This
is the seventh 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.
“The
true focus of revolutionary change is never merely the oppressive
situations that we seek to escape, but that piece of the oppressor
which is planted deep within each of us.”
-
Audre Lorde
The
term “transformation” can be over-used in movement
spaces. Transformation this, transformative that. It’s almost
as if once you speak the word, transformation will magically take
place. However, I do prefer the term because it implies a dramatic
change from one condition to another. We don’t understand the
penetration of the hegemonic tentacles that wrap around us at birth
in this country. This means these chakras usually stay jammed and
affect our behavior in movement spaces. If ever there was a critical
mass of this chakra operating freely, I think we’d experience
tsunami-like chi on multiple levels. We would realize the
transformative changes we only theorize about now.
If
there were sound effects associated with our political baggage, we
would hear us coming before we hit the door. For some, it sounds like
boxes moving across the floor. For others, it sounds like the stones
of the Great Pyramid grinding on a concrete surface. Stuffed in these
bags are the isms of individualism, racism, sexism, ageism,
heterosexism, homophobia and classism. These isms are the carry the
toxins that maintain the hegemony of capitalism such as values,
beliefs, ideologies and practices. Whether ours is a fanny pack or
multiple matching luggage depends on how intentional and consistently
we unpack our baggage as we grow older. Although it starts with self,
unpacking your cannot be a solo act; it takes the support and wisdom
of a radical collective.
In
all the readings I’ve encountered, the target of transformation
is mainly the society. Rarely is there exploration of that piece of
the oppressor that Sista Audrey Lorde warns “is planted deep
within each of us.” All of us consciously or unconsciously are
feeding the capitalist monster. These toxins crowd out the healthy
microorganisms of self-transformation and result in our becoming the
willing carriers of all the isms which spill out into our
organizations. Those in the movement for social justice are not
immune just because we can spout political phraseology or because
we’ve been organizing for x-number of years. We have
internalized the poisonous beliefs, values and behaviors that become
normalized unless we resist, unlearn and replace with revolutionary
behaviors.
When
people come together into a collective or into a social movement, our
personal baggage collides with the political baggage. This is when
our organizations become consumed with containing the drama,
extinguishing the fires and dodging the political arrows. This is
exhausting, demoralizing and unproductive. It leaves us little time
and energy to mount a serious offensive against the Empire. Sadly,
you’ll hear people in the movement say things like “I’ve
done my time” before they move on to something else-- as if
they just served a prison sentence.
Conflict
is inevitable but it can be a healthy conduit to a deeper unity if we
engage in a collective, democratic process. Our groups do not, cannot
survive this chaos and confusion. Our struggle with hegemony must be
a conscious and ongoing one or else our organizations will be plagued
with the same isms that infect the broader society.
Three
reasons why our social movements don’t have the necessary
intensity of struggle against hegemony that we need is because: 1)
individualism is rampant in our organizations and movement spaces; 2)
we often lack consciousness about the manifestations or dangers of
hegemony and about our own complicity; and 3) we are hampered by
liberalism, i.e. unwilling to have genuine self-criticism or raise
constructive criticism of others for the greater good.
#1-Individualism
is highly promoted by this capitalism culture, as in you are so damn
smart, you don’t need these other losers. Individualism is ugly
all by itself but when class is a motivating factor, it’s super
ugly and always destructive. It’s a bad case of petty bourgeois
individualism with emphasis on petty as in trivial, insignificant,
small-minded, self-centered. Being born into the working class does
not ensure automatic, life-long membership for those who love to
throw their working class roots at you; you must consciously choose
to throw down with the class and all that it represents. The people I
know who did the most damage to organizations were the ones who
lacked working class consciousness. They had the rhetoric down but
when it came to their class interests, those folks exercised their
class privilege every time. Once they get what is needed to promote
their careers or if their self/class-interests are threatened, they
are likely to leave the organization in shambles with little remorse.
#2-Under
capitalism, the struggle against hegemony must be relentless. Our
movements must do intense study of hegemony because it is a smooth
operator. It has us doing the dirty work of propping up capitalism
without even knowing it. Or if we know it, the personal rewards are
so pleasurable that we don’t care how it impacts us or others.
Espousing politically correct rhetoric will not adequately address
hegemony, we must be radical and get to the roots. On a personal
level, this means understanding the political, cultural, social and
familial forces that impacted your development as a child and young
person. Generally, if you are a male, you got many messages that you
were superior to women. If you are heterosexual, you got messages
that homosexuality was abnormal. If you are white, you received
messages that people of color are inferior. If you are Christian, all
other religions are illegitimate. Fierce study and principled debate
can help us identify the signs whenever and wherever they appear.
#3-Our
inability and in some cases, our refusal, to combat liberalism can
never lead to principled and healthy self- criticism and criticism.
Having crit and self-crit can be compared to the agitator of a
washing machine. Some dirt from the clothes may be loosened up just
by being put in soapy water but the agitating is going to loosen up a
lot more dirt. It’s the difference between a dingy wash and a
clean wash. Our dingy movement needs some serious agitation.
And
can we discuss a revolutionary morality in our movement? This is
different from how the religious right frames it. I’m talking
about creating internal organizational cultures where negative
behaviors will not be tolerated whether it is womanizing, theft or
sexual assault. These behaviors or acts of disruption have little to
do with our struggle for liberation and democracy. They will always
undermine our unity of purpose and any strategy for power. Always. I
would hope that a revolutionary morality is one that perpetually
lifts up the most just and humane characteristics of people. A
revolutionary morality is nurtured in an environment free of
exploitation and oppression often perpetrated by us.
Self-transformation
must be a perpetual act to create and strengthen a counter-hegemonic
culture that challenges the racist, patriarchal status quo. The
social justice movements are open to all who want to struggle to be
our best selves—physically strong, mentally sharp, spiritually
sound, ideologically clear and politically grounded.This is not a
come-as-you-are party. You gotta leave your bags at the door. We’re
transforming. Another world is coming.
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