231 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
231 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
![]() |
This article recently appeared in FREEDOM (anarchist
|
|||
|
fortnightly)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FREEDOM carries at least a page in every issue of international
|
|||
|
news of interest to the anarchist movement around the world.
|
|||
|
For a free trial edition write to:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FREEDOM PRESS
|
|||
|
IN ANGEL ALLEY
|
|||
|
84B WHITECHAPEL HIGH STREET
|
|||
|
LONDON E1 7QX
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FOCUS SPECIAL
|
|||
|
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Normally in the FOCUS... articles we try to set out an anarchist
|
|||
|
viewpoint of some particular issue. Here we break with tradition
|
|||
|
(aren't we naughty!) and bring you an article not written from a
|
|||
|
specifically anarchist position. We feel, however, that it raises a huge number of issues that are of interest to anarchists in a context which is currently of interest to progressives in general. It should also generate some debate. Anyway, read it. You'll see what we mean...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Monday, 4th October 1993. Oaxtepec, Morelos, Mexico. Representatives
|
|||
|
of the indigenous peoples of 23 countries gather together to set out
|
|||
|
a common strategy within the context of the international situation...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Amongst all the hubbub of the celebrations of the 500th anniversary
|
|||
|
of the conquest of America, the counter-struggle left the diplomatic
|
|||
|
stage it had previously pursued through organisations like the United
|
|||
|
Nations to take on a more political hue by means of strategic
|
|||
|
alliances with popular sectors. Over the course of several congresses
|
|||
|
(Quito, Bogota, Rio de Janeiro), seminars and public demonstrations,
|
|||
|
the indigenous peoples let it be known that they did not applaud the
|
|||
|
extermination of their ancestors. On this occasion they launched a
|
|||
|
continental campaign, which was to become global, whose objectives
|
|||
|
were not only to boycott the celebrations but to put forward alternative
|
|||
|
propositions to promote their rights here and now.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A first stage culminated in the '500 years of Resistance' movement
|
|||
|
(previously reported on in Freedom) which took place in Quetzaltenango
|
|||
|
(Guatemala) from 7th to 12 October 1991. Under the auspices of the Quiche
|
|||
|
indians, representatives of different ethnic groupings gathered together
|
|||
|
on the Guatemalan plateau in traditional costumes, along with their
|
|||
|
centuries old traditions and a list of the wrongs they had suffered.
|
|||
|
They paid homage to Hurac<61>n (the Spirit of the Sky) and to Abya Yala
|
|||
|
(Mother Earth) - but they also used computers to record their own history.
|
|||
|
Pluralism presided over a whole range of experience, opinion and ceremony.
|
|||
|
Some denounced the extermination campaigns, others the ravages of the
|
|||
|
environment and yet others evoked the incessant campaigns aimed at
|
|||
|
denying their identity.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
BIRTH OF A GLOBAL MOVEMENT
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If the idea of creating an alternative on the continent by
|
|||
|
co-ordinating with national civil groups took root in Quetzaltenango,
|
|||
|
the nomination of Rigoberta Menchu for a nobel prize and the UN
|
|||
|
designation of a 'Year of Indigenous Peoples' gave witness to a new
|
|||
|
sensibility which had appeared on the international scene bringing
|
|||
|
with it a clear element of progress within the movement. That the
|
|||
|
most famous victim of military brutality should have won such a prize
|
|||
|
was a diplomatic success for the domestic Guatemalan resistance which
|
|||
|
has been fighting a ferocious dictatorship for 40 years.
|
|||
|
Moreover, the determination of this sliver of a woman summarises
|
|||
|
the determination of the civilisations that our age has denied,
|
|||
|
and the prize awarded to her (despite its lateness and inadequacy)
|
|||
|
is in itself a homage to all these people. From this starting point,
|
|||
|
Rigoberta's offices in her Mexican exile, have become the axis of a
|
|||
|
whole network of autochthonous organisations - which has reached out
|
|||
|
beyond its point of creation: the American continent - to become
|
|||
|
international.
