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Title: Our Culture, Our Resistance Subtitle: People of Color Speak Out on Anarchism, Race, Class and Gender Date: October 2003 Authors: Victoria Law, Ashanti Alston, Ernesto Aguilar, Heather Ajani, Sara Ramirez Galindo, Tiffany King, Soo Na, Rivka Gewirtz Little, Bruce Little, Walidah Imarisha, Not4Prophet, Greg Lewis, TomĂĄs Moniz, Puck, Suneel Mubayi, Ewuare Osayande, Shawn McDougal, Kapila, Ramiro Muniz Topics: class, race, black anarchism, gender, Anarchist People of Color Published: 2020-06-10 00:00:00Z
Over the last decade, Third World peoplesâ movements against globalization, neoliberalism and
related issues have captured the imagination of the world. From the
militancy of street protests to the fight for autonomy advocated by the
Ejércitio Zapatista de Liberación Nacional (EZLN, also known as the
Zapatistas), radical politics led by people of color is quickly evolving. We
are hearing less of old top-down strategies and more about popular
education and grassroots organizing.
A small but growing movement of people of color is developing a new
conversation that advocate anti-authoritarianism and anarchism as solutions to our collective struggle. Such a movement is largely led by youth,
and such advocacy is a departure from the old-guard politics espoused by
revolutionaries of color. Many of these people of color met in October 2003
in Detroit for the first Anarchist People of Color conference. Others continue to organize, agitate and act to find bottom-up answers to the freedom
movementâs most perplexing questions.
Our Culture, Our Resistance: People of Color Speak Out on Anarchism,
Race, Class and Gender is the first compilation of writings by people of
color covering the concepts of anarchism, race, class and gender. The
purpose of this book is to contribute to the ongoing dialogue among people
of color and others as we strive toward freedom.
ISBN 0-9759518-0-7
Ernesto Aguilar, editor
[[http://www.illegalvoices.org/][www.illegalvoices.org]]
This book is dedicated to people of color around the world and our
just fights for consciousness, justice, land, freedom and liberty.
Thanks to the authors; to Heather Ajani for tremendous support; and
to AK Press for its work, but also for rejecting this book and inspiring
independent people of color publishing.
<br>
*by Ashanti Alston*
The white fathers told us, âI think, therefore, I amâ and the
black mother within each of us â the poet â whispers in our
dreams, I feel, therefore I can be free. Poetry coins the
language to express and chart this revolutionary demand.
â Audre Lorde
Here we are, and the APOC phenomena continues. From the Detroit
Conference to the build-up for the Republican convention and onward, folks
of color with anarchist and anti-authoritarian politics are making a presence. And it couldnât happen at a better time!
If I may pull my age card for a moment: I am a very proud product of the
1960sâ Revolution. It was that time when all things seemed possible, like
Revolution in the very belly of this beast. It was in the air and folks from all
walks of life were joining up. Some movements in particular were grounding
the charge. The âAmerican Indian Movement,â the Chicano Liberation
Movement and the Black Liberation Movement. And why do I say âgrounding?â Because without the recognition of these movements having to deal
with the very structure of the Empire of the U.S., the anti-war movement
would only fight for reform and reform would mean the wholesale selling out
of those of us at the very bottom for the interest of well-meaning white
folks. It would be just another version of selling out folks of color as
throughout the history of our struggles from the moment of European
invasion. For the same reason, folks of color decide that it is necessary to close ranks, so to speak and figure out how to ensure our different
freedoms.
Living in the â60s and â70s meant living at a time when modern technology,
especially the revolution in communications and transportation, meant that
the âworldâ got smaller. A teenage boy in New Jersey could turn on the TV
set and watch his folks in that Black Nation called Down South get water-
hosed and beaten by rednecks because they dared protest for the right to
be free from racism and terror. It also meant that we got to see televised
accounts of the U.S. invasion of the Vietnamese people and sometimes
even an African revolutionary diplomat speaking eloquently on a newly
independent nation or liberation struggle on the verge of victory. Come to
find out that your very own revolutionaries here, like Robert Williams,
Malcolm X, Stokeley Carmichael, the Panthers and even folks like Maya
Angelou had been traveling overseas to visit and learn from these other
kindred struggles. Cuba, Vietnam, China, Algeria, Tanzania, Kenya,
Nigeria. Folks were reporting back new information before they could even
get back. And folks here were just moved. It was the true beginnings of the
anti-globalization movement. But folks of color revolutionaries here werenât
hoping from one revolutionary uprising to another like it was fun, and no
doubt it was exciting. But folks belonged, for the most part, to organizations on the ground level who needed, wanted to know what thinking and
organizing styles seemed to be working for others around the world so that
we might incorporate them, like in jazz improvisation, into our movements
and move forward. Communications and transportation technologies were
being used by the slaves to hook up with other revolutionary slaves around
the world in the hope that we would all be on the same page in bringing
down The Beast. The Babylonian Monster.
Interesting about this â60s period that is so instructional for those of us
today who are bringing anarchist and anti-authoritarian revolution to our
communities, is that â60s revolution began as a rejection of old revolutionary thinking and styles of organizing. When we research that early period
we find that young folks, regardless of racial background, were tired of the
various communist and Marxist parties, and the liberal organizations. They
were not lonely, led by old folks but displayed such a rigid, Catholic
adherence to dead white male revolutionary thinking that it felt like parents.
It felt like parental rule that upheld hypocrisy and materialism and individualism and willful blindness to racism, war and class privilege. So, on their
own, young folks were searching for more egalitarian, communal and
spontaneous ways of just being in the world and of making revolution in the
US in concert with other struggles around the world. France, May 1968.
Mexico, 1968. The Congo, 1964âŠ
In this early period, the anti-authoritarian spirit was dominant. It was
organizationally expressed in early Students for a Democratic Society
(SDS) and Student Nonviolence Coordinating Committee (SNCC). It was
expressed in terms of vision in terms of creating a âBeloved Community.â
Revolutionaries like Elder Ella Jo Baker was able to impart to young folks
in the South to look to themselves for leadership and to help Southern
communities raise up their own indigenous leadership instead of relying on
the privileged ministries and old liberal guard to guide them. SNCC, as just
one example, took Ellaâs advise to heart and was able to help build a
dynamic revolutionary movement for voter registration and community
liberation like the racist, fortress South had never saw. And when we look
further into this period, we can see that as long as folks kept to egalitarian,
participatory democratic and grand visionary politics, the movements kept
a vibrancy and growth. But as we go further, we also see that at the same
time the more rigid liberal and revolutionary influences had not given up
their religious fight to lead the movements. Black, Native American,
Chicano, Asian, Puerto Rican and white âworker.â
As the battle for ideological leadership, organizing style and revolutionary
âagencyâ grew, folks were hitting normal growth roadblocks. They had to
do with membership growth, the constantly changing picture of the system
we were up against and its fascism against us, questions of allies, weapons of fight-back, etc. Folks needed answers. The pressure was on.
Revolution now. Seems like quick fast solutions were needed and folks
were leaning more to the more âscientificâ approaches coming from the
Marxists, communists and Third World revolutionaries. And the Third
World revolutionaries were taking on more Marxist and communist ideas.
Eurocentric ideas. Scientific ideas. Modern ideas of making a revolution in
their respective nations. And being that the liberation movements were
succeeding so quickly in kicking out their imperial masters, then it seems
to make sense that we take on that kind of thinking and style. We did.
As our movements here became more Marxist, we will see that they also
became less inclusive, less spontaneous, less democratically participatory. One did not continue to pursue the Beloved Community; one now
increasingly talked about
âscientific socialism.â One
did not try to discover new
ways to deepen the
has meant for us
participatory democracy
which âtook too longâ or
contained too many
different ideologies; one
went for the more serious
âvanguardâ small, tight-knit
organization of the more
brilliant speakers, theoreticians and organizers who knew what to do,
because they had read more, traveled more and spoke more. The Women
Uprising within SNCC and SDS and other organizations would be stifled
because, I donât care how you look at it, this new revolution would boil
down to men shit. And though it may have been a blessing in disguise,
because a womenâs revolutionary movement would seriously take off at this
point, the overall movements would fragment in a not-good way while the
Monster would recover and its Counter Intelligence Program
(COINTELPRO) shored up its fascist work. In this sense, though a lot of
great resistance was waged under the growing Marxist-Leninist-Trotskyist-
Maoist direction of grassroots movement, overall, it killed our spirit, our
spontaneity and our faith in our own indigenous knowledge production.
Within the Empire, be we folks of color, workers, students, we have
histories and herstories of resistance nurtured by visions of freedom. We
have ways of knowing and figuring things out that have allowed us to draw
from Iroquois to Franz Fanon and Herbert Marcuse.
Why I originally said that all this was instructional for us today is because
it was that anarchist and anti-authoritarian spirit of the early â60s that gave
that period its revolutionary dynamism, its, originality. Folks were so
inspired by international movements but mores by our own folks of color
movements here in the belly. But we lost it. All of us. And in many ways,
their ainât been a comparative movement of movement since. By the early
â70s, for all intents and purposes, we were not able to sustain our growth to
effective challenge the Empire and COINTELPRO, and the mass media
wrote the rest of the story.
But then out of nowhere, seemingly, comes Seattle and the WTO battles and
we begin to hear faint sounds of revolution again and some of them voices are
ours. Ours. Folks of the Tribes, indigenous to Turtle Island, here by way of
the slave ships, here by southwestern wars of U.S. annexation, World War
Two koncentration kamps descent and then our more recent immigrant communities of color who take their turn at becoming the latest fall-guys diverting
attention from the real empire designs of world domination.
Our anarchism has meant for us a return to something old yet so new, Not
only in terms of our peopleâs ancient stories of stateless times but just
being here now knowing that even within the resistance stories there has
always been the spirit of freedom, direct action direct participatory democracy and communalism. We, like the Zapatistas, are both ancient and
new, embracing cutting edge thinking on our own terms, i.e. not slavishly.
We will use both the drum and the Internet, the sacred prayer and the gun;
and we will be as grandly and wildly visionary in drawing new worlds as we
wanna be.
Folks wanna know what anarchism is? Itâs freedom, itâs creativity, itâs
culture. Itâs people and peopleâs diversity. Itâs people finding themselves
right now from all walks of life here in the belly of the beast and not giving a
damn about how we got here via the Empire but deciding that it is gonna
be here where we plot the Empireâs demise. Fuck ya bourgie-ass white
rights, borders, patriotism, their weapons of mass distraction and destruction. On to the return of an old family grandchild to home: Revolution
anarchist-style, communal, earth-loving, dancing, throwing bricks, squatting abandoned building, creating quilombos. In the hands of your soulful playmate, we APOC are here. Let the games begin!
Ashanti
<br>
Anarchist Panther
PS â Thank you for letting an ole man hang with yâall. Because of you, I
still believe that with the torch in your hands, we can kick ass and help
make this world of worlds ⊠free.
Behold, I am Funkadelic. I am not of your world. But fear me not. I will do
you no harm. Loan me your funky mind and I shall play with it. For nothing
is good unless you play with it.
And all that is good, is nasty!
ââWhat is Soul,â Funkadelic, 1969
GOOD MORNING, REVOLUTION, you nasty cat you!
Sorta Langston Hughes, uh-hun.
<br>
*by Sara Ramirez Galindo*
It is difficult to write about a topic like anarchism, which is already controversial enough, to people who are familiar with its theory and practice
without being intensely judged and questioned about what is written. Not
that questioning is wrong. It is necessary, but in my opinion, it is unproductive if it lacks respect for someoneâs ideas, thorough thinking, reflection, and constructive feedback. That is why I ask that you, the reader, to
please just read, think and reflect about what I am expressing here. It
might not be a perfectly written composition but it is not meant to be one,
it is simply my experience with anarchism.
I first learned of âAnarchism,â the kind known to most activists in the
United States, through literature given to me by a friend who had traveled
to Washington State for the anti-World Trade Organization actions in
Seattle of 1999. My curiosity about the subject led me to research more
about it. I never read entire books by Proudhon, Bakunin or Emma
Goldman for lack of time, so I read articles, zines and excerpts of books
instead. Through this literature I learned of an anarchist conference.
This first anarchist conference I attended left me perplexed, for I had read
about anarchism as the theory and practice towards the abolition of
authority, hierarchies, practicing collectivity and active organizing. The
feeling I got from that conference was uninviting, dry, alienating, extremely
sub-cultural and life-stylish. I could not understand many of the things
people were talking about in discussion circles. I could not understand why
several of them had re-named themselves after plants and animals. I did
not understand why they wore no deodorant; and it seemed weird to me
that nobody bothered asking others how they were doing, if they needed
anything, or even took the time to offer a greeting or a smile. I did not enjoy
the conference but still remained interested in anarchism telling myself,
âIâm sure this isnât all thereâs to it.â
Once I got in contact with a self-defined anarchist group in my region that
was holding weekly meetings, I decided to check them out. The way I was
received by the people in the group was not any different from what Iâd
experienced at my first anarchist conference, except that after the conclusion of the meeting a couple of women in the group approached me to ask
my name and how I was doing and invited me to their next meeting. I did
not stay in that group long. I never spoke up because I was afraid of saying
something wrong, something outside the âanarchistâ terms they understood, and I did not want to be the center of attention if anything I asked
became controversial, for I felt none of that âsolidarityâ and less of that
âcollectivityâ that anarchism is supposed to generate. Though some people
were very nice, others were very arrogant, unapproachable and plain
intimidating, so I moved on.
While visiting âanarchistâ groups every now and then, I was simultaneously
involved in anti-sweatshop student activism, not because it was the âthing
to do,â but because my mother, uncles, aunts and myself had worked in
clandestine garment sweatshops before. From this student activist work, I
met a woman who introduced me to her collective, the Zapatista Committee of Los Angeles.
That day was the beginning of a life-changing experience.
Nobody in any activist or typical anarchist organization had greeted me
with honest handshakes and looked at me in the eye with interest of
knowing who I was or what I had to say like the people in this collective
did. I was once again confused because this group was not self-defined as
anarchist, but they based their practices on non-hierarchical, anti-authoritarian politics, they did practice collectivity, held
weekly reading circles,
and most importantly they
were organizing events,
not just shows â these
were based on accomplishing truly radical and
practical goals. And I for
the first time felt these
actions were building a
true sense of community.
As I became to know
each and every one of the
people in the collective, I
was not surprised to know
many of them were in fact
self-defined anarchists
who had simply felt the
need to work with a group
of people who could
produce and provide what
mainstream anarchist
circles had not. Upon experiencing anarchism through those events,
groups and people, I constructed this view about todayâs many types of
anarchists: the self-defined image anarchists, the read-only anarchists, the
underground and non-self-defined working anarchists, the anarchists who
are a combination of all these, and others.
At this point I had understood that the anarchists I had initially met did not
necessarily comprise what the theory and practice of anarchism was, as I
understood it. It was like understanding that in the world there are nation-
states and then there are the people living in them, two different entities. It
was also at this point that I openly acknowledged that I was not wrong for
being one of the few women and people of color walking into a predominantly-white anarchist book fair, but that is was in fact this homogenized
âmovementâ of anarchists that had unfortunately allowed things to be
structured this way.
This homogenization has unfortunately built boundaries that mark what
kind of issues are of priority, what kind of actions are ârevolutionary,â the
kind of workshops to be given at a conference and so on. It was difficult for
me to feel connected to these anarchists; our realities and priorities had
nothing in common. Anarchist literature circulating in the majority of
anarchist groups today speaks mainly of European (and European descendantsâ) anarchistsâ history and present. Iâm sure that is not on purpose, yet
the beginning of this trend led to the simplification of ideas, such as that of
Europe being the âbirthplaceâ of anarchism and this information was used
to simplify another idea, that supposedly anarchism later âreachedâ Latin
America in the mid-1800s. I saw how this was not questioned often or ever
by mainstream anarchism. Was it never considered that other people,
whose histories just never made it to books, could have been practicing
anarchism?
Understanding the importance of rescuing other anarchist histories has led
to the emergence of materials about Cuban anarchism, African anarchism,
Argentine anarchism, etc. At the same time a growing number of anarchists
â including myself, a non-white person â have started identifying as anarchists of color in order to rescue and expose (to everyone, not just to main-
stream anarchists) our struggles and those fought by historic individuals like
Luisa Capetillo from Puerto Rico, Lucy Parsons from the United States, Julia
Arévalo from Chile, Maria Angelina Soares from Brazil and others.
Being part of this is my attempt to break up this standardization of
anarchismâs current Eurocentric tendencies that, in my opinion, could be
causing some of the stagnation of its theory and practice; and to use it as
a supplement to the gradual dismantling of racism and similar hierarchies
of power that unfortunately exist in mainstream anarchism.
I keep mentioning, âmainstream anarchismâ because in the United States,
the only anarchism recognized is that which is externally visible, while it is
in fact being âactively and seriouslyâ taken into practice in other parts of
the world through struggles that are simply not getting the amount of
solidarity an all-white-boy black-block âactionâ gets. I am certain that the
anarchist activity taking place right this minute in Magonista communities
in the Mazateca Highlands in Oaxaca (Mexico), and in the Bolivian region
are not the type of anarchist âscene,â we are accustomed to see, for these
movements include bloody confrontations, tears, death, mutual trust and
hope, and most importantly constant struggle as a priority to survival. The
realities for U.S. anarchism are others, and so the responses are going to
be different, that is understood. Yet, this mainstream anarchist movement
in the U.S. lacks understanding and consideration for the realities lived by
non-privileged anarchists in the same region. Mainstream anarchism in this
aspect lacks the solidarity, the convivial feeling needed to work with each
other, to learn and unlearn from each other, and most importantly to build
trust to back each other up.
I was fortunate enough to participate in an amazing event where these elements of respect, solidarity, inspiration and revitalization were experienced.
The Anarchist People of Color Conference in Detroit boosted up my hope
for anarchism. This was an event that became controversial (to mainstream
anarchists) from the very beginning, as many considered it exclusionary,
âracistâ and every other negative thing possible. I did not pay much
attention to this drama, as I knew we were not gathering to plot a battle
against white anarchists, we were simply in need to meet and share ideas
with each other. It felt humiliating to have to explain to some white and
non-white anarchists why we wanted to meet. We wanted to meet for the
same reason anarchist women gather separate from anarchist men: to
empower themselves; we gathered, with similar reasons to those anarchists break away from authoritarian nation-state governments: to change
things that were going wrong, to change things in the system. To me this
conference meant meeting people who had experienced the discrimination
I had lived within mainstream anarchist circles. It also meant meeting
individuals who were highly interested in developing and carrying out
projects, not just for those in the âsceneâ or in their cliques, but mainly
with those in their communities (community meaning neighbors, co-
workers, families, etc.), projects that could truly exemplify the ideals of
anarchism rather than simply spending time theorizing about them.
This conference did not produce a separate anarchist group, as that was
not our purpose. We created a different understanding of its practice and
theory.
To us, anarchism meant something diverse, since we all came from
different communities and with different psychological, emotional and
spiritual experiences. We stressed on the importance of having serious
commitment on building relationships with our community rather than
encircling ourselves in a subculture that unconsciously excludes others
around us. We also planted that this anarchism we were talking was non-
vanguardist, non-elitist, non-arrogant, respectful, humble, honest, loving,
gentle and accountable to others. As revolutionary anarchist people of
color, we understood our communities need non-traditional anarchist
projects that could be constantly assessed to see if they are indeed
creating solidarity, mutual-aid, self-determination, self-sufficiency and
autonomy.
Experiencing anarchism to me has not been what books say it is. It has
meant how my actions can in fact produce it effectively.
<br>
*by Heather Ajani*
Over the past few years, my involvement in movements against police
brutality, globalization and other political movements led me on a path to
understanding how race works and how it affects me as a woman of color.
Over the years, I have studied race theory, womenâs liberation movements,
the criminal justice system, classical and contemporary political theory, as
well as drawing from my own experiences. It is because of these academic
exercises and personal growth processes that I write this article. I learned
a lot about myself over the past three decades, figuring out why I am
angry, why the way I feel has a bigger context than just my being and that
as a brown woman in America I am forced to feel a duality wherever I turn.
There is a lot of debate about the political versus the personal. The debate
started hitting mainstream activism during the second wave womenâs movement. The argument boiled down to whether the personal experiences we
had belonged in political debate, more easily analogized as taking a more
professional approach in our activism, checking personal problems at the
door. To me this argument plays into the colonization of thought we struggle
against each and every day. We use it and other terms to stifle each other
and ourselves, including when we need to be accountable for our actions.
There have been times in history when the most beautiful revolutions,
revolts and uprisings have been sparked because of the personal. Such
examples include the abolitionist movement, civil rights movement and
even motherâs movements such as the Argentinean group, âLas Madres de
Plaza de Mayo.â Some of the most successful movements are borne of
passion in one respect or another and that personal drive, commitment,
self-discipline and self-determination, or whatever is at the base of a
revolutionaryâs heart is balanced with the political context of their environs.
These movements are sparked by fires that burn the very foundations of
the people involved, threatening their identities, who they are, leaving them
with their backs against the wall.
As a person of color, activist, organizer, agitator, anti-authoritarian with
strong anarchist leanings, I have often been accused of being too emotional, too critical, or too truthful. I canât say that Iâve always displayed the
best behavior when confronted with these paternalistic statements often
bestowed on women in radical circles, but I have tried to hone those
accusations into something I can reclaim in a more principled way. The
pain I feel when I hear these accusations and when I think of the way that
these statements become internally oppressive it makes me wonder if
what we give each other leaves us empty handed.
In my journey to developing a political and personal praxis, I have come to
an understanding that my oppression comes from a system that depends
on the privileges of a few and the oppression of those who are denied those
privileges. This oppression eats people of color alive, depends on false
dichotomies, hierarchies, systematic genocide through the continual
colonization of non-whites, the perpetuation of capitalism and unholy
alliances between workers and bosses. I have also wondered if it is
possible to have the passion necessary to combat these social and
political ills without emotion, self-criticism and truth.
In All About Love, bell hooks stresses the need for openness (i.e. honesty,) nurturing, self-discipline, justice and love as a means for social and
political change. In a recent project, I had the opportunity to speak with
several elders who had taken part in movements such as the Black
Panther Party, Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee, and others.
Most stressed the need for spiritual and political balance, stating that often
times the connections between mind, body and spirit are ignored in lieu of
personal gain. In another, more locally based project in Houston, this
reality took another turn as I asked people why commitment to political
organizations/movements waned. Often times the answer was simply that
there is a lack of passion for what we do. The balance between the
personal and political is necessary to successfully create revolutionary
potential. How do we seek to build a better world when we canât deal with
ourselves or each other? How do we set examples for our dreams, our
goals, or our visions without the internal healing that needs to take place?
We need passion to make change. We also need political direction and
unity. In order to do this we must find the balance between the personal
and the political worlds we live in. Sometimes we need to take our personal experiences to build a political analysis while understanding that
political change canât successfully occur until we are left without those
personal choices. I often quote one of my favorite people in the anarchist
people of color movement, Ashanti Alston in saying, âchange doesnât come
until you are made to feel uncomfortable.â
Drawing upon what I know, I will use the struggle of women as an example.
Due to racial oppression, struggles of women of color have not focused on
women as women, but against various oppressive systems. Often in our
struggle, women of color experience issues of tokenism, stereotypical
oppression, as well as blatant exposure to sexist behavior. We are not
only subject to our identities as women, but also as women of color.
Theorists often refer to this identity as âthe other.â Another term I prefer is
the âthird world womenâ (AnzaldĂșa, 64). This term encompasses the need
for decolonization of the oppressed in our communities, the need for self-
empowerment and -determination and knowledge of the history of people of
color in this country. We are part of a system that seeks to destroy us, we
are the âdevelopingâ and âwar tornâ peoples within Amerika, we continue to
be colonized through lack of education, healthcare, employment, decent
housing, child care and decent food. We have been taken from our lands
and our lands have been taken from us and we continue to experience this
displacement through modern day Jim Crow systems such as the police
and prisons. No matter what, the culprit is the same. It is our common
enemy and the only way that we can fight it is by addressing our issues,
finding solutions and developing political unity in order to build and
strengthen social movements.
Before we can go on to developing a theory for freedom, we need to
recognize and understand power. Power is often defined as the capacity to
exercise control over another. Power is also the ability to perform or act
effectively. At a womenâs studies conference in 1981, a group of women
who were part of a consciousness-raising group for women of color con-
cluded that they needed to define a common ground for how power worked
within the United States. This model has four categories and signifies a
hierarchy from which power flows. It begins with the idea that freedom in
the U.S. is most easily achieved by the reality of the white, capitalist male.
Next in line is the white woman, who achieves her will to power through her
whiteness and though she is objectified by white men, she still bears the
privilege of whiteness and draws on that privilege objectifying people of
color in order to gain a solid sense of self. Men of color or âthird worldâ men
do not benefit from racial hierarchy, but do utilize their identities as males
to confront their oppressions, which leaves women of color in a place
where they are neither white, nor male (AnzaldĂșa, 64).
Even when trying to understand power as something that is interconnected
through race and gender, it is important to think in terms of political
change, where the weak spots are. Though power has been displayed in
terms of hierarchy above, there is a need for a common goal, not just
against whiteness and patriarchy, but against the weak spot in the system
that divides these struggles. For critics of capitalism, it is class, but
beyond that, what has historically divided struggles against those in power
in the United States? Power differentials in the U.S. have been dependent
on a system of white privilege. This privilege has separated movements of
womenâs liberation, labor movements and hinders self-determination of the
poor and oppressed. Whiteness as a system determines who goes to the
best schools, who lives where, employment, healthcare, and allows for an
alliance between the bosses and the white working class. Whiteness
keeps people of color from meeting basic needs and the power differentials
that white privilege creates keeps the entire working class and sectors of
the poor from resisting en masse because of the benefits it creates for
those who identify as âwhite.â This benefit for whites is sometimes referred
to as the âwages of whitenessâ (Roediger).
We need to recognize this system of domination that we live under if we
are going to struggle against it. It is also important to understand what we
go through on a personal level and how the wages of whiteness often times
affect us. In a discussion session held amongst women of color at the
2003 Anarchist People of Color Conference in Detroit, a decision was
made to discuss how we were made to feel as women of color and what
we saw as solutions to those problems. We made this decision in order to
start a dialogue amongst ourselves that started with a healing process, so
we could gain strength in fighting our oppressions. When I look back upon
the following list, I feel empowered because I no longer feel alone in
system of oppression and domination that often sparks self-hatred and
identity crisis among many women of color.
We came to many conclusions as to how we are oppressed, internally as
well as externally. One was that women of color are often tokenized.
Women of color (and our brothers) are often looked to by whites for
answers and opinions about their [whitesâ] race politics, how they are
working within a community, etc. When a cultural or racial question comes
up, many times whites have a tendency to look towards the people of color
in the room to view their reactions. This is not to say that whites should
disregard the opinions of people of color, but that we shouldnât be asked for
our opinions simply because we are non-white. A twist to this problem is
when whites start to pontificate about our struggles as people of color.
Sometimes whites will say, âif you all did thisâŠâ or âif you did thatâŠâ Why
would a white person know my struggle better than me? Why would I listen
to a white person when all the white people in my life have said something
either intentionally or by slip of tongue denoting that I am less than
deserving: things like I am not fit for school, I shouldnât have kids, that they
wish that I could stay and take care of their kids and help around the
house, reinforcing that I am subordinate in one way or another?
Often women of color experience tokenization by whites in various ways;
one is that we are exoticized for our unique qualities and physical at-
tributes. There is more than one tale of a black sister walking into a room
where a white woman wants to feel her hair. Other forms of oppression
include unconscious sexist behavior amongst women, competitiveness,
communication problems (not getting heard, getting talked over), being put
into caregiver roles (we are called upon to be the secretaries, the organizers, the errand runners, the nannies and the mammies) and there are
times when we fear for our personal safety because women of color are
often perpetuated as whores by the corporate media. After each of us at
the discussion brought up an issue, we finished our sentence with what we
wanted in order to address the issue, so we were problem solving as we
went along. Some of the solutions we came up with were: healing our-
selves, finding balance, defining our boundaries, taking responsibility for
ourselves and our actions, developing respect for ourselves and for others,
and building communication skills. These solutions clearly spelled out the
need to deal with the personal as well as the political in building strength
among the women in that room.
We need to build solidarity amongst each other through sharing our
experiences, recognizing our differences and building support for each
other. True solidarity creates awareness amongst oppressed peoples, and
helps them to recognize the need to forge political unity. Because our
identities as third world peoples are multiple, this means defining who we
are and at the same time, redefining what it means to struggle for liberation
by building on our commonalities. The struggle for liberation should seek to
end the subordination and domination of oppressed peoples and create a
shift in power differentials that concentrate on a weak spot within our
current power structure.
This means that we need to deal with who we are personally (both politically
and spiritually) in order to be able look beyond ourselves and truly see how
we as oppressed peoples are affected as a whole. This does not mean that
we stop at struggling against our own angst, or for equality and individualismâthis means that we use our consciousness of self to begin to collectively envision a society without domination by white, capitalist males; that
we need to challenge what whiteness means in terms of actual privileges and
to bankrupt that system so that it does not provide wages to those who draw
on their identities to oppress others. We also need to create spaces that
help to develop and empower ourselves and others. We need to understand
that without our own fires we cannot spark the creativity, desire, and strength
needed to struggle effectively against our oppressors.
<biblio>
Anarchist People of Color Conference. âWomen of Color Discussion.â
Detroit, MI. October 3â5, 2003.
AnzaldĂșa, Gloria. Making Face, Making Soul.
hooks, bell. All About Love.
Roediger, David. The Wages of Whiteness: Race and the Making of the
American Working Class.
</biblio>
NOTE: the title of this article is not of my imagination, it is taken from a
friendâs former band, Bully Rag, a.k.a Fucking Thunderâs CD, which
ironically they put out before he was unfairly replaced. Anyway, to make
a long story short, they consequently suffered as a result of their bad
decision. Solidarity with friends, oh yesâŠ
<br>
*by Tiffany King*
Reflecting on my own participation as a person of color in the 2003 protest
marches of the anti-war movement, I am now aware my presence is being
manipulated and abused. I have been rendered a puppet for white liberal
pageantry. Any time I have attended a march I find I subject myself to objectification, marginalization and exploitation. Beyond the personal offenses I
have incurred, I now truly believe the presence of people of color in anti-war
and other so called âglobal justiceâ protest marches led and organized by
whites legitimizes tactics that undermine a true pursuit for justice.
On February 15, 2003 grappling with my own frustration, anger and feelings
of impotency as our country charged towards war; I attended a protest
march. The march was organized by the usual suspects, A.N.S.W.E.R,
Not in Our Name, Unite for Peace and Justice and the other white led
coalitions here in Philly. As the Bush Administration moved closer and
closer to dropping the first bombs on Iraq, I caved in and decided I had to
go regardless of who organized this thing. I thought to myself, that if there
was ever a time to momentarily get over the racism of the white left and
past scars from previous interactions, it was now.
My justification for my attendance was we were facing war, and at least the
illusion of a collective and unified voice would be âmore powerfulâ than the
efforts of isolated communities of color or my own for that matter. In that
moment, I had just given into white supremacist systems of domination.
White supremacy asserts its own agenda by absorbing, subverting and
negating any dissent and resistance to its domination. The structures of
white supremacy demand submission by professing to be both the norm
and alternative.
In the book, Black Anti-Ballistic Missives, activist, author and poet Ewuare
Osayande argues white supremacy is the critical component that the anti-
war movement fails to address, thus rendering it irrelevant. The racist anti-
war movement is devoid of any self-critical process to acknowledge or
address how white supremacy contributes to the oppression of people of
color within the movement, so how could it possibly have an analysis of
how white supremacy oppresses people of color around the world?
Given the reality the anti-war movement does not address white supremacy, it is to be expected that people of color would be objectified
and exploited at one of its protest marches. On February 15, the people of
color contingency I attended the march with decided to create a feeder
march that would join the larger march on Broad Street. I assume this was
an attempt to empower the POC who would be participating that day. We
would temporarily march on our own terms, citing white supremacist
imperialism as the true evil. Momentarily, I had the feeling that we would
reclaim the political act of protest as a relevant and meaningful tool used
by self-determining people of color around the world who have and continue
to resist white supremacist imperialism. Yet I realized once I got to the
march that this would not be possible.
We would chant Black, Latino, Muslim, Asian and... so forth to evoke a
feeling of camaraderie and equal partnership. Yet the unequal distribution
of power and privilege amongst people of color, which played a part in
determining the convening groups ability to organize this very effort, stared
us in the face and was left unaddressed. Still, we feigned a content and
empowered united front and proceeded to Broad Street to meet up with the
rest of the protestors.
As soon as we approached the sea of white folks and they became aware of
our presence we became a sideshow. White people started to clap and cheer
as if we were the long awaited people of color parade float they could awe
and point at. They appreciated our presence and danced to our drumming as
long as we were their entertainment. However, as soon as members of the
contingency started to pick up our bullhorns and speak to the white supremacist imperialism that murdered people of color they became offended.
