543 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
543 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
Anarchy: a journal of desire armed. #37, Summer 1993
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THE SAD TRUTH
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-includes "How Nice to be Civilized!" by Des R=82fractaires; "Peru:
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the Ideology of Apocalypse - Shining Path to What?" by Manolo
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Gonzalez.
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How Nice To Be Civilized!
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Assassinations, massacres, rape, torture: these crimes committed
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on the soil of what was once Yugoslavia are not the acts of
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uncontrollable savages; of educationless brutes.
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No doubt as children they respected the family order; are now more
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or less faithful followers of religions; earnest sports spectators;
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content with television. In a word, civilized folks; normal people
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doing what society expects them to!
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Each crime demonstrates the success of diverse processes of
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domestication which have come to be grouped under the heading of
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Civilization.
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The killers, rapists and perpetrators of massacres have
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exceptionally well internalized today's world's fundamental logic:
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to survive, other people must be destroyed! This mutual mangling
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takes different forms, such as economic competition or war. But the
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result is always the same: some must be trampled in order to give
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others the impression that they are living more and better. Being
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civilized signifies not taking your own life and those of others
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into consideration. It means letting your life be used, exploited
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and dominated by the always-superior interests of the collectivity
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where fate decreed that you would be born and live your life. And
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all for the financial etc. gain of the authorities of the
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collectivity in question. In exchange for this submission one is
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granted the possibility of being accepted as a human being.
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Being civilized, as well, signifies sacrificing your life, and
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those of others, when those in power attempt to solve their
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management problems with wars.
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Aside from a variety of benefits they offer, wars represent a very
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efficient means of directing feelings of frustration against people
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who, designated as prey, can then be oppressed, humiliated and
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killed without qualms. Those who suffer, as with those who take
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pleasure in making others suffer, become nothing more than
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instruments of the conditions of social existence, conditions where
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lives are only important in relation to the use that can be made of
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them.
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Following the collapse and decomposition of the Eastern Bloc,
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various local and international gangsters have slots to fill,
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markets to conquer and energies to channel through the formation of
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new States.
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To help slice up the pie, local political gangs have deftly played
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the religious and nationalist cards. And if these cards work
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effectively, unfortunately, it is because, for a portion of the
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population, this collapse and decomposition have not been perceived
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as openings towards increased freedom. On the contrary, people have
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experienced an immense emptiness, one that has been alleviated with
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nationalist and religious alienations which are often decked out in
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a tawdry grab-bag of local history and culture. Instead of
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attempting to understand and attack the real causes of our material
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and psychological misery, too often people are thrown into a state
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of disarray. In response to this disarray identities are presented
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as lost values to be recaptured, whereas these values are simply
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the ideological cement which is the prerequisite to founding and
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developing State entities propped up by alliances between local and
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world powers.
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Nor, in a climate of generalized terror, is there any hesitation
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to accomplish this by displacing populations and practising ethnic
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cleansing in order to redistribute land. In this sense, don't the
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peace plan concocted in Geneva and hypothetical military
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intervention rubberstamp the UN's recognition of the dismemberment
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of the territory of former Yugoslavia? And if this is to be the
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price of pacification, everyone just closes their eyes to the
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cortege of horrors which is integral to every war.
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The humanitarian organizations, cynically baptized
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non-governmental, present the dismal paradox of inciting pity and
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indignation while at the same time impeding the possibility of
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spontaneous participation from which true human solidarity could be
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born.
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Today humanitarianism is a true lobby in a financial, human and
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media sense. But beyond generating money humanitarianism carries
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out an educational task, channeling emotions and arousing feelings
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of indignation on a specific and regular basis - paving the way to
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military intervention in humanitarian wars which the State
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undertakes to supposedly respond to pressure from a public
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indignant about the very real massacres that they are powerlessly
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witnessing. This type of media treatment's only goal is to convince
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people that alone, by themselves, nothing can be done; the State is
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in a position to come to the rescue and will watch out for their
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political and strategic interests.
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Everything is peachy because everyone consoles themselves with the
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thought that peace and democracy are a privilege - the proof being
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that elsewhere, over there, all is war and barbarism.
