Links needs your support! Donate what you can!
Click on Links masthead to clear previous query from search box
Recent comments
- you are welcome
1 day 3 hours ago - A new movement - a moral imperative.
1 day 4 hours ago - Thanks to Pham Binh for
1 day 13 hours ago - agreed
2 days 23 hours ago - Some differences matter more than others
3 days 3 hours ago - "Voluntarily handing power back to their exploiters"??
3 days 9 hours ago - you say "For the global
3 days 11 hours ago - Question
4 days 8 hours ago - State of left unity in Europe
4 days 14 hours ago - irony
4 days 17 hours ago
Racism, domination and revolution in Bolivia
By Adolfo Gilly
September 22, 2008 -- Mexico -- “The problem in Bolivia is that the country is undergoing a process of reforms, without abandoning the democratic framework, but both the opposition and the government act as if they were facing a revolution”, stated Marco Aurelio García, a close international affairs advisor to [Brazil's president] Lula, according to an article by José Natanson in the newspaper Pagina 12.
Allowing
myself to not take this declaration literally, but instead in an ironic
sense, Marco Aurelio García, an intelligent and well-informed man,
can’t help but realise that if the two protagonists of the Bolivian
confrontation believe that they are dealing with a revolution, this
belief is the best confirmation that, in effect, it is. The vice-president of Bolivia, Álvaro García Linera, on the other hand, has said that what
is happening is “an increase in elites, an increase in rights, and a
redistribution of wealth. This, in
Domination questioned
He is right: in
The
massacre in Pando, with more than 30 campesinos assassinated in cold
blood by the hit men of the white minority, and the horrific scenes of
humiliation, pain and punishment of the indigenous people in the public
plaza of Sucre and in the streets of Santa Cruz de
Indigenous uprising
The
Bolivian right wing, the old and not-so-old elites, the owners of land
and of lives, were defeated by the immense indigenous and popular
uprising that began with the Water Wars in the year 2000, culminated
with the rebellion of El Alto in October 2003, and concluded with Evo
Morales’ entry into the presidency in January 2005. The new constitution, even though subjected to a referendum, and other measures
by the
This
process was approved again by a the great majority of the Bolivian
people in the referendum on August 10; 67 per cent of the votes–-more
than two-thirds–- with up to 85 per cent approval in the communities of
the Altiplano. The dominant white minority in the eastern region has
incited revolt and, with brutality and ferociousness, challenges these
national electoral results and threatens secession.
This
minority knows well that it is not about simple “democratic
improvements/extensions” but that instead it is about a revolution that
questions the minority’s power and its privileges, the “structural
inheritance” of its despotic rule. Therefore a revolution is one of
those culminating moments in which the insurgent movement of the people
touches those exact bases of domination, tries to destroy them, and is
able to fracture the dividing line where that domination passes through
the given society.
It
is not about the line that separates the governors from the governed, a
political question, but instead about the line that separates the
dominators from the subaltern. In the classical sense, social
revolution refers to the subversion of that social domination and not
just to political or economic domination.
That dividing line is sharp and deep in
In
that domination, being a full citizen means being white or an
assimilated mestizo. To become a citizen, an Indian must stop being
Indian and see themselves and be seen as being white; break from their
concrete historical community, that of the Aymaras, the Quechuas, the
Guaraníes or another one of the many indigenous Bolivian communities;
and enter as a newly arrived subordinate into the abstract community of
the citizens of the Republic. The Indian does not expect that the
Republic will change and be like his people. Instead, it is required
that these people change their men and women, renounce their identity
and their history and be like the Republic of the whites, the rich, the
eucated, the Spanish-speakers – where, for everyone else, the
inerasable colour of their skin will forever condemn them (those men and
women) to second-class citizenship. That is the nature of this
domination.
Ancient civilisation
The
strength of the revolution taking place in Bolivia is supported by an
ancient civilisation, invisible in the law but one that persists in the
languages, customs, belief, relationships of solidarities and
communities, both rural and urban. The dominated brown-skinned people
were not brought from other lands. There were there before, they were
and they continue to be the native civilisation. The filmmaker Jorge
Sanginés, in an unforgettable film, called it “The Clandestine Nation”.
Guillermo Bonfil named it “Deep Mexico: A Civilisation Denied”.
Following in their steps, I have named it “a subaltern civilisation” in
my book, Historia a contrapelo.
Clandestine,
denied or subaltern, the social and cultural framework of those native
civilisations appears at the moment of organising the uprisings and the
rebellions of their heirs and bearers, because those rebellions and
uprisings are roots as deep as the root of racial domination.
That
strength also lives in the inherited framework of the dominated and
subaltern who spark revolt to win all of the rights that the racial
Republic denies them or limits for them: dignity and respect, spaces of
liberty and organisation, the natural resources of their land,
education, health, everything that constitutes the social framework of
a Republic of equals.
The
old republican motto “liberty, equality, fraternity” has in such
rebellions its double: “land, justice, solidarity”. In these regions
there is not liberty without land redistribution, there is not equality
without justice for all, and there is not fraternity without solidarity
between the multiple communities and between the entire community of
this nation of nations that is
It
is not just about a new political and economic order. It is about what
in the Bolivian context will constitute a new social order. From that
comes the bestial violence of the reactions of the privileged minority
groups and their hitmen, as in Pando, in
All of
They
will not allow it. They have enough experience and organisation to know
how to respond to the violence with violence if their governors, for
whom they wait but of whom they also make demands, do not stop and
punish the criminals, the only sensible and effective resolution that
could come from the current negotiations between the fighting forces.
Indigenous and working-class in the east mobilising
The expulsion of the
However, it is not just the governments who are playing. In
A
report from the Gran Pueblo Chiquitano, from the eastern region,
decided on September 15 that “they had reached their limit for
tolerance and they will renew the sense of survival and fury of the
Pueblo Chiquitano to fight fiercely for their Land, Dignity, and
Indigenous Autonomy”. Therefore, it was decided “to confirm the
consequence and unshakeable struggle to defend the results of the
constituent process, which has included our historical demands […] So
that we will never again be slaves nor servants of the ogliarchic and
land-owning groups of Santa Cruz!”; and “to warn the Civil Authorities
and Prefectural Authorities from the department of Santa Cruz that the
indigenous territories that are titled and those that are in the
process of reorganisation are untouchable, cannot be changed, and are
not subject to external authority.”
A declaration by the Social Organizations of Eastern Bolivia
demanded on September 17 that “the Parliament and the National
Government not touch the new Political Constitution of the State
approved in Oruro on December 9th, 2007, above all the chapter on
autonomies, since it is there that the principal demands of more than
25 years of struggle are located and claimed. Humiliated and
persecuted, we, and our fallen brothers and sisters, advocate, march
and die for our liberation and the liberation of all Bolivian People.”
A
September 17 alert from the Coordinating Committee of the Indigenous
Peoples of Santa Cruz says, “Those who assaulted our offices are sent
by and paid for by the land speculators, big landowners and those who
enslave our indigenous brothers and sisters, and by the Prefect, the
Mayor, and civic committees, who oppose our historical demand placed in
the New Political Constitution: the autonomous indigenous territories,
without subordination to any regional authority, which has an
inalienable character and is thus the basis of our liberation as a
people.”
In
this terrain, that of a revolution whose makers and protagonists are
not ready to give it up nor negotiate it no matter what the cost and no
matter what violence the land-owners and racists will execute, are the
confrontations in
[This article was published in Spanish in the









Comments
Post new comment