The battle after Seattle (part two)

BEST OF IDENTIFY 2003 (tie). Four years after the landmark 1999 protests in Seattle, times are tougher for the global justice movement. But activists are adapting by broadening their ranks, shifting their tactics, and envisioning an alternative world.

Go to part one

In recent years, the activists have refined their use of direct democracy, discovering new ways to use technology (anything from cell phones to pirate radio) to keep their various groups coordinated. Weeks before the FTAA summit in Miami was set to take place, protest organizers were holding their spokescouncil meetings over telephone conference calls. “We’ve had to figure out how you organize with direct democracy when people are all over the place, and most people can’t come here weeks early,” says Starhawk, a veteran organizer. Moreover, activists are getting better about coordinating the protest actions on the streets and the ones inside the convention halls — as the authorities learned, to their chagrin, in Cancún. “They thought that they could keep the voice of civil society out, [behind the barricades] seventeen kilometers away, but everyday we’ve been able to come in, and show the WTO what the other side is,” says Walden Bello of Focus on the Global South, who helped stage anti-WTO publicity stunts inside the convention center the week of the ministerial. The defiance is contagious: Marches and rallies of thousands of people build up “street heat,” which inspires representatives of nongovernmental organizations to stage their own demonstrations from within the security perimeter — which encourage delegates from developing countries to resist the demands of the United States, European Union, and Japan during trade negotiations (as members of the G21, a group of twenty-one developing countries led by Brazil, China, and India, did at the Cancún trade talks).

If the global justice movement has managed to adapt to growing repression in recent years, some of its older tactics are increasingly being questioned. At every large protest, you can find men and women dressed in black, professing anarchist beliefs, who smash windows and perform other acts of vandalism — and sometimes rough it up with cops. In defense of their form of protest, activists who use “Black Bloc” strategies explicitly appeal to the movement’s own notions of inclusiveness, saying it should be open to a diversity of tactics. As one woman in black wrote: “Third World peasants, vulnerable in their poverty, generally cannot challenge the ultra powerful multinationals … We are the voices of the voiceless, and we must be loud, because the men in suits high up in their office towers don’t hear the screams of misery below or see the wasted ruins of the Earth. So, we attack their symbols. It’s the least we can do.”

But as Jerry Mander sees it, the property destruction and violence simply undermine the protesters’ credibility and suppress their message. “I understand why people do it, out of frustration and so on, but … it’s, in the end, counterproductive,” says Mander, who is the president of the International Forum on Globalization, a think tank critical of free trade and corporate power. “Because then the media covers the violence.” That has been the trend ever since Seattle, Mander says, “Once [the property destruction] happened — which all the other protestors tried to stop — once that happened, the media only reported that and we had no more substantive reporting from that day forward. It’s police vs. protestors. Period.”

Mander and other activists say that the actual amount of violence in the movement is being grossly overstated. “The only violence is the violence of the World Trade Organization, which needs to police us as if we were thieves when they are the ones who are robbing us,” says Javier Sánchez Ansó, director of international relations for COAG, a Spanish farmworkers’ group. Dietrich, an anarchist who is affiliated with the Green Bloc (activists into “guerrilla gardening” and other forms of pro-environment direct action), says that news reports misinform the public about his movement. “The media has just drilled home that we [anarchists] are violent, angry, young white men,” he says. “But that’s not true. I am a young white male, but not violent. The media portrayal of anarchy and anarchism, it never goes into the debate about the politics of what anarchy is, it’s just, ‘Anarchy is chaos.’ Anarchy is people doing it for themselves, direct democracy at its best and finest.”

Nevertheless, the focus on violence in the nightly news seems to be having an effect: In the days before protests began in Cancún, locals said they feared the activists coming into their city. Gabriel Marez, a forty-five-year-old waiter at the La Ruina cantina, told me that he was opposed to the FTAA and other free trade agreements, but added that the protesters upset him: “I am not in agreement with radical forms of protest, with the violence.”

“Personally, I don’t think throwing things at the police brings about social change,” says Danaher of Global Exchange, whose mother was a police officer. “You’re not going to have a revolution in the U.S. with a unified police force. There has to be a significant portion of the police who realize that it’s in their self-interest to be neutral in the class struggle between capital and labor.” Danaher does police liaison work during demonstrations, and speaks with pride about the occasions when police officers tell him, “We really appreciate that you’re trying to humanize the situation.” These days, Danaher is trying to start a nonviolence training camp to bring together police and activists. He says such a confab could help the two sides to better understand each other, and help the global justice movement win allies among the ranks of blue.

After Seattle police were roundly criticized for allowing their city to descend into chaos during the 1999 WTO ministerial, the police have put on a massive show of force at every international summit. (In Miami, law enforcement agencies received $8.5 million from the $87 billion Iraq reconstruction bill to protect the city from protesters: The funds helped pay for helicopters, armored personnel carriers, and an array of sophisticated weaponry.) Now that police have so many resources at their disposal, the global justice movement should think about moving away from its strategy of “summit-hopping,” some activists say.

“I think that you’re never going to win a fight with the cops. You just won’t,” says David Amdur, a community organizer for the East Boston Ecumenical Community Council, a progressive organization that works with the local Latino community to further immigrant rights. Before he landed his current job, Amdur worked for years as an activist on international causes — first in solidarity with Latin American social movements (he lived in E45El Salvador from 1996 to 2000) and then as a member of the Boston Global Action Network. But these days he believes he’s doing more good by working in local communities. “Part of me feels that the most important maybe is to stay here, to organize something here,” he says. “And the most vital of all is not just to focus on globalization and a summit — it’s about educating people about the FTAA, and motivating people to take action and stop it.”

Amdur and other activists say they shouldn’t abandon the protests, which help energize people and get different groups talking to one another. They acknowledge that the global justice movement has made some efforts to bring local voices to the large-scale protests (consider, for example, Root Cause, a South Florida-based coalition that staged a thirty-four-mile march the week of the Miami ministerial to highlight the FTAA’s potential impact on local communities). But in their view, some sectors of the movement have a misguided belief that protests alone will put an end to free trade agreements. Meanwhile, the focus on demonstrations keeps the movement from doing other important work, such as building coalitions that include more people of color and working-class Americans. “There are times for big mobilizations,” Amdur says, “but there are times when you need to have organizing, education, and mobilizing in your community, because you have to realize in terms of class, in terms of race, and in terms of immigration status, not everyone can go to these big protests.”

A protester holds his opinion high in front of the World Bank’s headquarters in Washington. April 20, 2002.

Global solutions

Writing in The New York Times the very day that global justice protesters clashed with Italian police in Genoa, Thomas L. Friedman declared the anti-globalization movement to be a bunch of irresponsible naysayers: “To be against globalization is to be against so many things — from cell phones to trade to Big Macs — that it connotes nothing. Which is why the anti-globalization protests have produced noise but nothing that has improved anyone’s life.” This portrait of an “anti-globalization” movement of Luddites and reactionaries became even darker after September 11. Soon after the terrorist attacks, Britain’s international development secretary, Clare Short, warned: “There is a danger that the terrorists and the anti-globalization protestors will get what they want, which is to blow up world trade and to separate us.” Canadian journalist Leonard Stern was a tad kinder: The demonstrators were “still several rungs behind Osama bin Laden,” he said, even if they were “climbing the same ladder.”

Global justice activists say their critics are misguided. “It has nothing to do with being afraid of globalization. It has everything to do with putting forward a new form of globalization,” says Bill Moore-Kilgannon, director of campaigns and communications for the Council of Canadians, a Canadian citizens’ watchdog organization. But part of what makes the criticism stick is the fact that the global justice movement has done such a bad job of getting its message out into the mainstream media. “I think some reporters are just lazy,” says Jason Mark, co-author (with Danaher) of the new book Insurrection: Citizen Challenges to Corporate Power. “And it’s a lot easier to just write the story in a simple way. I think another part of the challenge is that these issues are a lot more complicated than an anti-war march is. At an anti-war march it’s very simple to get the message: ‘No War.’ Two words … But if you go and interview somebody in the street about the IMF, even without their protesting, it’s going to be difficult for them to offer their vision.”

These days, global justice activists are trying to spell out that vision — on the streets and in the convention halls. Instead of just shouting their opposition to the WTO and other suspect multilateral institutions, they stage “alternative” summits just blocks away from the trade ministerials — anything from forest forums to farmworker gatherings to fair trade confabs. (In Cancún, anarchists from the Green Bloc even built their own “eco-village” in a city park, featuring exhibits of some of the sustainable technologies that people could use in their own communities, such as systems to collect rain for drinking water.) The movement’s most ambitious effort to institutionalize alternatives, however, has been the World Social Forum, an annual gathering that for the past three years has been held in Porto Alegre, Brazil — at the same time that business elites and heads of state meet up in Davos, Switzerland, for their World Economic Forum. The next World Social Forum will be held in January in Mumbai, India; like the first, it will bring together global justice activists from around the world to discuss the movement’s alternatives to neoliberalism.

The going has been slow, but in recent years it seems that the various activist communities have made some progress in sketching out their alternative world. Some of their economic proposals include:

  • Last year, the International Forum on Globalization (IFG) put out a book, Alternatives to Economic Globalization — the product of a three-year discussion by nineteen academics and policy analysts, including Bello, Mander, and Vandana Shiva. Their report calls for a moratorium on the negotiation of new trade agreements, and also highlights a wide range of “alternative” systems for energy, transportation, agriculture, and manufacturing — from hydrogen fuel cells to “smart growth” urban planning, from local food production to accounting methods that take into account environmental cleanup costs.

    At the heart of IFG’s alternative vision is a concept called subsidiarity. “Subsidiarity doesn’t exactly mean localization,” Mander says. “What it means is that power should reside in the governing unit that’s closest to the people where practical.” When dealing with global crises like AIDS or ozone depletion, there is a need for international arrangements with some degree of power “because everybody’s in the same soup,” Mander says. “But they should be one at a time. They should be one case at a time. There should not be an overall structure that dominates all of these things, like the World Trade Organization tries to be.”

    Diversity and democracy are entwined in this idea of subsidiarity — diversity in the promotion of a variety of local solutions to problems, and democracy in the decentralization of production. “The great thing about wind and solar [energy],” Mark of Global Exchange points out, “is you can put it everywhere. The idea is, okay, if each community is creating their own energy source … then that creates more community control, local control. It helps and enhances democracy.” As Danaher puts it, “The basic idea is, democratize access to capital. Capital is horseshit. Concentrated in a pile, it stinks. Spread it out, it makes things grow. It’s like fertilizer, right?”

  • Promoting diversity is also one of the explicit goals of Berkeley’s BREAD Hours, one of the world’s local exchange trading systems. An alternative to the greenback, BREAD Hours allow Berkeley residents to keep money within the local community. BREAD Hours are based on labor: Individuals provide services in exchange for Hours, which they can use at local shops, restaurants, and business. (Ithaca, New York, has a similar currency called Ithaca HOURS, and Argentina’s RGT system, a national trading and barter network, transacts several million U.S. dollars of business every year.)
  • Fair trade” is another diversity-friendly form of production that has taken off in the past decade. To be certified fair trade, goods must meet certain standards — among other things, the producers have to receive a stable, minimum price, and the goods must be made under safe working conditions, without forced labor or exploitative child labor. Today, a wide range of products — including coffee, chocolate, and crafts — receive international fair-trade certification, allowing consumers to make sure their purchasing reflects their values. According to Global Exchange, fair trade coffee every year benefits 350,000 farmers organized into more than 300 cooperatives in twenty-two countries; fair trade products overall accounted for $100 million in sales in the United States in 2000. Even Starbucks — whose store managers are never too happy to see anarchists waltz by their plate-glass windows — now sells fair trade coffee in its stores.
  • While some global justice activists want to get rid of corporations altogether, others want to reform them by getting at the root of their problem: their obsessive pursuit of the bottom line. The idea of a “triple bottom line” — one that takes into account environmental and social impacts as well as profit — can be seen in the efforts by the AFL-CIO and other labor movements to introduce workers’ rights in the WTO and trade agreements. It can be seen in the “living wage” campaign, which has focused on implementing city ordinances that require city contractors to pay their workers a minimum wage that provides adequate support for their families. And it can be seen in shareholder activism, a strategy that has been pursued in recent years by groups like Amnesty International USA to persuade multinational corporations to stop supporting human rights abuses in countries like Indonesia and Nigeria. By putting forward shareholder resolutions that stir up dissension, Amnesty has been able to insert morality into the usual corporate debates, and promote a form of (albeit limited) democracy in otherwise unaccountable institutions.
  • In the anarchist community, activists talk about how their models of decentralized decision-making can help fashion a more inclusive and democratic society. For these activists, the whole purpose of the global justice struggle is to bring radical democracy to the world. “That’s not just the means to the change, but that is the change,” says Solnit. “We can’t change the world through political parties and politicians or reforming corporations. We have to just make a new world, and actually very much not seize power, but exercise power.” These days, Solnit is putting together an anthology of essays (the forthcoming Globalizing Liberation: How to Uproot the System and Build a Better World) that spells out the political vision that he and his fellow activists share — one opposed to any system of government that centralizes power. “Other social movements have had alternatives, but I think it’s significant in that anti-globalization is at its heart an anti-systemic movement,” Solnit says. “In the last decades we’ve been trapped into single-issue movements that talked about alternatives to the war, alternatives to sexism, alternatives to racism, but not alternatives to the entire system.”

    New forms of political participation in other parts of the world have provided inspiration to Solnit and other global justice activists. In Argentina, where four out of ten people now live in poverty, spontaneous neighborhood councils have been convened in middle-class neighborhoods, where residents are upset over unpopular government decrees. In Brazil, the Landless Workers’ Movement (Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra, or MST) has organized hundreds of thousands of landless peasants to squat on and take over unproductive land — carrying out their own version of grassroots, extralegal land reform. And since 1989, Porto Alegre, a regional capital city of 1.3 million in southern Brazil, has used a “participatory budget” process that allows thousands of city residents to make decisions about how their tax dollars are spent.

If global justice activists fall almost in lockstep behind the general principles of diversity and democracy, there’s plenty of disagreement over how far to push these things. On one hand, the reformists question whether democracy is always a good thing (couldn’t you consider the genocide of a minority group by a majority group “democracy in action”?). On the other hand, the radicals are concerned about the darker side of their movement’s diversity: co-optation. “To a large degree, single-issue nonprofits, [nongovernmental organizations], and trade unions serve a function for the system of normalizing things, preventing genuine rebellion, keeping people in check, and then providing someone who’s much more manageable,” says Solnit.

Nevertheless, there are signs that the two camps are growing more comfortable with each other’s company. Lisa Hoyos, an organizer for the AFL-CIO, points out that “radicals” like herself could learn from the lobbying strategies of more traditional political campaigns. “When it comes to international trade and the World Bank and all those things, it’s Congress that’s voting on these measures and accords,” says Hoyos, who formerly facilitated the “Our World Is Not for Sale” global justice network. “And I don’t think that, for all the great visibility work we’ve done in protests and so forth, that we’re pressuring them enough.” Meanwhile, reformists are realizing that there are tactical benefits to having a diversity of political viewpoints under one banner. “Those of us who are in the reformist camp are beholden to the abolitionist camp [for] moving our agenda for us,” says Zafra Whitcomb, business and human rights program coordinator at Amnesty International USA. “When a moderate group meets with a governmental or corporate organization, often the organization will say, ‘We’re so glad we can talk to you. We’re so glad you’re not just out there beating us over the head.’”

