http://www.racialicious.com/2011/10/15/a-letter-to-the-occupy-together-movement/
By Guest Contributor Harsha Walia
By Guest Contributor Harsha Walia
I
wish I could start with the ritualistic “I love you” for the Occupy
Movement. To be honest, it has been a space of turmoil for me. But also
one of virulent optimism. What I outline below are not criticisms. I am
inspired that the dynamic of the movement thus far has been organic, so
that all those who choose to participate are collectively responsible
for its evolution. To everyone – I offer my deepest respect.
I am writing today with Grace Lee Boggs in mind:
The coming struggle is a political struggle to take political power out of the hands of the few and put it into the hands of the many. But in order to get this power into the hands of the many, it will be necessary for the many not only to fight the powerful few but to fight and clash among themselves as well.
This
may sound counter-productive, but I find it a poignant reminder that,
in our state of elation, we cannot under-estimate the difficult terrain
ahead. I look forward to the processes that will further these
conversations.
Occupations on Occupied Land
One
of the broad principles in a working statement of unity (yet to be
formally adopted) of Occupy Vancouver thus far includes an
acknowledgement of unceded Coast Salish territories. There has been
opposition to this as being “divisive” and “focusing on First Nations
issues”. I would argue that acknowledging Indigenous lands is a
necessary and critical starting point for two primary reasons.
Firstly, the word Occupy has understandably ignited criticism
from Indigenous people as having a deeply colonial implication. It
erases the brutal history of genocide that settler societies have been
built on. This is not simply a rhetorical or fringe point; it is a
profound and indisputable matter of fact that this land is already
occupied. The province of BC is largely still unceded land, which means
that no treaties have been signed and the title holders of Vancouver are
the Sḵwx̱wú7mesh, Tseilwau-tuth, and Musqueam. As my Sḵwx̱wú7mesh
friend Dustin Rivers joked “Okay so the Premier and provincial
government acknowledge and give thanks to the host territory, but Occupy
Vancouver can’t?”
Supporting
efforts towards decolonization is not only an Indigenous issue. It is
also about us, as non-natives, learning the history of this land and
locating ourselves and our responsibilities within the context of
colonization. Occupation movements such as those in Boston and Denver and New York have taken similar steps in deepening an anti-colonial analysis.
Secondly,
we must understand that the tentacles of corporate control have roots
in the processes of colonization and enslavement. As written by the Owe Aku International Justice Project:
“Corporate greed is the driving factor for the global oppression and
suffering of Indigenous populations. It is the driving factor for the
conquest and continued suffering for the Indigenous peoples on this
continent. The effects of greed eventually spill over and negatively
impact all peoples, everywhere.”
The
Hudsons Bay Company in Canada and the East India Trading Company in
India, for example, were some of the first corporate entities
established on the stock market. Both companies were granted trading
monopolies by the British Crown, and were able to extract resources and
amass massive profits due to the subjugation of local communities
through the use of the Empire’s military and police forces. The
attendant processes of corporate expansion and colonization continues
today, most evident in this country with the Alberta Tar Sands.
In the midst of an economic crisis, corporations’ ability to accumulate
wealth is dependent on discovering new frontiers from which to extract
resources. This disproportionately impacts Indigenous peoples and
destroys the land base required to sustain their communities, while
creating an ecological crisis for the planet as a whole.
Systemic Oppression Connected to Economic Inequality
In
creating a unified space of opposition to the 1% who hold a
concentration of power and wealth, we must simultaneously foster
critical education to learn about the systemic injustices that many of
us in the 99% continue to face. This should not be pejoratively
dismissed as “identity politics”, which for many re-enforces the patterns of marginalization.
The connection between the nature and structure of the political
economy and systemic injustice is clear: the growing economic inequality
being experienced in this city and across this country is nothing new for low-income racialized communities, particularly single mothers, all of whom face the double brunt of scape-goating during periods of recession.
The
very idea of the multitude forces a contestation of any one lived
experience binding the 99%. Embracing this plurality and having an open
heart to potentially uncomfortable truths about systemic oppression
beyond the ‘evil corporations and greedy banks’ will strengthen this movement. Ignoring the hierarchies of power between us does not make them magically disappear. It actually does the opposite – it entrenches those inequalities.
If we learn from social movements past, we observe that the struggle to
genuinely address issues of race, class, gender, ability, sexuality,
age, and nationality actually did more, rather than less, to facilitate
broader participation.
In
order to this we need to critically examine the idea of “catering to
the mainstream”. I do not disagree with reaching out to as broad a base
as possible; but we should ask ourselves: who constitutes the
“mainstream”? If Indigenous communities, homeless people, immigrants,
LGBTQs, seniors and others are all considered “special interest groups”
(although we actually constitute an overwhelming demographic majority),
then by default that suggests that, as Rinku Sen argues,
straight white men are the sole standard of universalism. “Addressing
other systems of oppression, and the people those systems affect, isn’t
about elevating one group’s suffering over that of white men. It’s about
understanding how the mechanisms of control actually operate. When we
understand, we can craft solutions that truly help everybody. ” This
should not be misunderstood as advocating for a pecking order of issues;
it is about understanding that the 99% is not a homogenous group but a
web of inter-related communities in struggle.