We were suddenly the recipients of annoyed stares, shushes and interruptions because we were talking over the âslatedâ speakers.
We kept on speaking, however our attempts to define and adhere to our
own agenda did nothing. We did not create self-determining space that
would allow our particular analysis of the war and white supremacy, as the
global terrorist, to challenge the shallow, racist analysis of the white
activists and organizers. We were not even able to make the white folks
aware of their own racism at the protest itself. We became a pawn, a mere
prop, one of those larger than life puppets (often rendered to depict oppressed people of color) that white groups make for âprotests.â
I donât know how many times I saw and heard white people look at us and
say⊠âItâs sooo good to finally see some color here.â I could see them
patting themselves on the back for the good work they had done to reach out
to people of color and educate us or make us feel welcome to join them.
Our presence only legitimized the work of whites, which is to stay in positions of power and control the discourse, action and direction of so called
progressive politics. By participating we allow them to delude themselves
that, 1) their particular analysis of the war and imperialism is a legitimate one
and 2) the power and resources at their disposal to lead âsocial changeâ
movements are legitimately earned. Our presence at the march made the
statement that we support the white supremacy of the left.
Many non-white critics of white leadership within the âglobal justice
movementâ have challenged the analysis of whites who have reframed and
distorted issues of justice. Whites conveniently impose an anachronistic
time period on imperialism, with a NAFTA obsessed political analysis, that
places the start of multinational corporate imperialism in the early 1990s.
Whites on the left also relegate the issue of accountability and blame to
that of the corruption of a select few corporate executives and their Washington DC cronies. They conveniently ignore their own culpability in
reinforcing systems of white supremacist capitalist imperialism.
I actually heard white people saying things like, âWeâre all French nowâ and
âLong live the French.â How can a credible and legitimate global justice movement congratulate a country that actively engages in the white supremacist,
imperialist exploitation of people of color all over the globe? French multinational corporate monopolies are currently fueling conflict and repression in
the Ivory Coast and West Africa. The French are white supremacist imperialists just like the U.S. The tyranny of Franceâs white supremacist imperialism
is a present day political reality people of color all around the world are
suffering under and resisting. This lack of analysis of French imperialism and
global repression is lost because of the racist analysis of the white leadership that dominates the current âglobal justice movement.â
In the past, like many others, I would be inclined to engage in the ongoing
discussions of Where was the Color in/atâŠ, in order to try and address the
lack of participation/leadership by people of color at anti-globalization
marches and other mass mobilizations. So often these discussions lack a
sound analysis of the structures of white supremacy and itsâ impact on
why mass mobilizations look the way they look. These arguments frequently end up placing the burden on people of color to explain why they
are not present at an event or protest. In her introduction to the essay
Whereâs the Revolution? Part II, activist and author, Barbara Smith critiques the racism of so-called âprogressiveâ movements in general and the
LGBT movement specifically. In speaking about the state of progressive
movements in general, she states, âThanks to racism and elitism, progressive people of color are barely allowed to share movement leadership, let
alone control it. Rest assured if we did get to decide movement agendas,
they would be a lot different from what they are now.â (Smith, 1998)
Some people of color are challenging white leadership in the global justice
movement by acknowledging people of color need to organize on their own
terms without the presence of whites and then bring our own platform from
the margins of the global justice movement to the center. People of color are
absolutely right that we need to organize ourselves on our own terms without
whites. However, when we come back to the table have we done anymore to
challenge the power structure that marginalizes us? This strategy was attempted on February 15 at the anti-war demonstration in Philly, but as people
of color we still found ourselves marginalized and exploited.
An even better example of how the racist power structure of the white left
marginalizes and then kills acts of self-determination is the more recent
October 25, 2003 Anti-War March. As early as summer of 2002, Black
Voices for Peace, The Black Radical Congress and other people of color
led organizations were planning a Black led mobilization in October of
2003 to resist the war in Iraq before the first bombs even dropped. There
was no mention of A.N.S.W.E.R. or any other majority white groups
playing even a supporting role in the effort. This Black led mobilization
which was acknowledged by the White left almost from its inception
interestingly enough would be reduced to a feeder march and side show for
the larger mass mobilization orchestrated by A.N.S.W.E.R. The Black
March for Peace became a mere âfeederâ march that ended up feeding into
the white supremacy of the White Left.
I am no longer frustrated or disturbed by the often failed attempts to
mobilize Black people and people of color in the numbers that white people
are mobilized for protest marches. We need to begin to question the value
and relevancy of the protest march for people of color, particularly as they
are currently conceived and organized. The protest march has become
nothing more than a vapid cultural product of the White Left used solely as
a means to attract media attention and funding to sustain its elitism and
racism. I struggle less and less with answering the question of âWhere are
the People of Color?â
Ewuare Osayande, who I have cited earlier, has offered an alternative view
on the question of where people of color are in the anti-war and âglobal
justiceâ movements. âWhite people will start to see people of color when
white people start doing the work that people of color have always been
doing. The question people of color ask is: Where are the white people?â
White privilege so often positions whites outside of the very oppression
that they speak about resisting. Revolutionary movements do not willingly
permit oppressors or collaborators to lead movement struggle. White
leadership in the anti-war movement has resulted in the development of an
analysis and tactics that are far removed from the daily reality and revolutionary struggles of oppressed people of color. The racist analysis and the
misguided tactics of the White left have resulted in exploitative âprotest artâ
inspired by a vicarious objectification of the lives of oppressed people of
color and shallow symbolic media events like the protest march/pageant.
Oppressed people of color, on the other hand, are engaged in daily acts of
resistance that appropriately place white supremacy at the root of injustice. This work is being done on the margins in communities of color,
without the prodding of the white left or in front of the glare of media
cameras. This work is rarely ever acknowledged or is more often dismissed by the white left as not being real âsocial change.â People of color
who have a clear commitment to resisting all white supremacist systems
of domination will not be found organizing protest pageantry and they will
definitely not be featured as the premiere puppets of these spectacles.
<br>
*by Soo Na*
There are many discussions happening around the purpose of conferences. Often, people feel tired and frustrated at such gatherings. While
serving as connection points â where isolated people can find a sense of
safety for a few hours, or even days, long-time comrades can meet and
catch up, and networking occurs â conferences can also be points of
frustration. Critical observations were made at the DC APOC conference,
where people felt that certain issues were not being addressed. In the spirit
of constructive criticism, I wanted to share my experiences. I hope that in
my sharing, it opens up spaces for other critical and necessary discussions to occur.
More and more, I question the ability of weekend-long, or any length, confer-
ence to really act as a place of sustainable connection. Much of the connect-
ing often occurs in the hallways between workshops, where people find the
time to, as Ashanti talks about in his zine, âunmaskâ what has been kept
hidden from the majority of people that one might interact with in a given day.
It is difficult to find places where vulnerability can be risked, and that difficulty
is proportionate to the joy one experiences when a sense of safety is attained, however briefly. I am not criticizing nor judging that safety.
The general feeling I received from previous APOC gatherings, whether in
Detroit, or in the regional organized gatherings since (and prior to) then,
was that these spaces felt safest to share experiences, as well as organizing. In that collective spirit of shared vulnerability, beautiful spaces are
created. I experienced that while in the queer and trans APOC workshop.
One person stated that they âfelt at home.â However, that collectivity is
difficult to create and maintain. It can happen spontaneously, but itâs not
inevitable, nor is it magic. Creating that sense of community often means
unlearning and actively challenging internalized ideas of charismatic
personalities, and learning to be critically aware of judgment and criticism
â oneâs own and that directed at other people.
Now, if you bear with me, I will make a contradictory statement. In light of
what I said about charismatic personalities, I will reference Ella Jo Baker,
who cautioned against singling out a single person as spokesperson, in
her speech which came to be remembered as, âMore Than Just a Hamburger.â Her belief is that people must not look for a (s)(z)(h)ero; rather,
people must believe and love and empower themselves, with collective
help, to âlead,â that we are all leaders, and that this can be taught and
passed on. Ellaâs work with young people, and her own life experiences,
gave her insight into thinking about the ways in which peopleâs internal fires
are extinguished when they are silenced, overpowered, or seen as less
exciting than another personâs.
We have all, in one way or another, been silenced in our lives. Popular
culture, revolutionary culture, cultures, whet us (and I use the âusâ with
caution) to the idea of celebrity. It is romantic and deeply compelling. But,
it is important to think about what one is seeking in such aggrandizing of
another person over and beyond oneâs own power. There is a quote by
Julius Lester, from his fictional novel, âAnd All Our Wounds Forgiven,â
where he talks about the dislocating positionalities of both the âadmirerâ
and âadmiredâ:
I donât watch much TV anymore. I found myself on
constant emotional overload because in the course of an
evening I would have fifty relationships, intensely liking
this one, disliking that one, wondering what this actor and
that actress was like, that politician or that celebrity
without portfolio. It is psychically disorienting having
powerful emotions about people you know only as images. But television seduces us into trusting image as
reality. Daily I watched people approach him. There was
always an instant when they realized that all the love and
emotion they had for him was not reciprocated, that he
had been in their homes and had not known it, that his
existence was crucial to their lives while they were
nonexistent in his. They had no alternative but to make
themselves known to him because they had been forced
into a relationship with him.
I want to think about forced relationships, forced ways of relating, and
habitual ways of connecting that may or may not be connected with
liberation, trust, and mutual growth.
I am Korean, and have been living in North America since age six. My
experiences as an Asian yellow womon are complicated as, I am sure, all
peopleâs experiences are. One thing I notice consistently among other
Asian womyn is a feeling of competition. Often, when I am in a room, I will
notice the eyes of other Asian womyn, and there is a feeling of endanger-
ment. It is as though we are in competition against each other. I think that
competition between womyn has many origins, but I think there are
specific racialized, gendered, and heteronormative reasons why womyn,
including Asian womyn, see each other as competition.
I want to state that, as a personal belief, womyn are not endangered as a
people. In stating that, I am not erasing or ignoring the realities of sexism,
white supremacy, misogyny, homophobia, transphobia, intersex phobia,
classism, ableism and the numerous oppressions that people of color
face. These oppressions also seem to be places of solidarity. But I think
itâs important to think about how that solidarity can occur even though the
most challenging conversations do not take place, precisely because the
connection itself, so desperately sought, suddenly overrides the desire to
actively decolonize and liberate oneâs self, oneâs desires, oneâs body and
oneâs politics. That, in fact, those challenging conversations become
places where the connection, so desperately forged, becomes endangered
through the idea of it being in crisis and precious, fragile. That is a dangerous place to be. It is my belief that connections should not be places
where difficult conversations cannot occur.
Part of why people attend conferences has to do with the idea of wholeness. It is possible that certain people, through their activism, seek to find
that sense of wholeness, but it is difficult. There are powerful connections
made at conferences, even lifelong friendships, lovers, partners, creative
erotic movements. Audre Lorde defines the erotic in the following way:
The erotic functions for me in several ways, and the first is the power which
comes from sharing deeply any pursuit with another person. The sharing of
joy, whether physical, emotional, psychic or intellectual, forms a bridge be-
tween the sharers which can be the basis for understanding much of what is
not shared between them, and lessons the threat of their difference.
Much dispute exists around whether or not there is an APOC âcommunityâ
per se. From what I heard, many people feel that APOC, like the concept of
queer, is an ambiguous, fluid concept. It is visionary, an idea(l). With vision
comes spaces, pushing and pulling of limitations, expansion and stretching
of internalized self-robbings and robbings of each other. Likewise, APOC is
heterogeneous, multi-level, and multidimensional. It is never one thing, and it
never remains the same. Can we, as APOC, and as people and individuals in
our communities, experience the erotic with people without it devolving into
heteronormative ways of relating with each other?
People are different and complicated, come from different places, both
geographically and psychically. There are critiques of the phrase, âpeople
of color,â which is also, for lack of a better word, inadequate. But it is a
ratchet, a visionary ratchet from where movement can begin. There is
always creation of languages during times of connection and vulnerability.
I am wondering how people of color, and people who identify as womyn,
can employ Audreâs definition of the erotic to think about the ways in which
APOC people (donât) relate with each other. As a queer Asian womon, I
struggle with heterosexism,
both internalized and in my
interactions with people and
institutions â whether
family, school, health care,
and the like. I think
heterosexism occurs in
many of my interactions
with Asian womyn, not
because they âknowâ I
identify as queer, but
because of the ways in
which gender and sex have been conflated as one and the same. Fear is a
product of heterosexism, as is competition. When I see an Asian person in
a room, I do not assume that we will have things in common. Part of this
comes from experience. As an adopted Korean womon, I have often
interacted with Korean North American folks who regard me with pity or
unmasked disgust when they learn I do not speak Hangul, the official
spoken language both in the Republic of Korea (southern Korea), and the
Democratic Peopleâs Republic of Korea (northern Korea). Many people
have experienced similar separations and experienced the pain of what
Gloria AnzaldĂșa refers to as âexisting in borderlands.â
But, when I get the endangered, or what I refer to as the âheteronormative
fearâ glance, it is painful. Heterosexism operates in tandem with misogyny
and patriarchy, in that womyn are meant to compete with each other, in the
service of men. It is for their benefit that we are kept separated from each
other, we being womyn, queer folks, femmes and all people. I want to ask,
is the separation worth it? Or, rather, what do we gain from competing with
each other? Where is the fear coming from? And how is the interesting
mental health idea of self-esteem, or the anarchist idea of self-management (which I heard a lot this weekend) bolstered by this fear?
At this conference, I went up to a person because I knew that if I did not
approach them, we would never end up talking. This is not coming from a
place of forced interaction, but a place where I sensed competition and in
order to bridge that fear and that separation, I moved to correct it and
started a simple conversation, at the level of small talk. I do not think this
person was necessarily queerphobic. I simply think that this had to do with
heterosexism and the competition that often occurs between Asian
womyn. I want to think about why I feel it, and what it reinforces.
We are traumatized daily. We struggle with differences. It is not the call of
political and self-revolution to perpetuate that trauma through fear, indifference and its product, inaction. And it is also not my intent to reduce my
experiences and observations into rhetoric. I want to think about trust and
fear, connection and political engagement. I also want to think about the
beauty in the ordinary, and the challenges and also the necessity of having
difficult conversations. I think another word for difficult conversations is
âordinary.â Isnât that true? That the status quo, though perhaps indifferent,
monotonous, is also challenging, that which so many people rail against,
so that it becomes un desafio, a challenge? June Jordan, in her poem, âOn
A New Yearâs Eve,â talks about the ordinary:
let the world blot
<br>
obliterate remove so-
<br>
called
<br>
magnificence
<br>
so-called
<br>
almighty/fathomless and everlasting
<br>
treasures/
<br>
wealth
<br>
(whatever that may be)
it is this time
<br>
that matters
it is this history
<br>
I care about
the one we make together
<br>
awkward
<br>
inconsistent
<br>
as a lame cat on the loose
<br>
or quick as kids freed by the bell
<br>
or else as strictly
<br>
once
<br>
as only life must mean
<br>
a once upon a time
I have rejected propaganda teaching me
<br>
about the beautiful
<br>
the truly rare
(supposedly
<br>
the soft push of the ocean at the hushpoint of the shore
<br>
supposedly
<br>
the soft push of the ocean at the hushpoint of the shore
<br>
is beautiful
<br>
for instance)
<br>
but
<br>
the truly rare can stay out there
I have rejected that
<br>
abstraction that enormity
<br>
unless I see a dog walk on the beach/
<br>
a bird seize sandflies
<br>
or yourself
<br>
approach me
<br>
laughing out a sound to spoil
<br>
the pretty picture
<br>
make an uncontrolled
<br>
heartbeating memory
<br>
instead
<br>
I read the papers preaching on
<br>
that oil and oxygen
<br>
that redwoods and the evergreens
<br>
that trees the waters and the atmosphere
<br>
compile a final listing of the world in
<br>
short supply
but all alive and all the lives
<br>
persist perpetual
<br>
in jeopardy
<br>
persist
<br>
as scarce as everyone of us
<br>
as difficult to find
<br>
or keep
<br>
as irreplaceable
<br>
as frail
<br>
as everyone of us
And Alice Walker also writes about this in her poem about loving what is
abundant more than what is scarce.
In the spirit of the deep love and affection I have for people of color, in the
spirit of thinking about joyâs proportionality to pain and my acknowledgment that I have responsibility for the pain that other people in the world
experience, in the spirit of healing, I offer my thoughts. I do not identify as
anarchist. I am still learning about this political visioning ideology / way of
life. As such, I draw from numerous living philosophies and ideas.
I appreciate this space for engagement.
<biblio>
Alston, Ashanti Omowali. âChildhood and the Psychological Dimension of
Revolution.â The Anarchist Black Panther Zine. Summer/Fall 2002,
Vol. 4 : 59â70.
Lester, Julius. And All Our Wounds Forgiven. New York: Harvest Books,
1996.
Lorde, Audre. âUse of the Erotic: The Erotic as Power (excerpt).â Cries of
the Spirit: A Celebration of Womenâs Spirituality. Ed. Marilyn Sewell.
Boston: Beacon Press, 1991.
See her essays in This Bridge Called My Back: Writings by Radical
Women of Color. Ed. CherrĂe Moraga and Gloria AnzaldĂșa. Watertown:
Persephone Press, 1981. Also see AnzaldĂșaâs Borderlands = La
Frontera: The New Mestiza, San Francisco: Spinsters/Aunt Lute,
1987).
Pavi. âOn A New Yearâs Eve.â Online Posting. 10 Oct. 2002. Minstrels. 20 January 2002. <[[http://www.cs.rice.edu/~ssiyer/minstrels/poems/1102.html][http://www.cs.rice.edu/~ssiyer/minstrels/poems/1102.html]]>.
Walker, Alice. âWe Alone.â From the speech, âWhat Can I Give My Daughters, Who Are Brave?â Anything We Love Can Be Saved: A Writerâs Activism. New York: Ballantine Books, 1997. 92.
</biblio>
<br>
*by Ernesto Aguilar*
I first began writing for Our Culture, Our Resistance on anarchist people of
color and the conversations I believe we need to get started. During that
process, very kind individuals offered up much help in ideas and structure,
but at some point, the work became academic. So, stepping back, I
realized that, to be compelling and motivate change, starting any conversation has to be fluid and open, but also geared at accomplishing something.
I took a step back and returned to the roots of my piece, of the conversations we need to get started if we are going to grow and politically advance
ourselves as revolutionaries of color. And here we are.
When people visualized the emergence of a tendency of anti-authoritarian
people of color, no one believed it would grow at the pace and direction it
has. It is sprouting up and fostering awareness in ways few people envisioned, which has been fantastic. At the same time, we are at a critical
point; where many see our organizing must evolve. We need to create a
space for our unity, culture and identity, but also our politics.
We need to be clear that advocacy of rights and roles for people of color,
while certainly needed, permits the state and white-led movement to
institutionalize and mediate our struggles. Fighting racism and white
supremacy, when included at all, are problems typically regarded as line-
items for social change. Even among anarchists of color, the attraction is
strong to build own our anarchist movement, made up of people of color, or
to demand greater respect from the white-led movement. In the process,
weâre failing to ask critical questions about the viability of the white-led
movement or our own loyalties.
For people of color who identify as anti-authoritarians, bringing us into the
clearest solidarity with oppressed people around the world should be our
primary focus. We need to give respect to those whoâve come before us by
building on their successes and learning from their mistakes, while bringing
the anarchist people of color tendency to the next level.
Ask someone what they think of when they consider racism, oppression
and white supremacy. Youâll likely get many answers. What does oppression mean to you as a person of color? I believe that, in order to find
answers, itâs important to know what weâre dealing with when we talk about
such broad concepts.
Francis Cress-Welsing argues that racism is white supremacy. That
distinction alone is significant. Some whites and a few people of color are
confused by the word racism; theyâll sometimes fall into traps of terms
popularized by the far right, or take the word literally, thinking it to be a
prejudice of any race by any race. Historically, however, racism has
always meant white supremacy and collusion with institutional power.
Race was, in many instances, a line of distinction separating Europeans
from non-whites. Cress-Welsing states racism consists of âpatterns of
perception, logic, symbol formation, thought, speech, action and emotional
response, as conducted simultaneously in all areas of people activity
(economics, education, entertainment, labor, law, politics, religion, sex and
war).â Cress-Welsingâs definition grasps the totality of racism/white
supremacy, and how it shapes our own views, as well as that of white
people, virtually from birth. Cress-Welsingâs clarity makes us think about
how we got into the global mess we face. In truth, Europeans have waged
military and cultural war against people of color for nearly a thousand
years. Such exercises were never a means of dividing rich and poor, but to
unite the white masses to fight for the moral, political, social and/or
economic superiority of their way of life over other races.
Addressing the social and political realities of white supremacy requires a
strategy. In my view, that approach must make self-determination for
oppressed people a basis of unity for looking at the world, among those
professed anti-authoritarian people of color and all others. Our first stand
must be with people of color worldwide fighting for room to breathe. Our
first prerogative must be freedom for all oppressed people, by any means.
At its core, self-determination is an opportunity to finally be free, to
determine oneâs own political, social and economic destinies. For North
American radicals of color, this kind of idea can be a leap; we live in a
society of relative privilege, where corporate corruption, globalization and
other movements compete for our hearts and minds. Occupation and
oppression arenât harsh and in our faces as, for instance, in Palestine. As
such, weâre conditioned to think about our struggles related to what weâre
against, rather than that for which we are fighting.
Clearly, itâs on us to start thinking about how we make efforts if we are to
be self-determined. One of the beautiful things about anarchism, many
people tell me, is that it is fluid and open; flexible enough to respond to
social and political conditions, but strong enough in its anti-
authoritarianism to stand up against dictatorship of any kind. However, all
of us get frustrated in the roadblocks that come before any movement. I
submit that we need think about our tactics and our unity.
It is crucial that we start looking at our politics with a nod to what we, as
revolutionaries, hope to create of this world. We know what weâre against,
but how are we getting to the world we want to create? And, as importantly, what actions do we need to make to get there? What is a fundamental call from which our movements emanate?
Although I have spoken out frequently on the need to locally organize, I
respect that not everyone is an organizer. It can be intimidating for even
experienced people. In reality, I am an advocate of the growth of our
movements on many levels. Whether you are an organizer, somebody just
looking for answers, someone fed up with how the system works, or an
intellectual, what you are about and what we as a movement stand for
needs to be out front, fearless, imperfect and courageous.
Some ideas that touch on tactics and unity, no matter who you are:
- **Objectives:** What do you want? What are the long-term, mid-range and short-term goals? What are the process goals (i.e. building cultural consciousness among members) in reaching the objective?
- **Resources:** What/where are the alliances, money and relationships?
- **Audience:** Who are the people you want to connect to? Who are you trying motivate to action?
- **Message:** What do people need to hear? What parts of the message apply to peopleâs sense of justice, and which to their self-interest?
- **Spokespeople:** If you are organizing something for your idea, who should deliver the message? Who is credible to the audience, and how do we equip spokespeople with information and comfort levels?
- **Jump-Off:** How do we kick off and move forward?
- **Venue:** How do we get the audience the message?
- **Opportunities:** What do we need to cultivate?
- **Evaluation:** How do we judge our progress?
As one example, I wrote a missive on tactical politics, focusing on lifestyle
politics. Also called conscientious consumerism, lifestyle politics (and
other forms of reactive activism), have come to the fore as leading trends in
social action. Boycotts; buying green, fair trade, et al.; and voluntary
simplicity are everywhere. The failure of these kinds of strategies is in
vision. Writer Angus Maguire argues that, at its worst, lifestyle politics
âoveremphasize the importance of white and middle-class buying habits
while marginalizing the work of communities of color around the world to
gain power in struggles against the same injustices our buying habits are
supposedly addressing.â And I concur. But the ensuing responses from
whites as well as a few people of color failed to offer a vision about how
such consumerism connects with our program for advancement. Many
people are not ready for a discussion about a âprogram for advancementâ
or much of a program for anything, but we need to be. Time and conditions
require we stop spinning our wheels. We need to see a strategic vision for
our work as part of an explicit and comprehensive program for reaching
political, social and economic self-determination. Lifestyle politics is
perhaps an easy target, but this instance demonstrates our need to
analyze tactics.
Unity is perhaps one of the most curious roads to navigate in this respect,
because once you find out what youâre for, your allies become a little
clearer. Itâs vibrant, for sure, and presents opportunities for us.
I donât want to open the conversation with the typical us-versus-other-
ideologies rhetoric, but nudge you to consider priorities. Herb Boyd writes
in a revised edition of Detroit: I Do Mind Dying that ideologues on various
sides of the political spectrum had, âpolitical positions so bitterly opposed
in the 1970s that it disrupted the remnants of the Black liberation movement, thereby ending any possibility of operational unity.â Anarchists of
color get caught up in that too; some of us see our internal contradictions
as people of color as more important than the external contradictions of
white supremacist-engineered society out to do us all in. Weâve been sold
the line that joining the white-led movement serves âhumanity,â when
humanity canât speak for itself in struggle in which it doesnât lead. Some of
us eschew other people of color as being anti-white, et al., but fail to see
who is served by our divisions. By no means am I saying to ignore our
differences. I donât believe paper unity serves anyone. I encourage all my
people to consider who you unite with, why and the interests it serves.
Whether we unite with white anarchists is a tough question. While I believe
broad-based work presents unique opportunities, I am very passionate in
feeling itâs not our job to hold white folksâ hands, make them feel empowered,
good about their politics, not downplayed, etc. The white-led movement should
provide that to them, since itâs theirs and whites should be demanding more
of other white progressives. But the subject of allies is altogether different.
When the Anarchist People of Color listserv began, some of us came to the
table with the idea that weâd have this open space for ourselves to create a
more visible presence of people of color in the âanarchist movement,â essentially the white-led movement. Undoubtedly, our at-first unpopular little crew
has now gotten more support from whites who see this effort as important.
However, while most anarchists of color still participate in white-led organizing, our collective analysis is slowly evolving to a place where we are standing on our own, and what such unity means for us in the long term.
Thereâs an equal amount of work around the question of anarchism, and
how we can grow it to meet the needs of communities of color. Not a few
people of color observe that the contemporary anarchist scene, if indeed
itâs embodied by testosterone-pumped white boys and Anarchy magazine,
relates to a minuscule fraction of the populace. How do we make the ideas
of anarchy relate to those who are not pissed off Caucasians and grad
students? Such a question doesnât even get into the troubling failure in
anarchism to adequately address white supremacy, e.g. Bakuninâs anti-
Semitism, Emma Goldmanâs advocacy of eugenics and modern
anarchismâs denial of the centrality of race in the dialogue. Anarchism,
looked at objectively, should be applied as a model of social organization.
North American trends in anarchist thinking have advocated anarchism as
an ideology, philosophy or lifestyle choice. Yet the fault of such application
is that many assumptions made by anarchists deliver firmly Eurocentric
values in their introduction.
Just to be clear, when I say Eurocentric values, I mean values that have
become a little more complex than merely âwhite values,â but concepts,
through the system of white supremacy, capital and subjugation, that have
become part of mass consciousness. The rise of modern Eurocentric
values can be traced to the rise of capitalism, and embody ideas which,
despite pretensions to the contrary by their most radical carriers, are
intended to serve white supremacy and capital.
Calling individualism, liberalism, the rule of (natural, structural or other) law,
democracy and free markets (e.g. free trade, fair trade, et al.) Eurocentric
values denies the rightful link people of color have to them. In fact, Eurocentric values mean a sense of power, and of moral, political, social and/or
economic superiority to other cultures, with the mission of assimilating
them. For hundreds of years, European scholars have bemoaned the
failures of âotherâ people as a means of talking up the superiority of their
own belief systems, and assimilating them into Eurocentrism. All of us fall
into the trap sometime; as people of color, weâve been indoctrinated to
tacitly accept the superiority of whites over us, while whites have been
taught to assume their values are right. The âunite and fightâ abstraction, at
its core, is aimed at winning people to its philosophy and assimilating all
struggles into âone.â In another example, you regularly hear proponents of
anarchism rejecting community cohesion and religious faith, but failing to
grasp that, to many people, such things are important and can, in some
historical examples, be an organizing spot. Even notions of consensus â
an organizing model developed by white, middle-class anti-nuclear activists
where a tiny group of people, often with many of the same values, get
together and mutually agree to something â are an illusion aimed at
reinforcing the values of a small group to the contrasting values of outsiders. Proponents of North American anarchism too often look to bring
allegedly superior lifestyles and belief systems to the fore, and oppressed
people, directly or indirectly, can be the victims.
I do think a revolutionary movement will take root, and that it will be broad-
based. However, the mindset of many is a rush to idealism â that social
justice is âall one struggleâ and that we all need to be united to defeat
fascism. I put forward the conversation that the rush to idealism will be our
demise as a movement. The white-led movement should answer for its
internal racism, and people of color should understand what we want, how
we plan to work, and be conscious and organized as a struggle enough to
fight this battle alone, if necessary. That kind of conviction is important in
this undertaking. We should not make concessions to our demand for self-
determination to win anyoneâs support.
Another issue on the unity tip is the anarchist romance with class. As we
forge a new path of oppressed peoplesâ politics, as well as anarchist
theory and practice, we must take a critical look at class. Are we surrendering our self-determination in the name of unity?
Within white-led anarchism, there is a subtle, and occasionally overt,
competitiveness between race and class. For example, in âRace and
Class: Burning Questions, Unpopular Answers,â a member of the North-eastern Federation of Anarcho-Communists brings arguments such as âracism is an excuseâ and that racism is prevalent among people of color.
These ideas are presented to show class is the primary issue we should
unite under. âThereâs an overwhelming amount of class-privileged âpeople of
colorâ spearheading this movement, creating a culture that is class reactionary to all working class people of all races in the United States,â the
piece notes. âThese people are also quick to react to what they see as
âclass trumping race,â and find the common class struggle between people
of different races to be not as important as what they share in common
with the community in question.â
Similar points are made in a far cruder fashion. Most white radicals, and
some radicals of color, have adopted old Marxist notions of class, class
struggle and, most importantly, class solidarity. There are dozens of
names people of color get called â from ânationalistâ to âreverse racistâ to
âprivilege pimpâ â for pointing out the obvious importance of self-determination, racism and the historical fallacies of class unity. Although I do agree
with familiarity with how capitalism functions is appropriate, my concern is
many class-unity concepts are based on two fundamentally false ideas: 1.)
that âthe working classâ (meaning the white working class and workers of
color, in the United States and internationally) can unite to fight; and that
workers of color and the white working class have common interests, from
the workplace on down.
Even most anarchist intellectualism stakes positions to which the two
misconceptions as their foundation. While there are indubitably surface
commonalities (i.e. workplace, housing, etc.), history demonstrates that
working-class solidarity between white workers and workers of color does
not exist. History further demonstrates that white workers, in almost all
cases, side with the oppressor and against workers of color. Iâm sure there
are isolated examples of unity. Does that mean I believe people of color
should take such cavernous leaps of faith? Not without their eyes open and
minds sharp.
J. Sakai, author of Settlers: Mythology of the White Proletariat, has been
one of the hardest critics of the white working class. In an interview I
conducted with him, Sakai explained he researched history and put his
findings bluntly âI figured out that actually there wasnât any time when the
white working class wasnât white supremacist and racist and essentially
pro-empire.â Those who ad hominem dismiss Sakai ought to follow up on
what he says. From colonization to ongoing wars and the dismantling of
Affirmative Action, how many mass movements of white workers (or whites
altogether) were there, compared to instances where white masses either
stood with the elite, actively or passively? 100-to-1? 500-to-1? Herein lies
the dirty secret of class politics. If we have a few hundred years of history
to look upon, in which the white working class has consistently and in
most instances actively sided with oppressors and sold out people of color,
what is the basis for solidarity? If working-class solidarity were more than a
slogan, wouldnât the racial discrimination and even profound racism within
the ranks of white workers
have been obliterated years
ago? If white workers have
rejected significant demands supporting people of
color, what makes them
different now? Theyâre not.
As Sakai points out, and
deftly illustrates, the white
working class and people of
color have divergent interests. White workers just
side with their own interests
and the empireâs.
Another conspicuous issue is the history of cross-class alliances among
people of color in fighting colonialism. Read the histories of Algeria,
Mexico and other countries and youâll discover the internal contradictions
of class become far less important when faced by the external contradiction of an occupying army. Itâs the kind of history that swims against North
American radicalismâs beliefs that classes donât or canât unite. Moving
forward as anarchist people of color means understanding our allies, as
well as our enemies, and what that means for our freedom.
One of the beauties of self-determination is the fact that it draws lines of
opposition, contradictions and prompts us to consider privilege. Not simply
the (still important) roads typically hewn by activist-types â gender,
sexual orientation and class â but looking at one another and acknowledging the privileges of people within this movement, and navigating that in
hopes of being honest as possible. Being self-determined requires such.