A new era in organizing

The conventional wisdom is that “successful” social movements need a single, compelling vision, strong, charismatic leadership, and hierarchical, centralized organization. Throughout history, this perspective has won over movements that began as experiments in direct democracy. “By the late 1960s, many new leftists had abandoned efforts to create an egalitarian microcosm of a future society in favor of centralized, often militaristic organizations modeled on those of their Third World revolutionary heroes,” writes sociologist Francesca Polletta in her book Freedom Is an Endless Meeting. “It was among radical feminists and in a counterculture largely disdained by politicos, that experiments in movement democracy continued.” Democracy, in other words, was a luxury of the delusional political fringe.

From the moment it began in the Lacandón Jungle of Mexico, the global justice movement has sought to become an exception to the rule. Seattle became the global rallying cry for a new vision of organizing: one that saw diversity and democracy not as weaknesses, but as strengths; not merely as means, but as ends. By taking this position, activists hoped to avoid the fate of the two progressive experiments whose failures some of them had witnessed in their youth: the U.S. New Left, and international communism. The former had been driven into division by arrogant leadership and an inability to relate across lines of class, gender, and race. The latter had sought to impose yet another hierarchical, oppressive model of organizing society and the economy.

Instead, we might compare the global justice movement to another kind of organizing from another era: the U.S. civil rights movement. It began as a reaction against Jim Crow in the South — in Montgomery, Alabama, against segregated buses, and in Greensboro, North Carolina, against whites-only lunch counters. In later years, however, it grew into a much larger movement, with aims that went beyond tearing down racist laws and institutions. Key leaders, like Martin Luther King Jr., and key activist organizations, like the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, shifted away from a more or less reactive approach — demonstrating against specific injustices like Jim Crow — and increasingly advanced their own visions of democracy and economic opportunity in America. By the mid-1960s, the SNCC was working among black communities in Mississippi to register voters and build black politica+E94l power; King and other black leaders were calling for jobs and education and “something more” than legal equality for African Americans. As King said in 1968, two months before his death, “What good does it do to sit at the counter when you cannot afford a hamburger?”

Three decades later, another social movement is on the cusp of a similar transition. In their post-MTV, post-Internet version of the Montgomery bus boycott, global justice protesters shut down the city of Seattle and sabotaged the 1999 WTO ministerial. That protest was a defining moment, which unleashed a wave of other demonstrations around the country and across the globe. But like the U.S. civil rights movement did in the late 1960s, the global justice movement has entered a new stage in its organizing: broadening its ranks, diversifying its tactics, and dreaming its own versions of tomorrow.

The question, of course, is whether the movement can rise out of the fringe of left-wing politics — what one activist calls the “anarchist gutter.” Will the movement’s campaign to diversify simply lead to more crippling divisions? Will its effort to further democratize strip it of the very tools it needs to confront its enemies? Last year’s massive rallies against the Iraq War have provided some momentum, and the general drift of public interest is in their favor, activists insist. “The point we’re at now is unique,” says Whitcomb of Amnesty International. “Even though economic globalization has been going on for three centuries, there hasn’t been a true awareness. Even in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, there were activist movements … But now I think it’s more decentralized, filtered out through the population. And it’s focused on the issues of economic justice, equal voice, participation, rights to decent work, decent living conditions, fair wages — equal participation in the benefits of economic development. It is shaping a new paradigm.”

HELP NEEDED: To take part in a survey of global justice activists being conducted by Tom Hayden and Victor Tan Chen, please click here.

Victor Tan Chen is In The Fray's editor in chief and the author of Cut Loose: Jobless and Hopeless in an Unfair Economy. Site: victortanchen.com | Facebook | Twitter: @victortanchen

 

Readers’ Choice: Top ten activists in America

Last month we asked you which ten activists and organizations working on social justice issues in the United States have had the most influence during the past three decades (1973-2003), and now the ballots are in. The vote was incredibly close, and there were even a few irresolvable ties. (In fact, the vote for the most influential organizations was so close that we need your help in whittling the list of eighteen organizations down to ten — click here to help out.)

The list that our readers came up with is by no means exhaustive. As one reader explained, “We probably don’t know many of the most important activists by name because they’ve been busy cultivating other leaders. It’s sort of weird to lionize an individual activist since activism is a group effort by nature.” Other readers made it a point to mention that activism isn’t always characterized by a liberal slant.

That said, the ten activists selected represent a wide array of accomplishments, causes, and political strategies. They have transformed the lives of countless people around the world. And they continue to challenge and inspire future generations of leaders and activists. We hope you will join us in recognizing the importance of their work.

Laura Nathan
Managing Editor, InTheFray Magazine
Austin, Texas

TEN MOST INFLUENTIAL ACTIVISTS FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE IN THE UNITED STATES
(1973-2003)

#9 – Oprah Winfrey

#9 – Barbara Ehrenreich

#8 – Bono

#7 – Jimmy and Roslyn Carter

#5 – Jesse Jackson

#5 – Edward Said

#4 – Gloria Steinem

#3 – Ralph Nader

#2 – Noam Chomsky

And the Readers’ Choice for the MOST INFLUENTIAL ACTIVIST FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE IN THE PAST THIRTY YEARS:

#1 – Cesar Chavez

 

It’s lonely at the top

Every generation likes to think it stands at the end of time. But there are good reasons for activists to remember their history — and remember their humility.

It is hardly likely that twentieth-century man is called upon to discover truth that has never been discovered before.
—E.F. Schumacher, Small is Beautiful

Outside my home, somewhere in the cedar trees, summer insects are piping away, with no idea of whether they are the first, the billionth, or the last to do what they are doing. Unlike them, I worry about my place in the progression of time. A baby boomer, a modern man, someone living in a time of global crisis — I not only see myself in time, but I sometimes view myself as being at a privileged position — which is at the summit and culmination of history.

Having a sense of time and place is one of the interesting things about being human. But our awareness becomes a problem when we start to believe that our particular moment is the most important moment, that our insights are the best of all time so far, that our generation stands on a mountaintop soaring above history’s hills and valleys. And I think this is especially a problem — even a trap — for those of us who are working for social justice.

I think that the idea that insights, problems, and programs are “new” is driven largely by those — mainstream politicians, or corporate brand marketers, or discoverers — who feel a need to claim that they are pioneers of a brave new world. Then, of course, there are academics and inventors and funders and folks applying for grants — people who are competing for time-limited resources. Throughout the twentieth century, the worlds of music and art have also been tangled up with time-based competition, as artists get praised and rewarded for being “contemporary” or “modern.” In each case, we are urged to forget all the losers in the past, and simply glory in the wonderfulness of the present, where someone finally did it right. Whatever “it” is.

In reality, most of what we know, do, smell and think has been with us for a while. Some of our ancestors were as smart and sophisticated as anyone is now, and we are pretty much in their footsteps on a long march, much of which keeps coming around to the same places.  The accomplishments of those who lived thirty or even ninety years ago are little different than the accomplishments of this generation.

The more things change …

At the age of fifty-three, I’ve seen more than a few things cycle around and become trendy in activist circles again. Recently, I came across two books that reminded me of this. One of them is Neighborhood Centers Today: Action Programs for a Rapidly Changing World, written by Arthur Hillman and published in 1960, when I was a child. One article in the book talks about “planning for inclusiveness.” It emphasizes that activists shouldn’t follow a “melting pot” approach, but should recognize that diversity among groups is real and valuable. Not only the sentiments, but the actual phrases, are those we hear every day from folks who think they are way up to date. Another article chronicles a process of “leadership development” in neighborhoods. Another talks about ways of dealing with aging. A lot of the material could very easily be recycled for social workers, organizers, and researchers writing today.

The Power Elite, by C. Wright Mills, was first published in 1956. When I was a young radical, this was a book that all the older radicals, the twenty-five- and twenty-six-year-olds, had on their shelves. And like Neighborhood Centers Today, it anticipates some of the “modern” wisdom of our day. See if these words don’t give you a shiver of familiarity: “a small group of political primitives … have exploited the new American jitters, emptied domestic politics of rational content, and decisively lowered the level of public sensibility.” Or how about this: “The elite of corporation, army, and state have benefited politically and economically and militarily by the antics of the petty right, who have become, often unwittingly, their political shocktroops.”

Doesn’t this pretty much describe where we are in 2003?

Obviously, some progress has been made over the past several decades. There is no mention of LGBT (lesbian/gay/bisexual/transgendered) issues in either of the books I mentioned, let alone any sense of an LGBT movement, though it certainly had begun back then. Apartheid in housing was still legal in the United States in 1960, instead of just an informal reality as it is today. And I’ve heard rumors that there have been some changes in communications technology since 1956.

But we progressives have also lost ground in a lot of areas. Income inequality has grown. The labor movement has become weaker. Fundamentalist and media-based churches have grown at the expense of more tolerant, congregation-based, and progressive mainstream churches. The United States is a more frightening military power than it has ever been.

Overall, the basic facts have not changed. Some people seize every opportunity to exploit others, and defend every vestige of privilege and dominance over other people that they can get away with. Other people give their lives, or many years of their lives, for justice. And most of us just live our lives, trying to do the right thing to the extent that we can cut through the fog of media messages.

In other words, in 1956 as in 2003, we are pretty much the same kind of people playing out the same drama. That doesn’t mean the drama is somehow bogus or unimportant, or some kind of cruel joke. It means that the social struggle is part of life. Breathing is also a repetitive process. So is housework. A lot of tasks that are vital to our very existence are never completed, never fundamentally resolved in one unique moment. There is no Mount Everest of social justice waiting for us to climb it and plant a flag once and for all.

Nevertheless, there continue to be people who look down on the rest of us for following an approach from the eighties, or the sixties, or the thirties. They don’t know that most of what we do has been done before — and they don’t learn from that experience. They have a notion in their heads that the present historical moment is unique. And they believe, with all earnestness, that they are the ones with the solutions for society’s problems, that they alone have the smart ideas that really will work — unlike all those annoying, lame efforts in the past. Usually, the new “something” they are going to do is a way to win without organizing and talking to people — or a way to avoid taking the risk of going to jail or being targeted for violence. Then, of course, there are the folks who are going to be more militant than anyone ever was before, or who are going to have a more brilliant analysis than anyone ever did before.

It’s lonely at the top

I don’t mean to merely be a tendentious lecturer and wet blanket. There are some big-time benefits to realizing we are not at the summit of time. For one thing, it gives us a lot more comrades in our struggle, and a lot bigger sense of what is possible.

We no longer have to travel to connect to the great social movements of the past. Wherever we live, we already live on ground hallowed by struggle. For example, I just moved to a mostly white, rural county in Virginia that goes Republican in every election. Why I did that is a long story. But it definitely helps that John Kagi grew up several miles from here. A few miles farther away is Harper’s Ferry, where Kagi fought with the radical abolitionist John Brown against slavery. The longer I live here, the more I’m inspired by the local history: the farmers who organized, the unions that struggled, the indigenous people who resisted.

Of course, many of these stories from the past are not happy ones. It is unpleasant to be reminded that some of our struggles will also fail, that some of us will also suffer unjustly. But at least we know we are not alone. This is important, because the exploiters often do a good job of embarrassing us activists into feeling that we are strange — overly sensitive, “politically correct,” obsessive. But history tells us that in every hierarchical human society there are people who rise up for justice. Sometimes, they even win.

It’s also important to remember that whatever we activists are trying to do, someone has done it — or something a lot like it — before, under way tougher conditions. That doesn’t guarantee our success, but it does mean that we can succeed if things go right.

These days, I often think of the abolitionists who fought slavery in the early 1800s. They lived through a time when it looked like slavery would be swept away in the egalitarian fervor of the American Revolution. That didn’t happen. The system of slavery, in fact, got stronger: Churches that had been racially integrated in the late 1700s became rigidly segregated; laws were passed preventing slaves from learning how to read and requiring them to travel with passes. But even in these bleak times, activists struggled valiantly. Gabriel Prosser still organized a rebellion in Richmond. Benjamin Lundy still traveled around the nation preaching the evils of slavery. Lundy, in fact, managed to inspire a few people before he died in the 1840s — among them, William Lloyd Garrison, the great anti-slavery crusader who helped convince Lincoln to set black slaves free during the Civil War.

It’s not hard to see why Gabriel Prosser and Benjamin Lundy were considered fringe fanatics in their day. Slavery wasn’t going to go away in 1800 or 1840. No smart young man eager to influence policy would have done what they did.  But without their struggles, slavery might not have gone away in the 1860s. These two people really mattered — in some ways, more than the men who were presidents during their time.

It’s hard for activists to have this kind of long-term perspective. I recently got an email from someone on a progressive email list I am on that said, “Let’s make sure that Bush is the last Republican president.” I am sure it won’t be the last time I hear this kind of apocalyptic rhetoric between now and the 2004 election.

If you have any sense of history, you know that wish could come true. Political parties come and go, and in 1856 nobody really thought the Whigs were going to vanish from the American political scene. Some Republican president will be the last one. It could be this one. But you also know, if you study history, that it ain’t about Republicans — it’s about systems and egos and opportunities to exploit people. Bush is not going to be the last human being to sit on a pile of concentrated power and abuse it for the interests of his class/race/gender/gang.

In fact, every presidential election is a reminder of how presumptuous we activists can be, to think we stand at some special historical moment. Millions of dollars are spent to mobilize people around the idea that 1960 or 1984 or 2004 is some kind of Armageddon. And thousands of intelligent people get caught up in the illusion. Anyone who questions the importance of a presidential race gets accused of cynicism.

Perhaps the most decisive U.S. presidential election was the 1932 race, in which the Democrat Franklin Delano Roosevelt beat the Republican incumbent, Herbert Hoover. Many scholars argue that this electoral victory led to the modern liberal state, and possibly prevented a socialist or fascist government from coming to power in this country. But what really happened in 1932? A former governor of New York from a wealthy family was elected on a platform to make massive cuts in the federal budget. If the people hadn’t been in the streets, before and after the election, there would have been no New Deal. The election of Roosevelt may have been a necessary condition for the New Deal, but it was not a sufficient condition.

At any given moment, the government we have largely reflects the existing balance of power among various classes, ethnic groups, and communities. And that balance of power is the result of long-term efforts and trends, as well as purely random events. It is the result, in other words, of what millions of people — some long since dead — have done. The Roosevelts and Lincolns, and even the Gandhis and Guevaras, can do no more than the complex set of preexisting conditions allows. You and I help to create those conditions — sometimes much more than we know.

We may very well live through an event — perhaps the impeachment of George W. Bush, or the resignation of Dick Cheney? — that will become a defining moment for our generation. But we have no way of knowing for sure if or when those moments will come. Each of us is merely one more human being doing her or his best to find justice.

