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Cotric | Radio Zapatista

(Español) “Se van pero se quedan” – Termina el primer CompArte de Danza “Báilate otro mundo”

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.

El primer festival de danza convocado por el EZLN, el CompArte “Báilate otro mundo”, concluyó ayer, 20 de diciembre de 2019, en el caracol Jacinto Canek, en las instalaciones del Cideci, en San Cristóbal de Las Casas.

Después de los reconocimientos a los artistas, entregados por la Comandancia del Ejército Zapatista de Liberación Nacional, se presentaron Argelia Guerrero, Paulina Segura y Germán Pizano (con la obra “Zapata”) y la niña Libertad Hernández, en un emocionante acto de clausura en homenaje al 26 aniversario del levantamiento armado del EZLN.

Al terminar, el Subcomandante Insurgente Moisés se despidió con estas palabras: “No tenemos más que darles, más que las gracias. Se van pero se quedan. Nosotros, un día nos vamos. Muchas gracias.”

El Colectivo Transdisciplinario de Investigaciones Críticas (Cotric) hizo el siguiente registro fotográfico.

(Continuar leyendo…)

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Radio Zapatista

(Español) “Bailando la libertad” – tercer día del CompArte de Danza “Báilate otro mundo”

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.

Liberarse de la esclavitud del capital, del consumo, de las pequeñas y grandes cosas que nos atan a vidas sin vida y volar, bailando en el aire.

El tercer día del CompArte de Danza 2019 “Báilate otro mundo” continuó ayer 18 de diciembre en el caracol Jacinto Canek, en las instalaciones del Cideci, en San Cristóbal de Las Casas.

La jornada inició con el “divertimento coreográfico” “Tríptico”, del Colectivo Sociodanza, colectivo de danza contemporánea del Faro del Oriente en la Ciudad de México, en el que, con música de Vivaldi y coreografía de Miriam Álvarez, se abordan temas tan diversos como la memoria del movimiento del 68 a las encrucijadas en las que cada decisión implica la castración de otra posibilidad.

Victoria Arts se presentó de nuevo con las obras de ballet “Ave María” y “Carmen”, deslumbrando una vez más a un público en su mayoría zapatista.

El Colectivo Sociodanza se presentó también con la pieza “Esclavo”, un comentario sobre la esclavitud que con frecuencia implica la dependencia tecnológica y la afición por el consumo.

Los colectivos Marabunta y El Puente invitaron al público a volar hacia otros mundos posibles por medio de la danza aérea, y el colectivo GACHO presentó “Cempasúchitl, flores de la memoria”.

La Compañía Tierra Independiente presentó la extraordinaria pieza “Coreografías unipersonales y colectivas”.

Por su parte, Jorge Izquierdo presentó la plática “Ver, observar, percibir para interpretar la danza”, sobre la fotografía de danza y la creación.

En la tarde se impartieron también talleres abiertos de danza contemporánea, expresión corporal, malabar, danza africana y danza árabe.

El CompArte de Danza 2019 continúa hoy en el caracol Jacinto Canek en San Cristóbal de Las Casas, y termina mañana, viernes 20 de diciembre.

 

Ve un poco de la pieza “Tríptico” del colectivo Sociodanza:

Fotos (Radio Zapatista y Colectivo Transdisciplinario de Investigaciones Críticas (COTRIC)):

(Continuar leyendo…)

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Radio Zapatista

(Español) “Todo es movimiento” – Segundo día del CompArte de Danza “Báilate otro mundo”

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.

“Lo que nos convoca aquí es el movimiento, porque todo en el mundo es movimiento: movimientos sociales, marchas, la danza… movimiento del cuerpo que se convoca y que convoca el alma de los seres humanos en su lucha por los ideales”, dijeron lxs compañerxs del grupo de danza Barro Rojo. Nada más apropiado, pues las presentaciones de este segundo día del CompArte de Danza 2019 “Báilate otro mundo” movieron el alma de quienes los presenciamos tanto ante la belleza de nuestro mundo como la resistencia y perseverancia tenaz de quienes enfrentan los duros tiempos que vivimos.

La jornada comenzó con Diana Betanzos, originaria de Ciudad Neza, quien presentó “Nosotras estamos aquí”, una expresión de lo que significa transitar, como mujer, los espacios de violencia ejercida sobre los cuerpos feminizados en esa periferia de la Ciudad de México, uno de los espacios con mayor índice de feminicidios y de violencia en general contra la mujer.

