Assata Shakur, a figure who inspired generations of activists while remaining one of America’s most wanted fugitives, has died in Havana at 78. Cuba’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said she passed away from health complications linked to age. Her daughter, Kakuya Shakur, wrote on Facebook that her mother “took her last earthly breath” on September 25 and thanked supporters for their prayers during this time of grief.

Early Life and Path to Activism

Born JoAnne Deborah Byron in Queens, New York, in 1947, Shakur spent part of her childhood in Wilmington, North Carolina. She later returned to New York for college. As a young woman, she joined the civil rights and anti-war movements of the 1960s. Eventually, her activism led her to the Black Panther Party in Oakland, where she worked on community programs and political education. By the early 1970s, she moved into the ranks of the Black Liberation Army, an underground group that embraced armed struggle.

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The New Jersey Turnpike Shootout

Shakur’s name entered headlines in May 1973 after a confrontation with New Jersey state troopers on the Turnpike. The incident ended in the death of Trooper Werner Foerster and left Shakur wounded. She insisted she had her hands raised when she was shot. In 1977, she was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison. Her supporters argued the trial was shaped by racism and political bias.

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Escape and Exile in Cuba

In 1979, Shakur escaped from the Clinton Correctional Facility in New Jersey with the help of armed allies. She resurfaced in Cuba in 1984, where Fidel Castro’s government granted her asylum. For decades, she lived in exile, writing, speaking, and supporting liberation movements. In 2013, the FBI placed her on its Most Wanted Terrorists list and doubled the reward for her capture to $2 million. The move deepened tensions between Washington and Havana.

Her Voice and Writings

Shakur used her time in Cuba to share her political vision. In a 1998 letter to Pope John Paul II during his visit to the island, she voiced her support for revolutionary change. She condemned capitalist exploitation, racism, sexism, and political repression. Her autobiography, Assata: An Autobiography, became a touchstone for activists worldwide. It linked her personal struggle to broader fights against systemic injustice.

I have been locked by the lawless. Handcuffed by the haters. Gagged by the greedy. And, if I know anything at all, it is that a wall is just a wall and nothing more at all. It can be broken down. – Assata Shakur

A Divisive Legacy

To U.S. authorities, she was a convicted cop killer and terrorist. To many others, she was a symbol of resistance against racial oppression and state violence. Her ties to cultural icons such as Tupac Shakur, her godson, and Mutulu Shakur, her stepbrother, deepened her status within movements for Black liberation.

Shakur’s death closes a chapter in a story that spanned civil rights, Cold War politics, and the unresolved conflicts of America’s racial history. Yet her life continues to resonate, reminding the world of the price and power of defiance.


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