This
is the sixth article of a 7-part series that will focus on the issues
in our radical movements that I think need our immediate and ongoing
attention. I am using the ancient eastern concept of chakras for the
body as a parallel to our movement’s energy wheel. Healers
believe sickness occurs when the body’s chakras are blocked or
out of alignment. Likewise, the U.S. Left and our social justice
movements need our collective introspection, analysis and adjustments
that lead to unblocking our energy/chi points. A weakened Left, and
especially the Black Left, have been unable to provide this critical
guidance over the last twenty years. I do not have the space to go
too deep into my thinking although I have been pondering and talking
about this very subject for a few years now. I am looking to
stimulate a higher level of principled discussion about how to
energize and organize the social forces coming into play at this
pivotal juncture in history and how we can rebuild a formidable
radical movement in this country.
“We are airing our shame and
failures because we want you, our movement sisters and brothers, to
tuck lessons from this trauma into your sewing kits and toolboxes to
create sturdier organizations in your communities.”
-Sharing
Sorrow: Women of Color Resource Center’s Downfall,
Community
Taskforce Findings, March 2011
There
are several terms used to critique if we are effective in what we are
building and how we are doing it. Evaluation, assessment, review. I’m
most accustomed with the word summation, as in creating a culture of
summation in an organization. Summations are important because they
validate whether our political analysis and strategy were realistic.
Ultimately, it should help us improve our internal functioning and
organizing. Without regular, thorough and collective assessments,
this chakra gets clogged. When this happens, our political analysis
becomes dull and our development is stagnated.
Summing
up our practice or a campaign should be a routine part of
organizational planning. When we sum up a program or campaign, the
starting point is if we achieved the stated goals and objectives.
These are based upon our analysis of conditions and capacity and how
the program/campaign fitted in with our overall strategy. A summation
can vary in depth from a cursory assessment to looking at all the
elements of the campaign including the roles of individuals.
There
are times when our organizations should sum up a trend that is
harmful to its members or to the organization. For example, if there
is factionalism (political clique) brewing, the tendency must be
critiqued and steps put forward to eliminate the disruptive trend.
Then there must also be a summation to determine if those steps were
successful in rooting out the negative behaviors. Remember, it’s
all about saving the patient(s).
A
summation gives us guidance on what are our strengths and weaknesses.
Where there are strengths, our organizations can build on them. Where
there are weaknesses, we can map out what we need to get it together
including more study, trainings and mentoring. Our movement is anemic
on study; it’s easier to argue about opinions than to assert a
historical analysis based upon facts. Memes can be clever in
delivering a short, powerful message but they are no substitute for a
disciplined dive into theory, ideology and philosophy. We must strive
for the same command of issues like critical race theory or market
economy as we have of our protest chants.
One
of the most poignant and in-depth summations that I have read in
recent times was on the demise of the Women of Color Resource Center
(WCRC). This kick-ass group of sistahs had been doing the critical
work around women’s issues for nearly two decades. The
leadership torch was passed from Linda Burnham to a new director. Two
years later, the organization crashed and burned. The support
community around WCRC took the extraordinary steps to find out what
happened and to publicly share those hard lessons with the movement.
The findings of the community task force that was convened are very
detailed; they include a letter of desperation from the board to the
larger community, financials and even summaries of staff interviews.
A sentence in the report always feels like a kick in the gut, “…with
the writing and sharing of this report with you, we are now ready to
scatter the ashes of our beloved organization.” Damn.
I
hadn’t read the report since it was circulated and it’s
just as heartbreaking now as it was then. Reading it again made me
realize that it encompasses all the chakras I have written about.
It’s all there in painstaking detail why our movement must
focus on transformative work on ourselves and in our organizations.
Right around the same time as the fall of WCRC, the National Center
for Human Rights Education also bit the dust. Founded by Loretta
Ross, the center was handed off to a new executive director after a
decade of exemplary leadership by Ross. Like the Resource Center, the
crew at NCHRE had engaged in a serious vetting process. Sadly, the
vetting did not guarantee a successful transition in either case.
We
can go up and down history and study what took down organizations
from the Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) to the League
for Revolutionary Struggle (LRS). We could, but we’re too busy
making the same mistakes. Too often, we don’t take the time to
reflect and understand what worked and what didn’t; we jump
right into the next project.
The
great thing about summations is that you must be doing work in order
to have something to sum up. New and younger activists are looking
for best practices in organizing and movement building. Our movements
have a responsibility to them and to ourselves to document our
successes as well as our failures in as many creative forms as
possible. Let the summation do the talking--in the words of the
people actual did the work.
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