The Death Penalty

We are going to work on the controversial issue of the Death penalty or Capital Punishment.  In no way my intention is to gag your ideas thus you will be given photocopies and shown videos either in favour or against.  However, I cannot deny I am against this brutal act, a physical and psychological form of torture that has not worked as a deterrent against heinous crimes and that infringes human rights and brutalizes the core of humanity, that is respecting the dignity of a human being. What you will be asked to do is to make a video (either a commercial against Death Penalty, or a video debating the reasons for or the reasons against Capital Punishment) individually or in pairs or in groups.  Then I would like you to come up with a piece of creative writing which somehow recaps our “path of investigation”.  You may write an acrostic poem, or a poem of your own choice (shape poem, for example, that is a poem written in the shape of an electric chair, or a shouting face, or a tear, or a hanging rope symbolizing the gallows), or the entry of the diary of a person on death row (s/he has just been announced that tomorrow it’s the FINAL day), or the letter of a victim written to the newspaper taking a stand against capital punishment.

Which of the following images do you find the most striking to represent the Death Penalty? Why? What would you draw if you were asked to depict Capital Punishment?

death-penalty2 death-penalty_1 death-penalty-chair

I would love to start with some quotations.  Which one do you like most? (why?)

“Capital punishment is the most premeditated of murders.” -Albert Camus, French philosopher

“To take a life when a life has been lost is revenge, not justice.” -Desmond Tutu

“What says the law? You will not kill. How does it say it? By killing!”  -Victor Hugo, author of Les Miserables

“It can be argued that rapists deserve to be raped, that mutilators deserve to be mutilated. Most societies, however, refrain from responding in this way because the punishment is not only degrading to those on whom it is imposed, but it is also degrading to the society that engages in the same behavior as the criminals.” -Stephen Bright, human rights attorney

In literature we read a passage from In Cold Blood by Truman Capote, next year we will analyze the wonderful ballad by O. Wilde “The Ballad of Reading Gaol” which throws into the reader’s face the hypocrisy of our society and questions the way human beings punish a crime.  Killing a man with a sword is it worse than killing a man with words, with indifference, with negation?

Now watch the following videos.  The first one is in favour of the Death Penalty.  See the way it is “constructed”, it will help you with your own “creation”. What technique does the student use to make her point?

The one that follows, instead, is a video that harshly opposes Capital Punishment.  How does the actor lead us into his train of thoughts? How does he make is point pass through? What is the true meaning of Capital Punishment? (a sort of play on words)

Here are some poems I selected.  Read the first one. What makes you understand that the writer is truly against the Death Penalty?

A Poem About The Death Penalty

When a man performs a murderous act

Stealing the life of a man well-known

We wish to condemn him the same favor,

And break his neck bone.

Then we think it’s justified

That he had to die,

That the hearts ripped by the death of his victim,

Will somehow be satisfied.

That all that same loathing,

And all that same bitterness

Will make it all tranquil,

In spite of all carelessness

But I, I think this ridiculous,

I think that no man should die,

No matter his sins,

No matter the yearn to justify.

The next poem openly attacks…. Whom? Why? Who is the “speaking I”? Are there any points that make you understand that the poems  are somehow autobiographical?

[Michael Perry: I’ve written all these poems while sitting on death row.  Since I spend 23 hours a day in solitary confinement, poetry is one of the only ways I can express how I feel.  I hope you like them. Sincerely, Michael Perry #999444]

A Few Lines

The state wants to prove crime doesn’t pay.

They won’t let injustice stand in their way.

The have to convict someone of the crime.

They really care not if it’s your life or mine.

They do not worry if there is no evidence.

They just ask the “judge” for the trial to commence.

They cannot afford to take any chances.

And around the court, the “D.A.” prances.

The trial is not fair, everything is rigged.

The whole “justice” system, truly is jigged.

The judge reads the verdict, in just one breath.

I am found guilty and sentenced to death.

The State of Texas is being frill.

They’ve found out they have the “right” to kill.

I now sit and wait, here on death row.

I know late some night, my life could go.

I don’t want the needle stuck in my arm.

I could never ever cause anyone harm.

Throughout the courts I put up a fight.

Cause I want to avoid that dreadful night.

Regardless of innocence,

I’m to be killed with vengeance.

So before I go

Down this dreadful road

I leave with you these few lines

For now, I have run out of time.

How does the writer of the following poem develops his argument against the death penalty?

The Death Penalty Is Murder

You go to your house of worship to your God to pray

But that your Government execute people with you is okay

When you tell me that all bad people deserve to die

Are you trying to say Moses Fifth Commandment is a lie?

You tell me you live in a democracy

But it does not seem too democratic to me

All murder is wrong that you do not deny

But in the laws of your Government a life for a life does apply

And since with so called lawful executions you wholeheartedly agree

You are guilty like many of hypocrisy,

The blessings of a God I do not ask to receive

But the death penalty is murder that’s what I believe

And those who believe every murderer should be made to die

Without saying so are saying Moses Fifth Commandment is a lie.

Francis Duggan

Reflect upon the following questions:

Does a person’s race affect the likelihood of him/her receiving the deathpenalty?

Does a person’s income level affect the likelihood of him/her receiving the death penalty?

Should a death penalty moratorium be implemented?

Should victims’ opinions matter when condiering the death penalty?

Should the death penalty be allowed?

