Leonard Weinglass Passes On:
His Memory and Legacy Endures
It
was with a deep sense of loss that the Canadian Network On Cuba heard that
Leonard Weinglass had passed away on March 23rd. He was an indefatigable fighter
for social justice and freedom. To these struggles he wholeheartedly devoted
his considerable legal acumen and energies. Over the last few years, he was was
focused on winning the freedom of the Five Cuban Heroes, who were unjustly
imprisoned in the United States since 1998 for defending Cuba from terrorist
attacks. His contributions to this fight and others were invaluable.
Reproduced below are a few of the numerous tributes that have been made to
honour his memory and legacy.
From Gerardo Hernandez, Cuban 5 Hero, incarcerated for 12 years:
In memory of Leonard Weinglass

Not that long ago Len came to visit me and we worked
for several hours preparing for the next step of my appeal. I noticed at the
time that he was tired. I was worried with his advanced age that he was driving
alone after a long trip from New York. The weather was bad and the roads from
the airport up to Victorville wind through the mountains surrounding the high
desert. I mentioned my concern to him but he did not pay it any attention. That
was the way he was, nothing stopped him.
When we would meet the same thing would always happen. At some point in our
conversation, while listening to him talk, my mind would separate from his words
and I would focus on the person. I would realize that here is this great man,
the tremendous lawyer, the legendary fighter for justice, right here in front of
me. I told him that I had seen images of him in documentaries on TV dedicating
himself to important legal cases that he had participated in from a very young
age. With pride I would tell people watching, "that is the lawyer of the Five".
It did not matter how much I read or heard about Len I knew through his humility
and modesty that there was a lot I still had to discover about this man who had
dedicated his life to his profession.
Len always insisted that our case, like the others that he had dedicated lots of
his time to, was essentially a political one. He cautioned us from the start
that this struggle would be long and difficult. His experience with the "system"
had taught him that. For our part, beyond the professional relationship we had,
we always thought of him as one compañero in the battle for justice.
Len leaves us at an important moment, but he leaves us prepared to carry on the
path. On more than one occasion he expressed his admiration and respect for the
other lawyers on our legal team, and I think that he has left confident that our
case is in good hands.
Like other people, who during these years have accompanied us in our struggle to
make justice prevail, he will not be with us to see the inevitable triumph. We
are confident that day will arrive and to Len, and to all the others, we will
pay them a well deserved tribute in our homeland.
On behalf of the Cuban Five, and our families, and from the millions of Cubans,
and brothers and sisters from all over the world who trusted and admired him, we
send our most sincere condolences to Len's family and friends.
Leonard Weinglass, ¡Presente!
Gerardo Hernandez Nordelo
USP Victorville, California
March 23, 2011
Leonard Weinglass: Aug. 27, 1933 - Mar. 23,
2011
'True justice
was his passion
and his life.'

Leonard Weinglass, preeminent civil rights attorney
and fighter for justice whose defense history includes the Chicago 8, Daniel
Ellsberg, Mumia Abu-Jamal and the Cuban Five, died on March 23 of cancer.
Known as Len to all, the last picture taken of him was in hospital several days
ago as he reviewed his latest appeals documents for Antonio Guerrero of the
Cuban Five, for whom he was official appeals attorney. Weinglass was
instrumental in the overall case of the Five, especially the latest appeal of
Gerardo Hernández, who is serving an unjust double life sentence for defending
Cuba-along with his four brothers-from U.S.-backed terrorism. Weinglass joined
the Cuban Five's case in the appeals phase in 2002.
Born August 27, 1933, in New York City, Weinglass earned his law degree from
Yale University in 1958. After serving in the U.S. Air Force as a judge
advocate, he entered civilian life as a lawyer in an era framed by the great
African American Civil Rights movement and the struggle against the Vietnam war.
Many of those activists would come to depend on Weinglass to win justice and
freedom.
He earned a well-deserved reputation as a people's defense lawyer, the kind of
attorney who does not separate his political and personal life from his legal
career.
Weinglass's long history of defending political and death-row cases attests to
those principles: radical activist Angela Davis in 1973; eight Vietnamese
students who faced deportation in 1974 due to their political activities against
the war; the Atmore-Holman Brothers in Alabama prison in 1977; Daniel Ellsberg,
Pentagon Papers defendant in 1970; Juan Segarra Palmer, Puerto Rican
independentista in the Hartford 15 case in 1989; and too many more to mention.
