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Title: Review: Zapatista Spring
Author: Eoghan Ryan
Date: 17 October 2011
Language: en
Topics: book review, Zapatistas, Irish Anarchist Review
Source: Retrieved on 24th December 2021 from http://www.wsm.ie/c/review-zapatista-spring
Notes: Published in the Irish Anarchist Review Issue 4.

Eoghan Ryan

Review: Zapatista Spring

Editors’ Note: In this issue of the IAR we have the all too rare

pleasure of reviewing a book by a fellow Irish anarchist. It’s Ramor

Ryan’s Zapatista Spring, one of the most honest books yet published

about the Zapatistas.

While Ramor Ryan’s “Clandestines” detailed the myriad adventures of a

peripatetic revolutionary, his follow up book, “Zapatista Spring”,

concerns itself more with the minutiae, and frequent tedium, of weeks

spent in Chiapas demonstrating “practical solidarity”. In his own words,

he is “attempting to portray the Zapatistas as they are at the

grassroots, beyond the mythologizing of [Subcomandante] Marcos and the

public face of the rebellion.”

However, it can also be seen as a companion piece to “Clandestines” in

that his Spartan surroundings while there allow him time to reflect on

the motivations behind his revolutionary activities, as well as those of

other volunteers.

Initially Ryan visited Chiapas as part of the “accompaniment” strategy,

whereby international activists immersed themselves in Zapatista

communities, living and working with the peasants. This was “tactically

successful throughout the late 90’, as the[ir] presence … might well

have staved off the worst of the military excesses, serving as eyes and

ears to monitor human rights in the conflict zone. However, in

consolidating the rebel project of building autonomy [it] was lacking.”

Hence the move towards “practical solidarity”, encompassing, amongst

other things, water projects.

He and a number of other volunteers form a “water team” who help to

build a basic water supply in a remote Zapatista village, Roberto

Arenas. They comprise Ryan, Maria from America and Praxedis from Mexico

City, which may as well be a different country as far as the villagers

are concerned. There is no indication when this episode took placed

although it is probably around 2002/3.

Contradictions

Contradictions abide for a committed anarchist. Deep-rooted patriarchy

within the village is highlighted and challenged, within certain limits.

While the gender based division of labour (men do the construction work,

women the field and house work) remains, the women did finally get some

input into the design of the water system to make it easier to fill

their predestined roles. Anarchists must take on roles of authority,

delegating manual work to the villagers (not very successfully in Ryan’s

case!).

Ideology aside, there are other complications. Revolutionary village

campesinos continuously enquire about the possibilities of work abroad.

Racist, sexist truck drivers are hired to transport the vital equipment

to rebel held territory. The “water team” must pass through neighbouring

government held territory where the equally poverty stricken peasants

remain PRI (the governing party) supporters. International vegetarian

volunteers object to the shooting of wolves that threaten the villagers’

chickens and children. Communities sometimes switch sides depending on

the opportunities that varying their allegiance can bring, with outlying

Zapatista aligned villages sometimes having a somewhat adversarial

relationship with their compatriots in bigger towns. Particularly

instructive, in an Irish context, are some of the parallels with the

ongoing Garda occupation of Erris in Mayo. Communities are bought off by

state handouts and investments in much the same was as Shell have

attempted to do.

A conversation between Ryan and Praxedis explores the rationale behind

their presence in the area, as an act of solidarity with the base of the

Zapatista movement, notwithstanding their devout religious beliefs,

social conservatism and frequent nationalism. Whatever the conflicts

between they (urbanised, socially liberal and atheistic) and their

hosts, they ultimately conclude that, as anarchists, this is the

“coalface of the struggle”. Ryan views himself as a Celtic Tiger

refugee, seeking revolutionary possibilities, away from a place where

“everything just seemed to be sucked up into the economic boom, and

everybody became mesmerised by Ireland’s new wealth and capital and

forgot about solidarity and collectively building communities based on

hope and reciprocity.”

A Zapatista In Your Own Country

One of their EZLN guides suggests that the visiting activists “should be

working in [their] own community, fomenting rebellion.” This line of

thought seems to have become more widespread within the EZLN, resulting

in their recent call for no international visitors to their area and

they having broken almost all links with NGO’s. So, this “practical

solidarity” strategy seems to have backfired somewhat with, in this

instance, the villagers continually viewing the “water team” as some

type of NGO despite our protagonist’s best efforts to explain otherwise.

Ryan eventually concludes the divide between the internationals and the

indigenous may perhaps be too great a one to bridge, they can always

leave while the campesinos are stuck.

On a more micro level, anarchist activists will recognise the

difficulties mentioned between competing tendencies described in Mexico

City and the tensions between the activists themselves in Chiapas. In

describing this and the sometimes strained relations with the

campesinos, Ryan illustrates problems almost all activists will have

encountered albeit perhaps in different contexts.

There are some problems with this work, the most obvious being the

disclaimer on the insert that “while this book is based on true events,

some characters and scenes have been fictionalised”. So what is true and

false? Are characters merely introduced as a device to illustrate a

particular problem? For example, when a Mara gang member from Honduras

stumbles into Roberto Arenas having lost his way on the long trek north

to the US, did this actually happen or does it merely allow Ryan to spin

a parable on the harshness of urban existence across Central America?

Given the professed aim of the book, it detracts significantly from the

finished product if the reader cannot be sure if it portrays the

Zapatista base in any way accurately. There are a number of typos and

there is the occasional resort to cliché, the children are rarely

anything other than sweet, the locals are stoic and the countryside

bucolic.

This is not a primer in Zapatismo and, as someone not overly familiar

with the Zapatista movement and revolution, I didn’t gain any particular

overarching insight into the situation in Chiapas. But, first and

foremost, “Zapatista Spring” is a story, a simple yet engaging one, in

no small part due to Ryan’s succinct prose and easy humour. He

illustrates some of his thoughts by reference to themes explored in

Joseph Conrad’s “Heart of Darkness” and Albert Camus’s “Myth of

Sisyphus”, a device that works well in clarifying his position on his

role in Chiapas. The author also doesn’t gloss over his own failings; he

loses his temper on occasion and can be anti-social.

While the overall premise may appear slight, the complications involved

in transporting equipment through army controls and difficulties in

relations with the locals make for a page-turner. Finally there is a

twist in the tail that ties everything together in a peculiarly

satisfying way.

The Zapatistas have recently re-emerged in public last May after a

five-year hiatus, participating en masse in a rally in San Cristobal

pushing for a political solution to the narco-trafficking problem in

Mexico rather than the infinite war pursued by the government. Ryan’s

ultimate conclusion is that they are a force for good and thus this can

only be a positive step.