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Radio Zapatista

Cal State Los Angeles celebrates encounter for the 25 years of zapatismo

On April 26 and 27, the Encounter 25 Years of Zapatismo, Across Time & Space took place at California State University Los Angeles. The encounter brought together activists, scholars, militants, and members of organizations and collectives in the US who have been struggling for autonomy, justice and dignity in the country, many of them inspired by the Zapatista uprising. Also present were councilmembers of the Indigenous Governing Council and, via the internet, the intellectuals Raúl Zibechi and Gustavo Esteva and other Mexican activists and journalists, who analyzed the current situation experienced in that country and the organization of resistance and rebellion.

Since the Zapatista uprising on January 1, 1994, and especially after the Chican@-Zapatista Encounter in August 1997, zapatismo has inspired a large number of collectives and organizations in the US, especially of Chicanos, migrants, and people of color in general, who have adopted Zapatista forms of struggle to resist state violence, racism and repression against people of color, the prison industrial complex, gentrification and the systematic displacement of those from below, labor exploitation, deportations, raids, and much more. Thus, during these 25 years there have emerged artistic groups (see for example our documentary on the Chicano-Zapatista musical movement, Rhythms of Zapata), autonomous experiences of food sovereignty, community spaces, independent media collectives, groups of scholars proposing other epistemologies, self-defense organizations, exchanges and youth delegations to Chiapas, women’s groups, etc.

This encounter was therefore an opportunity to exchange experiences and connect struggles, while reflecting on the changes in Zapatismo in these 25 years, the civilizational crisis we face, and the situation for the peoples under the current Mexican administration.

Of fundamental importance was the participation of the councilmembers Betina Cruz Velázquez and Fortino Domínguez Rueda, of the National Indigenous Congress / Indigenous Governing Council (CNI-CIG). From his perspective as a member of the Zoque people, Fortino led us on a voyage through the history of the CNI up to the creation of the CIG and its relevance for indigenous peoples in Mexico and the world, in the context of the destruction caused by the current phase of capitalism. Betina Cruz in turn undertook a decisive and carefully documented analysis of this destruction, now led by the government of Andrés Manuel López Obrador and his so-called “fourth transformation.”

This was complemented by the analyses by Raúl Zibechi and Gustavo Esteva, who discussed the relevance of zapatismo for Latin American social movements (or societies in movement, as Zibechi proposes) and, again, the threat that the current Mexican government represents for indigenous peoples and for the construction of Zapatista autonomy. Also via the internet, from Mexico, the activists María Laura Orozco and Evangelina Ceja and the journalist Arturo de Dios analyzed the use of forced disappearance as a tool of the state, based on specific cases. And a member of the Radio Zapatista collective explained what the Zapatistas understand by the “storm” and the civilizational crisis underway.

From the standpoint of education, the influence of the Zapatista uprising on universities in the US was discussed, as well as the contributions of Zapatista education toward a decolonial and deschooling thought in that country. The topics of borders, identities, nations, and states oriented several roundtables, as well as patriarchy, feminism, and queer subversion. Former members of the now extinct organization Estación Libre shared the experience of their efforts to connect the struggles of people of color in the US and the ideas and practices of zapatismo. Food justice was present in the discussion of various autonomous experiences in food sovereignty in California, such as the South Central Farm, Zapotepec, and the Oxnard Heirloom Seed Library.

The Encounter also included a film festival, an art exhibit, a poetry recital, an evening of CompArte at the Floricanto Center, and a festive fandango at the Chicano organizational and cultural space Eastside Café.

 

radio
Amig@s de Mumia de México

(Español) Se despeja el camino hacia la libertad de Mumia Abu-Jamal

Sorry, this entry is only available in Español. For the sake of viewer convenience, the content is shown below in the alternative language. You may click the link to switch the active language.

(Sigue este enlace a la página de Amig@s de Mumia para escuchar el Mensaje de Mumia Abu-Jamal a México:  https://amigosdemumiamx.blog/)

*

Por Carolina Saldaña

El largo camino hacia la libertad de Mumia Abu-Jamal ahora se despeja con el retiro de la oposición del Fiscal de Filadelfia Larry Krasner a un dictamen favorable al preso político encarcelado durante más de 37 años.