For people of color who were raised in or politicized by white-dominant
spaces, concept of self and oneâs relationship with non-white-dominant
spaces represent one point of privilege worth exploring. In no other instance is the difference between anarchists of color bigger than between
white-acculturated persons of color, and those socialized by their respective cultures. Relational views; concepts of autonomy/people of color
spaces, racial experience, overall objectives for empowerment and more
are thus profoundly varied. In many cases, being raised in white-dominant
spaces is not a choice, although voluntary involvement is. In both cases,
participants must recognize that, historically, such spaces impart values
that, while dressed in democratic language, are intended to further white
supremacy; create confusion and division; and, as a means of self-
perpetuation, can make white-acculturated people of color unwitting agents
of white supremacist ideology. How internalized marginalization and
oppression function are critical considerations.
Very honestly, there are internal struggles being waged by conscious
people of color all around us. The sense of estrangement from communities is real, as is the indignation some people of color feel when whites
assume that people of color have no other interests but race. We need to
be actively supporting one another through these explorations, exhibiting
care and knowledge. Internalized oppression for people of color, manifested
as guilt or defensiveness, helps no one, and we need to see these issues
of privilege as collective issues for all of us in the movement.
Similarly, itâs important white-skinned people of various cultures and
ethnicities to understand the dynamics of race. This is a challenging
segment of privilege to steer, but itâs necessary. Light skin versus dark
skin is a demonstration of our internal struggles, as well as the debates
within our own colonies. As one person put it well: âHow has your light skin
operate like white privilege among people of color? How have used your
light skin to pass as white in the dominant culture? How has your light
skin been used as a way to separate yourself from people of color? Do you
use it to separate yourself from other people of color but not from people of
your ethnic group? How does the collusion of your light skin give people of
color the impression that you are not in their camp, but only come to their
camp when excommunicated from the dominant culture not wanting to
have these privileges is not the point here. The point is this: the fact that
you do have light skin privilege in this racialized society, it is important to
be racially responsible with it.â
Talking about collective freedom through self-determination also requires
we have a discussion about individualism. Individual freedom is one of the
reasons we fight, and it is one of the highest ideals, although the ultra-
competitive society fostered by capitalism has turned the idea of individual
conscience on its head. Our objective as anarchists is not to emulate what
the media tries to make of us, as self-involved monsters bent on greed and
serving ourselves. Autonomy doesnât mean that our politics are defined by
our moods or interests at the moment, but by study, struggle and discovery. Individualist politics are an exercise in privilege. Many Americans
exercise that privilege every day by passively supporting the empire. Some
anarchists of color get swept up in the moment, and start defining our
politics by whatâs exciting at the moment, rather than realizing we donât
have that many moments to lose.
Lastly, it is critical to recognize that the need for respecting each other and
organizing ourselves collectively. Iâm regularly surprised by the lackadaisical approach some people of color bring to anarchist people of color
spaces. From small things like showing up late to gatherings to major
things like exclusionary organizing, the message is one of power dynamics and privilege. Sometimes itâs unconscious. Sometimes people came
up in a lazy political culture or one that didnât have to consider what
starting a meeting 45 minutes late, for instance, might do for a poor
personâs bus ride or parentâs time with their kids. Yet these examples are
matters of privilege that mirror what is already going on in white anarchist
milieus. This needs to be examined clearly.
Think about Adidas. Its purpose is to sell expensive shoes. But nobody in
their right mind will buy $200 sneakers. So Adidas has to evolve from
selling shoes to selling a lifestyle. The baller of the moment rocks a pair of
signature shoes as a hot track bumps in the background. Adidas is
flexible; it grows its campaigns as the tastes of potential buyers evolve.
Now think about a movement. Making signs and sweating in the hot sun
doesnât sell well. Who in their right minds wants that, verdad? So we need
to evolve as peopleâs media-savviness and minds evolve; the problem is not
that people donât believe what we believe, but that anarchists can seem
completely uninspiring doing what we do. Why would anyone care for a
lifestyle of protests, long meetings, drum circles and getting arrested?
Maybe those pissed-off Caucasians or grad students I mentioned earlier,
but thatâs all.
We all want movements that are flexible and can respond to social conditions. We also need to work tirelessly to keep political goals like self-determination and tactics for getting there relevant to everyday folks. No,
we donât need a movement led by Adidas, but we need to look at, without
bias, the world our people live in, and how our messages can speak to
them. Iâve heard âwe canât go to such-and-such because itâs corporateâ as
proclamations of peopleâs individualist politics twice as much as Iâve heard
âwhere do people hang, and can we go talk with them about such-and-such
campaign?â If Adidas can have legions of cats wearing their $200 gear, theyâve tapped into what we need to get a dose of, and quick. A few points that came out of the âBuilding an APOC Movementâ workshop at the 2003 APOC conference, in terms of organizing:
- How people go about doing things; for the benefit and greater good take where people are and build from that. We have more to learn from people than they do from us;
- Using skills and resources already in existence; empowering to teach each other-working from our strengths; and
- More vision; not just talk about, make it more participatory, more organizing.
And in terms of networking and resources:
- Find common ground and be in the community;
- Bring together by using each othersâ resources together;
- Focusing on commonalities;
- Be honest when balancing your values and other groups as a basis for building trust; and
- Be simplistic; talk about how you can support.
We also resolved on a few ideas related to points of unity:
- Ask people first; value system respecting existing knowledge;
- Clarity of goals makes things clear;
- Be aware anarchism is not better than what exists; be open; and
- Ultimately support community decisions; mistakes are part of the process.
Four key points of anarchist organizing:
- Helping people experiment with decentralized, collective and cooperative forms of organization;
- Increasing the control that people have over actions that affect them;
- Building counterculture that uses all forms of communication to resist illegitimate authority, racism, sexism, and capitalism. Creating alternatives to the dominant culture; and
- Strengthening the âsocial fabricâ of neighborhood units that network of
informal association, support services, and contacts that enable
people to survive in spite of the negative influences of government and
its bureaucracies.
Five criteria covered at the conference for measuring success:
- People learn skills needed to analyze issues and confront those who exert control over their lives;
- People learn to interact, make decisions and get things done collectively; rotating tasks, sharing skills, confronting racism, sexism and hierarchy;
- Community residents realize some direct benefit or some resolution of problems they personally face through the organizing work;
- Existing institutions change their priorities or way of doing things so that the authority of government, corporations, and large institutions is replaced by extensions of decentralized, grassroots authority; and
- Community residents feel stronger and better about themselves in the
collective effort.
These arenât gospel, but theyâre a start in moving towards the conversations we need to have â whether youâre an organizer or not â about self-determination, tactics, allies, privilege and more. As with anything, we
need to treat each other with compassion and empathy; donât let hostility,
resentment or a quest for âaccountabilityâ color your efforts. Tearing each
other down as people of color for perceived transgressions is never acceptable under any circumstance. Weâre not the military, and nor should we
strive for that. We have serious discussions to have, and hopefully more
learning, caring, fighting and loving in the future.
<br>
*by Victoria Law*
Siu Loong means âLittle Dragonâ in Cantonese.
But Siu Loong herself isnât Cantonese. She isnât even one hundred percent
Chinese. Through me, she can claim to be Hakka, Suzhonese and
Shanghainese. From her father, she can claim to be Finnish, Hungarian
and Jewish. But she is also an American living among American anarchists, where none of this supposedly matters.
Before motherhood became a consideration, I paid little attention to the
lack of color in the New York City anarchist âscene.â So what if no one
looked like me? Werenât we all struggling for the same thing?
Pregnancy made me sit up and look around at the demographics of the
anarchists around me. Yes, I had followed (but not participated) in the
short-lived discussion on white privilege in Seattleâs protests against the
WTO. Yes, I would confront my fellow anarchists about their internalized
racism. But I never really went further and questioned why there were so
few people of color-never mind people of color like me-in the anarchist
movement.
Motherhood forced me to open my eyes. Before the recommended six
weeks of postpartum rest were up, I was up and about on my various
projects. Virtually everyone was supportive of my new role as mother and
on-call cow. However, I started noticing small things that bothered me
about my (mostly white) activist circles.
For starters, no one could pronounce my daughterâs name correctly. It was
pronounced, âSue Long,â âSiu Long,â âSue La,â any which way except the
way it was supposed to be pronounced. If people didnât have trouble
making a small circle with their lips to say the word âsiu,â they couldnât
remember that âloongâ had two âoâs. One person tried to shorter her name
to Suzy. I very firmly put a stop to that.
Before Siu Loong could even remember her environment, I looked at the
young children who made up the anarchist scene. Who would she be
playing with when she grew old enough to interact with other kids?
Most anarchists do not have children. Whether this is a political statement
or a personal choice, the face remains that anarchist children are few and
far between. On the Lower East Side, the anarchists who choose parenthood and had enough support to remain somewhat involved in the movement tend to be white.
It bothers me that Siu Loongâs companions are almost all white. I do not
want her growing up in an all-white (or predominantly white) environment. I
do not want her to wonder if she is somehow incorrect for not having blond
hair and blue eyes as many of her peers do. When I have brought this up
with other anarchist parents, they dismiss my concerns. Of course they do
not have to worry about whether their child will feel as if she does not
belong. Their children, even those who are of mixed parentage, have white
skin. They do not have to worry that their child may feel as if she is not as
good as her lighter-skinned, lighter-haired friends. They do not have to
worry about the fact that our small community sometimes mirrors the
racism and ethnocentrism found out in the larger world.
Sometimes I wonder if I obsess about race too much. I buy her books that
emphasize her Chinese heritage and, more importantly, have characters
that look like her. When she began Early Head Start, I was secretly thrilled
that there were no white children in her class. When she entered Head
Start seven months later, I was delighted that ten of the fifteen kids running
around were Chinese and that all spoke Cantonese. No one mispronounced Siu Loongâs name, not even the non-Chinese teachers.
However, the parents and caretakers of these children are not ones with
whom I share anything except an ancestral homeland. For the most part,
we do not share the same language and thus cannot talk with each other.
Some of them do not return my tentative or âJou sahnâ when we pass each
other in the hall or wait for the elevator together. I do not know their politics
and opinions. After seeing my punk rock babysitter, they may have
guessed mine, although this did not prevent them from electing me the
chairperson of both the Class Committee and the Settlement Houseâs
Policy Committee. But because we have virtually nothing in common, we
do not arrange for our children to see each other outside the classroom.
Perhaps because their children are full-blooded Chinese, often raised in a
community of other full-blooded Chinese, they do not see arranging play
dates with the other Chinese children as a concern. Or perhaps they
already do, but because my Cantonese is limited to ordering food and
asking for prices, I am left out of the invitation loop.
In addition, despite my visible pleasure at Siu Loong being around children
who share the more neglected half of her heritage, I feel as if Iâm compromising some of my anti-authoritarian beliefs by placing her in a school-like
atmosphere. She not only picks up the odd Cantonese phrase but also the
seemingly senseless rules and regulations found in all classrooms.
One evening, as I sat and talked with a friend, Siu Loong grabbed my legs.
âPut your feet like this,â she commanded, attempting to bend my legs into
a cross-legged position. Then she grabbed my hands.
âPut your hands like this,â she demanded, intertwining my fingers and then folding my hands.
This was not a comfortable position for a grown woman in a chair, so I
promptly uncrossed my legs and unfolded my hands.
Siu Loong tried to reposition me again.
âThis isnât comfortable,â I protested.
âIt is comfortable,â she insisted, trying to bend my fingers.
âYou need to sit like that so I can read you a story,â she added.
That was when I realized that, for some unknown and probably nonsensical
reason, Siu Loongâs teachers were having their charges sit for story time
with folded hands and crossed legs.
The logic of this escapes me. Isnât it enough that the kids are seated and
quiet? Why impose a needless rule? Especially one that she will parrot
and annoy me with?
Often, I feel as if my life is split. If I want to be around people who think as I
do, who believe and are willing to fight for the same things, they will not
look as I do. They will not share the same culture or upbringing. I will have
to explain certain aspects of my life and sometimes have these aspects be
misunderstood or distorted. If I choose to be with those who share my
culture and collective history, I risk having my individuality misunderstood
or ignored. During high school, I chose to be with other Chinese. We
shared nothing except a common ancestry. In that circle of friends, my
needs and wants as an individual and as an emerging anarchist were
ignored. As an adult, I have been asked why I choose to be around so
many white people, why I do not choose to be around âmy own.â In this
circle, my needs and wants as a woman of color are ignored.
Sometimes I wonder if Siu Loong feels the split as acutely as I do. I
wonder if she notices that, around white people, virtually anything is okay.
She can run and climb and laugh and shout. She can even take all of her
clothes off. No one will chastise her. The most that will happen is that the
grown-ups will laugh.
However, among those who look more like she does, whether they be
schoolmates or relatives, such behavior is not only not laughed at, but
actively discouraged and chastised.
When I try to talk with my anarchist friends about this split in my life and
hers, they donât get it. Why is it important that I send Siu Loong to
âschoolâ? Why am I subjecting Siu Loong to regiment and restrictions at
such an early age? Canât I find an alternative source of childcare for her-one
that does not reinforce models of hierarchy and oppression? And why am I
so hung up on race? One anarchist described my concerns about race and
ethnicity as ânationalistic bullshit.â
How can I raise a baby anarchist of color if my choices lay between a
white, color-blind movement or a gathering of those who can identify with
her looks and heritage, but little else?
Iâm still struggling to find some sort of balance between these two extremes. Itâs hard to think of solutions when those around me-both my peers
and the parents of Siu Loongâs peers-do not acknowledge that there is a
problem. This reflects a larger issue-white anarchistsâ refusal to discuss
race, racism and exclusivity in the movement. Knowing this doesnât make
it any easier. I am still struggling alone with this concern.
*Bruce and Rivka Gewirtz Little met in Texas and now reside in New York City. Some may remember Bruce as a founding member of the Federation of Black Community Partisans, the predecessor to many APOC groups. Rivka is a great organizer in her own right. This interview focuses on parenting and how being parents has changed the lives to two kickass revolutionaries.*
**Bruce:** Being an introvert, I had a lot of political influence from books, TV
and music. As a teen when I was in junior high, I read a lot of books on the
Vietnam War and the international insurgent movements during that time
period. I remember looking at CNN during the days I skipped school and
recognizing the kind of military build up in the South and Central Americas
as being somewhat identical to the kind of U.S military buildup that took
place in Vietnam. Being a working class black male at 14, I knew for sure
that I was gonna be drafted. Later, in my twenties, I read Malcolm Xâs
speeches and got involved in peace and justice coalitions in Houston.
**Rivka:** The â80s affected my political development. I grew up in a lesbian-
parent household in upper Manhattan. Crack hit like a ton of bricks,
addicting or helping to jail many of my lifelong friends. AIDS hit even
harder, with many of my motherâs friends dying. Gentrification eventually
claimed the apartment I grew up in. Marshals evicted my mother, throwing
25 years of our shit on the street and dragging me out kicking and screaming. Yet I hated the left and all that it embodied. My mother (a Jewish
woman) and her partner (a black woman) forced me to canvas for the
Rainbow Party and I had been to more patchouli-smelling sing-ins than any
kid could handle. I didnât see anything concrete being done. I tuned out as
much as possible. Thank god for that blip of a conscious era in hip hop. I
put my thinking cap back on and began to organize around issues in
college and later as a journalist focusing on criminal justice issues.
Can you talk about how having your daughter has changed your
lives, and what you want out of life?
**Bruce:** Having Navah has definitely added on more consideration to how
we used to function as activists before we became parents. We still strive
to work for the transformation of our communities, but we do have to work
through child care issues and âswitchingâ to make meeting s or get to
certain protests.
**Rivka:** Having grown up in a severe state of urban emergency, affecting
change has always been part of my MO. However, as N grows, my political
work has taken a much clearer and more solid form. I am now desperate to
work for underground education, cooperative child care and other services
for children that function outside the oppressive laws of the system. If there
is any sanity to be maintained for me on a Saturday night when my
daughter becomes a teen, I know that I need to expose police corruption
and exploitation of youth of color now. I know there needs to be an attitude
that every kid in the âhood could be my kid and therefore is my responsibility. My goals are very defined.
**Bruce:** I was made more aware of issues like education and social
services since we had been thrust into dealing with them first hand. All last
year we were playing survival games with the State in trying to keep our
daughter in affordable child care. In a situation like that, you almost have to
be living on the street to qualify for these kinds of services.
<br>
And you have to be in a single parent situation as well. I was unemployed
and R was working, but that wasnât enough. The State wanted me out of
the picture altogether in order for N to be qualified to continue to get
childcare services. We wanted to look at certain daycare programs that
were started by grassroots activists back in the day because we knew that
they had progressive learning curriculums for toddlers. But as funding for
alternative grassroots based schools become scarce, they get swallowed
by the State and hence the classist guidelines.
**Rivka:** Again, instead of looking at all the issues all the time, I have really
begun to focus on whatâs happening to inner city kids. Being involved with
children all the time thrusts it in our face. Right now the scariest part
seems to be the prison state we have created for urban youth in public
schools, which later transfers into the prison industrial complex. But then
itâs also terrifying that mothers on welfare are forced to deposit their
newborns into the hands of strangers so that they can meet welfare
guidelines. There are so many issues it seems overwhelming â so the
thought of having to organize around something like globalization (though I
know its crucial) seems to dilute my efforts on any front. Maybe in 18
years, Iâll start to branch out again.
**Bruce:** I believe it can be, but it really comes down to the parent. What are
they willing to live with or live without as they raise a kid up under capital-
ism? There are networks of alternative health care providers although small
and scarce that anti-authoritarians can turn to if they do not want to go to
take their child to a ârealâ doctor. There are alternatives to public schools
and you can even squat or choose a primitivist lifestyle in a remote setting.
What Iâm saying is that radical parents throughout the years have chosen
to live lives where they raise children âunpluggedâ from the dominant
culture and it can work. I just see it as a âYour Mileage May Varyâ kind of
thing. There shouldnât be rules on how to build a family under an oppressed
state. I follow my instincts and common sense along with Rivkaâs consul
as a partner. We may choose a medical doctor for Navah based on the
individual and how they practice medicine. Do they blindly prescribe the
medicines of the industry when
there are alternative medicines
to consider? Are they open
minded to holistic alternatives?
<br>
Do we as parents decide if we
want to give our child those
medicines when we know
based on our own research that
that medicine may not be good
for Navah? I think being a
conscious and thoughtful parent
leads to practical decisions.
**Rivka:** Itâs totally possible,
though hard. To me its all about
collaboration and cooperation. If
you want to keep your kid out of
the system by way of doctor,
school, etc, it takes a group of people who are willing to chip and in
cooperatively provide services. For example, the only way for parents
without cash to get daycare without going through the state is to come
together with a group of other parents to form a daycare collective. I think
the hard part is making the connections with other people who have
committed themselves to raising their children in that environment. Once
you make the connections, I believe it to be possible.
**Rivka:** I have spent a lot of time thinking about this very issue. Is it possible
to raise a kid that questions and bucks authority while instilling âdisciplineâ
in the home? In other words, how do you tell a kid to challenge the state and
existing laws and then tell them to shut up and listen to your rules? On the
other hand, four-year-olds donât necessarily have the capability to know that
playing with the stove could kill them-hence the clear need for rules: âHey
kid, stay away from the stove, or else!â Ultimately, as a mother, my job is to
extend the womb for as long as possible until my child doesnât need the
support anymore. The womb provides boundaries that make a fetus feel safe.
On the outside world, toddlers seek instruction to feel safe in a big scary
park, for instance. The trick is to provide rules for safety, while teaching kids
to question rules that seem bogus â including their parents. Oddly, the safety
and security that comes from a disciplined home can empower kids to be-
come adults who are strong enough to fight the system. Of course, Iâm talking a lot of shit right now. What am I gonna say if Navah heads out the house
in a hoochie skirt to the club at 16 and âchallenges my authorityâ on going âŠ
Hmmm âŠ. ass whoopinâs all around!
**Bruce:** Although I kid around the house about passinâ out ass whoopinâs
and I also make threats if Iâm caught in bad mood, I have realized how my
upbringing instilled that âfear of getting in troubleâ as a kid and how we
track that same fear into adulthood in the work place or at a protest
dealing with cops. I donât want Navah to fear other people, just respect
other people who respect her. So I take my cue from Rivkaâs ideas on
discipline, which means talking things out with her, not bargaining. But
also pointing out the consequences of your actions: if you donât clean up
and take care of your shit, itâs not gonna be any good to you in pieces if
someone steps on it or it gets lost, or if I get tired of picking it up all the
time and it âdisappears.â
**Bruce:** We started getting white Barbie dolls for gifts from some relatives
when Navah was like, one. Granted we did not lay ground rules to our
peoples not to give us Barbies of any color, but regardless, we always
knew that we had our work cut out for us to counter indoctrination of white
supremacy and negative body image via Barbieâs marketing.
<br>
Barbieâs blond looks and body image are targeted to girls Navahâs age
and it can have that effect of self hating of a child of color hating their
brown skin and dark unruly hair. I think of the old Whoopi piece she used
to do portraying a young black girl with a yellow towel on her head pretending that it was blond hair. We counter this in a couple of ways like telling
her how she and other kids that look like her are beautiful too. As she gets
older it will be easier to explain that there is an industry out there making
mad dollars off of people of color who have been tricked to hate themselves
and in turn will want to look like someone they are not, or kill themselves
trying. I would hope that she will make her own conclusion that she should
love her natural self.
**Rivka:** I think the way to impart culture is to provide it without ramming it
down your childâs throat. In other words, surround the house with cultural
books, and avoid the typical childrenâs crap, have parties in which people
are naturally wearing cultural dress, instill values of your culture in simple
ways like focusing on community and story telling. However, I donât think
itâs helpful to start some sort of counter indoctrination. I was raised with a
little of that and had a severe rebellion. I am hoping that if the parents love
and are proud of their cultural heritage and fill the home with ceremony and
other folks living the same way, the child will incorporate that in their way
of being.
**Rivka:** I have a very unpopular take on this issue. I am all about Navah
honoring her many cultures, i.e. Black, Jewish, etc. But at the end of the
day, when the police stop her ass driving a car, she will be a Black woman
and they will treat her as such. While that officer is beating her ass for
whatever sick reason he finds, he wonât be asking her if she is a quarter
French â know what I mean? My feeling is you provide all the beauty of
culture in the house in a positive way, but you let your kid know the ropes
on the outside world â bottom line. If there is some confusion or refusal to
accept at some point â well hey thatâs normal. As someone who comes
from a multicultural home, I have gone through my periods of self-doubt
and even hatred, but it all shook out in the end.
**Rivka:** Provide examples of alternative ways of being on their free time. Go
to plays, free art exhibits and concerts, libraries, etc. I think it takes
providing alternative perspectives to keep kids away from that conformist
thinking. No kid will remain a conformist when they know there are cool
alternatives. And if they do, that will all change in time.
**Bruce:** Deprogramming at home is the key. First you need to know the
school your child is attending. Who are the teachers, what are they
teaching, etc. Then ask your kid what they are being taught. It will be the
usual shit, like the first Thanksgiving where the first colonizers partied with
the indigenous Americans. Here is the opportunity to arm them with tools
like A Peopleâs History of the United States by Howard Zinn. It provides an
alternative to conforming to the reactionary historical perspective of the
school system.
<br>
But you also have to be active in countering the stuff being taught in
schools by speaking out when you attend school board meetings, or yes,
even PTA meetings.
<br>
Most importantly encourage the child to satisfy their curiosity by challenging the school authorities on the stuff they are teaching.
**Bruce:** Political meetings and workspaces can improve with the increased
involvement of politically conscious parents. Building the APOC movement
means reaching out across class and age lines. If there are more parents
involved in radical community building, I believe that will improve child-
friendliness at meetings. Parents could organize themselves to switch off
in the child caring area from meeting to meeting so it just wonât be any
particular personâs âjobâ to watch the children.
<br>
So far I have been to meetings that have offered childcare, but I have never
really used that resource because Rivka and I usually plan ahead of time
when it comes to managing our time to attend meetings. As for what kind
of behaviors that needs to be checked, I can only say that hopefully you
can work with people who are patient and understanding with children who
cannot or will not sit through a four hour meeting patiently.
**Rivka:** Take them, take them, take them. We had a scary experience at
one of the anti-war demos here in New York where police on horses were
trampling folks without regard to age or physical stability (including
seriously old folks). Navah and her cousin (also a toddler) were pinned
against a wall on our shoulders, just watching the horses charging people
and we couldnât move and could barely breathe. It was terrifying. However,
both girls remember the experience with love and they remember all the
chants. They still joke â1, 2, 3, 4, we donât want your stinkinâ war. Thatâs
part of âimpartingâ culture and politics. It would be good for parents to work
in cooperation so that when scary things happen, there are parents who
can take over and get the kids out of the crowd or help form shields around
the kids so they donât get injured.
**Bruce:** Yes, the parents definitely need to be organized, networked to
come to a demo and form contingency plans for when the police begin to
riot and break up a demo.
<br>
There is also the school of thought that you should be more selective
about what kind of demos you can take your children to. But in light of the
police assaults in some of the most peaceful actions that took place in
Florida around the FTAA, I donât really know how selective you can be. The
police are defiantly following a decree to break up actions as quickly as
possible and as they see fit. Still some common sense and a heightened
sense of when things go wrong could be a parentsâ best tool.
**Rivka:** Not. Itâs all about instinct. My big fear there is that she will come to
think of MTVâs pimp and whore culture as her own urban culture. I really
want to help her get around that bullshit that so victimizes women and
criminalizes youth of color for the fun of white kids.
**Rivka:** We have the utmost love and respect for you and all that you embody.
*What role does an artist play? What role does a politically conscious anarchist artist of color engaged in community organizing play? And a bigger question, what social responsibility? Not4Prophet, voice for the Puerto Rican political band/collective Ricanstruction, speaks with Walidah Imarisha, the bad half of the poetry duo Good Sista/Bad Sista, about anarchism, art, creation and the different ways of struggle.*
**Walidah:** Right now we are seeing the birth of an anarchist people of color
movement here in the United States, which is really exciting to me. I think
that artists have a role to play in that movement, because art occupies a
unique space in social struggles. In fact, the members of Ricanstruction
came to anarchism partially through the art you were creating together,
right, rather than through reading about it in books?
**Not4Prophet:** Well, I donât know so much if we came to it through art or if
we just started interpreting it through art once we started engaging in âart.â
<br>
As I said before, the quest was always to find your own way, but not
because we were trying to adhere to, or create any kind of lifestyle or
ideology. Fact is, that when we came to the realization that we werenât
really meant to exist within this shitstem that was created and engineered
by our conquerors, then we came to overstand that we were already, for
hundreds of years, resisting it in order to continue to exist, and that we
were in the process of finding ways to live outside of this shitstem in order
to survive it. So the idea of the necessity of living an autonomous lifestyle
was already in effect. It was just my âintellectualizingâ of the shituation that
had to get a late pass. So by the time we became âartistsâ we were
already engaged in a battle for autonomy, a struggle for freedom, so the art
just became a reflection of that and another beautiful, raging and vivid
outlet for that necessity for freedom and autonomy. I donât think we could
have come to it through books, because the quest for freedom is not
something the slave has to be taught. Itâs something we live everyday.
**W:** Right, and itâs that real life struggle that is the focus. Anarchism, or any
political ideology or movement, canât just rely on art or subcultures or youth
rebellion to give it life in communities of color, as it often has in white communities. I think a lot of the difference for political artists of color and activists of
color is that connection to the community, being strongly rooted in where
you came from. And while in idealist terms, both for myself and other APOC
folks, thatâs true, I know a lot of us in the APOC movement are middle class,
and that affects the way we approach anarchism, art and community-based
organizing. I know your experience has been different.
**N4P:** Yes. In the case of Ricanstruction, we were Puerto Ricans from the
barrios of Nueva York, whose parents came to the U.S. as exiles fleeing a
colonial condition, only to enter into a neo-colonial condition. Babylon
hasnât been kind to boricuas. When you gotta dumpster dive or beg and
borrow to eat, and be homeless in the dead of winter or live in condemned
buildings waiting for a knock at the door at midnight (if thereâs even a door),
and you get stopped by the ghetto occupying forces we call pigs on the
daily because you âfit the description,â then youâre always trying to find a
better way, a better place.
<br>
Speaking personally, Iâve been a gang banger, a nationalist, a Marxist, a
rasta and a santero, all in search of something better than this. It took me
a long time to realize that there is nothing better than this, unless we
create it ourselves. It was when I came to this realization that I began living
what some might characterize as an anarchist lifestyle or perhaps an
outlaw culture, which is just another way of saying you are existing outside
the laws that have been created by the shitstem. I started trying to create
not just a counter culture but also an autonomous culture. And I stopped
discussing how we need to reform the police force, and instead began
talking about abolition. And instead of discussing our right to food, shelter
and clothing, I began stealing food and clothing and squatting.
<br>
But of course, police brutality, hunger, homelessness, a corrupt government are problems that affect all ghetto dwellers; these are not specifically
anarchist issues. Whatâs âanarchistâ is what you do about these things.
Yeah, I do think that APOC will have to deal with issues of class and
privilege if we are really gonna get anything done on the streets, which is
where it counts. We canât just assume that we are all in the same boat
because we are all pocs. Some of us may have a boat with a hole in it,
and some of us may not have a boat at all. Maybe a tire, if weâre lucky.
**W:** What tie do you think art has to community organizing? Is it important
in reaching out to folks, or are the more immediate concerns of food,
housing and clothing what matter most? I think itâs really easy for middle
class folks to lose focus of those basic survival needs while getting caught
up in the lofty ideals of making art, or on the other side, itâs easy for them
to think that working class and poor folks only need their physical needs
met, while neglecting the soul. So how important is art to community
organizing?
**N4P:** For us, itâs been very important because art is used by downpressed
cultures as a tool of resistance against the enslavers, the âauthorities,â
and itâs everywhere; in the streets, the barrios, ghettos, shanties, prisons,
churches and mosques. We use art to communicate, to resist and to
rebel, so itâs importance canât be denied or minimized. Thereâs music in the
domino players slapping the dominoes down on the table, the baby crying
cause mommaâs got no more milk to give, the brother preaching on the
corner of 125th and Lenox Ave., our feet as the tap the sound of the calle
as we run from the cops across 110th Street. The revolution may not be
televised, and it may not make it on to the radio (unless itâs pirate radio),
but it damn sure will be seen and heard on the streets. For us, we have
mostly tried to make our art another part of the resistance struggle, the
anti-authoritarian struggle, the struggle for freedom. We create political
resistance murals on âprivate property,â outlaw art, and we encourage the
passerby, the ghetto dweller to join us, even if all they feel that all they can
do is paint the red line on the Puerto Rican flag. We show films on the
sides of buildings while abuelitas sell cuchifritos that they made at home.
<br>
We always overstood the need for the people to take back the streets from
the authorities, to not allow them to have authority over us, so we tended
to utilize our art in this capacity. We would set up our instruments on the
street, plug into a light pole for power, start jamming and encourage others
to join us. Those who couldnât play musical instruments could draw on the
walls around us or dance and sing, jeer at the pigs as they rolled by. What
could they do? The people had created a TAZ {temporary autonomous
zone) and the pigs feared turning a ârevolution partyâ into a âriot,â and the
sense of liberation is so deep, so thick in the air itself that the people can
feel their own freedom.
<br>
Art is only effective as a tool of community organizing when it is as real
and honest as the people and their quest for liberation; if it doesnât engender the peopleâs rebellion, quest for autonomy and ultimate freedom, then
itâs just entertainment waiting to be swallowed whole by babylon, regurgitated and wrapped up in pretty ribbons or punk patches, and sold back to
us, revolution in Nike kicks and gap jeans. Art is only worthy of the
peopleâs struggle if it, as Amiri Baraka said âscreams poison gas on beast
in green berets and cleans out the world for virtue and love.â
**W:** Do you have a problem calling yourself an anarchist when you do
community-based artwork? For me, it feels tricky when you are trying to
reach folks in the community who know about anarchism through main-
stream media, who think of anarchist as black mask wearing white punk
kids who throw rocks and start fires but who donât do any work. I know in
the community organizing I do, mostly work with prisonersâ families and hip
hop organizing, I donât necessarily introduce myself as âWalidah Imarisha,
anarchist poet activist.â I have tried to find a balance by instead incorporating anarchistic ways of working; consensus and mutual aid, into the work I
do, without expressly calling it that. I feel it bypasses the stigma, and
gives people a chance to experience what anarchism is really about,
without getting caught up on titles.
**N4P:** Personally I am not down with any titles, tags, or designations. Iâve
spent most of my adult life trying to find ways to do away with genres and
borders and envelopes, so I think we are always better off if we donât label
ourselves or allow anyone to label us. Anarchy or anarchism is really
something we seek and live and struggle for, so it doesnât matter what we
call ourselves (or donât) if we are in the midst of action doing it.