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Denouncing the horrors, collecting accounts from the local
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population, exhorting the government to intervene, the media have
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the starring role in this affair. Real recruiting sergeants! As to
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be expected, the media have carefully edited out any information
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about those in ex-Yugoslavia who oppose the war, carefully
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concealing information about the 1992 massacres in Zagreb and
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Sarajevo which put the finishing touches on repressing the
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movements against the war. These horrors are necessary in order to
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lay the basis for the right to intervene, to invent humanitarian
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wars and to create tribunals to judge the vanquished. The "New
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World Order" which is coming into being is cutting its teeth on
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small nation-State wars; it provides the arms, then comes to the
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rescue, basing its activities in each case on a flood of horrifying
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images!
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Thus exalting ethnic, national and religious identities goes hand
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in hand with gang warfare to constitute a new hierarchy of
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Godfathers.
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In response to the growth of ghettos - those artificial
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separations and false communities which allow the world of money
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and domination to thrive on human life - we, as people who are
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refractory to the world around us, would like to affirm our
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community of struggle and aspirations with those who are refusing
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the war in ex-Yugoslavia, those who see themselves above all as
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"human beings who want to live" and not cannon fodder.
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We are refractory to all that is the glory of civilization. We
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want to live human relations that would no longer be based on
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appropriation, competition and hierarchy, and would thus be
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relations in which individuals would no longer be obliged to treat
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themselves a priori as adversaries and enemies.
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-Des R=82fractaires
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This text was collectively written, and sent from Paris by G=82rard.
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Des R=82fractaires is a new group which doesn't have a post office
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box at present. Translated by Michael William.
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Peru: The Ideology Of Apocalypse
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Shining Path To What?
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BY Manolo Gonzalez
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Introduction
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In one episode of his novel, Yawar Fiesta=FEFeast of Blood=FE, the
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Peruvian writer Jos=82 Maria Arguedas describes in painful detail the
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combat of a condor tied to the neck and shoulders of a bull. Seldom
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does either animal win. The bird pecks madly, trying to get away
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from the enraged bull. Often the bull, blinded and exhausted,
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collapses and crushes the condor to death. This ritual has been
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performed at religious festivities for about three hundred years,
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since the Spaniards introduced European cattle into the Peruvian
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Andes. Arguedas uses this as an allegory of the violent, never-
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resolved conflict resulting from the invasion of the American
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continent by the Europeans. The rapacious policies of Spain, the
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super-exploitation of the indigenous population and the violent
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methods used to obtain total submission reflect one of the most
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cruel episodes of history. Perhaps up to 10 million Peruvians were
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murdered or died of European infectious diseases, and that in only
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the first 25 years of the invasion. Thousands of temples, adminis-
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trative posts, roads and aqueducts were wantonly destroyed. Cities
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like Cuzco, Caxamarca were disfigured or almost demolished. The
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expropriation of the communal lands of the natives by the Europeans
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was a religious desecration of the beliefs of the Peruvians who
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revered the Earth, the Pachamama, as an all life-giving deity.
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Precious objects of art were melted for their gold or moved into
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European museums, or private collections. A practice that still
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continues today.
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In Peru, class conflict has always been exacerbated by racial
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hatred. The lower classes are always Cholos, when not zambos or
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cutatos for people of African descent. There is the term chinitos
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for any oriental, like President Alberto Fujimori. The rich and
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powerful are always considered white, regardless the color of their
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skin.
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Furthermore, different ethnic groups are antagonistic towards each
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other. Peruvians from the coast seldom recognize their brothers and
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sisters from other regions as their legitimate countrymen. Racial
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epithets fly around at the least expected occasions, be they soccer
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or politics.
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In Peru, a sense of nation, of having a common background and
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common symbols to unify the country, has never existed. It is com-
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mon for Peruvians to call themselves members of the "independent
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republic of Cuzco," or `Arequipa', etc. The middle classes of Lima
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identify with New York, Paris or even Moscow but reject Peruvians
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from the highlands or the jungle.
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Geography is one of the most brutal challenges to the Peruvian
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people. The Andes cross the country from north to south, creating
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three regions: the arid, desolated coastal deserts; the highland
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sierras; and the Amazonic jungle. Each of these regions is a
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separate entity economically and culturally, always in conflict
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with the other regions. There has never been a cohesive policy of
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building roads or creating efficient systems of communications.
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Most railways are from the 19th century, built by British or
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Americans. 20th century travelers in Peru have observed that, if
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you travel from West to East, you will move from the present to the
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late 19th century and when you arrive in the jungle, you will be in
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the Stone Age. Yet United Nations functionaries still manage to say
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that Peruvians, decedents of the Incas, live royally compared to
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the abject poverty and misery of Bangladesh or Northern India.