1,188 people were executed in the US from 1977 through 2009, primarily by means of lethal injection. Most death penalty cases involve the execution of murderers although capital punishment can also be applied for treason, espionage, and other crimes.

Proponents of the death penalty say it is an important tool for preserving law and order, deters crime, and costs less than life imprisonment. They argue that retribution or “an eye for an eye” honors the victim, helps console grieving families, and ensures that the perpetrators of heinous crimes never have an opportunity to cause future tragedy.

Opponents of capital punishment say it has no deterrent effect on crime, wrongly gives governments the power to take human life, and perpetuates social injustices by disproportionately targeting people of color (racist) and people who cannot afford good attorneys (classist). They say lifetime jail sentences are a more severe and less expensive punishment than death.

Should the death penalty be allowed?  I found this interesting webpage which we will be using for our debate in class.  You will be divided in two groups, regardless of your personal beliefs, and you will be asked to fight PRO or AGAINST capital punishment.  Look at the website.  On the left-hand margin you find a menu.  Please read “Top 10 pros and cons”.  These are the ones you will be using in class.  You will know whether you are in the PRO or AGAINST group the very day we perform the public debate.  As you can see there are other tags that can be of interests to you, such us “did you know” or “should the death penalty be allowed” or “glossary”, etc.  Browse the website at your own wish, but the “top 10 pros and cons” is mandatory for the class activity we are going to have.  You can listen to the whole pages, there is the symbol of a loudspeaker.  Mind you, however, that the voice does not follow the natural rhythm of a mother tongue speaker, so resort to it when you have doubts as to the pronunciation of some words.  You just need to click on the word and then on the loudspeaker.

First they came…” is a famous statement attributed to pastor Martin Niemöller (1892–1984) about the inactivity of German intellectuals following the Nazi rise to power and the purging of their chosen targets, group after group.

Who is this poem addressed to?  What does it fight?  It would be nice if you could add a stanza of your own, a stanza that is contextualized in your own space and time.  Have a go.  This is mine: “When they came for women, I did not speak out; I was a man and my rights were safeguarded” (to me this is strongly linked to today’s news: the rate of women being killed by their male partners is not decreasing in our country).

When the Nazis came for the communists,
I remained silent;
I was not a communist.

When they locked up the social democrats,
I remained silent;
I was not a social democrat.

When they came for the trade unionists,
I did not speak out;
I was not a trade unionist.

When they came for the Jews,
I remained silent;
I wasn’t a Jew.

When they came for me,
there was no one left to speak out.

If you were asked to draw an image or write a slogan against the death penalty to be turned into badges to wear on your clothes or to pin on your rucksack/pencil case, what would it be like?  Think of a slogan and of an image.  Do you find the following ones effective? Why (not)?

death-penalty-poster1 justice and death penalty Death-Penalty po_death_penalty_big against death penalty

 

Artists and intellectuals fought and fight against the death penalty.   You listened to Jeremy Irons’ speech and you saw that some writers opposed it.  What about singers?  Do you know any song against capital punishment?

These are the ones I found with an anti-death penalty message, however, I am sure you can do better than me 😉

Dead Man Walkin’ by Bruce Springsteen

There’s a pale horse coming

And I’m gonna ride him

I’ll rise in the mornin’

My fate decided

I’m a dead man walkin’

I’m a dead man walkin’

In St James’ Parish I was born and christened

I’ve got my story Mister

Ain’t no need for you to listen

It’s just a dead man talkin’

Once I had a job I had a girl

Between our dreams and actions lies this world

In the deep forest their blood and tears rushed over me

All I could feel was the drugs and the shotgun

And my fear up inside of me

Like a dead man talkin’

‘Neath the summer sky my eyes went black

Sister I won’t ask for forgiveness

My sins are all I have

Tonight the clouds above my prison

They move slowly across the sky

There’s a new day

dawnin’ and my dreams are full to-night

This is the trailer of the film Dead Man Walking we will be watching in class.

Billy Moore got desperate for money and planned a robbery. He got the money, but killed a man and was sentenced to die. Thirteen execution dates later, his future changed dramatically. The video (click here: the video is divided into two parts, the second part will appear on the right-hand margin of Youtube) is broadcast by a Christian Channel and since I DO want to RESPECT believers and non-believers, I am not going to post the videos, but you can click above if you want to watch them.  The videos are a personal account of Billy Moore experience, which shows how we could all fall into the trap of committing an irrevocable mistake if we were driven by desperation.  The first-account witness reveals that poverty makes a difference and that black people in the USA are more likely to end up in the death row than white people.  The video also shows the power of forgiveness (the victim’s family fights for Billy Moore’s lift of the death penalty).

Inside the Texas Death Row

Now read the lyrics of Johnny Cash’s song “25 minutes to go”, what do you expect its tune to be like? What does the song reveal?  What criticism is raised towards the individual embodying justice (the mayor, the police officer)?

