Conversations with Gamechangers: Grassroots Liberation
(part of the [[Conversations with Gamechangers]] webinar series.)
Organised by SEA ([[Solidarity Economy Association]])
- small coop based in UK
- multiple small projects for solidarity economy from below
-
SE
- being done all over the world (although maybe not called SE)
- SEA: sharing tools tips and solidarity from around the world
[[Grassroots Liberation]]
Speakers
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Waringa Wahome
- social justice and human rights lawyer
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Brayan Mathenge - writer on politics
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Gacheke Gachihi
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Kinuthia Ndung'u
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all members of differnt social justice centres, involved in grassroots liberation, part of young communist league kenya
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music played at the beginning, tribute to the leader of the Mozambique people ([[Eduardo Mondlane]]?)
[[Mathare Social Justice Centre]]
- economic crisis in east africa
-
mathare social justice centre started in 2015
- collective political power and economy from below
- documenting human rights violations
- fight for the right to organise
- in the face of extrajudicial killing and torture
- inspired by [[democratic confederalism]] of [[Rojava]]
- the centres have around 30 membres
- campaigns: rights to water, extrajudicial killing, ecological justice
Genesis
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how are the conditions historically changing
- colonialism to neoliberalism
- spread of hopelessness in [[Kenya's informal settlements]]
- broken healthcare, education systems
- high levels of unemployment
- police brutality, enforced disappearances, extrajudicial killings
-
activities engaged in by the SJCs:
- monitoring these things, stepping up to be a vanguard of the community
- organised both legally and when legal means fail taken to mass actions in the streets
- organising ecological justice hubs, parks in local neighbourhoods
- building a popular power within local neighbourhoods
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Ecological Justice hubs
- people's park
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clean up garbage and plant trees
- not just for the park
- but in memory of those affected by state violence, police brutality and killings
- Kenya has a history of police state and violence
- former british colony that has remained violent
- sustainable economy
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in urban areas Ecological Justice is pressing
- growth
- people trying to make profits from housing
- open sewers, causing myriad of chronic conditions
- in shanties (informal settlements) lots of people suffering from cancer and similar
-
also a lot of land grabbing, minimal green spaces
- air is polluted
- can't drink the water that is in the rivers
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social justice centres
- organised in different ways in different areas
- own means of sustenance
- home where people can communicate
-
two struggles
- first, building a civic space for community organising
- second, building a sustainable basis for these
- these spaces are sites of struggle
Informal settlements
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[[Kenya's informal settlements]] - what is the life like there?
- history, problems, typical lifes
- poverty is violence, poverty is crime, drugs
- 70% of people live in settlements
- no water, housing
- crises of capitalism
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police stop people from organising against poverty and hopelessness
- SJC are to give a space to start organising
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protest marches every year
Political education
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international solidarity is critical to send message to gov to stop cleansing and criminalisation of the youth
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hard to do community organising where there is poverty and hopelessness
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political education is important
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ecological justice campaign has helped challenging for a democratic space to organise
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political education
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important to understand our history
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to know where we are going
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looking at history, all struggles are political questions
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politicisation of human rights
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in kenya, HR has been suspended
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borrow from history, such as Che Guevara
- first duty of revolutionary is to be educated
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very important in understanding neoliberalism
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students of walter rodney: revolutionary must understand the system
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different ideological factions with doing opinions
- standardised political programme
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hopelessness in informal settlements (because of poverty)
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wretched of the earth are detached
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PE reawakes the wretched of the earth
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to expose systemic forms of oppression
- taking up sites of struggle
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e.g. to help connecting water shortages to political organisation
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create a syllabus of political thinkers and political writers
- network of political thinkers
- to organise around the same issues, and conduct education
-
-
jeff miley
-
lives in england, political sociology
- kurdish freedom movement in 2014
- very involved in that since then, 2018 involved in dialogue with people in mathare social justice centre
- affinity between kurdish movement and movement in nairobi
- beyond NGOs and the nation state
- grassroots liberation was born out of internationalist spirit
- trying to do things at grassroots
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organised a series of seminars done in the communities themselves
- rasta resistance
- women's lib in the 21st century (from kurdish freedom movement)
- social ecology as a revolutionary paradigm
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legacy of walter rodney - he saw need for grassroots education
- not political speeches, but go to grassroots and engage
- arusha declaration for the 21st century
-
lives in england, political sociology
Intergenerational movement?
