It took U.S. activists decades of campaigning against
the apartheid regime in South Africa to arrive at strategies that,
when combined with a commitment to transnational relationships, changed
more than individual attitudes. The anti-apartheid movement changed
the balance of power in the U.S., the future of South Africa, and
lives on both sides of the Atlantic. Ten years later, the threat
of moving backward is quite real and the stakes are even higher.
In place of an apartheid state we now face a Global Apartheid that
demands a U.S. movement at its best and most effective.
Apartheid was destined to fail,
as it sought to establish itself amidst a growing desire for self-determination
in colonial Africa.
The 1960s confirmed this destiny as the French and the British
began releasing their colonies in West and Southern Africa. The
architects of apartheid continued to move against the grain and
made political decisions to entrench the system and further divide
the country along racial lines, preserving the best resources including
access to education, land, and the country’s mineral wealth
for their own purposes and exploiting the black majority for cheap
labor.
The 1960s also marked an important era in the
struggle for equality and civil rights in the United States,
with the establishment of
the Voting Rights Act of 1965 resulting in increased representation
in Congress. These events were significant to the anti-apartheid
struggle, as African-Americans gained access to decision making
apparatus in the U.S. and sought to bring the struggle against
apartheid to the forefront of their domestic agenda. What followed
was one of the most significant and effective mobilization campaigns
in history that peaked in the 1980s, gaining unprecedented media,
political and international attention, and achieving it’s
ultimate goal in the early Nineties with the end of apartheid and
the first free and fair elections in South Africa.
Perhaps the single most significant factor
in the defeat of this system was the unity of internal resistance
to apartheid and external
pressure from international institutions and the grassroots corporate
and congressional campaigns waged here in the U.S. On both the
local and national level organizations and individuals challenged
the private sector through shareholder resolutions and divestment
campaigns. They took on the U.S. government, ultimately passing
sanctions against the rogue apartheid regime over Reagan’s
veto, by mobilizing support on Capitol Hill and in Congressional
districts across the country. Domestic and international forces
joining together proved too much for the Afrikaner elite and forced
one of the most poignant transitions to democracy in this century.
But why was the struggle against apartheid so successful in the
U.S., which has traditionally pursued a separate and unequal foreign
policy relationship with Africa? The answer resides in the involvement
of African-Americans in this struggle and their ability to mobilize
strategic national campaigns on a broad scale that forced social
and political change. African-Americans were empowered by African
liberation and sought to strengthen the push for independence during
the Sixties. They benefited from the intellectual and political
leadership that arose from this era and sought to work with their
African contemporaries to achieve political, economic and racial
equality for Afro-descendants in general, not just Afro-descendants
in America. Basically, they saw a historical relationship and through
that relationship addressed common goals.
The anti-apartheid movement of the 80s and
90s saw a movement at its best – a strategic movement,
guided by political solidarity, engaging a broad base of activists,
and successfully demanding
change.
Today our fight is against a system of Global apartheid dominated
by a white elite minority who dictate access to basic human rights
for the global majority based on race, gender and geography. Unfortunately,
the heightened level of engagement between Black American and African
communities has waned in the last ten years, resulting in less
pressure on the U.S. government, corporations, and international
institutions to maintain an awareness and commitment to equality
and justice for African peoples. The absence of the African-American
community in the global struggle for access to education, health,
and economic resources is reflected in the lack of credibility
and effectiveness of the current movement.
Just as in apartheid South Africa, the global oppression of many
at the hands of a few is inextricably linked with race. Any attempt
to affect real change in the current political environment must
acknowledge the fact that race has always been, and continues to
be today, a major determinant of U.S. domestic and foreign policy.
If there is to be real success in dismantling global apartheid,
activists in the U.S. must build a social movement that recognizes
and prioritizes the centrality of race. And in order to push for
real change on these terms it is essential that African struggles
be drawn to the center of the discussion.
Nowhere is the impact of Global apartheid more
clear than on the continent of Africa. Sub-Saharan Africa is
the poorest region in
the world, and yet in the past two decades it has spent more servicing
illegitimate debts to rich countries than it has received in new
loans or foreign assistance. With only 10% of the world’s
population, Africa claims more than 70% of people living with HIV/AIDS,
not to mention the lowest life expectancies and highest infant
mortality rates in the world. There is no place in the world more
affected by the legacy of racism, colonialism and Cold War interference.
The point here is simple: If the system we challenge has its deadliest
consequences in Africa, any movement in the U.S. that seeks to
be credible must prioritize solidarity with African struggles.
Bringing Africa and race into the debate over
a new global system were key contributions of the anti-apartheid
struggle. Illuminating
the supportive role of the U.S. in the racial oppression of South
Africans mirrored the struggles of Black Americans in this country.
By positioning racial justice as a central motivation in the stand
against the global status quo a new constituency was, and again
can be, created that is based on political solidarity. In this
movement Black people will take real leadership in a global struggle
that is intimately tied to the success of their own resistance
against multiple forms of oppression. But only by putting Africa
where it belongs – at the center – will the full potential
of this movement be realized.
The shifting set of individuals and organizations
that claim the mantle of the Global Justice Movement in the U.S.
will continue
to lack a coherent strategy and broad-based credibility – and
as a consequence will continue to lack Black people – until
Africa is drawn away from the margins and into the core of these
activities. The “Seattle Model” that has set the tone
in this burgeoning network for the last five years has ignored
this central reality, and left us with little more than the familiar
trinity: Teach-In, March, and Rally. It is essential that we build
a new movement by holding on to those important lessons from the
past – creating strategies that fit new political realities
and building relationships between a new generation of activists.
The most appropriate way to recognize this
10th anniversary is to use the lessons of this historical movement
and apply relevant
strategies to address modern issues of justice and equality. Black
Americans in particular must make the link between common struggles
and broadly invest themselves in this international struggle. Prominent
leaders as well as grassroots advocates must allow space for a
new generation of socially and globally conscious youth to engage
in movement building and mobilization. The generation of activists
that were engaged in the fight to end apartheid must share their
experience and strategies with coming generations, supporting their
interest in African issues, and linking the “microcosm” of
Africa to the overall picture of present day global apartheid.
Finally, Africa must be centrally placed in the fight for global
justice to fully illustrate global disparities and ensure that
American efforts, such as those of the anti-apartheid era, impact
the international order.
Devanne Brookins currently works as Africa Program Associate
at Global
Rights, formerly the International Human Rights Law Group,
with a programmatic focus on Burundi, Sierra Leone and the Democratic
Republic of Congo. Andre Banks is an Assistant Director of the
Africa’s Right to Health Campaign at Africa
Action, the nation's oldest organization focused on African
affairs. Both are interested in constituency building that incorporates
youth into Diaspora and global justice struggles.
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