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Allen Cooper

1938 - 2022

Allen Cooper obituary, 1938-2022, Albuquerque, NM

BORN

1938

DIED

2022

Allen Cooper Obituary

Allen Cooper

Allen Fairfax Cooper, born August 10, 1938, in Albuquerque, New Mexico passed away at the age of 83 on August 7, 2022, at the New Mexico State Veterans' Home in Truth or Consequences, after a long battle with Lewy body dementia. He is survived by his son Malcolm Jamal Cooper, daughter in law Agatha, two grandsons, Daraeon and Jamari Cooper, brother Terry Fox, and former wives Jane Ruge and Allison Frank, who loved and supported him through the end.

On Allen's 82nd birthday the City of Albuquerque issued a Proclamation honoring Allen as a "fearless and courageous Albuquerque resident who has given his heart and soul to the Movement in spite of institutional harassment and surveillance from all levels of government, imprisonment, loss of jobs, and other failed attempts to silence him."

Throughout Allen's life, he took a stand for freedom, liberation and social justice, challenging war as the answer to peace after serving in the US Navy in the 1950s during the Cold War, and actively supporting oppressed, disenfranchised, exploited, brutalized peoples across the country, and in international struggles in Cuba, Central America, Northern Ireland, Palestine, Southeast Asia, and Africa. He spoke with revolutionary zeal for social change but at heart Allen was an ally in the struggle for justice and peace who walked his talk.

In the 1960s he joined the historical 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom demanding an end to institutional racism, buoyed by Martin Luther King's speech "I Have a Dream." He walked from Washington, DC to Key West, Florida, calling for peaceful US â€" Cuba relations. Moved by the racism he observed in the military and the 1955 brutal murder of Emmett Till in Mississippi, he followed the call of the Southern Freedom Movement for civil disobedience, and worked with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee in Black communities in rural Georgia and Mississippi as a medic, literacy teacher and organizer, registering voters and educating farmworkers how to unionize, at peril to his life from the brutality of legal authorities and the Ku Klux Klan.

Immersed in the activism of the day, he collaborated with the Black Panther Party and United Farm Workers in California to address social and economic inequality, marched with Reyes Lopez Tijerina in support of La Raza and the land grant movement in Northern New Mexico, and carried his protest of the Vietnam War not only to demonstrations and teach-ins as far as Mexico City but offering draft counseling to young men seeking conscientious objector status. During the Iraq War in the 2000s he again came forward in protest, while volunteering for the GI Rights Hotline.

In 1973, with a small group of Vietnam Veterans Against the War, Allen joined the occupation of Wounded Knee with the American Indian Movement to liberate the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota from the oppressive tribal government terrorizing the traditional Lakota people.

For his support, he faced federal charges with over 100 years' imprisonment. He remembered Wounded Knee and the Southern Freedom Movement, especially Mississippi, as transformative, real life-and-death communities of resistance whose courageous people became his lifetime teachers for struggles to come.

And there were many struggles where Allen was a visible and vocal ally, joining demands for social, economic and legal justice, environmental protection from energy development and nuclear waste disposal, recognition of indigenous treaty rights and international human rights. He remained active through 2016 when he participated in the Standing Rock protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline in North Dakota.

In New Mexico, Allen was active for decades in the Peace and Justice Center in Albuquerque and used local community media platforms, as a volunteer host of Espejos de Atzlan on KUNM and the New Mexico IndyMedia Show on public access TV Channel 27, to inform the community about a broad range of cultural and social justice issues, while realizing his lifetime vision of building solidarity and valuing diversity. As the City of Albuquerque Proclamation recognized, Allen Cooper, throughout his life, "stood up and cried out for justice believing that until all of us are free, none are free." Allen was a public school teacher who loved teaching and loved his students. Enthusiasm, humor, compassion, and respect were his gifts. When asked what he taught, he would reply

"I teach students to think for themselves."

An avid swimmer and voracious reader, Allen also enjoyed traveling, fishing, hiking, listening to music, watching documentaries and independent films, and feeding and watching birds. Most of all, Allen was a revolutionary motivated by great love. He worked ceaselessly to raise consciousness. He said he would never quit until he died and "probably won't even quit then." He was most at peace at the Bodhi Manda Zen Center in the Jemez Mountains of New Mexico.