Well they’re building a gallows outside my cell I’ve got 25 minutes to go

And the whole town’s waitin’ just to hear me yell I’ve got 24 minutes to go

Well they gave me some beans for my last meal I’ve got 23 minutes to go

But nobody asked me how I feel I’ve got 22 minutes to go

Well I sent for the governor and the whole dern bunch with 21 minutes to go

And I sent for the mayor but he’s out to lunch I’ve got 20 more minutes to go

Then the sheriff said boy I gonna watch you die got 19 minutes to go

So I laughed in his face and I spit in his eye got 18 minutes to go

Now hear comes the preacher for to save my soul with 13 minutes to go

And he’s talking bout’ burnin’ but I’m so cold I’ve 12 more minutes to go

Now they’re testin’ the trap and it chills my spine 11 more minutes to go

And the trap and the rope aw they work just fine got 10 more minutes to go

Well I’m waitin’ on the pardon that’ll set me free with 9 more minutes to go

But this is for real so forget about me got 8 more minutes to go

With my feet on the trap and my head on the noose got 5 more minutes to go

Won’t somebody come and cut me loose with 4 more minutes to go

I can see the mountains I can see the skies with 3 more minutes to go

And it’s to dern pretty for a man that don’t wanna die 2 more minutes to go

I can see the buzzards I can hear the crows 1 more minute to go

And now I’m swingin’ and here I go-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o!

Now listen to it.  Is it what you expected? Why do you think the singer chose this tune/rhythm?

I am attaching the extraordinary “shape poem” that Elena Ghersetti created (4F).

Elena Ghersetti

Another expression of creativity is the one by Valerio Zaina (4F).

Valerio Zaina 4F

The following powerpoint presentations were made by my students of 4H and 4F.  They were asked to watch some films dealing with the issue of the Death Penalty and select/analyse pivotal scenes.  The results are just jaw-dropping.  I am amazed at the capabilities that some young students have.  Kudos!

What follows is the powerpoint presentation created by Anna Giulia Nadin (she did a super job, she will shortly become my personal tutor in creating effective power point presentations!).  Del Pup Elisa, Marini Sara, Mullahi Xheni and Anna Giulia analysed the film “The Life of David Gale”.

locandina


Xheni, to make her point against the Death Penalty, found these interesting videos on youtube.  Then she created her own video, amazing!

 

Bortolotto Laura, Fabbro Arianna, Lupascu Maria, Semenyuk Irina, Zongaro Silvia

 

The Green Mile

Corsunov Julia, De Piero Lara, Pavan Sara, Pignat Marta

Nicastro Sara, Rossetti Elisabetta, Busato Lucrezia, Bertacco Giulia, Blasut Giada

These are the video snapshot selected by the students to exemplify some of the issues dealt with in the film.

Redemption

Cozzarin Michele, Gerometta Mattias, Coletto Lisa

dvd-redemption


There are different reasons why we are against the Death Penalty.  Some people are not persuaded by the inhumane treatment of the victimizers (= the ones found “guilty” of the crime): many people on the death row were found innocent; the average time convicts on a death row have to wait in the state of California is 30 years.  Some of them die before their execution is enacted: they die of disease or they commit suicide.  For some people the money factor is more persuasive a motivation to put an end to the Death Penalty.  The expenses met for the killing of the convicts on the death row are massive. To our mind there are better ways of investing the money: PREVENTION.  Preventing crimes, investing money in social programmes to help disadvantaged kids or people.  This would still make people feel safe and protected by their government.

Dead Man Walking

dmwPitton Elisa, Moisa Elena, Grande Sara, Girardi Giulia

Videos mounted by the students.

Capital Punishment

Sufference- Friendship

Balbinot Giulia, D’Angelo Antonino, Ghersetti Elena, Piol Silvia, Zaina Valerio, Ziyad Nicola

Poem written by Nicola

I’m in jail for no reason

Brought here cos somebody says I hit his son,raped her daughter..

Can I get a glass of water?

The story starts now

Take a seat cos at the end

Y’all gonna be like ” wow

is it really how it went?”

I’m a man who can’t suck up his pride

and I’d rather say a lie

than to remain vulnerable to the eyes

that want me dead;

But now I’m lying on this bed

thinking, is it right for me to

to be sent to death, while my

Fake bro is only gonna get

a beat up from the Lutenant?

I did nothing wrong, the only

mistake maybe was to put

my words into a song.

There she comes, a woman who’s white trying to get a confession out of spite, but I won’t fall.. Maybe.

She’s a damn nice person,

Ugh this makes no sense,

I feel it,she’s coming through.

Is it because she’s a nun?

Doubt it, she could be a bun

And make no difference to me;

But what I want to see is,

Can I trust her?

If I tell her the truth,

can she assure me Gods mercyness?

No one can. What I did was terrible

no one will ever forgive me.

I’m scared,terrified. But she’s here with me while I’m getting ready, all the guards are steady and they waiting to take my shit out the room. Soon they say. I feel redemption, I don’t wanna die as a liar, if so I should die due to fire.

None of this was never meant to be; I am one of God’s children and as so I’m gonna free my soul and fly wherever He wants me to go. Cos at the end, it ain’t no judge who puts me where I belong, but it’s God whom sits in the front row.

Listen to Nicola reading his own  poem.

Memo

Sister Helen Prejean’s  interview

“A Life Against Death: the Work of Sister Helen”

A short documentary by Michelle Bagoyo

This is an interview to Sister Helen Prejean, American Advocate for the abolition of Death Penalty.

Here there are a few extracts from the interview, in my opinion the most powerful and the ones that are linked to the movie (Silvia Piol)

Since 1930, over 4.500 people have been executed in the United States.                                   Sister Helen Prejean has been a witness to six of them.