<br>
At the same time, we do live in a world of designations based on our
perceived politics. Socialist, communist, Marxist, nationalist, capitalist,
terrorist, and often these tags are overstood by the people better than
some amorphous non-definable non-title. So I think, sometimes these
ânamesâ are just a way of giving some kind of clarity (to others) as to what
we are doing or trying to do. It could be easier to say to someone on
the street, âWe are anarchists and hereâs what we want,â then âI
donât want to be labeled and neither do any of my companer@s, but hereâs
what we want.â
<br>
I think also a lot of âactivistsâ are afraid of scaring the âpeople on the
streetâ or confusing them, so they donât want to use any terms that they
feel might be misconstrued by âthe people,â but I think you gotta give the
âpeopleâ more credit than that. So, really, putting an A in front of POC is
really just a way of defining what we want to others and to ourselves. But I
tend to tell folks not to sweat the A in apoc. It could mean anything:
Anarchist, anti-authoritarian, autonomous, activist, armed, angry. I like that
one. Angry People of Color.
**W:** That idea of giving people on the street more credit is a really important
one. It goes back to the class issues we were talking about before,
because whatâs being implied is that folks on the street arenât sophisticated enough to get what you mean, so you have water it down for them.
N4P: The hip-hop artist Jay-Z recently copped to the idea that he âdumbs
downâ his lyrics and message for his audience so he can continue to sell a
bunch of records. This, to me, is a really sad premise, that you would
perceive your audience as a bunch of dummies that you have to step down
to talk to. It would be even worse if those who consider themselves activist
or soldiers in the struggle felt that it was necessary to âdumb downâ our
struggle politics in order to âreachâ the âpeopleâ or the sufferahs.
**W:** That speaks to the larger dilemma of doing political art that I know I
have experienced; how do you keep it fresh and interesting, not let it turn
into propaganda, while at the same time still making sure that your music
expresses the politics you believe in, so youâre not watering it down?
<br>
As a poet, the politics of my art are pretty overt, because all I have are
words to make my work. But Iâve also felt a trend as a poet to produce art
that is personal, and, not to trout out a worn cliché, prove how the personal
is political. But I have realized that none of my poems are expressly
anarchist in nature. Iâm not even sure what an anarchist poem would look
like. And Ricanstructionâs music is obviously extremely political, but I
wonder, do you consider anarchist? And if so, what makes it that way?
**N4P:** Weâve always tried to avoid the clichĂ© or propaganda or the âpolitical
songâ by simply writing about what is important to us, regardless of what
we are talking about. If we feel strongly about it, we write about it. So we
are firm believers in the idea that the personal is political. Fact is, a song
about fucking in the back seat of a Lexus is no less political than a song
about dropping bombs on innocent people. Just different reasons⊠or
maybe not. Just because I am not interested in writing about big pimping
doesnât mean that the person who does is not making some kind of
political statement, for better or for worse. A lot of people make the
mistake of believing that if you are talking about so called âpoliticalâ issues
than you are a political artists. But that means everyone else gets to be
just a straight up âartist,â regardless of what they talk about or donât talk
about. If we are âpolitical artists,â then everyone else are âa-political
artists,â but then what does their A mean? If we are âanarchist artists,â
then everyone else are audio slaves I guess.
<br>
I donât imagine that there could be such a thing as an anarchist poem
unless it were totally free. But once itâs committed to paper it ceases to be
free. Weâve called our music revolution music at times, and other times
weâve just called it music, but we try to make it at least free and flexible
and, I guess you could say anarchistic. Beauty and harmony within the
chaos.
**W:** Thatâs such an important point, that everything is political. If you arenât
conscious of what you are promoting, then you are promoting the same ole
mainstream politics, which are still intensely political.
<br>
Sometimes, I feel like the artist in me and the organizer in me are at war,
with the organizer saying, âWell, why are you writing about love or heart-
break or relationships, when there are real issues to write about? You
should be writing a political poem.â I know that the two sides arenât
opposed, and that how we love is political, and therefore a love poem is a
political poem. Like you said, âAll Ricanstructionâs songs are love songs.â
But still, I do find myself trying to walk a line, because even if love poems
are political, there are still bombs dropping on babiesâ heads around the
world, hungry bellies growling, nightsticks beating tender flesh, over 2
million people in this country going to sleep in a prison cell. So then do we
start rating the issues we discuss in our art in terms of social relevance,
do we ration out one relationship poem to two police brutality poems? How
do you keep that balance?
**N4P:** Well, we are still trying to figure out exactly what part does art really
play in this struggle at all. Is there such a thing as an anarchist poem,
and, if so, what the hell is it for? Is art a tool for revolution? Does it lead us
any closer towards an ideal? And, if so, how? Is arts power in itâs lyrical
message, or is that yet another straight jacket? Maybe its power is in its
sense of freedom. When we first formed the group of artists that we now
call Ricanstruction, many people automatically expected us to play a
specific kind of music based on where we grew up, our ethnicity, our race.
So we made sure that the music would instead be a fusion, a not-necessarily describable amalgam of everything that ever inspired us, everything
we ever heard in the air. We didnât want to be pigeon-holed, so we made
sure that one person would say, âTheyâre a punk band, âand another,
âTheyâre a hip hop group, âor âTheyâre a salsa orchestra,â or a âjazz
combo.â We used to say that revolutionary music should sound like
everything youâve ever heard before and nothing youâve ever heard before.
So I sometimes feel that in this quest for revolution music, and how it
works as a toolâ that the sonics are more âimportantâ than the words
because you can only go so far with language.
<br>
But then of course, itâs not so simple because the words are still important
and they are the easiest way to communicate, short of throwing a molotov
cocktail at an appropriate target. The words are no less important then
Malcolm preaching on 125th street, or George Jackson writing from prison,
or Che writing Guerrilla Warfare, or even Abbie Hoffman writing Steal This
Book. Or for that matter, Nina Simone writing and singing âTo Be Young,
Gifted, and Black.â I think itâs easy and expedient for the shitstem to write
art off as being nothing but some sort of entertainment, which serves as a
way of declawing art so that they can then commodify it and put it in a
pretty wrapper and sell it back to us as packaged âpolitical album.â But as
artists who are engaged in the struggle, itâs important that we not get
caught up in âbiznessâ and start second guessing ourselves.
**W:** Yeah, thereâs always that questioning process going on inside you, and
we often put limits on our art. Which in a way is a very good thing, to be very
aware of what youâre putting out in the word and how it will be interpreted. But
at the same time, sometimes it becomes more about the right language and
the mechanisms of intent, rather than creating something powerful and beautiful and terrible, all at the same time. I have written pieces that I love and feel
are some of my best work, but I would not put them out in a book or read
them at a performance, because of some of the language I use, and mostly
the fear that what I have written is vague enough that it can be misconstrued
in a way contrary to what I intended. So you try to create work that is art and
not just propaganda, make it wide enough for other people to immerse themselves in it, to put your poem on and call it their skin, while at the same time
making it narrow enough that they canât pull at it and stretch it large enough
to clothe whatever they want to.
**N4P:** Which I think is also the beauty of art. It is not something that can
be straight-jacketed unless you let it be. It is not a political speech. Itâs not
an ideology or a party line or a ten point plan. Itâs free to talk about fighting
or fucking, freestyle or funk. Yes, people can stretch it and clothe themselves, and stay warm in the winter or cool in the summer, or bulletproof on
the frontlines. The language can be raw, âreal,â or revolutionary. Redemptive like a Bob Marley song or Bad like the Brains. It can call us to fight the
power, encourage the people to get up, stand up, or go to sleep. In the end
it can be madder than Malcolm. Or not even matter.
**W:** Which is the all important question, that keeps political artists awake
at night: does it even matter? Does all the thinking and agonizing and
debating I put into my work really make a difference in the grand scheme
of things? I have to believe it does, both as a poet, but also as a person
who has been moved by art. Itâs not the revolution by any means, and
people sometimes get it so twisted, thinking that spitting radical rhetoric
on a stage is the extent of their responsibility and obligation.
But art is salve for the soul, and we all need that to continue in the lifelong
struggle we were born into (and born to win, as the hip hop group The Coup
says). We can all remember a song, a poem, a single word even that
moved us beyond measure, that gave us the strength to get back up and
push forward. Historically we can see that at the center of almost every
fight for freedom and justice was some form of art to carry peopleâs spirits
when their bodies were too tired to stand.
Whenever I think of the question of is art important, I think of Nikki
Giovanniâs poem âFor Saundra,â where she is asked by her neighbor is she
ever wrote happy poems, and so she tries to write a tree poem, or a
beautiful blue sky poem, and she canât because of the despair and destruction she sees out her window. She writes:
âso i thought again
and it occurred to me
maybe i shouldnât write
at all
but clean my gun and
check my kerosene supply
perhaps these are not poetic
times
at all.â
For me, this was so incredibly moving, because itâs what I think all the
time. Franz Fanon once said something like, âA poet must learn that
nothing can replace the unequivocal picking up of arms on the side of the
people.â Itâs such an important reminder, that these words, this art, is part
of a larger struggle we must be engaged on many different levels. But I
think the fact that Nikki asked that question in a poem shows that there is
some purpose, because it reached mine and many other peopleâs eyes
and hearts. There is some sort of redemption after all.
In the early 1990s, under the name âGreg Jackson,â Greg Lewis eas the
editor of Black Autonomy, the first Black anarchist newspaper in the
United States. Lewis, along with Lorenzo Komboa Ervin, became the most
high-profile members of the Federation of Black Community Partisans, a
Black autonomist formation. Today, he is a self-defense and fitness trainer
still living in the Seattle area. We talked about his history, the trails blazed
by Black Autonomy and Copwatch 206, and struggles today.
One thing just led to another. All my life my mother struggled to feed us
and keep a roof over our heads. Welfare used to send her on jobs that
didnât pay a living wage. But she was required to go, or else we would be
cut off for good. But, if by some miracle she made any money, it would be
deducted from her monthly check and they would threaten her with
prosecution or being cut off for making too much money. Every year I had
to take a form to the school to fill out and send to them to prove I was in
school. One more reason other kids had to pick on me.
The day she died, she was a college grad, Phi Theta Kappa, with a bachelor
of arts in journalism; but she was working at a fast-food restaurant because
local newspapers refused to pay her a living wage or didnât hire her at all.
When I was a teenager, I was on the bus going to work as a dishwasher at
an upscale restaurant when a group of white police stopped the bus and
ordered all of the black people off, accusing us of shoplifting at a local
mall. I glanced at one officerâs badge as I got off, he saw me do it, and said
that he would be more than happy to put a third âeyeâ in my forehead.
Years later, I was confronted by neo-Nazis in the University District, and I
successfully defended myself against them. At the time, I was a trained
kick-boxer who fought ring matches regularly; they never saw it coming. I
later found out that I wasnât alone; there was a âmovementâ of punk rock
homeless kids, gangster types and weed dealers who were doing their part
to run them off the Ave also.
It wasnât until I read Revolutionary Suicide and The Autobiography of Malcolm
X that I began to get a clearer picture of what I was dealing with. Later, some
of the homeless kids turned me on to Marxist and anarchist writings.
I drifted from one struggle to another. First, there were the protests due to
the police raiding a squat. At the same time, the former City Attorney,
Mark Sidran, was pushing for an anti-sitting and anti-panhandling ordinance. Then, the neo-Nazis returned and stabbed a black man on a bus on
the Ave on Christmas Eve. It was shortly after that the homeless kids got
organized and marched to Broadway 100 or so deep to confront them Then
the first Gulf War happened and the large protests shutting down the
freeway, and finally the beating of Rodney King, which led to two nights of
riots, fires, and fighting the cops downtown and on Broadway. All of these
things happened one after the other with very little time in between events.
It was in this climate that my politics began to expand and change.
What drew me to anarchism was not so much the theory or the ideal, but
the way the anarchists did things. The Maoists were around in greater
numbers back then, but they seemed a lot like religious people seeking
converts. And they would get mad if you didnât agree with them. Some of
them would actually challenge you to fight!
The anarchists did things. They took over buildings and lived in them, they
chased the Nazis off the streets, they would go to community meetings
and blast the so-called âexpertsâ on homelessness or youth issues, and
they would share whatever they had with you without asking for anything in
return except for your opinion on whatever subject.
I used to call myself an anarchist, until one day an older activist, now a
political prisoner, Omari Tahir (he was convicted of hitting former Seattle
mayor Paul Schell in the face with a bullhorn; it took them two trials to get
the conviction), said to me, âI know what youâre against, but what are you
for!?â He also warned against letting others put you in a box by of labeling
yourself in way that is alienating to others.
To me, all âismsâ out there are a form of ideological and social prison. Like
Bruce Lee said in The Tao of Jeet Kune Do, âAbsorb what is useful;
discard what is not. Use no way as a way.â
If I am to be labeled, hereâs the box to put me in: life-long black man in
amerikkka of mixed racial background, a so-called âperson of color.â I am a
certified personal fitness trainer, and professional martial artist and instructor. I am for reparations (for chattel slavery, for genocide of indigenous
people and the theft of their land, and for police terrorism/murder of people
of color; white people should also be compensated for being assaulted by
cops or losing loved ones to police violence), self-determination (individual
and collective), direct workers control of community institutions by those
within that particular community, and an economy based the equal distribution of wealth and resources. I am for freedom, justice, and equality for
all the human families of the planet. I am a revolutionary.
The Copwatch was significant since it was the first one in Seattle since the
Black Panther Party did their patrols in the 1960s. We were the only group
at the time that monitored the police directly on the street. We defiantly
got the attention of the police department, the local media, and attorneys
on both sides of the police accountability issue. I donât think the FBCP
was all that significant; it wasnât widely supported.
I honestly donât know. Lorenzo was the common contact we all had. It
basically came about from discussions I had with him, and discussions he
had with black activists in the various cities he spoke in.
**Do you think that kind of dynamic â where one person was the conduit and leader, for lack of a better word â hurt the organizing generally? And being who you are, one could guess you were not comfortable with such a communication flow.**
For me, the problem was more of a lack of numbers locally. I got calls and
emails from other folks involved with the project all the time. I had plenty of
allies locally, but the organization itself wasnât growing. Another problem
was people not following through on what they said they would do on a
consistent basis.
I do believe it gave a voice to what many folks were already thinking.
Beyond that, itâs hard to say. Usually itâs the white anarchists that come
up to me talking about how moved they were by the newspaper, how they
were inspired by what Lorenzo had to say in their town, etc.
It barely even started. It was really a formal organization in name only.
People werenât interested in a formal organization. I received very little help
in funding or publishing Black Autonomy or in building an organization.
To do it all over, I wouldnât have done it at all had I known that peopleâs word
was not bond and that I would be used and abused for my work ethic. Or
maybe I would have published it as a more of a personal âzine. Lately,
people have been asking me if I ever thought about starting it up again. I
donât know. It was a lot of work and most people, even so called âconscious activists,â donât have the discipline for the tedious work that it was.
When I was doing the newspaper, I didnât even own a computer. I had to
arrange to use other peopleâs gear or go to Kinkoâs or to a college campus.
That took planning and organization in itself. Then, I had to assemble the
graphics and pictures. That meant lots of cutting, photocopying, scanning
and re-scanning. Then I was forever waiting on people to send their articles
and letters, especially FBCP comrades who were doing work in the
streets. People had a really hard time with deadlines. And all of that had to
be spell-checked and edited for length.
Once that was done, I had to send the hard copy to a printer down south,
since printing is so expensive out here. After that, distribution took up
more of my time. And I still had to go to work, do my own local activism,
answer mail, maintain accounting, train in karate, teach the occasional
self-defense seminar, and stay current on what was going on in the world.
I think the way to avoid those kind of pitfalls is to be prepared to do it all
yourself, no matter what anyone promises. Plan ahead prior to trying to put
the paper together. And be sure that you have a way for the newspaper to
make money, because with publishing you will usually lose money. In the
four years that Black Autonomy came out, I never broke even.
Lack of money. Political hatred from other local anti-police brutality groups.
Eventual burn out. No non-profit funding agency will give you money to
really and truly solve the problem of police terrorism. They, like the paid
activists, are too tied to the system. Without the problem, they wonât
collect a paycheck. They donât grasp with real depth that capitalism and
white supremacy are necessary components for keeping âthe American
wayâ alive and well. And because of that, they are generally more a part of
the problem than the solution. Another Copwatch exists in Seattle, born
out the WTO protests, but they focus more on the large demonstrations
and confronting the city council on police accountability to the public.
Our job, as we saw it, was to âpolice the policeâ and educate the public on
what their rights were under the law. Our slogan was âCopwatch 206: the
REAL civilian review board!â We even considered conducting citizenâs
arrests of police officers, but decided that would be inviting death even
more so than we already were. As it turned out, the people werenât ready
for that; it was all we could do to get them to share information with us.
We advocated for an independent civilian review board with broad legal
power, with a well funded over sight patrol, the copwatch, as the âeyes and earsâ of the board. We would use the investigative tactics of the police
against them. A brother by the name of Diop Kamal, who heads the Police
Complaint Center in Florida, is already doing it. He, along with the Black
Panther Party, was our inspiration.
The line that the rightists like to use is âwell, if you arenât doing anything
wrong, you have nothing to worry about.â This what we would say to the
police when they would pitch a fit about us filming them.
I cannot talk specifically about our tactics, since some of them are still in
use by Copwatch volunteers throughout the world. I would advise folks to
learn the law, learn how to use a camera under pressure, get in shape and
stay in shape, fix any legal contradictions you may have before you go
deal with their contradictions (pay your fines, do your time, etc), learn the
investigative techniques of the worldâs law enforcement agencies, surround
yourself with lawyers and media people, read (and re-read) Sun-Tzuâs âThe
Art of Warâ or Maoâs âOn Protracted Warfare,â and plan, plan, plan. And be
prepared to be killed in action; Copwatching is serious business and is not
to be taken lightly.
Every Copwatch is different in every city. I believe that over time a uniform
standard will develop. For me, the current standard of service to the people
has been firmly established by the Police Complaint Center
([[http://www.policeabuse.org/][www.policeabuse.org]]). Ultimately, itâs a question of what a cop watch
actually does day to day and what community a cop watch actually
serves. If it is limited to just the large demonstrations involving the âusual
suspects,â then its obviously not keeping it real. If itâs only a cop watch in
name, limited to informational forums, harassing politicians, and doing its
own demonstrations, then its not keeping it real. All of the above are
important, however the cop watch is most needed and effective when it
serves the interests of people of color, primarily, in a real and tangible way.
As I see it, the real test of a Copwatchâs validity is measured by how many
beatings and killings of the most directly affected are actually prevented. If
the people the cop watch serves and the organization itself can look back
after a year and say, âsee, because of our vigilance in the streets, in the
courts, in the media, and in the halls of government, no one has been
hospitalized or died at the hands of the police in the past year!â or, âbecause of our vigilance in the streets, in the courts, in the media, and in the
halls of government, not one police officer has gotten away with assaulting
or killing anyone in the âhood or on the campus!â then all will have to bear
witness that the cop watch is real, is revolutionary, and is effective.
Tactically, the Police Complaint Center is the current model that activists
need to study, dissect and improve upon. Diop Kamal and his team have
been instrumental in successful lawsuits and convictions against abusive
police officers and their leadership. Study the methods used by the great
reactionary law enforcement groups of the world, FBI, CIA, Mossad, MI5,
etc; and use their investigative and spy tools against them. Just donât kill
anybody, like they do. It might be a good idea if some folks actually went
to school to learn how film making, criminology, police science and other
skills, at a professional level, to make Copwatch that much better.
Something else that we found in our time doing it was that Copwatch was
also an effective deterrent to crime; no one wants to look stupid on camera, and no one wants to get caught on tape.
One thing that progressives donât usually get involved in is the neighborhood watch programs. At the very least by being involved progressive
forces will know intimately well who the reactionaries are in the community, what they are up to, and be better able to deal with them before they
get anymore out of hand than they already are.
In addition, the police are very open about the fact that they cannot operate
effectively in a neighborhood without the help of civilian auxiliary organizations. I wonder how would they would operate if the neighborhood watch or
the local police reserve unit in a particular area was dominated by radicals
and the local copwatch was on a first-name basis with just about everybody who lived in the âhood and all the activists on both sides of the color line and the language barrier?
Oh boy, here we go; you had to ask the âmillion-dollarâ questionâŠ
Well, first of all, I believe that the term Autonomous People of Color movement is a more accurate description of whatâs really going on today. I canât speak for everybody, but Iâm sure there are others who feel me on this.
Letâs face it, we are separate from, yet at the same time allied with, the main
anarchist movement, the left, and the various struggle-based tendencies (anti-
globalization, anti-racism, Palestinian independence, reparations, police brutality, tenant rights, homelessness, religious freedom/post 9â11, etc) that
call themselves movements. We may do work with individuals and organizations within these circles, but I can almost guarantee that we are a new
breed of activist; a new type of people, based on how we see ourselves, how
we see the rest of the world, and how we see ourselves in the world.
We may agree (or disagree) with some aspects and concepts that are
espoused by the various anarchist/anti-authoritarian groups out there in the
world, or we may (or may not) take positions on other subjects that casual
observers may label âMaoist,â âIslamic,â âChristian,â âIndigenous,â etc. Our
political, cultural, and, for some of us, even our genetic influences are
diverse. Our needs, wants, and desires transcend mere political struggle;
we are outside âthe box.â There are spiritual dimensions to all of this,
regardless of whether we pray to a God (or Gods), donât believe in a God,
or call ourselves âGod.â
The one common ideological thread I saw at the conference with those I
spoke to and the discussions I heard in workshops was that no one was
down with a leadership clique, a messiah or savior leading âthe massesâ to
the promised land, or individuals doing what they pleased with no regard for
others. People were for collective decision-making and the idea of leadership by personal example. I think thatâs what makes us all âanti-authoritarianâ and ârevolutionary.â
Right now, my advice would be for everybody who was at this historic event
to stay in contact with one another. Organize similar APOC affinity groups
in your city. Attend the next conference if you can and bring as many
people as you can. Go to the APOC website ([[http://www.illegalvoices.org/apoc/][www.illegalvoices.org/apoc]])
and review the notes that were posted from the various workshops. Dis-
cuss what happened with other people in your community, especially the
youth. And read this book. Twice. And discuss it in your community.
I feel that the way forward is through all of us, in our own way, making a
conscious effort to contribute to the (r)evolution of popular culture from that
of consumerism and backwardness to that of intelligence and popular
resistance. Many of the artistic types (emcees, spoken word artists, DJs,
etc) are already doing it. This means more networking, this means making
communication between groups and individuals easier. This means building
more bridges between artists, street activists, certified professionals in
various fields, academics, and the âaverageâ brother or sister on the block.
This means being careful not to reinvent oppressive social relationships
(we must get rid of fear, hate, greed, and jealousy in our own heads,
amongst each other, and amongst our respective peoples; all of these
things breed reactionary ideas and actions) since this kills activism and
popular struggle from within, and allows COINTELPRO-type operations to
kill it from without. Out of that will come trust; then tighter, more formal
organizational structures; necessity is the mother of invention, and I
believe this is how it will occur. This is how we will build our power.
Power consists of four main elements: knowledge, wealth, violence and unity.
Together, we possess more than enough knowledge collectively to do great
things; the wealth and unity will come with the proper utilization of the
knowledge we all have. If violence can be avoided, that would be great; but
if our enemies want to box, then we will have to defend ourselves.
To the critics I ask, âIf you canât criticize them while they do not hold state
power, what happens if or when they do have state power and they are
criticized?â This question also applies to any other organization jockeying
for a position of leadership in âthe movementâ; claiming to be a vanguard or
whatever. Are the critics saying that the RCP and/or other organizations
are above criticism? Are the critics saying that they themselves are above
criticism as well?
I agree that criticizing allies or potential allies should be done in a way that
is constructive and doesnât purposely hurt them, but at the time this was
written the RCP was doing things to directly hurt groups and individuals
outside their party, and the movement generally; and either didnât know, or
didnât care, or didnât care to know.
I was under the impression that they didnât care, since conversations
around various issues (some brought up in the pamphlet, some not) with
local RCP members always degenerated into shouting matches, veiled
threats from both sides, routine vandalism upon their bookstore and
occasional violence.
It was to a point where other organizations were calling for âparty disciplineâ
from the national RCP leadership. Some actually attempted to contact the
RCPâs central committee with their concerns. I was one of them. At one
point (around 1997) some black activists ordered them out of the Central
District (a historically Black neighborhood in Seattle) because of how they
treated oppressed people.
I donât know about other cities, but the Seattle RCP behaves considerably
better now. I believe they have a clearer understanding of their role in local
politics and realize that they too cannot afford to be alienated anymore
than any of us already is.
In all reality, that piece was written in the spirit of Maoâs principles of
âunity-criticism-unityâ and âlet 100 flowers bloom, let 100 schools of
thought contend.â And this, despite any personality conflicts that activists
may have with individual RCP cadre, is precisely what happened.
The October 22nd event locally, which was for years exclusively an RCP
event, is now more diverse and powerful. Many activists are still critical of
their overall political line, but they do make an effort to involve as many
people as they can reach out to. They attend all the major political events out
here. They make an effort to encourage people to pack the courtroom for
every police shooting inquest and activist trial, and they sent members to
both of my trials (criminal and civil) around the events of September 1998.
I have no beef with the RCP or its supporters at this time; they know
perfectly well what I think, they know where I stand on important issues,
and what I am willing and capable of doing. They may not like me as a
person, and this could be said for some of the anarchists out here, but Iâm
pretty sure they respect me as activist.
Although the argument could be made that having images of people of
color protesting and speaking out is good, it also comes off as ultra-liberal
and even pimping the images and histories of the oppressed, particularly
when the RCP is against decolonization and other issues.
There is not one white-led organization out there above criticism for racist
practices, no matter how ârevolutionaryâ they claim to be. This one of many
reasons this APOC network exists. Some groups are better than others.
The only way this will change as far as the RCP goes is when the people
of color within the party or those who support the party make that change
occur. I notice that top-down leadership type organizations tend to improve
when the rank and file either leave or force the leadership to leave.
Self-defense has been extremely important in the life of this particular
person of color. My journey in the martial arts began due in large part to
being regularly attacked because of how I look, how I speak, how I used to
dress, how I was a klutz and had asthma, the fact that my dad was not
around, and my mother was white. To this day, there are people who hate
on me for some of the same reasons.
What I teach is more rooted in the real living struggles of the oppressed,
rather than any ideological posturing. Historically, traditional Okinawan
karate was refined in the struggle of peasants against Japanese invaders
and the sell out king who disarmed them in the 1600s. Later, Japanese-
adapted karate was used by some elements of the population against
G.I.s during the U.S. occupation of Japan after World War II.
In this country you have the legacy of the Deacons for Defense, the BPP â
as well as the Brown Berets, Puerto Rican Independence Movement, AIM,
etc â and the Black Liberation Army. Most of them, probably all of them,
taught some form of unarmed self-defense to anyone willing to learn.
And then thereâs the reality of domestic violence; this is something Franz
Fanon actually touched on indirectly when he wrote about how the oppressed will attack each other if they are unable to attack their enemies.
This goes on amongst men and women daily in this country, regardless of
sexual preference. People of color are the targets and victims of violence
more often than white people are; often at the hands of other persons of
color; people who look like us and speak our language(s). Sad, but true.
The reactionaries are light years ahead of the forces of progress on this
subject. There is an entire industry devoted to teaching middle class white
America, both civilians and cops, how to fight back against terrorists, car-
jackers, thugs, serial rapists, etc.
Thankfully, there are small groups of progressive folks like Home Alive in
Seattle and Girl Army in Oakland who teach self-defense in a way that is
not about patriotism, racism, xenophobia, or personality cults around a
fighting style or teacher.
Many of those who are progressive, anarchists in particular, often fail to
deal with âwhat isâ and try to leap directly to âwhat they wish to be.â Some
progressives grew up bourgeois and sheltered, and never have been placed
in a situation where their lives were truly in immediate peril (until they got
involved in radical politics). Or they got their first education in the concept
of self-defense from someone who used the words and the overall concept
to justify targeting them for abuse.
There are still those out there who subscribe to the ideology of âredemptive
suffering,â a pacifist politico-religious doctrine advocated by Bayard Rustin,
Martin Luther King, Jr., and Mahatma Gandhi; that somehow those who do
evil to the most defenseless segments of the population will finally âcome to
their sensesâ or ârepentâ for their sins against humanity because of the willingness of a few nonviolent martyrs to be brutalized. Those who advocate non-violent resistance have been jailed and killed in numbers equal to or greater
than those who (as Malcolm X put it) âstop singing and come out swinging.â
Proclaiming yourself to have sole ownership of the âmoral high groundâ or âthe
truthâ in a situation only leads to alienation from those around you and execution at the hands of your enemies, with help from those around you who are
now alienated from you. Jesus is a prime example.
I believe in self-defense by any means necessary, but what I specialize in
is unarmed self-defense and the use of improvised weapons. In an age of
tighter control on handguns, knives, and specialty blunt force weapons
(sap gloves, brass knuckles, etc) and longer prison sentences for their use
(even if its justified), it makes more sense in my opinion. At the same
time, it is good to be well rounded in the use of tools other than your bare
hands and I study in that direction.
Philosophically, I believe as Gichin Funakoshi (the founder of the Shotokan
style of Karate) did, that âkarate is for the development of character.â If you
can control yourself, then no one else can control you. If you cannot
control yourself, then someone else will control you.
Author and interviewees in alphabetical order
**Ernesto Aguilar** is based in Houston, Texas. He started the Anarchist
People of Color listserv in 2001, and the APOC website shortly thereafter.
He edited Our Culture, Our Resistance and works on the monthly APOC
publication Wildfire. You can reach him at apoc@illegalvoices.org.
**Heather Ajani** recently moved to Houston to focus on community level
organizing amongst people of color and to finish her oral history project,
âBlack Star Rising: People of Color and Resistance in the New Millennium.â Over the past six years, she has written several articles and has
been involved in various forms of organizing around issues such as labor,
immigration, prison support and abolition, and police brutality.
**Ashanti Alston,** presently the Northeast regional coordinator for Critical
Resistance, is a former member of both the Black Panther Party and
Black Liberation Army, and was a political prisoner for over 12 years.
Currently, he is a member of Estacion Libre, a people of color Zapatista
support group, as well as a board member for the Institute for Anarchist
Studies. He also authors the zine Anarchist Panther.
**Walidah Imarisha** is a spoken-word artist (part of the group Good Sista/
Bad Sista) and helped to edit Another World is Possible: Conversations in
a Time of Terror. She works with the crew of AWOL as well. More information on AWOL is at awol.objector.org.
**Tiffany King** lives in Wilmington, Delaware and is currently working with
P.O.W.E.R. People Organized Working to Eradicate Racism
**Victoria Law** has been a self-identified anarchist since she was sixteen.
Since then, she has participated in various collectives and anarchist
endeavors, learned photography, been published on-line and in print, made
zines, traveled overseas and become a mother. She and her daughter will
be visiting her great-grandmotherâs former house in Shanghai in January
2004 between the Western and the Lunar New Years.
**Greg Lewis** writes, âI was born December 2, 1970 to a white mother and
black father. I was raised mostly by my mother. I became politicized largely
due to being targeted for racist violence by white kids in my neighborhood,
along with being on welfare from birth until I was 17. This also helped jump off
my journey in the world of martial arts, starting with boxing. Today, Iâm a
certified personal trainer, karate instructor, and I serve the people as minister
of information for the RBG hip-hop liberation group dred-i.â
**Bruce Little** is an anti-authoritarian of Afrikan descent living in New York
City. He works on technology volunteer projects that are focused on bridging
the Digital Divide. Rivka Gewirtz Little is a New York City-based freelance
journalist, who focuses on issues in criminal justice and urban education.
**soo na** is an activist, student, and writer. She believes in articulation of the
possible, which is desire. In the past, she has organized community
dialogues on women of color and sexual health; worked with the online
website for young women of color and sexual health, MySistahs; and co-
founded the D.C.-based Coalition Against Rape and Re-victimization
(CARR), which first took to the streets on 13 September, 2003.
**Not4Prophet** is with the band Ricanstruction. You can learn more about
Ricanstruction at [[http://www.ricanstruction.net./][www.ricanstruction.net.]]
**Sara Ramirez Galindo** writes, âI was born in the southeastern Mexican
state of Puebla, migrated to the U.S. at the age of 11 and grew up in
Compton, California. I started taking part in leftist political activism &
organizing while in high school. Today Iâm part of the collective at Casa Del
Pueblo Cooperative in Los Angeles. My âformalâ institutional education is
being completed at UC Santa Cruz with a focus in Community Studies and
Latin American Studies; the informal education Iâm learning comes from
everyday people like my family, the CDP collective, and the children,
señoras and señores who make up the Casa Del Pueblo Housing Cooperative, who like me are âsoñadores, seeing, thinking and acting for dignity,
community, âconvivencia,â and autonomy.â
Our Culture, Our Resistance: People of Color Speak Out
on Anarchism, Race, Class and Gender,
First edition, published September 11, 2004
Disclaimer: This work has been edited for typographical errors and
formatting. Authorsâ structure and flow, for the most part, has been left intact,
so to support people of colorâs efforts to speak in their own words as they
wished. This work may not be free from editing faults, however.