“Bailar para alguien es nuestra forma de lucha”, dijo Paulina Segura, citando a Gloria Contreras, la coreógrafa de la bellísima obra de danza neoclásica “Oh, melancolía”, que nos hizo viajar y penetrar en el sentido profundo de la experiencia humana, “haciéndonos uno”, tal como lo expresó Paulina.

Victoria Arts se presentó por tercera vez en el CompArte de Danza, esta vez con un ballet que, como ella dice, es una verdadera plegaria: el “Ave María” de Schubert.

El grupo de danza Barro Rojo presentó tres obras bellas y dolorosas, que comentan, con cuerpo y alma, los dolores de nuestro tiempo. La primera fue una interpretación sobre el adiós de una hija que espera mucho tiempo a su padre exilado, el cual nunca regresa. La segunda representa la lucha de un hombre por sus ideales. Y la tercera, que arrancó lágrimas en más de un espectador, trató del dolor de los padres y madres ante el desaparecimiento forzado de los hijos.

Ya fuera de la “Ballena” (el gran auditorio en el caracol Tulan Kaw), se presentaron Patrulla Roja, Dangers Crew, Ch’ulel Crew y el colectivo Abya Yala. Con un tupido público en su mayoría zapatista, los hip-hoperos nos llevaron en un recorrido por los cambios que el Break Dance ha sufrido desde su creación en la década de 1970 hasta nuestros días.

Una familia chilena compartió la situación que se vive en Chile en este momento: el hartazgo y el levantamiento popular, la brutal represión estatal, la resistencia y la esperanza que no cesan.

Del caracol de La Garrucha se presentó un grupo de compañeros y compañeras zapatistas que representaron el bello bailable “Autonomía”, una de las cuatro participaciones zapatistas de ese día.

El resto de la jornada, al que no pudimos asistir, contó con la acción participativa de Xixito de tsií´kbal; la obra de danza contemporánea “Zapata”, de Germán Pizano y Paulina Segura; la obra de danza contemporánea participativa “En el filo”, con Anadel Lynton y Diana Betanzos; la danza <i>butoh</i> “Paz”. Se realizaron también talleres abiertos de danza contemporánea, expresión corporal, malabar, danza africana y danza árabe.

El CompArte continúa hoy en el Caracol Jacinto Canek, en las instalaciones del CIDECI, en San Cristóbal de Las Casas, donde seguirá hasta la clausura este viernes 20 de diciembre.

Escucha los audios:

Ve las imágenes:

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Radio Zaptista

(Español) Empieza el CompArte de Danza “Báilate otro mundo”

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.

La danza es alegría, es festividad, es resistencia, es creación y recreación, es tiempo, es movimiento, es re-existencia y sí, también es pensamiento. En la India, el dios de la danza es Shiva Nataraj, quien destruye el mundo para que otro mundo pueda nascer. Como el mundo de muerte que hay que destruir para que la vida pueda surgir en otro mundo posible en el que florezcan nuestros sueños. O sea, el trabajo de Shiva Nataraj es bailarse otro mundo.

O, más cercano a casa: “En el antes no había después. El tiempo se estaba así quietecito, ansina como se está ahorita la noche. En el antes estaban los dioses más grandes, los que nacieron el mundo, los primeros (….) Así estaban los dioses en el antes, y empezaba a llegar en su pensamiento que era necesario inventar el después porque si no muy triste se iba a estar el mundo siempre parado en el antes y nunca llegando al después”, contó hace ya muchos años el Viejo Antonio. Y fue bailando que los dioses primeros pusieron el tiempo en movimiento, y así nació el después, al que hay que caminar siempre regresando al antes para poder avanzar. Bailarse otro mundo.

“Va a haber baile colgado de una nube”, dicen que dijo Defensa Zapatista.

Y sí, allá en la ballena zapatista, se puso el tiempo en movimiento ayer en la inauguración de la primera edición del festival CompArte de Danza “Báilate otro mundo”. Y sí, el viejo mundo pareció temblar, como amenazado por Shiva Nataraj, y en el caracol de Tulan Kaw, el caballo fuerte que no se rinde, no se vende, no claudica, nos condujo al sueño de otro mundo posible que se comienza a vislumbrar entre los escombros del nuestro.

En los próximos días, hasta el 20 de este mes, los zapatistas nos traerán exhibiciones de danza contemporánea, clásica, neoclásica, árabe, butoh, acrobacia, bailable, circo, performance, participativa, aérea, africana, dark belly dance hip hop fusión, moderna, hula hula y manipulación de fuego, además de talleres de danza contemporánea, expresión corporal, malabar, danza africana, danza árabe, así como pláticas y una exposición fotográfica.