Referring to the young convict Patrick Sonnier,1949-1987, this is what she says: “When I came out of execution chamber, when Patrick Sonnier had been electrocuted to death, I watched this man being killed in front of my eyes and I threw up. I’ve never seen a killing in front of my eyes, in such a cold, calculated, protocol  death.” Something deep inside her, made her say: “Let me write the book Dead Man Walking”. About the purpose of writing the book, she states: ”I got to tell this story to the American people, because they never gonna get close to this”.

LEARN TO SAY “I’M SORRY”

LEARN TO FORGIVE

Loving your enemy does not mean condoning him, it means saving you from committing a crime.  When you kill a person, you do not free society of a criminal, you create a new one: the person who kills loses himself.

Literature can play an important role in changing people’s conscience for the better, this is what Helen Prejean promoted in the State Penitentiary in Oregon.

http://insideoutoregon.com/

TurnedInsideOutBook

‘Inside Looking Out’ tells the story of the national Inside-Out prison exchange program by focusing on the University of Oregon Honors College course taught at the Oregon State Penitentiary. Through the study of classic literature, outside students, learn to understand life inside a prison while inside students learn what it is like to be a student. It is a story of personal transformation through confronting and changing misconceptions people inside and out have about the meaning of education, and incarceration. What can be learned from another human being?

Inside Looking Out from Tiffany Stubbert on Vimeo.

I am very proud to post the first video that four students of mine created.  Girls, you did a superduper job! 🙂

I love the soundtrack you chose.  I did not know this song by Tupac.  This is what a person on the web wrote of the song:

Tupac began rapping about his own life after he was shot in Manhattan. Before that period, he rapped from the perspective of ghetto youth as a whole, and placed himself in the shoes of the people who faced the issues he rapped about. That said, 16 on Death Row (1992) is written from the perspective of a young cat faced with the realities of the inner city. The anger and passion in his songs are real, and that is how a lot of people in those situations feel. He was a mirror of this society, and was able to put it into words like no other.

“16 On Death Row”

Death Row
That’s where motherfuckers is endin up

Dear mama, I’m caught up in this sickness
I robbed my adversaries, but slipped and left a witness
Wonder if they’ll catch me, or will this nigga snitch
Should I shoot his bitch, or make the nigga rich?
Don’t wanna commit murder, but damn they got me trapped
Hawkin while I’m walkin, and talkin behind my back
I’m kind of schizophrenic, I’m in this shit to win it
Cause life’s a Wheel of, Fortune here’s my chance to spin it
Got no time for cops, who trip and try to catch me
Too fuckin trigger happy, to let them suckers snatch me
Niggaz gettin jealous (jealous) tryin to find my stash
Whip out the nine, now I’ma dive and pump your ass
Peter picked a pepper, but I can pick a punk
Snatched him like a bitch, and threw him in the trunk
The punk thought I was bluffin, but swear I’m nothin nice
Before I take your life, first wrestle with these, mics
I listen to him scream, Tray Deee went insane
I guess the little, mites had finally found his brain
New Rovers pull me over, I’m sentenced to the pen
Remember that little, bird, he snitched and told a, friend
It’s trouble on my mind, I’m with the old timers
And fuck five-oh, blaow blaow.. turn em into forty-niners

[Tupac sings]
Bye bye, I was never meant to live
Can’t be positive, when the ghetto’s where you live
Bye bye, I was never meant to be
Livin like a thief, runnin through the streets
Bye bye, and I got no place to go…
Where they find me? 16 on Death Row

Dear mama, these cops don’t understand me
I turned to a life of crime, cause I came from a broken family
My uncle used to touch me, I never told you that
Scared what you might do, I couldn’t hold you back
I kept it deep inside, I done let it fuel my anger
I’m down for all my homies, no mercy for a stranger
The brother in my cell, is 16 as well
It’s hard to adapt, when you’re black and you’re trapped in a livin Hell
I shouldn’ta let him catch me
Instead of livin sad in jail I coulda died free and happy
And my cellmate’s raped on the norm
And passed around the dorm, you can hear his asshole gettin torn
They made me an animal
Can’t sleep, instead of countin sheep, niggaz countin cannibals
And that’s how it is in the pen
Turn old and cold, and your soul is your best friend
My mama prayed for me
Tell the Lord to make way for me, prepare any day for me (why?)
Cause when they come for me they find a struggler
To the death I take the breath from your jugular
The trick is to never lose hope
I found my buddy hangin dead from a rope, 16 on Death Row

[Tupac sings]
Bye bye, I was never meant to live
Can’t be positive, when the ghetto’s where you live
Bye bye, I was never meant to be
Livin like a thief, runnin through the streets
Bye bye, and I got no place to go…
Where you find me? 16 on Death Row

Dear mama, they sentenced me to death
Today’s my final day, I’m countin every breath
I’m bitter cause I’m dyin, so much I haven’t seen
I know you never dreamed, your baby would be dead at 16
I got beef with a sick society that doesn’t give a shit
And they too quick to say goodbye to me
They tell me the preacher’s there for me
He’s a crook with a book, that motherfucker never cared for me
He’s only here to be sure
I don’t drop a dime to God bout the crimes he’s commitin
on the poor, and how can these people judge me?
They ain’t my peers and in all these years, they ain’t never love me
I never got to be a man, must be part of some big plan
to keep a nigga in the state pen
And to my homies out buryin motherfuckers
Steer clear of these Aryan motherfuckers
Cause once they got you locked up
They got you trapped, you’re better off gettin shot up
I’m convinced self-defense is the way
Please, stay strapped, pack a gat every day
I wish I woulda known while I was out there
Now I’m straight headin for the chair

[Tupac sings]
Bye bye, I was never meant to live
Can’t be positive, when the ghetto’s where we live
Bye bye, I was never meant to be
Livin like a thief, runnin through the streets
Bye bye, and I got no place to go…
Where you find me? 16 on Death Row

16 on Death Row
It’s to all my partners in the penitentiaries
16 on Death Row

This is the video shot in the basement of our school, really worth watching!