In 1956, C. Wright Mills wrote that the United States “now appears before the world a naked and arbitrary power.” Its leaders were, “in the name of realism,” imposing “their often crackpot deliberations upon world reality,” Mills argued. He offered these views with no prescription for what could be done. He envisioned no movement that could use his insights. He simply felt it was wrong to “relax the effort to understand the facts of power and the ways of the powerful.”

Last winter, millions marched around the world, in the first truly global mass movement against a planned act of war — the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq. Their actions were a resounding vindication, half a century later, of Mills’ criticisms of “naked and arbitrary power.” Today, other thinkers are following Mills’ lead in writing analyses that will someday pulse through the world — once people build a movement around them.

After my time as an activist is done, I hope someone else will breathe as I have breathed, be concerned as I have been concerned, and take a few risks for justice as I have. Or, even better, as Emma Goldman did, or Sojourner Truth, or the unknown person who first had the idea of a labor union, or who first insisted that the widows and orphans deserved a share of the year’s harvest. With each generation, the same song is sung. But it never comes without effort, and never without desire. And the song is no less beautiful or vital because it has been heard before many times and will be heard many times again.

STORY INDEX

MARKETPLACE >
(Order from Powells.com and a portion of each sale goes to InTheFray)

Small is Beautiful: Economics as if People Mattered by E.F. Schumacher
URL: http://www.powells.com/cgi-bin/partner?partner_id=28164&cgi=product&isbn=0060916303

The Power Elite by C. Wright Mills
URL: http://www.powells.com/cgi-bin/partner?partner_id=28164&cgi=product&isbn=0195133544>

PEOPLE > BROWN, JOHN >

“John Brown and the Valley of the Shadow”
Information about John Brown’s raid on Harper’s Ferry.
URL: http://www.iath.virginia.edu/jbrown/master.html

PEOPLE > KAGI, JOHN HENRY >

Biography
Brief description of John Kagi, a follower of the abolitionist John Brown.
URL: http://www.plainandsimple.org/kagi.html

PEOPLE > PROSSER, GABRIEL >

“Historical Background of the Gabriel Prosser Slave Revolt”
Excerpt from American Negro Slave Revolts, by Herbert Aptheker. Published by International Publishers. 1974.
URL: http://www.chss.montclair.edu/english/furr/spl/gabrielrevolt.html

 

Fear totalitarianism

BEST OF IMAGE 2003 (runner-up)

Dodging rubber bullets at the Miami FTAA ministerial.

Click here to enter the visual essay.

Last month, representatives from thirty-four nations met in Miami to negotiate the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA), a proposal to create a free trade zone that would span the entire Western hemisphere, with the exception of Fidel Castro’s Cuba. As trade ministers met behind closed doors on Thursday, November 20, an estimated 15,000 people — labor union members, environmentalists, human rights activists, small farmers, students, anarchists — marched in downtown Miami to protest the trade pact, which they argued would threaten the livelihoods of farmers and workers and erode protections for the environment. The demonstrators were met by some 2,500 police officers from more than forty local, state, and federal agencies — a security force paid for, in part, with $8.5 million included in the $87 billion Iraq appropriations bill recently passed by Congress. Thursday’s demonstrations ended abruptly later that afternoon, when police officers in riot gear marched into the crowds and started subduing protesters with wooden batons, rubber bullets, and pepper spray. According to police, some individuals in the crowd had started hurling rocks at the police lines; demonstrators at the scene, however, denied there was any provocation. By the end of the next day, 231 people had been arrested, and dozens injured, including a handful of police officers. The images in this visual essay, drawn from the work of five photographers who were in Miami that week, document the actions of both protesters and police.

Victor Tan Chen is In The Fray's editor in chief and the author of Cut Loose: Jobless and Hopeless in an Unfair Economy. Site: victortanchen.com | Facebook | Twitter: @victortanchen

A group gathers around the Man each morning to watch the sun rise. Photo by George Post

Burning Man Lights a Fire

Best of In The Fray 2003. The Nevada desert art event doesn’t just produce art, it produces citizens.

Drive along the state roads toward the Black Rock Desert, a former lakebed surrounded by mountains in northwest Nevada. Stock up on food, water, and camping goods in the gambling city of Reno. Drive past a gypsum mine and through Gerlach, a once bustling train depot that boasts three bars and a taxidermy stand. Turn at the painted arrow from the blacktop paved road onto the temporary road pressed into the crusty desert surface. Slide your vehicle in a “slot” at the Gate, where dust-streaked men and women collect your ticket and check for stowaways. A short distance later, the exuberant and wackily attired (or unattired) Greeters shower you with a warm “Welcome home!”, maps, and information about camping guidelines. A clown in leather fetish attire and armed with a whip might even entice you to exit your vehicle and mount the Clown Cross, upon which you are gently but firmly indoctrinated as a citizen of Black Rock City.

Welcome to Burning Man, a temporary arts community that appears and disappears each year on four square miles of a normally uninhabited desert.

Seven days demarcate the official lifespan of this self-styled alternative society, where most monetary transactions are prohibited (the exceptions being ice and coffee sales), and participation is strongly encouraged. Using the map and street signs marked with names that reflect the event’s changing theme (“Imagined” and “Dogma” for the 2003 event’s “Beyond Belief” theme, “4:20” and “Head” for 2000’s “The Body” theme), locate your campsite within the crescent-shaped grid and park your vehicle. As you anchor your tent with long metal stakes to prevent the winds from carrying off your belongings, your neighbors stop by and introduce themselves. Visit the nearest portable toilet and pack some drinking water. Memorize your camp location (near the PVC dome covered with Christmas lights and military netting and to the left of a furry reproduction of the cat-shaped bus from the Japanese animation film My Neighbor Totoro) before you explore the city. As you travel on foot, by bike, or art car towards the city center, orient your location relative to Black Rock City’s anchor, the forty-foot neon and wooden sculpture of the Man.

On this expanse of alkaline desert, which once tested the survival of emigrant expeditions, discover large and small-scale art installations, some of which depict the year’s art theme. Unlike conventional art institutions, no security guard prevents you from peering too closely. In fact, some installations invite your participation to “complete” the art—you can taste, smell, manipulate, and alter it in ways prohibited elsewhere. Chip away at a slowly melting ice ball to make a snow cone, crawl through an ammonite-spiraled maze, recline upon a bed of imported grass, listen to a band perform in a chapel made of stained glass-like mosaics of recycled plastics, and dangle from a jungle gym-like sculpture. Your fellow Black Rock City citizens—some of whom sport elaborate costumes, glittering body paint, or nothing at all—may join you in appreciating the art, give you a friendly nod or an encouraging shout, or invite you to participate in an impromptu game or party. Art cars decorated as Spanish galleons with cannon ball-ridden sails, fire-breathing dragons, and other fantastic designs occasionally lurch by and disgorge passengers. Meander among the camps that sport different themes, ranging from an elaborate recreation of Mad Max’s Thunderdome to a simple site that reunites lost film with their owners.

As the sun melts into the horizon, volunteer Lamplighters ritualistically lift kerosene lanterns to tall wooden spires, lighting the central city streets for the evening. Sleep rapidly becomes a precious commodity, as nightfall’s cooler temperature brings out performers who spin fire, thumping music, powerful lasers, and vehicles and people decorated with EL wire, or “cool” glowing neon. Saturday evening, gather at the city center for the event’s traditional highlight. As hundreds of performers spin fire and fireworks explode overhead, the Man burns. Joining in the revelry, some artists torch their installations that evening and the next, making way for another year’s preparations.

When the ashes have cooled, pack your vehicle with your trash and gear, pick up debris from your campsite, say farewell to new friends, and prepare for the dusty ride home. A tinge of depression may descend as the distance increases between you and Black Rock City, signaling your return to everyday life. But for many, Burning Man does not end with this departure.

For my doctoral dissertation, I examined how people expend significant efforts organizing this event and related activities. Among other topics, I focused on how volunteers and members gained organizing experiences and skills by working for the Black Rock City Limited Liability Company, the organization that manages Burning Man’s development.

A significant number of people are so drawn to the Burning Man experience that they recreate it on a year-round basis, albeit on a different scale. On a June evening in 2003, for instance, I squeeze into a pickup driven by Nana Kirk, a landscape architect who volunteers for Burning Man’s Playa Information, a question and answer service. Her date accompanies us. My companions giggle as they adjust their attire, which includes a prom dress “enhanced” by stuffing tissues into the bodice and a silver brocade dinner jacket that will later win a ribbon for gaudiness. We are headed to “Tacky Prom,” a benefit for the Carousel Numinous theme camp’s art project at the upcoming Burning Man event. At the entrance to a small club in Berkeley, California, we pay for our tickets and descend into the balloon-festooned recreation of a prom. The DJ spins cheesy tunes, including Madonna’s “Like a Virgin” and Donna Summers’ “Ring My Bell,” that span the multiple decades represented by the prom-goers. Another friend, Burning Man Playa Information Manager Rob Oliver, shows up in hooded sweatshirt and sweats, posing as the “surfer dude” who crashes the prom. He joins us as we watch others, who sport gaudy thrift shop finds, and talk about plans for Burning Man. Most of the prom attendees had heard of this event either from a Burning Man email list or from the Squid List, an electronic distribution list of Bay area events. This is only one of the many benefits thrown by theme camps that are preparing for the upcoming Burning Man event.

The next day, I sit in Burning Man’s expansive new headquarters, a move made possible by the dot-com bust that popped San Francisco’s inflated office rental market. Steve Raspa, an artist and event planner, is chatting with other co-workers about how he would have promoted more interactivity and performances for another Burning Man volunteer’s recent event that drew several hundred to the San Francisco Opera’s warehouse. As I listen, I reflect on the factors that have generated a critical mass of these smaller local events, which rival the conventional art events sponsored by museums, art galleries, and other institutions. Burning Man-related events require intensive planning and support, often by individuals who previously did not consider themselves to be artists or organizers capable of throwing such events. A few of these individuals have even formed their own organizations to host alternative art events. What factors facilitated such a shift towards active organizing?

Burning Man ice sculpture
A boy makes a snowcone from an interactive ice sculpture. Photo by George Post

The First Flames

On the summer solstice of 1986, Larry Harvey, a landscaper, and Jerry James, a carpenter, constructed a small wooden sculpture of a man and brought it to a secluded San Francisco beach. Surrounded by a small gathering of friends and family, the duo lit the sculpture afire.

They continued to do so in front of growing crowds on an annual basis until 1990, when a San Francisco park official intervened with the burn. Over the next two decades, this informal, unnamed evening developed into an annual weeklong camp-out that draws increasing numbers of attendees to its new location in the Nevada Black Rock Desert. Attracted by the opportunities to construct, display, and burn outsider art and engage in round-the-clock revelry, about 30,000 or so people from around the world currently amass for the event.

Most media reports tend to emphasize the event’s more flamboyant and controversial aspects, such as the elaborate costuming, art, music, and performances, spectacular bonfires, drug and alcohol consumption, and the possible environmental damage to the federally managed site and its historic trails. Other reports note the event’s other unusual tenets, such as its demand that attendees actively participate in the building of art and community and the event’s eschewing of vending and corporate sponsorship that support other conventional events. Rather than selling or purchasing goods or services, some event attendees barter, while others give trinkets or needed objects as gifts without the expectation of reciprocation. Few reports indicate the massive scale of organizing needed to erect and disassemble the event, and even fewer reports delve into how the experience of organizing such an event has both educated and inspired event-goers to organize in their local communities.

In effect, the small bonfire on a secluded beach has sparked a social movement across the United States and other parts of the world. Attendees apply “Burning Man” skills, practices, and values to not only the event but also to everyday life. Members also engage in additional organizing activities outside of the event. In short, the Burning Man organization and its event have provided the context for acquainting members with organizing skills. For the initial Burning Man evening beach burns, organizers expended limited and informal organizational efforts. However, the almost exponential growth of the Burning Man event population and its relocation to the challenging environs of the Black Rock Desert eventually forced Harvey and others to organize formally on a year-round basis. Although the organization has a small full- and part-time staff, it depends on volunteer labor to carry out the organizational mission of creating Burning Man:

Our practical goal is to create the annual event known as Burning Man … [and] to generate an experience that encourages participants to do three things: (1) creatively express themselves, (2) fulfill an active role as members of our community, and (3) immediately respond to and protect that environment.

In fulfilling this mission, people learn that art is not necessarily restricted to the domain of a formally educated elite—the layperson can also produce, display, and consume art.

Burning Man lamplighters
Lamplighters beginning their evening procession. Photo by Heather Gallagher

Politics and Partnerships

Organizers have also learned how to mobilize members quickly to influence the larger legal and political processes that affect the Burning Man event’s activities and future. For example, when Nevada senators proposed federal legislation in 1999 that could have affected the event’s most vulnerable resource, its access to federally managed land, Burning Man organizers successfully used email lists to mobilize constituents. Spurred by emails that described how such legislation could curtail public access to federal land and provided officials’ contact information, constituents attended local meetings with political officials and wrote letters of protest to state and federal governments. With such help from event attendees and other direct lobbying efforts, Burning Man organizers successfully negotiated a provision in the legislation that explicitly excluded the Burning Man event from restricted access.

Of course, organizers and members have learned when and how to cooperate with government officials and agencies. But they maintain Burning Man’s flavor of quirky creativity and carry principles such as environmental responsibility into everyday life. Aware that agencies must undertake responsibilities such as law enforcement and environmental protection, Burning Man members have formed joint ventures like the Earth Guardians to manage responsibilities collectively. A partnership between the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) officials and Burning Man members, the Earth Guardians have, for example, educated event attendees on “pack it in, pack it out” trash practices. The event has no formal trash collection capacities, so the Earth Guardians help to minimize post-event debris while still upholding the “radical self-reliance” ethic of the event. The Earth Guardians and other groups also introduced elevated platforms and barrels that protect the desert’s surface from burn marks, a change that exceeded the BLM’s demands. On email discussion lists, participants have shared how they imported these practices into everyday life, from cleaning up someone else’s litter to donating elaborately carved burn barrels to warm police personnel at the World Trade Center site.

By attending and volunteering for Burning Man, some people have become more conscious of their abilities to break from the status quo. Instead of passively consuming conventional entertainment or relying upon other established art institutions, members learn how to make their own art events and organizations. With the event’s replacement of monetary exchanges with a gift economy, some attendees have become more conscious of how giving voluntarily can spark unexpected connections. Molly Ditmore, for example, said she worried about how she could actively participate in her first Burning Man event. She decided to give away over 1,000 tampons, ibuprofen, and massages, bringing gratitude and gifts that lead to subsequent volunteer work and other art projects:

I strapped a copy of Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret [a book by Judy Blume that depicts a girl’s experience with puberty] to my backpack, and I had a sign off my shoulders [that said] “Free Tampons” on one side and also I had “Molly’s Women’s Way Station” and I would just sit out there during the day, and I would give people massages or give them tampons or Advil or just whatever … women totally appreciated it.

… and I met a lot of really great people that way … I had people bringing me gifts the next day or bringing me ice cream or “oh my girlfriend, oh thank you so much!” … people’s reactions were just really great. I wanted to keep interacting with the community, no matter what I did.

