This essay was revealed in partnership with the Jail Journalism Undertaking, which publishes impartial journalism by jailed writers and others affected by imprisonment.
On February 8, 2022, about an hour earlier than the 6.30am morning depend, an announcement rang out over the loudspeakers at New Jersey State Jail (NJSP). It was an emergency code, a “Code 53,” indicating a medical scenario.
Positioned in Trenton, NJSP is the state’s solely most safety jail for males. Most are serving lengthy sentences, many for all times. Earlier than New Jersey abolished capital punishment in 2007, NJSP was dwelling to the state’s dying row, therefore its nickname, “The Final Cease”. The jail at the moment consists of three giant compounds — West, North and South — and homes about 1,300 prisoners. Roughly 400 are Muslim. Apart from a number of dozen, the bulk are converts.
It was chilly that morning when the announcement rang by the PA system in 2-Proper, one in every of 9 housing models within the West Compound, a Civil Conflict-era army advanced later transformed to serve its present goal.
I had simply gotten as much as clear the ground of my South Compound cell — a single-person, 8 by 7-foot (2.4 by 2.1-metre) cage — earlier than performing morning prayers. An extended steel desk runs throughout the size of 1 wall of my cell; adjoined to it are a chrome steel sink and bathroom. The sunshine gray partitions are naked aside from an Islamic prayer calendar, a timetable that I comply with every single day.
I work for the jail’s chaplaincy division and know that of the practically 120 males who reside on 2-Proper, greater than two dozen of them are from our Islamic congregation, which is among the many largest within the US jail system.
I instantly started to hope. Through the years, I developed a behavior of praying at any time when emergency codes had been known as out. That they had grow to be frequent in these days. The COVID-19 pandemic was nonetheless raging, notably in prisons the place the virus has killed hundreds of individuals. Due to the heightened environment of worry of dying in the course of the pandemic, many Muslims at NJSP had begun to really feel intense anxiousness about our closing rites, and what would occur to our our bodies if we died. Fuelling this unease was the information that some imprisoned males who died at NJSP had been cremated in opposition to their non secular beliefs.
Dropping a brother
I had already misplaced one good friend to the virus, so each time I heard a medical code, I braced for unhealthy information.
This time was no completely different.
“Yo, Tariq, it was Mujahid on the code this morning,” shouted one of many longtime prisoners from my housing unit who labored on the within sanitation element as he returned from a garbage run.
Affirmation of the information got here from one other prisoner, a fellow Muslim who labored on the ice element hauling and filling luggage of ice for styrofoam coolers, which prisoners should buy and use to refrigerate meals and drinks. Our brother, Gregory Williams, who glided by the identify Mujahid after changing to Islam, had died.
I first met Mujahid at in regards to the time of my arrival at NJSP in August 2005, three years after I used to be arrested. I used to be 28 years outdated once I arrived, and had identified him for the higher a part of 20 years. Mujahid had been in jail for greater than 40 years. He was an lively, beloved senior member of our Muslim jail congregation. He was one of many establishment’s oldest paralegals, or what some name a “jailhouse lawyer”, an imprisoned individual, often self-taught, who helps fellow prisoners in varied authorized issues. He was a wholesome, lively, slender Black man identified for each his authorized work and handball sport. He was 67 when he died.
I discovered the main points of what occurred later that morning within the North Compound Chapel from Martin “Poncho” Robles and Samuel who lived in Mujahid’s housing unit. The chapel serves prisoners of all religions and I work there as a clerk, aiding with non secular companies, which incorporates placing collectively a month-to-month roster of various actions and offering prisoners with studying materials, amongst different duties.
The chapel is situated on the junction of the North and the West compounds, and alongside a hall resulting in the jail gymnasium and the recreation yard. Because of this, it’s a high-traffic space, and folks typically cease by the chapel to change or talk about information. A dying inside NJSP is huge information, and due to the continued unfold of COVID-19, the jail was seemingly all the time abuzz with dialog about somebody getting sick, being hospitalised or dying.
When Poncho and Samuel, who requested that solely his first identify be used on this article, got here by, I used to be sitting with Sheikh Jamal El-Chebli, supervisor of NJSP’s chaplaincy division and an worker of the New Jersey Division of Corrections (NJDOC), the federal government company accountable for the state jail system. Additionally current was Robert “Rafique” Rose, my fellow chaplaincy clerk and shut good friend. Rose, a founding member of our congregation, is a well-respected septuagenarian elder and identified inside as “Sheikh Rafique”. (The time period “sheikh” is an Arabic honorific that can be utilized to confer with elders.) Tall and full of life, he has served greater than 40 years of a 75-year jail sentence.