Note on what you may have paid for this book: Our Culture, Our
Resistance has been first distributed electronically, with active encouragement that distributors print out their own master copies and share with the
public. The editor has requested distributors charge fairly for the book, as the
authors and the editor are not being paid. Buyers are encouraged to scrutinize what theyâre charged, and whether any profits are being disbursed to
(and to which) movements of people of color. By all means, support independent distributors â and encourage them to support communities of color.
<br>
Over the last decade, Third World peoplesâ movements against globalization, neoliberalism and
related issues have captured the imagination of the world. From the
militancy of street protests to the fight for autonomy advocated by the
Ejércitio Zapatista de Liberación Nacional (EZLN, also known as the
Zapatistas), radical politics led by people of color is quickly evolving. We
are hearing less of old top-down strategies and more about popular
education and grassroots organizing.
A small but growing movement of people of color is developing a new
conversation that advocate anti-authoritarianism and anarchism as solu-
tions to our collective struggle. Such a movement is largely led by youth,
and such advocacy is a departure from the old-guard politics espoused by
revolutionaries of color. Many of these people of color met in October 2003
in Detroit for the first Anarchist People of Color conference. Others con-
tinue to organize, agitate and act to find bottom-up answers to the freedom
movementâs most perplexing questions.
Our Culture, Our Resistance: People of Color Speak Out on Anarchism,
Race, Class and Gender, Volume Two is the continuation of writings by
people of color covering the concepts of anarchism, race, class and
gender. Released simultaneously with Our Culture, Our Resistance, the
purpose of this book is to contribute to the ongoing dialogue among people
of color and others as we strive toward freedom.
ISBN 0-9759518-1-5
Ernesto Aguilar, editor
[[http://www.illegalvoices.org/][www.illegalvoices.org]]
This book is dedicated to people of color around the world and our
just fights for consciousness, justice, land, freedom and liberty. This
volume is also dedicated to the memory of Houston activist Olaniyi
Labinjo and all anarchists of color fighting the good fight everywhere.
Thanks to the authors; to Heather Ajani for tremendous support; to
Erika for her help; and to AK Press for its work, but also for rejecting
this book and inspiring independent people of color publishing.
<br>
*by Victoria Law*
My great-grandfather was the type of man who refused to get out of bed
unless there was breakfast waiting for him. Since he wouldnât get out of
bed to go and work, there was never any breakfast waiting for him. It was a
cycle that did nothing to alleviate the familyâs poverty.
When he grew old enough, his son, my grandfather, left the small village to
seek work in Shanghai. He found it and spent the next year shoveling
manure for a living. He worked his way up to become a jewelerâs apprentice, eventually opening his own jewelry store. He returned home to build
the villageâs largest private house for his mother, who had long endured the
ridicule of her neighbors and acquaintances. When the Communists won
the Civil War, confiscating both the house and the jewelry store, he started
again in Hong Kong, this time with a family of six and a wife who loved the
latest fashion. One year, he held the traditional Chinese New Yearâs party.
It was packed with fellow entrepreneurs. The next year, his business
crashed; their doorway remained empty. The visitors of yesteryear, who
had eaten all his snacks and drank all his liquor, had found more lucrative
families to call upon.
My other grandfather was the unsuccessful owner of a factory that made
burlap bags. Rarely did these bags yield a profit and so my motherâs
strongest childhood memories are of eating salted peanuts one at a time
to make them last. Her younger sister died of hunger. One of her older
sisters had to be given away.
Despite these inauspicious beginnings, both of my parents had attained
middle-class status by the time I was born. They had come to the States
to go to college. Both were the first generation in their families to attend,
let alone graduate, high school. They owned their own home in a predominantly white area in Queens. Both parents worked white-collar office jobs. I
have no childhood memories of material want.
This last fact has been used against me when I bring up race and racism.
There have been more than a few occasions when white anarchists quickly
shift the conversation from my discomfort at being the only non-white face
in the room to class issues. I had a middle-class childhood. How dare I
complain about, or even question, the lack of racial diversity in any given
anarchist project when I have never experienced material deprivation? It
does not matter that I grew up to become a single mother making less
than fifteen thousand a year. The fact that I grew up privileged invalidates
anything I might have to say about discrimination-whether it be based on
race, skin color, gender or even my status as a parent-both in and out of
anarchist circles.
In their attacks on my well-to-do childhood, white anarchists overlook
some deep-rooted cultural differences. For instance, I grew up with a
series of amahs. In pre-1949 China (and in post-Revolution Hong Kong),
Chinese parents rarely cared for their own young. Instead, they turned
them over to amahs, who acted as wet nurses, babysitters and maids.
Most amahs remained with the family until all the children were grown and
continued to maintain close ties with their nurslings. For the poorer
families, like that of my maternal grandfather who could not afford to hire a
woman, the elder children took responsibility for the younger. In earlier
times, the son was married off-at the age of two or three-to a preteenage
girl whose role was more that of surrogate mother than wife.
American culture has nothing that resembles the amah. Wealthier families
may have nannies, which is what I suppose the average American anarchist envisions when I talk about my childhood. Because many of them
have grown up in places that encourage ethnic and cultural segregation
and because Chinese culture discourages unnecessary interaction-
particularly more intimate interaction-with other cultures, they have no
frame of reference for my stories. I am seen as having grown up with the
privilege of having had servants. There is little attempt to probe further into
the culture and understand that amahs, while technically employees of the
household, had more intimate relationships than an American familyâs
maid, cleaning lady or dog walker.
Perhaps this refusal speaks to the internalized notion that only American
heritage and tradition matter. If an experience comes from someplace else,
it doesnât count.
It is not just the differences in culture that cause misunderstanding. What
many self-proclaimed working-class (white) anarchists fail to understand is
that having money did not insulate me from the insults American society
heaps upon its children of color and its girl children. The fact that my parents
held white-collar jobs did not prevent me from encountering grown men who
believed it was within their right to approach a ten-year-old girl and quietly
say, âNice pussy.â My parents owning their own home did not protect me
from other children pulling their eyes sideways and taunting me. Living in a
well-to-do neighborhood did not shield me from the history teacher who looked
at me and the Indian girl in his sixth-grade classroom and said, in all seriousness, âItâs too bad that you come from inferior cultures.â
Such closed-mindedness is not limited to anarchists focused on class
struggle. Although all anarchist groups and projects proclaim, âWe welcome
all who agree with our mission statement, regardless of race, sexual orienta-
tion, etc.,â what many of these groups fail to realize (or perhaps donât care to
realize) is that their mission statements and their ideal visions often fail to
address, or even acknowledge, the very different realities we come from.
Their mission statements may sound good on paper, but often fail to take
into account that many people of color do not feel comfortable in almost all-
white spaces. They refuse to acknowledge that we may have had bad experiences with predominantly white groups both in and out of the anarchist
movement. They refuse to understand that we automatically notice when we
are the only ones in the room. They refuse to comprehend that we are tired of
being touted as the groupâs (sole) member of color, of being accused of being
overly sensitive to skin color or of having our concerns ignored altogether.
They refuse to see that overthrowing the capitalist system will not automatically address the institutional and internalized racism, sexism and other forms of discrimination that we experience every day.
Last winter, I went to a meeting of anarcha-feminists. The flier offered childcare
â a rarity in the anarchist scene. That alone made me hope this would be
different than other meetings and groups Iâd attended in the past. After all, the
organizers, neither of whom were parents, understood the need for childcare.
They might be more open-minded about other issues as well.
After dropping my daughter off in the childcare space, I entered the
meeting room. A circle of chairs had been set up. As the room filled, I
noticed every face except mine was white.
A few years ago, this would not have bothered me. I had entered the
anarchist scene in high school and hadnât cared much about racial diversity or differences. I was just glad that no one made fun of me because I
looked different or acted different or actually cared about what went on in
the world. As I grew older, I began to notice my difference more and more. I
noticed that people sometimes treated me differently, as if they were going
out of their way to welcome the one woman of color and prove that they
were not racist. In high school, I was invited to a Love and Rage meeting.
Love and Rage was a closed collective; more than a few older white
anarchists in the scene were surprised that I, a girl so new to politics, had
been asked to participate while they had been ignored by the group for
years. I arrived to the meeting late. The discussion was going full force.
The topic? How to bring more people of color into the organization.
That day, I was acutely aware I was very unlike the others in the circle. My
discomfort lessened only slightly when another woman of color entered.
Throughout the meeting, I struggled with the prospect of bringing up the
groupâs lack of diversity. I wondered if my concerns would be dismissed or
even ridiculed. I wondered if I would be accused of being divisive or of distracting from the ârealâ issue of womenâs status in the anarchist movement.
At the end of the meeting, as a sign-up sheet was being passed around,
another woman â one with blond hair and blue eyes â saved me the
discomfort. âBefore I agree to be on any sort of listserv or be part of any
kind of network, I want to ask about future outreach. Iâm not interested in
being part of a predominantly white group.â
All eyes divided between darting towards me and towards the other woman
of color on the far end of the room. I was glad that a white woman had
brought up the subject. However, since half the people in the room were
looking at me and no one at all was speaking, I decided to add my
thoughts. âI think the term anarcha-feminist might turn away some women
of color who share the same politics but donât explicitly identify as anarchist. Maybe the next flier can drop the term.â
As I spoke, I remembered past conversations with radical women of color-
women who shared anti-authoritarian ideas and beliefs but who didnât want
to be identified with a movement that they saw as white brick throwers. I
thought about the woman of color who had attended a few different anar-
chist meetings and been turned off by white male anarchistsâ dismissal of
race issues. I thought about the woman of color who had posted the
article, âWhere was the Color in Seattle?â Her concerns had been dismissed as unimportant; what really mattered were class differences. I
thought about the radical women of color who had the perception that
anarchists were either unwashed, smelly white punk kids or white academics. Both had the option of renouncing radical politics and rejoining the
mainstream world. This was what the word anarchist conjured up for them.
Why would they want to get involved with any group that labeled itself that?
There was an uncomfortable pause. After some hemming and hawing, an
organizer suggested perhaps instead of directly trying to reach out to
women of color, this group could do fundraisers and donate the proceeds
to women of color organizations âthat are doing good work.â
I felt as if Iâd been smacked. I wondered if the woman realized how patronizing and racist her suggestion was. In my mind, I could see Charlotte Mason
giving money to the black artists she deemed âprimitiveâ enough. Only, instead of the 1930s heiress who demanded her artists sit at her feet and call
her âGodmother,â these were post-millennium anarchists deciding which
women of color were anti-authoritarian enough to receive their money.
The other organizer had a different suggestion, one which also circumvented the possibility that they would have to reach out to women other
than the same old (white) faces. She suggested that the group work
around issues facing women of color, such as the prison-industrial complex. Although she didnât outright say it, I felt that her suggestion was that
this predominantly white group speak for and act on behalf of women of
color rather than actively trying to get them involved or even find out what
their main concerns were.
Later I learned that one or two of the attendees had felt offended on my
behalf. How dare someone bring up race and the lack of non-white faces
with Vikki sitting right there? Is she blind? Doesnât she realize that Vikki is
a person of color? Is she implying that Asians are not really people of
color? They refused to see her question as anything other than an attack
on me. I tried to explain that I was glad that a white person had broached
the subject because, frankly, I was tired of being the one who always had
to. Instead, I began to understand that many white anarchists are unwilling
to talk about race. They would rather dismiss it as a social construct that
does not apply to anarchists and, thus, ignore the issue altogether.
The next time I saw this woman, I thanked her for bringing up the subject. I
wanted to let her know that I was not angry or offended by her observation.
âYou shouldnât have to always be the one to bring it up,â she stated.
Since then, I have not had a white ally in other projects to pipe up and point
out the obvious. It has fallen to me-the woman of color, often the only woman
of color in the room-to point this out. The responses have ranged from un-
comfortable silences to lukewarm acknowledgments to outrage. Whatever
the tone, the common defense is always, âWe donât discriminate against
people of color.â What is left unsaid is, âSee? We welcome you. Thatâs proof
that we donât discriminate.â
I now understand why so many people of color are wary of working with
whites. When I first encountered the suspicions and wariness of people of
color towards white anarchists, I dismissed their concerns. âHey, theyâre
doing good work,â I defended. âWho cares what color they are?â
I now see that it is not that white anarchists are white. It is that many of them are unwilling to try to understand the needs, concerns and experiences of those with different skin colors.
As an anarchist of color, this disturbs me. I am tired of always being put in
the position of explaining racism and race issues to white anarchists, sexism and gender issues to male (and sometimes female) anarchists, or some
form of discrimination to virtually everyone I encounter. I am tired of the prophecy that in an anarchist society, racism, sexism and all other forms of discrimination will magically cease to exist. Such explanations no longer appease me. Instead, I see them as white anarchistsâ way of not confronting
the problems and issues within our own movement and within themselves.
<br>
*by TomĂĄs Moniz*
It starts with a story:
My grandma, worried that her 3-year son had not spoken a word yet, had
him chase down a grasshopper. Diligently, without complaint, the boy did
and returned with a smile. Open she said; confused and scared, he did.
She shoved it in and closed his mouth. Hablas, mijo, hablas. He spit it out
crying. Crying and yelling. He has not stopped either since, she says, and
smiles thinking of her now 50-year-old son talking his time away in a New
Mexican state penitentiary.
This is not make-believe. This is how we find our voice. This defines our
language.
Here is my story. Or the start of it. My name is Tomas Ignacio Aragon;
everyone calls me Tom. This I know for sure. I come from families of lies, of
stories to deceive you, to deflect discovery. As a bicultural child, I was not
comfortable in nor completely accepted by either side of my families. In
the white world of my working class mother, I was the visible mistake, the
dark stain on the family name. White working class military folk, dealing
with the daughter who runs away to find her place, to save the world in the
late â60s, and comes home struggling to save herself and feed her two year
old son. With her, I was raised to avoid declarations of race, of difference,
trying not to discuss my brown skin and brown hair in a family of blonds
and blue eyes, forgetting my Spanish, speaking English only. I hid my
shame with my silence.
On the Chicano side, I was the product of typical male weakness, the sign
of my fatherâs co-option and ultimate demise by white women come to
save the poor, the natives. He was seduced by her presence, her education, her future. And those things he loved about her, she used to leave him
when he found his place in el pinto, the typical educational facilities for
poor Chicanos in New Mexico. His anger at her transferred in to his
abandonment of me. No letters. No contact. My father running from the
law, running, running, knowing the inside of a cell more than his son.
Wait. This is not a story. This explains nothing, so I create my own
explanations.
I started writing to find my color, saying on paper in black indelible ink what
I couldnât to my classmates, to my first few lovers, to my mother and
members of my own family: I am Mexican. I am white. I am.
âFight one bean you fight the whole burrito.â I remember this saying as a
warning white kids said about fucking with Mexicans in Ventura, California.
I remember the sound that they made on the school bus, slapping hands,
laughing, all building a solidarity of whiteness or non-brown-ness when one
kid calls out âsmells like beansâ as the Mexicans leave the bus, walking
down the aisle. At 15, I couldnât stand it any more. I stood up and hit the
kid in front of me with my backpack breaking my connection to them. I
wanted to be the burrito. I am Mexican; I am not white. But in the end I
was wasnât welcomed. I am the one who had to find trouble rather than it
finding me. It has been the same ever since. I walk the borders of cultures,
the too white to be brown and too brown to be white. Sometimes hassled
by both sides and sometimes passing into each. Sometimes seen as one
of the boys, sometimes the affirmative action product. I enter college
deciding to claim, to rename, to embrace and revel in my contradiction, my
displacement, my ambiguity, my absence of certainty.
MEChistAs in college scoffing about my lack of Spanish and complaint that
meetings were in held only in Spanish. âChale, man. Whatâs up with you?â
Because I was raised by a English speaking white mother. Awkward silence.
My teacher asked why the absence of Mexican American writers in a California literature class bothered me. Because I am one. Awkward silence.
This is the only way I can speak to you. I am an academic and I am not afraid
to talk that talk â the hybrity of myself causes these contradictions that I
embrace like old lovers knowing how to soothe each one, how to excite and
comfort. I was freed in theory and abstraction finding voice in books by Moraga,
Anzaldua. Finding fathers in Acosta, Reechy. Finding heart in the radical
acts of violation and violence like Tijerina at the New Mexican courthouse,
Murrietaâs refusal to bow his head, Los Crudosâ demand for an uncompromising politic, Rage Against the Machineâs connection to difference and abhorrence of authority. I became a bicultural, Chicano with no respect for authority, no time for lazy assumptions about race, culture, politics, class, sexuality. I found myself in the refusal to singularly define myself.
Wait. This is a lie. These words. Stories.
How do I claim myself: how to separate what I feel as a Chicano, as a
male, as a person of privilege. How do you claim anything when you canât
claim the authenticity of your own voice? Remember: speak clearly, be
careful if your pronunciation is off, if your skin fades too pale in the winter,
present you color in your movements, your clothes, your lovers.
In a world that wants singularity, I choose both. In a culture that wants
uniformed sexuality, I choose to embrace bisexuality. In a society that
denies authentic autonomy, I found myself in anti-authoritarian histories, in
the romance of clandestine organizations. I was seduced by the pen and
the gun, by non-monogamist lifestyles, by radical, dissident Chicano
nationalism, by the feminist rhetoric to reclaim our selves, our lives, our
sex, our religion, our consciousness. This has defined me and hurt me. I
tend to be the problem, the one who asks too many questions, who is
never comfortable with the way it is. With the way I am.
But now I refuse to be silent or shameful or half-hearted. I tried to avoid it for
a while, but if I wanted to find and meet other anarchists in the East Bay, I
needed to go to the Long Haul, an anarchist infoshop in Berkeley. So I took
a deep breath, opened the door and entered, trying to free myself of my
previous feelings, my stereotypes, my love and hate for the anarchist com-
munity; and yes, I know it ainât one homogeneous thing, but regardless, my
experiences with it have been fraught with good olâ revolutionary angst.
Let me explain.
I have never been into the punk scene, I am not white, I became a father at
20 and had to think about changing diapers, not just about changing social
structures. I remember being chastised by someone trying to get us to go
up one summer to the logging protests and when I reminded him of my
responsibilities, he snapped back: âwhat was more important.â I wanted to
punch him, to make him see his ignorance, the elitism of privilege, the
typical dismissal of people with children, with jobs to pay for food and rent.
Yet, this has happened over and over. Meetings at 6 p.m. or reading my
child a bed time story? How to choose? It felt as if I could never fully
commit, never be as dedicated as the people I met â mostly younger,
white, students, who were mobile, who could survive on a fluctuating
income. Now there is nothing wrong with this, but this was not me, not my
experience, not my culture. But I knew that the anarchist views more
closely resembled my views about how life could be lived than anything
else, so I tried as much as I could to find that community. I brought my
kids to meetings; I swapped childcare with other parents on my block (a
nice way of realizing it truly does take a neighborhood to raise a child). I
tried to figure out how to balance riding bikes with my kids around the
block versus riding in critical mass, which is right at dinner time.
I realized I needed the anarchist community after years of trying to compartmentalize the seemingly disparate aspects of my life â the non-monogamist, the self-schooling parent, the activist, the Chicano academic,
the fuck-the-police poet. But how I got to this point is another story. Is in
fact many stories.
Let me start at the beginning. I began noticing the glaring discrepancies in
my life; I grew up on hip-hop and could see it being co-opted into cheap
fronting and frivolity. This was not the community I was a part of, dressed
in hand-me-downs and learning to break on ripped up sections of linoleum.
I simply couldnât handle the growing consumerism, the value placed on
objects, after having lived in poverty, after scoffing at and detesting the
symbols of wealth for so long (yes, out of envy and jealousy at the time
perhaps). Yet, I desperately needed to believe in the anti-authoritarian
politics of NWA, Public Enemy, Freestyle Fellowship and others, for I was
not hearing it from anyone else nor in any other way that spoke to me.
It continued in undergraduate classrooms in which I was appalled at the
refusal to engage in anything but what was deemed âpractical and possible
realties.â After being told that Republicans and Democrats held the only
legitimate and viable worldviews, I wondered how the hometowns I grew up
in â Las Vegas, New Mexico, Kailua, Hawaii, Ventura, California â were
included in anything we discussed. How did these âviableâ political choices
account for the poverty, the single mothers, the drugs, the lack of choices
available? There had to be another way. And when I did make my way to
an anarchist study group. I seethed at peopleâs unwillingness to even
attempt to connect anarchy with issues of race and privilege. There had to
be other ways. Other places. Others.
So I retreated for a while into my own experiences, creating and nurturing a
lifestyle that embodied the values I couldnât find elsewhere. I found connections with my imprisoned father and prison issues that introduced me to
Attica, to my fatherâs penitentiary, to political prisoners. I reveled in becoming a father and was soon horrified as disciplined behavior became the
primary learning objective in my sonâs school. What could I do, where to
turn? I refused to participate in the privilege of private schooling so that was
out. And then I found The Teenage Liberation Handbook, and we created
our autonomy, but struggled to connect with others who chose to
homeschool for reasons of liberation rather than Christian bullshit and
racist, classist fears about public education. Where were the other parents? People fuck, so I know people reproduce.
Moving to the East Bay from the city did help me meet more people with
similar values. While attempting to create a relationship based on free
choice rather than social coercion, my partner and I met another young
parent questioning the rigid social definitions of what relationships could
be. With the inspiration from Emma Goldman and the practical advice from
The Ethical Slut, we began to embrace non-monogamist freedom to
explore our own sexuality, our growing identities, our interests. But even
here we felt out of place: we werenât 50-year-old hippies reminiscing about
free love, nor were we new age converts trying to fuck while rubbing
crystals and engaging in tantric poses. We were in our late twenties, we
were looking for others more like us.
All these interests and choices of my life culminated in the tear gas of
Seattle. Studying globalism as an advisor to student clubs on the campus
I taught at, we decided to participate in the WTO protests, not realizing the
dramatic and liberating events that we would be a part of.
So after the smoke cleared from Seattle and then DC and then Quebec, I
realized that I could no longer chase the revolution, that I could no longer
compartmentalize the different aspects of my life. I needed a way to
synthesize them all. After ten years of making half-hearted attempts to
connect with people who looked and lived so differently it seemed than me,
I decided to toss aside my ego, my attitude, and my fears and both find
and help create the community I wanted.
In the three years since I have made this commitment to be involved in the
anarchist community, I have met some powerful and inspirational people; I
have learned to see that resisting the oppressive and seemingly
undefeatable social world we live in can be practiced in so many minute,
marvelous and meaningful ways â in fucking, in gardening, in punk, in
slumming it, in cooking. Perhaps even in crystals. Iâve been a part of RACE
(Revolutionary Anarchists of Color), been to and participated in the anarchist conference, started a zine, boxcutter, with a few others to explore
aspects of personal liberation. I even staff a shift now at the Long Haul.
With each step I try to bring my stories and my experiences with me. I
want to be a part of something that combines theory and praxis, that can
talk the talk and walk the walk, I want to work with people that I can learn
from, that inspire me in my own efforts of teaching, parenting, living my
daily life. I want to try and fail rather than remain safe in stasis. And yet, at
times I still feel like an outsider to the radical/anarchist community. But
now I know that I am apart of it, and so I have a responsibility to it, to help
shape it. I am writing to engage myself in this process that will force me to
embrace more of it, to be more involved in it, and to welcome other people
like me â marginalized from the mainstream, yet not quite the typical
anarchist â to join this discussion. I know many more people are out there,
many more stories, and I hope we can start sharing them.
Anarchy is the radical approach to life of not simply living a fair equal and
free life for yourself, but making the connection and working for the liberation and equality of everyone. It is anti-authoritarian; it is non-coercive; it is
based on the principles of active involvement, of direct action, of a radical
faith in diversity. Now this doesnât imply that the struggles of all communities are equal. Therefore, it is imperative to recognize, within ourselves
individually and within our individual cultures, the points of privilege we may
have access to and benefit from. It is crucial in anarchist thinking to
understand the workings of white privilege, male privilege, heterosexual
privilege and so on, and to work to destroy these forces. And one of the
first things to realize is that the state in all its aberrations must go. We
need to radically imagine new ways to relate to each other within communities of our devising â until then, police will always be an abusive presence of control and white privilege, behavior will only be tolerated that
works to reinforce the status quo.
I am tired of anarchist thinking that only serves intellectual exercises and
academic notions of social discourse and I fear generally white male punk
violent angst against private property that serves only the transitory
pleasure of the actor while serving to marginalize poor communities and
heighten the repression of difference by condoned state terrorists â the
cops. I also am tired of isolated individual anarchist practices that serve
only the development and liberation of the individual who has access to
and time for these pursuits such as veganism, voluntary simplicity and
conscious social marginalization. There is another way.
People of color and the anarchist tradition are now set to revitalize that. I
came to anarchy through sex and Seattle; and now that Iâm here, now that
Iâve plundered my way through the âclassical or canonicalâ texts (how ironic
that so many fight for these labels as if this provides some authority to
these anti-authoritarian texts), Iâve come to fuck it up, to shake it down and
push it forward into the multicultural, diverse pedagogically flexible revolutionary philosophy it is. No longer will I be told that real anarchy is not
related to struggles for national liberation, not about the praxis of living a
life defined by radical honesty and trust, not about coalitions and communication.
For me anarchy must be linked to the individual only in relation to the
communal, whether that community is lovers, or family, or children, or
employers, or neighbors.
I cannot separate my political growth from my personal growth. Nor will I
even try. I knew there must be something out there, something to validate
what my partner and I felt but could not articulate â that true commitment,
true respect and love was not linked to ownership, possession, fear, and
distrust. After years of working hard to âmake it,â to be successful, good,
liberal citizens, we looked around and realized there must be more than
what we have been striving so hard for,. We rejected marriage, but were
unable to articulate a philosophical reason yet, we had kids, but refused to
become the conservative self-centered parents we saw other new mothers
and fathers becoming, we were political in all the condoned ways â liberal
Democrat, wanting taxes to go to public schools and senior centers.
All wasnât perfect; we each wanted things, but we wanted to be together,
we each had attractions to other s but know it was wrong, we each
understood that after working so hard raising three kids, a few years away
from out thirties, that we had to change something or choose this path
forever. And then came Emma and Andee.
Emma Goldman hit us like a ton of bricks â non-monogamy, freedom to do
and love who you want, to choose to be together rather than to have to be
together. The essays spoke deeply to our own unspoken philosophy.
Let me tell you a story:
At 20, I hitchhiked from Las Vegas, New Mexico down the highway to see
my father face to face. To try to find some answers. He tells me he fucked up.
He should be out there with me, working with me, living life with me. Because, he says, I realized Iâm a slave in here. And now I can only fight against
other slaves. Out there, when I realized I was a slave, I coulda done something, I coulda fought back at least. Somehow. In here, itâs just fucked up.
My father explained that in jail, pencils are like daggers, you can write and
you can stab. âMira, â he points to his arm, âhere are the pencil tips that I
cannot get out.â
This is not a metaphor. This is a warning.
<br>
*by Puck*
Abortion is not and has never been only a âwhite issue.â Although few
people today realize it, women of color have been involved from the very
beginning. Women of color have played and continue to play a crucial part
organizing for and shaping the struggle for reproductive freedom in the US.
Who Gets Abortions?
Currently, Latinas are two times as likely as white women to have an
abortion; black women are three times as likely. Black women obtain 24
percent of abortions in the US. Indeed, polls show that over 80 percent of
African Americans support family planning, yet few are members of the
prominent reproductive rights organizations.
Why? A look into our recent past shows that people of color have valid
reasons to suspect the motives of predominantly white groups advocating
for the single issue of abortion rights.
During the last century, the pro-choice movement, or the family planning
movement, often dismissed or ignored concerns of women of color when
they werenât problems for white women as well. Devastatingly, the reproductive rights movement of the past at times allied with eugenicists and
other white supremacists in opportunistic political coalitions meant to
further the abortion rights movement.
Being pro-choice or a feminist today means having to acknowledge and
transcend the racist legacy of collaborations between white feminists,
conservatives and eugenicists who shared common ground on parts of the
abortion issue. How we fight for reproductive freedom today must be
informed by the reality that for many women of color, abortion is just one
fight in a larger struggle of class and racial oppression. Unlike for some
white or middle class women, the lack of access to reproductive freedom
that many women of color face has more to do with the limitations placed
upon them by their ethnic and class background than by the actual legal
status of abortion or geographic availability of abortion clinics.
Early on, the Black community saw reproductive control as being an
essential key to liberation, and they have fought for it since the times of
slavery. Black women have been underground providers of safe and
affordable abortions. Later, African American women organized with other
women of color and brought tens of thousands to participate in rallies
demanding an end to forced sterilizations.
Then and now, many feminists of color challenged white feminists who
framed abortion rights as a womanâs issue that was unconnected to other
social injustices.
As Black feminist and activist, Loretta J. Ross explains:
Many Black women still do not see abortion rights as a
stepping stone to freedom because abortion rights do not
automatically end the oppression of Black women.
Sadly, the vital participation and intellect brought to the reproductive rights
movement by women of color are noticeably absent from many white
feminist accounts of history.
Until recently, mainstream and preeminent pro-choice organizations have
promoted a narrow view of reproductive liberty that focuses on the âright to
chooseâ abortion. This can come across as sounding trivial and
consumeristic. The language of abortion rights politics can also be culturally insensitive and alienating to recent immigrants and women who come
from religious backgrounds- even those who support and get abortions.
Women of color have also been subjected to controlling and coercive
reproductive policies and, as a result, many continue to distrust public
health services and are more apt to view family planning programs with
apprehension.
As Brenda Romney, an African American activist, explained:
âWhen our children were [white menâs] property, we were
encouraged to have children. When our children are ours,
we are not worthy parents. Those are the messages, the
background and the context of health care in general.
This is some of what Black women bring with them when they seek health
care information or abortion services.â
Therefore, many women of color feel that it is more central to their needs
to demand for economic justice and healthcare- including reproductive
rights- instead of focusing on the aspects of âchoiceâ and availability
regarding abortion and birth control.
Abortion was not openly discussed in the Black community because other survival issues were key.
â Lois Smith, an African American member of the Jane collective (a collective that provided safe and sliding scale abortions before Roe v. Wade passed)
Eugenicists promote the idea that essentialist traits such as intelligence
and criminality are biologically determined and can thus be eliminated or
emphasized through the selective breeding or elimination of âpureâ races.
The ideology of eugenics became applied public health policy in the U.S.
during the 1960s and â70s. Industrial tycoons like the Rockefeller family
funded it; prestigious universities studied it, and governors introduced
legislation proposing the compulsory sterilization of Native American, black
and poor women in order to âfight the war on poverty.â In truth, these
policies were aimed at decreasing the explosive political potential of
minority populations and pacifying white fears of social unrest during a
time of increasing militancy in the struggle for civil rights.
During the 1960s, family planning services became accessible for large
numbers of poor women of color through federally subsidized programs like
Medicaid. Although this was seen by most feminists as a victory, on the
flip side, the government also began coercing Native American and black
women on public assistance into getting State-sponsored hysterectomies
by threatening to revoke their welfare benefits if they refused.
During the 1970s, it is estimated that up to 60,000 Native American
women and some men were sterilized. Indian Health Service had a âcaptive
clientele,â since Native women often lacked access to services other than
those paternalistic public ones located on reservations. In 1975, for every
seven babies born, one woman was being sterilized. Shockingly, the IHS
sterilization campaign was paid for entirely with federal funding.
Puerto Rican women were also sterilized at astronomical rates by U.S. tax
dollars. During the same time, several Mexican American women were sterilized at a County hospital without much explanation or information. A national fertility study conducted by Princeton University found that 20 percent
of all married African-American women had been sterilized by 1970.
Given that experience, it is no surprise that in the communities of color
targeted by government-controlled depopulation programs, birth control and
abortion were equated with genocide for years to come. Many poor women
of color felt that they had been âtrackedâ toward sterilization and were
outraged at having been denied the opportunity to have children in numbers
of their choosing.
âWhile birth control was demanded as a right and an option for privileged
women, it became an obligation for the poor,â Ross recalled.
When women of color organized successfully for laws requiring the
âinformed consentâ of patients undergoing hysterectomies in an effort to
cut down on forced sterilizations, they had to so often without support from
mainstream white abortion rights groups- who were then too obsessed with
their own narrow self-interest to see the broader feminist struggle at hand.
Access to abortion and birth control do not exist free of social values.
White people of all political motivations have supported abortion when it
suited their interests and set the stage for years of racial tension and
mistrust in the arena of reproductive rights policy. Today, eugenic ideas like
âoverpopulationâ and biological determinism continue to influence public
health and social policies that blame poverty, crime and pollution on the
rising population growth of brown and black people- ignoring the root
causes of social ills: unequal distribution of resources in a society deeply
segregated by white supremacy.
A recent example of this phenomenon was the Norplant controversy during
the 1990s. Norplant is unusual because it is a contraceptive that is 99
percent effective and can last up to 5 years after its initial administration.
However, it requires the insertion of six matchstick-sized capsules under
the skin of a womanâs forearm. Although Norplant is expensive and can
cause negative side effects including depression and irregular, heavy
bleeding, public subsidies covered the costs for many poor women of color.
