Bigotry Behind Bars:
Racist Groups in U.S. Prisons

Introduction
Racist Prison Gangs
Brotherhood of Hate
Racist Outreach to Prisoners
Treated as Heroes
Non-White Racists in Prison

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Introduction

Driven by a belief in their superiority, white supremacist prison gangs contribute to increased racial tensions and violence in American penitentiaries.
Prisoner of War
A publication exclusively for racist inmates, Prisoner of War features pseudo-scientific articles on racial differences, news about the white supremacist movement and crude anti-Semitic caricatures.

Not only do their activities undermine prison security, but their extreme rhetoric and animosity toward other races often stay with gang members long after their release.

Prison officials estimate that up to 10 percent of the nation's prison population is affiliated with gangs.

Since prisoners tend to segregate themselves by race, white supremacist gangs may appear more attractive to white inmates -- especially those seeking protection -- than they would outside penitentiary walls. Inmates already sympathetic to racist ideology become more radical in their beliefs in the racially charged prison environment.

One of the best-known racist prison gangs is Aryan Brotherhood, which emerged in the 1960s at California's San Quentin Prison. This violent gang has since spread to prisons throughout the United States and has been linked to a number of murders, both in and out of prisons. More>>

A number of racist groups in the U.S. sponsor prison "outreach" programs that send tapes and literature filled with white supremacist propaganda to inmates.

To all people of the "White Aryan Race"! Wake up, open you [sic] eyes, look around you! We of the White nation are fighting a great battle ... We, as a nation need to use our god [sic] given rights to fight this war against the canaanite jew [sic] and all other non-white races, for they are the true enemy of our White race.

-- From an Oregon inmate in the February 1998 issue of Thule, a white supremacist publication written by and for prisoners

These extremist organizations encourage racist inmates by treating them as "martyrs," fueling their racist ideology through violent rhetoric. More>>

White supremacist groups are not the only racist organizations active in prisons. The Nation of Islam, the Black Muslim group led by Minister Louis Farrakhan, has organized an extensive prison outreach program since 1984. NOI has fought, sometimes in court, to have its prison emissaries recognized as chaplains separate from the mainstream Muslim chaplaincy. Supporters of the prison outreach program argue that NOI's message of discipline and morality helps rehabilitate prisoners; moreover, NOI's prison emissaries help inmates find jobs and housing upon their release. However, critics worry that Farrakhan's rhetoric -- including a long record of anti-Semitic and anti-white statements -- may spill over into NOI's prison outreach program and radicalize prisoners. More>>



Next: Racist Prison Gangs


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This report was originally issued in October 1998.

© 2001 Anti-Defamation League