This passage by Said reminded me of this artwork I did (Fig. 4) where I compared my prison identification card with my father’s immigration card. I wonder if being exiled is truly not a matter of choice in one's life. It is true that I had no choice to be born into this body, but the choices I made to be sent to prison were entirely my own, although I can say honestly that at the time I was truly convinced that I would never be caught and sent to prison. The part of the passage that says “you are born into it or it happens to you,” is something that rings so true to my life. Nobody wants to go to prison. A lot of times I would see inmates at the county jail get on that transportation bus they call the “grey goose,” literally kicking and screaming. One way or another your ass is getting on that bus. It happens to you. You are transported against your will to a place nobody wants to go. It is almost as if you get transported to a parallel universe that exists on the outskirts of what we call reality. When you step off of that bus after being driven through 3 different gates, one of which is charged with an electric current 24 hours a day, you definitely feel you are not in Kansas anymore. You will meet your first prison guard who will ask you: ¨who do you run with?” a simple question that is meant to divide the prison race populations. Already knowing of this, my answer was quick and confident: “Southern Mexican.” Since the 1960s, Southern California chicano gang members have been at war with Northern California chicano gang members, yet another division perpetuated by the California prison system. One of the most important things about prison that you learn in the county jail is that you do not want to end up in a situation where you get placed with the wrong population. These systems of segregation start in county jail. Once you are placed in a holding space with “your people,” you are given the first object by your new “owner.” I say this because you are now officially “state property.” You belong to the state of California until your sentence is complete. This new object you are given is a prison identification card. On this card is a head shot of your face along with your newly assigned prison number. Like my father so long ago, I had become a number, a number that had become more important in identifying who I am than my actual name.
Rights that citizens have out here are taken away. Privileges you have out here are taken away. You are given a list of books you cannot receive. You are given a good size book called Title 15, in which your prisoner rights are outlined. This book also outlines procedures for how you will be dealt with if you break laws in Title 15. I became acquainted with this book very well after I got in trouble for “taking trash off of the yard,” a situation in which I participated in assaulting another inmate during a race riot. I have been shot at, beat by police, and jumped by enemy gang members on the streets, but nothing I have lived through is more frightening than a prison race riot. It was about ten minutes of absolute chaos. I guess one of the more frightening aspects of that situation was witnessing absolute human savagery toward a person of a different race. Some people belong in prison. My role in the situation was one of defense, but I did observe other inmates who truly had complete intentions of killing another person. The correctional officers that day shot two inmates with assault rifles, both in the legs, and other inmates, myself included, were shot with rubber bullets. At the time it felt like the man I was fighting with had punched me hard in the leg, probably trying to hit me in the genitals, but later on I learned it was a rubber bullet. For my participation I was sent to the “hole,” a type of prison for the prisoners. An exile for exiles that is technically called Administrative Segregation but is usually known as the “hole” or the “back.” It was in the “back” that I finally realized I had hit what I call “rock bottom.” That time was actually my third time in “Ad-Seg.”
The Second time I went to the back was for getting caught tattooing. I had developed a name for doing ok tattoos so I had a nice little business doing tattoos on people. Apart from that I had started taking college courses, and some people started to know me for helping people with their English essays. That time in the hole I had met an “older homie,” a fellow southern Mexican, who asked me if, when he got out of the hole, I could help him sign up for college classes. This older homie who went by the gang name Enano, which means midget in Spanish, was actually still in the hole when I returned for the riot. In the hole, inmates are allowed to go out to a type a giant dog kennel they call the “cage.” You are only allowed to go out to the cage 3 cells at a time, and only for 1 hour a day, for exercise or to stretch your legs out. During one of these times out in the cage, Enano asked me a question that changed my life forever. He asked: “what are you doing here?” I asked him what he meant by that, almost insulted. He asked me how much time I had left to go home, my answer was 8 years left. He tells me, “I get out in 80 years. My celly over there gets out in 120 years. Our neighbors over there, they both have life in prison. Never getting out! Even if they live to 200 they ain't never getting out. So I ask you again youngster, what are you doing here?” I really had no answer when faced with so many years! It was an impossible concept, trying to understand the idea of dying in prison. Enano then said something I could understand , “I know who you are, you help people. You are known as somebody who can help people, you are even willing to help me with the college stuff. You don't belong here, youngster. You belong somewhere else, helping someone. In here we are all useless. My advice to you is take your chicken shit 15 years and go back out to the world and help somebody while you still can.”
From that date I made a promise to myself to do everything I can in my power to get out of that prison. Not Ironwood, I knew I would eventually get out of that hell on earth. I'm talking about the prison I had built in my mind. A lot of people will tell you that all you find in prison are predators and prey, but that is a generalized statement. I found salvation in prison. I found art in prison. I found education in prison. I also found someone in prison who believed I could be better. I needed to hear it from the people I was trying to be like, that I was not like them. A moment of truth only takes seconds, but lasts forever. Eventually I was transferred out of Ironwood to a private prison in the state of Mississippi. Although not in California, this private prison handles any prison overcrowding issues for California. It is an example of the privatization of correctional institutions. These companies are traded publicly on the New York stock exchange. They are private businesses that specialize in housing prisoners. They are also an example of the issues in mass incarceration that America is suffering from at the time. They have locked up so many people, and it has become such good business, that they have allowed private companies to get in on the action. As state property, I could not fight this move to such a far away place. It became nearly impossible for my family to visit me. The correctional officers in Mississippi were 99% black women, who were being paid the state minimum, which in Mississippi is about $8/hour. Corrections Corp. of America, and other private corrections companies, have created a business out of exiling people. It is at this prison that I realized the potential for common prison made items to be pieces of art.