The video was introduced to the class by means of an interview.  Then all the “actors” explained some parts of the video. The following notes will cast light upon certain aspects of the video that otherwise would not be fully appreciated.

INTERVIEW

Good morning to everybody. My name is Emanuele Li Calzi.

Today we have with us here four famous actors. Recently they acted in a film against the capital punishment. Today we are going to ask them some questions and then watch the film trailer.

So, let’s see.. first of all

–          Why did you shoot the film?

We chose to shoot this video, because we wanted to raise people’s awareness to the way the prisoners are treated and the choice to put an end to their life.

We protect lives, we fight for human rights that are not granted in all countries and then, we do not give the opportunity to change life to someone who had once made a mistake.

Punishment should be a chance for prisoners to understand they made mistakes and to start a new life just like a new person, it should not be a fatal punishment, because it is an irreversible process. This is the main reason we shot this trailer.

–          What was the hardest thing about shooting the video?

Oh, it was not hard shooting the video because we had so many ideas! However it was hard to find the right location because re-creating the atmosphere of a jail is not so easy. The other difficulty that we had was behaving like convicts.

– Is this the first time you have acted together?

Yes, it is the first time and I am really satisfied with our job.

This theme really involved us; we played our roles with such enthusiasm, that we did not feel tired after hours of work

Last but not least

–          Do you believe that your film can be persuasive?

We do not want to censor anybody’s opinions.  This is the reason why in the video there are two people against the Death Penalty and two who are in favour (the ones wearing a mask).  We just wanted to have our own say and young people against capital punishment, so we hope our classmates appreciate what we worked hard to make.

Thank you very much to all of you. And now we are going to watch the movie trailer!

II SCENE.

I’m going to speak about the treatment reserved to prisoners. As we saw in the trailer, during the period of detention too many times the guards abuse their authority, physically and mentally against convicts. Inmates may be beaten for no reason and locked in tiny cells that are similar to cages. Victims do not have the right to speak. They are often forced to live in dark places, where the only companionship they have is themselves.

Moreover, the day of their execution may be postponed day after day. It is clear that, in this way any man on Earth, would lose his mind. For these reasons, I strongly believe that, in these circumstances a man is killed before he is actually executed.

SCENE SHOWING THE TRHEE CONVICTS PLAYING A GAME

This was a real game played in the 1960s.  These people could be three potential criminals or a guilty person and two liars who decide the man’s faith without even talking to him. In fact in most cases others decide a man’s fate without taking into consideration his “truth”. When we see that one of the three has got a picture, symbolizing his death, the other two realize that he is guilty.  The system has found someone to blame, no matter if he is really guilty or innocent, the system did its work.

V SCENE.

In the scene of the execution, we decided not to kill the executed. In fact he raises his eyes and stares directly at the camera. In our opinion this is symbolic of life as more powerful than death: nobody can decide to “stop” somebody’s life. Another important detail is presented in the fifth scene. After the execution a cheerful mask appears on the wall. This choice has two different interpretations. The first reading describes the desire to make the viewer experience what the executed has. The second one discloses the unfeeling people who watch the execution without telling anything. It seems that some people present at the execution may smile at that horrible spectacle. Where do they find courage to be so uncouth? Is it the joy of revenge that gives them the strength to witness a “murder”? We’d better ponder for a while.

Part showing the convict as a “dead man walking”. His last walk. We decided to film this scene in a corridor because it is dark and it is a narrow corridor, all these features convey to the spectator a feeling of anxiety, which is what the convict feels.

(last part)

I speak about the last part of the video. In this last part there are four people: a girl, a nun and two people with masks. This part represents the different opinion about death penalty. The girl and the nun shake their heads to say that they are against it. On the other hand the two people with masks are in favor of capital punishment. We decided to represent the people that are in favor of death penalty with masks because sometimes people are afraid of saying their opinion or what they think and they do not want to show their faces. So the mask is a metaphor for their fear of assuming their responsibility for their decision. The nun is the symbol of the Church, whereas the girl is a metaphor for all of that people that fight against death penalty.

101 Replies to “The Death Penalty”

  1. For me, the Death Penalty is a brutal act that doesn’t respect the dignity of humanity.
    For me, the most striking image of the site representing the Death Penalty, is the first one, because it represents the ungliness of Death Penalty.
    I like the first quotation, because it is a real and brutal definition about capital punishment.
    In the first poem, I understand that the writer is truly against the Death Penalty, when he write the last three lines of the poem: “I think that no man should die, no matter is sins, no matter the yearn to justify.”
    I like the second and the third poems too, but in particular the third one, because it tells about hypocrisy of people who believe in God, but agree the Death Penalty.
    I think the Death Penalty is a murder, because no one man can take the life of another man.

