View Document

printer-friendly version

Rocky Mountain Online Archive


Table of Contents

Collection Summary

Biography

Arrangement:

Scope and Content

Restrictions

Preferred Citation

Processing:

Provenance

Index Terms

Inventory


Guide to the Mitchell Kaufman Media Collection

Colorado State University-Pueblo Library, University Archives and Special Collections,

URL:  http://library.colostate-pueblo.edu/



2009


Collection Summary

Title: Mitchell Kaufman Media Collection
Dates (Inclusive) 1970s-1993
Creator and Collector: Mitchell Kaufman
Abstract: The Mitchell Kaufman Media Collection consists of 25 VHS videocassettes collected or produced by Mitchell Kaufman in support of civil rights work, primarily relating to prison reform.
Identification Number: EMKT
Quantity: 25 VHS videotapes, 2 folders
Repository: Colorado State University-Pueblo Library, University Archives and Special Collections, 2200 Bonforte Blvd, Pueblo, CO 81001, Phone: 719-549-2475, URL: http://library.colostate-pueblo.edu/
Languages English, Spanish

Biography

Born to first generation parents of Eastern European Jewish parents, Mitchell spent his formative years in Newark, N.J. During these years, Newark was going through a sociological succession, whereby, African-Americans from the South were replacing the mostly Jewish and Italian immigrants from a generation or two before. As Mitchell turned ten, his parents realized their American dream of owning their own house in the suburbs. But even at this young age, Mitchell understood, at some level, what white flight was. This left an indelible image on him. His lifelong struggle for the rights of the oppressed and discriminated against is best understood in this context.

In high school, Mitchell excelled in academics and political/philosophical debate. He was president of the National Honor Society, starred in the senior play, played football and wrestled.

It took him three universities and six years to graduate from college (Rutgers) with a degree in English. During the next several years, he spent one year at Seton Hall Law School and earned a teaching degree from a New Jersey teacher’s college. He was working as a social worker in Manhattan’s Lower East Side when his mental illness was first diagnosed. He carried the misdiagnosis of schizophrenia through most of his adult life, only to be correctly diagnosed as bipolar during the last five years of his life. This is critical because he was unable to stop his schizophrenia medication due to the side effect of the tardive dyskiensia, which results when these drugs are no longer taken after years of use. In 1974, after, his third breakdown, his childhood friend Lenny Tischler invited him to visit. Lenny and his family were living in Silver Cliff, Colorado. Mitchell was to spend the rest of his life there. .

Custer County was arguably the most conservative county in Colorado. At the same time, a growing number of latter-day “hippies” who were fleeing the cities arrived in Custer County. As one would expect, confrontations were not rare. Mitchell became something of a “jailhouse lawyer.” He was dependent upon the director of social services for his disability check. He, nevertheless, relentlessly fought the director when she denied claims to his friends that he felt were deserved. He had so many of her decisions overturned that by the end of his life, she would occasionally seek his opinion.

In 1984, Mitchell married Lisa A. Schwartz who had moved to Custer County from Indiana. They had two girls: Natalie (1984), and Kate (1990). At the time of this writing, Natalie is living in Boston working for a Massachusetts State Representative of the 14th Middlesex District, and Kate is a sophomore at Reed College in Portland, Oregon. She is a guide on the Arkansas River during the summers.

During the mid-1980s, as the Custer County old guard continued to pressure the counter-culture types to leave, Mitchell and his friend Lenny wondered “…Who could we bring here that would bother them (the old guard) more than us?” The answer was African-Americans. Out of this tongue-and-cheek joke came one of the seeds that helped found the “Jazz in the Sangres” festival, which took place every August for nearly twenty years.

When the government announced plans to build prisons in nearby Florence in the early 1990’s, Mitchell immediately became involved in the incipient anti-prison industrial complex movement. To Mitchell, prisons were another aspect of American racism. Prisoners were disproportionably Latino and African-American from urban settings.