La superación de este obstáculo significa que el internacionalmente aclamado periodista y escritor puede proceder con la re-argumentación ante la Suprema Corte de Pensilvania de cuatro apelaciones rechazadas por la Corte entre los años 1998 y 2012. Éstas involucran veinte distintas reclamaciones. El éxito lo podría llevar a un nuevo juicio para Mumia por el asesinato del policía Daniel Faulkner en 1981. Su meta es la revocación del veredicto de culpabilidad y su subsecuente libertad.

Es probable que los asuntos tratados en las apelaciones incluyan la declaración del Juez Albert Sabo, “Les voy a ayudar a freír al nigger”, el ocultamiento de la presencia de una cuarta persona en la escena del crimen, la fabricación de pruebas, la intimidación y coacción de testigos, las mentiras de testigos y el sesgo racial en la selección de los integrantes del jurado.

Voces del movimiento

En una conferencia de prensa/mitin celebrada el 18 de abril en Filadelfia, la jefa del movimiento Pam África dio la bienvenida al cambio de postura de Krasner como respuesta a la constante acción del movimiento que exige justicia y libertad para Mumia. En un ambiente revitalizado, también señalo que aparte del renovado proceso de apelación, hay múltiples motivos para que Mumia salga libre ahora mismo, una postura respaldada por todos las y los oradores, quienes   llamaron a aumentar las acciones en las calles y en las comunidades para llevar a Mumia a casa.

“En MOVE nunca nos rendimos”, dijo Mike África, hijo. Por eso pudimos llevar a casa a mi madre Debbie y mi padre Mike después de 40 años en prisión. Y por eso, vamos a sacar a nuestro hermano Mumia y los demás también. “No podemos esperar justicia debido a la buena voluntad de ningún juez, fiscal u oficial, pero sabemos que responden a la presión y ésta la vamos a aumentar”.

(Continuar leyendo…)

radio
Red Europea Zapatista

(Español) Red Europea de Solidarida Zapatista se manifiesta frente a la Embajada de México en Madrid

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Sábado 30 de marzo de 2019, Madrid, Estado Español.

Estamos aquí la Red Europea de Solidaridad Zapatista, integrada por colectivos de territorios del Estado Español, Euskal Herria, Països
Catalans, Italia, Francia, Alemania, Suiza, Grecia, Noruega, Escocia y Austria frente a la Embajada de México. ¡¡Ante el llamado de solidaridad de las y los zapatistas les decimos hoy que NO ESTÁN SOLAS!!

Hemos venido desde nuestros territorios, trayendo la voz de nuestras luchas y nuestras organizaciones, a acompañar la lucha por la vida y
contra el despojo de nuestras compañeras y compañeros zapatistas. Desde aquí, denunciamos que la autodenominada “Cuarta Transformación” del nuevo gobierno inició en 1982 con la llegada de Miguel de la Madrid y su proyecto de privatizaciones, se profundizó con
Carlos Salinas de Gortari y la firma del Tratado Libre Comercio de América del Norte. Siguió su guerra de conquista con Ernesto Zedillo, Vicente Fox, Felipe Calderón y Enrique Peña Nieto; y ahora continúa con el proyecto transexenal.

El gobierno neoliberal que encabeza Andrés Manuel López Obrador tiene la vista puesta en los territorios de los pueblos originarios, donde con el Instituto Nacional de Pueblos Indígenas se tiende una red de cooptación y desorganización que abre el camino a una guerra que tiene
nombre industrial, echa de proyectos y violencias que con el crimen organizado, expanden una oscura telaraña en los pueblos originarios del
país.

Reiteramos nuestra firme oposición a las políticas neoliberales de los viejos y los nuevos gobiernos, nuestra oposición a las consultas
amañadas que no tienen otro fin más que el despojo de los territorios. Nuestra oposición a la minería, al represamiento de los ríos, a la
construcción de autopistas, a la acelerada especulación inmobiliaria de las tierras, es decir, al modelo desarrollista centrado en los
megaproyectos neoliberales de muerte como el Corredor Transísmico o el Tren Maya. También, el Proyecto Integral Morelos que consta de 2
termoeléctricas, gasoductos y acueductos que buscan despojar a los pueblos indígenas nahuas de los estados de Morelos, Puebla y Tlaxcala,
de la tierra, el agua, la salud, la identidad y la vida campesina.