Politicians framed the initial cost as an expenditure that could save
millions of dollars nationally in the welfare costs it would take to raise the
children of âirresponsible women.â
Several states wanted to require mothers on welfare to use it as a condi-
tion of receiving their benefits. Debates ensued in the national media: âCan
Norplant Reduce the Underclass?â
Commonly, women who suffered negative side effects and asked for their
Norplants to be removed were denied and had to endure paternalistic,
bureaucratic and controlling service providers.
During the 1980s, feminists of color clamored louder than ever to be heard.
Women of color gained in numbers as well as prominence within mainstream pro-choice organizations, and some assumed leadership positions.
Reproductive rights groups put more energy into reaching out to people of
color. Health activists of color broke through the âconspiracy of silenceâ
surrounding abortion in their communities, framing reproductive rights as a
human rights and healthcare issue. The first âMarch for Womenâs Livesâ
was organized in 1986. Ross, who worked with the National Organization
for Women (NOW), was employed to find organizations of women of color
to endorse this first national march dedicated to abortion rights. She
reflects on the changes in the years since:
In 1986 Black women were skeptical about joining a
march for abortion rights sponsored by what was per-
ceived as a white womanâs organization. Although all the
leaders of the Black womenâs organizations I contacted
privately supported abortion rights, many perceived the
issue as marginal, too controversial, or to âwhite.â
By 1987 NOW was responding more clearly to the voices
of women of color.
By 1986, the annual march was endorsed by 107 organizations of women of color, and by 1989, âmore than 2,000 women came together to form the largest delegation ever
[at the time] of women of color to support abortion rights.
Women of color were responsible for expanding the focus of the abortion
rights movement. Their influence can be found in the shifting language
used by mainstream groups â from one centered around abortion to one
emphasizing reproductive rights. The work women of color had been doing
all along in their communities to support reproductive freedom slowly
began to be recognized and at times supported by mainstream feminist
groups. Most importantly though, women healthcare activists of color
continued to push for more and more justice- for more social justice in the
pro-choice movement and more feminism in their communities.
Here in the year 2004, at the eighth March for Womenâs lives, letâs reflect
on the mistakes of the past and the injustices of the present. We still have
a long way to go. Let us constantly strive to bring about more instances for
increasing numbers of people to experience self-determination, true
democracy and justice in their lives. We must not let our vision of liberation
be obscured by political compromises that promise only a few of us
legitimacy and victory. We must all be free simultaneously, or none of us
can truly be free.
<br>
*by Suneel Mubayi*
I see it all around me in my neighborhood â the people who I claim to be
fighting for; the people whose oppression fuels part of me; the people
whose rights I want increased. The young people I want to join in struggling
with, to ally. But wait, thereâs something wrong. I donât see them struggling;
I see them conforming. They have no meaning or idea of what oppression
is, even though theyâre enacting it and internalizing it in public.
Every time I walk past them, theyâre loitering on the streets, on street
corners, on the bumpers of cars, in clusters, like gangs. They look at me
with my pale skin, smooth, silky dark hair, colorful clothing and piercings
and give me long stares. They hoot and catcall at me. Sissy-ass white/
honky fag wanderinâ in the wrong âhood. They have no notion or idea of âthe
struggleâ or âthe movement.â For them, politics means whoâs the best
gangsta on the block; whoâs got the coolest clothes and chains; the most
money and pussy.
A few weeks back, I walked into this Russian-run jewelry/piercing place on
Broadway and 145th to get a third piercing on my ears. The guys who run
the place, two slightly built, pale Russians, have already exoticized me in
my previous visits by directly associating me to the Kama Sutra and
wanting to know whether I have a copy, only because I say Iâm from India,
even though according to them I donât look it. Once you say youâre from
somewhere else, thatâs all that matters. These guys basically make a
living by pawning and selling jewelry to the aspiring young would-be
gangstas of the neighborhood, apparently ripping most of them off and
cheating in the process. Their mannerisms are very deliberate, exaggerated, and put-on, from the constant use of âmy brotherâ to the gangsta
embrace and the hand on the heart. Of course, they deal with even their
most trusted customers through bulletproof glass and an entrance door
that must be buzzed to open. So anyway, as I was getting my piercings
done, which were $10, there were other customers negotiating the price of
gaudy gold chains in thousands of dollars, in a community where I wonder
who can genuinely afford that. In walk in a group of young teenagers,
mixed sexes, but definitely in their younger teens. They all crowd around a
showcase to my left that has more gold chains displayed and one of them
starts exclaiming, âOh, man! Thatâs gangsta! Thatâs gangsta!â So few
words, yet revealing so much. Obviously, theyâve learned from somewhere
or someone at a very young age, that being a gangsta is something to look
up to, aspire and revere. I wanted to scream at them, shake them and tell
them how they were perpetuating their own oppression and how the
establishment wants them to be gangstas precisely so that it can lock
them up in jail for the rest of their adult lives. But something stopped me;
something said, theyâll have no idea what youâre talking about, theyâll laugh
at you; look at how theyâre already giving you weird looks with your long
hair, multicolored clothes and multiple piercings. All these feelings and
signals leave me heartbroken and not knowing what to do to help the
people I claim to be fighting for.
Please. This is not some pissed-off white liberal guilt. Neither is this an
attempt to say that minority folks, particularly Blacks and Latinos, have
themselves to blame for the oppression they suffer. This is not some
grandiose attempt to generalize and categorize every youth in Harlem.
These are just observations I make, walking to and from home, every day.
Even though Iâve been living here for more than a year, I hardly know
anyone even in my own building, other than polite greetings. But when Iâm
walking around outside, or doing stuff within the building like laundry, even
if I donât interact, Iâm always observing. My eyes and ears are always
perked. I guess little pitchers have big ears, right?)
The youth I describe, again, do not represent a gross generalization that the
reader might think Iâm attempting to make. What they do represent is the
visible face of the youth of their community, what an âoutsider,â whoâs not âinâ
or âdownâ with them might see as (s)he walks or drives through the neighborhood. The fact that they do represent the visible face is something very important, especially for all the youth of the community who arenât so visible.
They portray variations of what is commonly known in American popular
culture as the gangsta mentality. If they do not seem to quite succeed at
it, they certainly do not have any lack of aspiration or enthusiasm to
become gangstas. Here is the point that must be made â their visibility
has everything to do with their aspirations to gangstahood.
These youth are visible and become the de facto representatives of young
Harlem because American popular culture, the mass media, and the establishment have made the gangsta identity. They have created it, seizing on
certain alternative politico-cultural trends in the African/Latin-American communities and forging this identity of the gangsta, simultaneously elevating it
on a very high pedestal, one that is near impossible to reach for the youth it
calls to. They have then made it acceptable for this identity to be portrayed in
their own channels as being representative of all minority urban youth. So
one channel is spewing lyrics and images glorifying murder, rape, drug dealing, looting and lavish wealth as somehow being the only path to success for
these youth; another channel is simultaneously reporting how âgangsta rapâ
is encouraging violent and delinquent behavior amongst these very same
youth, and the apparently pressing need to âcrack downâ and âget toughâ
with these kids. It wouldnât be uncommon for these channels to have common owners, stockholders, financiers, backers and investors. But what is
the effect it is having on these kids? On one hand, they are constantly told
that the only way they can be successful in life is to become a gangsta or a
gangstaâs bitch; on the other hand, as they become more and more deeply
immersed into this culture, the very same establishment starts enforcing
draconian laws and regulations on them, and criminalizes them without ever
trying to show them that one can be successful and happy in life without
being either a gangsta or Colin Powell. The cops and the judges will listen to
our whining and tell us they donât criminalize the kids; they are already criminals and need to be dealt with before they get out of hand. The news producers, MTV execs, rap artists and
record producers, etc will tell us
theyâre just doing whatever
makes the most money for them
for the longest time.
The result is that the kids who
are perpetually loitering outside
are objects or pawns being kicked
around in a power game, seen as
criminals in the eyes of the rest
of the world. One never sees any
cops stopping and telling these
kids to go buy a book, or guide
them toward more meaningful social interactions, or just talk to
them. One neither sees any cops
ordering them to disperse immediately, even though there are âNo Loiteringâ
signs in bold around most buildings. This isnât a coincidence. They are allowed to loiter perpetually and hang around, so that they can self-affirm their
identity as gangstas to the cops, who will then trawl the streets in their police
cars and go around âbustingâ random people, subjecting them to humiliating
searches and arrests in public on mere suspicion of behavior or activity associated with the gangsta mentality. The same cops will then go home and find
their kids being drawn to the same thing.
And what about the faceless masses, those youth who refuse to accept
this manufactured criminalization that looks so cool, who refuse to conform? We must remember that thereâs no black and white, no two distinct
groups here necessarily, but shades. There could be kids in the gangs who
long not to be there, who long to be productive, creative, and successful,
but are just afraid of the backlash by the cool ones for daring to be different. There could be kids forcibly kept at home by paranoid, scared parents
who donât want to see them spend the rest of their lives in jail under racist
Rockefeller drug laws, who are nevertheless blinded by the gangsta
illusion. And then, somewhere, are my crowd â the friends Iâve never met,
but whom I talk to all the time.
I hope my Black and Latino friends and comrades, especially those in
Harlem, will read this and try to understand my perspective. I hope they
will understand that Iâm not being racist here and not at all attempting to
stigmatize. I am trying to find reasons for the perceived image of young
people of their communities in popular culture as being unreformable
delinquents and criminals; why that path looks so seemingly attractive and
how it has so much to do with what the media and the establishment
creates; what it says is OK and what it says isnât; how it can say both
about one thing simultaneously for its advantage and to oppress. I hope
these comrades will give me their feedback and point out any places Iâm
incorrect or going wrong. I will be the happiest of all if my analyses based
on my own perceptions are proved to be categorically wrong and incorrect.
If they are, it shows the media and the pigs havenât got to absolutely
everybody. If they arenât wrong, then Iâm afraid that we as far left radical
people of color, have a hell of a lot of work to do, and as our respected
Anarchist Panther comrade says, a lot of painful growing, learning and
changing ahead as well.
I what? You what? Feeling lonely? Trying hard to find polemical analysis to
figure out why youâre feeling lonely in a suite with 9 other people? The
closer you are to them, the more isolated you feel?! How does that make
sense? Me, the seasoned New Yorker with all the older friends, the older
ladies, suddenly on campus and with her (I will stubbornly use the pronoun
of my choice) age group â feels lonely. Feels jealous as she sees clumps
of excited, giggling happy teenagers walking, no bouncing, past her. It
acutely touches on that nerve that has always been so sensitive inside
you, babe, that nerve that holds companionship and abandonment and
friendship and partnership. You know inside you that youâre years more
mature than them, that you made not just a fist of it alone in Harlem for a
year, but a stable home.
Are the most brilliant of us destined to be alone? Why does everyone
seem to have bosom buddies already that theyâre hanging out with all the
time? It touches on all those memories that can never be erased, the
memories of abuse before awakening, through suffering, when as a
frightened little girl inside a boyâs body who understood things too well for
her own good, you looked around you and everyone seemed to be coping,
everyone seemed to be stable and connected to each other except you.
You established yourself in a world outside of this gated campus when this
gated campus seemed to big and complicated a world for you. And you
never knew then that in a year, you would be a blooming, beautiful flower of
a boy-girl becoming man-woman in the infinitely bigger world of the whole
city. Youâve combated racism both inside and outside of you, expunged the
colonialism and casteism from within, and not so politely alerted the rest of
the world of much of the same present in it. You found out about
Orientalism and Eurocentrism and dealt with those, no sweat. Those are
serious characteristics in oneâs mindset to deal with, babe, and you did it
with no problems.
You learned the hard way how to deal with problems that manifest themselves in the form of people. From the racists to the establishment pigs, to
the infatuations to people who needed to be avoided but tempted you so
much. The people who hurt you when they wanted to nourish you; the
people who broke your heart and nearly broke your spirit. But nothing
broke you. You realized that there is no heteronormative idea of a woman â
that you were the woman who broke that notion that occupied your mind â
you made yourself the woman who can be smooth and sensitive and soft,
and at the same time, tough as nails and durable through the roughest
weather. You broke the barriers that heteronormativity had set up between
male and female, masculine and feminine, and showed by your own
example that there could be the woman who could fight for herself without
losing any of her femininity.
Now suddenly, you feel small, young, and fragile again. The thought of
classes tomorrow and a schedule scares you and makes you feel weak,
when the racist pigs of the NYPD couldnât do that after even having you
cornered and alone. Itâs just the memories, babe, itâs just the memories of
when you were young. In recalling, you regress into the past, leave the
present and thatâs why you start feeling crumbly again, because the little
boy-girl lives in you only as a memory, not as a current and tangible reality.
That makes it a little more scary and harder to grasp, but it being a
memory as opposed to an existing identity makes you safe from vulnerabilities, but you are not that person anymore, so that little child will not
think for you, and its weaknesses will never affect you. Definitely, you will
get upset when you think of how much you suffered as him/her, and the
memories will be vivid and frightening like nightmares, but you will never be
her ever again. Sometime, when I feel like it, when I feel ready, I will write
in detail and specifics about my suffering. The incidents, from the earliest
to the latest to the ongoing; the abusers and predators (with special
mention to brainless children in all the schools I was put in and the bitch
who appointed herself as my mother/colonizer); the mistakes I made; and
all the trauma I went through. Itâs too much right now â the thought of
delving so deep into the filthy muck makes me shake and unable to type.
People tell me come on, Suneel, everyoneâs suffered, everyoneâs been hurt,
and so, and therefore, thereâs nothing special about your pain and your
pain. Wrong. There are people out there whoâd have suffered less than me,
more than me, or as much, in similar ways or different. But the fact that I
choose to express them, the fact that I have the ability to write about them
like this, analyze them, and not just stuff them under my exterior until I
explode and injure everyone around me, like I see most others do, is
special. And if others choose to do so as well, then thatâs special too.
Donât believe what the capitalists and the pigs and the wolves tell you.
There is room enough on this earth for all of us to be happy, successful,
well off, and well known. Because if we all know each other, and understand each other, weâll all be famous and weâll all feel weâre getting enough
attention from each other. And there is no such thing as the human face of
socialism, because socialism is all human, all one hundred percent of it,
and anyone who thinks otherwise and still calls themselves a socialist are
only living a more contrived and subtle version of machismo and militarism.
I didnât mean for this to touch so much on my sexuality, and my sexual
awakening, but it is so present in everything I think and do, from my daily
existence to my radicalism and sociopolitical thought to the way I relate
with friends and with lovers too.
Iâve endured the taunts and the doubts. My dad telling me that feeling like
Iâm a woman inside is just another source of confusion, and that Iâd do
better with less confusion in my life. Wrong, dad. Iâd do worse if I tried to
be something I know I wouldnât be happy being. The worst combination of
my grandmother and my stepmother telling me that with my current
identity, straight girls would be turned off because they want men, gay men
likewise, and lesbians too because they want women who have womenâs
bodies (I might still have one yet!), and that Iâm sexually frustrated! Turns
out she doesnât know all the girls out there. My womanhood endures.
Often Iâm plagued by self-doubt â am I doing this just to attract attention? Am
I taking being a stage-whore too far off the stage? I answered it myself when
I expressed these doubts to my friend Erica (thank god for her) and she
asked me the most fundamental question of all: what does being a woman
mean to you? I thought for a few moments and answered: being a woman
means simply that. Being a woman. Itâs a feeling, a sense thatâs hard to
express in words, because to me, being a woman means having an identity
that is feminine, but without any preconceived notions, ideas, or mindsets
about what a woman is or what a woman should be. In any sense, be it in
terms of looks, actions, habits, social roles, or anything else. Everybody
feels like there is some kind of âidealâ man and an âidealâ woman too. Well I
reject that. I am a woman with no conditions and no strings attached. And no
presumptions too. You may find me rather androgynous, deviant, and
genderbending. I like to dress up, be pierced, and be âeffeminateâ or âgirly.â But
those are just tastes and habits, like preferring cookies ân cream above butter
pecan and not to be confused with my sexual identity and preferences. Yes,
I am all those things, or rather, I possess all those qualities. But I claim the
right to choose my ultimate sexual identity beyond my traits, looks, qualities
and features, even if it is different from the sexual organs I possess. And
whether thatâs feminine or hermaphrodite or my desired blend of masculine
and feminine is my choice. You can love it, be OK with it, be uncomfortable
with it, be revolted by it, or leave it. But itâs my choice. Being a woman means
being a woman.
So just ride through the fear and the sense of isolation, babe. Youâve
settled in a world much bigger than this. And nobody says you have to
settle here. Just like dad (thank god for him too) said, youâre not here to
socialize, youâre here for an education. And those who party nonstop and
think theyâre being really bad/causing lots of trouble donât know that theyâre
playing the exact moronic role that the system wants them to. You and
your friends know what causing real trouble means. And you know itâs a
good thing, something to be proud of, feel noble and just about. Look
beyond the social butterflies and the people who pretend so much that
theyâre just pretenses of themselves. Youâre about to grasp knowledge,
analysis, understanding, and ability. And with it will come your destiny,
and the revolution.
<br>
*by Ewuare Osayande*
The following is the edited transcript of the keynote address given at The
Climate Control Conference, February 21, 2004, Harvard University,
Cambridge, MA.
Since we are dealing with the question of environmentalism I thought it
might be appropriate to introduce my sharing with you by quoting from the
most celebrated scientist of the previous century, being that environmental-
ism relies heavily on science. The person being Albert Einstein who
himself was not just concerned with theories of relativity but was a committed socialist and used his popularity and influence to speak out against
oppression. He says, âA human being is a part of the whole, called by us â
universe. A part limited in time and space where we experience ourselves,
our thoughts and feelings as something separated from the rest, a kind of
optical delusion of our consciousness. This delusion is a kind of prison for
us restricting us to our personal desires into affection for a few persons
nearest to us. Our task must be to free ourselves from this prison by
widening our circle of compassion to embrace all living creatures in the
whole of nature in its beauty.â
The struggle on the part of the environmental movement is the struggle to
free itself from that delusion that separates itself from the rest of the
struggles against oppression on the planet, as well as the rest of the
planet itself. This optical delusion, this way of viewing the world through
rather white, western and elitist eyes ⊠this is more than a call for inclusion. It is a call for making the movement contextually aligned with the
ideology and the ideologies of oppressed peoplesâ struggles for liberation.
There is a profound reluctance on the part of activists in the environmental
movement to embrace a social justice platform that is accountable to the
lived reality of people of color worldwide who live in poverty and under oppression due to the legacy of European colonialism and American imperialism.
According to the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and the
World Health Organization, Global warming is already responsible for the
deaths of some 160,00 persons a year already. The study concluded that
children in developing countries are the most vulnerable to the impact of
global warming. So here at the outset of our conversation I want to make it
clear that we are already dealing with a circumstance that the environmen-
tal movement is prepared to address if it would only heed the call.
Malaria, diarrhea, malnutrition, from droughts and floods are all the result of
climate change brought on by the industrialized efforts of the West. Robert
Watson, former chairperson of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change has stated, âAlmost any change in climate will reduce
agricultural productivity in the tropics and the sub-tropics. Climate change
is a developmental issue, not an environmental one.â
In other words he is saying that, given the way in which global warming
impacts the planet, the areas of the world that get impacted the most and
experience the greatest chaos, crises and disaster as a result are those
areas are all too often underdeveloped. We are not talking about Europe.
We are not talking North America, Canada, Russia even. We are talking
about the tropics and sub-tropics, Africa, Southeast Asia, Latin America.
Nations that are under-developed and thus donât have the infrastructure to
respond to the threat of global warming. And so disease is rampant.
Malnutrition, diarrhea, all of these issues that in developed nations all you
got to do is go to the hospital and get a pill.
For this reason social justice cannot be an afterthought for environmentalists. For in truth it lies at the very heart of the movement itself, of the
struggle to save the planet. Save the planet from what? Save the planet
from whom? From what? The answer could be from global warming, from
the effects of what occurs in what is called the greenhouse effect. From
whom? From multinational corporations who pollute our air and govern-
ments that allow these corpses to get away without restrictions in most
cases particularly when they set up shop in communities of color.
The question becomes and the question that lies at the heart of the environmental movement is how did this occur? How did multinational corporations
gain access to the lands and lives of so-called Third World peoples over the
globe? This is a question of colonialism. This is a question of the history of
conquest on the part of Europe. Those people are still oppressed. They still
suffer the legacy of colonialism and national oppression.
But here is the problem. See we can talk about theory and ideology but
when the rubber meets the road, when we really get down to it â the very
corporations who are involved in some of this mess fund many of our
organizations in the environmental movement.
So the question becomes if you are really about doing the real work then
you may in fact end up sacrificing a large part of your funding. Iâve had
conversations with a number of activists over the years. I have been
involved in this struggle for some decades now, and over the years we
activists understand and appreciate that if you are going to deal with truth,
if you are going to deal with the root causes of oppression and suffering
then you are going to need to find alternative sources to fund your work.
And history speaks to this. I will share how. Earlier I spoke about Robert
Watson, who was the former chairperson of the UN Intergovernmental
Group on Climate Control. He was removed from his post by an alliance
between Exxon, Mobil and the US government because of his outspokenness, because of his willingness to place the issue on development. He
was ousted because he went on record stating that the people experiencing the heaviest impact on global warming are poor and oppressed.
The question for the environmental movement is: Are we going to try to
cooperate with corporations? Or are we really going to begin to try to
challenge the corporate structure in a way that truly redresses the problem
toward the benefit of the majority of people who suffer, not just those of us
who live in the most privileged generation in the history of the planet.
The corporate response is often to kill the messenger. For activists of color
all over the globe the term kill here is not meant as a metaphor. That is
actually what happens. The threat of death and the terrorism witnessed
and visited upon communities of color that seek to respond to the reality of
corporations coming into their communities, setting up plants, polluting the
air, the soil is real.
I want to share two examples of this. Just for the sake of time we just got
to deal with two. There are plenty more. Many people are aware of the
activist Ken Saro-Wiwa of the Ogoni people in Nigeria and how he was
executed in â95 for representing the interests of his people. Many folk are
aware of the activist Chico Mendez from Brazil who was also killed. Both
killed by corporations. Both killed with the backing of their respective
governments. Both killed with the funded support of the US government.
There is a connection here that we as activists canât get around. Their lives
become the litmus test. I am not saying that we have to put ourselves in
front of bullets or put ourselves in the hangmanâs noose. But at the same
time what about their lives becomes instructive for how we ought to be
engaging this work?
The sad thing is and this is my personal criticism. It ought not take
somebodyâs death to cause that communityâs struggle to gain access to
the media. It shouldnât take someone having to be imprisoned for years
before activists in the West catch wind of the worry and begin to talk it up.
Thatâs a problem again of the lack of network, the lack of an international
outlook on the part of activists in the West who are the ones with the most
access, no doubt, no question. When you listen to their stories, when you
read their writings, youâll understand that for people of color throughout the
world, those in so-called third world countries, particularly, the environmental struggle is not simply about saving trees. Itâs about saving people. Itâs
about freeing the land. Itâs about liberating the land. There is an acute
awareness on the part of activists throughout the globe outside of privileged
nations that our land has been robbed from us. That is why the pollution is
occurring. We lack control over the very land we live on. And understanding
that, walking with that analysis, we realize that we will never change the
condition of our environment until we are able to liberate the land, until we
are able to get these corporations off our land.
That is why in the case of the Ogoni in Nigeria they tied their struggle
against Shell with their struggle to political rights. It was not simply about
getting Shell out of Nigeria. It was also coupled with the struggle to gain
parody politically within the structure. But those of us here in the West
who take what we believe is democracy for granted, we donât understand
and appreciate that.
In Brazil the struggle was about gaining land rights. These were small time
farmers. These were people who lived in the forest. They had no contact to
the world per se. They were comfortable with that. They were fine. Along
comes some cattle herders and they wanted to tear down all the trees so
they can make land into pasture so their cattle can eat. So Americans can
buy beef.
I read a study just recently that said that the fact that people buy beef has
had a greater impact on global warming than humans themselves, than
human consumption itself. Meaning that cattle eat more than we do and
their waste contributes more to global warming that ours does. And they
are being fed so we can feed on them. Because of our consuming drive
there are whole populations of people in South America who are being
removed from their land. And are being killed if they refuse to get off.
We got to make the necessary connections. It is not enough to call for a
boycott of Shell. It is not enough to stop eating meat. When their blood,
Ken and Chicoâs blood comes
all the way back to the White
House. We can talk about the corrupt Nigerian government.
We can talk about the corruption in the Nigerian government.
But who made the corruption in
the first place? What does US
foreign policy have to do with
any of this? Plenty. And so our
struggle as environmentalists
here has to be about charging
the government responsible for
the crimes and atrocities that
occur all over the globe wherever American interests are
present. And we have to support the indigenous peopleâs struggle to
liberate their land.
Malcolm X, who was assassinated this night back in â65 himself gave a
number of addresses here at Harvard, stated in his speech, âMessage to
the Grassroots,â that, âRevolution is based on land. Land is the basis of all
independence. Land is the basis of freedom, justice and equality.â The
environmental state of the Ogoni people, the environmental state of the
Mapia people from whom Chico Mendezâs folk come from in Brazil will not
fundamentally change until they receive justice. And that justice cannot
occur ultimately until they are able to liberate their land. We have to
understand this. We have to understand that there is a relationship
between Bushâs war in Iraq, Bushâs so-called axis of evil when the evil
starts here at home.
See what many fail to understand is that if you donât have money you have
little to no defense in our times. And that can be made in a very general
way even in terms of what I am talking about here about oppressed
peoples across the globe. If you are poor you have no defense. And the
sooner that we who are more privileged begin to understand or appreciate
that fact and create a movement in alliance with that reality to remedy the
same, the sooner we will begin to see true progress. Until that occurs
weâre in trouble.
This next quote I am going to share with you is from Ken Saro-Wiwa. He is
talking about Shell and its relationship to whatâs going on in Nigeria. He
said, âShell has waged ecological war in Ogoni since 1958. And ecological
war is highly lethal, the more so as it is unconventional. It is homicidal in
its effect. Human life, flora, fauna, the air fall at its feet and finally â the
land itself dies. Generally it is supported by all the traditional instruments
ancillary to warfare â propaganda, money and deceit. Victory is assessed
by profits. And in this sense Shellâs victory in Ogoni has been total.â
Over the 39 years of exploitation at the hands of Shell some 30 billion
dollars in profit Shell has accrued in the Ogoni region alone, which is only
3% of the total oil production in Nigeria. Thatâs a billion dollars essentially a
year since Shell has been in Nigeria. Yet, in spite of all this production and
profit, the condition of the Ogoni people remains ridiculously sad. No
running water. No electricity. Yet the corporation can come in and make
that much money and not have any obligation to the people whatsoever.
Shellâs profit motive is largely responsible for the repression of Nigeriaâs
democracy. It is that factor that leads to the corruption of the government
and the denial of democratic rights. See, here is a clue. We donât need to
look overseas. We donât need to go over or across our borders to see the
corruption cause it is happening right here. In America those who are the
poorest and not white, it is in their communities that corporations set up
their toxic waste dumps and pollution centers that produce major respiratory problems for the poor and of color in our own country. The term
environmental racism coined in 1982 grew out of the learning that the most
significant factor in the siting of hazardous waste facilities nationwide was
race. Ask yourself where do the corporations in this community dump their
trash? Where does Harvard dump its trash?
Just as in the case of the Ogoni people, the Mapia people and other
oppressed peoples, majority Black cities like Camden in New Jersey and
St. Louis, Missouri and others, have been robbed of their political rights
due to state takeovers. The argument made by state governments used to
justify this anti-democratic, in fact fascist act, is that the political structure
in those cities have been corrupted. No one bothers to ask how those
structures got corrupted.
The same stuff going on in Nigeria is going on here. So people get denied
political rights because corporations have corrupted the politicians. And
then you get other corrupt politicians coming in saying we are going to
take over. Why? Not so that democracy can be reestablished but so that
more corporations can come in and set up shop. Thatâs what is going on
right now in Camden. It is what is going on in St. Louis and other places
throughout the country where the majority populations are Black and
Latino and poor.
The struggle is about the land. The struggle is about the political struggle
and rights, self-determination of oppressed peoples. Whoever owns the
land determines the quality of the air, thus the quality of life. According to a
recent study done forty of the worldâs poorest countries face losses of
more than a quarter of their food production as a result of global warming
by the year 2080. Those forty nations are home to 2 billion people on the
planet. That is about one third of the worldâs population. The future is now!
Here is another example. I just happened to hear this on NPR one night
about the Inuit of Alaska and how they found large quantities of DDT in the
breast milk of the women. Now most folk would ask the question, âhow did
they get that stuff there?â The scientists were dumbfounded. They would
think that these folk farthest removed from the sprayers that go over crops
would be the last people to be at risk. But it is due to the wind patterns.
They had higher quantities of DDT than Canadian women because of the
wind patterns and the climate in that region around the North Pole.
So people who donât even have a hand in the exploitation suffer as a result
of our desire to live comfortably. Something is wrong. Something is wrong I
tell you. There is a growing divide between rich and poor nations, between
the industrialized and the underdeveloped nations, between the West and
the rest. The question for the environmental movement is: What side are
you on? You must become radical. You must radicalize your movement to
place it in alliance with those who suffer the most. Theyâre not looking for a
handout. These arenât people who are ignorant of the issues. These are folk
who are very aware, who live in the reality youâve researched.
The environmental movement at its most authentic state is an anti-
imperialistic movement, is an anti-racist movement. So if you as an
environmentalist are not demonstratively resisting and fighting imperialism,
if you as an environmentalist are not demonstratively resisting and fighting
racism then I question their commitment to environmentalism.
I am going to leave this on your head and hearts. I have worked with a
number of groups represented here and others. And the issue always
comes up and hopefully may come up during the Q and A about diversifying membership. Many predominantly white organizations want to make
themselves more aware of the issues and concerns of people of color, to
make your organizations more friendly and cooperative, but are experiencing trouble. It doesnât seem to work. Your initiatives arenât making progress.
I challenge you to study, to reconsider your ideology, the way in which you
go about movement, the way in which you go about struggle, how you
develop propaganda, the kind of language style and usage that you use.
Because I am telling you and I am telling you the truth. There are people of
color who are prepared. There are people of color who are already engaged
in this very work. They may not consider themselves environmentalists.
They consider themselves mothers and fathers, sons and daughters, living
in urban wastelands, concerned about the lived reality of their people. They
donât need a title. They donât need an organization. They are doing the best
with what they got which ainât much. I challenge you to reimagine your
movement not in leadership but as following the direction of these activists
of color who exist on the frontlines of the movement itself.
The problem is that all too often is that white activists tend to believe that
they know best, tend to believe that you all know better how to engage
struggle than people actually living it themselves.
The number one thing, then I am going to bring it to a close. The number
one thing you can do for the environment this year is to beat Bush. I am
not aware of how many people here are a part of the Green Party, or
whatever your politics are, whether you are Republican, Democratic,
Independent or Libertarian or whatever. But I am thankful that Nader
decided not to run for president this year. [Within a few days of this
address, Nader would announce that he was again going to campaign for
the presidency; this time as an independent â go figure!] Not just because
we have a better chance of getting Bush out of office cause that vote now
will hopefully go to the Democrat to make sure that happens. But it is also
because there is a greater issue here. And itâs an issue that is going to
stay with the Left or the movement, if you will, until we remedy it. And that
is this: When Nader ran in 2000, there was a split between the progressive
vote that partly enabled the fiasco that led to Bush being appointed the
president. My point is that had there been some kind of coalition among
progressives that cut across race and class lines we might have been able
to avoid that. The problem with the Green party is no different than the
problem with the environmental movement and other majority white movements in this country. That it is bogged down by a racism that even the
most enlightened, the most concerned still have trouble addressing. Given
that, we all lose out.
We have to begin to enter into dialogue as different organizations, as
different communities, as people just concerned about the future of not just
our country but the world. We have to do that with the same amount of
fortitude and passion that we engage our particular issues. That is our only
solution. Me personally, I believe that we need to radicalize the Democratic
Party. No, I do not suffer from the delusion that we will be able to wrestle it
from the clutches of the corporate structure. But if we were able to develop
a progressive radical wing that is vocal, that is clear on the issues, that
knows how to use the media to our advantage, then weâre better able to
capture the imagination of the American people. And that could be the
starting point for the development of a third political party that truly represents the misrepresented and those of us that are not represented at all in
government. The Green Party is not that kind of party. The propaganda
machine of the Republican Party is well money and very sophisticated but
it is not undefeatable.
So Iâll close up with this little thought. You know, the people responsible for
why global warming is such a problem is the rich. Not just because they
own the corporations that pump pollution and toxins into the air, but also
because they eat the most and thus have the most gas. All those bad
emissions in the air arenât just coming from the smokestacks but from the
asses of the upper classes.
