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Jul 24

2007

The Jena 6: Nooses Hang From The “White Tree”

Posted at 12:23 pm in Jena 6, Other BlogsAdd comments

Do you know how to tie a noose? Get a piece of string and try it. It’s not a simple slip knot. You have to practice it to get it right. If you live in the south, you probably have a special aversion to nooses. We know what they mean, as surely as Cubans know the meaning of the Che graphic that is idiot chic. You can communicate a great deal with a few words or an image. So it is with the noose. It is not a prank. It is not a joke. It is a threat of execution. That threat was made last August in Jena, Louisiana against black teens protesting segregation. Finally in December, six of the teens - the “Jena Six” - were arrested for attempted 2nd degree murder for a high school fight in which the victim was not seriously injured.

jena6whitetree.jpgOn August 31, 2006, Jena High student Justin Purvis asked for permission to sit under the “white tree.” This is a tree in the school courtyard where whites typically sat. He was told by the school administration to sit where he liked. But three white students said it all - the next day, three nooses hung from that tree. Black parents were outraged, and met at a church to discuss it on September 5th. Black students were outraged. De facto segregation, where people tend to congregate with others in their race, is one thing. Enforced segregation via threats is quite another. The students stood up against it on September 6th.

JUSTIN PURVIS: It was like, the first beginning, in the courtyard, they said, “Y’all want to go stand under the tree?” We said, “Yeah.” They said, “If you go, I’ll go. If you go, I’ll go.” One person went, the next person went, everybody else just went.

The same day as the impromptu protest, an assembly was called. White students sat on one side of the auditorium, black students on the other. LaSalle Parish District Attorney Reed Walters dropped what he was doing and, accompanied by the police, came out to threaten the black students. He faced their side of the auditorium and told them, ““See this pen in my hand? I can end your lives with the stroke of a pen.” It was not an idle threat.

The three white students received three days of in-school suspension, over the wishes of the principal who wanted them expelled. He was overruled by school superintendent Roy Breithaupt who said, “Adolescents play pranks. I don’t think it was a threat against anybody.” On September 10th, black parents tried to address the school board but were refused. They tried again on September 18th, and were finally granted five minutes to speak with the understanding that the issue was closed and whatever they said, it would make no difference.

The tension and violence escalated. On Thursday, November 30, the academic wing of the school was burned. The next day Robert Bailey, one of the Jena 6, attended a party at the Jena Fair Barn. Upon his arrival, he was beaten with fists and hit with beer bottles by a group of whites. Only one, Justin Sloane, was later charged with simple battery and ultimately received probation. The next day, Saturday, Robert Bailey and two friends encountered one of the white men present at the previous night’s Fair Barn beating. The white man was afraid of retaliation and pulled a shotgun on the three teens. The teens wrestled the shotgun away from him and ran. When they reported the incident to the police, they were charged with robbery of the shotgun. Word travels quickly in small towns. Teachers at Jena High, fearing trouble, asked that the school be closed the next day. Their request was denied.

On Monday during gym class, Justin Barker and a group of whites, including the three noose hangers, taunted Robert Bailey and other black students. According to reports, they used the word “nigger” and mocked Bailey for having his “ass whipped.” When Barker left the gym, he was attacked by a group of black students - a mirror image of the attack on Bailey at the Fair Barn three days earlier, with two exceptions. Bailey arrived at the party expecting a fun evening, not trouble. He was attacked without provocation. Reports vary as to what happened outside the gym, but tend to agree on some points - Justin Barker was knocked unconscious by either being hit, or hitting his head on the concrete, and was kicked when he was down. An ambulance was called. Justin was conscious and standing by the time it got there. He was taken by ambulance to the hospital, where he complained of eye pain, received a CT scan, and was released within three hours. He attended the school’s ring ceremony later that night, and says that he took pain pills for a week after the beating.

The first to be tried was Mychal Bell, after spending seven months in jail because he could not pay the extraordinarily high bail. Immediately before the trial, the charges against Bell were reduced to 2nd degree battery, also a felony. The prosecution called Bell’s parents as witnesses, so they were not allowed to be in the courtroom with their son, although they were not called to testify in the case. Bell was defended by a public defender who called no witnesses and put on no defense. The jury was all white, which is not surprising in a town where 85% of the population is white. What is surprising is that of the six person jury, according to CNN, “All of them said that they knew some of the witnesses that are expected to be called in this case.” The jury included a high school classmate of Reed Walters, the district attorney who threatened the black students after the white tree protest. It included the mother of one of the prosecution witnesses, and a good friend of Justin Barker’s mother. Bell’s attorney put on no defense whatsoever. He did not call a single witness to refute the prosecution’s case, including the Jena High coach, who had stated that Bell was not involved in the fight.