In meeting and working alongside other persons, individuals develop and pursue new interests and skills, such as fire spinning or managing small art events. As volunteer and former self-professed “dot communist” Barney Ford notes, such learning opportunities do not exist in less well-connected networks and environments:

I think the amount that I can learn from people out at Burning Man is much more vast [than what is available at my workplace] because these people are bringing a huge resource of knowledge and skills and know-how just because they want to …

And, in a refuge that lifts institutional restrictions on who can make art, event attendees can conceive of alternative ways of sharing art and comradeship that they find more fulfilling. For example, after rainstorms melted “Shona” Guerra’s art project, an eighty-foot wide labyrinth constructed from playa mud, Guerra despaired. Like other artists who were unable to complete their art projects in the harsh desert conditions, he gave up. He went to say good-bye to the decimated labyrinth and discovered that someone else had spent hours restoring it:

… and [the labyrinth] was just literally unbelievable. And it was better than it was before! It was perfect! … I’m jumping around ecstatic, [wondering] how did this happen? …

Well, later in the day we run into our friend [from Earth Guardians] Larry Breed and [I said], “you won’t believe what happened!” And he starts crying … I knew that he had done it … He went out there and fixed it, and it was just one of the most touching and special things that has ever happened in this little life of mine.

Well, that came, as most things do, through interrelationships, through being a part of Burning Man …

By helping artists construct their projects, other event attendees become inspired to attempt their own projects. Some decide that they want to have these experiences on a more continuous basis. With the Burning Man organization’s support, some event attendees have formed regional groups in which they organize their own events and social activities, strengthening networks for year-round organizing. The New York City regional has formally organized as the Society for Experimental Art and Learning (SEAL) to raise funds to secure space in which members can meet and share art. The Austin, Texas, regional has established the Austin Artistic Reconstruction Limited Liability Company to organize their yearly event, “Burning Flipside.” Even those who have never attended the event have felt inspired to organize local events. Shelley Stallings reported to a Burning Man organizer that Alaskans have created their own version of Burning Man. In a July 1999 email newsletter, her message went out worldwide:

Last year was our first Burning Man gathering. We live on an island off the coast of British Columbia, [which is] fairly isolated and hard to get to, only [by] boat or plane … We have a small core group, 3 families, which organized the event and we invited 3 other families for a total of about 20 people. We expect it to grow some, but … we would like to keep it to a maximum of about 50 people so that we have less impact on the area and are not piled right on top of each other with our tents … we are encouraging costumes and performance this year. None of us have attended Burning Man, [we] only know of the event from the Internet …

In undertaking these local activities, participants learn how to manage volunteers and secure space and funding.

By attending an event that others might consider to be purely hedonistic or frivolous, a number of people have found not only a larger mission to enact, but also a means of sharing this mission with others through organizing. As greater numbers of people continue to experience the Burning Man event, similar organizing efforts are likely to spread, develop, and possibly even outlast the maturing Burning Man event itself. As organizer Marian Goodell claims, “If this event is going to be around for fifty years, it will only be around because we empowered people with the info about how to make it run.” Make way for the Man. Make way for his makers.

Katherine K. Chen is an associate professor of sociology at the City College of New York and Graduate Center, CUNY. With Victor Tan Chen (no relation), she is the editor of the book Organizational Imaginaries: Tempering Capitalism and Tending to Communities Through Cooperatives and Collectivist Democracy (Emerald Publishing, 2021).

 

No labels, no logos

Latest update

September 22, 2005

Analysis of the survey results has been completed. Click on the link below to view the document.

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About the survey

This survey was prepared by Tom Hayden and Victor Chen. It will be used by InTheFray, a nonprofit magazine devoted to issues of identity and community, and the Department of Sociology at Harvard University. In 2003 Hayden led a study group at Harvard’s Institute of Politics on social movements and globalization. The survey results will be analyzed by Victor Chen (vchen@fas.harvard.edu, 617.669.2578) at Harvard’s Department of Sociology and by other Harvard students who traveled to Miami as observers during the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) ministerial conference in November 2003: Jordan Bar Am, Anne Beckett, Rachel Bloomekatz, Madeleine Elfenbein, Denise Lambert, Toussaint Losier, and Colin Reardon. The survey is funded with the generous support of Harvard University’s Institute of Politics.

The survey will be distributed at a number of globalization-related demonstrations and events, beginning with the 2003 FTAA ministerial. The survey is anonymous and the completed forms will only be seen by members of the Harvard research team.

Please take a few minutes to participate in this collective process of defining a new identity in the world. Please circulate the survey and ask your friends and colleagues to participate as well. Thank you!

Completed surveys and other correspondence can be sent to Victor Chen, Department of Sociology, Harvard University, William James Hall, 33 Kirkland Street, Cambridge MA 02138, USA.

Note: The categories make it easier for us to analyze the results. However, feel free to write in a response if you don’t feel they represent your unique viewpoint.

Interviewees needed: As part of his research at Harvard University, Victor Chen is conducting interviews with activists about their participation in the global justice movement (this is separate from the survey). If you are willing to be interviewed or know someone who might be, please contact Victor at vchen@fas.harvard.edu or 617.669.2578. Or, fill out the relevant information in the form below and mail it to the address above. Interviews take about 1 hour and can be conducted over the phone or in person. Interviewees have a right to confidentiality.

To read the survey, click on one of the links below:

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Old PULSE entries

Welcome to PULSE. This space is devoted to an animated, ongoing discussion of contemporary politics, culture, and society. We are your hosts, Pacificus and Helvidius (for more on this obscure nineteenth-century reference, click here). Pacificus hails from New York; Helvidius writes from across the Atlantic, in a certain cheese-loving French capital. In our postings, we will bring to your attention news items that are routinely overlooked by mainstream media outlets. We provide the incisive analysis and thoughtful insights; you provide the withering criticism and rigorous debate. The end product will, we hope, be a lively exchange among readers and editors that is a tad serious, and a tad not. The PULSE page will be updated as often as practical.

(January 4, 2004 – 4:55 AM PDT)

QUOTE OF NOTE

“It shows how frantically the ruling class is rushing toward a revival of militarism.”

A statement by the North Korean state radio agency, Korean Central Broadcasting, regarding Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi’s visit to Yasukuni Shrine on New Year’s Day. The shrine serves as a memorial to Japan’s war dead, including convicted World War II war criminals. While Koizumi has stated that this was a personal visit, various governments in East Asia have objected to the visit on the basis that the shrine celebrates Japanese militarism.

The PULSE staff

(December 29, 2003 – 8:45 PM PDT)

QUOTE OF NOTE

“It breaks my heart… I think the Episcopal Church is headed down the path to secular humanism.”

A statement by Shari de Silva, a neurologist from Fort Wayne, Indiana, commenting on the Episcopal Church’s decision earlier this year to ordain an openly gay bishop. The decision has resulted in controversy; some parishioners have left the Episcopal Church and converted to Roman Catholicism, while others have joined the Episcopal Church in support of its new policy.

The PULSE staff

(DECEMBER 27, 2003 – 10:14 AM EST)

As we all celebrate the holiday season with our friends and families, let’s not forget the holiday news sent from out of this world. The European Space Agency continues to wait for a signal from the Beagle 2, the British-made spacecraft meant to analyze the surface of planet Mars. Although the Beagle has yet to make contact with planet Earth, scientists from around the world continue to hope for a holiday gift from outer space.  

Helvidius

(DECEMBER 13, 2003 – 5:40 AM EST)

Shirin Ebadi, the Iranian lawyer and human rights activist who won this year’s Nobel Peace Prize, gave a speech this week in which she criticized the Bush administration’s foreign policy — more or less in its entirety. “Some states have violated the universal principles and laws of human rights by using the events of Sept. 11 and the war on terrorism as a pretext,” she said. A adapted version of the speech was published inThe Globe and Mail, a Canadian newspaper.

Here’s one particular quote from Ebadi’s essay that deserves re-reading:

I am a Muslim. In the Koran, the Prophet of Islam has said: “Thou shalt believe in thy faith and I in my religion.” That same divine book sees the mission of all prophets as that of inviting all human beings to uphold justice. Since the advent of Islam, Iran’s civilization and culture have become imbued and infused with humanitarianism, respect for the life, belief and faith of others, propagation of tolerance and avoidance of violence, bloodshed and war … The discriminatory plight of women in Islamic states, whether in the sphere of civil law or in the realm of social, political and cultural justice, has its roots in the male-dominated culture prevailing in these societies, not in Islam.

Commentators like to blame Islam for creating suicide bombers, oppressing women — even, as bizarre as it might seem, encouraging pedophila. As is the case for most religions, of course, Islam the faith is a lot different from Islam as the faithful practice it. After all, Christians found ways that the teachings of the great pacifist, Jesus Christ, could be used to justify burning alive thousands of Jews and Muslims during the Spanish Inquisition — it doesn’t take many aspiring demagogues before a religion of peace starts spawning legions of hatemongers. Thankfully, questions are beginning to be raised these days about the un-peaceful practices of certain religious extremists (during the Cold War, the United States found it useful to ignore the Muslim ones). Scholars are even questioning whether conventional translations of the Qur’an, Islam’s holy book, are accurate about some rather important points — is it seventy-two “virgins” or seventy-two “fruits”? (Not to be outdone, scholars of the New Testament are also raising some crucial questions.)

In spite of what the fundamentalists (of all faiths) might say, religion is a quite malleable thing — the devil, so to speak, is in the details, and who decides those details matters a great deal. The face that Islam will show in this new century will depend on which leaders take power in Muslim countries. Which brings me back to Shirin Ebadi. She is the kind of leader that Western countries should be encouraging — a Muslim feminist who implores other Muslims to remember their faith’s humanitarian spirit, its vision of global unity that the Iranian poet Rumi once described in this way: “The sons of Adam are limbs of one another/Having been created of one essence.” If Ebadi and other like-minded Muslims can gain power in their countries, they could do much more than the hordes of CIA agents and Special Forces commandoes embedded abroad presently seem capable of doing — that is, sweeping away the terrorist-inspiring hatred that has become America’s bugbear ever since it clawed its way across the ocean on September 11. Even the more neoconservative figures in the Bush administration — Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, for instance — are finally coming to the view that, in addition to dropping bombs, it might be a good idea to start peddling a “kinder and gentler” Islam abroad.

The problem is, of course, that even liberal-minded Muslims like Ebadi are being alienated by the “shock and awe” foreign policy of the Bush administration. Ebadi asks: “Why is it that some decisions and resolutions of the UN Security Council are binding, while other council resolutions have no binding force? Why is it that in the past 35 years, dozens of UN resolutions concerning the occupation of the Palestinian territories by the state of Israel have not been implemented — yet, in the past 12 years, the state and people of Iraq were twice subjected to attack, military assault, economic sanctions, and, ultimately, military occupation?”

These are troubling questions — for the extremists, without question, but also for those Muslims who want to see an end to the fanaticism. If the United States truly wants to stop terrorism, it needs people like Ebadi on its side. But as long as the Bush administration stubbornly clings to its current policy of hyper-aggressive unilateralism — a policy that has created only more enemies in the Muslim world — liberal Muslims will have a hard time convincing anyone in their countries to listen to them. And that does not bode well for the sanctity of Islam, nor for the security of Americans.

Victor Tan Chen

(DECEMBER 5, 2003 – 1:15 AM PDT)

QUOTE OF NOTE

“I will never use the word ‘gay’ in school again.”

— The statement which second-grader Marcus McLaurin was forced to repeatedly write after he informed a fellow student that his mother was gay. McLaurin explained that his mother was gay when another child asked him about his mother and father.

The PULSE staff

(November 27, 2003 — 10:08 AM PDT)

The possibilities of integrating Internet capabilities with democratic rule are virtually limitless, yet are the risks to our system of government just too high to allow for a transformation to a world of e-governance ? Keith Culver offers an intriguing new look at the future of e-democracy, analyzing the lessons from a recent Canadian experiment in e-participation in democratic decision making. Although many herald the democratization of information made available via the Internet, the Web may also pose serious risks to the ideals of democracy as we know it. Whether integrating government with the technological capabilities of the Internet would result in e-democracy or e-dictatorship is still up in the air.

Helvidius

(November 14, 2003 — 6:38 PM PDT)

“Bravehearts: Men in Skirts,” an exhibition sponsored by Gaultier at the Metropolitan Museum, has been greeted by very positive reviews in all the right publications. The show features male fashions without pants, from kilts to sarongs. Your own Pacificus had a chance to go. From the title, which has all the charm and cleverness of a sophomore women’s studies paper, to the jargon-laden placards, this exhibit shows the smugness and lowered standards that accompany anything with even a hint of avant-garde genderbabble. The pieces, all but a few of which are recent designs by the sponsor, are twice written up in the exhibit itself as “flaunting convention.” Such a statement is true only because the facile, liberal-robot underpinnings of the show are so visible.

Pacificus

(NOVEMBER 17, 2003 – 12:30 AM PDT)

QUOTE OF NOTE

“Where are you from? … What country in China?”

—A racially charged statement attributed to Mets special assistant Bill Singer. Singer made the comment last week to Dodgers assistant general manager Kim Ng. Ng, an Asian American woman, was deemed the thirty-eighth most influential minority member in sports by Sports Illustrated in May 2003.

The PULSE staff

(November 14, 2003 — 6:38 PM PDT)

It seems that despite the repeated rhetoric of bringing democratic values to Iraq, the Bush administration has strangled efforts to develop a free press in occupied Iraq. The New York Oberserver reports that the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA), led by the United States, has severely limited journalists’ access to news stories throughout Iraq, largely in order to ensure that news coverage from the beseiged country will make the coalition’s position a bit sunnier. Access to morgues, police stations, schools, and hospitals have virtually been blocked off by CPA authorities.  When journalists are given reasonable access to Iraqi facilities a CPA “minder” tends to follow.  Despite the Bush administration’s contention that America is the democratic liberator of the Iraqi people, these limitations on freedom of the press appear not so very different from the draconian measures reminiscent of the days of Saddam.  

Helvidius

(November 11, 2003 — 12:35 AM PDT)

Several priceless archaeological treasures alarming turn yesterday, when she revealed that the military has manipulated her story for political gain.  During an interview with Diane Sawyer, Lynch said she was bothered by the military’s portrayal of her ordeal, saying “they used me as a way to symbolize all this stuff.”  If true, the military’s flagrant misuse of the Lynch story for the purpose of domestic pro-war propaganda is abominable, yet it is nonetheless expected.  By propagandizing the truth behind the Lynch tragedy into a Hollywood search and rescue thriller, the military not only hurts the victim but avoids admitting to the realities and horrors of war.

Helvidius

(October 30, 2003 — 4:43 PM PDT)

Opinions around the world are mixed as Dr. Mahathir Mohamad leaves the premiership of Malaysia after twenty-two years in office. Mahathir, lauded by some for setting Malaysia on the path towards sustainable economic development, is perhaps best known for his fiery tongue and unabashed anti-Western commentary. The latest Mahathir diatribe, delivered at the Organization of the Islamic Conference summit and rebuked by dignitaries around the world, argued that Jews “rule this world by proxy.” The festivities surrounding Mahathir’s last day in office today were unusually subdued — the
outgoing Prime Minister urged the Malaysian people to be “diligent, disciplined, in control of their feelings and prepared to face challenges and overcome obstructions.” For both those who love him or hate him, there’s no denying that “Dr. M” will be a tough act to follow.