Issues turned shortly
The day earlier than Mujahid handed away, Poncho and Samuel informed us he had been having issue respiration. Certainly one of his legs, the 2 reported, had swollen up the day past, prompting a go to to the jail medical division. Later, Mujahid relayed to Poncho and Samuel that he had felt dismissed by the medical personnel and never taken severely.
The subsequent morning, at roughly 5:10am, a guard performed a daily prisoner depend. Poncho, whose cell was situated near Mujahid’s, heard him acknowledge the guard.
However then issues shortly turned. At 5:32am, Poncho mentioned, the nurse delivering morning drugs to prisoners within the housing unit discovered Mujahid unresponsive. The officer escorting the nurse instantly known as for the medical code. Quickly, medical workers arrived and pulled Mujahid’s physique out of his cell, trying to resuscitate him for what Poncho known as “a great half hour”.
“You might see his lifeless physique on the chilly flooring,” Poncho mentioned. Some males within the unit grew agitated – some had been murmuring whereas others yelled angrily. Unable to revive Mujahid, jail officers waited for the coroners to reach. Poncho mentioned he tried handy the officers a sheet to cowl his physique however they didn’t take it. In my expertise, jail workers are sometimes reluctant to the touch a physique for worry of turning into entangled within the investigation that follows a dying. Finally, the guards introduced a standing display screen to protect him from view.
His physique lay there for about seven hours earlier than the coroner lastly pronounced Mujahid lifeless, Poncho defined. At that time, Mujahid’s “physique was positioned in a black physique bag and dragged away.” (I’ve not been in a position to affirm the official explanation for dying.)
The information of Mujahid’s dying hit these of us who knew him exhausting. Poncho mentioned he’s been “tousled” ever since he noticed his good friend’s lifeless physique mendacity unattended for therefore lengthy.
Upon studying what had occurred, Sheikh El-Chebli, Sheikh Rafique and I checked out one different and recited a verse from the Quran typically invoked in occasions of calamity or dying: Inna l’illah wa inna ilayhi rajioun. (Really, to God we belong and actually to Him we return.)
After they left, we talked about Mujahid, his service to the neighborhood and his beneficiant nature. In jail, such moments are cherished. They briefly ease the stifling feeling of imprisonment and isolation which burdens us all. In shared grief, we really feel held by our neighborhood and jail household.
However we quickly began to fret about Mujahid’s burial and closing rites. It was a surreal dialog; through the years, we had typically spoken with Mujahid in regards to the topic. Mujahid had all the time tried to make use of his authorized experience to enhance the standard of life for our congregation, and specifically, had labored to safe closing rites for imprisoned Muslims.
Now, it appeared, his worst fears – not receiving these rites – may come to move.
Burial and closing rites
Islamic beliefs dictate {that a} Muslim can’t be cremated; it’s thought of haram, a forbidden act. A Muslim should be buried after a ritual bathtub known as ghusl and the protecting of the physique with two white sheets or towels, often called kafan. A janazah, or funeral, is carried out earlier than burial.
For Muslims, the final rites are a closing farewell and non secular act carried out in keeping with sincerely held beliefs in life after dying, the day of judgement and heaven and hell. The burial procedures are subsequently of important non secular significance.
Throughout my imprisonment, I’ve identified of Muslim prisoners who’ve died and not using a household keen or in a position to declare their our bodies. In some circumstances, these males had been buried with the assistance of Islamic communities exterior, together with the Islamic Society of Central Jersey (ISCJ).
However at current, there doesn’t seem like a transparent prison-facilitated course of in place for prisoners to affect what occurs to their our bodies after they die.
The truth that so many Muslims inside are converts complicates issues. Arranging closing rites and legally establishing one’s burial preferences sometimes require buy-in from members of the family, who typically don’t settle for their cherished one’s choice to transform. In such a scenario, the one technique to override the desires of the instant subsequent of kin is to acquire what the state of New Jersey calls a “funeral agent”. This individual is designated by the prisoner earlier than dying to deal with burial selections. However the course of for attaining a funeral agent is just not easy, and one is barely helpful insofar {that a} decedent, or his funeral agent, can afford the prices related to burials — a tall order for a lot of imprisoned individuals.
In relation to our burial rites, we’re confronted with a black gap. We’re not given the knowledge we’d like in regards to the means of securing these rites, nor do we all know if there’s a correct manner for imprisoned Muslims in New Jersey – many serving extraordinarily lengthy sentences – to make sure our burial needs are carried out. With out the company as Muslim prisoners to elect our burial preferences, we worry being cremated in opposition to our non secular beliefs.
Combating for a mechanism
The New Jersey Administrative Code comprises the foundations governing how state legal guidelines are applied. Based on the part on the burial or cremation of unclaimed our bodies of prisoners: “An unclaimed physique shall be cremated the place it’s fairly believed that it will not violate the non secular tenets of the deceased inmate.”