(Continuar leyendo…)

radio
Noticias de Abajo ML

(Español) Noticias de abajo – 11 de marzo de 2019

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Ir a descargar

ROMPIENDO FRONTERAS

GUATEMALA: Audio sobre el 8M Comunicado del sector Mujeres
HONDURAS: Jornada de solidaridad con Bertha Caceres
 
La tinta      

DESDE EL OMBLIGO DEL MONSTRUO

MEXICO:  Invitación a encuentro de Mujeres
HUELGA: Invitacion a radio de la huelga de la uam InfoUam
radio
Mujeres que luchan

(Español) Encuentro Nacional e Internacional de Mujeres que Luchan – CDMX – 16 y 17 de marzo

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ENCUENTRO DE MUJERES QUE LUCHAN
16 y 17 de marzo
Deportivo Coapa del SME – CDMX

http://enlacezapatista.ezln.org.mx/2019/02/26/convocatoria-encuentro-de-mujeres-este-16-y-17-de-marzo-en-la-ciudad-de-mexico/

Foto de portada: Ana Lilia Felix Pichardo

 

radio
Observatorio de las democracias

Homenaje a las mujeres que luchan

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Por Proyecto de Videoastas Indígenas de la Frontera Sur (PVIFS)[1]

Las mujeres zapatistas nos dijeron al cierre del Primer Encuentro Internacional, Político, Artístico, Deportivo y Cultural de Mujeres que Luchan:

Hermanas y compañeras:
este día 8 de marzo, al final de nuestra participación,
encendimos una pequeña luz cada una de nosotras.
La encendimos con una vela para que tarda, porque con cerillo rápido se acaba
y con encendedor, pues, qué tal que se descompone.
Esa pequeña luz es para ti.
Llévala, hermana y compañera.
Cuando te sientas sola.
Cuando tengas miedo.
Cuando sientas que es muy dura la lucha, o sea la vida,
préndela de nuevo en tu corazón, en tu pensamiento, en tus tripas.
Y no la quedes, compañera y hermana.
Llévala a las desaparecidas.
Llévala a las asesinadas.
Llévala a las presas.
Llévala a las violadas.
Llévala a las golpeadas.
Llévala a las acosadas.
Llévala a las violentadas de todas las formas.
Llévala a las migrantes.
Llévala a las explotadas.
Llévala a las muertas.
Llévala y dile a todas y cada una de ellas que no está sola, que vas a luchar por ella.
Que vas a luchar por la verdad y la justicia que merece su dolor.
Que vas a luchar porque el dolor que carga
no se vuelva a repetir en otra mujer en cualquier mundo.
Llévala y conviértela en rabia, en coraje, en decisión.
Llévala y júntala con otras luces…
Hermanas y compañeras:
Aquí, delante de todas las que somos aquí y las que no están pero están con el corazón y el pensamiento, les proponemos que acordemos seguir vivas y seguir luchando,
cada quien según su modo, su tiempo y su mundo…
(Caracol de Morelia, Chiapas, México, a 10 de marzo de 2018)[2]

Entonces era marzo, a finales de agosto, lxs coordinadorxs[3]  del PVIFS, con esa llama encendida, arribamos a tierras recuperadas por los, las, les garífunas en la costa norte Caribe de Honduras. Tierras recuperadas a punta de movilización que abrió la vía jurídica. Tierras de la Organización Fraternal Negra de Honduras (OFRANEH). Aún retumbaba en nuestra cabeza la palabra de las mujeres zapatistas: “… seguir vivas y seguir luchando, cada quien según su modo, su tiempo y su mundo…”

(Continuar leyendo…)

radio
Democracy Now!