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20th century technology has blanketed Peru with the message of
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rock and roll and blue jeans. Radio and TV has transformed the de-
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scendants of the Incas into consumers of Capitalism's junk. The
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most popular soft drink is called Inca Cola. But these stand in
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sharp contrast to another reality. The peasants of the Andes and
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the dwellers of the slums of Lima and other urban centers live in
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terrible conditions, victims of exploitation, unemployment and
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diseases long-ago controlled in most of the world. Cholera,
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tuberculosis, venereal disease are rampant in these improvised
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villages. No wonder an uncontrollable rage has exploded.
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Paradoxes, contradictions and exaggerations are the biggest
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obstacles for those of us who deal with Peru's history. An Italian
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geographer created a phrase that is a national obsession to all
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Peruvians. Antonio Raymondi said, "Peru is a beggar seated on a
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bench of gold."
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The Failure Of Ideology
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In 1980 when Sendero Luminoso (Shining Path) started its military
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operations, Peru was in the middle of the most profound crisis ever
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in its 150 years of Republican existence. Both economic illusions
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and long-revered ideological sacred cows had failed.
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First, due to ecological reasons and overfishing, the fish
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industry had collapsed. Since 1950, almost a million highland
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peasants had abandoned their lands to work along the coast in a
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profitable new industry. Peru became the world's largest exporter
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of anchovies and fish meal. A gigantic fleet of `Bolicheras', high
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sea fishing vessels, annually caught over $75 million worth of
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fish. When the industry collapsed in the late '60s, millions of
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Peruvians were affected. By 1970 the desperate, unemployed invaded
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the streets of Lima in a wave of crime and violence. Nevertheless,
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the government did not realize its political implications.
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Second, the leftist military, in a period of State Socialism,
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managed to impose radical nationalization of mines and industries
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and the century old dream of social reformers: the Agrarian Reform.
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But workers could not control artificial industries or compete
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against international prices. The peasants did not benefit at all
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from the land given to them in a rather chaotic manner. No
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technical assistance, mechanical equipment nor seeds were avail-
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able, and, without social incentives, the long-awaited Agrarian
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Reform turned into a disheartening tragedy. The peasants continued
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emigrating to the coast for jobs in factories and the fishing
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industry, abandoning the land to the despair of romantic social
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equalitarians and Marxist intellectuals.=20
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Third, the election of Fernando Belaunde Terry in 1980 was the end
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of any democratic illusions about social change. Belaunde was a
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most inept man, arrogant and obsessed with expensive pet projects,
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like building a highway in the Amazonian jungle, ignoring the
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massive social problems surrounding him. Congress, controlled by
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the middle-class APRA party that had dominated the political scene
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for 60 years, followed a policy of sectarian opposition to
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Belaunde, more on a political basis than due to any programmatic
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differences. It is no coincidence that Abimael Guzman, the so-
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called Presidente Gonzalo of Sendero Luminoso, decided in 1980 to
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launch a frontal attack on all the institutions of Peru. In reality
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there was not much left after the chaos of State Socialism and the
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restoration of European democracy. Belaunde continued a hysterical
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purchase of arms because someone had the idea that in 1979, one
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hundred years after the War of the Pacific with Chile, there should
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be a revenge for Peru's humiliating defeat. All this was paid for
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with money borrowed from international banks, monies that could
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never be repaid because Peru could barely afford to service the
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massive interest charges on the loans.
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Coca: Just Another Industry
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In the meantime, Peru had become the main producer of coca.
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Recondite valleys in the Andes easily hid coca cultivation, as well
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as the army of Presidente Gonzalo. The cultivation and use of coca
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leaves is a cultural leftover of the Inca civilization. Among the
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peasants of the highland chewing coca was nothing more than a
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potent snack to combat fatigue and the physical demands of working
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in the high altitude of the Andes. For over a century, coca was a
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monopoly of the State. Cultivators sold the leaves to government
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agencies, which then distributed it to consumers in a rather
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ordinary way, through regular stores, together with liquor, matches
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and cigarettes, all monopolies of the State. It was the Coca Cola
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company that first decided to buy large quantities of the leaves
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for its famous soda, but it was the elegant elite of Europe and the
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United States that made cocaine a drug of choice. Even Cole Porter
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popularized the alkaloid. But, when poor Peruvian peasants began
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selling coca leaves to different organizations of drug traffickers,
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the success of the enterprise had unexpected results. Tragic
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consequences for Peru and the battle for control of the coca crop
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started. International agencies, mafias and political operatives
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from many nations fought for the right to buy, and thereby control,
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the superb leaves of the Peruvian Andes.