  2. I think that the death penalty is not right. First of all because they respond with violence to more violence does not make sense because the underlying problem is not solved, rather it will continue to foster a sense of revenge by the families of the condemned. Then because if you are not completely sure that he is guilty you can not kill an innocent person. Besides I think killing a person is meaningless; if someone killed many people or just one, if someone raped or abused a child, he has to live with this mistake for his entire life.
    The imagine that I find the most striking to represent the Death Penalty is the one with the three men hanging from the ropes and the people passing below because it shows the indifference of people towards this problem.
    The quotation I like the most is: “Capital punishment is the most premeditated of murders.” This sentence makes it clear that with the death penalty the law goes against itself.
    The last part of the first poem makes me understand that the writer is truly against the Death Penalty because it states that no one should die, despite his sins and especially the last verse “No matter the yearn to justify.”
    The author of the second poem is a condemned and you can understand from the and the last two lines “I leave with you these few lines /For now, I have run out of time.” The poem shows the writer’s anger towards the State and the judicial system because the process isn’t fair and they judge him guilty despite his innocence.
    In the third poem the writer compares the death penalty to a murder.
    He says that if we pray to God we cannot be in favor of death penalty because it implies we deny Moses Fifth Commandment.
    The fourth poem is addressed to all the people who observe what happens without reacting, to all those who assist to outrageous crimes and don’t say nothing.
    A stanza that I can add is:
    “when they came for the homosexuals,
    I remained silent.
    I was not homosexual.”
    The slogan I find effective is the one with a black background, a red handprint and the written “The Death Penalty makes killers of us all.”
    The song “25 minutes to go” speaks about a man who has only 25 minutes of life and then he will be hanged. In the song the individual embodying justice, like the mayor and the police officer, seems not to care about the man’s death: the mayor is out to lunch and the sceriff is happy to see him die. I expected the rythm more slower but i think that the singer choose this tune to defuse the moments of anguish before the death.

    Valentina Paronuzzi 4’F

    1. Dear Valentina, Thanks for the hard work you have put into answering the different points of discussion present in this page dedicated to The Death Penalty. I really admire your energy, commitment and passion.

  3. Death Penalty is pointless,
    it is cruel.
    Men should not kill one other.
    We all make mistakes;
    of little relevance,
    or more serious.
    But we should give another chance
    we should forgive more.
    Death penalty isn’t justice
    it is revenge.

    Valentina Paronuzzi
    4F

  4. My last three minutes

    Fear, anxiety, desperation, regret, sorrow
    This is what I feel.
    But do I really deserve this?
    Who has the power to decide when somebody must die?
    Who wants to take responsability?
    No one should.
    No one should, because we are all human
    we are all equal, identical.
    But now it’s my turn. Somebody decided my destiny.
    They say it’s time now for me to pay in the “right way”.
    Only God knows which is the “right way”. We should not take His place.
    This job is too hard. It’s better for us to act just like human beings.
    Time is rushing.
    I hold my breath and I count to ten.
    This is the End.

    1. I love the title of your poem, really effective. The poem itself speaks out your rejection of the Death Penalty as a form of deserved and proper punishment.

  5. Somebody thinks that it is the fair punishment,
    Somebody calls it a murder, others justice,
    And maybe they are right.
    Think of all the the violence to ill people,
    Or think about a mafioso: What is the right punishment?
    Only prison, be it life imprisonment? Perhaps it is too little:
    They have to pay for what they did in the past.
    People heard every day about “persons” that did such a horrible actions,
    And have not spent a day in prison.
    So, what does real punishment stand for?
    I mean: for someone paying for one’s crime is synonymous with the Death Penalty, the fair punishment.
    But it is not so.
    In what way a person, who committed a crime, pays with his life?
    Does he/she understand his/her mistakes in order not to repeat them in the future?
    No, because there will be not another chance.
    They think that with the death penalty, criminals are more afraid
    But they do not educate them in this way.
    And think of this:
    If you kill someone, who killed in the past, you make the same mistake.
    So death penalty is a viscious circle, it has no end.

    1. It looks more like a series of reasonings in favour of the abolition of the Death Penalty than a poem. Nice, though. Since there were quite a few mistakes I decided to correct the major ones, this because I did not want your “creative piece” to be skipped because of unclear bits.
      Here you get your updated piece. If I intreted things in the wron way, please let me know since I can redress everything quite quickly. 😉

      1. No, sorry, maybe I was not clear at all. On the poem I liked to start with the things that people think in favour of it and, in the end of the poem, revealed my opinion about it. Sorry, again. If you want, I rewrite it 🙂

  6. POEM

    He must expiate his crimes.
    He must serve his sentence.
    He must pay for his faults.
    He must spend his days in prison.
    He must be sentenced to death.

    He must die.

    But.. remember that he is a Man…so

    He should expiate his crimes,
    he should serve his sentence,
    he should pay for his faults,
    he should spend his days in prison,
    he should be sentenced but…

    He mustn’t die.

    In the world there are lots of people that are in favour of the death penalty.
    But a Man that committed something wrong is also a Man with a family, friends, dreams and life. And I do not call him “criminal” because he could be innocent.
    He could be our father, husband, brother or friend.
    And the most important thing is:
    He is a Man like us,
    He must live!

    Giada Blasut 4^F

    1. I like this poem because there is the repetition of “he must” and then “he should” in contrapposition, and they remember me of Dante’s Inferno (what is written on the door). The two stanzas repeat the same things, but changing the verb is really effective and help the reader to understand what is the writer’s opinion.

