If you judge others how this system has judged you, it will make you no better than those who have condemned you to death.

Dwight Adanandus

Overview

This activity uses information sheets and discussion to explore issues about:
• The protection of society from criminals
• The human rights of criminals
• The death penalty

Related rights

• The right to life
• Freedom from torture and degrading treatment
• The right to equality in dignity

Objectives

• To examine preconceptions about criminals and reflect on some of the implications of the death penalty
• To develop listening skills and critical thinking about information
• To promote a sense of human dignity and justice.

Materials

• Copies of the handout, "When tomorrow comes" one per participant.
• A sheet of paper and pencil for each member of the group.
• Flipchart or large sheets of paper and pens for summarising points made in plenary

compass-key-date
  • 10 OctoberWord Day Against the Death Penalty

Instructions

Step 1.
1. Read part 1 of "When tomorrow comes" out loud to the group. When you have finished, give people about 5 minutes to recall all the main points and to write them down in their own words. Then ask them to exchange sheets of paper with their neighbour, to read each other's accounts and give feedback.
2. Invite some volunteers to read out their accounts. then discuss the differences between the versions: did some people remember more details than others did? Did some people invent details that had not been mentioned in the original story?
3. Ask people for their reaction to the story: who do they think the narrator is? What has happened?
Step 2.
4. Read out the newspaper cutting and part 2 of Nanon's narration.
5. Now allow the pairs 10-15 minutes to discuss the new information with their partners. supply them with copies of "when tomorrow comes" in case they want to refer back to points in the text.
6. Then ask them to think about the following two issues:
• Did they find their opinion of either dwight or nanon changed when they learnt that they were on Death Row? How? Why?
• What do they think Dwight meant by saying ‘If you judge others how this system has judged you, it will make you no better than those who have condemned you to death!" Do they agree with him?
7. Open the issue up for general discussion, obtaining feedback from the various pairs on these questions.Goto top

Debriefing and evaluation

This activity can be used to spark off a number of important and interesting issues which can form the subject of further activities or discussion. However, it is recommended that in the debriefing you stick fairly closely to the topics that the groups have already considered rather than opening up entirely new themes (see below, under notes for facilitators).
• Has this activity taught you anything about yourself? Has it made you reconsider any of your previous opinions or beliefs?
• What do you think the activity was intended to illustrate? Did it succeed in this aim, and if not, why not?
• What, if anything, did the activity have to say to you about the right to life? Were there any other rights issues that were raised in the discussion?
Make a note of these issues on a large sheet of paper or flipchart paper for future use.

Tips for facilitatorsGoto top

In the first discussion (after reading part 1) it is important not to give people any hint of the two men's situation: try to draw out people's impressions of the characters, but without suggesting you have any particular reason for doing so. The purpose is for people to examine the two men's human sides, without knowing anything of their circumstances or past history.

The point of people swapping accounts at the end of step 1 is to give them an idea of the different ways that people may perceive and remember exactly the same piece of information. It is worth emphasising that this should not be seen as a "test", so that people do not feel shy about their accounts; but rather as a way of showing up different viewpoints. Try to ask for comments from people whose account has differed radically from their neighbour's. Ask why this may have been the case – why, for example, some people remembered certain pieces of information that were omitted by others.

"11 songs that shook the world"
Adapted from Songlines World Music magazine, March 2009

Free Nelson Mandela – Jerry Dammers and The Special AKA
From Little Things Big Things Grow – Kev Carmody and Paul Kelly
Get up, Stand up – Bob Marley
Gracias a la Vida – Mercedes Sosa
Al Atlal – Oum Kalthoum
Biko – Peter Gabriel
Didi – Khaled
Imagine – John Lennon
Zombie – Fela Kuti
Nkosi Sikelel' iAfrika – a Methodist hymn, composed  by Enoch Sontonga in 1897
Djelem Djelem – the Roma anthem, composed by Jarko Jovanović on a traditional Romani melody.

The activity itself will most probably raise too many issues for a single session, so you should try to keep the discussion along the lines suggested, rather than allowing people to get carried away by debating – for example – the death penalty itself. Try to keep the discussion focused on the two key issues of:
1. The extent to which we, the State, everyone, are inclined to "judge" people on the basis of something (we believe) they have done. This is probably what Dwight has in mind when he talks about not "judging" others as the State has judged him (and Nanon). The State has effectively written them off as human beings on the basis of something (it believes) they have done in the past.
2. Even so-called "hardened criminals" possess and retain their inherently human characteristics - not only the "caring and compassion" of which Dwight speaks, but also the "frustration and depression" that Nanon describes as a result of the confinement.