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Prelude To Insurgency
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The insurgency of Shining Path was a desperate, almost spontaneous
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movement of a provincial college professor, students, and unem-
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ployed youth. Cadres were easily recruited from the gigantic slums
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that surrounded Lima, Arequipa and ports like Chimbote, still
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suffering from the effects of the collapse of the fishing industry.
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Since the beginning of the 20th century, Peruvian politics had
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experienced a predictable left/right polarization, the usual array
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of Marxists and pseudo-Marxists versus the right-wing, including,
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in the early '30s, black shirt fascists and Franco admirers. But
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the Peruvian aristocracy had always controlled the most effective
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political force, the Army. Since the 1950s, the Army had been
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indoctrinated in the anti-Communist doctrines of Eisenhower and the
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CIA, or the anti-insurgency `007' tactics of Kennedy. But, in the
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classical style of tropical contradictions, the Army decided in the
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'70s to try Socialism! Socialism failed, but things were not back
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to business as usual. Mass mobilizations had occurred and industri-
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al workers, peasants and students were forming cadres for a Maoist
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revolution, at the moment the most fashionable theory for armed
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struggle among Third World revolutionaries.
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The original Peruvian Communist Party, affiliated with the Third
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International and loyal follower of the Leninist ideology of the
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Soviet Union had become a bureaucratic apparatus, an active
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collaborator with the so-called "progressive bourgeoisie." But the
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rift between the CPs or China and Moscow had repercussions on most
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of the radical left in Peru, as well as in the rest of the Third
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World. Abimael Guzman, a professor of Philosophy at the University
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of Huamanga (Ayacucho), fought inside the Moscow-oriented CP of
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Peru to follow a more radical line. In 1969 he was expelled from
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the party, and Guzman and his followers found a Maoist faction,
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reclaiming the name of the Communist Party of Peru for themselves.
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Fire In The Andes!
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The political parties of Peru were not ready for the offensive of
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Sendero Luminoso. Elections in 1980 were more or less normal,
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except for the minor inconvenience of the Maoist group in Ayacucho
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launching its first military operation. By the 1985 elections, won
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by APRA, Shining Path had devastated the capital of Peru with
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constant assaults on the police, bombings and mobilizations of its
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cadres in the slums, the "pueblos jovenes." The European-oriented
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APRA party was, not only totally incapable of resolving the crisis,
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but actually precipitated in an orgy of corruption, petty revenge
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and sporadic brutal attacks on the regions where Shining Path
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operated. The Army routinely massacred thousands of peasants in
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Ayacucho, Alto Huallaga, Puno and other Andean points of resis-
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tance. To no one's surprise, the armed forces became deeply
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involved in the `protection' of the coca business organizations,
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both local and from abroad.
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The violence of Sendero Luminoso, its irreducible dogmatism, and,
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especially, its mystical reverence for Presidente Gonzalo's thought
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gives the movement a formidable image as an uncompromising
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political ideology. Peruvians have always managed to, somehow,
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combine political theories into civilized arrangements that have
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made Socialists of the Army or fashionable Communists of the
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children of the rich. Shining Path, however, is different, and per-
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haps, that is its biggest weakness.
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It has been said many times that people with deep religious
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feelings cannot become capitalists or communists in their many
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forms. Peruvian middle classes are strongly indoctrinated in
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Catholicism. By and large, the peasants still keep the old
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pantheism of the Incas. Shining Path tries to define Peru as a
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peasant society, separated and segregated from the rest of the
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world. In the desolated mountains of the Andes, deep in the jungle,
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even in the small towns around Cuzco, Puno and Ayacucho, that
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vision of the country seems real, almost a justification for
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recreating the glory of the Inca Confederation. But neither Maoist
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ideology nor a nostalgic conception of history is adequate to solve
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the problems of Peru. With a population of twenty million, heavy
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external debt and pressure from the IMF, and the tutelage of the
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United States, the country cannot escape the ups and downs of the
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current world economy. If capitalism is trying to survive and
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retain its hold on Third World countries, Peru is a terrible
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example of future conflicts.