Clayton
Thomas-Muller, Tar Sands Campaign Organizer for the Indigenous
Environmental Network, wrote to me: “Our own Indigenous Rights movements
are gaining momentum which means that we all must continually be
educating new folks getting politicized. We can all be working towards a
larger convergence that is strongly rooted in an Anti colonial, Anti
Racist, Anti Oppressive framework.” In a similar vein, Syed Hussan writes,
“Understand that to truly be free, to truly include the entire 99 per
cent, you have to say today, and say every day: We will leave no one
behind.” Just as we challenge the idea of austerity put forward by
governments and corporations, we should challenge the idea of scarcity
of space in our movements and instead facilitate a more nuanced
discourse about inequality.
Learning from History and Building on Successes
While
it is clearly too early to comment on the future of the Occupy
movement, I offer a few humble preliminary thoughts based on Occupy Wall
Street and the nature of the Vancouver organizing. Those who us who
have been activists rightfully do not have any particular authority in
this movement and as many others have cautioned, more experienced
activists should not claim moral righteousness over those who are just
joining the struggle. But we also cannot claim ignorance either.
It
must be re-stated that Occupy Together is brilliantly transitional. As
has been repeatedly noted, it is has been a moral and strategic success
to not have a pre-articulated laundry list of demands within which to
confine a nascent movement. Peter Marcus writes
“Occupy is seen by most of its participants and supporters not as a set
of pressures for individual rights, but as a powerful claim for a
better world… The whole essence of the movement is to reject the game’s
rules as it is being played, to produce change that includes each of
these demands but goes much further to question the structures that make
those demands necessary.” Similarly Vijay Prashad says that we “must breathe in the many currents of dissatisfaction, and breathe out a new radical imagination.”
The
creation of encampments is in itself an act of liberation.
Decentralized gatherings with democratic decision-making processes and
autonomous space for people to gather and dialogue based on their
interests – such as through reading circles or art zones or guerrilla
gardening – create a sense of purpose, connectedness, and emancipation
in a society that otherwise breeds apathy, disenchantment, and
isolation. This type of pre-figurative politics – a living symbol of refusal
– is a ways to come together to create and live the alternatives to
this system. I am reminded of the modest (Anti) Olympic Tent Village in
our own city in the Downtown Eastside last year, which was deemed
‘paradise’ and a place where ‘real freedom lives’ by many.
One
issue I would stress is building awareness about police violence and
police infiltration. In some cities, Occupy organizers have actively
collaborated with police. While many do this on the principle of ‘we
have nothing to hide‘, the police cannot be trusted. This is not a
comment on individual police officers who maybe “ordinary people”, but
their job is to protect the 1%. The police have a long history of
repression of social movements. Plus, people who are homeless,
racialized, non-status, or queer routinely experience arbitrary police
abuse. We must take these concerns seriously in order to promote
participation from these communities. We must also learn to rely on
ourselves to keep ourselves safe and to hold ground when police are
ordered to clear us out. This seems insurmountable, but it has been done
before and can be done again.
In
the heels of the Olympics and G20, a recurring issue is diversity of
tactics. Despite a history in community-based movement-building, based
on a debate about diversity of tactics
with an ally whom I respect, there has been unnecessary and misinformed
fear-mongering that those who support a diversity of tactics
“fundamentally reject peaceful assemblies”. For me, supporting a
diversity of tactics has always implied respect for a range of
strategies including non-violent assembly. As G20 defendant Alex
Hundert, who has written extensively about diversity of tactics told me,
“It is important to recognise that a belief in supporting a diversity
of tactics means not ruling out intentionally peaceful means. These
gatherings have been explicitly nonviolent from the start and in
hundreds of cities across the continent. Obviously this is the right
tactic for this moment.”
It
is noteworthy that Occupy Wall Street has not actually dogmatically
rejected a diversity of tactics. It appears that the movement there has
understood what diversity of tactics actually means – which is not
imposing one tactic in any and every context. The Occupy Wall Street
Direct Action Working Group has adopted the basic tenet of
“respect diversity of tactics, but be aware of how your actions will
affect others.” In my opinion, this is an encouraging development as
people work together to learn how to come keep each other safe within
the encampment, while effectively escalating tactics in autonomous
actions.
Finally,
we may want to stop articulating that this is a leaderless movement; it
might be more honest to suggest that We Are All Leaders. Denying that
leadership exists deflects accountability, obscures potential
hierarchies, and absolves us of actively creating structures within
which to build collective leadership. Many of the models being used such
as the General Assembly and Consensus are rooted in the practice of
anti-authoritarians and community organizers. There are many other
skills to share to empower and embolden this movement. As much as we
wish we can radically transform unjust economic, political, and social
systems overnight, but this is a long-term struggle. And there is always
the danger of co-optation. Slavoj Zizek warned
Occupy Wall Street that “Beware not only of the enemies. But also of
false friends who are already working to dilute this process. In the
same way you get coffee without caffeine, beer without alcohol, ice
cream without fat, they will try to make this into a harmless moral
protest.” Which means that we will need to find ways to do the
pain-staking work of making this movement sustainable and rooting it
within and alongside existing grassroots movements for social and
environmental justice.
“We have begun to come out of the shadows; we have begun to break with routines and oppressive customs and to discard taboos; we have commenced to carry with pride the task of thawing hearts and changing consciousness. Women, let’s not let the danger of the journey and the vastness of the territory scare us — let’s look forward and open paths in these woods. Voyager, there are no bridges; one builds them as one walks.”
- Gloria Anzaldua
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