La inauguración se llevó a cabo ayer, 16 de diciembre, con las palabras de bienvenida de la Junta de Buen Gobierno “Semilla que florece con la conciencia de los que luchan por siempre” del recién caracol de Tulan Kaw.

Hugo Molina presentó la danza del “Venado”, sagrada para los pueblos Yaqui. Arguelia Guerrero presentó “Se va la vida, compañera”, una obra de danza contemporánea que habla sobre las muchas mujeres que viven sometidas a las labores domésticas. La niña Libertad Hernández presentó la bella obra “La Esperanza es zapatista”, con música de Víctor Jara, dedicada a los niños, niñas y niñoas zapatistas. Hugo Molina presentó también “Tlakazkatl” (El hombre hormiga), una obra de danza contemporánea. Y Victoria Arts presentó el ballet clásico “Carmen”, que baila la relación amorosa entre hombre y mujer.

Ya fuera de la ballena, en el gran templete en la esplanada cerca de la carretera, Vica Rule presentó el performance “Requiem por el Planeta”, seguido la obra de fusión de danza árabe con otras danzas “Chiapaz”, con música de Julio Revueltas. El colectivo Shakti Arte Escena presentó “Mujer árbol”, una obra de danza butoh, una forma de danza japonesa creada en la década de 1950 después de las bombas de Hiroshima y Nagazaki, seguida por “Respirar”, con la participación de niñas zapatistas. Sofía Ivy García presentó un performance y acrobacia.

Fabián Guerrero y sus dos hijos pequeños presentaron el texto “Leer, escribir y editar también es bailar”, reproducido en la íntegra en audio abajo. Barro Rojo presentó el solo de danza contemporánea “Niña de tus ojos”, y Victoria Arts, “Zapata”.

L@s compañer@s zapatistas no podrían dejar de bailar, y estuvieron presentes con dos bellas obras.

Y el Circo Xutly y hermanos Nadayapa presentaron la obra del circo “p’al barrio” “Las aventuras de Trapeador y Cotonete”.

Después de la comida se realizaron talleres abiertos de danza contemporánea, expresión corporal y malabar, y se presentó el libro Barro Rojo, el camino, de Jorge Izquierdo, Laura Rocha y Fabián Guerrero.

El festival sigue hoy 17 y mañana 18 de diciembre a partir de las 10:00 en el caracol de Tulan Kaw, y continúa 19 y 20 en el caracol Jacinto Canek (CIDECI, San Cristóbal de Las Casas).

Ve aquí la programación completa.

Escucha/descarga algunos audios:

(Continuar leyendo…)

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Radio Pozol

(Español) “En territorio zapatista el arte se convierte en lucha”, inicia festival de danza convocado por el EZLN

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.

Chiapas, México. 16 de diciembre. “Como zapatistas que somos, nuestra lucha de resistencia y rebeldía es como una danza que también se baila y así construimos otros mundos posibles. Bienvenidas y bienvenidos a este primer comparte de danza “Báilate otro mundo”, bienvenidos a su auditorio “Maricheweu, diez, cien, mil veces venceremos”, expresaron la mañana de este lunes en la inauguración del festival convocado por el EZLN.

Las y los rebeldes chiapanecos indicaron que el mega auditorio del Caracol XI, “es el espacio en el que compartimos nuestra danza, nuestras artes según la experiencia de lo que queremos decir y hacer”. Y añadieron que “en esta nueva zona de Tulan ka´u, estamos con los brazos abiertos, para darles un abrazo compañero, compañera. Para que dancen con alegría con libertad, en este territorio rebelde zapatista donde el arte se convierte en lucha”.

Entre vivas a los artistas presentes y a sus diferentes manifestaciones dancísticas, quedó formalmente inaugurado el primer Festival de danza: “Báilate otro mundo”, en los Altos de Chiapas.

Trasmisión en vivo: https://www.facebook.com/ColectivoCotric/videos/668750153662144/

https://www.facebook.com/ColectivoCotric/videos/781216625684982/

https://www.facebook.com/ColectivoCotric/videos/668750153662144/

https://www.facebook.com/ColectivoCotric/videos/757516814752379/

https://www.facebook.com/ColectivoCotric/videos/452918248975127/

Para este lunes 16 de diciembre, la programación será:

(Continuar leyendo…)

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Radio Pozol

(Español) “Representarán la guía del pueblo”, concejo de ancianos a la nueva JBG zapatista.