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Guerrillas And Romance
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When the news of armed struggle in Peru started to appear in the
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world press, there was, at first, a very sympathetic response.
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Especially among social agencies, Church workers and liberal
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intellectuals who decried the poverty of Peruvian peasants. The
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social horror of Peru's misery had attracted the attention of the
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international press, observers and hopeful radicals.
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Collage professors of Latin American studies called for support
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for the Peruvian revolution. The New York Times and The New Yorker
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dedicated long pieces of reporting and analysis to the armed
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struggle in Peru. The repressive methods of the Peruvian govern-
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ment, whether Belaunde, APRA or Fujimori, had moved organizations
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like Amnesty International to denounce the country as one of the
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most flagrant violators of human rights. Shining Path still
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maintains a rather well-organized network of supporters in Europe
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and the USA. In the mid '80s, walls around Berkeley, California
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were covered with the slogan, "Support the Popular Revolution in
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Peru." One very large, impressive wall could be seen from the
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entrance to the Bay Bridge, covered with hammer and sickle and
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exhortations for revolution.
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Few Americans knew what was happening, but CNN and the magazines
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started to report on the brutal confrontation that was going on in
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Peru. Committees of support appeared on the campus of UC Berkeley.
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Videos, lectures and college agitation soon added the war in Peru
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as another cause for the American Left. The presence of American
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advisers only enhanced the concept that Peru was the next Vietnam.
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Typical of the interest shown by young liberal intellectuals was
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an article published in the 1992 Winter issue of New Politic.
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Written by Professor Phillip Smith, a graduate of the Institute of
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Latin American Studies at the University of Texas in Austin, the
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piece concludes, "it is the responsibility of the U.S. Left to
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challenge the assumptions of `narcoterrorism' and the international
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war on drugs as promoted by the Bush administration. It is
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certainly our place to fight against assistance to the Peruvian
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military=FEamong the world's worst human rights violators. The threat
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of direct intervention is real. With the U.S. government in a
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chest-thumping mood after cheap and easy victories in Grenada,
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Panama, and the Persian Gulf, and a public now conditioned for
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militarism, the temptation for Washington to 'straighten out the
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mess' may well be irresistible." His prediction of intervention, as
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many other predictions of the U.S. Left, is a reincarnation of the
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Vietnam syndrome. The Left forgets the lessons of El Salvador and
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Nicaragua, the war against the revolutionaries was by proxy and
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with mercenaries. In Peru the Army is an essential part of the
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privileged alliance, the backbone of the scared middle classes in
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Lima and other urban centers. The indiscriminate violence from both
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the Army and Sendero was a sobering effect that slowly penetrated
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liberal opinion.
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Politics And Surrealism
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The irrational political confrontation in the elections of 1990
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left most observers flabbergasted. There was the old APRA, wasted
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|
and running scared, while the Ex-President was being indicted on
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|
charges of corruption. Traditional conservatives and Belaunde-
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|
followers backed Mario Vargas Llosa, novelist and admirer of
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|
British democracy. In a moment of irritation Vargas Llosa dropped
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|
out of the campaign, only to return to declare that Peru needed a
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|
Parliamentary Monarchy. (This while running for President of a 180-
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|
year old Republic.) Finally, there was the obscure candidate of a
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movement called Cambio 90, Alberto Fugimori. He only had to show
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|
his face and declare, "I'm more Peruvian than those other dudes!"
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|
While he made vague promises, it was his use of buzz words like
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|
`blanqui=A4osos' (white crackers) that tapped into the profound
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|
racial antagonism that pervades Peruvian society. His strongest
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|
support came from the growing Protestant Evangelist movement that
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|
is challenging the Catholic Church, the official religion for
|
|
centuries. No one won. The election went to Congress, and the APRA
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|
majority gave its support to Fujimori. Vargas Llosa wrote in Granta
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|
magazine, "After me Peru will fall into barbarism." He was almost
|
|
right.
