Thursday, October 16, 2008

US, Northwest Anarchist People of Color Gathering - report-back


The weekend of Friday August 15th through August 17th marked the renewal of a
specifically anarchist presence among people of color in the Northwest. The
gathering took place in Portland, Oregon over a three-day period. Around twenty
people of color from all over the region attended the gathering coming from as
far away as Eugene and Bellingham. Olympia, Seattle and Portland were also
represented at the event. The focus of the weekend was to define what an APOC
(Anarchist People of Color) organization looks like, specifically in the context
of the Northwest, and also to define what it means to be part of an APOC identity.

Friday night was focused on a social event at a fellow APOCer's house where
folks could hang out with one another, eat food, and get to know everyone who
would be part of the gathering. This was in sharp contrast to many other
activist events that take place. The focus here instead was on building
community and feeling comfortable around one another rather than insisting on
immediately "getting down to business." Despite the amazing community- building
that happened that weekend, there was much business that had to be addressed.

Saturday began with a report-back from the NE APOC gathering that happened just
before the one in the Northwest, followed by lively discussions about the APOC
of the past. APOC, as an idea, began over the Internet on a listserv in 2001 by
Ernesto Aguilar and was inspired by anarchists of color throughout history, such
as Lucy Parsons, Lorenzo Kom'boa Ervin, and Ricardo Flores Magon. In 2003, the
first formal gathering of Anarchist People of Color at the national level
occurred in Detroit, Michigan at Wayne State University. Although some
factionalism occurred at the conference (see illvox.org), a sense of purpose
emerged from the conference in general. After hurricane Katrina in 2005, plans
fell through for another national conference that was to be held in Houston,
Texas. Resources could not be gathered to change the conference's venue in time.
Thus, 2009 will mark the renewal of APOC at a national level. The gatherings
that are taking place now in the Northeast, Northwest, and soon in the Southwest
are precursors to this renewal.

In the past, APOC has not been associated with any sort of centralized group,
but instead is a network made up of individuals and collectives. There are many
different ideas concerning what APOC is, what it should be, and what it means to
claim an APOC identity. In fact, the diversity of opinions present throughout
APOC is one of the reasons why it is an important presence in left revolutionary
movements today. At the recent Northwest gathering, participants articulated
many of these points that make APOC essential and relevant. One of these ideas,
and one that is particularly salient, was the fact that an APOC organization
gives people of color working for social change a chance to come together and
take back our communities. It gives us the impetus to create revolution in the
here and now. In other words, coming together with other people of color who
have similar experiences is incredibly empowering and gives us insight that we
didn't have before that we can then use in our own communities.

Furthermore, an APOC presence allows people of color to reclaim our
anti-authoritarian past and ideas from what has become a movement with a
majority-white face. This reminds us, and the world, that people of color all
over the place were living in anti-authoritarian societies long before Proudhon
or Bakunin ever wrote it down and called it anarchism. Therefore, APOC is
extremely important because it allows people of color to look back and take
pride in our history that has been erased through colonialism, imperialism, and
domination. It shows the world that anarchism is not just for and by white
people. It is for all people. Lastly, an APOC presence allows a place for people
of color to find support outside of our mass movement work.

The left in the United States is composed primarily of white folks. Because of
this, people of color involved in these movements face a lot of difficulties
from flat-out racism to being marginalized and not understood by their comrades
who have completely different experiences. APOC serves as a place for people
with similar experiences in relation to race to come together and find
much-needed support and guidance.

One issue that came up at the gathering that will need to be discussed and
analyzed further both in the Northwest and at a national level is the term APOC
itself. What does it mean? What does the "A" mean? How does this label make
people of color feel? Some people prefer the terms "autonomous" or
"anti-authoritarian" to "anarchist." The reasons for this are plenty and include
issues of inclusivity and appearances. Many people of color in the U.S. today do
not wish to be associated with what has become the stereotypical white North
American anarchist movement that is less about community and more about creating
a lifestyle out of anarchism. Because of these common notions of what anarchism
is, many people of color feel that the term alienates us from the communities we
come from. Furthermore, it was pointed out at the gathering that we shouldn't
feel obligated to define ourselves by our relationships to racism, colonialism,
and imperialism, because all people of color have different relationships to
these histories. In other words, all people of color are not the same and we all
have our own complex pasts and stories. However, what all people of color do
have in common is the fact that we are not white in a society that elevates
whiteness, maleness, heterosexuality, money, etc. above all else and defines
everything in relation to these "norms." Because of this, there is common ground
for us to work together around issues that affect people of color in particular
such as immigration, access to healthcare, gentrification, sexual violence, gang
presence, war in our communities, and the prison industrial complex.

The weekend ended with brainstorming about how our current work on issues as
diverse as working with youth, poetry and spoken word, hip hop, Industrial
Workers of the World, infoshops, homeless outreach, prison work, education, and
student movements fits into an APOC identity in the Northwest. We brainstormed
particular groups that are already working around issues that affect us as
people of color in the region. We identified groups such as OLIN in Portland who
do Zapatista solidarity work, Communities Against Rape and Abuse in Seattle who
are an affiliate of INCITE! Women of Color Against Violence, Seattle Solidarity
Network who are doing a lot of positive work against gentrification, and Olympia
Industrial Workers of the World who are doing support work for day laborers in
the area. At the conclusion of the weekend, we had developed a small community
among APOCers in the Northwest, a plan to publish a periodical, some concrete
ideas to be thinking about, and a date for the next gathering in December of
2008 in Olympia, WA.

http://www.ainfos.ca/en/ainfos21540.html

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