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Title: National Liberation & Anarchism
Author: Saint Andrew
Date: May 19, 2021
Language: en
Topics: national liberation, nationalism, black nationalism, kurds, Palestine, Breadtube
Source: Retrieved on June 8, 2021 from https://youtu.be/v67_1czmyCI

Saint Andrew

National Liberation & Anarchism

Introduction

The world today is rife with conflict, as a multiplicity of struggles

are waged in the broader fight for freedom. At this point, it’s pretty

blatantly clear that there are more wars than just the class war. Truth

is, there always have been, despite the dogmatic assertions of some

class reductionists. We must be intersectional, struggling also against

the patriarchy, white supremacy, ecological destruction, and much, much

more, as liberation cannot be fought in relation to the class war alone.

Today, I hope to clarify what I believe is the most reasonable position

on one such struggle against domination. I hope to answer the question

of national liberation and how we should navigate it as committed

internationalists in a world rife with national oppressions.

What is a Nation?

I’m using the term nation throughout this video to refer, not to a

nation state, country, or political constitution, but to an imagined

community of people formed on the basis of a common language, history,

ancestry, society, or culture, who are conscious of their autonomy. I’m

using it as a synonym for ethnic group, basically. Therefore a nation is

not geographically bound, like the popular Western conception of a

nation. Diasporas are, in fact, fairly common. Some nations are united

under a banner of nations, such as in the case of Pan-Africanism, which

seeks to unite the thousands of ethnic groups on the continent and in

the diaspora.

Nations are often the target of suppression, subjugation, and erasure.

African peoples were stolen from the continent and thoroughly stripped

of their languages, histories, and cultures, and continue to be

oppressed throughout the so-called new world. Indigenous nations across

the world also continue to be denied their autonomy as minorities within

a domineering state. Armenians were systematically murdered under the

Ottomans, the Kurds are divided and suppressed across four countries,

and Palestinians continue to be colonized by the Israeli state. Hawaii

and Puerto Rico remain occupied by the US empire, while Tibetans and

Uyghurs remain dominated by the Chinese state. I really could go on and

on. Across the world, struggles have been and are being fought by

nations for their liberation.

What is National Liberation?

The national liberation struggle is a struggle against the relationship

of exploitation and domination inflicted upon a nation. It’s a struggle

against the domination of one people by another, often centered on

questions of language, culture, welfare, equality, and land. It’s not

something we can just stand by neutrally and ignore. Ignoring national

liberation struggles would mean siding with national oppression.

And don’t try to squeeze them all into one box. National liberation

struggles are diverse. Within them, there usually many tendencies at

play, from the most reactionary to the most revolutionary. Thus, within

the struggle for national liberation, there are other ongoing struggles,

including class struggle. While the oppressed classes cling to national

liberation struggle in an effort to defend against foreign subjugation

and exploitation, the capitalist class uses the struggle for national

liberation to consolidate power and monopolize the exploitation of the

working class.

Which brings me, inevitably, to nationalism.

What is Nationalism?

Nationalism is one of the programs that has been proposed as the

solution to national liberation struggles. It hasn’t been the only

program, mind you, and it’s not synonymous with national liberation, but

it has been one of the most popular. Terminology can be easily muddled

here, as nationalism has referred to ideologies of both oppressor

nations and oppressed nations. There is a vast chasm between the violent

supremacy and colonialism of white nationalism or Zionism and the

self-determination movements of Black nationalism or Palestinian

nationalism. Let’s not get it twisted.

The program of nationalism, specifically among oppressed nations, has

generally seen the oppressed nation as a united bloc, ignoring class,

gender, religion, and other divisions, in favour of the development of

an independent state, which is usually some form of capitalist, either

state capitalist, welfare capitalist, or neoliberal capitalist.

Nationalism is often weaponized and promoted by the ruling class in

order to unite the oppressed classes with domestic oppressors, replacing

foreign capitalists with local capitalists, foreign generals with local

generals, and foreign government officials, with local officials. In a

word, to conceal the importance of class struggle.

Nationalism has repeatedly failed to solve poverty, oppression,

exploitation, and suffering. While many states have become formally

independent from their colonial masters thanks to nationalist movements,

neocolonialism perseveres. Yet the continuation of national oppression

often results in the revival of nationalism as opposed to an exploration

of other options. For example, the Middle East has been severely

subjugated by Western imperialists, even post-independence, but proposed

solutions have included reactionary, authoritarian Ba’athism and Salafi

jihadism, which aims for a global caliphate.

Hence why nationalism is usually criticized and opposed by anarchists.

Again, there’s a difference between nationalism and national liberation.

But in that criticism of nationalism, some anarchists, while recognizing

that there are class divisions within a nation, have ignored national

divisions within a class in favour of some ideal united working class.

The truth is that the oppressed classes of some nations have benefited

from the domination of the oppressed classes in other nations. Don’t do

the class reductionism thing nah.

Obviously nations that have had constant war waged against them for

centuries tend to turn to nationalism for their national liberation.

Forgive them for not thinking about the global working class when

they’re literally under assault for their national identity. When you’re

fighting colonial administrators and foreign armies, you not exactly

studying class war. Which is why, historically, national liberation

struggles, using nationalism, have ignored class divisions among the

oppressed nation. But not always. Let’s look at two examples, one flying

under the banner of nationalism and one rejecting it entirely:

revolutionary Black nationalism and the Kurdish national liberation

movement.

