Showing posts with label anarchafeminism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anarchafeminism. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 02, 2010


FOUND TREASURES:
THE ANARCHA LIBRARY:
The theme of this part of the blog is "found treasures on the internet", and our first item is the Anarcha Library, a relatively new online library of anarcha feminist writings. I have to admit that I haven't finished fully exploring this site, but what I have found so far impresses me. There are literally hundreds of items from across the world on a wide variety of themes from 'Ableism' (5 items) to 'Zine' (89 items). From what I read the two most prominent tags are 'sexism' (131 items) and 'queer' (95 items). A world of reading to explore. Here's a brief sample from an Croatian site.
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What is anarcha-feminism? (2007)
http://www.zamirnet.hr/anfema/fest/about_anarcha_feminism.php

Difficult question: That's why it's the best to start from the beginning. In the beginning of the story of anarcho feminism, anarchism and feminism were basically different expressions, although they were always a tight connection between them. (E.g. one of the oldest anarchist newspapers of the world "freedom", was founded by the woman and feminist Charlotte Wilson among others). In the end of the 19th and at the beginning of the 20th century feminist and anarchist were very active and noticed, for example Mary Wollstonecraft, Lucy Parsons, Voltairine de Clayre and Emma Goldman, who made the connection between anarchism and feminism a very popular idea. Maybe they could even be called the pioneers of the fight for the freedom for women and by that for the society in general. In the 20th century the idea and the movement developed their ways of organising, especially independent groups. They are masked by decentralism, non-structure, non-dogmatism, refusing of one ideology or line and complete despise towards hierarchy as a structure inside the group but also inside the whole society.

Such a way organising & acting stayed until today. Why were the anarchist ideas always so important for the feminist movement?

Anarchism is fighting in its bases with every kind of authorities and their authoritarian systems, also against the authority of the man over the woman and against patriarchy. Authoritarian systems consider the family as a base for their existence. This is what children, and especially female children, in this kind of system learn, from the father to the leader, from the boss to god, is to OBEY. Feminism is fighting against those dogmas of the patriarchy that has always been there, against the systematical domination of the man over the woman within all the structures of the society, against the culture of rape and against all the stereotypes of the woman life as a saint, mother or whore, woman as a sexual object or as a passive individual.

Feminism is fighting for the equal rights of women and men, complete realisation of male and female potentials, and it's aiming to change the "man's world" towards a "world for all people", without caring about gender, age, race, sexual choice. Anarchism gives this opportunity to feminism. And this is the point where anarchism and feminism connect themselves to anarchafeminism. Anarchafeminism recognises patriarchy as the essential weapon of modern capitalistic and hierarchical society, which decides about human everyday life through institutions and family as one of the institutions. That is why I consider that anarchafeminism is a more complete solution than feminism alone, because it doesn't focus on changing situation for only women, but on changing for all people in society, like a total change in society. The problem of women as second (third?) citizens in society is not a separate problem but is part of the whole problematic society of non-equality and authority. And non-equality among people, same as among women and men will exist as long as the relation of superior and inferior is rolled out. The system that still holds this fetish of female inferiority does this because most of all it hates when its authority is touched, when it is provoked. That characterises for all authorities, regardless if it is authority of masters over their slaves or men over women. Anyway the people escape from their cages with big free steps.

Anarchafeminism is a challenge to this system for both women and men, but also a personal challenge in itself, after all the first necessary change is in oneself, and then around oneself. Human passion and need of freedom exists from the very beginning of human kind and the thing is not just in emancipation of women but in emancipation of society, all people. We don't want to be able to do the same as men we want all together to be able to do much more.

And when we succeed, Anarchafeminism will reach its goal. It'll be free to erase itself.

Friday, March 05, 2010


INTERNATIONAL ANARCHIST MOVEMENT-BARCELONA:
ANARCHA-FEMINIST CONFERENCE:
This March 8 marks International Womens' Day and this year marks the 100th anniversary of the foundation of the Confederación Nacional del Trabajo, the anarcho-syndicalist CNT of Spain. It is thus quite appropriate that this weekend will signal the start of a month long anarcha-feminist conference in the heartland of international anarchism, Barcelona. The following is the announcement from the CNT Centennary Commission. The English language version below comes from the Anarkismo website.
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Barcelona: Anarcha-Feminist Conference
Martha Ackelsberg, Ana Sigüenza, Antonia Rodrigo, the Colectivo Juana Julia Guzmán from Colombia, Mujeres Libres... just some of the participants in this festival of feminism and anarchism organized by the CNT in Barcelona in March. [Castellano]

