Tuesday, July 23, 2024
Let me get this straight…
A bunch of old Christian white men coming to Texas death row to bring forth a Kairos conference for minorities held in chains within isolated cells? I could hear tribal drum beats from my African ancestors telling me to run. Flee the scene! Avoid at all costs! It was something I had successfully avoided for two decades, and I had never applied to join – until now.
Over the years I had not refused out of penal dogma, nor was I convinced I would be radicalized religiously. I am an iconoclast by nature, so I am not at all intimidated by people who have a different view on life than I do. In fact, I cherish meeting people with different beliefs. No, my lack of participation was simply based on my view of advocacy for Texas death row inmates and how it would look. I believe that if one resident gets something from an outside organization, then all of us should receive the same thing or things equally. Or none of us should get anything.
When I first arrived on death row I learned this from former inmates who called upon unity and fairness as their religion. Everything I do is done with the idea that I can make a difference in my environment, and my previous protests of Kairos were always done because I wanted everyone to benefit from it.
But situational circumstances can be reason to make exceptions to the rules. Sure, perhaps a bit manipulative, depending on how you look at it, but that became my dilemma, I was given a choice I had to make – “Join Kairos or be moved to another cell in another section.”
A cell is a cell, I am sure one would assume. True to some degree. However, I have invested financially in the cell I currently occupy. I have faux wallpaper on the walls. It’s clean. It is not as draconian looking as other cells due to my efforts. It’s comfortable as far as death row standards. So, I was reluctant to part ways with my current cell. Starting all over is a mentally daunting task for me since the administration has done nothing to maintain our cells’ appearance and condition for over eighteen years.
So, I agreed to take part in Kairos, convincing myself that in the worst case scenario, if I didn’t like it, I would only have to endure it for two days. I mean, realistically, I have wasted 9,490 days in a solitary cell. So, what are two days?
Wednesday, July 24, 2024
A section of one of our pods consists of fourteen cells with a recreational dayroom in front of all the cells. On this morning, the dayroom was cluttered with crane-neck microphones, speakers, guitars, an electric piano – instruments that would be played by population inmates who had sufficient musical skills. A few other population inmates, penal-certified Field Ministers and Life Coaches, arrived around 7 am to set up the area with chairs for the guests and decorate with colorful ribbons attached to short messages.
The inmate-band did a test run on their instruments while another inmate began brewing Folgers coffee, filling the air with an aroma that had been absent from my nostrils since my youthful days living with my grandmother. Another inmate walked around taking photos of death row inmates in cells. I refused to have my photo taken at first until I saw that everyone else had theirs taken. If you ever see the photo, you may notice my wallpaper in the background.
At around 8 am, about twenty-five Kairos representatives arrived. They were a casual bunch, not on the far side of over-the-hill, but having passed its summit. With their thinning gray-to-silver hair, they appeared more suited for a M.A.G.A rally than sitting alongside the condemned. Never judge a book by its cover…
The not-knowing drove my expectations, and I would later learn the same not-knowing faced these Kairos men. They heard that in my section resided enigmas. We’d offered up nothing much for attempted spiritual support in past events, and they were told to be unsure of how we might react. So when they came in, they prayed.
After their group prayer, two of the inmate Life Coaches rolled in breakfast and passed a plate to each death row inmate consisting of breakfast tacos, boiled eggs, oranges, apples, Folgers coffee, assorted cookies and real sugar. Don’t even get me started trying to recall when my pallet last tasted real, uncut, diabetic cocaine… sugar.
Once we had all eaten, each Kairos man introduced themselves, and we quickly learned these were not Jim Jones disciples. Some were former military, including two who fought in the Vietnam War. One was a scientist, another a mathematician, another a New York liberal, a pastor of a growing church, etc… All were well off.
Then a Field Minister went to each cell and introduced each death row inmate and explained to them why we took part in the Kairos activities. Some of us were truthful about not wanting to move. A few said they wanted to build on or explore their faith and fellowship with Jesus Christ, one had no response, and another said he simply wanted to try something new.
After the introductions, they sang three songs, encouraging us to sing along. Then two men took center stage and gave their testimony and explained who they were as Christians. All were passionate. I think what grabbed my attention the most was how brutally honest their revelations were, from being used by the military as a Special Ops killing machine to a manipulative womanizer to a reckless alcoholic who nearly killed his entire family in a car accident.
Once these men were done, a group narrator divided the men into ‘families’, naming the groups Matthew, Mark and Luke, and groups of three men were assigned to come talk to inmates at their cells. Conversations could be about the testimony given and how it moved us, if it did. Or they would just listen to us talk about carnal stuff – sports, penal injustice, our delusional egos, and so on. Nothing was forbidden. Nor were they trying to judge us. The talks would last for fifteen minutes before they were called back to the dayroom. More songs were sung, more coffee passed out, and different men would then stand and talk. Around noon, lunch was passed out, and afterwards there was more singing, more testimonies, and more family meetings at door cells.
Both days at around 2 pm the Kairos men would sing the song I’ll Fly Away, forming a single-file line, spreading their arms out like wings and flapping them as if birds, unashamed, sharing the biggest and warmest smiles I have ever seen in my life. They were intoxicated, yet not under the influence of any alcohol or chemical agent. Though I laughed at their ‘funky chicken’ dance routine, I was more appreciative of their genuine display than I thought I would be.
And at around 5 pm each day, they ended with prayer, feeding us again before saying their good-byes.
On Day 2, the final day, they explained that their wives, family members and church members had prepared the meals for us. They even did all the baking. This revelation touched me – then and now. I’ve learned over the years that on death row, the majority of us receive support from strangers, non-family members, from different countries even. It moves and humbles me.
They also gave us a little tote bag filled with notes and letters from Kairos men and their families, even from incarcerated men and women who took part in previous Kairos events. I read every one. Some were written with a formal message, but there were a few personal messages from the men I spoke to. I’m sending them home so my mother can read them too.
When it was finally over and the lights were no longer bright on the section, when every instrument, chair and person was long gone, the most fascinating thing happened… the air was filled with happiness, not the wild tension that normally fills up this place like a powder keg waiting to ignite. If I had to describe it… Recall how the green menace stole all the presents from the Whos in Whoville? He was so proud of himself, thinking he had ruined the holiday for everyone as he patiently waited to hear screaming and crying coming from the small town. Instead he heard singing. Praise.
Well, after the Kairos men left, IT WAS LIKE WHOVILLE UP IN THIS MUTHER…
ABOUT THE AUTHOR. Charles “Chucky” Mamou is a long-time WITS writer. The circumstances surrounding his case have long inspired me, giving insight into how criminal courts work in some cases. Convictions resulting in sentences of death can be obtained, even when all the evidence that is in a state’s possession is not shared.
Details surrounding Charles’ case have been shared extensively on this site. If you would like to contact Charles Mamou, you can do so at:
Charles Mamou #999333
Polunsky Unit
P.O. Box 660400
Dallas, TX 75266-0400
He can also get messages through: https://securustech.online/#/login
And any messages or comments left here will be forwarded to him.