Revolutionary Black Nationalism

Black nationalism is a very diverse political movement, with several

currents and opposing perspectives within it, but a common thread

throughout: resistance to the domination of the white supremacist system

and the assertion of Black sovereignty. It’s a recognition that we have

to free ourselves, without waiting for permission. A recognition that we

have to protect ourselves from the continued assault of the empire. A

recognition that we can be proud of and love our bodies, our minds, and

our heritage. A rejection of eurocentrism. Some manifestations of Black

nationalism have been reactionary, capitalistic, homophobic, and

patriarchal. Others have stood in stark opposition to those currents. In

particular, revolutionary Black nationalism, which, unlike some forms of

Black nationalism, stands in opposition to all forms of oppression,

including imperialism, white supremacy, and capitalism. In my view, as

many Black anarchists have noted, revolutionary Black nationalism has a

place in the struggle, in conjunction with the struggle against

patriarchy, capitalism, and the state, as we aim to prefigure a world

free of all forms of domination.

Kurdish National Liberation Struggle

The Kurdish national liberation struggle is a deeply fractured movement

with many groups and approaches, each proposing different solutions.

After hundreds of years of oppression under the Ottoman Empire, the

Kurds were divided into four states: Turkey, Syria, Iraq, and Iran. But

the existence of those independent states did not solve the Kurdish

national question: they have remained an oppressed minority. They are

commonly seen as the largest nation without a state.

In the 1990s, one of the Kurdish national liberation groups, the PKK,

broke with Marxism-Leninism and Kurdish nationalism in pursuit of

democratic confederalism, which developed out of communalism and

anarchism. The PKK now stands in opposition to capitalism, feudalism,

imperialism, and statism, favouring a “democratic system of a people

without a State,” that “takes its power from the people and adapts to

reach self-sufficiency in every field.” The PKK still maintains

independence as the ultimate goal, but through society-building rather

than state-building. They have established the Autonomous Administration

of North and East Syria, which was called Rojava up until 2016, when the

Kurdish word was dropped to promote multiethnic unity.

So, we have our critiques of how nationalism tends to manifest, and we

know it’s not the only way. We’ve seen how the PKK has fought for

Kurdish national liberation while opposing the state and capitalism and

we’ve seen how revolutionary Black nationalism, despite its name,

incorporates a fight against capitalism, and sometimes the state. We

recognize the importance of national liberation, but how do we support

such struggles while staying true to our principles?

True Internationalism

While the nationalism of oppressed nations has often manifested with

close ties to capitalist and statist domination, national liberation

against domination is a stance that any true internationalist should

hold. A true internationalist is one who recognizes that human unity can

only be achieved through mutual respect, solidarity, and alliance among

all peoples. Part of the international revolution must involve

participation in national struggle for self determination and human

dignity against imperialist domination.

If we oppose male supremacy, which is the patriarchy, we must support

women’s fight against it. This doesn’t mean blindly supporting bourgeois

liberal girl boss feminism. It means listening, learning from, and

collaboratively developing the revolutionary anarcha-feminist project to

liberate all women from patriarchal domination. If workers decide to

form a union, in many cases the existing union is pro-capitalist and

hierarchical. Nevertheless, we stand with the workers against the

bosses, even as we try to convince them of the need for union democracy,

militancy, and opposition to bureaucracy, in order to liberate them from

class domination.

The price of solidarity could never be subservience. Solidarity is not a

reward for compliance. Solidarity is a discourse between peoples about

how we determine our own freedom. So while we may disagree with the

development of states, people are free to make mistakes and learn from

them. Of course, we can fairly critique statist elements within these

movements. After all, as we’ve seen again and again, independent states

remain dominated by global powers and corporations. Independent states

remain tools for local capitalists to exploit their own people. Please

remember, our aim is definitely not to stand in support with the

leaders. Just to make that clear, because the most common

anti-imperialism I’ve been seeing these days has been so vulgar.

Anti-imperialism is more than anti-Americanism and it definitely isn’t

supporting leaders and parties, who often have imperialist ambitions

themselves yet claim to be anti-imperialist. Anti-imperialism is not

about denying genocide, it is not about ignoring the internally

oppressed minorities within oppressed countries, and it definitely is

not about conflating the state with the people. You have to have

principles. You have to be able to engage in the complexity and

contradictions of national liberation struggles, offering critique where

needs be, and resisting reactionary, capitalist, patriarchal, and

statist elements where they manifest. Our aim is to support the

oppressed masses in their fight for autonomy while engaging in the

dialogue of solidarity.

Never treat the people you stand in solidarity with as a monolith and

don’t trust people who claim to speak for them as though they’re a hive

mind either. Majority approval doesn’t make something right. There is

always disagreement within national liberation movements, and you can

elevate those whose visions are close to your own. We can participate in

and support these struggles while helping our comrades within them to

shape them in a more revolutionary, libertarian, socialist direction.

There are always voices willing to stand against class oppression and

authoritarianism, even if they don’t call themselves anarchists.

So...how do we engage in national liberation struggles? Circumstances

vary. These struggles are often taking place in other parts of the

world, quite far from our reach. But reach out nonetheless. To

organizations and comrades on the ground, involved in the fight. Start a

dialogue with them, and find out how you can support them. Listen more

than you speak.

Peace.