  7. A man who kills a man
    CanNOT be justified,
    CanNOT be killed,
    CanNOT be tortured,
    But it must be punished.
    Punished for what he did,
    Punished for the crime he committed,
    Punished with jail,
    And not with death.
    Death is not the right way,
    It isn’t right to punish death with death,
    and life should guarantee redemption.

  8. A man who raped and murdered a student
    deserves punishment.
    The state killed lots of criminals,
    But this is not considered as a criminal act.
    The law says not to kill,
    And this is the teaching you give?
    It is thought that this would change their mind,
    But they still commit terrible crimes.
    Nobody should be stolen their life
    This is not something a human being should ever do.

  9. Enough

    Again those steps
    Are they going to be the last ones?
    Not yet.
    With the same ears
    I heard those prophetic words
    Not sure
    Not care
    If they were the last ones
    They were killers’ words
    But it is enough.
    Again that smell
    Is it going to be the last one?
    Not yet.
    With the same nose
    I smelt the wooden “justice”
    Not sure
    Not care
    If it was just
    Or not
    But it is enough.
    Again that flavor
    Is it going to be the last one?
    Not yet.
    With the same mouth
    I tasted the sour “truth”
    Not sure
    Not care
    If it was true
    It was everybody’s truth
    But it is enough.
    Again that smooth sensation
    Is it going to be the last one?
    Not yet.
    With the same fingers
    I touched hypocrisy’s hair
    Not sure
    Not care
    If it was legal
    Or not
    It seemed human
    But it is enough.
    Again that heartbeat
    Is it going to be the last one?
    Maybe yet.
    With the same chest
    I felt their anger
    Not sure
    Not care
    If another heart is stopped
    Will it calm down
    Or not:
    It doesn’t seem enough.

    Zaina Valerio 4^F

    1. I changed the last few lines a bit, but please check whether I have rendered them in the way you really meant. Awesome poem. Well done. 🙂

  10. She has blue eyes, he has brown hair.
    He comes from Brazil, she comes from Spain.
    She has got two brothers, he is an only child.
    He did it for money, she did it for revenge.
    She loves painting, he loves running.
    Maybe she has got ten years left.
    Maybe he has got three days left.
    He cannot breathe anymore.
    She cannot speak anymore.
    She is already dead.
    He is already dead.
    He is a man, isn’t he?
    She is a woman, isn’t she?
    They are human beings, aren’t they?
    People are different.
    But they are all human.
    People are different.
    But they all make mistakes.
    People learn things from their mistakes…
    But what if they died, before they have learned from their mistakes?
    Nothing disappears,
    nothing can be forgotten,
    nothing can be destroyed,
    nobody should be killed.
    It is not by closing your eyes that the storm disappears.
    It is not by trapping a fly
    into a box
    that you won’t hear it
    anymore.

    Valentina Porro 4F

  11. YOU WON’T GO TO HEAVEN

    I don’t want to wait anylonger but I don’t want to die,
    I wish this were just a joke, I wish this were just a lie.
    They are abusing their power by sending me to hell,
    The only thing I can do is throwing a wish into the well.
    Do you really think you will feel better after my death?
    I want to hold my breath.
    You are not seven,
    and trust me, you won’t go to heaven.

  12. We are all precious creatures, we are all human beings,
    we have the right to live.
    How can a man think of killing another man?
    Why should a person kill another person?

    If that happens
    the person who kills deserves being punished.
    But…
    …what kind of punishment is fair punishment?

    Death??

    What is the meaning of this dreadful word?
    This is a question that should not exist
    because death penalty SHOULD NOT EXIST.
    A person who commits a crime must not die for what he did,
    this person must be punished but not with the death penalty.
    What does it solve?
    NOTHING
    We cannot kill a person who killed
    because in this way we become killers ourselves
    if we kill, where is the justice?
    Justice….
    IS NOT TO BE FOUND IN THE DEATH PENALTY.

    Lucrezia Busato 4f

    1. Can you think of a possible title? Nice poem. It could be “Justice is done” not reveal straight away that the poem is against the Death Penalty. However, it is your poem so it is better that you choose for yourself.

      1. Thank you for the title you suggest me 🙂 I think it is extremely meaningful. Another possible title could be ” Be Human” in the sense that we are all human and we must not kill a person but even in the sense that we must not kill a person who kills.

  13. Stop breathing for a while: can you here it?
    It’s your heart beating.
    What if it would suddenly stop?
    Now close your eyes and imagine someone told you
    “this is your last day in this world”.
    Have you ever thought of what you’d say to your wife?
    Have you ever immagined how you’d look at your child?
    Saying Goodbye to him for the last time?
    What sentence would you choose as the last one
    coming out from your mouth?
    Perhaps “Let me live”?

    Are you still in favor of the death penalty?

    Silvia Piol

  14. We try to speak and understand
    what feels the the prisoner in the end
    when he or she knows the condemnation
    and is preparing for infinite isolation.

    There are some people who are in favour
    Of the death penalty before it happens
    to their relatives and friends
    Because nobody could be insured from mistakes.

    It is true that THEY must be punished
    For all the terrible things THEY committed
    But no one can decide when one person must die
    And if he does, then it is a new crime!

  15. Life is very important,
    It is our soul
    Killing,
    the worst of crimes,
    taking away freedom from a person.
    Robbing a person’s life.
    We were created to live
    We are animals
    and failing perfection is
    our only ‘fault’
    You can make a mistake, but
    You should not die
    We are men
    creatures of the earth.
    And as such we can
    make a mistake
    but we can also find a solution
    but not in killing as a form of retaliation.