Mujahid and different Muslim prisoners together with myself have tried to petition for and set up a mechanism inside NJDOC to make sure Islamic final rites for Muslim prisoners. These efforts embody complaints submitted by a proper channel for prisoners. Mujahid confirmed me letters he mailed to organisations together with the American Civil Liberties Union and the Council on American-Islamic Relations and pro-bono legal professionals requesting assist, however nobody responded. Earlier than he died, he had additionally pursued a non secular discrimination lawsuit.
Prisoners have additionally petitioned to have the ability to submit a closing authorized will recording their needs to be buried in keeping with Islamic doctrine.
Having the ability to select is essential. With out such a mechanism, selections about what occurs to the physique after dying might fall to an unsympathetic member of the family or the state. NJSP authorities sometimes depend on a prisoner’s emergency contact kind to find out who’s contacted first a couple of dying and what to do with the physique. That individual might refuse or be unable to assert a physique because of the monetary burden, non secular disagreements or any variety of different causes. Typically, they’re now not alive.
Through the years, jail chaplains have defined to me what they perceive occurs to the physique of a deceased prisoner. Usually, the physique is stored in chilly storage, often by the county’s medical expert officer. It’s thought of unclaimed if no funeral executor or member of the family is recognized and contacted.
At this level, inevitably, we’re compelled to ask: What then will occur to the physique? All we all know is that the state will determine.
That is the query many Muslim prisoners requested after Mujahid handed away, as we nervous whether or not a member of the family would declare his physique. It’s additionally one I posed to Victor Lee, NJDOC’s non secular coordinator, when he visited the ability in 2022. He declined to remark.
And not using a particular process to elect and assure our burial preferences, many people have no idea what is going to occur to us once we die.
Final-ditch requests
In my time at NJSP, not less than three Muslims have been cremated as a substitute of being correctly buried. Their names are Rahim, Alim, and Talib. A fourth Muslim, Abdullah, was buried by his household as a Christian. These are the names the lads took on after changing to Islam.
I couldn’t affirm the precise dates of every dying. Even years had been tough to trace down. My reminiscence, fellow prisoners, and different individuals who knew the lads bought me solely this far: Abdullah died between 2006 and 2007; Rahim between 2011 and 2014; Talib between 2019 and 2021. Alim died in 2020. It’s exhausting to explain to individuals on the skin the way in which time warps in jail, how the times, months and years mix collectively in a haze. I remorse the shortage of precision. These males had been my brothers, and I want I might let you know when precisely they died.
Within the circumstances of Talib and Abdullah, each had members of the family who refused to honour their burial preferences. For Alim, his household couldn’t afford burial, in keeping with a fellow prisoner who knew the household. (A typical Muslim burial can value about $6,000.) I’ve not been capable of finding something extra in regards to the circumstances round Rahim’s cremation.
I knew every of those males indirectly or one other and discovered of their cremations by each shut acquaintances and previous and present jail chaplains. All had been members of our congregation. I’d see them often throughout Friday prayers and at non secular courses and occasions. Abdullah was a light-skinned man with thinning hair who had the look of a dishevelled arithmetic professor and spoke in a exact, calculated manner. He was an excellent paralegal and regarded by all to be a smart and caring man. Rahim, pleasant and outgoing, cherished to play playing cards and board video games. Talib had a silver beard and a comfortable, quiet manner. A longtime meals companies employee, he cherished to prepare dinner. Alim was a paralegal and a jail mentor. I had identified him since arriving at NJSP and he was an expensive good friend of mine.
Each Talib and Alim had submitted self-made wills to varied jail departments declaring their burial preferences. Muslim prisoners right here typically resort to making a generic doc with paralegals which resembles a closing will. Some individuals have even had copies of those paperwork notarised by notary personnel organized by the jail and accepted by varied jail departments. (I’ve seen this occur, and I helped Talib fill his out.) For a lot of prisoners, these are a last-ditch try to safe some readability on their rites. It’s not clear what authorized significance these paperwork carry, or whether or not or how they had been consulted after the deaths of Talib and Alim.
NJDOC didn’t reply to questions offered by Al Jazeera and the Jail Journalism Undertaking.
Dying by imprisonment
The anxiousness about final rites stems largely from the truth that dying in jail within the state of New Jersey will or might be a actuality for a lot of prisoners, together with myself.
The state has one of many harshest sentencing schemes within the nation and a number of the worst racial disparities within the nation. Based on a 2022 report by the New Jersey Prison Sentencing and Disposition Fee, Black individuals account for 61 % of the jail inhabitants, and solely 13 % of the state inhabitants.