<br>
*by Shawn McDougal*
My goal in writing this is to help expand the movement for human liberation
which many of us understand ourselves to be a part of. First Iâll explain a
bit about the vision that drives me in my social change work. Next, I will
offer one key practical idea for movement-building. I will follow the idea with
a concrete example of how I and some comrades have put the idea into
practice. Then, I will share some key concepts useful not only for explaining the practical idea, but also for developing and evaluating virtually any
tactical plan for mass liberation that movement-builders might consider.
The ideas I present here are not new. I am a synthesizer; I like to take
disparate ideas and fashion them into a synthesis that is my own. Feel
free to take the pieces you desire and synthesize them in a way that
makes sense for you.
The title of this piece was inspired partially by a leaflet I created a couple
of years ago called âMobilize like kittens, not sheep,â and partially by the
notion that culture is fundamentally about patterns of activity that we
continually (re)create. But Iâm getting ahead of myself. I hope the title
makes sense by the time you finish reading this.
A world where everyone understands that they are creators of social
reality, rather than spectators... a world where everyone feels worthy of the
best in life, and no one feels subordinate or less worthy than anyone
else... a world where our interactions bring out the best in us, rather than
the worst... a world where our institutions are nurturing and life-affirming,
rather than domineering and life-negating... a world where our hopes
overcome our fears.
(Note that in describing my vision I do not mention the usual list of âismsâ
that so many of us rightfully oppose: capitalism, racism, heterosexism,
patriarchy, adultism, elitism, etc. I believe these dehumanizing social
patterns are really symptoms of more fundamental problems: We are
unconscious of our own power, and we are ruled by fear. To the extent we
realize that we do not merely inherit the world but that we shape it, these
destructive and fear-based patterns will be replaced by creative and hope-
based patterns â at every level, and in every facet of our lives.)
Growing up in an underclass Black family in Los Angeles, I experienced
the effects of racism and classism â external and internalized â around
and within me. (I call my family underclass and not working-class, cuz
most of the time nobody had a job â it was mostly welfare and petty
hustles.) Seeing my older brother marginalized for being gay, and seeing
my single mom have to hustle and get money from her boyfriends for us to
survive (âCan you throw me down some change this month?â), taught me
about heterosexism and patriarchy. Also, seeing people risk jail-time just
so they could have something that looked nice taught me about the power
of conformity and internalized oppression in peopleâs lives. Seeing (and
much later, experiencing) drug addiction taught me about the often self-
destructive power of escapism.
Success in school shaped me to be a young elitist â the kid who was
gonna make it out of the ghetto. That same success got me a scholarship
to an elite boarding school in New England where I began to see the levers
of elite power close up. I realized that the people in power were no more
deserving than anyone else. Eventually, time spent as an exchange
student in Brazil helped me see the global nature of class society, patriarchy, white supremacy and the other âismsâ I had come to despise, as well
as the crucial role America plays in the global system. The people I met in
Brazil also reminded me of the amazing power of the human spirit, and our
capacity to create connections and joy even under miserable social
conditions. It was in Brazil that I realized that I could not escape from or
ignore the problems of the world, but that I had to live my life fighting them.
When I was in college I met people who called themselves anarchists. I saw
that we had the same basic attitude on a lot of things â especially challenging authority and conformity â so I realized that I was an anarchist, too.
Letâs do a thought experiment. Two actually. Ready?
First, imagine a mass action in your favorite city. Itâs a march/rally. Five
hundred (or 5,000) people gather in a park. Youâre there with them. While
people stand around waiting for the action to begin, organizers circulate
around with extra signs, chant sheets and whistles. You all line up and
walk along a route â maybe a mile or two â where city officials make sure
traffic is cleared. Or, maybe you couldnât get a permit and youâre walking
along the sidewalk. Along the way folk are chanting, singing, drumming,
waving signs, a few even passing out leaflets to lookers-on. After an hour
or two of marching, you reach the destination point. There is a rally. Great
speakers, rousing performers, old acquaintances, drums and chants. You
even spot a reporter or two from the local media. You and your friends go
home, confident that you did your part for the movement for peace and
justice today.
Now, change the channels.
A second mass action. Same city. Five hundred (or 5,000) people gather in
a park. Youâre there with them. Organizers circulate around with handouts
on how to approach strangers and talk politics in public and suggested
locations. People share leaflets, surveys, stickers, street-theater scripts,
chalk. You all form teams of 2 to 5 people. The teams â hundreds (or
thousands) of them â fan out to locations all throughout the city. (Supermarkets, gas stations, post offices, shopping centers, laundromats, bus
stops and movie lines are among the favored spots.) At these locations the
teams talk to people about the issues, ask questions from a survey, hand
out stickers and leaflets to those who are down with the cause. A few even
perform theater or create chalkings on busy sidewalks. After an hour or
two of connecting with people on the street, you all reconverge for a rally.
Folk share stories about how it felt to engage with the public â the challenges and the breakthroughs. Great speakers, rousing performers, old
acquaintances, drums and chants. You even spot a reporter or two from
the local media. You and your friends go home, confident that you did your
part for the movement for peace and justice today.
Questions for you to consider before moving on:
- Which action has the greatest impact on public awareness?
- Which action is more likely to empower people to stay active in between the mass actions?
- Which action is more dependent on the corporate media to get its message out?
- Which action spreads more of a practical understanding of what it takes to build a movement among the people who participate?
- Which action creates a deeper sense of community among participants?
Any other differences you think noteworthy?
The second mass action is the practical tool â a tactic â that I promised to
offer in this essay. I call it the kittens action. I choose this term because of
what it evokes. Kittens (cats) are different from sheep in that, because
they are not herd animals, their movements are not easily controlled or
constrained by those who would domesticate them. If youâve ever lent an
ear to a frustrated meeting facilitator, school teacher, or soccer mom â or if
youâve ever been one â you will probably recognize the phrase âItâs like
herding kittens!â
The kittens action follows a very simple recipe:
**Step 1.** Converge.
**Step 2.** Form teams, share materials for outreach.
**Step 3.** Spread out.
**Step 4.** Engage the public.
**Step 5.** Reconverge.
**Step 6.** Share stories and celebrate.
The kittens action is similar to what some people call an organizing blitz,
though blitzes usually have organization â specific goals (like signing up
new members), and Iâve never seen this sort of tactic used at a mass
action level involving people and groups with diverse interests. Also
somebody told me once that in Mexico City they did something similar
with teams called brigadas.
There was a gathering of diverse organizers and activists in December
2003 to discuss community and autonomy in LA. The event was organized
by folk whoâd been inspired by their exposure to Zapatismo, such as the
people at Casa del Pueblo. At the end of that meeting one of the requests
was for a way for the diverse people and organizations present to continue
to connect and work together. I suggested putting together a monthly
kittens action, perhaps with a different theme each month, so that various
forces around LA could come together on a more regular basis and do
concrete work together.
Many were in agreement, so some of us organized the first event, called
POP! the Revolution (POP= People Organizing & Partying), to happen in
January. Here is the email announcement we sent out:
*Ready to see LA-area activism taken to the next level?*
*Ready to connect with diverse activists working on various fronts in the struggle for social justice?*
*Ready to stop feeling angry and start celebrating and building the culture of resistance?*
*Then you are invited to:*
*P.O.P.! the Revolution Party*
*People Organizing & Partying*
- *People: because to win we donât need to convince those who stand against us â we simply need to activate those already on our side*
- *Organizing: because itâs time to move from the margins and into the center*
- *Partying: because revolution needs to be fun!*
*Saturday, January 17th, 2004, 2 p.m.*
<br>
*Echo Park Methodist Church*
<br>
*1226 Alvarado, just north of Sunset*
*Sounds intriguing... In a nutshell, what is it?*
*Activists from all over LA coming together to join forces for a day of schmoozing and organizing in the community, to turn traditional protest into community engagement, and to have fun. A new way to help the LA left feel more connected.*
*agenda in brief:*
*2:00: PREPARE â welcome to the community, intros, brief training, form street teams*
*3:00: OUTREACH â street teams fan out to surrounding grocery stores, gas stations, connect with the public, ask critical questions, share resources*
*5:30: PARTY â food, music, open-mic, performance art, share experiences*
*This is the first of what will become a monthly event, held at different locations all throughout LA, highlighting our various struggles*
*If you are interested in teaming up with us, or to help make this and future events successful, then spread the word, and join our email list!*
At that first event about 50 people showed up. Many of the people present
were not regular activists; just progressive folk who were fed up with feeling
powerless and wanted to do something.
After intros we did a training on how to talk to people, on how to approach
strangers to get their attention, on what to expect in terms of people
turning you down or ignoring you, on how to focus your efforts on people
willing to dialogue and not waste time debating people who wanna be
haters, etc. We gave everyone a list of questions to ask people about
community issues, and a stack of informational leaflets with alternative
media and community resources.
Next, people went out in teams of two to five. Some went to supermarkets,
others to gas stations, and others to bus stops. People were out for about an
hour. (From the agenda we put in the email you can see weâd planned for a
longer time outreaching, but, shockingly, we were behind schedule.)
When the teams returned we had a debriefing session. The energy was
palpable. Folk talked about how exhilarating it felt to approach total
strangers in the streets and talk politics. Folk talked about some of the
amazing and interesting people theyâd met â for example, one guy who is
not a typical âactivistâ but who organizes his buddies every year to donate
SUV-loads of food to homeless folk on Skid Row. Folk talked about how
most of the people they met were actually pretty open to chatting and
happy to receive info on alternative media. One guy mentioned how he
realized how difficult it was to judge people by the way they look or
dressed â an older guy who heâd assumed would be a Bush-lover was
actually pretty critical of the war and complained about all the tax breaks
going to the rich. One woman said how now she feels more confident, so
that next time sheâs in line at a grocery store sheâll be less afraid to talk to
people in line next to her.
We did another POP! the Revolution event the following month, with similar
experiences reported by a new set of participants. One complaint was that
our leaflets didnât have enough info on local resources to help people in
need of specific help: How to move more from talking to action?
Although the POP! the Revolution event was more like a workshop than a
mass action, it is essentially a mini-kittens action. With more participants
â hundreds or thousands instead of a few dozen â a mass kittens action
would likely include many forms of outreach to engage the public, from
various sorts of leaflets and surveys to street preaching to street theater
and interactive art. My hope is efforts like POP! will help popularize the
idea of the kittens action, so that more mass action organizers will think in
terms of getting folk they mobilize to be organizers, outreaching in the
community, not just warm bodies to fill the streets or hold one sign in a
sea of signs. Imagine the impact of 5,000 activists spending an hour or two
throughout the city having conversations with 50,000 or 100,000 people!
One criticism often leveled at anarchists by certain segments of the left â
in particular Marxists â is that we are all tactics and no theory. I vehemently disagree with this criticism. The reality is that anarchist practice
usually has strong theoretical underpinnings. The problem comes with
articulating those ideas in a way that non-anarchists can understand.
Before we continue, there is a term that I use that may be unfamiliar to
many readers. Itâs that weird term that appears in the title of this essay:
meme. (It rhymes with seem.) It was coined by zoologist Richard Dawkins
in his 1976 book, The Selfish Gene. It was taken from a Greek root
meaning âimitate.â Memes are units of cultural information such as recipes,
ideas, songs, social conventions, fashions, gestures, rituals and sayings.
Memes are to culture what genes are to biology. Like genes, memes
replicate, mutate, spread and die out. Just as genes powerfully shape the
form and function of biological organisms, memes shape the form and
function of cultures and societies.
In the rest of this section I will give you a sense of the theoretical basis for
and the visionary implications of the kittens action. I will do this by explaining five key concepts â five powerful memes that, taken together, may
serve as tools to shift how we think about and do social change work. In
explaining these memes I will show that the kittens action is not merely a
tactic as itâs commonly understood â a choice of action to be used or not
as expedient. The kittens action carries within it both a strategy â a long-
term plan of action and a vision â a place we want our strategies to take us
to. I also hope to show that whatever one thinks of this particular tactic,
there is a sore need for anarchists in particular and progressives in general
to create and promote tactics whose long-term effects are similar to those
of the kittens action if our vision for a more liberated and just world is to be
realized. What exactly the long-term effects of the kittens action are will be
clearer as we proceed.
Whatâs the connection between tactics, strategy and vision?
Maybe itâs because my first intellectual passions lay in the sciences and
mathematics, but I often find useful metaphors for thinking about how people,
social groups and society work coming from fields like mathematics, biology, and complex systems theory. For example, Iâve found the biological cell
with its semi-permeable boundary â selectively and flexibly allowing in some
but not all outside influences â useful in thinking about how an evolving culture or social group interacts with other groups or cultures.
In thinking about how society as a whole functions, one useful metaphor is
the human brain. Like society, the brain is made up of multitudes of
specialized yet adaptable, highly interconnected, dynamically developing
yet historically shaped, semi-autonomous units. In the brain these units
are neurons, while in society they are people.
In a complex system such as the brain (organisms and ecosystems are
further examples of these sorts of systems), there are various levels at
which one may examine the systemâs dynamics. These levels fall along a
spectrum from the micro â the realm of individual parts â to the macro â
the realm of patterns and relationships among parts. For example, in the
brain there are neurons (micro level) and there are concepts (macro level).
Whereas small numbers of neurons may be involved in a processing a
particular sense datum (for instance, recognizing the color green), large
collections of neurons are involved with more emotional or conceptual work
(for example, appropriately recognizing a green traffic light).
The standard view of the philosophy of reductionism is that a whole can be
understood simply by understanding its parts. Classical physical science is
the child of reductionism â for example, the search in physics for the smallest building blocks of matter. In reaction to the limitations of reductionism,
holistic approaches to knowledge emphasize relationships and wholes â
parts only can be understood in a particular context or environment.
Feedback â everywhere is the idea that reductionism and holism are both
true, but only partially. Parts create the whole and the whole shapes the
parts. There is mutual influence between the various levels in a complex
system, a dialectical cascade between the micro and the macro.
For example, it turns out that in the brain not only do the things we sense,
perceive, or experience inform our concepts, and shape our moods, but that
our concepts and moods in turn shape what we perceive. Have you ever
misinterpreted a friendâs innocent remark? Then you know what I mean.
In the social realm these contending perspectives â reductionism and
holism â play out in debates between rugged individualist âconservatives,â
and social constructionist âliberals.â (A lot of contentiousness in our society
actually seems to arise from these same clashing views on the relationship of individuals to groups.) Feedback-everywhere allows us to transcend
this duality: not only do individuals create society, but society creates
individuals.
As I mentioned before, a common criticism of anarchists is that we are all
action without theory, tactics without strategy. A corollary of the feedback
â everywhere principle provides adequate response to this criticism: the
unity of tactics, strategy and vision. Although it is axiomatic among folk
who wanna be smart planners that vision determines strategy determines
tactics, it is rarely recognized that the chain of effect runs in reverse as
well: what we do today (a tactical choice) shapes our path for tomorrow
(strategic possibilities), and the unfolding of that path shapes our evolving
vision. This corollary of feedback- everywhere â the unity of tactics,
strategy and vision â is embodied in the classic anarchist understanding
that our means (tactics/strategy) must harmonize with our ends (vision).
Thus, the kittens action is not only a tactic for mobilization, to be used or not
as expedient, but it also implies a class of compatible strategies for transformation, and a class of compatible visions of the society its practitioners
would like to create. Again, the kind of strategy and vision implicit in the
kittens action will be made more clear as we look at the five other memes.
How do we fight the/for power?
Power exists only in the interaction between people. Although the power
relationship may imply different roles-the âpowerfulâ and the âdisempoweredâ
â that relationship only has reality because of the participation and the
acquiescence of each participant.
This principle has been recognized by generations of diverse social
theorists and social actionists (e.g. Hume, Tolstoy, Gandhi, Foucault, and
Biko, to name just a few) who have long argued that the power of an
oppressive regime rests on the peopleâs obedience to that regime. In the
words of Steven Biko, âThe most powerful tool in the hands of the oppressor is the mind of the oppressed.â
Despite this long tradition of nuanced and dialectical thinking about power,
many people, including many on the left, still tend to think in absolute and
static terms when they ponder the nature of power: the elite or the privileged are âpowerfulâ while the oppressed and the marginalized are âpowerless.â Power for them becomes like a scarce commodity: some people
have it while others donât.
Why is this way of thinking so pervasive? There at least three reasons for
the popularity of this idea of power: 1) It provides a kind of rationalization
for resignation-âWe have good reason to feel hopeless! Weâre powerless for
chrissakes!â; 2) It results from internalized oppression-resistance becomes
inconceivable when we see ourselves as powerless; 3) Our concepts work
metaphorically. The commodity concept of power arises via metaphorical
extension: Power is something we desire and that we negotiate in social
transactions, and thus it is like a commodity.
The problem with this scarce commodity concept of power is that it can
lead people to make bad strategic choices in their social change work, and
it can lead to perceived and therefore manifest powerlessness. For example, radical social actionists often criticize liberal reformists for solving
social problems in a way that reinforces the power of the oppressive social
forces that cause the problems to begin with. By begging the master to
throw you a bone, you affirm the masterâs power over your life. To the
extent this criticism is true, it is the liberal reformistsâ assumptions about
the âpowerlessnessâ of the people they want to save that is to blame.
A thought experiment I like to give people when it seems like their understanding of power is too absolute or commodity-like is this:
<br>
*Imagine you could get rid of the top 1,000,000 power people in the world-
you know, the CEOs, the high-level officials, the presidents, the generals,
the corporate boards of directors, the biotech wizards, the movie moguls,
etc. Imagine you could just snap your fingers and boom! they would all
disappear without a trace.*
After their twinkling eyes tell me theyâve gotten the picture, I then ask:
*Ok. So the rulers of society are gone. Now what happens next? Social liberation? The struggleâs over? We won?*
After some moments of consideration, they usually will say something
like, âNaw, it wouldnât make much of a difference. Other people â the
middle managers, the staffers, the lieutenants, the assistants, etc â -would
all just move up to take their places. What would need to change is the
system, the consciousness.â
To fight the power (and win), it is not enough to get rid of the people who
are privileged. We must change the consciousness that the current power
relations reflect. Iâm reminded of the marvelous title of an anarchist pamphlet Iâve had on my shelf for the longest but that Iâve never gotten around to
reading: *You Canât Blow Up a Social Relationship.*
A characteristically anarchist approach to taking action to challenge power
relations is direct action. Direct action means taking action to directly
address a problem or get your needs met, without asking the powers that
be to do it for you. Direct action means fighting power by asserting your
own power, as opposed to asking that others with power treat you kinder or
gentler. Although many activists donât emphasize this, direct action isnât
just about fighting power: itâs also about changing consciousness. People
who take direct action to improve their lives end up by having a greater
sense of control over their own lives. By taking action they change the
world, and by changing the world they change themselves. (This is another
example of feedback-everywhere. Also, see Meme 5 for more on the role of
action in shaping our sense of self.)
Some people confuse direct action with civil disobedience, especially after
the dramatic protests involving mass arrests that weâve seen in the global
justice movement since Seattle. Though direct action and civil disobedience
can overlap, they are not the same. Civil disobedience means breaking a law
in order to get justice â either directly in the moment or indirectly through a
moral appeal to other people. Direct action means doing what it takes to get
immediate justice â whether the action is legal or not. Consider the issue of
police brutality. An example of a civil disobedience response would blocking
the streets in order to highlight the issue for the public. An example of direct
action would be forming a Copwatch group to show up and closely observe
whenever folk get stopped by the police.
Since any tactic has implications for strategy and vision (cf. feedback â
everywhere), when evaluating a tactic we should ask ourselves: Does the
tactic (or its related strategy) work to change power relations and consciousness in a fundamental way? If the answer is yes, great. If the
answer is no, time to rethink our tactics.
How does the kittens action work to change power relations and consciousness? In some ways the kittens action is closer to direct action than the typical march-rally.
At a march, most participants do not directly engage the public; they are
merely part of a crowd passing by waving their signs. The immediate target
of a typical march-rally is actually the media, and only indirectly the public.
Organizers draw media attention in the hopes that the media will then
communicate their message to the public. In contrast, at a kittens action,
the participants interact with the public directly; they become the media
themselves and take their message directly to the people.
Also, participants at a kittens action (kittens for short) must think and
make decisions on the spot â where to go, who to engage, what to say,
how to respond â whereas few such decisions need to be made by
marchers following the crowds on a pre-planned route. And these interactions happen involving many, many more members of the public than the
relative few who happen to see a march go by. Their autonomy combined
with the widespread nature of their action means kittens pose a greater
challenge than marchers to the taboos about how to behave in public.
Finally, kittens interact with lots of people who may not automatically
agree with or be as passionate about the issues as them. Thus they work
more than marchers in challenging their own fears of rejection. They
become stronger organizers.
One visionary implication of the kittens action is thus revealed: building a
society where everyone sees themselves as creators of social reality, with
lead-not just supporting-roles to play.
There are other ways I believe the kittens action fits within a larger vision of
consciousness change. Iâll explain more below.
What needs to change in our culture?
Political structures and economic structures not only shape culture, but
they arise out of culture (cf. feedback â everywhere). Social transformation
of the kind people like us wanna see will require more than a changing of
the guard-it will require a shift in our culture, a shift in our everyday habits
of thinking and acting.
In what ways does our culture need to shift? There are many, many ways I
can think of, and Iâm sure you can, too. Iâll list a few here that are of
particular relevance to the kittens action.
First, mainstream U.S. culture has a bizarre taboo against talking politics
in public. Our media primarily focus on personalities, trivia and tragedies.
Social reality is mainly a show â one with us as spectators, and whose
key events seem beyond our control.
How can people see themselves as creators of social reality?
Second, we have a dominant culture that squashes dialogue on deeper
levels. For most people in our society, it is not cool to seem ignorant or
confused, so asking questions is uncool. It is not cool to show a need for
help or a reliance on other humans. We strive to be independent, so we
tend to repress, not express, many of the feelings that arise from our basic
needs. Hence, for these reasons and others, instead of communication,
dialogue, and understanding, we have advertisements, announcements,
and arguments.
How can we create dialogue that deepens our understanding of ourselves
and each other?
Furthermore, our economic system actually depends on people feeling
disconnected and unable to rely on others: individually wrapped lifestyles
make us bigger consumers and more fearful workers. Ways of relating that
are about mutual aid and interpersonal connection outside scripted roles â
insofar as they are not marketable or commodifiable, and insofar as they
interfere with workplace discipline â get deemphasized in our corporate-
mediated culture. (The historical loss of the commons has been well-
documented, and continues to play out in contemporary struggles over
privatization.) The acceptable roles â consumers, workers, sports fans, et
al. â get scripted for us. As we spend our time wearing masks not of our
own creation, we feel less in control of our own lives, and a sense of
powerlessness (or alienation) becomes pervasive. The alienation leads to
greed and fear: Greed to beat out our competition (i.e., fellow humans),
and fear that the competition will beat us out. The business and the
government elites use greed and fear to increase the power they wield in
our lives. And the alienation growsâŠ
How can we stop this cycle of alienation, fear, and greed?
Finally, most forms of collectivity in our society â teams, companies,
public agencies, etc. â are organized as clear hierarchies, with bosses,
managers and followers. Very rarely do we have opportunities to work in
groups that are organized in an egalitarian way, where the experiences of
each participant are equally important. Thus, we get used to seeing
collectivity as requiring a weakening of our individuality. We come to see
individuality and collectivity as locked in a zero-sum competition. To be a
âstrong individualâ means to ignore the collective, and to be a âgood team-
playerâ means to efface oneâs own needs.
How can we create social groups that both enhance and feed off of the power
of the individual members? How can we create liberated forms of collectivity?
In reaction to the pervasive hierarchy that informs our social groups, and
because they cannot think of alternative structures, some anarchists
espouse doing away with complex forms of social organization altogether.
Some pine for an idyllic past where everyone lived in small egalitarian
bands and complex divisions of labor did not exist. However, the majority of
thoughtful anarchists make a distinction between the legitimate authority of
experts who we choose to listen to for advice or situational leadership, and
the imposed authority of bosses, rulers and elites.
But knowing in theory that legitimate and non-coercive leadership is
possible doesnât mean that itâs always clear how to make it work in
practice. A huge stumbling block for efforts to create egalitarian social
arrangements is that the vast majority of peopleâs socialization has
occurred primarily through hierarchical groups and institutions. One of the
powerful and far-reaching impacts of the global justice movementâs mass
mobilization efforts has been the exposure of many, many people to
effective egalitarian forms of decision-making (e.g. affinity groups). These
people certainly take their experiences into other aspects of their lives and
their social change work.
A question to ask about any tactics (or strategies) for social change is
this: to what extent do those tactics (or strategies) help prefigure or bring
about a desirable and necessary change in the way we live our lives, a
desirable and necessary shift in our culture?
The kittens action promotes a culture-shift on all the fronts Iâve just mentioned.
First, it gets folk to transgress the taboo about talking politics in public.
The demise of this taboo would have deep and far-reaching consequences
in our society. No longer would the American public be content to limit its
sophisticated analyses and passionate debates to sports, pop stars and
movies. No longer would our roles as consumers or workers eclipse our
roles as community members, as citizens (documented or not). When
social reality ceases to be a trivial show, when social reality is something
that we have important things to say about, then we can move from being
spectators to being creators.
Second, by breaking through not only the taboo against politics but the
taboo against purposefully engaging strangers in dialogue, kittens renew
their sense of interdependence and connection with the real people who
make up the real society around them. Conversing about heartfelt stuff with
people outside our normal circles makes it hard to reduce people to tokens
in a theory, it expands our sense of our own humanity, and it moves us out
of alienation.
Third, the kittens action â just like other anti-authoritarian forms of mass
action (e.g. affinity group convergences) â engages participants in a form of
collectivity where every individual is a key actor and decision-maker, and
where the power of the group is directly dependent on the power of the
individuals, and where the power of the individuals is directly connected
with the power of their team and indirectly (especially at the final
reconvergence/sharing stories step) connected with the power of the overall
action. We learn to create liberated forms of collectivity through practical
experience.
How do we move from the margins into the center?
Anarchists who are into organizing are often critical of those who represent
anarchism largely as a subculture or lifestyle. Anarchist organizers argue
that lifestylist anarchists marginalize themselves in their safe subculture
niches and thus become invisible and irrelevant in the wider movement.
The marginalization anarchist organizers worry about is not just a problem
for anarchists â itâs a problem for the left as a whole. (N.B. I know some of
yâall donât like the word âleft.â Sorry for any semantic inconvenience. What I
mean by âleftâ is very broad: the people who believe we need more social
equality, more sustainability, less hatred, and more liberation in the world.)
For most of us on the left, the longer we see ourselves as part of the left,
the more we feel estranged and distant from regions of culture that used to
be familiar to us. We spend more and more time with other progressives
and activists, and less and less time with that âconservative brother-in-law
who just doesnât get it.â We shift our sense of community as we shift our
sense of self. This is quite normal.
However, if we on the left are going to win the public to our side of the
struggle, we gotta do more than complain about the people who donât know
what we know, or the people who arenât activated like us. We gotta figure
out how to teach people what we know, and we gotta figure out how to
activate people. In short, we gotta organize.
A lotta people assume that organizing means organization-building.
Perhaps this comes from the (correct) notion that systemic change
requires institutional change, and the (incorrect) notion that institutional
change requires mass organizations. Or perhaps it comes from Marxist-
Leninist party-fetishism. Who knows?
When I talk about organizing I donât mean getting people to join an organi-
zation, although that can be a part of it. By organizing I simply mean doing
what organizers do â getting people to do something, getting people to
take action. Ultimately, it doesnât matter if someone joins a particular
organization, as long as that person is doing work to expand human
liberation, and as long as they understand that their work is part of a larger
tapestry of transformation, a tapestry that includes the work I and people
like me are doing.
This is a critical point so let me take time to be clear here. The impact and
legacy of left social movements (e.g. the civil rights movement, the anti-nuke movement) cannot be measured simply by the policies that are
passed or by the organizations that get created. After all, policies can be
subverted and organizations can ossify. The main value of left social
movements comes from the transformative actions they inspire from
millions of unnamed and unaffiliated people, people whose lives are
changed by something they are a part of, people who take what they learn
into the rest of their lives. The main value of social movements comes from
the way they deepen our consciousness and shift our culture.
Any tactic or strategy connected with a vision for liberation must say yes
to the following question: Does this tactic or strategy lead to transformative
action? Does this tactic or strategy organize?
It is clear that the kittens action, like any mass action, does organize
people, at least its participants. Participants step outside their normal
scripts of silence and anonymity in the face of the culture of complicity,
and they do something about the ills they perceive. Further, by directly
engaging the public, kittens can organize many, many others as well.
More on this to come.
How do people learn? What makes people change?
What makes people change? This is the fundamental question facing all
organizers (and teachers). This question should be on the mental front
burners of anyone who cares about changing the world.
There are essentially two views on the problem of getting people to learn or
change. One view is that learning happens primarily through symbols â
words, texts, stories, images, etc. The other view is that learning happens
primarily through experience â things that happen to us and things that we
do. (These two views are really part of a more complex continuum. For
instance, consider role-models, people in our lives that serve as examples
for us to follow. Are they experiences? Are they symbols? Both? Neither?)
Organizers (and teachers) who take the symbolic approach focus on
making convincing arguments, telling compelling stories, showing people
evocative images. Symbolic learning is the dominant approach taken in
traditional schooling, and it serves important functions â the memorization
of facts, the communication of the experiences of others. Also, within
organizing symbolic work serves a vital function-background knowledge,
raising critical questions.
The experiential approach to learning focuses on hands-on projects, field
trips, apprenticeships, experiments, student-centered learning. (One
example of student-centered learning is Paulo Freireâs liberation pedagogy:
it is all about privileging the âsubjectiveâ experience of the learner over the
âobjectiveâ official knowledge of the teacher.) In organizing, the experiential
approach focuses on helping people reflect on their own experiences, and
pushing people to have new experiences-to expand their understanding of
an issue and their relationship to the issue.
Although formal schooling is dominated by symbolic learning, experiential
learning is almost universally recognized among educators to be the most
powerful approach.
Pause for a moment to think about your most powerful and memorable
learning experience. Did it happen because someone made an especially
convincing argument to you, or told you a particularly compelling story? If
youâre like most people, chances are your most powerful learning experience was precisely that â an experience, something that happened that you were a part of.
In the realm of social change as well, the symbolic approach has limitations.
One weakness of the symbolic approach to social change can be seen in
the diluted and in some cases reversed. Policy victories of the civil rights
movement, for instance; although Brown v. Board of Education (and
following rulings and legislation) ended de jure segregation in schooling, de
facto segregation continues. Fifty years after Brown the racial gaps in
education persist, mainly because the racist attitudes of whites in America
have not changed that much.
Another weakness with symbolic approaches to change as compared to
experiential approaches has to do with long-term vision. Is our vision to
continue a culture where politics is a spectacle, a parade of rhetoric and
images, controlled by an elite minority of privileged and highly-trained
image-makers, story-tellers and symbolic analysts (be they from the left,
center or right)? Or do we want to create a culture where politics is not
seen primarily as something you watch, read about or listen to, but rather
as something you do, something you experience?
This is a really difficult thing to imagine. It is perhaps a universal of human
culture that the leaders and chiefs tend to be the ones who are the most
verbally astute. Throughout human history â and evidence suggests even in
the days when we were all hunters and gatherers living in small nomadic
bands â political life has been disproportionately influenced if not dominated by those who were the most adept at words and images. Is it even
possible to have a political culture that doesnât have this sort of built-in
status hierarchy?
(Additionally, personality typologies such as the Myers-Briggs and learning
theories that look at multiple intelligences and learning styles suggest that
symbolic-oriented learners â as opposed to concrete-experientially-
oriented learners â form a privileged minority within our schooling system,
especially at the secondary and post-secondary levels.)
Recognizing the problematics with this kind of power is difficult, especially
as many of us, including me, have found a kind of power to fight oppression through our facility with language and symbols.
Yet there is a paradox. On the one hand, we want people to take action
and take charge of their own lives, and not be led by whatever images
theyâre fed by the elites, or whatever myths theyâre told by charismatic
people around them. On the other hand, the most ready tool for social
change many of us have is our own influential voice (be it spoken or written
or performed or illustrated). (Eugene Debs, socialist presidential candidate
in the early 1900s, illustrated this paradox when he said, âI donât want you
to follow me or anyone else. I would not lead you into the promised land if I
could, because if I could lead you in, somebody else would lead you out.â )
It is essentially the question of how to promote revolution without promoting oneself. This question must be recognized and grappled with those of
us who envision a society without elites of any kind.
The history of revolutions for social equality creating new elites and ruling
castes shows the difficulty of overcoming this conundrum. Clearly, in these
instances, symbolic revolution, articulated by revolutionary elites, won out
over experiential revolution grounded in the unique perspectives of all
members of society. Top-down won out over bottom-up.
Perhaps the conundrum can be canceled by an approach that combines
actions with symbols in some sort of dialectic or transformation? To the
extent both the actions and the symbols are controlled by each individual,
elitist divisions of labor between those who instruct and those who follow
instructions could be overcome. (I once chatted with a woman who was a
self-made life-planning counselor. She told me a bit about neurolinguistic
programming-a self-improvement approach that uses individually chosen
gestures to symbolize moods or mindsets that we want to reinforce in
ourselves. Something for further studyâŠ)
So weâve considered some weaknesses with symbolic approaches to
social change. What about experiential approaches?