Barcelona: Anarcha-Feminist Conference
This year - 2010 - the CNT celebrates 100 years since it was founded, in a context very different from today's. For this reason, we want to analyze and reflect on the path that this class-struggle union has followed throughout its history and examine its role today. There is no doubt that the people who have been members of the CNT have mostly been women and men with a capacity for critical thought, sometimes well ahead of their time, and there have been times when the CNT has played a vital role, as in the social revolution of 1936. Today we ask ourselves how it sees itself as a union that fights against every form of authority, and especially against something as important as patriarchy which, along with capitalism, inhibits the freedom of many living beings and is destroying the planet.
So, this Feminist Conference arise from the need of various female members of the CNT to visualize the vital role that women play in the anarchist movement, to reflect on the connection between anarchism and feminism, to challenge traditional gender roles, female and male, on which patriarchy are based.
The Conference on Women and Anarchism will be an opportunity to get closer to the realities of female militancy. We intend to analyze, discuss and highlight the participation and organization of women who identify with libertarian principles without giving up their gender identity. We want to see the problems that affect us as women in the various areas where we operate: labour, educational, organizational, health, emotional, etc., and the problems arising from a patriarchal and capitalist society such as ours that affects us and our comrades, male and female alike.
To this end, we will try to deal with the subject on two levels: one level is our own situation as female workers and union activists in a class-struggle, revolutionary and libertarian union, covering the historical perspective and the needs that we see today. The second level is feminist women's participation in the various organizations that seek to contribute to social change. We are interested in highlighting these daily struggles, the projects that result from them, the difficulties that exist and the contradictions that we encounter. We also wish to work on these aspects by collecting multiple experiences from the past and others that are in progress today all over the world.
To try to cover these objectives, we have organized five topics:
1. Women, work and the union
2. A historical reference: the Mujeres Libres
3. Anarcho-feminism: organized women
4. Women in the press and propaganda of The Idea
5. Sexual diversity and anarchism.
Everyone is invited to participate in these reflections on our/your part so that we can try to get closer to achieving our/your utopian society.
Let our thoughts become action.
PROGRAM
- Saturday 6 March 11.00 a.m.
Women and Anarcho-syndicalism: with Ana Sigüenza (first Secretary General of the CNT) and Laura Vicente (Doctor of Contemporary History at the University of Alicante), author of "Teresa Claramunt. Pionera del feminismo obrerista anarquista".
Venue: Centre Cívic Drassanes - Sala d'Actes. C/Nou de la Rambla 43. ( L-3: Liceu, Drassanes ó Paralel).
- Sunday 7 March 5.00 p.m.
Workshop - Self-managing our health (women-only event - prior registration required: libertariascnt@hotmail.com )
Venue: Casa de la Solidaridad. C/Vistalegre, 15. ( L-2: Sant Antoni)
- Wednesday 10 March 7.00 p.m.
Cine forum: "Adrift (by casual women workers)" Authors: precarias a la deriva.
Venue: Espai Obert. C/Violant d'Hongria 71, 1º. ( L-5: Plaça de Sants i Badal; L-3: Plaça del Centre)
- Friday 12 Marzo 7.00 p.m.
Anarcho-feminist Theory & Practice, with La Katino Anarkista (member of the Red Anarcofeminista de Mujeres and creator of the publication "Alejandra") and Vanessa Ortíz, from the Juana Julia Guzmán collective (Bogota).
Venue: Fundació d'Estudis Llibertaris i Anarcosindicalistes - FELLA. C/Joaquin Costa 34. ( L-3: Catalunya ó L-1 i L-2 Universitat).
- Saturday 13 March 5.00 p.m.
Anarchist women propagandizing The Idea, with María Ángeles García Maroto, anarcho-feminist journalist and writer, member of the Alcoi SOV, and Antonina Rodrigo, writer, author of the book "Amparo Poch y Gascón, médica y anarquista".
Presentation of feminist publications. RAG (Ireland), Herstory (Barcelona), Histeria (Barcelona), Mujeres Preokupando 8 (Barcelona) and others...
Venue: Centre Cívic Pati Llimona. C/Regomir 3. ( L-3: Liceu ó L-4 Jaume I).
- Sunday 14 March 5.00 p.m.
Feminist self-defence workshop. Organized by a Barcelona self-defence group (women-only event - prior registration required: libertariascnt@hotmail.com ).
Venue: Casa de la Solidaridad. C/Vistalegre, 15. ( L-2: Sant Antoni)
- Friday 19 March 7.00 p.m.
Animal liberation, liberation of the land and liberation of women. Natalia, Maria, Isabella and Clara.
Venue: Espai Obert. C/Violant d'Hongria 71, 1º. ( L-5: Plaça de Sants i Badal; L-3: Plaça del Centre)
- Saturday 20 March 5.00 p.m.
Mujeres Libres, yesterday and today, with Martha Ackelsberg, professor of Political Science and Women's & Gender Studies at Smith College, Northampton, MA (USA) and author of "Free Women of Spain: Anarchism and the Struggle for the Emancipation of Women", together with comrades from the Mujeres Libres in Extremadura and Madrid.
Venue: CCCB – Aula 2. C/ Montalegre, 5 ( L-3: Catalunya ó L-1 i L-2 Universitat).
- Friday 26 March 7.00 a.m.
Gender, race and class. Carla.
Venue: Espai Obert. C/Violant d'Hongria 71, 1º. ( L-5: Plaça de Sants i Badal; L-3: Plaça del Centre)
- Saturday 27 March 11.00 a.m.
Sexual Diversity and anarchism: debate organized by D-género, a pro-sexual liberation libertarian collective from Madrid, Karolina, Filipo Brenda and Maricarmen.
Venue: Centre Cívic Barceloneta. C/Conreria 1 – 9. ( L-4: Barceloneta).
* Workshops are for women only. Prior registration is required - write to: libertariascnt@hotmail.com . Dates for the workshops are subject to change, and in this case participants will be advised by email. Further workshops may be organized if the maximum number of participants is exceeded.
Organized by:
Comisión del CeNTenario (Barcelona)
English translation by FdCA-International Relations Office
Related Link: http://www.cnt.es/centenario

Saturday, June 13, 2009


INTERNATIONAL ANARCHIST MOVEMENT-ENGLAND:
FEMINIST INTERVENTION AT THE BRITISH ANARCHIST CONFERENCE:
The following is from the A-Infos website, and it concerns the recent attempt to hold a British wide anarchist conference. It happened, but what it will lead to is doubtful. The "generalist" nature of the conference says to Molly that it was nothing but a social gathering. Not that this is not valuable in itself, but its limitations should be duly noted. Anyways. here's the story.
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Britain, Anarchist movement conference 2009 - anarcha-feminist intervention:


A group of anarcha-feminists interrupted the Sunday afternoon plenary session of the conference. They spoke about the problem of sexism in both capitalist society and the 'movement', and projected a short film on the subject.


---- You can also read the full statement, watch the film, and find out more, at http://www.nopretence.wordpress.com/


---- This is what was said.


---- “We make no pretence. This is a conference by and for anarchists. And by anarchists, we mean those opposed to the state, all forms of nationalism, capitalism, sexual/race/gender oppression and all forms of exploitation and domination,” Anarchist Movement Conference 09 Call Out











We have taken this space and projected this short film to show how we see sexism in ‘the movement’ and sexism in capitalist society. We have covered our faces in the same way we might do against the state and its agents – inspired by the tradition of our militant sisters who took back male-dominated stages, and political spaces.







We expect hostility, intimidation and greater surveillance after our action. Covering up makes it easier to communicate. And we know that our message is much bigger than the messenger herself.






The following text is our response to the four themes of the conference.
MOVEMENT or why we aren’t one
No matter how much we aspire to be ‘self-critical’ there is a clear lack of theorising and concrete action around sexism, homophobia and racism in the anarchist movement. We do not feel that the content and structure of the conference deal with gender and we’re tired of asking for space – we’re taking it ourselves.






You want to talk about history? Let’s stop pretending that feminism is a short blip in the history of political struggles. The feminism you know may be the one that has been dominated by white middle-class liberal politics – NOT the struggles and pockets of revolutionary resistance missing from our political pamphlets and ‘independent’ media. The feminism of Comandanta Yolanda, of bell hooks, of Anzaldua, of Mbuya Nehanda, of Angela Davis, of Rote Zora, of Mujeres Libres






CLASS or is anybody out there?
We are all oppressed by the class system, but there is nobody ‘out there’ who isn’t also oppressed by white supremacy, imperialism, heterosexism, patriarchy, ableism, ageism... Pretending these systems don’t exist or can be subsumed into capitalist oppression, doesn’t deal with the problem, it just silences those people most oppressed by them, and allows for the continuing domination of these systems over our lives.







We are tired of being told that anarchists don’t need to be feminists, because ‘anarchism has feminism covered’. This is just a convenient way of forgetting the reality of gender oppression, and so ignoring the specifics of the struggle against it
RESISTANCE or are we futile?
If the anarchist movement doesn’t recognize the power structures it reproduces, its resistance will be futile. For as well as fighting sexism ‘out there’ we must fight sexism ‘in here’ and stop pretending that oppressive systems disappear at the door of the squat or the social center. Only a movement that understands and fights its own contradictions can provide fertile ground for real and effective resistance.