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focus on youth, intergenerational? how is it structured?
- bring together different movements
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emancipation from NGOism
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majority of african population is young people in general
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borrowed heavily from democratic confedarlism
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three line
- ecological justice (youth, young people)
- women's rights
- democratic confederalism
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three line
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rasta population has a lot of similarities with the kurdish people
What was the existing way of organising?
- organising cooperatives around food and rural organising
- organising around water
- people were doing self-help but began organising around struggle
- borrowing from south africa that organises around the housing question
- existing resilience of the people
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preexisting conditions
- used to have individuals taking charge in the community
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any time the community involved itself it was as a spontaneous reaction
- that was not sustained organising
- political education to help sustain the organising
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individuals who defended the community might disappear
- but if it's as a whole community, then it's harder to take down
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the main road that runs through mathare
- mau mau road
- preexisting tradition of land and freedom movement
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political consciousness in the ghettos
- political history that was betrayed by post colonial activities
- referenced [[Dedan Kimathi]]
NGOism
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recent form of colonialism is NGOism
- international development, NGOism
- how have they challenged NGOism?
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last 30 years in neoliberal economy
- politiclisation of social movements by NGOs
- has affected many people
- similar to as in latin america
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organic intellectual networks is putting together a book on ngo discourse, role of ngos in east africa
- community organisation has to challenge NGOism every day
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NGOs don't ask fundamental question of why people are poor!
- never look at political economy
- NGO activities limit their struggle
- neoliberalism is not necessariliy a tactic that people understand, this is part of the education work
- NGOs fragment different political struggles in communities
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the communities become depolitised
- political education helps fight back against this
- fundmental question within GLs circles
- NGOism is very deeply rooted
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NGOs were born from the belly of neoliberalism and free market economy
- very tied to neoliberal system
- move from dependency to dignity
- a self-determined structure
- some progressive NGOs have had a positive influence or positive contribution (but they are still a result of neoliberal economy)
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jeff: from an internationalist perspective
- even going in with the grassroots, it's hard to avoid a neocolonialist perspective
- distinguish between NGOisation and leveraging our privilege
- check our privelege and leverage our privilege
- e.g. speak out about police violence, can be very dangerous for those threatened by it, leverage privilege to speak out about it
- distinguish internationalism from neocolonialism
Economic aspect
Differences between rural struggles and urban struggles
- [missed a bit]
- as capitalism reinvents itself, the rural workers are experiencing similar struggles urban struggles as well, so there are overlaps
international solidarity
- sharing of their documents
- online fundraising that can be shared with us by jeff
- sharing about the crisis of capitalism
- creating awareness across the globe
- connect struggles - collective international campaigns
power relations between those with abilities and those with needs
- philosophical question
- it is inherent in the nature of capitalism that ther eis an imbalance
- there has long been a class difference
- those who are privilege must leverage that
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jeff:
- fanon says that political education is different from coming in with speeches. help to be the midwife in the birth of critical thinking.
- paulo freire - pedagogy of the oppressed
- these webinars are one way of attempting to organise political education different
what is the situation for women?
- primary question is class struggle
- particular issues that address the women question
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patriarchy is prominent in capitalism
- something to organise around
- advocacy from women in SJC
- women in SJCs are organising wmen in informal settings to politicise them
- NGOs and red carpet feminism
- glass ceiling and rock ceilings
Do you have any interactions with local government? Are they supportive or antagonistic?
(my computer is also struggling with zoom so I can't ask this personally, sorry!)
social justice centres
- even if people don't necessarily belief in the political theory
- people can engage with questions of housing, poverty, police violence, etc
- once reasoning about immediate needs
- history of kenya: dictatorship, crisis of economy
- social justice was a proposition from below
- why do we have an economy that is inherently violent?
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21 SJCs in Nairobi
- meet every 2 weeks (or twice a week?)
- building a mass urban movement
- organise forces against state violence
- SJCs are found in informal settlements, where it is the less privileged and majority of poor people
closing remarks
- learn from each other and inspire international solidarity as the crisis of capitalism continues
- public document at doc.anagora.org/conversations-with-gamechangers-grassroots-liberation
- video call at meet.jit.si/conversations-with-gamechangers-grassroots-liberation
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