Bell was found guilty within three hours, and will be sentenced on July 31 for up to 22 years in prison for the December 4 school fight, for which he has already spent over seven months in jail. Four of the Jena Six are still waiting for trial, and one is being charged as a juvenile.

Sources:
CNN
The Town Talk (a local newspaper)
Friends of Justice
Injustice In Jena As Nooses Hang From The “White Tree” By Bill Quigley
Democracy Now
NPR
Associated Press
The News Star

More links in the PH Jena Six archives.

You can sign a petition here if you like. Online petitions are not especially helpful because politicians don’t care about what people think. They primarily care about what registered voters in their districts think and to an extent, what their constituents think because they might register to vote, donate or have influence on those who do. So sign it if you like but above all, please contact your Senators and your Representative. Tell them about the Jena 6 and demand that the Justice Department investigate.

If you live in Louisiana, contact Governor Blanco and ask not just for the pardon, but for LaSalle DA Reed Walters and the Jena police to be investigated.

Write:
Office of the Governor
Attn: Constituent Services
P.O. Box 94004
Baton Rouge, LA 70804-9004

Fax: 225-342-7099
E-mail the Governor

Call:
866-366-1121
225-342-0991
225-342-7015

And most of all, spread the word about the Jena Six!

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written by Laura

59 Responses to “The Jena 6: Nooses Hang From The “White Tree””

In an effort to keep this blog both PG-13 and to discourage spam, I've installed a plugin that asterisks out profanity and common spam words. When you see asterisks in a comment, you can mouse over the word to see it in a screen tip.
  1. Michael Says:

    I like the site redesign. Makes it easier to read. :)

  2. Laura Says:

    Thanks very much!

  3. Michael Says:

    Just wanted to let you know I signed the petition. It may help to request a presidential pardon for the prisoners.

  4. Laura Says:

    Thanks for getting involved. Please also consider contacting your congressional representation and ask them to request that the Justice Department investigate. And spread the word, if you can! :-)

  5. Eric Duran Says:

    i think that is messed up about the tree

  6. Laura Says:

    Well, they cut it down this week- that’s at least something.

  7. Quesse Says:

    I have email everyone I know about this situation, I am just now hearing about this myself. I am outraged and I believe that we have to let out heart cry out about injustice, no matter where it takes place.

  8. just shun Says:

    This really stink and he should sue them when he is free

  9. From Jena 2 Says:

    Laura

    The tree was cut down because of the destruction to the old main building and the tree sat where the new facility will be sitting.

  10. Denise Ray Says:

    This sickens me to no end. I worked at the Anti-Defamation League when I found out about the two separate proms being held in a high school in Atlanta, GA. We contacted our offices there to see what was being done on ADL’s
    part regarding that issue. Maybe Mr. Bell’s family can get in contact with that office and see what they can do. My heart goes out to all of the Jena 6
    Teens who are involved in this whole mess.

  11. From Jena Says:

    Denise Ray:

    They involved THEMSELVES in this mess when they decided to gang up on a guy WHILE he was unconscious on the ground and kick him repeatedly.

  12. Laura Says:

    From Jena 2 - yes, but the news reports said they cut it down early so it wouldn’t be there at the start of the school year.

  13. Andrea Says:

    And they things have changed,but in reality things are still changing and may I add at a sickening slow pace.

  14. PNAUDDI Says:

    It’s a shame, but everything happens for a reason, it was injustice to hang nooses from a school yard tree and school officials corrective action concluded in a simple “Prank/Joke”. It is injustice for a fight at school with absolutely no weapons, no serious injuries to end up in the court systems and result in (Attempt of Murder). However, I have always been told you have to pick and choose your battles, some battles are more difficult than others, and when you choose that battle you have to care that much, that you are willing to lose that battle. Personally if I was one of the Jena 6 boys I would have chose the battle because it means that much. The Jena 6 teenage boys have made history they stood up for what they believed, and have moved the nation. They should be proud and hold their heads high. You see as I opened my comment everything happens for a reason, every beginning has an ending, the duration from start to finish is the struggle, but the truth revealed is the key, see the truth can only be hidden for so long in due time the truth will tell:
    THE DEVIL IS A LIAR GOD STILL SITS ON THE THROWN

  15. Deanna Says:

    First of all, I would never listen to CNN. I Dont believe alot of the stuff I just read here. Ive never found blacks to be any more innocent of racism than any white person. I dont feel sorry for any of them.

  16. Laura Says:

    Every time I think I’ve closed comments on all Jena posts, I find out I haven’t. This post was my last word on the topic.

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