Prisons like those in Florence were far from the cities, making it much harder for prisoners' lawyers, friends, and families to visit them. Next, he learned about “the supermax” – prisons where prisoners were kept in tiny cells (6’x8’) for 23.5 hours a day. Before Florence, there was only one other in the country. By any rational definition, this was torture. Amnesty International agreed. Mitchell was beyond outraged that anything like this could exist anywhere, but to have one in his own backyard was totally unacceptable.

His response was to build an exact replica of a supermax cell and have the cell put on a trailer. He drove the “cell” around the state and spoke about the new prison to anyone he could get to listen. When one of my friends who had heard his presentation realized that Mitchell was my brother, he told me: “…Mitchell Kaufman, it was like being in a room with Che Guevara!” The intensity of this work drove him into his final bout of mania. He ended up in the state mental hospital against his wishes. The irony was complete. His work for prisoners led to his being a prisoner of a different sort.

After recovering, he returned home to Silver Cliff where he spent the rest of his life doing what he did best, raising his daughters. He died at the age of 54 from a reaction to one of his prescription medications.

(Written by Joel Kaufman, brother of Mitchell Kaufman)

Return to Table of Contents


Arrangement:

The records have been maintained in their original order.

Return to Table of Contents


Scope and Content

The Mitchell Kaufman Media Collection consists of 25 VHS videocassettes, either collected or produced by Mitchell Kaufman in support of civil rights activities. Original videotapes produced by Kaufman include interviews and commentary relating to the federal Supermax prison in Florence, CO; interviews with Ramona Africa, MOVE member and former political prison, Adjoa A. Aiyetoro, Rita Martinez, and Wayne Ewing; and one videotape documenting "Jazz in the Sangres" (Westcliffe, CO). The collection also includes clips from the news show "20/20" relating to conditions at the federal prison in Marion, IL, as well as videotapes produced by the Southern Poventy Lawn Center's Klanwatch Project, and Earth First! on the deforestation of the redwood forests.

Return to Table of Contents


Restrictions

Restrictions on access:

There are no access restrictions on this collection

Restrictions on use:

Not all of the material in the collection is in the public domain. Researchers are responsible for addressing copyright issues.

Return to Table of Contents


Preferred Citation

Mitchell Kaufman Media Collection, Colorado State University-Pueblo Library, University Archives and Special Collections

Return to Table of Contents


Processing:

Assistant Archivist Reyes Martinez Lopez completed minimal processing of this collection in June 2009

Return to Table of Contents


Provenance

Return to Table of Contents


Index Terms

This collection is indexed under the following headings in the Colorado State University-Pueblo Library's catalog. Researchers seeking materials about related subjects, persons, organizations or places should search the catalog using these headings.

MOVE (Organization)

Africa, Ramona

Aiyetoro, Adjoa A.

Audiovisual materials

Civil rights - United States

Corrections - United States

Earth First! (Organization)

Environmentalism - United States.

Ewing, Wayne

Florence (Colo.) -- History -- 20th century

Henderson, Jane

Hinds, Lennox S.

Hispanic Americans - Civil Rights.

Human rights - United States

Klanwatch Project

Martinez, Rita J.

Mexican Americans - Civil Rights.

Prisons - United States

Publications

Pueblo Coalition Against Prison Repression

Romero, Ricardo

Southern Poverty Law Center

Return to Table of Contents


Inventory

Description Container

Pueblo Coalition Against Prison Reform Press Releases and Mission Statement  no date

Box 1 Folder 1

“The Colorado Lawyer,” March 1993, vol. 22, no. 3  no date

Box 1 Folder 2

“20/20 Marion Segment” - This television news program (20/20 - ABC News) segment contains interviews with prisoners and authorities at the United States Prison at Marion, IL. Duration: 00:16:54   March 18, 1988

Box 1 Videotape 1

“Shut Down the Control Units” - A video production by the Committee to End the Marion Lockdown calling for federal prison reform. Duration: 00:31:08 (copy one)  ca. 1983