Helvidius

(October 28, 2003 — 8:29 AM PDT)

Yesterday’s tragic attack on the Red Cross’ Baghdad headquarters will likely be written off in Western media circles as yet another act of cowardice on the part of fundamentalist terrorist groups, this time against an international relief organization that only wishes to help the Iraqi people. Yet this newest bombing against humanitarian interests shows the lingering difficulties Iraqis have in distinguishing the occupying military force from Western non-governmental groups whose only aim, the Iraqis are told, is to help reduce the terrible suffering of the Iraqi people. The overarching reason for this continued misunderstanding is the flawed rhetoric of the occupying force, which continues to claim that the American military force on the ground is itself an international humanitarian relief effort. Is it any wonder that Iraqis, embittered by the stifling presence of an occupying force, strike international aid agencies with the same ferocity as they attack the military forces on the ground? One can only hope that these humanitarian groups will remain on the ground in Iraq, and continue their priceless work in ameliorating the dangerous situation in Iraq.

Helvidius

 

Editors’ choice: Top ten crusaders for social justice

Which ten organizations working on social justice issues in the United States have had the most influence over the past three decades? In the course of researching social movements for this Special Issue of InTheFray Magazine, we talked to a number of activists and scholars and gathered their opinions on this question. Below are the organizations that came up on the most judges’ top ten lists. They are in alphabetical order.

Of course, these groups will probably be different from the ones you’d pick. So here’s where you come in, loyal reader:

1. Please post a message to our Forum and tell us what you like, and don’t like, about our experts’ choices. Tell us what groups you’d add to the Top Ten, and which groups you’d take off. Defend your choices.

2. Email us at survey@inthefray.com with your picks for (1) the Top Ten U.S. organizations and (2) the Top Ten U.S. activists. (The question is: “Which ten organizations and which ten activists working on social justice issues in the United States have had the most influence during the past thirty years (1973-2003)?”) We’ll publish the results of this reader poll in the next issue of InTheFray Magazine. You have until the end of this month (November 30) to vote.

NOTE: Though we’re limiting this vote to U.S. activists and organizations, we encourage you to email us at survey@inthefray.com with the names of any activists or organizations that are doing important work abroad. Include a brief description of that work, and why it’s important. We’ll include your comments in next month’s issue (with or without your name, depending on your preference). You can also post your thoughts in the Forum.

Thanks for your input!

Laura Nathan
Forum Editor, InTheFray Magazine
Austin, Texas

InTheFray TOP TEN:

THE MOST INFLUENTIAL SOCIAL JUSTICE ORGANIZATIONS IN AMERICA (1973-2003)

#1: ACORN

In 1970, a band of welfare mothers from Arkansas formed ACORN, the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, to seek social change benefiting low- and moderate-income families. Today, the organization has 150,000 family members in 700 neighborhoods and fifty-one cities across the country, including Chicago, Detroit, New York, and Washington. Whether they are campaigning to increase the minimum wage, negotiating the rates of utility services, or cracking down on predatory lenders, ACORN activists show a passion for “organizing the unorganized” and protecting the rights of impoverished families.

ACORN
88 3rd Ave.
Brooklyn, NY 11217
Email: natexdirect@acorn.org
Telephone: 1.877.55.ACORN
website: http://www.acorn.org
Executive director: Steve Kest

#2: ACT UP

Soon after the HIV/AIDS epidemic began devastating lesbian/gay/bisexual/transgendered (LGBT) communities, activists in New York formed the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power, or ACT UP. Its mission was to raise awareness about HIV/AIDS, the inadequate response of local and federal officials, and the effects of the crisis on LGBT communities.

From its beginnings, this nonpartisan, grassroots organization has made headlines and sparked controversy for its unconventional and confrontational methods. ACT UP first grabbed the public’s attention in 1987 when activists marched on Wall Street demanding, among other things, that the Food and Drug Administration approve experimental drugs that might save the lives of people with AIDS. Two years later, ACT UP became notorious for disrupting a mass in St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York; the activists were protesting Cardinal John O’Connor’s opposition to condom distribution. Other high-profile ACT UP “direct actions” have included storming magazine offices, interrupting news broadcasts, and surrounding hospitals and government buildings. To this day, ACT UP continues to insist that direct action and public visibility are essential in bringing about social change.

ACT UP/New York
332 Bleecker St., Suite G5
New York, NY 10014
Email: actupny@panix.com
Telephone: 212.966.4873
website: http://www.actupny.org

#3: The American Lung Association

If you are twenty-five or older you probably remember sitting in airplane cabins filled with cigarette smoke. If you don’t, either you don’t fly or you owe a big thank you to the American Lung Association (ALA). In 1987, ALA activists led a successful campaign to ban smoking on all U.S. domestic airline flights lasting two hours or less (expanded to 6 hours in 1989 and to international flights in 1992)

Founded in 1904 to fight tuberculosis, the ALA is the oldest voluntary health organization in the country. It is perhaps best known for its tireless fight against the tobacco industry. In 1960, when much of the American public was still unaware of the health risks associated with smoking, the ALA issued a policy statement that became one of the first salvoes in the anti-tobacco war: “Cigarette smoking is a major cause of lung cancer.” Over the next forty years, ALA’s education and lobbying efforts were the backbone of the anti-smoking movement.

In more recent years, the ALA has also proven itself to be a champion of the environment. It played a major role in the passage of the landmark 1990 federal Clean Air Act. As a result of an ALA lawsuit, the Environmental Protection Agency established stricter air-quality standards for smog and soot in 1997. Today, the ALA continues its work “to prevent lung disease and promote lung health,” remaining vigilant against Big Tobacco and leading the fight against the asthma epidemic.

The American Lung Association
61 Broadway, 6th Floor
New York, NY 10006
Telephone: 1.800.LUNG.USA
website: http://www.lungusa.org
President and chief executive officer: John L. Kirkwood

#4: Center for Community Change

Founded in 1968, the Center for Community Change is devoted to “helping low-income people, especially people of color, develop the power and capacity to change their communities and public policies for the better.” To that end, the Center works with thousands of grassroots organizations across the country, giving ordinary citizens the skills they need to change their lives and rebuild their communities from the bottom up. Over the decades, its work has contributed to the building of low-income housing and community centers, the development of businesses and jobs, and reductions in crime and drug use.

In recent years, the Center has worked to raise public awareness of the plight of the poor in today’s troubled American economy. As one of the its recent press releases points out: “The number of people in poverty increased by 1.7 million to nearly 35 million in 2002, raising the official poverty rate from 11.7 percent in 2001 to 12.1 percent in 2002.” Nowadays the Center’s energies are focused on two areas: providing on-site assistance to grassroots groups, and connecting people in low-income communities to necessary resources. By including community-based groups, local leaders, and advocates throughout the process, the Center makes sure that low-income people are informed about the policies that impact their lives.

Center for Community Change
1000 Wisconsin Ave. NW
Washington, DC 20007
Email: info@communitychange.org
Telephone: 202.342.0519
website: http://www.communitychange.org
Executive director: Deepak Bhargava

#5: Center for Third World Organizing

Founded in 1984, the Center for Third World Organizing (CTWO, pronounced C-2) is a national, multiracial “movement center” that works with community organizations and grassroots leaders. It seeks to develop an analysis “showing how structures of racial privilege shape our lives and communities,” a vision “motivating movements based on race, gender, sexuality, and economic justice,” and a strategy of “building organizing capacity necessary to achieve meaningful social change.” With these goals in mind, CTWO works in communities of color throughout the United States, training organizers, offering advice, and providing other resources to aid activists in their “direct action” organizing.

CTWO has been a pioneer in building broad coalitions for racial justice. Its Movement Activist Apprenticeship Program has established an active network of organizations and activists of color working on behalf of racial equality. In its Community Action Training workshops, experienced community organizers teach participants how to build political coalitions at the grassroots level. CTWO also has a program called GIFT (Grassroots Institute for Fundraising Training), which teaches interns from communities of color how to do grassroots fundraising.

Center for Third World Organizing
1218 E. 21st St.
Oakland, CA 94606
Email: ctwo@ctwo.org
Telephone: 510.533.7583
website: http://www.ctwo.org
Executive director: Mark Toney

#6: Environmental Justice Fund

The environmental justice movement first began mobilizing in the late seventies, at a time when state and federal governments were beginning to implement a wave of legislation dealing with the environment and civil rights. Since then, the movement has persistently highlighted the failure of reforms in both areas to account for environmental damage that disparately affects communities of color. The movement’s motto, “We speak for ourselves,” hints at its focus on local organizations and local solutions, and its resistance to the kinds of corporate-controlled globalization that have sparked protests around the world. Its activists favor a much broader view of the “environment” than many mainstream environmentalists, defining it as “where we live, work, play, go to school, and pray.” They call into question market-based “solutions” that help certain privileged sectors while shortchanging or even harming communities that lack political and economic clout.

The Environmental Justice Fund (EJ Fund) is a national membership organization “dedicated to strengthening the environmental justice movement.” It was founded by six environmental justice networks in 1995, and continues to operate under an inclusive, loosely organized structure. The EJ Fund helps coordinate a vast network of local and regional coalitions that operate under the “Principles of Environmental Justice,” first ratified in 1991 at the First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit in Washington.

Environmental justice activists can point to several recent victories, including Executive Order 12898, issued in 1994, which directed all federal agencies dealing with public health or the environment to make environmental justice an integral part of their policies. President Bill Clinton said the order was intended to “provide minority communities and low-income communities access to public information on, and an opportunity for public participation in, matters relating to public health or the environment.” Clinton’s executive order also resulted in the creation of the National Environmental Justice Advisory Council, which seeks to improve governmental accountability within the Environmental Protection Agency.

At the local level, environmental justice groups have won a number of highly publicized battles against polluters. In St. James Parish in Louisiana (a highly polluted region known as “cancer alley”), activists prevented the Shintech corporation from building a polyvinyl chloride plastics plant. In California’s Ward Valley, environmentalists waged a successful campaign to protect the region’s water supply and threatened desert ecosystem. In New York, the “Clean Fuel, Clean Air, Good Health” campaign replaced polluting diesel buses with vehicles powered by cleaner fuel options. And in Tucson, Arizona, activists upset about tainted wells recently won an $84.5 million settlement from polluters, the largest settlement for groundwater contamination in U.S. history.

Environmental Justice Fund
310 Eight St., Suite 100
Oakland, CA 94607
Telephone: 510.267.1881
website: http://www.ejfund.org
National coordinator: Cynthia Choi

#7: Human Rights Campaign

The Human Rights Campaign Fund (HRCF) was founded in 1980 to raise money for congressional candidates who supported gay rights. It represented an organized response to right-wing groups such as the Moral Majority and the Conservative Political Action Committee, which had established a track record of getting conservative candidates elected. The HRCF’s growing political clout became apparent in the congressional elections two years later, when 81 percent of 118 HRCF-backed candidates won. In 1985, the HRCF and the Gay Rights National Lobby merged to form the Human Rights Campaign Foundation, which quickly became the most prominent champion of the rights of sexual minorities in America. The new organization arrived on the scene just as lesbian/gay/bisexual/transgendered (LGBT) communities began grappling with the disastrous consequences of the AIDS epidemic and the Supreme Court’s landmark 1986 Bowers v. Hardwick decision, which outlawed sodomy.

In the past two decades, the Human Rights Campaign Foundation has lobbied on behalf of same-sex adoption, hate crime legislation to protect LGBT individuals, extending the right of civil marriage, domestic partner benefits, gay service in the military, and expanding the Employment Non-Discrimination Act to protect sexual minorities. It has established education programs in local schools, raised public awareness about the role that sexual orientation plays in immigration law, and upheld the importance of diversity in all forms. By drawing attention to such a broad range of issues, the HRCF has exposed the American government’s consistent failure to follow through on its promises of political equality, and challenged the very family and relationship units that structure sexual and gender norms in the United States.

Human Rights Campaign
1640 Rhode Island Ave. NW
Washington, DC 20036-3278
Email: field@hrc.org (Field department); membership@hrc.org (general membership)
Telephone: 202.628.4160
website: http://www.hrc.org
Executive director: Elizabeth Birch

#8: Jobs with Justice

Jobs for Justice (JwJ) was founded in 1987 with a belief that people must unite and organize in order to provide a better way of life for themselves and their families. With a presence in forty cities and twenty-nine states across the country, JwJ has created a national network of labor, faith-based, community, and student organizations working together on behalf of “workplace and community social justice campaigns.” It helps individuals become advocates for the workplace rights to which they are entitled, all the while trying to connect them to larger national and international struggles for economic and social justice.

When new recruits join JwJ, they take a pledge, promising, “During the next year, I will be there at least five times for someone else’s fight, as well as my own. If enough of us are there, we’ll all start winning.” The organization’s passion for building bridges and returning power to the people can be seen in an initiative it helped organize this fall, the Immigrant Workers Freedom Ride. Borrowing from the tactics pioneered by “Freedom Riders” during the civil rights era, nearly 1,000 immigrants and activists piled into buses and toured the country for twelve days, finally converging on Washington and New York for a series of meetings and rallies that focused public attention on antiquated immigration laws and the plight of low-wage immigrant workers.

Jobs with Justice
501 3rd St. NW
Washington, DC 20001
Email: info@jwj.org
Telephone: 202.434.1106
website: http://www.jwj.org
Executive director: Fred Azcarate

#9: The National Organization for Women

With 500,000 members and 550 chapters in all fifty states, the National Organization for Women is the largest U.S. organization dedicated to guaranteeing equality for all women. Since its founding in 1966, NOW has been committed to taking positions and actions that are uncompromising, unorthodox, and ahead of their time. NOW’s long list of priorities includes amending the U.S. constitution to guarantee equal rights for women, protecting abortion rights and reproductive freedom, opposing racism, class-based discrimination, and bigotry against sexual minorities, and ending violence against women.

NOW has used a wide range of tactics — conventional and unconventional — to push for its political agenda. Its activists have brought forth lawsuits over gender-based discrimination, lobbied and campaigned for politicians, organized mass marches, rallies, and pickets, and engaged in nonviolent civil disobedience. This multi-pronged approach toward activism is one way that NOW recognizes the diverse voices and interests of the millions of women in America.

Over the years, NOW has been successful on numerous occasions in capturing national media attention and the American public’s imagination. It has organized some of the largest rallies on behalf of women’s rights in the history of the United States, such as the massive 1978 march on Washington in support of the Equal Rights Amendment, the March for Women’s Lives in 1992 (the largest abortion-rights demonstration in U.S. history), the first mass demonstration to focus on violence against women in 1995, and the 1996 March for the Right to Fight that defended affirmative action and drew attention to the unique plight of women of color. These unprecedented national campaigns to raise public awareness of gender issues have drawn countless women into public office, expanded employment and educational opportunities for women, and helped bring about tougher laws protecting women from harassment, violence, and discrimination. Most recently, NOW has embarked upon a campaign to beat back recent legislation that curtails women’s reproductive rights.