Ask yourselves this – do you believe sexism exists within the movement? When a woman comrade says she’s experienced sexual abuse or assault from a male comrade – what do you think? That it’s an individual or an isolated case? Or that it can happen – and disproportionately to women – because there is a system which allows it to develop and gives it life? Can we honestly say that our own autonomous spaces do not play a part in upholding this system?






Ask yourselves this – Why do fewer women speak in meetings? Because they think less? What is the gender of the factory worker? Why do more women do the washing up and run creches at meetings/events? What is the gender of the carer at home?






Now tell us if you believe sexism exists: tell us why men rape; why more women are battered than men; why more women are used by the state to do free and unwaged work. Tell us – are you a feminist?






We believe that in the anarchist movement, the strongest evidence of sexism lies in the choice we’re told to make between ‘unity’ and what-they-call ‘separatism’, between fighting the state and fighting sexism. Fuck that! We refuse to be seen as stereotypes of ‘feminists’ you can consume – like fucking merchandise in the capitalist workplace.
IDEAS INTO REALITY and what’s in between?
There will be no future for the anarchist movement if it doesn’t also identify as an anarcha-feminist movement. Anarcha-feminist organisational structures must exist within the movement to make anarcha-feminism an integral part of it. And you don’t need to identify as a woman to be an anarcha-feminist – every anarchist should be able to participate in the struggle against sexism.






The state’s incursion into our private lives and the relationship between sexuality and productivity from which it profits affects people of all genders. The gender binary system violently allocates us roles on the basis of our anatomy. A refusal to accept even these basic precepts will be a great hindrance to the movement.






You ask, ‘Can we find common cause despite our differences?’. We will only find common cause if we recognize that our differences are structured by numerous oppressive systems, and together fight to end each of these systems, wherever we find them.






Our feminisms must be plural, they must be anti-capitalist, anti-racist, anti-homophobic. Our inspiration must come from the actions of feminists who have helped self-identified women reach revolutionary consciousness.






Our feminisms must be revolutionary.
Final word
You can pretend we didn’t come here, pretend nothing was said(That is probably what will happen-Molly).

You can purposefully misunderstand us.

Or you can ask yourselves why we came, what we meant, and whether we’ll come back again.
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MOLLY NOTES:
This item screams for comment. First and foremost what the feminist comrades says is true, obviously true, in a movement that values militance and 'showing off", a movement defined by confrontation rather than construction. You can get into a whole world of yabba yabba about female and male values , but the "average" is that women will be more 'constructive" in the long run. Some have styled this as "conservative". If that is so at least two cheers for conservatism.





But then we get to the "meat" of the criticism. Long term readers of this blog will be fairly familiar with my emphasis on "practicality". This is a specific instance of this. I hope that nobody doubts the importance of feminism in anarchist politics. If one is unconvinced one can examine the composition of the "working class" and note that underpaid sections of it are quite often female in composition. One can also examine the "non-class" situations which females often find themselves in, situations where they experience what is fashionably called "oppression". All this is a given, and anarchist organizations (though it is extremely doubtful if a gathering is an "organization) should take note of.




But I will ask the following question. What was the point of what was done over at Britain ? Were any practical proposals advanced that would make the actions make the anarchist movement better ? God knows that the situation of women begs for such proposals. How would they relate to anarchism ? Do we "temporally" support social democratic reforms ? Do we have ANY other proposals for action beyond (shudder) doing pop-psychology and promoting guilt amongst anarchists ?
Feminism is so obviously important, from both a "class' perspective and otherwise that it is hard to deny its relevance. What can be said, however, is what actions actually led to some sort of progress. Personally I would give the actions in Britain a grade of zero, and not just because they cite the Stalinist Angela Davis as a "inspiration"(ahh-how many millions of corpses will so-called "liberation" cost?). Disruption for the sake of disruption. How typical of too much of anarchism today! Perhaps we should say that "feminism" is too important to be left to the feminists, but that would violate my own faith in the ability of ordinary people to find a rational way to advance their interests. I hope that the British feminists find such a way soon, rather than doing theatre for a marginal movement.

Sunday, March 08, 2009


INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY:
ONE FINAL NOTE:
Before I shut it down for the night here's one more item on International Women's Day, this one a reprint of a post here at Molly's Blog from this time last year.
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HOLIDAYS (OR IT SHOULD BE)
INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY:
Today, March 8, is celebrated as 'International Women's Day'. Way back when, on March 8 1908, 15,000 women marched through the streets of New York City demanding shorter hours, better pay and voting rights. In 1910 the first international women's conference was held in Copenhagen, Denmark, under the aegis of the Second Socialist International. The German socialist Clara Zetkin was the originator of the proposal. No fixed date was set at this event. The conference called for the establishment of an international women's day. This had been preceded by a declaration of the Socialist Party of America in 1909 calling for such an event on the last Sunday of February.

The date of March 8 gradually became an accepted time because it commemorated an 1857 protest in NYC by garment workers who later went on to establish the first labour union in the USA two years later. March 8 was also the day when women in Europe held peace rallies in 1913 as the clouds of WW1 gathered. IWD also gathered force from the Commemoration of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire on March 25, 1911 when 140 garment workers were killed in a factory fire because the owners had locked the doors, barring any escape.

On the persuasion of Alexandra Kollontai IWD was declared a holiday in the USSR shortly after the Revolution. But.....this "holiday" remained a regular working day until May 8, 1965. Wags might remark that this is the usual stuff of communist pronouncements, with the name and the reality usually at significant variance. Nonetheless IWD remains an official holiday in many countries today. Most are members of the ex-Soviet bloc or other communist countries. By 1975, International Women's Year, the United nations began to sponsor the day. Today there is pressure in many countries to declare it an official holiday. In 2005, for instance, the British Trade Union Congress passed a resolution calling on the United Kingdom to issue such a declaration.

Nowadays celebrations are held across the world on this day. The global women's group Aurora hosts a semi-official list of events and resources. For an anarchist take on the day and its significance see THIS and THIS from the Anarkismo.Net news site. Also 'Feminism, Class and Anarchism' by Deidre Hogan (also available as a downloadable pdf).

INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY:
STATEMENT OF THE CHILEAN FEL ON INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY:
The following, from the Anarkismo site, is the statement of the Chilean Frente de Estudiantes Libertarios Santiago on the occasion of International Women's Day. The following has been slightly edited for English grammar.
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Statement on the International Women's Day:

On this important day, our organisation declares:
That today, 8th of March, we celebrate internationally the struggle of women to end the oppression that has been systematically exercised on us by the patriarchal society.
However, we witness the way in which the establishment and the political and economic powers behind the dominant class try to eclipse and manipulate the very origins of this day, which lay with working class women, with those women who are part of the students and of the urban poor, women that suffer from a double oppression and exploitation due to their class origin and their condition as woman .
That there is an official International Women’s Day is because there has been a long tradition of struggle carried by working class women since late in the XIXth Century, women who saw that the final abolition of exploitation could not be complete without the end of another oppression, the first and fundamental form of oppression: that of men against women. With the roots in the first expressions of the socialist movement and in the midst of the industrial boom that led women to the factories, it was there that was born the organisation of those revolting for their right to vote and also against the abuse at work imposed by Capital and the domestic exploitation of men that turned them into slaves.
On the day itself, it is important to note that there were many women’s days until it was decided, arbitrarily, to pick the 8th of March, a date chosen by German socialist women in 1914. In the Russian calendar, women’s day is February 23rd, the day in which the first stage of the Russian Revolution started in 1917 with the strike of the garment industry working women from Petrograd, who ,without obeying the Party instructions to wait for action, voted to struggle for their right to bread and peace.
These events have been largely forgotten, and the liberal bourgeois movements that turned Women’s Day into an institution, reduced the importance of its class origins to turn it into the mere attempt to make women equal to men when it comes to their right to be exploited by capitalism. This is to deny and misrepresent a struggle that had as its main objective to end all forms of oppression, which aimed at creating a free and equal society, without classes nor bourgeois institutions based on coercion.
Women, in the heat of the struggle, have historically been at the forefront, destroying at revolutionary times existing norms, a role still played today, being a fundamental actor in the rise of our people’s struggles.
We cannot let ourselves be deceived because some women are in high posts in government and in private companies, from where they bark a supposed equal condition given by bourgeois society. In reality, all women are oppressed because of their gender, we know of it from our experience when looking for a job, when we receive our wage and in the way we are treated daily by this capitalist and patriarchal society.
We do not conform with an official day in our calendar, while the true origin of our struggle is concealed, and every day -we make it our day. We hold as our duty, as left-wing revolutionaries, not to tolerate discrimination or exclusion against our females comrades in our circles, attitudes which derive from the authoritarian relation of this traditionalist and bourgeois society in which we live. And we hold, as well, as something of paramount importance, to smash the illusion of “equality” when oppression keeps alive and well and we can’t turn a blind eye to it.
Against Patriarchy and Class Society!
Against Imperialism and for Libertarian Socialism!
Up the Women in Struggle!
FEL Santiago
Related Link: http://feluchile.blogspot.com/

INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY:
WORKERS' SOLIDARITY ALLIANCE IWD STATEMENT:
The following statement from the American anarchosyndicalist Workers' Solidarity Alliance was published today at the A-Infos website.
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US, WSA: International Women's Day statement:
One hundred and one years ago today, on March 8, 1908, thousands of women left their jobs in the sweatshops of New York City's Lower East Side and took to the streets to demand their rights as women and as workers. In 1917, their sisters in Russia followed suit, and helped to bring about the revolution that overthrew the Tsarist autocracy. And in Spain in 1936, the anarchist women of Mujeres Libres helped to free their sisters from centuries of oppression.
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In more recent times, women have played key roles in the civil rights and anti-war movements of the 1960's and early 1970's. In the 1990's and into the 21st century, women workers are still in the forefront of the continued struggle against sweatshop conditions in many industries and services. This vibrant movement has already won important victories, both against the institutions relationships of women.
The Workers Solidarity Alliance honors these women, as well as the countless others in every corner of the world, who, generation after generation, rise up against inequality, oppression and domination.
We salute their struggles and the sacrifices they made.
Still, the dream of freedom, equality and peace for all people is far from reality. Every day, women continue to confront sexism in their personal relationships as well as sexual harassment and violence on the job, in the streets, and at home. Millions of women workers are still ruthlessly exploited. The right-wing and religious fanatics threaten women's most basic right to control our own bodies.
The roots of sexism and all oppressive relationships are intertwined deep within the systems of hierarchy, authority and militarism that dominate society. These principles are the basis for every modern state and established socio-economic power. We know that this is not simply "the way it is." There are other, better possibilities for a more livable world. Faced with overwhelming webs of oppression and subjugation, we must fight back and take control of our own lives. We can begin by organizing with our sisters and brothers in our communities, our schools, and our workplaces.
We strive for a society in which one person or group of people do not dominate or exploit another. In such a society there would be no basis for sexual oppression, domination or class exploitation. We must work to replace the institutions of power, the nation-state and capitalism with a worldwide system of grassroots empowerment and self-management of all facets of social and economic life. See the dreams of these women workers fulfilled; join us in a movement with an extraordinary history and an inspiring future.
Help us build this new world of freedom and self-management.
Workers Solidarity Alliance
Related Link:
Workers Solidarity Alliance:
339 Lafayette Street-Room 202
New York, NY 10012

Saturday, March 07, 2009


INTERNATIONAL ANARCHIST MOVEMENT-BOLIVIA:
WOMEN AND LIBERATION IN BOLIVIA:
Continuing on with our feminism theme in the run-up to International Women's Day here's yet another opinion, this time from the Mujeres Creando (Women Creating) anarcha-feminist group in Bolivia. What it is is an indictment of the "anti-imperialist" government of Evo Morales and its ignoring of the situation of women. Molly herself has few opinions on Bolivia, not knowing enough to comment on the situation. Still...this is another view that should be heard.
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Evo Morales and the Phallic Decolonization of the Bolivian State:
por María GalindoTraducción: April Howard