The family would like to thank the NM Veterans' Home nurses, doctors, and staff for the kindness, care, respect, and dignity they showed Allen. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to NM State Veterans' Home Resident Fund, 992 Broadway St., Truth or Consequences, NM, 87901, in support of resident veterans in need.

A celebration of Allen's life will take place at the Albuquerque Center for Peace and Justice on

September 24, 2022 from 4-8 pm. Bring your memories and a dish to share.

To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.

Published by Albuquerque Journal on Aug. 21, 2022.

Memories and Condolences
for Allen Cooper

Not sure what to say?





Pegasus Blaise Collonge

September 21, 2022

What a great role model!
Allen was as good as they get, for a White guy, seriously. Ever-conscious of white supremacy in the USA, Allen did what he could as an ally, and supported many great revolutionary causes locally too. When my spouse and I were the prime coordinators for Trinity House (2006-2011) Allen encouraged whatever radical goodness and angelic troublemaking we could muster.
Viva Cooper!

Single Memorial Tree

Larry and martha

Planted Trees

Larry Hertz and Martha Dominguez

September 19, 2022

Very sorry to see such a great fighter go

Donna Thomas

September 7, 2022

I met Allen when I moved into my house on Vermont St in 2017 he lived directly across the street., he always waved hello and had very kind words to say, he was such a nice kind man, I was sad to see him leave when he became ill, I think of him often!

Joe Fashing

September 3, 2022

I met Allen on my first day on campus at UMM as a new faculty member in the departments of Sociology and Educational Foundations. He was recruiting me to be faculty advisor for
SDS. It was the beginning of a long friendship that I like to think lasted to his last day. My children were so fond of him that they named a named their new puppy "Allen" because he was warm and fuzzy just like his human counterpart. And I think anyone who ever really knew him will remember him the same way. All of us who ever knew him well are devastated by this sad news. He was a fine man and a great friend and role model.

Roberto Roibal

August 30, 2022

We'll definitely miss Allen's passion and work for social justice. I attended hundreds and hundreds of social justice actions with Allen and always admired his fortitude and passion for social justice.

Group of 10 Memorial Trees

Comrade Geoff Barrett

Planted Trees

John Santos

August 22, 2022

Never knew or heard of this great man until he was brought to my attention by his friend Sarah Rose. I LOVE him and will remember him as an inspiration for a life dedicated to truth and real justice that will pay forward eternally. We need many more like him. Much light and strength to his great spirit and to the family as well. With much gratitude and love.

Lara Dale

August 22, 2022

With tears pouring down my face as I write this I can safely say that I can't imagine there has ever been a person who crossed paths with Allen that was not profoundly touched, influenced and transformed by his actions and fierce but gentle integrity. He lived his entire life in service to the higher good of all, and whether he was marching with Martin Luther King or helping bring supplies to the camps at Standing Rock, he walked it like he talked it without ego or fear. Allen changed my life for the better, and countless others everywhere he went. I cannot imagine a world without him, but I will do my best to carry his legacy through to the next and the next generations so his spirit can live on forever in our work. God I miss you Allen - your soft voice speaking truth to power and your walking stick marching always towards justice. Make sure you hold heaven to your high standards as well, and know that you are as loved as a human being can be, and that your life was a model for us all, every conscious and conscientious moment of it!

Lenny Foster

August 21, 2022

My deepest condolences to your relatives, friends and loved ones. We remember Al as a comrade in the struggle. You will always be remembered as a Wounded Knee vet and a strong supporter of
Big Mountain. RIP my AIM brother.

Shelby Smith-Sanclare

August 21, 2022

My condolences to those wonderful people who loved and supported Allen in his endeavors for a more equitable, just, and loving world. He has left a space for many to step into and continue the work that even he would say has just begun. Somehow, I can see his energy and infectious enthusiasm gathering the souls in their resting places to join together in prayer and thanksgiving for those of us he left behind--for now. Rest in peace, Allen, at least for a while.

Showing 1 - 11 of 11 results

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Memorial Events
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Sep

24

Celebration of Life

4:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.

Albuquerque Center for Peace and Justice

NM

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