National Organization for Women
733 15th St. NW, 2nd floor
Washington, DC 20005
Email: now@now.org
Telephone: 202.628.8669
website: http://www.now.org
President: Kim Gandy

#10: Rainbow/PUSH Coalition

The Rainbow/PUSH Coalition (RPS) is a multiracial, multi-issue, and international membership organization that works on behalf of social, racial, and economic justice. RPS is the result of the 1997 merger of two organizations: Operation PUSH (founded in 1971) and the National Rainbow Coalition (founded in 1985). In fighting for affirmative action, equal rights, employment rights, and civic empowerment, RPC has explicitly linked its struggle for justice to the principles of the “American Dream.” As RPC’s founder, the Rev. Jesse Jackson, explains: “The American Dream is one big tent of many cultures, races, and religions. Under that tent, everybody is assured equal protection under the law, equal opportunity, equal access, and a fair share. Our struggle demands that we open closed doors, extend the tent, and even the playing field.”

In its six years of existence, RPC has registered hundreds of thousands of voters, mediated labor disputes, and lobbied for the inclusion of more racial and ethnic minorities in all areas of the entertainment industry. It has also negotiated economic covenants with major corporations, helping cultivate hundreds of minority-owned franchises and creating other business opportunities for people of color.

Rainbow/PUSH Coalition
930 East 50th St.
Chicago, IL 60615-2702
Email: info@rainbowpush.org
Telephone: 773.373.3366
website: http://www.rainbowpush.org
Founder: Rev. Jesse L. Jackson Sr.

SPECIAL THANKS TO OUR RESEARCHERS/WRITERS: Sarah Bond, Sharon Diamondstein, Ben Helphand, Aileen McCabe-Maucher, Laura Nathan, and Angelina Wagner.

 

The revolution will be emailed

Can a widespread, loosely knit organization — connected only through email — make the American mainstream media take notice of the Palestinian perspective?

Ahmed Bouzid is the founder and acting president of Palestinian Media Watch.

In May 2002, an Israeli tank shell killed a Palestinian mother and her thirteen-year-old daughter. The pair was grazing sheep on their land, far from any Israeli checkpoint. In defense of their actions, the Israelis said that the two women “looked suspicious.” The incident did not make the front page of any national American newspaper. The next day, a Palestinian suicide bomber killed two Israelis near Tel Aviv in response, and the event topped headlines of every major paper in the country.

The discrepancy did not go unnoticed. Activists from Palestinian Media Watch (PMWATCH) immediately barraged newspapers across the country with letters criticizing the unbalanced coverage.

Founded in 2000, PMWATCH now has thirty-nine local chapters in cities across the United States and tens of thousands of members, who regularly contact media oulets to demand fair coverage of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. Group leaders and members have attended dozens of meetings with editorial boards and foreign desk editors, published scores of op-eds and letters in major newspapers and magazines, and appeared on various radio and television shows. The group has become so well-known that writer Ahron Shapiro of the Jerusalem Post called it, “one of the best media monitoring sites I’ve encountered, period.”

PMWATCH began with a single letter. Sitting at his computer three years ago, Ahmed Bouzid wrote a letter to The Philadelphia Inquirer, criticizing a recent article for being pro-Israeli. The letter was published, along with Bouzid’s name and email address. Over the next couple of days his inbox was flooded with responses — some encouraging his efforts, others criticizing his reaction to the paper’s coverage.

Bouzid replied to the supportive emails, encouraging the authors to send their own letters to The Philadelphia Inquirer, and inviting them to participate in a dialogue with him about media bias relating to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. Many of his responses were ignored, but three Philadelphia residents wrote back, and an initial mailing list of four — Bouzid and the three respondents — was set up.

The four discussed media bias, emailed articles and opinions back and forth, and wrote to The Inquirer. They also set up a meeting with the paper’s editor to discuss what they perceived as a systematic prejudice when it came to reporting on the conflict. Through word of mouth, news of the list and its goals spread, and others interested in the issue joined. Soon the list had members in cities other than Philadelphia, ranging across the United States from Washington to Los Angeles.

In October 2000, an official organization evolved out of this email list: Palestinian Media Watch. The organization’s mission was two-fold: to identify and protest instances in which U.S. journalists failed to cover the Palestinian-Israeli conflict accurately and fairly, and to help mainstream media outlets access pro-Palestinian perspectives.

Redefining a ‘community organization’

While Palestinian Media Watch’s short-term goals are to monitor U.S. newspapers, it does so with the larger intention of increasing Arab American participation in domestic politics. The group works to empower its members to change the perceived image of Arabs in the media, as well as to teach them how to promote a political agenda using the press as a medium for effecting change.

With these long-term goals in mind, PMWATCH is wary of the strict hierarchy and “take-it-or-leave-it” culture that seems to plague many media watch groups. Media watch organizations tend to attract a more educated audience, and their work ranges from starting and maintaining relationships with editors to publishing media reports. Given these activities, it seems only natural that these organizations often end up as elitist institutions dominated by paid staff and experts.

The leaders of PMWATCH wanted to avoid creating this kind of culture within their own group. It wasn’t just a matter of being idealistic activists. Bouzid and his fellow activists worried that an organizational structure that was less-than-democratic would stifle creativity and intimidate ordinary members from speaking their minds.

Francesca Polletta, a Columbia University sociology professor, argues in her book Freedom Is an Endless Meeting that it is sometimes more “effective” and “efficient” for activist organizations to organize “democratically” rather than hierarchically. In the case of the Arab American community this rang especially true. Arab Americans are not as clustered in cities as are other ethnic groups. While some do attend mosques, most do not, and hence there was no obvious institution from which Bouzid could solicit a constituency.

Moreover, Bouzid’s willingness to get involved in politics, which led him to become the founder and acting president of Palestinian Media Watch, seemed an exception among Arab Americans. In an interview with The Chicago Tribune, Bouzid described the Arab American community as a “punch bag,” absorbing blows that Jews, Hispanics, and African Americans would never tolerate.

The personal experience of many members of the community with monarchies or totalitarian regimes may be one explanation for their lack of political participation. Rashid Khalidi, director of the University of Chicago’s Center for International Studies, says that most Arab Americans confine their activities to business, not politics, and “they have not played the political game.” James Zogby, president of the Washington-based Arab American Institute, points out that “the problem is not just apathy but a lack of connectedness that people have to the political process. People aren’t investing in it.”

Working with a constituency resigned to political silence and believing in an “Israeli-controlled” media was PMWATCH’s first challenge. The new all-volunteer organization had a long way to go to reach the level of pro-Israeli media watch groups such as Honest Reporting, which boast large constituencies that are quickly mobilized, paid staffs with office space and administrative assistants, well-endowed activities, and long-standing relationships with newspaper editors and TV producers.

Khalidi stresses that building a mass political movement is no easy task. Even if people do become involved, he says, “Political influence will not come quickly. You have to start at the local level with local building blocks. It took the Jewish community literally decades to do this.”

This became painfully apparent to the founding members of PMWATCH. Change did not occur overnight; as hard as it was to get one letter published, a single letter would not make a difference. There were no short-term incentives to encourage the rest of the community to join the effort. How could this new organization, with no history and only an email list of members dispersed across the country, begin to make a difference?

Organizing the ‘politically Palestinian’

PMWATCH’s membership slowly began to grow, initially through word of mouth and later through organized advertising efforts. The new recruits ranged from university students to businesspeople. As membership grew, so did the ethnic and social diversity of the members. Soon separate groups in thirty-nine cities — spread across the United States — had their own email lists and websites.

After Rania Awwad, a graduate student in genetics at George Washington University, set up a Washington chapter, PMWATCH launched its first large campaign. In December 2002, the Israeli army destroyed 350 Palestinian homes and damaged 500 more in the Rafah neighborhoods of occupied Gaza along the Egyptian border. The next day, The Washington Post did not mention the incident but ran a front-page story about several Israeli deaths. For Awwad and several other PMWATCH Washington members, this was the trigger event that inspired them to start challenging media bias.

Washington chapter members wrote and called the Post’s ombudsman, Michael Getler, to demand an explanation for why the Rafah home demolitions were not reported. In his weekly column on the following Sunday, Getler mentioned the complaints about the newspaper’s silence on the home demolitions, before proceeding to discuss the event in detail. This initial success was publicized on the PMWATCH email list, and soon similar strategies were being tried in cities across the country.

With each success, membership grew, and as groups in certain cities became significantly larger, the organization developed “task groups” and “media groups” that spanned the entire network and that any member could join or lead. The task groups focused on developing the PMWATCH website, drafting media reports, and working on other tools that the organization could use to further its cause. The media groups concentrated on national newspapers and magazines, like Newsweek or Time, which were beyond the scope of local communities. (Recently, PMWATCH also established a “movie group” to examine how Arabs are portrayed in Hollywood features and on television — the group is especially popular among younger members.)

Because of the overlap between groups and the lack of a consistent hierarchy, the leader/member divide within chapters has faded. Moreover, since most of the discussions take place over group emails and are posted online, each member has a good chance of being heard as a leader. Often in community meetings, more gregarious attendees and community leaders dominate. However, over email there are no time limits, and shy individuals are generally better able to express themselves. “While you can lose out on getting to personally know people over email, I never felt the group suffered, and we always got to hear people’s thoughts,” Bouzid says.

PMWATCH’s open registration and email communication system have also allowed a wide range of personal experiences and backgrounds to be shared among group members. Just under half the group are non-Arab Americans. The ethnic diversity of the network has not led to any problems, according to Bouzid.

In their book The Miner’s Canary, Harvard law professor Lani Guinier and University of Texas law professor Gerald Torres discuss what it means to be “politically black” — that is, being able to identify with the African American experience regardless of one’s own race. A similar sort of identification process can be found in the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. “The nature of the conflict is such,” Bouzid explains, “that the Palestinians no longer question the origins of people involved in it.”

You could call these activists “politically Palestinian.” Some Jewish leftists, such as MIT professor Noam Chomsky, fit the label; they have often been the Palestinians’ greatest supporters. Bouzid himself is Algerian, and has never been asked how he came to be so dedicated to the Palestinian cause. (In fact, most Arab Americans identify with the conflict, often called the “Arab-Israeli” conflict). If there are arguments among members of the group, they are often dealt with in the “public arena” of a PMWATCH messaging board.

Turning laypeople into media critics

The fact that PMWATCH members were spread out across the country meant that for the first year of work, the group’s leaders never met in person. The work was done over email and in chat rooms. Strategies were discussed over the Internet, but ultimately the success of the organization came down to the degree of mobilization in each city, and the effectiveness of the group in persuading editors.

The media is a fast-moving industry, and quick response time is essential to success. Waiting for a centralized group to react to a specific event would have incapacitated the organization. Each city group had to be trusted to respond on its own initiative. Furthermore, city groups were best situated to establish the necessary working relationships with editors and foreign correspondents that PMWATCH needed to gain a solid reputation.

Other media watch groups have remained much more centralized and hierarchical. They enjoy fully paid staffs and the money to fly out to visit newspaper editors. In contrast, PMWATCH’s slim resources have resulted in a horizontal structure, which also seems to represent the network’s democratic philosophy.

At the heart of PMWATCH’s mission is a desire to undermine the “us” vs. “them” perceptions that many Arabs have about the media. The organization works to persuade newspaper editors to “print more,” to give a more comprehensive view of the situation. While other media groups, such as Honest Reporting, organize widespread boycotts of newspapers (such as last year’s boycott of The Washington Post for describing atrocities allegedly perpetrated by the Israeli army), PMWATCH has not yet participated in any boycott effort. The group collectively feels that a boycott would undermine the group’s “report more” philosophy.

Because the network does not focus its efforts on boycotts, it has the more challenging job of gaining legitimacy and respect from editors and television show producers. Experience has taught them that it is counterproductive to walk into an interview unprepared. Editors will always claim that the complaint is about a “one-time event” and that, overall, the coverage of the situation is balanced. PMWATCH learned fast that to be taken seriously, its members had to do their homework. Letters to the editor would only be effective if written well and intelligently.

PMWATCH had to bring its members up to a level of critical thinking that editors would respect. To this end, PMWATCH has put a lot of time and energy into the development of its online resources. On the “action page” of its website, for instance, links are provided not only to important articles and the phone numbers of editors, but also to guides for letter writing and detailed reports on current issues. Furthermore, visitors to the site are invited to participate by doing research or writing up reports.

While new members of PMWATCH might balk at the idea of writing a research report criticizing the media, they quickly learn that there is no one else to do it. PMWATCH has gotten around having a paid professional staff by teaching laypeople to research the issues and write the reports by themselves. The website provides templates of previously written reports, and simple instructions on how to calculate figures of a newspaper’s bias, and how to classify articles under the terms “pro-Israeli,” “pro-Palestinian,” and “balanced.” Authors of previous reports are available to help any city group or individual writing a report for the first time (even though this support might only be over email or the telephone), and the researchers can send emails to the list soliciting input along the way.

Another key component of Palestinian Media Watch’s strategy is “constructive pressure.” PMWATCH regularly sends editors and foreign correspondents updates about academic work on the conflict, as well as lists of potential sources or op-ed writers: people who are able at a minute’s notice to grant interviews, or who are articulate enough to react immediately to a column or event with an op-ed that newspapers can publish.

An organic and effective structure

As Polletta argues in Freedom Is an Endless Meeting, groups that choose participatory democracy over more conventional forms of organization do so because it is more efficient. Though it may seem counter-intuitive, such decentralized structures have certain advantages over hierarchical ones: Members working within a participatory system, for instance, have more say over decisions and are thus more likely to accept them as legitimate.

Believing in the cause and trusting group decisions becomes even more important when being a member of the group also makes one a target of harassment. So far, the negative repercussions for PMWATCH have been fairly minor: Bouzid received a call from the FBI after newspaper editors and television show producers complained about vulgar emails sent by hackers from his account (the email accounts of several other PMWATCH members have also been hacked into).

Having a healthy level of participation within an organization also encourages innovative thinking. At PMWATCH, members from across the country can offer their input about different strategies and approaches. The group as a whole benefits from the diverse array of media experiences represented, and can draw from this resource base to rapidly respond to a constantly changing news cycle.

Participation is especially important when it comes to developing leadership skills and increasing self-confidence. For many members, meeting with a newspaper editor can be a frightening experience. When a member feels she or he has contributed to the group’s overall strategy and is well-versed in the rationale behind it, that member’s ability to carry out the task effectively is substantially enhanced.

By promoting democracy within their organization, PMWATCH activists have encouraged the often shy Arab American population to begin getting involved politically. In the process, they have enfranchised and mobilized a broader membership than anyone would have thought possible. Working upward from an initial four-person email list, PMWATCH has created what Harvard Professor Archon Fung refers to as “social capital with fangs.”

