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Killings of Black Panthers Fred Hampton, Mark Clark marked with a plaque in Chicago 56 years later

On the morning of Dec. 4, 1969, Nwaji Nefahito was in the Near West Side house where police officers under the command of then-Cook County State’s Attorney Edward Hanrahan stormed in and assassinated Black Panther leaders Mark Clark and Fred Hampton.

Nefahito was shot twice, once in the hand and once in the leg, as a police officer fired an automatic rifle through the wall of 2337 W. Monroe St. into the bedroom where she had been sleeping.

She saw the 22-year-old Clark — who she described as a quiet, humble person who would watch over the room — fatally shot.

Until last month, she hadn’t been back to the home where she saw two of her friends die.

On Wednesday night, she joined others who had survived the raid as well as other former Black Panthers as they dedicated a plaque at the site 56 years after the assassination.

It’s the latest of 12 plaques to be placed around Chicago and another in Peoria as part of the Black Panther Heritage Trail that denotes historic sites in Illinois.

“We have to remember the people who stood up and gave their lives,” Nefahito said. “We see where we’re at now. … We can’t be complacent. We can’t take the liberties and rights we have for granted. We have to fight, work and be kind to each other. We always have to help others and look for opportunities to get involved.”

Dozens of people hold candles during a vigil Wednesday outside the Fred Hampton Apartment location at 2337 W. Monroe St. to commemorate the 56th anniversary of the killings of Fred Hampton and Mark Clark.

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere / Sun-Times

The commemorations were announced last October after a fight over how the organization’s legacy would be preserved, one commemorating the since-demolished Illinois Black Panther Party headquarters was installed on the Near West Side in July during a similar ceremony.

Nefahito later recounted memories of the assassinations and Hampton, who she said was always educating and watching out for others.

An officer involved in the shooting “said, ‘I’ll get ‘em out with this,’” she said. “They were shooting through the wall.”

At the hospital, Nefahito was chained to her bed by officers despite orders from her doctor to walk as part of her physical therapy. With the Panthers, she worked in the party’s information cadre, handing out papers and writing articles and worked in its free breakfast program.

Wednesday night vigil’s was briefly interrupted by Fred Hampton Jr. Hampton’s son, who accused the preservation society’s representatives of being federal operatives.

U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush, D-Ill., former defense minister of the Black Panthers’ Illinois chapter, hailed Hampton as “more courageous than Malcolm [X].” He said officers had kicked down the door to his apartment the next day as they sought to wipe out the party’s local leadership.

“Fred Hampton’s murder we can never forget,” Rush said. “It was the only political assassination in the history of this nation that was officially sanctioned by the U.S. government. … I don’t know of any man, young or old, who represented the very best of human kind like [Hampton].”

A community member uses her candle to light former U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush’s candle during the vigil Wednesday outside 2337 W. Monroe St. to commemorate the 56th anniversary of the assassinations of Fred Hampton and Mark Clark.

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere / Sun-Times

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