An example of the power of action and experience in personal transformation comes from the field of social psychology.
There was study conducted by a team of social psychologists in a suburban neighborhood. They posed as âcommunity workersâ and asked the
residents whether they would be willing to place a billboard in their front
lawns as a public service. The billboards would say âPlease Drive Carefully.â
Of course, the vast majority of them said âhell no!â to the request â 85% of
the people in the studyâs control group in fact refused to do this public
service. In the test group, however, in the same neighborhood, with demographics exactly the same, 83% said âyesâ to the âcommunity workersâ
strange request.
One group was 85% ânoâ while the other group just the reverse, 83% âyes.ââ
Why such a dramatic reversal in response between the two groups of residents? The only difference between the two groups was that, two weeks
previously, another set of âcommunity workersâ had visited the test group,
with a smaller and much easier request: Would they be willing to place a 3-
by-3 inch card in their front window with the words âPlease Drive Carefullyâ?
When given this token request, the almost all of the people said âyes.â
Because the people in the test group had already done a token action
supporting the cause (placing the card in their window), they were much
more likely to do a bigger action (putting up a billboard in their yard) for the
cause later on. By taking a small action peopleâs sense of themselves had
changed, and they were much more likely to do other and bigger actions in
the future, consistent with their changed sense of self. (This study and
similarly interesting results from social psychology can be found in Robert
Cialdiniâs *Influence: the Psychology of Persuasion and Eliot Aaronsonâs
The Social Animal.* )
This notion of getting people to do small things in order to make them
more likely to do bigger things later on is known as baby-steps by organiz-
ers (and foot-in-the-door by sales people). It is a powerful example of the
power of action in transformation.
The kittens action applies this notion of baby-steps on two levels, at the
level of the wider public and at the level of the kittens themselves.
Firstly, in a kittens action, because the kittens are engaging the public,
and not just holding signs or chanting in a crowd, they can get the people
they meet to do things like write letters, sign petitions, put stickers on
their cars, wear buttons, swear oaths, and a host of other token actions
that will get the people who are not activists to move one baby-step in the
direction of becoming activists.
Thus, the movement becomes bigger.
Secondly, by helping kittens have a baby-step experience as organizers
directly and personally engaging the public to promote their cause, the
kittens action helps the participants to see themselves as organizers.
Thus the kittens action help create more organizers, more people who will
be active and effective over the long-term at expanding the movement.
These individuals will not only interact with the people they meet that
particular day; they will go on to be more likely to interact with others they
meet in the future-in their workplaces, in their neighborhoods, in the
supermarkets. In this way, not only does the kittens action do like any
mass action and organize the people who participate-the kittens action
spreads the meme of organizing to create more organizers!
Thus, the movement becomes deeper.
With the help of baby-steps, we can see how the kittens action provides a
powerful application of the meme of experience over symbolism, and a
powerful tactic in helping us build a bigger and deeper movement.
For me, as an organizer and as a teacher, the biggest question I face
everyday is: What can I do to get people to have experiences that transform and enrich their sense of possibilities? One of the things Iâve learned
(and relearned many times!) is that this question is equivalent to the
question: What can I do to transform and enrich my own sense of possibilities? As a religion teacher I had in college named Thandeka once told me,
The inner and the outer are one.
On some days or at some moments I see the light and feel inspired, at
other times itâs enough just to get through the day without seriously
wanting to hurt somebody or myself. Such is life.
Besides self-care, like walking or playing or staring at stars or fun personal
stuff like that, one thing that renews my hope in a heartbeat, that allows
me to smile and say things like âGeorge Bush is good for Americaâ to my
friends and not feel like Iâm telling a sick joke is this: remembering that I
am just but a single thread in a huge and unfolding tapestry of liberation.
Every single person on this planet has a role in weaving that tapestry. And
everybodyâs got a unique thread to weave. The best and only thing I can do
is weave my thread and get out of the way of people trying to weave theirs.
The revolution is now. The revolution is all the time. Welcome to the
revolution.
*by Kapila*
Letâs put one lie to rest for all time: the lie that men are
oppressed, too, by sexism â the lie that there can be such
thing as âmen liberationâ groups. Oppression is something
that one group of people commits against another group
specifically because of a âthreateningâ characteristic shared
by the latter group â skin color or sex or age etc. The
oppressors are indeed fucked up by being masters (racism
hurts whites, sexual stereotypes are harmful to men) but
those masters are not oppressed. Any master has the
alternative of divesting himself of sexism or racism â the
oppressed have no alternative â for they have no power-but
to fight. In the long run, Womenâs Liberation will of course
free men, but, in the short run, is going to cost men a lot of
privilege, which no one gives up willingly or easily. Sexism is
not the fault of women; kill your fathers, not your mothers.
â Robin Morgan
I look at their faces, I see reflection and masks that sometimes repeat my
own in a strange cyclic pattern of power. Because in here, I am but a wage-
slave, condemn sweating and hurting for eight bucks an hour, forced to smile
and accept condescend behavior from the all-smiling, ever merry elite of the
capital. Out there, they might call me a brother, an equal. We are not.
The system of class and the European system of white dominance and
colonialism fused to became one single straight brute force, a giant
juggernaut that tramples over the working-class worldwide and its two legs
are racism and sexism.
Let us be realistic.
While I work at Stanford University, serving food for the sons of the elite
and the future elite, it is increasingly strange for me to realize that this elite
sometimes has skin darker than mine, accent thicker than mine, visible
cultural roots sometimes more apparent than mine. The strength in which
this realization affects me cannot be easily described â it is an eye-opener
and is a mind narrower, it is both an epiphany as it is of such an obscurity.
This multicolored, multicultural bourgeoisie is always the enemy and
sometimes the most unexpected and always undesired ally, which forces
its âdiversityâ and its âoppressed situationâ down my throat, in an obscene
mockery of the plight of the workers of the world.
Let us be realistic.
Racism â white dominance â is not an American phenomenon. The âwhite
raceâ supports a global system of racial inequality and prejudice where,
worldwide, the white male has a hegemonic dominance. It is the new
capitalist model, and it is the old. Imperialism is a stream that never dried
because it is vital for the World Capitalism.
The capitalist globalization process that everyday kills and destroys the
lives of millions and millions of people around the globe serves the political,
social and economic agenda of a very well structured global elite. This
global elite is composed essentially of capitalist white males, power-
hungry and with no desire whatsoever of relinquish or divide power. It is
paramount to their institutions of power to ensure the security of the
âinvisibilityâ of the fact that the elite of the world is composed of one class,
one race and one gender. This elite controls the levels of government and
the levels of business. They are the church (the moral authority) and they
are the creators of culture. They are the philosophers, the educators. They
are too the most pernicious and dangerous group of people.
This elite has across the centuries used the divisions and social inequalities
in society. In fact, they are the creators and the maintainers of this oppressive structure, and the sole beneficiaries of it. Through a structured and systemic misogynist, racist, homophobic, brutal capitalist protocol, they ensure
the maintenance of their global empire and especially, the maintenance of
their privilege domain over the majority of the people on earth.
It is, it always was, in the interest of that elite that we, the people, do not
understand their affairs and could have no access to their domains. The
institutions of race, class and gender are notably set to the advancement
and comfort of these people and the exploitation of others.
This elite maintains nowadays a global system of exploitation, a structure
that interlocks racism, sexism and âtraditionalâ capitalist exploitation,
which, for lack of a better word, I shall call World Capitalism.
Traditional Marxist and class struggle analysis have always had a very bad
understanding of the race and gender â the concept that those two systems of exploitation were a âfruitâ of capitalist society and would be
eliminated when the class struggle is resolved fails to analytically criticize
a culture based in racism and sexism â both of which came into the
picture way before capitalism was around â and how the power structure of
privilege does not have to be ratified by the police, the capitalists or even
the State. Culture alone can be a catalyst of exploitation and submission,
and the change and the complete revolution in the bourgeoisie social fabric
cannot be done by simply taking the bourgeois out of the picture.
The understanding of the concept of privilege and how privilege imposes
itself is necessary to understand why is that racism and sexism are so
strong in our societies, why is that we to fight for the ârightâ of getting jobs
(not goods jobs, just jobs in
general), why it is two or three
times scarier for us to walk at
night, why is that, even when
economically would make
sense to alleviate the tension
around race and gender â our
society is adamant in keeping
those tensions alive and
burning.
This elite benefits threefold from
the system of World Capitalism
â the system devised, planned
and structure around the white
male bourgeois privilege, a
system that connects the
different levels of exploitation in
one single machine.
Different from others, I firmly
believe that the structure of the World Capitalism could not do without
racism and sexism. The reasons for the existence of this two can be
slightly different but the end result is the same â the submission of the
oppressed levels of the people to the elite of the capitalist society.
For the purpose of this analysis, racism and sexism shall be broadened to
comprehend a multitude of other correlated subjects that are intrinsically
tied to and share the same roots of those concepts. Racism, in this essay,
refers (unless noted) to race dominance and privilege, national identity,
nationalism, imperialism, colonialism and cultural repression. All those
share a basic identity of a dominating ethnic/national group and a subordinated one.
To understand race and capitalism in a broader sense of the American concept of race, it is paramount to us to analyze race in its historical context.
Racism in Europe started before Capitalism. The feudal lords and the
crown of Spain (absolutist and mercantilist) already obsessed over the
concept of âlimpieza de sangre,â the purity of blood. This concept became
strong in Spain in the 1400s, when the Spaniards fought against the Moors
invaders. A national liberation struggle, if you like.
These concepts of race and the purity of blood, however, were deeply
ingrained in European culture. Europe was a continent driven by conquest
and tribal wars. The Romans regarded the tribes of Germans and Francs to
be barbarians, brutes of low intelligence and destined to be submitted to
the rule of the roman fasciae.
Examples run back in history ad nauseam, in demonstrating a racist
culture and a racist system as an integral part of the European culture.
Why should we be shocked that they, when spreading their empire, spread
too their racist system?
It is sometimes a fairly common misconception that other cultures had no
racist background until the arrival of the Europeans. That is not true. The
African tribal wars that to this day plight the people in that continent are a
living proof that race (identity) has been an issue long before Capitalism.
What seems then to be the purpose of racism? In classical dialectical
materialistic analysis, the constant struggle over power between forces of
society shapes the format of the future and the present of the said society.
In the case of the disappearance of race and gender in our society, the
only struggle to be faced would be the class war â and against a united
working class, the capitalist are bound to lose. The need of a different
struggle, the need of race and gender inequality for the capitalist is to
engage the working class in different battles, to divide and conquer it.
Based on that, one could argue that, in the long run, racism has always
been a structure designed to maintain the power of a certain class over
another by creating a platform of âequalityâ of sorts, making them âbrothersâ of the oppressed class. This definition of racism carries more weight
than we can initially imagine, but it fails to recognize that racism can
outlive class oppression â and be still the source of power to a few that
would dominate the hierarchy that from that would emerge.
Racism and Sexism are more culturally rooted in the world than Capitalism,
more than the struggle between the bourgeoisie and the proletariat. Some
cultures are feudal systems, other monarchic dictatorships (But I deny the
Marxist evolutionism of societies in the sense of feudal-to-capitalist-to-communist-to-free-socialist as being an evolutionary process that is absolute to
any society). Racism and Sexism are two paramount structures of domination with which the world dominant class maintains its power, and, without
them, the structure of World Capitalism would collapse.
It is part of the strategy of the global elite to actively support and maintain
white dominance worldwide.
The idea that white supremacy is an American phenomenon, that it is a
national issue to be dealt nationally, and that racism in the U.S. have
origins in American Capitalism is, in essence, a very American idea. At
the same time, the complex aspects of race in the U.S. and the current
debate on racism and classism might be the catalyst for the change in the
perception of race and white dominance.
Global white dominance appears in two different aspects: privilege and de-facto ruling.
The privilege of the white race is an absolute in the worldâs politics and
economics; nowhere in the face of the world are people of European
descent the oppressed minority (or majority) to an elite of color. The âwhite
raceâ enjoys a privilege that does not falter by geographic means.
The white colonial/imperial power stretched itself through the process of
capitalist globalization. The consolidation of global capitalism is not only
rooted in racism but dependant on it. From Brazil to India to Mexico, the
lighter skin carries a lighter burden and occupies the higher place.
The de facto ruling of a white elite that controls the global capitalist state
enforces the privilege of the âwhite race.â Transnational corporate forces
are massively concentrated in the U.S. and Europe and so are the powerful
nation-states. The âwhite raceâ enjoys a position of privilege in these two
segments.
Token gains on race and gender are not so much to pacify race and gender
struggles, as it is to foment further struggle. The idea is to give the exploited a little taste of what they could get, but to make it clear that would
have to carry a certain burden in order to get it. Just like a mule that tasted
a piece of the carrot once is bound to want to eat the whole carrot, and will
work with all its strength to reach the unreachable carrot, and carry the
weight of the cart in its back. But, apparently contradicting themselves, the
capitalist class shows its contempt by race and gender equality by openly
attacking any form of improvement in the situation of the oppressed
genders and races. This makes the structure, in the eyes of people of
color, a racist one, instead of a purely classist one. It is necessary to keep
people thinking that a) gains can be achieved inside the structure and b)
racism is everywhere (which is true, but it needs to be really thrown at
peopleâs faces all the times). The objective of this exercise is to demonstrate both that power is in the side in the elite; and that the oppressedâs
situation can improve if only they submit enough so the elite do not seem
them as a threat, but as something they can thoroughly control. At the
same time, they need to keep the distance between those that have
privilege, and those who do not.
It is interesting to see that the elite of color too benefits from the racist
structure, and if racism were to simply be wiped out of the whole scenario,
they would be in bad waters. It is of their interest that the white elite
dominates â that would eagerly try to take over if they thought that they
could do it without tearing the fabric of social control that the white capitalist elite maintains.
The racist structure of the system allows the elites of color to maintain
their power and give them other possibilities. Imperialism has been used
as a shield by every single dictator that had power threatened by the
bigger shark, from Castro to Hussein to Milosevic. This dragged into direct
or indirect the defense of their oppressive regime millions of people of color,
working class people and anti-imperialist militants. This is not a justification to the U.S. actions, but an example of how the racist structure
benefits not only the white elite and therefore supports directly or indirectly
by the elites worldwide. It is a case of opportunism, where oppressors
assume an âoppressedâ mask to defend themselves against the taking of
dominance against another.
A very concrete example of that is the role that Brazil plays now in the
FTAA meetings. Lula and the PT (Brazilian Workerâs Party) have been
repeatedly trying to sell this image of a defiant Brazil, which is concerned
with the imperialist role that the U.S. would play in South America in case
the FTAA gets approved. What they are concerned about is that Brazil
might lose its hegemonic dominance over the South American market; and
then, if the U.S. does not open its market to Brazilian products, the
Brazilian elite of landlords would lose power. They are not concerned with
the effects of the FTAA on labor, environment and the people. It is just very
convenient that those issues show up so they can rally public support.
This pattern repeats itself around the globe. Besides, the majority of this
âelite of colorâ are actually descendent of Europeans. Just look at South
America, the diversity and richness of races and cultures in it â then look
at the elite of South America, a very white and European class of bourgeois. The elites of Africa, while not European in skin, are mostly educated
and raised in Europe or the U.S. The pattern repeats itself.
In maintaining the white supremacy, the elites of color try to escape guilt-
free. In the fight for racial and gender equality, the working class remains
bound. It is not that these fights are not important; if anything, alongside
with class, they are the most important ones. It is only that, without the fall
of the capitalist system as a whole, any fight becomes just filler.
Other parts of the elites of color take a more aggressive position in the defense of the interests of the world capitalist elite. The elites of Japan thrive
over the complete subjugation to the American empire. Make no mistake:
this is hardly a submissive elite â they were imperial forces for centuries and
held an elitist racial position over their neighbors. However, in this game they
play, the subordinate elite because is very much in their interest to keep the
status quo, and the rest is inconsequential. Japan, defeated on WWII, is
reborn as a global potency. But in submission to the white empire. Their pop
culture, their dream, their means of production â everything about modern
Japan cries â slave, but this condition of slave to the elite of world capitalism
asserts its hegemony and dominance over other nations. More than that, it
asserts the dominance of the Japanese elite.
The left worldwide have, for decades now, struggled with race and class
and gender â which liberation should take precedence over another â
without realizing that if any take precedence, the whole fight in itself is
almost a moot point. Racism is not only a pillar of class oppression. It is
one of the single bases of oppression itself.
In this essay, when referring to sexism, the concept, unless noted, incorpo-
rates issues like womenâs rights, womenâs position in the bottom of the scale
of the capitalist society, homophobia and male violence against women.
Sexism â male dominance â is the less addressed and consequentially
the most widespread system of oppression in the world. The roots of
sexism in societies cannot be easily traced and I will not even attempt to
dwell in its history to avoid any fallacy. However, in this essay, we shall
analyze sexism in its relationship with global capitalism and the struggle
for liberation.
The revolution of the capitalists was an economic and political revolution â
not social. The French Revolution, the fall of the Absolutists in Europe, the
social changes that followed were design to enforce the rule of the bourgeoisie and strengthen the influence and power of this rising class against
outside forces. Representative democracy, liberty and freedom and all the
other promises that the revolution made to the people were designed
according to which form would create a favorable atmosphere for the
establishment of capitalism.
It is interesting then to notice that the revolutionary leaders were quick to
crush the womenâs movement that was born during the revolution. The
establishment of Capitalism could not allow the development of such a
movement, especially since, in order to satisfy what those women were
demanding, a distribution of power was necessary. One pamphlet distributed by those women during the revolution was called Request for Women
to be Admitted to the Estates-General, and had the following quote: ââMan
is born egotist... he reduces us to managing his household affairs and to
partaking of his rare favors when he feels so inclined.â Nothing could be
more true and it exemplifies the relationship between the elite and women
â the relationship of power and the need of a structure that âjustifiesâ and
maintain such a relationship.
The strained relationship between capitalism and women has a lot to do, in
a modern setting, with the fact that the elites of the world are â no matter
their âcolorâ â an oppressive majority of males. The male dominance is not
only a âcultural traitâ as it is one of applying a simple rule of power â those
hoe have power will not give it up for free. Concentrated power is limited â
the more you share the less you have and the elites of the World will not
relinquish power for women.
The relationship of power between men and women needs to transcend
race and class in other to be effective. Although one could argue that this
is just another classist plot of the bourgeois to keep their economic rule
over the working class, it is very interesting to notice that misogynist
thinking is part (in different levels) of a multitude of cultures, even before
they got in contact with each other. âPrimitiveâ societies had their good
share of misogyny â they were hardly the utopia that certain people picture
them to be. The dominant gender in our societies has been exploiting
womenâs work and women in general for millennia after millennia. Sexism
is not a capitalist invention. It is not accident that the bourgeoisie power is
composed essentially of males, this is merely a consequence of the fact
that even when the class struggle between the nobility and the bourgeois
aristocrats was being fought, in one thing they agreed â that was a fight
between men, to see which men was going to be the ruler. It is obvious
then why the views of women like Olympe de Gouges were so threatening
to them that she was guillotined in 1793 as a reactionary loyalist.
Robespierre, Marat and the men of the Revolution were most certainly
terrified of losing their power to a woman who advocated not only the
necessity of full legal equality between the genders, job opportunities for
women, schooling for girls and the creation of a national theater were only
plays written by women could be performed, but the creation of the
National Assembly of Women, emphasizing the need for women of self-
governing and equal power.
Gouges understood that â because the culture of sexism â a structure that
âembracedâ men and women as âequalsâ would do nothing to actually
satisfy womenâs need and desire for liberation. It would be a token act. The
need of self-organization for women came from the realization that in a
social structure, every single relationship is one of power, and if men
constructed the social structure, it would be inherently sexist. Only women
could devise a structure that would really beneficiate women.
Sexism always had a condescending tone to its rhetoric, a view that menâs
subjugation of women was actually a necessity for the welfare of women.
What is interesting is that this view is deeply ingrained in the social fabric
of our society, and too ensure this, it is necessary that all men participate
consciously or unconsciously in terrorizing women â much like the State,
the function of manhood is to terrify women into accepting menâs âprotectionâ for the price of their total submission. As Susan Brownmiller puts it,
rape âis nothing more or less than a conscious process of intimidation by
which all men keep all women in a state of fear.â Domestic violence,
violence against women and rape are forms of intimidation and bullying
through which, firstly, male dominance is imposed, and second, male
âprotectionâ is made ânecessary.â Culture reinforces the dominant role of the
male and its âneedâ of violence.
The cult of violent behavior by men, against women and against each other,
is more than just assertion of power against the recipient of violence. It is part
of the engine that feeds of the terrorizing of women to keep them submissive.
Is the double use of the rod â it can beat you up or beat someone else to
protect you. And, as Susan Griffin notes in the book Rape: The All-American
Crime, âif the professional rapist is to be separated from the average dominant heterosexual [male], it may be mainly a quantitative difference.â The
level to which dominance and violence are exerted to the domination of women
may vary in quantity, but not in substance.
The idea of our social fabric reinforcing gender roles of violence/passivity is
to create an atmosphere of fear so overwhelming that the mere presence of
the male becomes threatening. Male attitudes â tone of voice, way of
sitting, conversation, clothing â everything is designed in order to keep
women guessing and consequentially, afraid. Why is it then surprising that
our movement and our spaces are normally male dominated if why do not
critically analyze the balance of power in the attitudes and presence of
men and women inside the movement.
A woman in a room full of men, no matter how strong, outspoken and
determined she is, and no matter how much the men are determined to
treat her as an equal â is definitively in a position of less power and thus
will not have the same weight in her voice. And with the institutions are not
conscious of this power imbalance and do not work actively in reverting
this situation â the maintenance of the status quo is inevitable.
The oppression of women by the working class males is a phenomenon
that can be traced back to almost every single culture. To see the feminist
struggle as separate and a âdivision of forcesâ of the working class is a
ludicrous statement â a reflection of a poor understanding of the nature of
oppression and the nature of the working class.
Indeed, to separate these three fights is to divide the working class, but to
set priority in any of them and have the others as a tag along is to destroy
any hopes of liberation that the working class might have.
The gender-based oppression serves a political purpose too. It serves the
elites that women have no political power for the same reason that it
serves the elites that people of color do not enjoy political power. There is,
however, a difference between the gender elite and the elite of color. The
male-dominated elite of color is, globally speaking, fairly stronger and
definitively more aggressive in its pursuit of power than the gender-elite.
The gender-elite lives in a much more subordinate position (to their male
counterparts) than the elite of color â thus putting them in a closer position
with the women of the working class. An abused woman will identify with
the plight of another one â independent of class or race; a queer person
can identify with persecution and prejudice.
It is however, very important to notice that, empathy and de facto equality
are a far cry from each other, and while the bourgeois women might have in
common with the working-class women their subordinate position, they are
enemies of class and therefore not allies.
The union of the working class in one fight will not happen without the
acknowledgment of the levels of oppression inside the working class itself
and the actual facing and destroying of the power imbalance in the movement that proposes to change the reality of oppression lived by the working
class nowadays. A forced union of the working class, with disregard of the
real issues of gender and race except in a superficial way is bound to fail.
A world revolution is necessary â a complete change of structure, a social,
economic and political revolution that destroys class, gender and racial
oppression.
I disagree with the idea that the class struggle should take priority over the
race and gender struggle. This centralist and elitist view of disregarding the
concerns of women and people of color have been seen thousands of
times before, and we have been betrayed and stomped on enough to
realize that those with power will not relinquish it, it must be taken from
them. Only the oppressed can liberate the oppressed, and it is vital that
we understand people of color, women, queers and all the other oppressed
people inside the working class have not only this motto repeated in their
heads like a mantra, but that they actually need to exercise that line inside
the movement and draw their own conclusions of where they want to go
and what needs to be done.
I too disagree with the idea that race and gender should be taken a priority
over the class struggle â the simple idea that race and gender issues
could be solved inside the capitalist system in any frame is simply ludi-
crous. Inside the capitalist system, we have no real say in the affairs of
business and very little (in the most optimistic of the views) in the affairs of
the government. A feminist or a race movement that did not have as priority
to smash the capitalist system would fall sort on its legs â gender and
race justice are impossible inside the capitalist system. The capitalist
system is not only a system based on class dominance, but one too that
maintain women and people of color inside that class and oppressed
inside of it.
The means must be coherent with the ends. A movement that disregards
any of the oppression-systems is bound to be limited and to create a
society based on elitism. Unless the movement is committed to be one
that will be addressing those three issues seriously and not sidestepping it
with âwe are all equalâ condescending behavior, its range is going to be
limited and it will turn off people that see themselves as not only working-
class, but feel other pressing form of oppression crushing them.
It is time to reevaluate the movements approach on issues of race, gender
and sexuality â it is good to see there is a movement of people already
working in that direction. It is time for us to have a revolution in ourselves to
change our perception on what a real liberation of the people means.
I see their faces â their smiling brown faces â and there is nothing of me in
there. We shall build a different world.
*by Ramiro âRamseyâ Muniz*
âI covered my face with my hands as I was shackled and
chained, beginning three years of solitary confinement in
the belly of the beast. I sat still in pure unconsciousness,
neither hearing nor feeling, nor knowing in the darkness of
the dungeons of America, like the deep of the sea, with no
time and no world. In the depths that are timeless and
worldless, it was then that the revolutionary spirit of Ricardo
Flores Magon reached into the depths of my heartâŠâ
Into my second year of solitary confinement, in the mode of darkness, I
was informed by the forcing oppressor that seventy four years ago, our
revolutionary brother Flores Magon had been confined in the same cell.
Even before the latter information, his revolutionary spirits would appear at
any given time or day. Fortunately, with the support of family and others, I
was able to receive various books written on the life, history and death of
Flores Magon. The most vivid and profound statement has made months
before his death here at Leavenworth USP is the following:
âMy dream of beauty and beloved visions of a humanity
living in peace, love and liberty⊠will not die with me,
while there is on Earth a painful heart or an eye full of
tears. My dreams and visions will liveâŠâ
â March 16, 1922
His visions, his dreams and his revolutionary spirituality are very much
alive tonight. Even though I have been condemned by the oppressor to a
death sentence, it is my tonalli (destiny) to continue with the visions,
dreams and liberation of all humanity, especially the oppressed people of
color. It is in the dungeons of the oppressor where I have found the truth
and direction that we as oppressed people must take in order to be free
once again.
During my confinement in the hole, if I would wish to communicate in my
dreams with my brother Flores Magon, I would concentrate for days on his
spirituality and writings. Within a few days, he would appear in my dreams,
not only sharing his inner thoughts, but, most importantly, what we must
do to rise again and remove the chains that our people bear in the present.
His most profound statement was, âMy brother, you must reach into the
ancient past, reach into the roots of our hearts, reach into the strength of
our revolutionary spirituality.â I will never forget how I would rise from my
sleep and immediately begin to write the essence of our conversations.
Yes, he is very much alive!
Our Mexicano spirituality is alive and throughout all Aztlan and in our Holy
Land (Mexico). In fact, it is more alive than those so-called leaders who
pretend to represent the masses of our people while, at the same time,
compromising and making political deals with the same oppressor that
continues to tighten the noose of the rope of oppression.
In a letter to his attorney, Flores Magon said he would rather die in prison
than abdicate his ideals. âI prefer this to turning my back on the organizers
and having the prison doors opened at the price of my honor.â Flores
Magon wrote. âI will not outlive my captivity, for I am already old, but when I
die, my friends will perhaps inscribe on my tomb, âhere lies a dreamer,â and
my enemies, âhere lies a madman.â But no one will be able to stamp the
inscription, âhere lies a coward and traitor to his ideas.ââ
It is our duty and responsibility as liberators to pass on our oral traditions of
struggle, sacrifice and freedom. From the medieval mazorra of this oppressor, we reach out of the voices of the mountains in Chiapas, where our brother
Marcos continues to liberate our sisters and brothers from the same oppressor that rules here in America. And in this world of conflicts, that fire of
spirituality continues to rise regardless of the genocide wrought. Everywhere
throughout the world, the oppressed, people of color, are rising. It seems as
if the entire universe is reaching into its ancient past for the answers of
tomorrow. We of the sixth sun, Mexicanos from Aztlan, have reached and
embraced the enlightenment of our spiritual, cultural and historical pasts for
the last five hundred years. We have lived in a mode of darkness and ignorance. The oppressor has, with malicious intent, destroyed and/or refused
the right for us to be exposed to the beauty and power of our ancient past. A
race without a history or past is a race of non-existence.
In conclusion, it is with pride and honor that I share this by Flores Magon. It
represents the purpose of this book on culture, resistance and anarchism:
âIt is necessary to educate our people, to teach them the
real causes of their misery and slavery⊠This is why our
hands, instead of being armed with muskets, are armed
with pens, a weapon more formidable and far more feared
by tyrants and exploiters.â
â 1916
Presently, we of Aztlanahuac are in the midst of rising, with a power of
resistance and liberation like never before in our history. The silence has
now become our new fire ceremony of liberation, justice and land. We
must all come with clean hearts and be prepared to sacrifice, because
without sacrifice, there will never be freedom.
Author and interviewees in alphabetical order
**Kapila** is an artist, organizer, writer and poet born in Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil, in January of 1981. Started working with the Centro de Estudos
Libertarios Ideal Peres â CELIP, a anarchist study group, and the
Resistencia Popular (Popular Resistance). Came to the U.S. at the age of
21, and started to get involved in student organizing, joining Students for
Justice, a group of mostly community college based activists, and was
part of the process which created a federation of the different Students for
Justice chapters in the San Jose area (Silicon Valley, in California). I am
part of Silicon Valley De-Bug, a young workers and artists self-managed
media and organizing collective. I joined the IWW and have been part of
the effort of starting a branch in San Jose. Currently I am working on a
book about art and revolution and am part of the Furious Five anarchist
collective in San Jose.
**Victoria Law** has been a self-identified anarchist since she was sixteen.
Since then, she has participated in various collectives and anarchist
endeavors, learned photography, been published on-line and in print, made
zines, traveled overseas and become a mother. She and her daughter will
be visiting her great-grandmotherâs former house in Shanghai in January
2004 between the Western and the Lunar New Years.
**Shawn McDougal** is a Black man whoâs been an anarchist since before
he even heard the word. He was born and raised in LA, but has spent time
living in New England and abroad (years in Brazil and China, months in
Spain and Argentina). After dropping out of grad school and moving back to
LA in 1997, heâs spent most of his time working as a community and issue
organizer andâmost recentlyâa public school teacher. His dream is to
start a community center that promotes the sharing of resources, skills,
and knowledge across boundaries of race, ethnicity, and class, and help
people learn through experience their power to shape social reality.
TomĂĄs Moniz has been living, loving, fighting, writing, teaching and
parenting three kick ass kids in the bay area for the last 12 years. Comments questions concerns, can go to Moniz at tom_moniz@riseup.netâ
**Suneel Mubayi,** 18, born in NYC, grew up mostly in New Delhi, India,
came to New York last June after finishing high school in India to study at
Columbia. He started writing poetry and stories at the age of 14, and
studied theatre for two years in school. After initially writing mostly love
and emotional poetry, he began to explore political arenas as muses, and
was inspired by post-9/11 and the war. At some point in time, around the
age of 16, he realized that he wasnât really a he inside, despite being birth-
assigned female, and Suneelâs political revolutionization has been closely
intertwined with her shedding of gender boundaries and categorizations.
She has since pursued spoken word performance and theater acting fairly
successfully all over NYC and is learning how to trash the system from the
belly of the Ivy League beast.
**Ramiro âRamseyâ Muñiz** is a political prisoner remembered for his
leadership role during the Chicano Civil Rights Movement in the 1970s. As
an attorney, Muñiz defended the rights of Mexicanos whose constitutional
rights were constantly violated. In 1972 and 1974, Muñiz was a gubernatorial candidate in Texas for La Raza Unida, a political party established and
developed solely by Mexicanos to articulate an independent political vision.
Muñiz garnered six percent of the vote and, during the campaign, spoke
widely of Mexicano political power and potential. He is now serving time in
Leavenworth. Info on his case visit his website at [[http://www.freeramsey.com/][www.freeramsey.com]], or
write him at Ramiro R. Muñiz â 40288â115, P.O. Box 1000, Leavenworth,
KS 66048â1000.
**Ewuare Osayande** ([[http://www.osayande.org/][www.osayande.org]]) is a political activist, poet and author of a number of books including his latest work Black Anti-Ballistic
Missives: Resisting War/Resisting Racism. The former chairperson of the
Philadelphia chapter of the Black Radical Congress, he is the co-founder of
P.O.W.E.R.: People Organized Working to Eradicate Racism. The Quarterly Black Review has called Osayande âone of Black Americaâs newest
insurgent intellectuals coming to the table with enough mental firepower to
be a David Walker for our time.â He currently resides in Philadelphia, PA.