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.

Chiapas, Mexico. 14 de diciembre. “Esta bendición es para todos las constructoras y constructores que han participado. Aquí estamos y seguiremos por siempre. ¡¡¡Viva la nueva Junta de Buen Gobierno!!!”, fue como inició la ceremonia de inauguración del nuevo Caracol XI, Junta de Buen Gobierno (JBG) “Semilla que florece con la conciencia de los que luchan por siempre”.

Los invitados del Caracol de la Realidad indicaron que a lo largo de las experiencias de trabajo, que les enseña el cumpliendo su deber, con error y corrigiéndose, siguieron adelante, sin importar los sacrificios de sus familias y su persona.

L@s originarios de la zona selva fronteriza comentaron que han venido ejerciendo la verdadera democracia donde el Gobierno propone y el pueblo decide de acuerdo a sus usos y costumbres. De igual forma impulsan los trabajos colectivos, para que sus compañeros tengan alimentación y generen el desarrollo para la lucha por la autonomía. Cuidando la madre tierra que recuperaron desde hace 25 años.

Poniendo énfasis en la frase: “El pueblo manda y el Gobierno obedece” les fue entregado formalmente a la nueva JBG el bastón de mando para trabajar por el pueblo y con el pueblo.

“Es mejor morir de pie que vivir una vida de rodillas “, mencionaron los rebeldes chiapanecos. Y recordaron a sus compañeros que como la gallina que cría y protege a sus hijos, “caminamos y luchamos”.

Las palabras a la nueva JBG por parte del concejo de ancianas y ancianos durante la entrega de bastones de mando fue que representarán la guía del pueblo. “Es la sabiduría de nuestros antepasados. Y representa nuestras 13 demandas”, indicaron las y los mentores zapatistas.

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Subcomandante Insurgente Galeano

A Whale in the Mountains of Southeastern Mexico

Sixth Commission of the EZLN
Mexico

December 2019.

To the National Indigenous Congress – Indigenous Governing Council:
To the individuals, groups, collectives and organizations of the Sixth in Mexico and internationally:
To the Networks of Resistance and Rebellion:
To film-lovers everywhere:

Considering, first and only, that:

A WHALE IN THE MOUNTAINS OF SOUTHEASTERN MEXICO

(Creatures and their Creators)

You have no idea how you ended up here in this place, though it seems it’s becoming something of a habit… “The traditions and customs of cityfolk,” you remember the late SupMarcos saying. You also remember how annoying he found those sarcastic comments…well, not just those comments. The afternoon has given way to evening. You stop, noticing in the distance a red, five-pointed star at the top of a mountain, with an enormous sign with so many letters that you can’t make out its message. Even more distant, you can make out the blue-gray silhouette of a braying horse with huge, illuminated letters that state, laconically: “TULAN KAW ZAPATISTA.”

At the entrance, the girl who guided you through that first impossible movie theater and her gang of kids approach you. You’re not sure whether to run, pretend not to know them, or freeze and see what happens. Any semblance of a strategy collapses because the girl takes you by the hand and chastises you: “Late again.”

You all cross through a wide flat space that appears to be set up like a county fair. You take a winding route through dozens of different “stations,” each booth with its own light-and-sound show, people dressed up as monsters, circus performers, and trapeze artists; over here there’s someone teaching art, and over there you can hear music, singing and dancing. People crowd together at their favorite “station”, laughing and shouting with delight and surprise, and, of course, taking selfies. At the edge of the path through the stations there’s a huge screen. You’re about to say, “Looks like a drive-in theater,” but a nearby sign reads: “Walk-In Theater. Tonight: Cantinflas and Manuel Medel in Águila o Sol[i]. Tomorrow: Piporro and Pedro Infante in Ahí viene Martín Corona[ii].

The girl leads you through the zigzagging path. Up ahead, a strange being, like a cat or a dog, is flanked on both sides by other girls and boys all talking at the same time.

You try to make out what they’re saying, but just then you see a huge banner with the face of…Boris Karloff?[iii] made up like the monster from Frankenstein, with a coffee cup in one hand and a half-eaten sweet bun in the other. The banner’s text repeats an ancient truism: “Nothing like coffee and a snack to bring you back to life.” Farther on another sign reads: “Maxillofacial Surgery. Get your best face and an irresistible smile!” with images of the monster from Alien from the series’ various prequels and sequels. You instinctively evaluate the cheeks from each version and shudder.