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|
Popular War
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|
Years of popular war has not weakened the State. On the contrary,
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|
Fujimori was free to justify his policies by pointing to the
|
|
difficulties of fighting an internal war and trying to repay the
|
|
external debt. He reestablished Peru's international credit in
|
|
order to pay for the repression, a new bureaucracy and all the
|
|
symbols of a modern nation. The condition of the poor continued to
|
|
worsen, but the many calls for national insurrection by Shining
|
|
Path have not been successful. Peruvians were certainly poor, but
|
|
the violence of Shining Path was repugnant to the impoverished
|
|
middle classes and, in a certain way, provoked indifference among
|
|
the peasants. Certainly the murder of many cells of the Maoists,
|
|
some in massacres within prisons, took a heavy tool on the
|
|
direction of the movement.
|
|
|
|
In his many interviews, pamphlets and revolutionary literature,
|
|
Abimael Guzman has never offered a political vision that could be
|
|
embraced by the industrial workers or the unemployed. The new
|
|
State, a vague phrase, like "after the revolution" in the '30s, is
|
|
not a promise of a brighter future, but demands indoctrination,
|
|
work and obedience. In a tropical nation that still takes its
|
|
siesta time very seriously, this is a letdown to any potential
|
|
revolutionary.
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Is The End Near?
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|
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|
The capture early this year of Abimael Guzman, the elusive
|
|
Presidente Gonzalo and most of his staff, moved the strategy of the
|
|
Maoists into a new, never before accepted phase=FEpolitical accommo-
|
|
dation. Recently President Fujimori has accepted the visit of
|
|
international groups concerned with human rights. The official
|
|
press blasted the international delegations, but, still, they made
|
|
it into Lima. El Diario, the semi-official newspaper of Sendero has
|
|
appeared again in Lima. Perhaps Fujimori needs to play to the new
|
|
Clinton administration in order to get help for loans and
|
|
investments. Perhaps some of the revolutionaries realize that the
|
|
military struggle is not an end in itself. There must be political
|
|
objectives. The capture of the State apparatus, or at least the
|
|
destruction of enough of the old ruling class to ensure a degree of
|
|
popular power, needs the support of a large section of the
|
|
oppressed. The Russian communist, with Leninist theories of a
|
|
small, conspiratorial elite of terrorists and intellectuals,
|
|
produces only a dictatorship, ready to commit the most heinous
|
|
crimes, just as Bakunin predicted in his debate with Marx at the
|
|
First International.
|
|
|
|
Sendero, or any other revolutionary group in Latin America, needs
|
|
a solid base in the industrial proletariat while still keeping
|
|
emotional and family ties to the rural population. The impoverished
|
|
middle classes will respond only to a climate of freedom and
|
|
productive work, not political patronage or selfish professional-
|
|
ism. The peasant population will never participate in any movement
|
|
that has European theories as its ideology. Catholicism, Marxism,
|
|
Maoism spell disaster for the indigenous masses of Peru, Ecuador,
|
|
Bolivia and Guatemala. Because the question of State, popular power
|
|
are immaterial to groups that see race and class as an ambiguous
|
|
concepts, even as distortions of the social order. The masses of
|
|
peasants need a Federation of independent enclaves, united by
|
|
collective technology and social services, not a State run by the
|
|
white elite, Marxist intellectuals or progressive capitalists.
|
|
|
|
Peru, and many other Third World nations, reflect the cruelest
|
|
evidence of the erosion of the capitalist system. There cannot be
|
|
a constant growing economy. This means that millions of human
|
|
beings are reduced to starvation in order to maintain the system.
|
|
At the same time, ecological disasters have precipitated economic
|
|
crises for which even the seven powerful, industrialized nations
|
|
cannot afford to pay. Just observe the ecological disasters in the
|
|
former Soviet Union, in the U.S.A., in the North Sea. But even more
|
|
serious for Peru and other countries, is the aspirations of its
|
|
people to control their natural resources and the uncontrollable
|
|
appetite of international corporations backed by the most powerful
|
|
armies of Europe and the U.S.A.
|
|
|
|
The invasion of Latin America by Europeans will never have a
|
|
peaceful solution. When Germany invaded its neighbors it eventually
|
|
had to withdraw. So it was with the U.S.A. from Japan. But the
|
|
Europeans have never moved out of Peru. What is needed is a Peace
|
|
treaty, perhaps paying reparations to the indigenous populations
|
|
and restoring a more natural order with the pre-Columbian institu-
|
|
tions that still survive in the large Indian communities all over
|
|
the Andes, from Ecuador, Peru to Bolivia. That region of Latin
|
|
America has so many elements in common that it is not farfetched to
|
|
envision a new Andean Confederation, there is already a name for
|
|
it: Indoamerica. Meanwhile the drama of "Yawar Fiesta" repeats. The
|
|
condor should be allowed to fly free!
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