|
|||
|
Throughout 1992 and 1993 there were many congresses and summits, under
|
|||
|
various labels but with a common objective: to take advantage of the
|
|||
|
favourable atmosphere before it should fade. When the celebrations
|
|||
|
of the conquest were over new forms of action saw the light of day
|
|||
|
with the Guatemalans leading from the front. From 24 to 28 of May
|
|||
|
1993 in Chimaltenango - in the cakchiquel territory - took place
|
|||
|
the first world summit of indigenous people.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
At the same time as these people were setting up their first
|
|||
|
international organisation the Guatemalan President Jorge Alias
|
|||
|
Serrano was carrying out his coup d'<27>tat which would cost him his
|
|||
|
power. The situation was a difficult one with the means of communication
|
|||
|
centred around the outcome of the crisis. However, the summit continued
|
|||
|
becoming by this very fact an act of civil disobedience.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Here is an extract from the Chimaltenango declaration:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
At the end of the 20th century, discrimination, systematic violation
|
|||
|
of ancestral rights and the exclusion of our people from the political
|
|||
|
process continues. We note that we live under the shadows of death such
|
|||
|
as racism, children traffic and environmental destruction. Faced with
|
|||
|
this sombre scenario, our millenarian cultures are surging forwards to
|
|||
|
become the voice of hope in favour of a more just and balanced future.
|
|||
|
We wish to restore the health of Mother Earth and re-establish
|
|||
|
egalitarian relationships based on mutual respect and solidarity...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Immediately afterwards, the participants proclaimed the 'Decade of
|
|||
|
indigenous peoples' from 1994 to the year 2003 and appealed to the
|
|||
|
UN and the Organisation of American States. Under a full state of
|
|||
|
emergency and with the Guatemalan delegates under military threat a
|
|||
|
ceremony was celebrated in Iximch<63> on 28th May 1993 to close the
|
|||
|
summit with a promise to meet again as soon as possible....
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
THE INDIGENOUS PEOPLE SPEAK
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This happened in Mexico between 4th and 8th October 1993 in Mexico.
|
|||
|
The 100 or so delegates brought with them papers, tasks to be
|
|||
|
accomplished and much hope. After an inaugural ceremony performed
|
|||
|
by the nahuatl women of the region the debates began which were to
|
|||
|
last five days and were used to soften corners and to consolidate
|
|||
|
movemental structures
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The delegates concentrated on defining the objectives for the Decade
|
|||
|
of the indigenous peoples, the problem of funding and organisational
|
|||
|
questions. Let us listen to the voices of some of those who were there.
|
|||
|
"On balance it has been a bad year. We were unable to raise the funds
|
|||
|
we wanted to launch the developmental projects we had established.
|
|||
|
Indian territories continue to be used for military purposes and as
|
|||
|
chemical dumping grounds. A few days earlier, forty yanomani brothers
|
|||
|
fell victim to the barbarism in Brazil. The destruction of ceremonial
|
|||
|
centres and sacred sites has continued. However, we have succeeded in
|
|||
|
breaking the silence. Our struggle is a long one and we have only
|
|||
|
just started to organise" stated Menchu in her opening speech.
|
|||
|
During the working sessions Margarito Ruiz a Tojolabal from Mexico
|
|||
|
stated "The International year resulted in the rebirth of the indigenous
|
|||
|
peoples. We have succeeded in finding allies who, like us, are
|
|||
|
struggling to achieve more human relationships". Alicia Canaviri
|
|||
|
an Aymara from Bolivia pointed out that the meetings carried the
|
|||
|
risk of forming an indigenous elite separated from the grassroots
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"That is why our task is to target international bodies with strong
|
|||
|
movements of a national character, dedicated to propaganda, the
|
|||
|
raising of consciousness and focusing on internal problems".
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Economic and legal problems were confronted in their vast complexity.
|
|||
|
"We are the inheritors of important cultural and social values.
|
|||
|
Let us avoid the confused notion of minority: in some countries
|
|||
|
we even represent the majority. It is better to speak of peoples
|
|||
|
with a right to self-determination and to participate in national
|
|||
|
and international well being" added L<>zaro Pari also from Bolivia.
|
|||
|
"In order to give back value to our institutions we favour the
|
|||
|
creation of a body to study the notion of common law" said Afredo
|
|||
|
Cupil from Guatemala. Tony Gonzalez from Arizona denounced the
|
|||
|
pollution of the Colorado river and the environmental damage
|
|||
|
that would be done because of the Nafta.
|
|||
|
From the Far East Victoria Tauli Corpuz claimed that "South
|
|||
|
East Asia is growing through a period of high growth. For the
|
|||
|
indigenous peoples (some 150 million) the opening up of the
|
|||
|
economy has signified increased marginalisation along with
|
|||
|
the destruction of lands rich in minerals and tropical forests.