The report confirms what I’ve seen with my very own eyes. On the day I arrived at NJSP, I bear in mind entering into the mess corridor the place we eat and catching my first glimpse of the rows upon rows of steel tables, every desk with 4 stainless-steel stools melded to it. They had been overwhelmingly occupied by Black and Latino individuals. The white individuals I noticed might be counted on one hand. That continues to be the identical at the moment.
Previous to the abolishment of the dying penalty in New Jersey, I used to be one of many final prison defendants tried for capital punishment within the state. After the jury declined the dying penalty, I acquired a punishment of 150 years for a double murder, for which I preserve my innocence. That successfully sentenced me to dying by incarceration. The common life expectancy of a New Jersey man is about 80 years. At 25 years of age with no prior run-ins with the regulation, I used to be given a sentence that might see me imprisoned for 70 years past the state’s common life expectancy. With one of many longest sentences on this state jail system, the prospect of dying behind bars is a real concern for me.
In contrast to others inside, I’m lucky to have a loving household. I’m a single man with no kids, however I’m blessed with loving mother and father, a brother and sister-in-law and their two stunning kids. I even have a number of different relations and constant buddies who’ve supported me throughout my imprisonment. This assist is invaluable each emotionally and financially.
Though I’ve stored a gradual job for about 17 years, it will be extraordinarily exhausting to outlive with out my family members. My meagre jail wages can’t even cowl my phone charges. And there’s no assure that my family members might be there once I meet my finish. Being away for a lifetime alienates prisoners like me from new family members who haven’t any connection to these of us serving life sentences. One other chance is that even when my household is round, there isn’t any assure that they’ll be capable to afford my burial prices.
If there was a transparent course of to state my burial needs, I might begin now to attempt to make my very own preparations.
‘I don’t wish to be burned’
The problem of ultimate rites stays a continuing supply of tension for a lot of Muslims at NJSP.
Throughout our many conversations at work within the chapel, Sheikh Rafique has typically expressed concern about this problem.
“Many older Muslim brothers are nervous about getting buried since most of their households have handed away and dwelling relations don’t even know them. The NJDOC must make this course of a precedence,” Sheikh Rafique informed me shortly after Mujahid died.
Sheikh Rafique’s 90-year-old mom had handed away not too lengthy earlier than that, in late December of 2021. He was heartbroken. For years, she had visited her son nearly each Saturday — travelling on two trains from Newark, the place she lived, to the jail in Trenton — till her well being began to flag in her 80s. Sheikh Rafique informed me he felt blessed to have a loving household; even his siblings’ kids knew and cherished him. He wasn’t too nervous about them taking good care of him when the time got here, however he didn’t wish to be a burden to anybody in his household when he left. Like different Muslims at NJSP, he wished he had a technique to make his personal burial preparations with an outdoor Islamic organisation or funeral parlour.
Marko “Abdul Mu’izz” Bey, one other fellow Muslim prisoner, got here to see our jail chaplain Sheikh El-Chebli and Sheikh Rafique for a counselling session a number of days after the dying of Mujahid. Bey, who’s in his mid-50s, had spent many years on dying row earlier than the dying penalty was banned, and appears to have resigned himself to dying in jail. When he visited the chapel, his mom had not too long ago handed away, and he was anxious to do one thing to safe his personal closing rites. “Man, they should determine this janazah stuff out, I don’t wish to be burned, brother,” he confided.
One other Muslim prisoner, who’s serving a life sentence and requested to stay nameless, is scared one thing related might occur to him. “My household ostracised me for changing, and now I’m nervous that once I move away they’ll both refuse to let me be buried as a Muslim or will refuse to assert my physique and I might be burned,” he confided. He had come to submit a self-made will to the chaplaincy division a number of weeks after the dying and cremation of Alim in 2020.
A Muslim burial
In the long run, our jail chaplain Sheikh El-Chebli intervened to advocate for Mujahid’s burial rites. This isn’t sometimes a part of the job description.
The individual on the emergency contact kind didn’t settle for Mujahid’s physique, however Sheikh El-Chebli efficiently situated his brother, his subsequent of kin, who’s a practising Muslim in Philadelphia. He accepted Mujahid’s physique.
After Mujahid’s dying, our neighborhood mourned. Many individuals got here to the chapel to talk about him and the assist he had offered us all around the years. It was simple, for a second, to think about us current on the skin, as if we had been visiting Mujahid’s dwelling to pay him the respects he so dearly deserved.
Practically one month after Mujahid died, Sheikh El-Chebli relayed to Sheikh Rafique and myself that Mujahid had been buried as a Muslim. We had been overjoyed. “Alhamdulillah!” we cried, turning to one another.
Mujahid’s case turned out the most effective it might thanks to varied particular person efforts. However there stays no assure that we gained’t must endure the same trauma subsequent time a Muslim brother dies. When that occurs, our brother and our neighborhood is probably not so lucky.
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