The Triumphant Homecoming of Angela Davis

By Amy Goodman & Denis Moynihan

“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere,” Martin Luther King Jr. wrote in his Letter From Birmingham Jail on April 16, 1963. King was arrested there for his role in organizing nonviolent protests against segregation, which were being led by the Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth. “Birmingham is probably the most thoroughly segregated city in the United States,” King also wrote in that famous letter. Civil-rights campaigners were so frequently targeted with bombs by the Ku Klux Klan that the city was often called “Bombingham.” Five months after King’s letter, one of those bombs went off at Birmingham’s 16th Street Baptist Church, killing four little girls. Today, across the street from that church sits the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute (BCRI), which for more than a quarter century has educated and inspired millions of visitors.

Last October, the BCRI announced it would bestow its 2018 Rev. Fred L. Shuttlesworth Human Rights Award on Angela Y. Davis, the legendary civil-rights activist, prison abolition advocate and scholar. Angela Davis is a Birmingham native, and grew up amidst segregation. Her neighborhood suffered so many Klan bombings that it was nicknamed “Dynamite Hill.” The daughter of civil-rights activists, she went on to become a prominent member of the Communist Party USA and a leader in the Black Panther Party. As a result, like so many activists in that era (MLK included), she was targeted by the FBI. She was charged as a conspirator in the shooting death of a judge. She faced three death sentences in a trial that became an international cause celebre. She was ultimately acquitted of all the charges.

The BCRI’s decision to honor Angela Davis made perfect sense. She has gained renown for her tireless work on behalf of prisoners and to abolish the U.S. prison-industrial complex. Integral to her life’s work, she has long expressed unflinching support for the rights of Palestinian people. In a recently published collection of essays and speeches titled “Freedom Is a Constant Struggle: Ferguson, Palestine, and the Foundations of a Movement,” she writes, reflecting on the life of Nelson Mandela and the successful campaign to eliminate South African apartheid, “We are now confronted with the task of assisting our sisters and brothers in Palestine as they battle against Israeli apartheid.”

Two months after the BCRI board members announced that she had been granted the Shuttlesworth award, they received a letter from the Birmingham Holocaust Education Center asking them to reconsider the award in part because of Davis’ “outspoken support of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) campaign against Israel.” The BCRI board, in a 9-2 vote, rescinded the award. It canceled the award gala that had been scheduled for Feb. 16.

The response in Birmingham was swift and angry. Birmingham’s school board and city council both voted unanimously to show their support for Davis. Birmingham Mayor Randall Woodfin publicly condemned the decision. A group formed to plan an event to honor Davis on the night of the original gala.

Within days, the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute board reversed its decision and asked Angela Davis to accept the award.

Last Friday night, “Angela Solidarity Shabbats” were held in dozens of cities, organized by Jewish Voice for Peace. Jesse Schaffer hosted the celebration in Birmingham.

“My Judaism is directly rooted in social justice,” he told us at the Shabbat. “For me, Angela Davis is a direct expression of those values, and she has always understood that our historic struggles are linked, whether it’s Palestinians, it’s black folks in the South, Jewish folks – really, any struggle for justice – that they’re all linked and that we’re stronger together.”

On Saturday night, more than 3,000 people poured into Birmingham’s Boutwell Auditorium for an evening organized by the Birmingham Committee for Truth and Reconciliation. At the event, Davis reflected on how meaningful the Shabbats were to her:

“‘Angela, sister, you are welcome in this Shabbat’ comes from a slogan that was used on many posters all over the country when I was underground fleeing the FBI. People put up these posters on their doors: ‘Angela, sister, you are welcome in this house.’”

The city’s first elected African-American mayor, Richard Arrington, Jr., wrapped up the evening, saying, “I am especially proud that in this moment of challenge we ran not in different directions, not venting the anger and the frustration we felt; instead, we ran to one another, linked arms, embraced one another and lifted up a daughter who is celebrated in the world community for her stand on human rights.”

Angela Davis says whether or not she returns to accept the Shuttlesworth Award will have to be a community decision. She offered as her final words Saturday night: “Let us use this moment to generate the strength and the enthusiasm and the vision to move forward to a better future for Birmingham, for the country and for the entire world.”