|
|||
|
The misery of militarization is the order of the day. This
|
|||
|
situation is particularly serious in my country, the Philipines,
|
|||
|
Malaysia and Indonesia where the government has launched a
|
|||
|
programme of colonisation at the expense of the indigenous
|
|||
|
peoples".
|
|||
|
"Burma is suffering from civil war. The terrible military
|
|||
|
dictatorship which seized power in 1962 cut off all contact
|
|||
|
with the outside world and massacred the peoples (Karen, Akha,
|
|||
|
Shan, Kacin) which were fighting for self-determination", said
|
|||
|
Sein Win the leader of the exiled government. It is the same
|
|||
|
situation according to Kok Ksor for the Degas, a people from
|
|||
|
the central mountains of Vietnam who fought the pro-US
|
|||
|
southern government and now fight the communist regime.
|
|||
|
Their situation is one of the most dangerous given the
|
|||
|
encirclement and militarisation of their territories by
|
|||
|
the government in Hanoi.
|
|||
|
Nabin Mondu a munda and leader of the Indian Council of
|
|||
|
Indigenous and Tribal Peoples said "In India forced
|
|||
|
integration is the agenda. Some of us descend from peoples who
|
|||
|
settled in the Deccan before the Ayran invasions. We are many and
|
|||
|
neither Hindu nor Muslim. We have no caste system. Our religions
|
|||
|
are other. The central government exploits our resources without
|
|||
|
thinking of the consequences".
|
|||
|
Different again is the situation of those from the Pacific Basin
|
|||
|
such as the Ainous of Japan or the Kanaka Maoli in Hawaii - who'
|
|||
|
under the domination of industrial democracies suffer other problems.
|
|||
|
Pauline Tangiora, a representative of 500 000 Maoris from New Zealand
|
|||
|
(Sic) claimed that the western civilisation by liquidating the
|
|||
|
traditional ways of life was killing the spirit of the indigenous
|
|||
|
peoples which was illustrated by the high levels of suicide and
|
|||
|
criminality.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EPILOGUE
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
At the end of the summit, with little international attention
|
|||
|
having been received, one question stands out. What chance of
|
|||
|
success can these peoples struggles have in a post-industrial
|
|||
|
IT age? More than a superficial glance may reveal. "The old
|
|||
|
opposition between modernity and custom is obsolete. To the extent
|
|||
|
that traditional wisdom is rediscovering a certain credibility
|
|||
|
we must also reconsider the ethnic factor which is at the source
|
|||
|
of tradition" writes The Economist hardly a champion of indianism.
|
|||
|
The rehabilitation of knowledge founded on a different way of
|
|||
|
seeing nature is today admitted by scientists. On the other hand
|
|||
|
the crisis in the history of ideas and progress shakes the convictions
|
|||
|
of western civilisations sense of superiority.
|
|||
|
There is nothing in the idea of autonomy - the basic demand of the
|
|||
|
indigenous peoples - which must necessarily lead to the break up of
|
|||
|
national unities. A real integration would be the product of free
|
|||
|
association and not coercion. Ethnic conflicts which are shaking
|
|||
|
Europe and other parts of the world could be the products of othe
|
|||
|
r ills such as state centralism of those old problems, never resolved,
|
|||
|
between the State and Religion.
|
|||
|
"It is easier for an indigenous person in Alaska to understand another
|
|||
|
in Ecuador than for a worker to understand a peasant in his own country"
|
|||
|
claimed Bishop Samual Ruiz. "In a world growing ever smaller it is
|
|||
|
technological development itself which is bringing them together: now
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
we can communicate with each other and share our common problems"
|
|||
|
said the Cuban Miguel Alfonso Martinez.
|
|||
|
For their part the indigenous peoples do not reject the modern
|
|||
|
world and they do not seek to isolate the countries where they
|
|||
|
live. They wish to participate in development and find their place
|
|||
|
at the heart of multi-ethnic nations of a new kind. Is it a utopianism?
|
|||
|
Perhaps but it's one of the last at this end of an unsettled millennium.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
2nd November 1993
|
|||
|
Claudio ALBERTANI
|
|||
|
Translated from the Spanish by Georges Nuissein
|
|||
|
(abridged English version Freedom Press)
|
|||
|
S<EFBFBD>rie Action et Contractions March 1994
|
|||
|
|