Weinglass was never without a political case, and many times, more than one.
The Chicago 10
His passion for justice brought him and another people's advocate, William
Kunstler, into the national spotlight in the conspiracy trial of the Chicago
Eight from 1969 to 1970.
Both attorneys became known for their courageous and forthright defense of the
anti-war activists they represented against a brutal judge who cited both for
contempt many times.
At 10 months, it was the longest trial of its time and was recognized as a Nixon
government prosecution, with the arch-reactionary Judge Julius Hoffman as his
legal henchman. The Eight faced lengthy prison sentences on "conspiracy" charges
from the vicious police attack on a mass anti-war rally at the 1968 Democratic
National Convention in Chicago.
Black Panther Party chairman Bobby Seale was separated from the trial by Hoffman
after being literally shackled and gagged in the courtroom, but progressives
always referred to the case as the Eight.
Because of their constant defiance of Hoffman's brutality and outrageous rulings
against the Eight, Weinglass and Kunstler were greatly respected in the anti-war
movement. Years later, the title of an acclaimed documentary, "The Chicago 10,"
honored the two lawyers who stood side-by-side with the eight defendants.
The Cuban Five: his final battle for justice
In 2002, Weinglass joined the appeals team of the Cuban Five political
prisoners. He brought to their case his decades of experience in previous
political cases, which was of great tactical and strategic benefit to their
struggle.
Because of the U.S. government's politically-motivated persecution of the Five,
Weinglass firmly believed that-even as he worked night and day in their legal
case-victory is not possible without political solidarity and public pressure.
Whenever the National Committee to Free the Cuban Five needed advice from him on
the next steps to take, when we requested interviews so the Free the Five
supporters could receive an orientation on the case, he always took the time, no
matter how busy he was.
In addition to full-time legal work for the Five, Weinglass spoke for the Five
at many anti-war protests, public forums, press conferences, at home and abroad.
He had an outstanding ability to explain the complexities of the Five's case in
a popular way, and to inspire others to take up their fight. He was especially
loved and was very close to the Cuban Five, their families and the Cuban people.
In one moving incident in March 2003, Weinglass rushed to take the last flight
from New York to Denver, before a blinding blizzard shut down the Colorado
airport, to see Antonio Guerrero. He then drove almost two hours in that
snowstorm to Florence federal prison. Antonio had been cruelly locked up in a
punishment cell due to a U.S. government administrative order against the Five.
Len's visit to him after two weeks of complete isolation inspired Antonio to
write the poem above.
True justice was Len Weinglass's passion and his life.
In the month before he died, a special website was set up for family and friends
to write him. Hundreds of solidarity messages poured in, from former political
prisoners to colleagues in law to his family.
Former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark wrote: "You have been an inspiration
to me since we first met in 1969. Your quiet, selfless, relentless, brilliant
and heroic commitment to truth and justice-against all odds-has made a
difference worldwide. Having been by your side here at home, in Chicago, Iran,
the Philippines, Nicaragua, Venezuela, and for the Cuban Five I can testify to
your sole, selfless commitment to a world of peace and principle and good times
along the way."
A huge void is left with Len's passing, but his inspiration and example will
live on.
Gloria La Riva
Coordinator, National Committee to Free the Cuban Five
March 23, 2011
Message of Condolence for the Death of
Attorney Leonard Weinglass
It is with deep sorrow that we have received the
news about the death of Leonard Weinglass: United States and Cuba have lost a
great lawyer and the solidarity movement, a special friend.
For weeks, we followed the development of his serious medical condition with the
hope that this tragic outcome could be avided.
He has won a place in the hearts of millions who followed his work. With the
same determination he took up the defense of unforgettable cases like the
Chicago 8, Angela Davis, Mumia Abu Jamal, among others, he accepted to defend
our five Cuban brothers.
The movement of solidarity with Cuba as a whole and, particularly the Committees
to Free the Cuban Five, will treasure memorable moments shared with Leonard in
this long struggle for the freedom of our Five brothers.
Today, in honor of comrade Weinglass, the Cuban Institute of Friendship with the
Peoples has opened a condolence book so his friends in Cuba can express our
grief.
Next Saturday, an official farewell and homage to Weinglass will be held at ICAP
at 5 o´clock coinciding with similar action in New York.
We join the voices of Gerardo Hernández, Antonio Guerrero, Fernando González,
Ramón Labañino and René González to say:
Leonard Weinglass… ¡Presente!
Cuban Institute of Friendship with the Peoples