When discussing the ‘right to life' issue, try to keep comments away from the practical arguments for or against the death penalty. Guide the discussion around the issues of whether these two people can be said still to possess the right to life – and if not, how someone can "lose" such a right. Does anyone, for example, have the authority to remove that right from other citizens, even if they have committed a crime?

Note:

The full piece (When tomorrow comes) can be found at the CCADP (Canadian Coalition against the Death Penalty) website http://www.ccadp.org.

Suggestions for follow-upGoto top

Songs have always been a powerful tool in people's fight for rights. The group may like to listen to some songs for freedom and justice or to write their own.
You may like to show a film related to this issue. Our suggestions are:
• Dead Man Walking – by Tim Robbins 1995. It is an American film which tells the story of Sister Helen who befriends a prisoner on death row.
•  Decalogue V: "Thou shalt not kill" – by Krzysztof Kieslowski 1988. The main character is a young man of 20 whose act of murder is terrible but so is the barbaric way the state executes him. The drama reveals that all life must be respected and that no one deserves to be killed.
•  The film, Into the Abyss (2011) by Werner Herzog. Conversations with death row inmate Michael Perry and those affected by his crime serve as an examination of why people - and the state - kill.

You may like to read or perform (the whole or extracts from) the play The exonerated by Jessica blank and Erik Jensen (theexonerated.com). The play moves between first-person monologues and scenes set in courtrooms and prisons to tell the stories of six brave people for whom the American criminal justice system went horribly wrong, and how they persevered to survive it.

Pursue the issues raised at the end of the activity. Organise a formal debate or use the method, "Electioneering". Topics may include:
• Punishment issues: what is the purpose of locking criminals up and/or of executing them? Is it primarily to protect society, to alter the behaviour of the criminals, or is it revenge/retribution?
• The death penalty: what are the arguments for and against the death penalty?
• The security of the nation vs. security of the individual: what are the limits to the way a government may treat its worst criminals or terrorists? For example - is torture of an individual justified if the security of a nation is at stake?

You could develop a project about the death penalty in relation to the rights of the child. In several countries children are sentenced to death and may be executed. Put "Death Row Kids" into your search engine to find more information, and a video on youtube.com.

Ideas for actionGoto top

Visit the web site of the Canadian Coalition Against the Death Penalty and read more of the prisoners' writings (http://ccadp.proboards.com). Then write to someone on death row (the ccadp website contains information on how to become a pen-pal or contact your local association of Amnesty International).

Find out the latest update on Nanon Williams on www.nawisa.ch and decide how you could support his case.

Further informationGoto top

The death penalty is forbidden by the European Convention of Human Rights. The Council of Europe has made abolition of the death penalty a prerequisite for membership. As a result, no execution has taken place on the territory of the organisation's member states since 1997.
The first year in which no-one was executed anywhere in Europe was 2009; however in March 2010 Belarus executed two people. 

You can find information about which countries have ratified international death penalty treaties on Amnesty International's website, www.amnesty.org.

According to Amnesty International's report, Death Sentences and Executions 2014, at least 2,466 people in 55 countries are known to have been sentenced to death in 2014.

This represents an increase of 28% compared with 2013, when 1,925 death sentences were recorded in 57 countries. This increase was largely due to sharp spikes in death sentences in Egypt (from 109 in 2013 to 509 in 2014) and Nigeria (from 141 in 2013 to 659 in 2014), both countries in which courts imposed mass sentences in some cases.

At least 19,094 people were believed to be under sentence of death worldwide at the end of 2014.

Executions Down, But Not For Juvenile Offenders from Human Rights Watch (1 April 2015) states that 2013 saw a rise in the use of the death penalty for crimes committed by children.

Iran is almost certainly the world leader in executing juvenile offenders, putting to death 14 in 2014 and as many as 77 in the past 10 years. Iran also continued to impose new death sentences on child offenders last year. In total, at least 160 juvenile offenders are awaiting execution in the country.

Elsewhere, death sentences were handed down last year against child offenders in Egypt and Sri Lanka. And others remained under sentence of death in Maldives, Nigeria, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and Yemen.

In 2013, three juvenile offenders were executed in Saudi Arabia, with others possiblycarried out in Iran and Yemen.

March 2014 Pakistan executed Muhammad Afzal, who was 16 years old when sentenced to death, and its courts approved the death sentence of Shafqat Hussain, said to be 14 or 15 years old when sentenced in 2004.