Amidst lots of brightly-colored lights there is a long mess hall (you can make out signs reading “ZAPATISTAS” and “WELCOME”). You’re about to say that it’s a bit chilly and that a hot coffee and a snack wouldn’t hurt when you see on one of the walls another banner with Edward James Olmos’ face announcing, “Soft-boiled sushi. Origami classes. Pest control. Bow ties. Gaff & Company.” Higher up, as if suspended from the ceiling, there’s an animated image of the geisha from Blade Runner. You pause for a moment trying to guess how such a novelty is possible, but the crowd behind you pushes you forward.

Almost at the end of the winding route of “stations,” there’s a table with a large model of what appears to be a future construction and a sign reading “Theater Project” with a collection box labeled “Anonymous Donations.” Behind an artisan shop nearby you see an image of a Facehugger advertising scarves and sleep eye-masks for sale.

Before you lies a path studded with lights and the silhouette of a large red star, and amidst some rubble, apparently placed there on purpose, flash images of a dystopian backdrop. The flickering lights barely illuminate the forest around you and the mountain above. Instead of individual trees, it’s as if the Zapatistas had strung the entire mountaintop with lights and the trees were merely branches on that great, hulking pine.

You decide that it would be best to turn around; nothing normal happens in Zapatista territory… at least, not to you. Every time you’ve come you’re left feeling somewhat discontent with and skeptical of yourself, and it takes you several days of your regular routine in the city to feel normal again. So you take a few steps back, looking for an opportunity to turn around without the boys and girls seeing you…

But then you see it, and stop dead in your tracks.

You tell yourself you’ve seen everything – that’s what the internet and its bandwidth are for – but what you’re seeing now is so illogical that… Well, you grab your cell phone and try to take a panoramic photo but you realize immediately that it’s impossible. You would need a satellite to capture the whole scene, because it’s clear that all of it is part of a puzzle and that to put it together you’d have to walk… and close your eyes.

But when you open your eyes, it’s still there. An enormous structure. A sort of huge hangar which, in seeming defiance of the laws of physics, extends back until it gets lost in the trees and the moist mountain surface. It’s like a galley whose figurehead is a red, five-pointed star. You wouldn’t be surprised if, in your peripheral vision, tons of small windows opened and dozens, hundreds, thousands of oars came out… and if inside, “writing in the sea[iv],” was the one-armed man of Lepanto.[v] It looks like a galleon, or a whaling ship… No, more like a lost whale who, trying to swim against the current, up the mountainside, has taken a rest among the trees and people—a lot of people, of all sizes and all colors. Even though most of them have their faces covered, their clothes are like a kaleidoscope moving around the great whale, absurd here in its stopover halfway up the mountain, just as everything that happens here is absurd.

No, it didn’t occur to you that this might be the “Pequod,[vi] but rather the legendary whale from Moby Dick with which Gregory Peck[vii] and Herman Melville were obsessed.

You’ve seen several signs that say “Film Festival,” but you haven’t seen any references to John Huston’s film or Melville’s novel. Then you remember something the Zapatistas once said: “We are speaking for another time. Our words will be understood in other calendars and geographies.” Even so, you are willing to respond with “Call me Ishmael[viii] if anyone asks your name, but then you notice three large banners covering one side of the structure. On the middle banner, embroidered with images of rope and spears, you read:

Trempülkalwe

That’s the Mapuche language, Mapudungun,” you hear someone explain to someone else. A little above that line the banner reads “MARICHEWEU! Ten, one hundred, one thousand times we will win.” As if to ratify that statement, ten, one hundred, one thousand masked people swarm around you, Zapatista young people, men, women, and otroas—the rowers on this paradoxical and good-spirited old galley—whose very existence, whose lives, seem to point to a triumph over a past that promised them nothing but death and oblivion.

You encounter this Mapuche cry of resistance and rebellion here in the mountains of the Mexican Southeast. Why does Zapatismo greet that originary people in this manner in these lands? Why the effort to take an ancestral history of resistance and rebellion from the continent’s southern tip and plant it here in these mountains—a place called “Tulan Kaw” (“strong horse” in Tojolabal and Tzeltal)—creating an irrational and anachronistic link between two resistances and rebellions with the same objective, the defense of mother earth?

You’re trying to decipher that puzzle when the kid gang pushes you into the belly of the whale…okay, fine, the auditorium. Inside there are lots of wood benches arranged in tiers following the slope of the mountain, and a stage with tables, three screens (the Zapatista version of 3D), speakers, and a bunch of cables spilling out like entrails.