    1. What could the title be? “Life”? It is up to you to decide. I made a few corrections, since certain passages where not clear. Please check that I interpreted certain ideas of yours correctly.

  16. The death penalty is the ultimate denial of human rights,
    it is just like giving weapons to Iraq and being against all the fights.
    The Death row is hours-counting,
    it would be better if I let myself drowning.
    Ten years without looking at the sky,
    ten hours by the bye.
    Once I had a job and a girl,
    but who cares now if I hardly unfurl?
    First thought is her smile,
    so simple and bright.
    I feel the sea-wind on my skin
    or maybe it is caused by my actual sin.
    I can taste my mom’s pie,
    I would not see my sky again.
    It is only nine,
    they bring me at the finish line.

    1. What title would you give to this poem of yours?
      This line is not clear to me ” who cares now if I hardly unfurl?” What do you mean by it?

  17. Death does not bring back a life

    Life marked him.
    On that terrible night
    The Devil’s shadow
    took over his mind
    and induced him
    to make that
    terrible act.
    He had spent years
    to try to get stuck with it.
    Speaking, listening, reading and writing
    trying to understand
    and make understand
    his repentance.
    But nothing and no one by now
    could change the destiny
    that someone,
    had already decided for him.
    Putting an end to his life would mean justice?

  18. The convict is waiting
    waiting for his destiny
    what is he thinking about?
    maybe about his SUFFERING death
    how can he feel
    thinking EVERYDAY
    that his moment to die WILL ARRIVE?
    does he feel well?
    NOT, surely he doesn’t
    Do you think, READER, the death penalty is
    HUMAN?
    NOT SUFFERING?
    USEFUL?
    Does it help a man regret what he’s done?
    SURELY it does NOT.

    1. I changed just a few things, see whether you agree with my little contribution. Well done Giulia, you see, you can write a poem and You always doubted it!

  19. Think

    Will killing a man render
    you better?
    How would it feel
    if you were the one,sitting,
    awaiting your death?
    I can tell you how it feels.
    Every day is a race against
    time,
    you wait in your cell,
    you see inmates come and
    go.
    Everyday you know that
    someday,
    it will be your turn.
    So,think,
    is killing a man really
    getting revenge?
    With the breath of prayer in
    your mouth,
    you sentence me to death.
    In a blink of an eye you
    have
    changed a person’s life.
    So think.

    1. I really like the poem of Virginia! very powerful and make us think about different aspects of the life and what is more important at all.

  20. broken breaths
    anger, then killing-escaping-be caught-
    be judged-and losing
    prison-people-waiting
    postponing-waiting again
    prison-people
    postponing-waiting again
    prison-people
    but there’s no happy ending, and finally
    waiting-walking-waiting-walking-waiting-gameover

    1. Great poem, the use of the hyphon creates a pause, but then the repetition of the words and of “again” give a sense of anxious speeding up of the existence, almost running towards death.

  21. How could I possibly forgive a murderer?
    How can I want him to be released from jail?
    Why should I care about a convict?
    Why should I be against his penalty?
    Did he care about his victim while he was committing the crime?
    No.
    Did he worry about the consequences of his act?
    No.
    So, how can I possibly forgive a murderer?
    Many of us say people sentenced to death are still human beings:
    but.. even that person who was killed,
    even that girl who was raped,
    any other victim
    was a human being.
    And now he or she is dead.
    This is the reason why I cannot possibly forgive a murderer.
    This is why I cannot take a stand against the Death Penalty.

    1. The capability of forgiveness is an enhancing power and to gain it a human being has to work hard, very hard, it does not come easily and it does not come to all of us, if we do not work hard to conquer it.
      The poem is effective in expressing your view, I just added the last line to make is as strong as you wished. The title could be “No forgiveness, No forgetting”. See you whether you like it or whether you prefer choosing a different one.

  22. We all want to live
    We don’t want to die
    We punish who kills,
    who makes us wanna die.

    We think we are clever
    We think we are right
    We condemn any torture,
    which comes from medieval times.

    We want to solve the problem
    We want to be free
    And what do we do?
    We kill.

    Alessia B. 4^H

    1. “We want, we think, we kill”, an escalation and for this reason I would entitle the poem in this way!

  23. Another chance

    We are all human
    and therefore we can make mistakes,
    but is it right to die for a mistake?
    Is it right to punish violence with violence?
    There is no going back from death.
    Killing is not the solution!
    We are creatures of the world
    and we are here to live our lives.
    A man who kills a man
    cannot be justified,
    but HE can be forgiven!
    Let’s give HIM another chance.

  24. Harlem quarter 3:09
    a person just got shot on the other side
    of a big church
    where many peole search for a God
    and they praise him not to set us in temptation with the bad
    but isn’t this scene sad?
    Somebody’s life has been struck
    now he’s in the back of a truck
    taking him on his last journey,the grave.
    So the person who killed him,should he be saved?
    Nah what he deserves is jus what he gave:
    tears,fear and unimaginable pain.

    1. As I told you in class, this is a really nice poem, regardless of it speaking out a sentiment I do not personally share. You made your point clear, yet at the same time you made it poetic too. Obviously, as I pointed out, it may be read in a different way and thus it may be read as an ironic support of the Death Penalty. You made it clear it is in favour, though and you read it in a way that could not be interpreted otherwise.

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