...and how Tupacs Mothers Involvement
with the Revoloutionary Black Panthers Inspired him
to follow in her Footsteps as a leader of his people.
The
tale of Tupac Shakur, who lived so fast and died so
young, is at oncemore tender and more tragic than that
of the woman-hating thug we saw instories about him.
Quiet as it was kept, by the media and by Tupac himself,
the effusively talented singer/writer/actor was the
heir apparent of a family of black revolutionaries,
most of whom wound up jailed, exiled, or dead during
the1970's and 1980's. His ties to the remarkable Shakur
family must have been a weighty psychicburden for the
rap artist. The individual members of the extended clan
commanded almost mythic respect from radicals of the
black power period, especially in New York. This defining
part of Tupac's background, incredibly, has been generally
glossed over by the music and social critics trying
to make sense of the contradictions that permeated his
life. Given the radical diehard commitment of those
relatives, it is no wonder that Tupac believed police
agents were trailing him, like hunters after their prey.
What was truly amazing was the grace with which, as
an actor and rapper, he tied together feelings of love
with the righteous anger that was a family legacy. Tupac
Amaru Shakur was born in 1971 to Afeni Shakur, a Black
Panther who carried the rapper-to-be in her womb while
she was in jail, accused in a bomb plot. The Manhattan
District Attorney tried to link 21 Panthers to the alleged
plot, but the prosecutor's office found itself redfaced
when a jury quickly rejected the charges. It is now
believed the defendants were victims of an F.B.I.-led
attempt to neutralize Panther Party members across the
country. Afeni never revealed publicly who Tupac's father
was. But one thing she did acknowledge: that the father
was not Afeni's husband, Lumumba Shakur,who was the
lead defendant in the Panther 21 case. Exhausted from
the trialand angry at the romantic betrayal by Afeni,
Lumumba left his wife and her newborn son; but Afeni
quickly moved in with Lumumba's adopted brother, Mutulu,
who would become Tupac's stepfather and spiritual counselor
for the rest of the younger man's life. Those who knew
the family describe Mutulu Shakur as the most influential
male figure in Tupac's life, the man who taught him
to stand up for himself and never to back down from
a fight. But Mutulu, later to be known as Dr. Shakur,
because of his training in acupuncture, was eventually
to be taken from Tupac. In 1986, he was arrested as
the reputed mastermind of the 1981 Brinks robbery, in
which two Nyack, New York policemen and a Brinks guard
were killed. To this day, Dr. Shakur denies that he
had anything to do with the holdup, but he was nonetheless
convicted and is now doing 60 years.
In an interview two years ago at the federal prison
in Lewisburg, Pa., where he was being held at the time,
Dr. Shakur would not say if he saw Tupac during the
years he was on the run from the Brinks charges. But
it must havebeen painful for adolescent Tupac to know
agents were scouring black neighborhoods all over the
country looking for his stepfather. During thistime,
Afeni and Tupac moved from Harlem to Baltimore. In an
added trauma for Tupac, Lumumba Shakur, who remained
on good terms with the family, was found dead in Louisiana
several days before Mutulu was arrested. Mutulu says
he suspects Lumumba was murdered by someone (perhaps
a police informant) who learned of Mutulu's whereabouts
and decided to kill two birds with one stone, taking
the two brothers out of circulation.
By this time, at age 15, Tupac must have been thoroughly
convinced that to be a Shakur was to confront the possibility
of death at an early age. He was learning such lessons
almost before he could walk. In 1973, when Tupac was
a toddler, his uncle, Zayd Shakur, was travelingon the
New Jersey Turnpike with his companion, Assata Shakur,
when they were stopped by a trooper. In a shoot-out
that followed, Zayd and Trooper Werner Foerster lay
dead. Assata, once known as JoAnne Chesimard, was wounded
and later charged and convicted in the killing of the
trooper. Taking the legend of the Shakurs to new heights,
Assata escaped from prison in 1979 and fled to Cuba,
where she is living now under a grant of asylum from
the government of Fidel Castro. Assata, dubbed the "soul"
of the Black Liberation Army, is arguably the most famous
member of Tupac's extended family. Even as he climbed
the ladder of stardom, and fought publicized battles
with the law -- including the sex assault case and an
allegation that he wounded a police officer in Georgia
-- -- Tupac stayed in close contact with his stepfather
Mutulu, talking with him by phone and seeking advice
from him. Mutulu (born Jeral Wayne Williams) maintains
he was having an impact on the young man, guiding him
from street instincts and post-adolescent confusion,
into a more coherent use of his energies. Mutulu praised
the tender songs that Tupac would write, the ones with
positive messages about family life and responsibility,
like "Brenda's Got a Baby." Together, the
step-father and -son team drew up a "Code of Thug
Life," which was a list of rules discouraging random
violence among gansta rappers.
All of this wasdone away from the glare of media attention
and perhapsthere was good reason why Tupac did not want
to publicize his relationship with Mutulu. He was already
taking enough heat from local police around the country.
Why aggravate the situation by further provoking federal
agents who might have been monitoring Mutulu and his
revolutionary associates? After all, federal authorities
were known to be still interested in capturing Assata,
who was close to Mutulu. Assata says she escaped from
jail in 1979 because she had learned of a plan to have
white prisoners assassinate her. Federal authorities
said Mutulu was part of the team that broke Assata out
of prison. It is perhaps difficult for some to remember
the passion that Assata and her associates inspired
in the law enforcement community. After I first wrote
about Assata in 1987, I did a phone interview with F.B.I.
official Ken Walton, who was prominent in the effort
to capture her after her jailbreak. He told me in measured,
angry words that he "or somebody like me"
will one day capture Assata and bring her back to the
States.
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