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10,000 organizers bring worldwide struggles to Social Forum
By
John Catalinotto
Atlanta
Published Jul 8, 2007 8:25 PM
Some 10,000 grassroots organizers, anti-racist fighters, farm workers,
domestic workers, anti-war veterans, former prisoners and their families,
spokespeople for lesbian/gay/bi/trans rights, women’s rights and
environmental organizations, and activists in virtually every progressive
struggle underway in the U.S. today came together in Atlanta from June 27 to
July 1 for the U.S. Social Forum.
Thousands march at June 27 opening ceremony for the United States Social Forum in Atlanta.
WW photos: Imani Henry, John Catalinotto, and Monica Moorehead
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They came from 1,000 organizations and held more than 1,000 workshops, meetings
and plenary sessions, one major march and other demonstrations in five days
under the broiling sun of central Georgia—and one torrential rainfall.
They came from all 50 states, and 400 international guests came from 70
countries, including Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.
There are undoubtedly different evaluations of how successfully the USSF
organizers and its different departments were able to address the needs and
rights of all oppressed groups present. Still, there were some remarkable
features. These include the composition of the forum and its strong spirit of
grass-roots struggle and solidarity. Forum participants were multinational,
with more than half being people of color. They were almost all personally
engaged in struggle and they were looking to give and get support.
There were people of all ages, including many youths under 30. The workshops
included but also stretched beyond the movement veterans who cut their teeth in
the Civil Rights and Black Liberation movements, the anti-Vietnam War movement
and the other struggles that took place in that relatively progressive period
of the late 1960s and early 1970s. A workshop organized by the youth
organization FIST—Fight Imperialism, Stand Together—on the
contributions of Che Guevara reflected this youth upsurge in the struggle.
There was strong representation from sectors of society that normally have the
least access to funds for traveling. This lack often limits participation of
people without personal or organizational resources in national gatherings.
Either the many local or regional groups were able to overcome many of these
obstacles or the national organization was.
From welfare rights to organizing the South
People worked on issues from health care monopolies to welfare rules in West
Virginia, state repression of ex-prisoners in Los Angeles, combating the modern
enslavement of immigrant farm workers and domestic workers, food preparation,
gaining full rights for those with “disabilities,” preparing vegan
food, understanding of the need of trans people for gender neutral bathrooms,
struggling to organize labor in the South, battling police brutality, defending
immigrant rights.
Also, freeing political prisoners like Mumia Abu-Jamal, Leonard Peltier, Puerto
Rican liberation fighters and the Cuban Five and defending the rights of the
more than 2 million prisoners of an oppressive state, and fighting to end the
occupations of Palestine and Iraq. This list doesn’t begin to exhaust the
choices. A message from Mumia Abu-Jamal to the forum was played at the closing
plenary session and at the family reunion rally organized by family members of
prisoners and former prisoners.
Hundreds of workshops—each with a half-dozen to a few hundred
participants—took place at each of the sessions over the three conference
days. Special tents on Africa, Palestine, youth and others hosted hundreds of
guests. And full-time networking went on in every space on the venue throughout
the forum.
From Katrina to TransJustice
Imani Henry at USSF June 30.
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The plenary sessions—attended by some 500 to 1,500 people depending on
the particular evening and topic—gave organizers an opportunity to reach
the most people with one talk.
The plenary sessions attempted to cover the following six struggles: Gulf Coast
Reconstruction in the Post-Katrina Era; War, Militarism and the Prison
Industrial Complex; Indigenous Voices: From the Heart of Mother Earth;
Immigrant Rights; Liberating Gender and Sexuality: Integrating Gender and
Sexual Justice Across Our Movements; and Workers’ Rights in the Global
Economy.
The plenary on Katrina drew a strong audience and made a strong statement that
the survivors of the hurricane were still fighting against a hostile and racist
government authority but had not given up on winning back their right to return
and to rebuild their lives.
The Indigenous plenary—and a later demonstration on the stage at the
Sunday morning “Peoples’ Assembly”—showed that the
first nations in this hemisphere would be heard.
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Indigenous women speak out at the July 1 USSF closing plenary on
racist injustice that their people have suffered for over 500
years. Just minutes before, one of their representatives had the
microphone abruptly taken away from him by one of the USSF's
organizers because he went over his "2 minute time
limit." This unfortunate action prompted over 50 Indigenous
people to take the stage in righteous protest.
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For anti-imperialists, the militarism plenary was likely the most
disappointing. Though the early speakers laid the groundwork for a fighting
plenary and an Iraqi oil unionist got a standing ovation when he called for
“driving out the occupiers,” the strategy talk called only to get
rid of the Bush government, which meant little more than electing a Democratic
president in 2008.
In addition, one of the speakers, an Israeli woman, made a frontal attack on
Hamas for alleged misogyny and had the gall to demand a change in Palestinian
leadership. The next night, after the Indigenous plenary, the USSF organizers
gave the floor to a Palestinian woman activist to answer this frontal attack on
self-determination.
The gender and sexual justice plenary, which opened an insightful discussion
involving a lack of understanding and sensitivity within the progressive
movement on this issue, ended in a burst of anti-imperialist and pro-socialist
education. Imani Henry of the International Action Center, who is also a
leading activist in TransJustice, was able to effectively raise a series of
militant issues.
Henry discussed the defense of the Cuban Five—the only time this
important case was raised at a plenary—and also of the New Jersey Four
lesbians, all African Americans, jailed for up to 11 years for defending
themselves. He aroused solidarity for some transgender people at the forum who
had been harassed by the Atlanta police, called for making September an
anti-war month, and raised a cry for ending capitalism and building a socialist
society. He got a standing ovation.
Since at the current time the social forums are structured as a space for
discussion and not as a plan for action, those interested in planning joint
actions participated in a “People’s Assembly”—the last
plenary. Though many had left, more than 1,000 people stayed for this session,
where all the organizations and regions could raise their proposals. The only
anti-war proposal was a call from the Troops Out Now Coalition to make
September the next anti-war month and to raise TONC’s call for an
encampment in Washington, D.C., starting Sept. 22, with a “People’s
Peace Congress” on Sept. 28 and a mass march Sept. 29 calling for an end
to the war abroad and the war at home.
Articles copyright 1995-2012 Workers World.
Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved.
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