STORY INDEX

ORGANIZATIONS >

Committee for Accuracy in Middle Eastern Reporting in America
A media-monitoring and research organization “devoted to promoting accurate and balanced coverage of Israel and the Middle East” and fighting anti-Israel and anti-Jewish prejudice.
URL: http://www.camera.org

Honest Reporting
Media watch organization that monitors instances of anti-Israeli bias.
URL: http://www.honestreporting.com

Palestinian Media Watch
Group that seeks to increase attention to Palestinian viewpoints in the news.
URL: http://www.pmwatch.org

PEOPLE > BOUZID, AHMED >

“Keeping an Eye on the News”
By Sandi Cain. Published by Arab-American Business. July 20, 2003.
URL: http://www.arabamericanbusiness.com/July%202003/newsfocus.htm

“Palestinians Find Their Voice Online”
By Mark Glaser. Published by the Online Journalism Review. October 22, 2003.
URL: http://www.ojr.org/ojr/glaser/1066177054.php

Personal website
URL: http://www.ahmedbouzid.org/

PEOPLE > FUNG, ARCHON >

Personal website
URL: http://www.archonfung.net

PUBLICATIONS >

Philadelphia Inquirer
URL: http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer

TOPICS > ARAB-ISRAELI CONFLICT >

“Photostory: Home demolitions in Rafah”
By Darren Ell. Published by the Electronic Intifada. December 19, 2002.
URL: http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article995.shtml

“Covering the Company, etc.”
By Michael Getler. Published in The Washington Post. January 20, 2002.
URL: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn?pagename=article&node=&contentId=A6797-2002Jan19¬Found=true

 

Where give meets take

Sharing a house, a shower, and a meal at the Catholic Worker.

St. Joseph House on East First Street, one of the two Catholic Worker houses located in Manhattan.

Like many of her classmates at the University of Notre Dame, Sarah Brook came to New York soon after graduation, looking for work. But the job she ended up applying for last summer had few of the “perks” that a typical graduate might look for, such as health insurance, retirement benefits, or even a salary. It also had a somewhat unconventional way of interviewing candidates — one involving a mandatory overnight stay at the organization’s downtown office.

Since August, Brook has been living, working, and volunteering at Maryhouse on East Third Street in Manhattan, one of two Catholic Worker houses in Manhattan. The other house, St. Joseph House, is just two blocks away on East First Street. Brook and the other dozen or so volunteers at each house have agreed to live and work at this house, wage- and rent-free. They assist the poor directly by serving meals, giving out clothing, and providing homeless men and women access to showers. The volunteers eat the same food they cook and serve to the destitute. They also wear clothes that have been donated to the group.

But Brook and the other Catholic Workers do not just serve the poor. They live with them. Every day, St. Joseph House and Maryhouse welcome hundreds of New York’s estimated 39,000 homeless into its living quarters. And every day, these individuals — many of whom suffer from mental illness — eat with, talk to, and sleep alongside volunteers from more or less privileged backgrounds.

“The ideal is to be with the poorest people and to do as much as we can to obliterate the distinctions,” says Tom Cornell, a volunteer who lives at a Catholic Worker farming community in upstate New York. Cornell and his wife, Monica, have been volunteers with the movement since the 1950s.

The Catholic Worker movement itself goes back seventy years, when activists Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin started handing out copies of their newspaper, the Catholic Worker, at a May Day communist rally in New York’s Union Square. (To this day, the 80,000-circulation Catholic Worker still sells for a penny a copy.) A year later, Day and Maurin decided they should do more than simply publish articles about social justice. They began establishing houses to serve the poor, the first of which opened in New York in 1934. There are now 185 Catholic Worker houses, serving thousands of poor people in the United States as well as abroad.

Day once said that young people will always want to come to Manhattan — and there will always be poor people in Manhattan. Decades later, residents of the New York houses — both the Catholic Workers and the people they serve — continue to represent a wide range of ages and backgrounds. Brook, who is twenty-two, says that living at Maryhouse is “an ideal way to still be in school. You’re getting your hands dirty, but getting to use your mind.” The Catholic Workers live off donations, she says; they do not take any pay, except for $20 a week in “fun money.”

This lifestyle of self-imposed poverty is precisely what continues to draw people — especially young people — to the movement, nearly two decades after Day’s death. “There is … great freedom in giving up your possessions, in devoting yourself to love of the poor and of fellow members of your community and devotion to social and political justice,” says Jim O’Grady, the author of Dorothy Day: With Love for the Poor. Bill Griffin, a former volunteer who often eats dinner at the Maryhouse, calls the Catholic Worker movement a “school of life.” Most volunteers stay for two or three years, he says; some end up staying indefinitely.

The organization’s name is somewhat misleading: The Catholic Worker has no official relationship with the Roman Catholic Church, and its statement of “aims and means” explicitly states that it has no “religious test.” Peter Maurin and Dorothy Day were both practicing Catholics when they founded the movement, but they wanted the organization to be open to people of all faiths. To this day, most of the organization’s volunteers are practicing Catholics, and religious faith remains a central motivation for their work. (“Our priorities don’t make any sense unless you believe in God,” says Felton Davis, a volunteer at Maryhouse.) That said, in some Catholic Worker houses other faiths have been known to dominate: The volunteers in the Catholic Worker house in Boston, for instance, are mostly Buddhist.

Of the 185 operating Catholic Worker houses, none of them can be rightfully called the movement’s “headquarters.” Informally, however, the New York houses function as the de facto center of the movement, as it was there where the movement began and where Day did her charity work. Today, Maryhouse and St. Joseph House sit inconspicuously alongside chic restaurants and boutiques in Lower Manhattan. When Day and Maurin founded the organization seven decades ago, this area — known as the Bowery or the East Village — was a blighted urban neighborhood. Over the years, however, real estate prices soared and the area’s poor left for other parts. Today, some volunteers question whether the Catholic Worker should move to Brooklyn, Central Harlem, or the South Bronx, since these areas now have the highest concentrations of the city’s poverty and homelessness.

One positive thing about their current location is that it allows the Catholic Workers to directly confront New York’s materialistic culture, says O’Grady. The Catholic Workers rebuke the “disgusting wealth reveling that goes on in Manhattan,” he says. “They sit right in the middle of it, but by going about their daily business, they say to us: ‘What obsesses you doesn’t matter.’”

In fact, the Catholic Worker movement seems to take pride in rejecting many mainstream cultural values, especially competition and materialism. “You’re not supposed to reject competition. That’s a rejection of the American way of life,” Davis tells me on one of my visits to Maryhouse. In Davis’ view, some people are in need and some people have too much; the Catholic Worker simply helps facilitate this redistribution of wealth. “If we weren’t here, how would people who have more than they need hand over to those who don’t?” he asks.

As we’re talking, a young woman stops by the house to drop off a bag of clothing. “People come to give and come to receive,” Davis says. “We’re living at that point where give meets take.”

Sarah Brook, a Catholic Worker volunteer, takes a break from her duties at the Maryhouse shelter in Manhattan.

One family

At Maryhouse, there is no formal training for new volunteers. And that, Brook says, was perhaps the most difficult part of getting started as a Catholic Worker. Brook had never before lived among the mentally ill. She often felt confused when her mostly female charges would act happy and talkative and then, moments later, begin screaming at her. Other volunteers were supportive, she says, and Brook felt comfortable asking them questions. Still, no one took her aside to point out which house residents had which types of problems.

It is precisely this lack of structure that defines the Catholic Worker movement and makes it so different from other social service organizations. As one volunteer puts it, the Catholic Worker is “a family.” It strives to create a relaxed, accepting environment in its houses. Many people who come to the house for food feel comfortable wandering through its pantries. “We try to offer someone not just a plate of food but a home or something that can be their home,” says Brook.

Meals at St. Joseph House or Maryhouse are a cross between a Thanksgiving family dinner and summer camp. One Friday night I walk into a macaroni and cheese dinner prepared by volunteer Jim Regan. The Catholic Workers sit right beside the people who come seeking meals. Smoke fills the air of the dining hall. Alcohol and drugs are not permitted in any of the houses — many of the residents are recovering from drug or alcohol addiction — but cigarettes seem to be the accepted indulgence. Some of the men and women yell or talk in disjointed sentences, while the volunteers doggedly try to engage them in conversation.

Griffin describes the Catholic Worker as the place where the “voluntary” poor and the “involuntary” poor come together. For a casual observer like myself, the two categories blended together so discreetly that it was often difficult to distinguish between those who served as volunteers and those who came seeking food. I initially thought a woman named Stacey was one of the volunteers. When I spoke to other people who ate or lived at the Catholic Worker, it was immediately clear that they suffered from a mental illness. Not Stacey. As she explained to me her problems with the city shelter system, she came across as strikingly intelligent and aware. Stacey said she was thirty-five, though she appeared much younger, and had been homeless for two years. She knew few details about the Catholic Worker organization, but she had been coming regularly to St. Joseph House and Maryhouse for clothes, food, a shower, and sometimes even a nap.

Stacey is one of hundreds of people who pass through the two Catholic Worker houses in Manhattan on a daily basis. Many of these people complain of problems they’ve had with the New York City shelter system. What makes the Catholic Worker houses stand apart from the other shelters, they say, is the unique attitude among the staff — the direct personal engagement that Catholic Workers bring to their work. For the past seventy years, this particular approach toward public service has been an explicit part of the movement’s mission, encapsulated in a philosophy known as “personalism,” which Catholic Worker co-founder Peter Maurin studied in the writings of the French philosopher Emmanuel Mounier.

At the time of the Catholic Worker’s founding, the world was beginning to be split between two warring political ideologies. The conflict between the classical liberals who favored capitalism and the Marxists who favored socialism would dominate the history of most of the twentieth century. Mounier’s philosophy of personalism advocated a middle ground between the liberals’ glorification of the individual and the Marxists’ glorification of the collective, both of which (according to Mounier) failed to put sufficient emphasis on personal responsibility.

In a 1955 issue of the Catholic Worker, Dorothy Day explained how Peter Maurin adapted the principles of personalism to the work of social justice: “His whole message was that everything began with one’s self … If every man became poor there would not be any destitute, he said. If everyone became better, everyone would be better off. He wanted us all ‘to quit passing the buck.’” In their daily work, the Catholic Workers live out the personalist philosophy by both choosing poverty and working to help those who have to live in poverty. As Griffin points out, “The way you help is as important as the money you give to help.”

The Maryhouse on East Third Street.

Act locally, act globally

It’s noon on Saturday in Manhattan’s Union Square, and nearly a dozen people are gathered around the statue at the northern edge of the square. The Catholic Workers and other activists have been holding a weekly vigil here for years. Now it’s about Iraq, but they’ve always had reasons to protest: Before the September 11 terrorist attacks, the group protested the presence of U.S. troops in Colombia.

How do U.S. policies in far-off lands connect to the movement’s mission of helping the poor? Art Laffin, a volunteer at the Catholic Worker house in Washington, says that the poor person on the street and the people in Baghdad are both “victims of our society.”

“We’re trying to live an alternative, a nonviolent alternative,” Laffins says. “We choose to not cooperate with a consumer society and a system that sanctions killing.” For Catholic Workers like Laffin, protests and vigils are as much a part of their day-to-day work as feeding the poor. Every Monday for the past sixteen years, Laffin and about fifteen other volunteers have held a vigil in front of the Pentagon. Every Friday for the past six years, they have demonstrated in front of the White House. Laffin was arrested last August for participating in a vigil at the Pentagon commemorating the Hiroshima nuclear bombing; the police said he had entered an off-limits area. “Dorothy Day said we have to fill the jails,” Laffin points out.

Besides taking part in protests, Catholic Worker volunteers also go to war zones to bring food and other supplies to victims. Laffin visited Iraq in 1998, Central America twice during the 1980s, and the occupied territories of Palestine three times between 1996 and 1998. “You see firsthand the immeasurable suffering of people,” he says.

Over the years, many notable pacifists have joined forces with the Catholic Worker. Daniel Berrigan regularly attends the Union Square vigil. Berrigan and his brother Phillip, who passed away last year, were known for their creative acts of civil disobedience in the 1960s, when they were both Catholic priests protesting the Vietnam War. The duo made the cover of Newsweek, and Paul Simon mentioned them in a song, “Me and Julio Down by the Schoolyard.”

Of course, not everyone can fill the jails at the same time. When certain volunteers are in jail, others must be around to help feed the poor, says volunteer Matt Daloisio: “No one of those things is more important than any other, but they’re all connected.” Daloisio says that no one in the organization pressures the volunteers to get arrested. “It’s more pressure that we put on ourselves,” he says.

On one hand, being part of the Catholic Worker clearly makes it easier for these volunteers to practice the pacifism that they preach: Davis, the Maryhouse volunteer, points out that people who work in full-time jobs can’t risk going to jail because that might jeopardize their jobs. On the other hand, when Catholic Workers do go to court, they often have to defend themselves. The organization does not use lawyers, Laffin says, because “courts are complicit” in the injustices that the volunteers are protesting.

The Catholic Workers’ radical denunciation of war also puts them somewhat at odds with the Catholic leadership in Rome. At many points in its history, the Roman Catholic Church has accepted the idea of a “just war” — that is, a war that can be justified on moral grounds. Earlier this year, for example, the Church did not come out against the U.S.-led war on Iraq.

While the Catholic Worker has no affiliation with the Catholic Church, most volunteers say they would like the Church to actively advance a pacifist agenda. The group has held meetings with Catholic bishops all over the country to ask them to take stronger public stances against war. Many Catholic Worker volunteers also work with other Catholic groups, like Pax Christi, that are part of the international Catholic peace movement. “We would like to see the Catholic Church become a peace church,” Laffin says.

“If the Catholic Workers, by speaking to their pacifism, unsettle us in our war-making for a just cause, well then that’s a good thing,” says O’Grady, the biographer. “Because it’s terrible if we’re blithe or smug about going to war.”

As with all radical politics, however, it’s difficult to be optimistic about the Catholic Worker’s ability to achieve the social and political transformation it seeks — at least in the near future. For all its devoted volunteers and relentless crusading, the Catholic Worker has all the “political impact of a grain of sand falling from the sky,” O’Grady notes. Nevertheless, he adds, even if there are few immediate results to speak of, in the long term the influence of a popular movement like the Catholic Worker can manifest itself in “mysterious and subterranean” ways.

It’s unclear what changes we’ll see in another seven decades, but there’s a good chance that the Catholic Workers will still be toiling then, still building the society that Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin envisioned so many years ago — a society “where it is easier for people to be good.”

STORY INDEX

ORGANIZATIONS >

The Catholic Worker Movement
URL: http://www.catholicworker.org

Pax Christi USA
The national Catholic peace movement that “strives to create a world that reflects the Peace of Christ by exploring, articulating, and witnessing to the call of Christian nonviolence.”
URL: http://www.paxchristiusa.org

Plowshares Movement
An organization working toward nuclear disarmament in the United States and abroad.
URL: http://www.plowsharesactions.org

Voices in the Wilderness
A Chicago-based organization working to end economic and military warfare against the Iraqi people.
URL: http://www.nonviolence.org/vitw/

PEOPLE > DAY, DOROTHY >

Biography
Co-founder of the Catholic Worker movement.
URL: http://www.catholicworker.org/dorothyday/ddbiography.cfm

PEOPLE > MAURIN, PETER >

Biography
Co-founder of the Catholic Worker movement.
URL: http://www.catholicworker.org/roundtable/pmbiography.cfm

 

‘Assault on the very basis of life’

In an age of unprecedented corporate power, social movements offer the greatest hope for humanity’s survival, says Vandana Shiva.