Source: Democracy Now!

radio
Mario Caporali

Words by mapuche activist Moira Millán, judicialized for defending her people’s rights

On February 21, 2019, weichafe Moira Ivana Millán will be tried in Argentina. She is charged with “aggravated coercion” for organizing a peaceful demonstration in 2017 in protest of the violations to the rights of Mapuche communities committed by the Argentinian gendarmerie during the raids in September of that year. The raids were authorized by the federal judge Guido Otranto, and were part of the investigations for the disappearance of the activist Santiago Maldonado in August 2017, and who was found ded in October that year. During the raids, the gendarmerie beat and humilliated the Mapuche people.

Moira Millán was acquitted of all charges in September 2018 by judge Gustavo Lleral, but the prosecution appealed the decision. If she is declared guilty this February 21, she could face from two to four years in prison.

radio
Mujeres que luchan en México y el mundo

Letter to the zapatista women from the women who struggle in Mexico and the world

Letter in Japanese
Letter in Turkish
Letter in Italian
Letter in Portuguese
Letter in French
Letter in German
Letter in Spanish

LETTER TO THE ZAPATISTA WOMEN
FROM THE WOMEN WHO STRUGGLE IN MEXICO AND THE WORLD
(signed by 891, Organizations, Collectives, Networks, and Individuals)

To our compañeras Zapatistas
To the women of the world who struggle
To the grandmothers, mothers, sisters, youth and girls
To those who have the heart of a woman

We the undersigned are women of Mexico and the world, convened by the Zapatista women on March 8th, 2018 in the First International Political, Artistic, Cultural and Sports Encounter of Women Who Struggle.

We reaffirm that every one of us committed ourselves to struggle, each one from our own place of origin or new home places, from our distinct cultures and occupations, so that “not one more woman in the world, regardless of color, size, or place of origin, should feel alone or afraid anymore”. We committed ourselves to the light that all of you shared with us in our gathering, and to the light that all of you represent to all of us. We keep that light alive in order to be, to walk and to struggle together.

Today we proclaim that we will not allow the bad governments to destroy your worlds and displace you from the territories that provide the roots, heartbeat and direction to your lives and dreams. We will denounce, through multiple venues and modes, the misuse of practices of cultural resistance, staging ancestral people’s rituals to justify megaprojects of death and sickness imposed by the patriarchal capitalist system.

Given the conditions of war that we continue to face every day as women, we reaffirm our agreement to “stay alive, and for us to live is to struggle, each one according to her means, her time and her place.”

Now is the time to tell the bad governments, past and present, in every corner and place in the world, that we repudiate, from our multiple locations and territories, the practices of concessions, extraction, and the misuse and abuse of our Mother Earth. “Fracking,” gas and oil pipelines, massive hydroelectric dams, extensive agro-industrial monocultures of crops and trees, and infrastructure for corporate tourism in indigenous territories, all benefit major commercial projects, at the cost of indigenous and non-indigenous peoples’ lives and territories. In the face of profit-seeking interests, we will struggle for Life, for the lives and territories of people and other living beings.

As women, we know the value of life and for this reason we work to build conditions that support life. We declare that yes, we can do this, we women with our collective hearts. You are not alone compañeras zapatistas, friends, and sisters, and neither are your children, families and peoples!

Quotations excerpted from Zapatista Women (2018) Zapatista Women’s Opening Address at the First International Gathering of Politics, Art, Sport, and Culture for Women in Struggle. March 8, 2018. Caracol in the Tzots Choj zone. March 26, 2018, Enlace Zapatista:
http://enlacezapatista.ezln.org.mx/2018/03/26/zapatista-womens-opening-address-at-the-first-international-gathering-of-politics-art-sport-and-culture-for-women-in-struggle/

(Continuar leyendo…)

radio
Red Ya-Basta-Netz Alemania

(Español) Desde Alemania, solidaridad con la lucha zapatista

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El pasado 25 de enero de 2019 se realizó la Jornada de Movilización Global contra los Proyectos de Destrucción y en Defensa de la Madre Tierra en muchas partes de México y del mundo.

En Hamburgo, Alemandia, se llevó a cabo la plática “¡Yepa, Yepa! 35/25 Años de la Lucha Zapatista: Un internacionalismo en concreto”. Quienes participaron en el evento mandaron una carta en solidaridad con la lucha zapatista y los pueblos originarios de México.

Reproducimos aquí la carta:

(Continuar leyendo…)