“I hate mornings. There’s nothing worse than waking up from your dreams to a cell whose 6×9 confines stretch into the horizons of your future.” — Emile DeWeaver

 

We share this special holiday reprise episode of Life of the Law from December 2015.

On Saturday night, Dec 5, 2015 more than 200 people filled the pews of the Catholic chapel inside San Quentin State Prison for a first-ever uncensored storytelling event behind the prison walls. Together, inmates and volunteers, officers and staff gathered to hear stories about the all-too-secret, often misunderstood community that sustains each of them inside and outside the prison walls.

For two storytellers, Troy Williams and Watani Stiner, the night would be the first time they would return to San Quentin after being released a year earlier following decades as inmates.

Like those in the audience for Live @ San Quentin, this special episode offers the chance to hear the voices and stories too often silenced by imprisonment.

Matt Martin, General Manager of Public Radio KALW in San Francisco, was in the audience that night. He made the decision to jointly air the Live @ San Quentin Christmas Day Special on KALW. He explained his decision to the station’s listeners in a newsletter:

Earlier this month, a group of us from KALW had the privilege to be part of an amazing evening in the chapel at San Quentin State Prison. It was a program of live storytelling by prisoners, staff and volunteers at the prison, organized by the podcast Life of the Law. As in any great night of storytelling, there was drama and disclosure, pain and humor. And for me, a new understanding that “rehabilitation” isn’t only about job skills or being ready for reentering society.   At its root, it’s about restoring life.  

The men who spoke are reclaiming their lives — from years of separation from loved ones, from violence and trauma and addiction, from their own terrible mistakes.  They are striving to make their lives meaningful, doing work to examine and improve themselves that most of us on the outside never do.

We are proud to be able to bring you a selection of these stories this Friday at 5pm.  As you’ll hear, they are remarkable and important — and completely appropriate for Christmas Day.

Sincerely,
Matt Martin, KALW General Manager

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The special hour-long feature episode presents stories from Lawrence Pela, Watani Stiner, Azraal Ford, Aaron Taylor, Phil Melendez, and Emile Deweaver.
Each of the photos below are links to the audio stories of the other wonderful stories shared at Live @ San Quentin — stories from Kathleen Jackson, David Jassy, Raphaele Casale, Eric Durr and Troy Williams.

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Raphaele Casale

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David Jassy

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Troy Williams

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Eric Durr

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Kathleen Jackson

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Live @ San Quentin was a co-production of Life of the Law, the San Quentin News, the San Quentin Prison Report, the Society of Professional Journalists Northern California Chapter and the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. The event was funded in part by the Open Society Foundations, the Law and Society Association, the National Science Foundation and A Blade of Grass.

In 2015, the Society of Professional Journalists welcomed reporters inside San Quentin to become members of the national organization, creating the San Quentin Satellite Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists, the first SPJ chapter of journalists in a US prison. See the photos of the day they received their membership cars, and read about the association in this Life of the Law blog post.

Special thanks to San Quentin SPJ members Rahsaan Thomas, Greg Eskridge, Juan Haines, Louis A Scott, and Tommy Winfrey for their months of work co-producing the event.  Our appreciation to photographer Elisabeth Fall and to Tony Gannon for producing the video of the event, which is being shown on San Quentin Television on Christmas Day.

Thanks also to Warden Ron Davis, Chief Deputy Warden Kelly Mitchell, Lt. Sam Robinson, Raphael Kasalee, Steve Emrick and Father George Williams of the San Quentin Catholic Chapel for their support in producing Live @ San Quentin.

Guests and press were by special invitation only and were cleared to go inside the prison by the CDCR.

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Life of the Law is published by Panoply network of podcasts and is a non-profit project of the Tides Center. This episode of Life of the Law was funded in part by grants from the Open Society Foundation, the Law and Society Association, the Proteus Fund and the National Science Foundation.

© Copyright 2017 Life of the Law. All rights reserved.