Martina Correia, 1967-2011, champion of Troy Davis and justice for all
by Matthew Cardinale
Atlanta (APN) – Martina Correia, the sister of Troy Davis, who was his strongest advocate, has succumbed to breast cancer.
“We were very blessed to know Martina and to work with her for more than 11 years,” Laura Moye, Death Penalty Abolition Campaign coordinator for Amnesty International USA, told Atlanta Progressive News.
“She was a true champion and hero for human rights in the U.S. and beyond. She changed all of us and she changed this world. We know her spirit is very strong and is going to continue to be a force for changing this world for the better,” Moye said.
“I was with Martina this week in the hospital, and she had a peaceful passing,” Moye said.
“We are inspired by her strength and by her courage. We are so grateful that she was a part of our cause and that we could be a part of her cause,” Moye said.
“With her leadership in the campaign, we always involved her in the decisions to build up an effective campaign,” Moye said.
“She inspired so many people to be involved in his struggle. She said it was really part of a larger struggle for human rights in this country,” Moye said.
“She got involved in Amnesty because she wanted to help her brother but she recognizes what was happening to her brother was happening to other people, she wanted to help other people. It was very much what they wanted – her and her brother,” Moye said.
“Martina Correia fought a 20-year-long battle for justice for her brother. She led an international campaign to save her brother’s life and prove his innocence. She was the voice for Troy and their family and led an international chorus in singing, ‘I AM TROY DAVIS,’” Sara Totonchi, executive director of the Southern Center for Human Rights, said in a statement prepared for APN.
“She was not only a leader in the anti-death penalty community; she is also at the helm of the National Black Leadership Initiative on Cancer. She focused her work on prevention, education and cultural barriers to eradicate cancer in communities of color,” Totonchi said.
“Many times over the years I would be on a conference call with Martina only to find out midway through the call that she was simultaneously receiving chemotherapy while fully participating in our discussion,” Totonchi said.
“But with Martina, it was not only what work she did; it’s how she did it. Martina led this movement by demonstrating an unshakable commitment to ending the death penalty. She is unparalleled in her determination,” she said.
“Martina’s focus was always bigger than her brother’s case. Martina never lost sight of the lives and the families of all people in prison and on death rows. I remember during one of the times Troy had an execution warrant pending with just two weeks before he was set to be killed, Martina called me to check in about a mutual friend of ours who recently went back to prison. She wanted to know if his wife and kids were OK and what address could she send a grocery store gift card to help them out during this difficult time,” she said.
Martina never lost sight of the lives and the families of all people in prison and on death rows.
“This was just one of the many, many times I have felt so blessed to know and work with someone as extraordinary as Martina. She has informed and directed my work at the Southern Center for Human Rights for over 10 years. I could always rely on her to direct me to the issues that are most deeply impacting the lives of people in prison and their families, whether it was the exorbitant fees charged to people seeking medical attention inside the prisons to abuses by the corrections officers at visitation. And she kept these families and their struggles in her heart always. Every time she spoke to an audience about her brother’s case, she would invoke them,” she said.
Correia was a nurse and a veteran of the first U.S. invasion of Iraq.
After being diagnosed with breast cancer, she was no longer able to work and was on disability, so she traveled the nation and indeed the world advocating for Troy Davis.
She also became an advocate for curing breast cancer.
Correia’s mother, Virginia Davis, died in April 2011, only months before Troy Davis was executed.
“I think the death penalty takes a terrible toll on all the families who are involved. It’s interesting to know Troy’s mother and sister died within months of his execution,” Moye said.
Correia is survived by one son, Antone De’Jaun Davis-Correia; two sisters, Kimberly and Ebony Davis; and one brother, Lester Davis.
Matthew Cardinale is news editor of The Atlanta Progressive News, where this story first appeared. He can be reached at matthew@atlantaprogressivenews.com.
Martina Correia: Her life was consumed by the fight to win justice
by Marlene Martin
For all of you who were lucky enough to meet Martina, you met someone with incredible conviction and determination.
In one of my last conversations with Martina, she told me someone in France had emailed her to say they were sorry that despite all of their efforts and protests for Troy, they had failed.
Martina said: “I want people to know that we didn’t fail. As long as we keep hammering away at this thing, as long as we refuse to give up, we haven’t failed. We’ll be doing what Troy would have wanted us to do. Our efforts made an impact and we’ll continue to make an impact.”
“I want people to know that we didn’t fail. As long as we keep hammering away at this thing, as long as we refuse to give up, we haven’t failed. We’ll be doing what Troy would have wanted us to do.” – Martina Correia
That is always how she was. She refused to be defeated. She always looked to the positive; she always looked to ways we could mobilize to win.