The Law of Convocation to the Constitutional Assembly: Society didn't propose a change of government.
In Bolivia there are hundreds of thousands of Evos, in each public high school, on each neighborhood soccer team, in each little workers union, from the taxi drivers to the ice cream vendors. There are intuitive Evos, with beautifully dark complexions, casual and unorthodox in terms of cultural identity. They are Evos as modern as they are indigenous but, above all audacious in their use of words and careless and macho in sex and love. They use ponchos, suits or sports jackets and they choose their clothes with the liberty that patriarchal societies prohibit women, and above all those that are called Indigenous and who, for that reason, have to carry their cultural identity on their hips and backs, undrawing their curves in the use of masculine mandates.
This Evo whose face is an immediate and magical social mirror did not receive just a presidential mandate in the past elections, he received a historic mandate that, moreover, consisted of the nationalization of the hydrocarbons and the sentencing of Sanchez de Losada, in the convocation of a constitutional assembly that would permit the redesign of the Bolivian political system. An assembly that was past of an agenda installed by the social movements and not the political parties, an assembly that marked Bolivian society's need not for a change of government, but instead for a historic meeting at which to redesign the bases that had created crisis together with the neoliberal model.
Due to that clear responsibility and his Indigenous condition, the hope existed that Evo would convoke an assembly that was open to all possible forms of participation.
However, though the Law of Convocation created by the government of Evo Morales, with the direct responsibility of Alvaro García Linera, promulgates a law that:
- Restitutes the legitimacy of the political parties defeated by the revolt in October of 2003, including those that committed genocide against the people of El Alto.
- Closes all possibility of direct representation of social movements, which has obligated many movements to seek out alliances with MAS in order to be able to propose candidacies or opt to stay out of the assembly and therefore the socio-political discussion that this has unleashed in Bolivian society.
- Ratifies the technocratic neoliberal criteria of representation of women as a biological quota within political parties, with the addition of the Otherness which inhibits all form of alliance between women by needing to alternate each woman with a man.
- Leaves out the important sector of Neoliberal exiles who are a migrant population in countries like Argentina, Brazil, U.S. and Spain. This population has grown steeply in past years and now constitutes a quarter of the economic support of our society.
- Closes the character of the constitutional assembly to session during a year in a framework that addresses powers already constituted, with which the assembly converts itself into a mere constitutional reform.
With this exclusion and weakening of social movements, Evo Morales and his indigenist-leftist government has the security of obtaining an absolute majority within the assembly. This permits him to co-opt social sectors like clients of the party, to carry out a plebiscite in place of assembly elections and to rewrite the text of the constitution from a place of executive power. So the project plans to annihilate spaces of dissidence and political autonomy in respect to the party of the government.
With this assembly then, we witness the silencing of the social movements in our society. We also witness a re-accommodation of the social movements from the role of being the forces of the veto and the Bolivian social mobilization, to being the cheap clients of a liberal state. They are left to be rats tricked by state power. It isn't the silencing of the bullet, and it isn't the silencing of censure, but rather a cynical exclusion. A silencing as could only come from Œone of ours¹ (in quotes): an ex prisoner who took up arms, like Alvaro García Linera and an indigenous union member, like Evo. In this way, the assembly converts itself in the scenario for the substitution of liberal representative democracy that we defeated in the streets, hundreds of thousands ,without leaders or parties, in unheard of mobilizations, to substitute this for a mono-partied democracy that offers us MAS as an alternative without alternative. In this way, the magic Evo, the Evo who wakes up identities, can convert himself into an identitive antidote that inaugurates a regime closed around its leaders.
I don¹t want to campaign for a candidate, I want to vomit: The electoral campaign.
It is not casual chance that the most conservative sectors have taken enthusiastically to the electoral campaign as a chance to make ridiculous reparations that will allow them to prolong their agonizing mediocrity by displaying gargantuan portraits of themselves which are unmistakable invitations to vomiting.
Other sectors that are taking advantage of the occasion are the great proliferation of Churches and Evangelical sects. They have presented their own candidates, thanks to thousands and thousands of their faithful, to defend their interests in the assembly and, like all churches, to go on eating the pieces of social life.
The military, which today enjoys important attributes in the present constitution, and which is not disposed to lose even the obligatory military service with which it installs in our youth its model of chauvinist virility, have also proposed their own candidates, borrowed and rented in all of their varieties. They range from pro-government to the extreme right, all coinciding in defense of their corporate interests.
Even the Catholic Church, using its intuitive instincts for the accumulation of power, has suffered an unexpected love-affair with MAS in order to put the brakes on the process toward a Secular State. Their campaign is characterized by efforts to delay, restrain, and confuse the processes of political recreation that a society as dynamic as Bolivia had proposed.
We, the Mujeres Creando [Women Creating], are street agitators, autonomous, self-summoned to all of life. We are women who have questioned representative democracy and the vision of equality proposed by the gender technocracy. We have proposed a candidacy, and so with our queerness, are entering a terrain that is a farce of representation. Our almost tiny candidacy has entered through a crack in the law, in the institution and the system, like rainwater that filters itself by simultaneously seeking and creating leaks. A crack in the roof of the houses, of the Palace and the institutions from where we let our dissidence leak.
To say that women are a political subject that for centuries was denied the right to speak, with which they emptied us of our own contents whether with arguments of complementariness, of submission, of exclusion or inclusion. In the end, all women come to the same end, women are ahistorical, apolitical and invisible. And all social pacts are pacts are made between categories of men according to the culture they pertain to, their skin color, the social class they pertain to or the ideology they subscribe to. And this social pact signifies a convivial pact regarding the interests of categories of men about hegemonic projects in which some are above others.
Today in Bolivia, Indigenism and Leftism repeat themselves and find themselves next to neoliberalism in the same phallic, patriarchal posture, a posture that ratifies the confusion between social projects and power projects, the control of society, the submission of the other, as the only interest around which history and politics should revolve.
I'm not native, I'm original: The colonial character versus the patriarchal character of the Bolivian State
As feminists we want to be neither underneath nor on top of anyone. That is why we will not find our own place in this process. As quasi undesirable tenants of the candidacy that we postulate, we use this space to affirm that the decolonization of the State is not possible without its depatriarcalization.
We affirm that the social pact rests on a sexual contract that has expropriated from women the sovereignty over our own bodies. And that this is a phenomenon of all political systems, of all ideologies and all cultures. A renovation of this social pact that does not question the sexual contract that sustains it can only reiterate forms of colonial and patriarchal submission at the same time. And looking at supposedly original cultures is not the mechanism that will permit us to decolonize our society, nor make it fuller, more livable or freer.
The demand for the original culture as pure, as the culture that will build the nation, the project of power and then nationalism will only drive us to the patriarchal and colonial renovation of power, where power simply exercises power with a mere change of actors.