To see how he is “still surviving”, follow Nanon Williams on Facebook and Twitter.

Amnesty's report ‘Children and the death penalty: Executions worldwide since 1990', published in 2002, reveals that the USA was top of the list with regards to numbers of young men executed who were under 18 when they committed their crimes; the USA executed 18. Pakistan executed one who was only 13 when he offended.

For a detailed account of Nanon's case and the mistakes made at his trial see http://murderpedia.org/male.W/w/williams-nanon.htm.

Human Rights Watch states: Only Iran, Sudan, China and Pakistan are known to have executed juvenile offenders since 2004. Sudan carried out two such executions in 2005, while China executed one juvenile offender in 2004 and Pakistan executed one juvenile offender in 2006. In contrast, Iran is known to have executed at least three juvenile offenders in 2004, eight in 2005, and four in 2006. In total numbers, only China carries out more executions than Iran. On a per capita basis, Iran executes more people annually than any other country. (www.hrw.org June 2007)

HandoutsGoto top

PDFDownload as PDF

When tomorrow comes by Nanon Williams

Part 1
It was a day after Dwight Adanandus died when I truly looked at life completely differently than what it was, or shall I say, what I wished it to be. This was the beginning of winter, and as I lay still thinking of a friend that always presented a smile when the days seemed so redundant, I felt tormented. As I gently moved, picking up the newspaper under the door, the paper told his story.
Reading about it and knowing I would never see him again felt like someone was sticking pincushions in my heart over and over again. Sometimes he would come swinging into the yard yelling, “What’s up youngster?” And I would look around me, stare back, and say, “Man, who you calling a youngster,” and we would both start laughing because I was the youngest person on our block. And when I think of those moments now, well, it deeply saddens me, because I’ll never look forward to being in the yard without Dwight being around to break the creases that riddled my face with anger.
As the years have gone by, my methods of passing time has changed, but I like to think these new methods will hopefully make me become a better man one day like Dwight became. During my moments of weakness, I always find myself wondering what Dwight would have done.
“Remember,” he would say to me, “The system can only get to you if you let them. Make your peace with whoever your God is and start to live life the best you can and appreciate it.” Then he would continue, “Youngster, I don’t know why you’re here, but I know you don’t belong here…

Part 2
“....... In fact, no one belongs here, not on death row. You have rapists, kidnappers, robbers, child molesters and sadistic people who don’t give a damn about you. However, you also have caring and compassionate people who have done those very same things, but have found a way to change and I want you to always remember that,” he said to me weeks before he was executed. “Remember this if nothing else. If you judge others how this system has judged you, it will make you no better than those who have condemned you to death!” And as those words ring in my ears now, I wonder why it has taken me so long to understand what he meant. Of course I heard what he said and it made sense, but making sense and fully grasping the meaning of those words was something totally different. I guess then I was the youngster he called me, but the truth hurts when you finally take the time to see it.
I know the confinement is all a psychological weapon of torture that builds frustration until depression sets in, but somehow the spirit and the will to continue remains in a few. For Dwight, he had that spirit no matter what he did that placed him on death row and with that spirit he changed the lives of others who rot like living corpses in the system’s graveyard. “I know it’s not easy Youngster”, he would say. “But nobody said life was easy. Take each day for what it’s worth and as long as you can see a light at the end of the road, let that be the strength that guides you,” were the last words he ever said to me tearfully as he said his final good-byes. I dare not to explain what that means to me, as I guess he said it to me so I can find my own strength that sustains me through the years that have passed and probably the years to come. I have never forsaken my principles or the things that I value most in life – like my family, so more than likely that love and one day entering heavens gates, is what tomorrow really is when it comes.”

Nanon Williams was sentenced to death by the State of Texas in 1992 when he was 17 years old, on charge of capital murder. He denies the charge and spent 13 years on Death Row before his sentence was commuted to life imprisonment in 2005 by the Roper V. Simmons U.S. Supreme Court ruling, barring the execution of juveniles. In 2010 the Federal Court ordered Nanon to be released from prison because of the false evidence that had been presented to the jury and the inadequacy of his defence representation at his trial in 1992.

Source:Canadian Coalition against the Death Penalty

Newspaper cutting
Huntsville - October 2, 1997. A convicted robber was executed Wednesday night for gunning down a San Antonio businessman who tried to stop him from fleeing a bank hold-up nine years ago. Adanandus, 41, went to death row for killing Vernon Hanan, who was shot in the chest January 28, 1988, as he wrestled with Adanandus in the foyer of a bank on San Antonio’s north side.