Box 1 Videotape 2

“Shut Down the Control Units” - A video production by the Committee to End the Marion Lockdown calling for federal prison reform. Duration: 00:31:08 (Master)  ca. 1983

Box 1 Videotape 3

“The Southern Poverty Law Center Klanwatch Project” - A history of the organization and a statement of purpose by the Southern Poverty Law Center Klanwatch Project. Duration: 00:22:00  no date

Box 1 Videotape 4

“III Cotter Mill, CSP Cemetery, Tina [Rita Martinez], Wayne Ewing.” Interviews by Mitchell Kaufman. Duration: 01:16:30  ca. 1992

Box 1 Videotape 5

Title: “End to Time 41:37 Tape 3 Dub Edit Master Re-Edit (w/ Earth First Peltier Exit) Dub II” Duration: 00:41:37   no date

Box 1 Videotape 6

Title: “An End to Time – Wall Street ‘Film Clip-Reel-’”   no date

Box 1 Videotape 7

“Ad Max – Dub Master”  no date

Box 1 Videotape 8

“1st Tour Ad Max Dub 2 Tape 1 A) Maggie Smith B) NY State Corrections C) Lenox Hinds D) Ramona Africa (1st Part)” Interviews by Mitchell Kaufman,   no date

Box 1 Videotape 9

“Redwood Summer – Peltier” - Environmentalists decry the deforestation of the great redwood forests of the Pacific Northwest.   no date

Box 1 Videotape 10

“Aug. 9th 1986 Jazz in the Sangres – Shut Down the Control Units CEML – At 5:07:49” Westcliffe, CO music festival footage ”  1986, no date

Box 1 Videotape 11

[untitled]  no date

Box 1 Videotape 12

“Southern Poverty Law Center Klanwatch Report” (copy)  no date

Box 1 Videotape 13

“20/20 Marion Segment” - This television news program (20/20 - ABC News) segment contains interviews with prisoners and authorities at the United States Prison at Marion, IL. Duration: 00:16:54 (copy of Videotape #1)  March 18, 1988

Box 1 Videotape 14

“DJS Co Spr[?] Sat Feb 20th”  no date

Box 1 Videotape 15

“Ad Max 2 Master Camera Sept 26 Co Springs Conference (Shot)”  no date

Box 1 Videotape 16

“How to interview with phs Sept 18 – PCAP Pueblo Meeting Master Original (Shot)”  2001

Box 1 Videotape 17

“FCC, Canon City Prison, Cotter Mill, Ricardo Romero”  no date

Box 1 Videotape 18

“Ad Max Dub 2, Tape 1//a, Maggie /b NY State Corrections Comm. (Rich Koehler-?) c. Lennox Hinds/d. Ramona Africa (1st part)”  no date

Box 1 Videotape 19

“Ramona [Africa]” Interview conducted by Mitchell Kaufman with former political prisoner and MOVE member Ramona Africa.  no date

Box 1 Videotape 20

“Florence, FCC 1” - Footage and narrative by Mitchell Kaufman.   no date

Box 1 Videotape 21

“An End to Time Dub edit master intact w/o opening tuck shot w/long shot Seal/ Peltier s/Peltier end shot”  no date

Box 1 Videotape 22

“Ad Max Dub 1, Tape 2/a Ramona Africa b) Adjoa A. Aiyetoro c) Jane Henderson etc.”  no date

Box 1 Videotape 23

“Ricardo Romero – Interview”  no date

Box 1 Videotape 24

“End to Time Tape 1 Dub-edit with longshot + Peltier end picture static copy master master” - The Pueblo Coalition Against Prison Repression vigil at the Florence Federal Prison Complex, including speeches by Mitchell Kaufman outside of USP Florence.   no date

Box 1 Videotape 25

Return to Table of Contents


 
 
Sponsors: National Endowment for the Humanities University of New Mexico - Center for Regional Studies University of New Mexico Libraries
 
   

© 2006, University of New Mexico