A sample of this today is the andinocentrism with which one expects to reinterpret Bolivian society. Our society is not a society of pure, original, indigenous people versus undesirable mestizo white-oids. It is much more complex than that; ours is a society of disobediences and cultural mutations in which the technological revolution is sugar to the soul of all kids who, thanks to piracy, conquer it in their quotidian chatting and navigating with the world. It is a society like all societies of the world where we as social actors also construct culture and thus we can talk about youth culture, about an urban culture, about this, that and the other culture, about a culture of queers and a culture of the street and the street vendors and who culturally transform the meaning of the street and public space, for example.
We are not obedient originals and for that reason and because we put in question cultural mandates, starting with clothing and ending with pleasures. Due to and thanks to this disobedience which makes us happy, we propose a decolonizing and depatriarchalizing societal project that has the rise of nationalisms as a principal question.
They want to substitute the project of the united Nation State for a project of autonomous plurinationalisms in order to open an eternal struggle for land, for resources, for power and control. We want to be neither on top nor underneath and so we challenge this project with our body and our skin, sensitive and open to sin.
The only fight you lose is the fight you abandon:
The strategy of concrete proposals.
We have also developed a handful of concrete proposals that matter to us because they are born of our daily life:
Our Father if you are in heaven liberate us from the power of the Church:
Today the Bolivian State has an official religion, which is Catholicism. Freedom of worship is guaranteed but the secular character of social matters is not. In this way the Church has confabulated with State Power in everything. We have religion class in all public schools, the Church exercises a mountain of non ecclesiastical activities, and worst, we have inherited the Judeo-Christian concept of family in our constitution and in all judicial law.
That is why to propose a secular State is to recuperate an hour of class time in schools from religion and to put it, for example, to the service of a secular sexual education, and to our right to know our bodies through school and the classroom. Beyond that, our proposal separates the concept of family from the patriarchal Judeo-Christian vision, reconceptualizing the family, honoring all the complex forms that this has in our society. This opens the doors the recognition of all forms of free union that occur beyond the state, these pretty and unusual forms that make freedom possible in love and in the construction of affectionate and supportive coexistence. Of course this includes couples made of men and women, community unions, houses of mothers and daughters, sons, grandmothers, aunts, uncles, until complexity widens it without impositions, without models and, above all, without imposing suffering nor shortages, nor absences who have the right to grow and live in sympathy and liberty.
Che and Evo are the same Irresponsible Fathers:
Society has expropriated maternity from women, it values and protects reproduction at the same time it imposes maternity as a reason for living for women. However, it subordinates maternity to the existence of a father who gives it legitimacy. While the women give life, the fathers have the power to grant social space, and so convert the act of giving life into a secondary act. That is what invents the concept of the single mother, to whom society grants the burden of condemnation in some cases, in others the burden of the fate of the abandoned mother. Mothers' recuperation of their maternity is a cultural theme, but it also addresses the legal act of the paternal last name, which in our society is the first [of the two last names], the one that counts and, at the same time, is a mechanism of recognition of the ignorance that every man has regarding his sons and daughters. That is why we propose maternal filiation, which is to say that boys and girls should carry the last name of their mothers first. This recuperates the place of the mothers, where women change from being objects of reproduction to subjects of maternity. It also recuperates the daughters' place in the family, a place that all statistics show us is not valued in comparison to their brothers'.
This act also will have consequences in all family jurisprudence, in so much as what is called patria-potestad, which is a concept of patriarchal authority over sons and daughters. Sovereignty in my country and in my body:
They have also expropriated from us, the women, the right to make decisions about our bodies, and this is presented in legal rulings in various situations, one of them is the penalization of abortion. The recuperation of women¹s sovereignty over their bodies is a wider concept than the mere depenalization of abortion. This is why we consider it fundamental to insert within the special constitutional regimes, one that concretely carries the title of women's constitutional regime. This has to do with a chapter that would permit all of those fundamental rights to be concentrated and, as the principal of all rights, a woman's right to make decisions regarding her body.
Every political party is a weapon loaded with blood, machismo and corruption:
We propose to break the monopoly that the political parties have in respect to political representation though the aperture of the exercise of direct representation of all forms of social representation that exist in Bolivian society. In respect to the representation of women, for us it is fundamental to challenge the quotas that were introduced during the neoliberal period and ratified by the Indigenist-Left. This quota converts the political representation of women into a biological quota, empty of content, in which any woman, due to her biological condition of being female, is representative of all women in a situation of non-ideological representation. This quota has been moreover reinforced in its non-ideologization though the concept of alternity, alternity that has as effect the negation of the political alliance between women. Both are mechanisms that deny women political autonomy, which is to say, the sense of organizing from themselves, outside of political parties and mixed organizations.
Long live the deserters, the so-called cowards and all youth who object to the use of weapons
These days military service is obligatory for men, and the gender technocracy has motivated the creation of voluntary military service for women, giving power to one of the densest nuclei of patriarchal culture in our society. Military service in Bolivia has constituted itself as the school of macho virility and the mechanism for the acquisition of manliness. That is why the young men who come back from military service acquire authority in their communities and are celebrated for it.
Conscientious objection is the door that allows the value of the use of weapons and the very existence of an army in society to be questioned. It is a fundamental right for all young men to be able to object to this sense of virility and the possibility of substituting this service for social service allows us to repropose to young men the logic of service to society and the place and sense of masculinity.
Give the Constitutional Assembly back to society, opening deliberative spaces from the Assembly itself
The Assembly is crossed by a series of themes that are axes for Bolivian society. It is a historic irresponsibility to leave it in hands of the political parties that, moreover, have filled the majority of the lists with characters that in many cases do not even correspond to social sectors. There are all kinds of candidates fulfilling even marital quotas, like that of the Mayor of the city of La Paz's wife.
In other cases, the candidates are making proposals that have nothing to do with the constitutional scenario because, if they are elected, they will simply respond to postures that will be cut up into other spaces. ON the other hand, the complexity of the themes converts itself into a species of mosaic that is impossible to assemble from a single perspective. This is why we consider that the scenario of the assembly raises, above all, a methodological challenge that can gather together the knowledge and visions of the actors and protagonists of each theme.
This is why it is urgent that, once the elections take place, departmental, regional and thematic pre-constitutional assemblies are opened by social actors. We have posed to ourselves the proposition of convoking a pre-constitutional assembly of women as a complex political subject.
BECAUSE WOMEN ARE NOT A BIOLOGICAL QUOTA,
NOR A RIB OF ADAM'S,
EVE TO THE CONSITUTIONAL ASSEMBLY.
We, the Mujeres Creando, have a self-managed house that is located at:
2060, calle 20 de octubre
Between Apiazu and J.J. Perez, Tel. 2413764, La Paz, Bolivia.
Our house is named Virgen de los deseos [Virgen of Desires]
There you will find:
A market, a dining room, lodging, an audiovisual hall, classrooms for workshops,
Solidarity, feminist culture in all its forms
And a universe of Indians, bitches and lesbians,
Restless assemblies and sisterhoods.
Our website is:

Thursday, February 05, 2009


CANADIAN ANARCHIST MOVEMENT:
ANARCHA-FEMINIST DISCUSSION/RADICAL FEMINIST CONFERENCE:
Coming soon in Ottawa and Montréal. Here's the announcement from the A-Infos website.
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Canada, (anarcha)feminism - Feb 8 Ottawa, Feb 14-15 Montreal:
Topic:
Anarcha-Feminism
---- Anarchist Discussion Group ----
Sun Feb 8. 1:00pm
Jack Purcell Community Centre (near Elgin & Gilmour)
---- Please join Common Cause Ottawa for a discussion on anarcha-feminism, with guest(s?) activists/organizers from Montreal. [all genders welcome]
ALSO ---- Consider a trip to Montreal for the weekend of Feb 14-15 for a bilingual radical feminist forum [women only].
---- Common Cause Ottawa is trying to coordinate transportation to this event for people from Ottawa. Please contact us if you would like to go, whether you have a vehicle or do not: a_ottawa@mutualaid.org or 613-656-5498.
---- Accommodations may be arranged, but the sooner we can organize it the better, so please get in touch!
---- Information en francais:(and English-Molly) ---- http://www.antipatriarcat.org/yabasta/
---- More info on the gathering:
PATRIARCAT YA BASTA!
Women-only radical feminist meeting
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February 14 and 15, 2009
Beginning on the 14 at 9:30 a.m.
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Maison Parent-Roback
110 Ste.Thérèse, Montreal
Métro Champ-de-Mars
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Let’s struggle against patriarchy! Let’s share our experiences and analysis!
Let’s create links between the radical feminists in Quebec!
Let’s celebrate our anger!
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Dear women,
You are invited to Patriarcat Ya Basta!, the third radical feminist meeting, in the spirit of those of 2003 and 2008.
It is a space created by and for radical feminists from Quebec and elsewhere to share experiences and analysis, to create links and new networks! The meeting will be in the form of an Open Space… on two days, including a day of action!!!
The question we will try to answer collectively is the following :
Patriarcat Ya Basta*! What can we do to revitalize the radical feminism in Quebec?
Come to think, act and celebrate with us!
**REMINDER**
Here is the long-awaited program of the week-end! Also, bring your dishes (a bowl, a mug and utensils) and your smile!
Saturday, February 14 – Discussions and reflexions
9h30 : Reception and coffee
10h30 : Ice breaker activity
11h15 : Presentation of the day and of the Open Space formula
11h35 : Pause
11h45 : Presentation of workshop propositions and compilation in a schedule
table
12h30 : Diner and inscriptions in the workshops
13h30 : 1st workshop
15h30 : Pause
16h : 2nd workshop
18h : Filling of the « newswall », explanations of Sunday’s program and
supper
19h30 : Feminist evening (party!!)
Sunday, February 15th – Towards action
11h : Reception and feminist brunch
12h :Explanations, compilation of ideas of actions and discussions,
inscriptions
13h to 16h : Discussions concerning actions and/or actions
16h : Back to Maison Parent-Roback and debriefing on actions and
discussions
For more information concerning the event, the Open Space formula and to subscribe to the event : visit http://www.antipatriarcat.org/yabasta or contact femmesradicales@gmail.com (this inscription can also be done by email, by giving your name, city, email and your special needs or accommodations).
***
Free event. Meals included. Accessible to wheelchairs. Accommodations and special needs on demand.
***
Please circulate widely to your networks!
*Patriarcat Ya Basta! means literally : patriarchy, it's enough!

Wednesday, October 08, 2008


INTERNATIONAL ANARCHIST MOVEMENT-ROMANIA:

REPORT ON 2008 LOVEKILLS ANARCHA-FEMINIST FESTIVAL:

The following story is from the A-Infos site, and it describes a recent anarcha-feminist gathering in Romania, hostile ground but increasingly-as in all of eastern Europe- putting down anarchist roots. The following has been slightly edited for reasons of English grammar and spelling.

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Romania, Timisoara, Report on the 2008 Lovekills Anarcha-feminist Festival:

On 26th and 27th September 2008 the third edition of the anarcha-feminist festival Lovekills took place in Timisoara, although it seemed almost impossible to organise this kind of festival in a society where ignorance and materialism can be transformed very easy into a violent oppression against everything different. The first problem and the biggest one that the Lovekills Collective encountered was finding a place for this kind of event, but the ones who made this festival possible were the group H.Arta, those who assured us a place to host the workshops, the friends from Timisoara who agreed to put their own homes on the line and put so much time and effort into the so called "minor" problems like cooking, shopping and cleaning, and last, but not least, all the participants from all over that prepared and supported the different workshops.
The festival began at 12 o'clock with the "Welcome " and the presentation of the Lovekills Collective and festival, and it continued with the next workshops :
*Oppression of women by orthodox church
The lecture was focused on the Romanian context and it was part of a case study on the Romanian Orthodox Church related to: state, army, extreme right wing and oppression of women. The lecture was aiming at raising awareness: on how the church is manipulating and oppressing people, and especially women, how it is empowered by state, popular practices and traditions in doing so; bringing up issues that are not easily noticed, especially in regions where religion and church are no longer problems of actuality. Annex: exhibition.
*Latent prostitution
When we think of prostitution we mostly think of direct prostitution that means the direct sexual contact of a prostitute with a client that is supposed to end with money paid by the client to the prostitute but there is also a latent prostitution, a subtle way of prostitution and less evident. This type of prostitution is hidden, secret and has more silent agreement in society then direct prostitution. Latent prostitution doesn't have to be consumed in sexual way but it has similar connotations to sexuality.
*- cut & change-
Cut & change was a workshop about our possibilities to question, change, reinterpret and re-contextualise the messages that are mass- transmitted through our clothing or other items that we use daily. We will cut, sew, paste, draw, combine, rewrite and divert the sexist, consumerist and stereotype messages, transforming them into messages that speak about the possible alternatives.
*-To shave or not to shave …
This is the question – a review on how society looks at "growing" hairs on different parts of the human body, how is this connected with gender roles, what's the point of depilation, do people do it because of beauty standards, health, fashion or is it just one more subject that is just unquestionable.
*- Stencil making workshop –
Stencil is a graffiti technique to express your political slogans and favorite pictures on t-shirts, walls etc. So bring your pictures you want to use, good slogans and if you have papers, colours and thin cutters.
In the evening movies and documentaries were aired:
Habitual Sadness 2 (Naj-eun mogsoli 2 )
( Follow-up to "The Murmuring" )
1997
The story of the women at the "House of Sharing" continues. The old women who share a common bond lead a peaceful life in the countryside, raising vegetables, chickens and painting pictures. They are no different from the elderly women we see everyday. But they are all marked by pain and sorrow from their shared history of being comfort women during World War 2. They became subject to prejudice in their own homeland after their return to Korea. It is painful for them to watch other peoples' children and grandchildren, and they feel rage when the Japanese government tries to cover up the crimes they committed against them. The films asks us to remember what these women sacrificed and the shame and misery they faced even as these individuals pass away often forgotten by their own people.
Killing us softly
Jean Kilbourne's pioneering work helped develop and popularize the study of gender representation in advertising. Her award-winning Killing us Softly films have influenced millions of college and high school students across two generations and on an international scale. In this important new film, Kilbourne reviews if and how the image of women in advertising has changed over the last 20 years. With wit and warmth, Kilbourne uses over 160 ads and TV commercials to critique advertising's image of women. By fostering creative and productive dialogue, she invites viewers to look at familiar images in a new way, that moves and empowers them to take action.
THE MAGDALENE SISTERS, 2002
A thoroughly mind provoking film about 3 young women whom, under tragic circumstances see themselves cast away to a 19th-Century Magdalene Laundry home for supposedly 'fallen' women. Here, the women endure agonizing punishment and a long, harsh working system which leaves them physically drained and mentally challenged. As the girls bond together, it soon becomes clear that the only way out of the Magdalene convent is to escape, but with twisted Sister Bridget running the wing, any chances seem limited...
The day was closed with a vegan dinner.
Saturday the festival started at 13.30 with
-Self-defence open ended workshop-
Feminism - not just for women –
Discussion on the way patriarchal system is affecting men as well. Why are some men perceiving "feminism" as a struggle only for women ? And how can we overcome some preconceived ideas about this "separatism".
- Color hair-
D.I.Y workshop about how can you paint and cut your hair
- D.I.Y. – Computer Security workshop-
Let's discuss why computer-security is also for you important. Let's find out how it works on different computer system software (windows, linux, mac) to mail encrypted with gpg or pgp and how to make secure partitions on your hardware.
- Drag Workshop/drag-„
dressed as guy" or „dressed as girl" describes the performance of a gender which is not your biological one. After a short introduction about the history and idea of drag shows, drag kings and queens as a part of transgender practices and some basic skills like faking beards, breasts or penises, there was time for experiences.
Also in the evening the movie But I'm a cheerleader was shown - Megan is an all-American girl. She's a cheerleader, she has a boyfriend, etc. But she doesn't like kissing her boyfriend very much. And she's pretty touchy with her cheerleader friends. And she only has pictures of girls up in her locker. Her parents and friends conclude that she *must* be gay and send her off to "sexual redirection" school, full of admittedly homosexual misfits, where she can learn to how to be straight.
The night ended with a vegan dinner, that was followed by a good-bye party that we hope left behind some good times and memories. In my opinion, the most important element was the the feeling of friendship that the participants had. Some of them pointed out the fact that people could communicate and express their ideas freely and with no holding back, in a way that contravened all the prejudice and clichés in the actual society. The first thing is that the festival was anarcho-feminist and which the number of male participants, a large number, has to be mentioned in this article without a doubt in mind. The male participants got involved actively and were from all over, including outside the Romanian borders. The patriarchal ideal and sexism that it generates can easily be removed because they are absolutely outrageous and they do nothing but to destroy inter human relationships. The third edition of the LoveKills festival demonstrated again how the feminist practice could create anarchy.