Wait for us here. We’re going to go get some popcorn,” the little girl tells you. You start to say that you didn’t see any popcorn vendors but the kid gang has disappeared, exiting the belly of the whale…okay, okay, the auditorium. While you wait you look around the inside of the building. There are beings of all sorts on the benches, and on stage are people who, you assume, make films. They are talking about film as if responding to questions that, as far as you can tell, nobody has asked… at least, nobody you can see. Or maybe they’re just talking to themselves.

The little girl and her gang come running back in, all carrying bags of popcorn. The little girl gives you a bag and explains, “I only put a little bit of salsa on them so you wouldn’t get a stomach ache.” The entrance of the kid gang serves like a signal and the rest of the crowd leaves en masse. The people on stage heave a sigh of relief. One confesses, “Phew! Now I remember why I chose to work in film!” Another says, “This is like a horror film mixed with a thriller and a science fiction flick. I fear the screenplay holds nothing good in store for me.” And another adds, “To be honest, I didn’t know how to answer her, she just had too many questions.” “True,” says still another, “it’s like being on trial but without a defense attorney… and knowing you’re guilty.”

The little girl whispers in your ear, “If SupGaleano comes looking for us, you tell him that we’ve been here the whole time, that you brought the popcorn yourself from the city and shared it with us. Even if he’s angry, don’t give in, remain firm! Resistance and rebellion, you know.” Just then you hear over the loudspeaker: “Please report any information or tips on the location of one cat-dog, wanted for theft of strategic material from the office of the General Command. The suspect tends to travel in the company of a gang of kids who… okay fine, forget the kids, but the cat-dog is unmistakable.” The aforementioned, with what you could swear is a mischievous smile, burrows into the little girl’s lap.

You are weighing the wisdom of lying to a Subcomandante when everyone comes back in with fragrant bags of popcorn and takes their seats. From the stage, someone says, “Nobody has any frivolous questions? I mean, to get back to normalcy and make everyone believe that this is a film festival like any other.”

Would you look at that,” you say to yourself, “a film festival where explanations, reason, and reflection are expected. As if a great big question mark had appeared on the screen and everyone (todas, todos, todoas) was expecting…what are they expecting? The little girl responds with a confession, “See, the thing is, we’re all kind of happy that these people who make film came here, because what if they are sad or their hearts anxious because they don’t know where these things they created ended up? It’s a good point, right? So we invited them to come and tell us if they are okay, or not okay, or depends. Maybe they’ll even start to dance and eat popcorn and their hearts will be glad,” the little girl says with her mouth full and her cheeks stained bright with salsa.

It seems like there’s an intermission, so everyone, including you, leaves the building. To your surprise, there is now a mobile popcorn vendor outside followed by a long curving line of kids waiting their turn, like a comet with a trail of lights. It looks like there’s another vendor a little ways off, and you can make out another still further away. You get in line and once you have your bag of popcorn you stare in wonder at the absurd movie theater with its rebellious inclinations, challenging all logic and the law of gravity itself…

The mythical Mapuche whale, Mocha Dick, swimming up the mountain, with all these people in its wake… “and mid most of them all, one grand hooded phantom, like a snow hill in the air,” (Moby Dick. Herman Melville, 1851).

The irreverent cetacean as part of the jigsaw puzzle.

Film as something more, much more, than a movie.

As if all this were just part of a bigger jigsaw puzzle, you see a giant poster announcing a dance festival, another about the defense of territory and mother earth, another about an international gathering of women who struggle, another about a birthday, and signs, lots of them, signaling bathrooms, showers, internet, supplies, “a world where many worlds fit,” the Junta de Buen Gobierno (Good Government Council), the Zapatista Autonomous Municipality in Rebellion, the Information and Vigilance Commission… at this point you wouldn’t be surprised to run into Elías Contreras, sitting and smoking outside a hut with “Investigation Commission” inscribed over the doorway.

You detect a lot of loose pieces. There are some people who can only be differentiated from the locals because they have a nametag that reads “National Indigenous Congress” and, of course, they don’t have their faces covered. There are also “citizens” or “cityfolk,” which is what Zapatismo calls those who live or at least survive in the city. You’re exasperated to realize there are and will be many more pieces. It’s as if Zapatismo has set out to challenge humanity with enigmas…or with the silhouette of a world, another world.

