Like Black generations before us, and like the children of Gen Z we would go on to birth and raise, we were young people living in a world where survival meant walking between the raindrops–-walking meaning dodging, raindrops meaning police bullets. By the time Public Enemy arrived to say Fight the Power, we’d been primed. But not only by the horrors, also by the hope that resides in the life and liberation of Assata Shakur.
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