I feel so proud and honored to have fought alongside Martina and Troy’s family. And I know many, many of you feel the same way.
This news came to me in a phone call from Mark Clements, someone who spent 28 years wrongfully incarcerated in Illinois. He said: “We will miss her. She was a warrior in this fight. To the best of our ability, we must continue this fight she started for Troy and for others.”
She was an inspiration to us all.
Now it will be up to us all to fight on in her memory and in Troy’s memory – and not to give up.
Marlene Martin, executive director of Campaign to End the Death Penalty, can be reached at marlene@nodeathpenalty.org.
Martina opposed LWOP
by Christine Hamel
Those of us who had the privilege of meeting Martina were truly blessed. She was the catalyst of the movement that spread worldwide to save the life of her brother, Troy Davis, even while she fought cancer to save her own life.
Recently I’ve heard Troy Davis’ case used as a justification for “life without possibility of parole.” In honor of her courage, leadership and hard work, I’d like to remind all of those that Martina was a long-time board member of Campaign to End the Death Penalty, an organization that opposes life without possibility of parole.
Martina stood up for her values, even when it might have been politically expedient to do otherwise.
Christine Hamel can be reached at babysoft777@hotmail.com.





She will not rest until justice is achieved. We have a long way to go. When I think of her transition, instead of thinking sadness in the traditional sense, I think fire, I think cold anger directed at those who gave her frustration, pain and death to her Loved Ones… I think of her strength, courage and fortitude in the face of odds that would have crushed a lesser person, and snuffed out a lesser spirit. I think of Troy Anthony Davis, who courageously held strong and true to his spirituality and his will and determination – not giving up one inch of fortitude to the pig. I think of Troy's determination to NOT eat a 'last meal' in full confidence that he would be renewed – and he was – even in death. This is why a corrupt system had no compunction whatever in attempting to destroy a courageous FAMILY: Mother, Brother, & Sister who are now Ancestors, and those who continue forward with us to continue the fight, and dare to win! The will of 3 AFRIKAN people moved a world: popes and kings, masses of millions, former heads of state and talking heads alike. That a cabal of 6 Negros – from Obama on down – stood on the threshold of this courage and still allowed their handlers to murder this bright flame, speaks to the lowest depths that some will sink to – some who have no racial memory of their Ancestors being whipped, raped, starved, beaten, murdered and mass murdered and enslaved. As Franz Fanon said in Black Faces/White Masks: "In this study, Fanon uses psychoanalysis and psychoanalytical theory to explain the feelings of dependency and inadequacy that Black people experience in a White world. He speaks of the divided self-perception of the Black Subject who has lost his native cultural originality and embraced the culture of the mother country. As a result of the inferiority complex engendered in the mind of the Black Subject, he will try to appropriate and imitate the cultural code of the colonizer. The behaviour, Fanon argues, is even more evident in upwardly mobile and educated Black people who can afford to acquire status symbols." Note the final 2 sentences in the previous quote…Why is it that people on this continent keep voting in these flawed bits of flotsam? Justin A. Frank psychoanalyzed Bush to a tee in his book 'Bush On the Couch: Inside the Mind of the President.' Bush is cold, ruthless, and emotionally unstable. Now comes Obama, fitting to a tee Ancestor Fanon's psychoanalysis of what an upwardly mobile and 'educated' Negro with an inferiority complex – and the money to NOT control it – can and will do: appropriate and imitate the cultural code of the colonizer. I guess it really would have been a wrench to Obama to invite over for coffee, the 5 other Black males who could have stopped Troy Davis' murder but didn't : after all, they'd all have Black Faces and White Masks like him, and unlike the cop who busted his friend Henry Louis Gates trying to break into his own house – the White Masks of Obama and his ilk aren't an immediately observable visual, but they are there – and they look just like Willie Lynch and govern themselves accordingly. So what/who is more dangerous: those who collectively 'vote' for a festering evil or the evil itself? Neither Troy Davis nor Oscar Grant III nor Kenneth Harding could vote – and we failed them by not 'rendering impassable with our bodies, the corridor to the gas chamber.' Thus, the bright flame that is the spirits of Troy, Martina, and Virginia still burns for us, even in death – reminding us all by their shining example, of what is still needing to be done, and what we'd better do. The jack boots are at the door, in the living room, sitting at the table eating our food. What we gon' do? ALL POWER TO THE PEOPLE
And…WHO needs psychoanlalysis?
R.I.P., beautiful soul. You and Troy are still alive with us.