It’s as if your life mattered to someone you don’t even know. Someone for whom you may have done much, or a little, or nothing, but who takes you into account in any case. It’s as if only now do you realize that this “Caracol of Our Lives” includes you and yours…ten, one hundred, one thousand times over.

This piece of the puzzle, film, like life, takes place inside a whale injured on both sides, swimming upstream in the mountains of the Mexican Southeast…

But that’s impossible… isn’t it?

-*-

Given the above, the EZLN’s Sixth Commission invites the men, women, otroas, children, and elders of the Sexta, the CNI, and the Networks of Resistance and Rebellion around the world, as well as those film fanatics who can and want to come, to the Film Festival:

“PUY TA CUXLEJALTIC”

(“Caracol of Our Lives”)

The second edition of which will be held in the Zapatista Caracol of Tulan Kaw, in the mountains of the Mexican Southeast, December 7-15, 2019.

The film schedule and festival activities will be posted at the Festival.

From the mountains of the Mexican Southeast,

SupGaleano,
Chasing after the most terrible mutation of Xenomorph: the Cat-Dog.
What? Well, because he stole my popcorn. And film without popcorn is like… how can I explain it?
Like tacos without salsa, like Messi without a ball, like a donkey without a rope, like a penguin without a tux, like Sherlock without Watson, like Donald Trump without Twitter (or vice versa)…
wha? Okay, that was another bad example.
Mexico, December 2019

 

[i]   Águila o Sol (1937): One of the first films starring Mexican comic Cantinflas.
[ii] Here Comes Martin Corona (1952): Mexican comedy Western starring Pedro Infante.
[iii] Stage name for William Henry Pratt [1887-1969], a British actor who played Frankenstein’s monster in the original 1931 film.
[iv] To row.
[v] Miguel de Cervantes, whose lost use of his left arm after a suffering a gunshot wound in the naval Battle of Lepanto against the Ottoman fleet.
[vi] The fictional 19th-century whaling ship that appears in the 1851 novel, Moby Dick.
[vii] Peck starred in John Huston’s 1956 film Moby Dick as Captain Ahab.
[viii] Chapter One of Moby Dick begins with the words «Call me Ishmael,» as narrated by the only surviving crewmember of the Pequod.

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Los Tercios Compas

Images from the Breaking of the Siege II (and last) from August 17, 2019.

Images from the Breaking of the Siege II (and last)
From August 17, 2019.

Note from SupGaleano: Here there should be a photo slide show from the new CRAREZ [Centers of Autonomous Zapatista Resistance and Rebellion] which were announced as part of the breaking of the siege on August 17, 2019. This video will likely be removed by Mr. YouTube since it is set to a song by Ana Tijoux (Chilean-French) and Shadia Mansour (Palestinian) entitled “Somos Sur,” [We are the South] and supposedly we either have to pay royalties or accept advertising. We are not of course going to accept advertising, and if there’s no money for water tanks for the new caracol Tulan Kaw, then there’s certainly no money to pay royalties. In any case, the Sixth Commission does not “monetize” our videos (plus, the traffic on our channel is like the traffic during semana santa (Easter) in Mexico City), so I doubt Mr. YouTube is going to end up any less rich because of our refusal to accept advertisement, nor are Ana Tijoux and Shadia Mansour going to lose artistic quality or followers because we have accompanied their rebellion with ours.

Maybe instead of taking down the videos that people set to music—as Zapata didn’t say, “music belongs to those who sing/dance/hum/bounce/whisper/shout and spread it (and like Shadia Mansour says, rapping in Arabic: “music is the mother tongue of the world”)—Mr. YouTube should work on his damned algorithm (“Oh, the twisted lines of YouTube”i). You know how it goes, you start out looking for videos of the guys from Botellita de Jerez to pay homage to the memory of Armando Vega Gil, or you search for ska from Los de Abajo, or Salón Victoria, or some tracks from Jijos del Mais, or Van T, or Mexican Sound, or LenguaAlerta, or Lirica, or Ely Guerra, or Keny Arkana, or the Batallones Femeninos, or from those masters Oscar Chávez and Guillermo Velázquez and Los Leones de la Sierra de Xichú, and all of a sudden you’re getting bombarded with videos of rodeos, cockfights, Maluma giving classes on how to respect women, or makeup videos (“now we’re going to learn how to do makeup for a ‘no makeup’ selfie”).

It’s not that we’re being fussy—after all, like Inodoro Pereyra said (or was it Mendieta?), “Broad and Alien is the World”ii—but rather that here, bandwidth is about as broad as Trump’s IQ: paltry, in other words.

