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Virginia
Resner: Activist against Drug War Injustice
Monday, July 23, 2007
Mikki Norris, activist and author, remembers friend and colleague
Virginia Resner:
Virginia Resner, a great activist who worked
tirelessly to put a human face on the injustice of the Drug War,
succumbed to a five and a half year battle with breast cancer at age 60
on July 18, 2007.
Virginia first became involved in drug policy reform in 1991.
Unbeknownst to her, her companion Steven Faulkner had engaged in a plan
to sell drugs. Coming home to find federal agents in her San Francisco
residence on a warrantless search for evidence to use against him became
her wake-up call. Through Faulkner’s arrest, prosecution, and 5-year
mandatory minimum sentence as a first-time non-violent, drug offender,
she quickly learned about the excesses of the Drug War.
Virginia found her way to the national organization Families Against
Mandatory Minimums and volunteered as their California representative
from 1992 to 2002. In this capacity, she provided information and
support to prisoners and their families in similar situations, and
advocated to public officials and the media for an end to mandatory
minimum sentencing. She initiated a Women’s Project that collected
stories and photos of women serving long sentences for low-level,
non-violent drug offenses and conspiracy charges, to bring attention to
the growing number of women in prison. She was instrumental in the
effort to attain Presidential Clemency from Bill Clinton in 2000 for Amy
Pofahl, who had already served nine years of a 24-year drug conspiracy
sentence.
In 1995, Virginia joined forces with Mikki Norris and Chris Conrad of
the Family Council on Drug Awareness to co-create HR95, now the Human
Rights and the Drug War Photo Exhibit project. This compelling photo
exhibit shows the faces and tells the stories of non-violent drug
offenders and their families. It was first shown at Fort Mason during
festivities commemorating the United Nations 50th Anniversary. It later
was exhibited at libraries, universities, government buildings and
events across the USA and Europe, including a six-week showing at the
San Francisco Main Library in 1998.
The trio co-authored the acclaimed book, Shattered Lives:
Portraits from America's Drug War, and Human Rights and the US
Drug War. Their work has moved and inspired activists everywhere to
take action and get involved with the drug policy reform movement. It
has influenced the media through subject matter used in the local and
national press, political ads, documentaries, etc., influenced
politicians and opinion makers, and shifted public perception to see the
negative impact of the Drug War on the American people. For their
efforts, they received a Robert C. Randall Award for Achievement in the
Field of Citizen Action from the Lindesmith Center/Drug Policy
Foundation in 2001.
Until her untimely death, Virginia continued to be intricately
involved with the Ed Rosenthal case as president of Green Aid: Medical
Marijuana Legal Defense and Education Fund, Inc. Although seriously ill,
she took the time to come to court regularly to attend his trial and
take care of the administrative tasks for his defense.
The daughter of famed labor and plaintiff attorney Herb Resner,
Virginia came from a Jewish family with a tradition of strong political
activism. Her father worked in behalf of such labor icons as Tom Mooney
and Harry Bridges, and she attributes her commitment to activism and
justice to his influence. Born on October 4, 1946, she was a native San
Franciscan who had a turbulent upbringing, with the loss of her mother,
Dorothy, at a young age. Her brothers, Hillel and Bill were founders of
the Straight Theater in the Sixties. She was an organizer in the truest
sense of the word, not only in the grassroots sector, but also in her
career as an office support service. She was a true fighter for justice,
and her commitment, courage and inner-strength, warm and generous
spirit, as well as her dignity in her battle with cancer, has been an
inspiration to many who had the fortune to know her.
An indication of the special love that Virginia brought to her work
can be seen in the outpouring of personal messages of support that she
received during her final days. She will be dearly missed.
Her family requests that donations in Virginia Resner’s name to be
made to Coming Home Hospice, Green Aid: Medical Marijuana Education and
Legal Defense Fund, Inc., and to programs at Temple Emanu-El.
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