Runner-up for BEST OF ITF INTERVIEWS (SO FAR)

Vandana Shiva talks to reporters in Cancún during last September’s World Trade Organization ministerial. (Victor Tan Chen)

When tens of thousands filled the streets of Seattle to protest a summit of the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 1999, many news reports focused on the spectacle of the moment — the tear gas in the air, the smashed storefront windows, the clashes between police and black-garbed anarchists. Drowned out were the issues that had sparked the mass demonstrations. On the streets, protesters were denouncing the WTO’s role in overturning a range of local laws (from regulations protecting sea turtles to bans on hormone-laden beef) and its “undemocratic” means of making decisions that affected billions of people. The activists shouted; few heard.

Seattle was the birth of a “new democracy movement,” Indian environmentalist Vandana Shiva wrote at the time. Shiva was present in Seattle, making her case in public against the genetic engineering of crops, the patenting of seeds, and other attempts by corporations to establish “control over every dimension of our lives — our food, our health, our environment, our work, and our future.” She praised the demonstrations in the streets, and argued that they represented history in the making. Citizens around the world, in poor as well as rich nations, would no longer “be bullied and excluded from decisions in which they have a rightful share,” she said.

If Shiva and other critics were largely ignored by the mainstream media in Seattle, they have doggedly persisted in making their case against “corporate-controlled globalization” in the years since. The author of the books Stolen Harvest and Water Wars and the recipient of the Right Livelihood Award (known as the “Alternative Nobel Prize”), Shiva has become one of the most quoted spokespeople of a protest movement that prides itself on its leaderless, democratic structure — and one of its few voices from the “global South,” the so-called “Third World” where the poorest people on earth reside.

Shiva was born in northern Indian city of Dehradun, in the foothills of the Himalayas. Trained as a physicist, she eventually left the academic world for life as an activist, and in the two decades since then has worked primarily on issues of biodiversity, the earth’s variety of plant and animal life. In her native India, the fifty-three-year-old activist is best known for founding the New Delhi-based Research Foundation for Science, Technology, and Ecology and the national movement known as Navdanya, both of which work on behalf of agricultural diversity and farmers’ rights. One of Navdanya’s more recent initiatives is Diverse Women for Diversity, an international campaign on behalf of biodiversity, cultural diversity, and food security.

When trade ministers met in Cancún, Mexico, for another WTO ministerial this September, Shiva and thousands of other protesters were there to greet them. Once again, violence dominated the headlines — this time, the suicide of a South Korean farmer, Kyung-hae Lee, who killed himself at the police barricades in an act of political protest (the agricultural policies of the WTO, Lee had claimed, were “killing” small farmers like himself). InTheFray Editor Victor Tan Chen caught up with Shiva in Cancún for a chat about the current state of the world’s social movements, the recent struggles against corporate power, and the meaning of one man’s ultimate sacrifice.

Q: What changes have you seen in social movements over the last several decades?

A: Well, all the new social movements that have emerged — even in the South, even movements that are terribly local — have been able to sustain themselves and build strength through global solidarity. And that’s partly because beginning with the eighties, the worst problems we face do not get created from within our societies. They get created because of World Bank lending, IMF lending, World Trade Organization rules, global corporate crimes — and to deal with these global risks you need global solidarity. And movements have been extremely ingenious in creating new strategies, new styles of actions, new combinations of intellectual work and research and grassroots actions. My own institutions that I founded — one in 1982 [the Research Foundation for Science, Technology, and Ecology], the other in 1987 [Navdanya] — are both children of globalization, of responding to globalization, and both of them work very much at the local level and at the national level, through advocacy and influencing parliament, and at the international level, through global solidarity. They also combine, I believe, the highest quality intellectual work with the deepest engagement in society. And I think those are totally new trends.

Q: Do you think it’s an energetic time for social movements today in the world?

A: I think it’s the only place where there is energy. At least energy that deserves to be called energy. Because in India, fortunately, we have different terms for destructive energy and creative energy.  We don’t use the same word for two. But in the West, you only have one word. So the energy of Mr. Bush bombing Iraq, is still energy. The energy of a Monsanto wiping out agriculture is still energy. But we have a different word for that. And for us, in my view, social movements are the only place for positive, creative energy.

States are failing in their duties. [They] are either failing because they are prevented from acting, through these very, very dictatorial rules, or they’re volunteering the sacrifice of their power. But their power is not their power in total sovereignty; their power is the … power of the citizens. So when states give up their power, they’re giving up the rights and powers of their citizens, which is an illegitimate step. So we have crippled states or corporate states — the only actor states are corporate states. The other states are crippled states. And social movements [are] the only place where a future is being shaped because the corporations are shaping an annihilation of the future.

Q:  What do you think the biggest challenges are facing activists for social justice today?

A: I think the biggest challenge is the fact that never before has humanity needed to respond to assault on the very basis of life. To patenting of seeds, to privatization of water, to total takeover of agriculture. As movements and political organizations, we’re geared to fighting for better wages, freedom of speech. And now we have to fight for survival. And fighting for survival is the common bottom line for everyone, and yet we are divided by the legacy of a divided world between rich and poor.

The biggest block social movements face is not addressing the issues of survival of the species but slipping into the polarizations, where the biggest corporations use the richness of the North to prevent solidarity and engagement of citizens of the North with citizens of the South.

And you can just notice after Seattle how campaigns and movements of the North are constantly criminalized [as] “rich people,” “white people,” “anti-poor.” And the “pro-poor” are precisely the corporations that are wiping us out. So I think that’s a huge leap we need to make in our political analysis and in our action strategies.

Q: Do you think movements are doing a better job organizing across lines of nationality, race, gender, class?

A: I think we need to do an even better job. And that’s why I formed Diverse Women for Diversity. I believe we do still have divisions on the basis of race and class, and that’s precisely what we need to transcend.

Q: Are women’s issues becoming more prominent, do you think, in the global justice movement?

A: Well, the thing is women’s leadership is prominent. And women are defining all social issues as their issues — food, water, the destruction of livelihoods — and you can see that everywhere, at least at the grass roots, women are shaping the agenda.

Q: What kind of advice would you give to activists today who are struggling for social justice?

A: To have sustainable energy — it’s a long, drawn battle. To stay cheerful, have joy in their struggle. To not be overburdened by the struggle itself. To relish their humanity, and not let political activism dehumanize them. To be engaged passionately, but be detached while engaging passionately.

Q: Do you have any words for people here protesting the WTO?

A: My main words are we all need to pay deep homage to the Korean farmer who gave his life for all of us, and through it wanted to focus that this is about life. And I would just say if we can keep our minds and hearts focused on that sacrifice and move from there. And not be distracted by [this question of] “oh, does market access help the Third World?” And the nonsensical diversions that divide the movement. I think we need to just focus our energies on Mr. Lee and say, “This is what it’s about.” He gave his life to remind us; let us not forget.

STORY INDEX

ORGANIZATIONS >

Diverse Women for Diversity
A global campaign of women on behalf of biodiversity, cultural diversity, and food security.
URL: http://www.diversewomen.org

Navdanya
An Indian movement to conserve agricultural diversity. “Navdanya” means “nine seeds,” a reference to India’s collective source of food security.
URL: http://navdanya.org

Research Foundation for Science, Technology, and Ecology (RFSTE).
Organization that “works on biodiversity conservation and protecting people’s rights from threats to their livelihoods and environment by centralised systems of monoculture in forestry, agriculture and fisheries.” Based in New Delhi, India.
URL: http://www.shiva.net

The Right Livelihood Award
Considered the “Alternative Nobel Prize,” an award established that recognizes “outstanding vision and work on behalf of our planet and its people.” Presented annually since 1980 in Stockholm at a ceremony in the Swedish Parliament.
URL: http://www.rightlivelihood.se/recip/v-shiva.htm

PEOPLE > SHIVA, VANDANA >

“Short Curriculum Vitae of Dr. Vandana Shiva”
Biography of the Indian environmentalist. Published by her organization, the Research Foundation for Science, Technology, and Ecology (RFSTE).
URL: http://www.vshiva.net/vs_cv.htm

TOPICS > GLOBALIZATION >

“Enough IMF/World Bank Policies”
By Scott Harris. Published by AlterNet. April 1, 2000.
URL: http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=31

“Globalization: A Primer”
By Mark Weisbrot. Published by the Center for Economic and Policy Research. October 1999.
URL: http://www.cepr.net/GlobalPrimer2.htm

“The Historic Significance of Seattle”
By Vandana Shiva. December 10, 1999.
URL: http://lists.essential.org/mai-not/msg00181.html

“Interview with Dr. Vandana Shiva”
Broadcast on NOW with Bill Moyers. September 5, 2003.
URL: http://www.pbs.org/now/transcript/transcript_shiva.html

“The Long Arm of the WTO”
By Jim Hightower. Published by AlterNet. April 26, 2000.
URL: http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=4866

“Monsanto — World’s Most Unethical and Harmful Investment”
Compiled by Ethical Investing.
URL: http://www.ethicalinvesting.com/monsanto

“World trade barricade”
By Dustin Ross and Victor Tan Chen. Published by InTheFray Magazine. October 27, 2003.
URL: content/view/84/39

Victor Tan Chen is In The Fray's editor in chief and the author of Cut Loose: Jobless and Hopeless in an Unfair Economy. Site: victortanchen.com | Facebook | Twitter: @victortanchen

A skewed view of the security perimeter. September 9.

World Trade Barricade

Puppets and protests galore at the World Trade Organization’s Cancún ministerial.

During the second week of September, delegates from across the globe descended on Cancún, Mexico, to take part in the fifth ministerial conference of the World Trade Organization (WTO).

At the same time, thousands of uninvited guests also flocked to Cancún to demonstrate against global capitalism and the alleged corporate bias of the WTO. The protesters on the street were, for the most part, prevented from coming anywhere near the convention center—several steel-mesh barricades, hundreds of Mexican federal police, and a few naval destroyers made sure of that. Nevertheless, the protesters still managed to put on a wide variety of alternative events, including a campesino (farmworker) forum and a fair trade conference. And a few activists even managed to slip inside the Zone and inject their message of defiance into the ministerial chambers.

Dustin Ross and Victor Tan Chen of In The Fray magazine were in Cancún to report on the alternatives alive on the street and in the convention halls. What follows is a visual essay of photographs from many of these events.

Characters

September 9

Woman dressed as Catwoman on the sidewalk
Catwoman dances at the march.
Man in black cone hat carrying drum and walking down street
A drummer from the Infernal Noise Brigade, a Seattle-based activist group.
Man in chef's hat carrying Food Not Bombs cloth sign
Keith McHenry, the cofounder of Food Not Bombs, marches against the WTO. Food Not Bombs shares free vegetarian food with hungry people and protests war and poverty throughout the world.
Man in orange vest and black mask carrying a flag
A student marches as part of the Orange Bloc. Activists at the Cancún demonstrations were organized into different contingents (Orange, Violet, and White). The Orange Bloc engaged in the most confrontational tactics, creating a barrier at the front of the march and meeting the police in their riot gear head-on.
Man wearing white mask and carrying flag
A protestor calls for peace.
Mexican protester speaks into a bullhorn
A Mexican protester speaks to the crowd.
A group of students wearing orange vests
Mexican students, members of the Orange Bloc, wait for the march to begin.
Protester stands on a fountain monument and waves a red flag
Across from the barricades, a protester perched on top of a fountain waves a flag of the former Soviet Union.
Man wearing a black cone hat playing the trombone
A trombonist from Seattle’s Infernal Noise Brigade.
Man wearing white T-shirt sitting on ground
The T-shirt speaks for itself.

Marching

People sitting on top of crumpled fence
Protesters and journalists climb onto the fallen security fence. Activists ripped down the fence using thick ropes and the muscles of an army of volunteers. September 13. Photo by Victor Tan Chen
Crowd carrying signs, with a palm trees and a large puppet in the background
Thousands of protestors gather in front of the security fence. After several days of demonstrations, Mexican police moved the fence about a hundred yards down the road from its earlier location—the site of the suicide of South Korean farmer Lee Kyung-hae. September 13. Photo by Victor Tan Chen
Large crowd walking down the street
A view of the oncoming march. September 9.

Painted Statements

Column base with skull and words spray-painted on it
Translation: “Free trade.” September 9.
Protester painting "OMC" in white letters on the asphalt
A protester paints “No OMC,” Spanish for “No WTO.” (The World Trade Organization is known to Spanish speakers as the Organización Mundial del Comercio.) September 9.
Banner of Hitler dressed up as the Statue of Liberty dangling a cowboy marionette
A disturbing banner hangs at the entrance to the campesino forum, which was held during the week of the WTO ministerial conference. Campesinos (farmworkers) from all over Latin America traveled to Cancún to be part of this alternative gathering. September 9.
Large gray puppet being rolled down street
“Puppetistas”—activists skilled in the art of puppets—created larger-than-life renditions of Mayan gods. This imposing figure is Chac, the god of rain. September 10. Photo by Victor Tan Chen

Celebrations

Circle of people raising their fists in solidarity
Protesters raise their fists in solidarity. Posing as tourists, this group of about eighty activists slipped past the barricades and then staged a sit-down protest in the street alongside Cancún’s convention center, where the WTO talks were being held. September 12. Photo by Victor Tan Chen
Group of naked people lying on the beach
On the morning of September 8, a particularly uninhibited group of demonstrators gathered at Playa Langosta (Lobster Beach) and used their bodies to show their disapproval of the WTO.
Naked protesters walking down the beach
Jeff, a naked protester from Boston, said the group wanted to show the world that they “feel strongly about global issues but want to have fun as well.”

Security Fence

September 9

Security Forces

Man with bullhorn speaks right through fence
A protester lectures police through the security fence. September 9.
Group of police officers with riot helmets
Thousands of Mexican federal police were on hand to keep protestors away from the WTO conference. September 13. Photo by Victor Tan Chen
Fisheye view of the security fence with riot police behind it
A skewed view of the security perimeter. September 9.
Police officers standing behind the barricades
Another view of the snaking security fence. September 9.

Memorial

September 13

Korean farmers wearing hats and carrying an effigy with the words "WTO"
South Korean protestors prepare to set fire to an effigy of the WTO. Photo by Victor Tan Chen
A memorial erected in honor of Lee Kyung-hae, a South Korean farmer who committed suicide in front of the Cancún barricades as an act of political protest. Lee and other protesters alleged that the WTO’s approach to agriculture was “killing small farmers.” Photo by Victor Tan Chen

Campesino Forum

September 8

Multiple generations of a family sit on rocks outside the forum building
A family at the campesino forum relaxes during a lull in the sessions.
Smiling boy wearing a polo shirt
A child at the campesino forum.
A man takes a bottle from a stack of coolers and plastic bags filled with water bottles
A delegate at the campesino forum grabs a bag of water. Temperatures reached the high 90s during the conference.

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