Saturday, July 12, 2008


ANARCHIST MOVEMENT-ROMANIA:
ANARCHA-FEMINIST FESTIVAL IN ROMANIA:
The following is a callout for the third annual 'LoveKills' anarcha-feminist festival to be held this September in Romania. While anarchism may have come late to the ex-Soviet bloc it is more than making up for lost time.
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Romania, Timisoara,
CALL OUT FOR LOVEKILLS FESTIVAL #3 26th-27th September 2008
The LoveKills collective is trying to organize the third edition of the festival. It is our strong desire to continue this festival, as we consider it to be very important for our struggle to make a difference especially in the Romanian context, to live up to our anarcha-feminist ideas in a fundamentalist/ orthodox/ patriarchal society and even in a completely ignorant+sexist 'scene'. We are welcoming every individual/collective involved/interested in anarcha-feminism to take part in our festival, to support and help us. The festival will be taking place in Timisoara (West of Romania) during the last week-end of September 26th-27th. Anyone who is interested in presenting a workshop/lecture/ documentary/ exhibition, in performing or playing or anything else please contact us.
www.lilith-lovekills.blogspot.com

Thursday, June 26, 2008


ANARCHA-FEMINISM:
RAPE- AN ALTERNATIVE TO RELIANCE UPON THE "JUSTICE SYSTEM":
Molly finds the following essay, taken from the Linchpin (an Ontario platformist group) site particularly valuable. If anarchism is going to be taken seriously it has to offer alternatives to the "beneficial services" that are presently mediated through the state. It furthermore has to offer a reasonable plan about how to get there, how to substitute other democratic and non-repressive ways of organizing certain services, gradually and in the here and now, not after some mythical revolution. Certainly the following essay doesn't offer anything resembling a detailed plan, but it at least raises the question. Are there alternatives to the police and the state when dealing with such important anti-social actions as rape ? It's an open question, and Molly would like to emphasize most severely that the leftist dream of making men join the sort of "therapy groups" that only members of the New Class enjoy is not a reasonable solution. Anyways, the article, and I hope that questions such as this are discussed much more fully and without the cultishness of the left, in order to propose solutions that ordinary people can accept.
.........................................
The state can’t stop rape
We need to stop imagining the government and police as being able to prevent women from being sexually assaulted. The police operate as an organized force to punish crimes and investigate other possible crimes. Very rarely do they prevent crimes or assaults from happening. Common statistics that come across the Canadian media proclaim that between 1 in 5 and 1 in 3 women experience sexual assault in their lifetime. Obviously the government, through the police service, is choosing or not able to investigate or prosecute all of these offences. Often people who are forced into sex or are drugged without witnesses are left without legal recourse to pursue. Often the police will actually tell women what happened to them was morally wrong but not legally wrong, leaving them to deal with their pain themselves.

Similarly, sexual assault crisis centres are left with marginal funding and limited counsellors, forcing women who show progress to be denied further support so that more recent victims can get priority. Often this can cause a blockage in the healing process as a trustful relationship is broken. The centres are also restricted by government-controlled funding. Rape Crisis Centres are unable to conduct public wide campaigns because of funding limits or go beyond the law to make assaulters accountable for their actions.

Often our society is hesitant to believe women when they insist they have been assaulted, abused, or raped, forcing victims to live with doubt and self-loathing because others are unwilling to support them, and possibly even blaming the victims for what happened to them. We all hold responsibility for what happens. Women who allow or seek out the sexual attention of men and encourage objectification are lending to the dehumanization/victimization of other women. Men who do not directly confront and socially ostracize male perpetrators of sexual violence lend to the conscious and unconscious acceptability of sexual violence. Further, men and others need to challenge lesser expressions of sexism to make sure people know that no level of sexism is acceptable. So on and so forth.

Incite! Women of Color against Violence, a grassroots women of colour anti-violence movement, have been articulating anti-state analysis and community-based solutions to sexual violence in their recent works. They have taken strong stances against state funding; they see it as a form of co-optation and regulation. Further, they see the state and the people who enforce its existence as using sexual violence as a strategy, a way of expressing power. Incite! along with their ally organizations have been developing an anti-state feminist analysis that intersects dynamically with anarchist-communism. Incite! is based in the U.S. with chapters all over the country. Incite! was initiated in part by former Black Panther Angela Davis and Indigenous feminist Andrea Smith.

According to many feminists and activists, stopping sexual violence does and will continue to require a community-based response that goes beyond the legal barriers of the criminal system. It requires self-organization by a whole community to prevent and enact justice on perpetrators of sexual violence. It is up to you to get involved.
WEBSITE: