny, “meaningless” not-so-loud noise demo outside a jail, with no one but us and a few youths inside to experience it. Yet somehow we all felt more fully human afterward.”
It feels good to remember, as Cindy so eloquently articulates, that each moment, each day, is rife with opportunities to reach out and embrace others, to refuse the logics of exile and incarceration, to share wealth or empathy—to build, sliver by tiny sliver, the sort of world we want to inhabit.
You can read more of Cindy’s work on her blog, http://cbmilstein.wordpress.com/
(this piece on gentrification in San Francisco is a good place to start)
——–
Last month WISH collectively decided to endorse efforts to free Marissa Alexander, a survivor of domestic violence from Jacksonville, FL who was sentenced to 20 years in prison for defending herself from violence. Though our part in this struggle has been small, we are thrilled to share the following press release from the Free Marissa Now Mobilization Campaign:
Statement to the Press
Victory! Marissa Alexander home for Thanksgiving
November 28, 2013
Words cannot express the relief and joy of everyone in the Free Marissa Now Mobilization Campaign that Marissa Alexander is home with her family this Thanksgiving Day. Ms. Alexander has been released on bond until a verdict is reached in her new trial that begins March 31, 2014.We hope the decision means that the Florida justice system has relented in its vindictive, hostile and racist legal assault on this African American mother of three. Ms. Alexander has been victimized twice — once by her abusive ex-husband and again by the state of Florida, which has stolen nearly three years from her life for an act of self-defense that injured no one.
We are thrilled that Ms. Alexander will be able to prepare for her new trial amid the support and love of her children and family from whom she has been separated far too long.
But the battle is not over. It is well documented that black women and other marginalized people are likely to be criminalized, prosecuted, and incarcerated while trying to navigate and survive the conditions of violence in their lives. This is especially true for black women who are subjected to racist stereotypes that paint them as overly aggressive and unworthy. The Free Marissa Now Mobilization Campaign will keep organizing, educating and keeping the pressure on to make sure that Marissa’s new trial is fair, sensitive to her situation as a black woman experiencing domestic abuse, and successful!
The Free Marissa Now Mobilization Campaign is more determined than ever to win complete exoneration for Marissa Alexander. We have launched the Marissa Alexander Freedom Fund campaign to raise $20,000 by the end of the year to help pay for legal costs of the new trial. Donors can give at tiny.cc/freedomfundraiser.
Free Marissa Now Mobilization Campaign is a grassroots campaign led by a core of organizers representing the African American/Black Women’s Cultural Alliance, New Jim Crow Movement – Jacksonville, Radical Women, INCITE!, and the Pacific Northwest Alliance to Free Marissa Alexander.
Knowing that Marissa was able to spend Thanksgiving with her family is concrete evidence of the value of the work so many folks are doing. This success is motivation to keep going.
Trans Lives Matter signs on!
We’re glad to announce that Trans Lives Matter has signed onto our Points of Unity.
In their words, “Trans Lives Matter is built on a strong core group of talented trans (and allied) activists. We have backgrounds in project management, insurance and trans health, policy creation and revision, finance and employment assistance, and much more. A lot of us have experienced many of the hardships that affect trans communities. That’s why we’re committed to creating programs that address long standing issues in new ways.” Read more about them here!

Wonderful events upcoming on November 20th & 21st
Mark your calendars for Wednesday (11/20) and Thursday (11/21) for some really cool educational events.
First, WISH is collaborating with a group of students from the University of Washington School of Social Work to put on a workshop about the School-to-Prison Pipeline.
This workshop is free and open to the public.
Time: 5-6:30PM
Location: UW School of Social Work Building, 4101 15th Ave. NE.
Room: 306A
Second, members of the National Immigrant Youth Alliance and DreamActivist.org will be speaking about the use of direct action by undocumented migrants on Wednesday, November 20th, 6:30PM – 8:30PM at the University of Washington Kelly Ethnic Cultural Center, Unity Room (3931 Brooklyn Ave NE) and Thursday, November 21st, 5:30PM – 7:30PM at Casa Latina (317 17th Ave South). These events are part of a West Coast speaking tour. Both organizations were recently featured on the June 21st episode of This American Life. They will be discussing how our broken immigration system has personally impacted them, and their efforts to organize and work for immigrants’ rights. The main speakers have experience helping organize detention center infiltrations and one speaker was a member of the “Dream 9” who was detained after attempting to cross the border demanding to be let in on humanitarian grounds. Biographies of the speakers are below.
The event is being organized by Who You Callin’ Illegal, MEChA – Seattle Central Community College, MEChA – Evergreen College, Evergreen Political Information Center (EPIC), Washington Incarceration Stops Here (WISH), and the Tahoma Unitarian Universality Congregation. Read more about the events here.

Free Marissa Alexander!
WISH has collectively decided to endorse the petition to Free Marissa Alexander Now! She is a survivor of domestic violence from Jacksonville, FL who was sentenced to 20 years in prison for defending herself from violence. For more information on her case, please go here: http://freemarissanow.tumblr.com/

Incarcerated Mothers Advocacy Project signs on!
We are glad to announce that the University of Washington School of Law’s Chapter of the Incarcerated Mothers Advocacy Project (IMAP) has signed on to the Points of Unity.
The Incarcerated Mothers Advocacy Project (IMAP) is a coalition of law students, social service providers, activists and formerly incarcerated women who seek to change the rights afforded incarcerated and formerly incarcerated women in the State of Washington. They write, “As community members, organizers, and prison abolitionists, we whole-heartedly endorse the development of transformative community-based responses to violence so we aren’t forced to rely on an abusive criminal punishment system for safety and accountability.”
Thank you IMAP for all your work and for signing on to the Points of Unity!
Anakbayan Seattle signs on to the Points of Unity!
We are proud to announce that Anakbayan Seattle, a youth and student organization based here in Seattle, signed on to the Points of Unity against the new King County Youth Jail.
Anakbayan is a youth and student organization working to educate, organize and mobilize our community to address important issues that affect Filipinos in the U.S. and the Philippines. We aim to unite Filipino youth of all backgrounds in order to achieve genuine freedom and democracy in the Philippines.