Given all of the above, if YouTube removes the video because of its soundtrack (like it already did with Princess Mononoke, apparently because Studio Ghibli decided to side with the system instead of with natureiii), we’ll repost the same photo slideshow here but without music, and you can add the music yourselves. In fact, I’ll include the translation from Arabic to Spanish of Shadia Mansour’s rap (based on the contribution from the user qmqz posted on the official music video) [TN: translated here in English]:

“Give me the mic:

Music is the mother tongue of the world
It supports our existence and protects our roots, tying us to greater Syria, Africa, and Latin America
Here I stand with Anita Tijoux
Here I stand with those who suffer, not with those who sold us out
Here I stand with culture, resistance
From the beginning and forever, hasta la victoria siempre!
I am with those who are against, with those who have cooperated, with those not on our side
Way back I did the math and I decided to invest in Banksy after Ban-Ki went bankrupt (Note from SupGaleano: possibly a reference to Ban-Ki Moon, who was Secretary General of the United Nations when this song was recorded, and went “bankrupt” when he refused to condemn the Israeli government’s terrorist actions against the Palestinian people).
As the saying goes, “it’s not that the situation needs a ‘proportionate response’, the situation needs to be stopped”
For every freed political prisoner an Israeli settlement grows
For every civil greeting a thousand homes are destroyed
They use the press to their benefit
But while my sorrow is vetoed, reality insists”

You know what? With or without YouTube, with or without advertising, the Palestinian people and the Mapuche people will achieve freedom. Ten, one hundred, a thousand times they will reach victory.

And if Mr. YouTube takes the whole thing down as part of the “fuck the Zapatistas now” campaign, oh well, we’ll just go back to the good old days of the Zapatista Intergalactic Television System, “the only television channel that you read” (Permit 69, currently being processed by the Good Government Councils, submitted as of 1996 but caracoles move slooooooooowly….).

From the mountains of the Mexican Southeast.
Los Tercios Compas
EZLN Sixth Commission
September 2019


i “Los renglones torcidos de Dios” (The Twisted Lines of God) is a novel by Torcuato Luca de Tena.

ii “El mundo es ancho y ajeno,” a 1941 novel by Ciro Alegría narrating indigenous struggle in the Peruvian highlands against land-hungry interests. Inodoro Pereyra is an Argentinian cartoon created by Roberto Fontanarrosa that parodies folklorism through the story of a lonely Argentinean gaucho and his co-protagonist, a talking dog, Mendieta.

iii Princess Mononoke is a Japanese animated period drama written and directed by Hayao Miyazaki and animated by Studio Ghibli which narrates an epic and fantastical struggle between the supernatural guardians or gods of a forest and the humans who consume its resources.

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Los Tercios Compas

Images from the breaking of the siege I

Images from the breaking of the siege I
August 2019.

From the mountains of the Mexican Southeast.

Los Tercios Compas.

Sixth Commission of the EZLN.

August 2019.

 

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Comisión Sexta del EZLN

Invitation to a meeting of Support Networks for the Indigenous Governing Council; to CompARTE 2018, “For Life and Freedom”; and the 5th Anniversary of the Caracoles

Convocation to a Gathering of Support Networks for the Indigenous Governing Council; to CompARTE[i]  2018, “For Life and Freedom”; and to the Fifteenth Anniversary Event of the Zapatista Caracoles entitled, “Píntale Caracolitos a los malos gobiernos pasados, presentes y futuros[ii]

July, 2018.

To the individuals, groups, collectives and organizations of the Support Networks for the Indigenous Governing Council:

To the National and International Sixth:

First and last point:

The Grand Finale.

You arrive at the grand stadium. “Monumental,” “colossal,” “an architectonic marvel,” “the concrete giant”—these and similar descriptors roll off the lips of TV broadcasters who, despite the different realities that they describe, all highlight the enormously proud structure.

To get to the magnificent building, you’ve had to wade through rubble, cadavers, and filth. Older folks say that it wasn’t always like this, that it used to be that homes, neighborhoods, businesses, and buildings were erected around the great sporting hub. Rivers of people would rush all the way up to the gigantic entrance, which only opened once in a while and on whose threshold was inscribed, “Welcome [Bienvenido] to the Supreme Game.” Yes, “bienvenido” in the masculine, as if what occurred inside was exclusively a men’s affair, as used to be the case with public bathrooms, bars, the machinery and tools sections of hardware stores…and, of course, soccer.

(Continuar leyendo…)