"No
movement can survive unless it is constantly growing and changing
with the times. If it isn't growing, it's stagnant, and without the
support of the people, no movement for liberation can exist, no
matter how correct its analysis of the situation is."
- Assata
Shakur
I've
received incredible response to the Chakra series already; the
articles are resonating with freedom fighters. I believe it's because
over the last several years I've been listening to your frustrations,
pain, insights and aspirations. There's enough of us seriously doing
the work to create a sea change in movements for transformative
change. Let’s start, or in some cases, accelerate the important
discussion about what we are building and how we will organize for
power.
I
started off the year with talking about the 3 S’s—what we
need more of in our movement building. To be more strategic, more
serious and more sophisticated. I talked about the 3 S’s
publicly as a panelist in the M4BL webinar on “Political
Power.” Since then, I’ve added two more S’s: More
science and more study. All five are critical to thinking about
organization for transformation.
Winona
LaDuke reminds us that there is no “social-change fairy.”
Neither can we chant or talk our way to power. We must organize the
masses of people based upon a vision and a strategy. It takes a plan
to build a house, write a book. It takes a protocol to do surgery, to
work in the pit stop. Individualism in our movements is on steroids
and contributes to the erroneous view that we can come into the
movement, and stumble and fumble up on social change.
In
our current situation, to resist is to almost be passive. It’s
like trying to hold back the floodgates of neo-liberalism but not
move forward. There must be an action verb connected to resist.
Resist and rebuild. Resist and renew. Resist and organize. It
imperative that we don’t lose the political ground that we’ve
fought so hard to gain. Now, we must be bolder and more creative in
our strategy and tactics. We should start thinking about disruption
tactics (like a national strike!) to turn up the heat and to win our
demands. This is a good time to discuss campaigns like
UnGovernable2017 as a focus for strategic action.
Last
year the New York Times report on protests of police killings in 88
cities over a two-week period. I wondered what our movement’s
net gain was given the amount of energy and resources these actions
took. Did we get a cop convicted? Did we change a department’s
policy on deadly force? Did our organizations grow? We know that
these mass actions are psychological boosters for our people but we
need to be planning protests in a way that advances our struggle,
pushes a set of demands. This is the time to be more sophisticated
and strategic. Let’s rally people beyond a protest sign and
around a strategic, principles of organizing and a revolutionary code
of conduct.
First,
do no harm to our movements and its committed members. If we take
ourselves seriously, the way in which we do our work reflects whether
you believe our struggle is worthy and winnable. There’s gonna
be hustlers in our movement. There’s gonna be those who don’t
do the work but take credit for the work of others. We should make it
difficult for these blood-suckers of the movement to operate and to
operate without consequences. We must create healthy and safe space
for the vigorous practice of self-criticism and criticism as well as
for redemption and healing.
What
study and retooling does our movement need to better understand the
period we are in? Groups like Project South, School of Unity and
Liberation (SOUL) and institutions like The Highlander provide us
with valuable popular education and training modules. Can we give
them feedback when we use their resources to improve their relevancy
and potency? Of course we can, but we must be disciplined enough to
conduct trainings and political education for our networks, then
facilitate a summation that allows us to build and grow. Feel free to
add to the accompanying resource list to the Chakra series.
The
Movement Chakras of vision, strategy, organizing, workstyle,
redemption, transformation and summation are congested, obstructed,
jammed up. I have often said some of the brightest and imaginative
people are in our social justice movements. We can—and
must—figure out our collective vision and purpose. Our goal in
the next five years is to build highly disciplined organizations and
formidable movements that actively engage in political education,
constructive criticism and radical workstyles. We need to get our
people ready for battle. It’s time to get in formation.
Unblocking our
Movement Chakras: Recommended Resources
(Please
share any readings, videos, etc.
related
to the series that we can add to this list.)
Accountability
to the Collective
A
protocol created by the Organization for Black Struggle
Creating
a Viable Left: Sixteen Lessons Learned from Building the Black
Radical Congress
By
Jamala Rogers and Bill Fletcher, Jr.
Combat
Liberalism
By
Mao Zedong, Adapted by the Organization for Black Struggle-St. Louis,
MO
The
Demise of the Women of Color Resource Center*
By
the Community Task Force
Ella
Taught Me: Shattering the Myth of the Leaderless Movement
By
Barbara Ransby
More
Than We Imagined*
Ear
to the Ground Project by NTanya Lee and Steve Williams
Up
You Mighty Race*
By
Umi Selah (Formerly known as Phillip Agnew)
*Denotes
an article cited in the Unblocking the Movement Chakras series
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