Category Archives: food sovereignty

A Natural History of ‘Food Riots’

by Crystal Bartolovich, 2010

In the first half of 2008, ‘food riots’ were much in the news. The streets of the global South and the television screens of the North were filled with angry protesters as the price of grains on world markets doubled or even tripled, pushing staples out of the reach of vast swathes of populations already struggling to get by. Nearly all commentators agree that the price rises that led to these disturbances were an effect of global forces, not merely local ones,such as drought or corruption, on which such unrest is typically blamed. Competition for oil, the cost of commercial seed, fertiliser and pesticide, speculation in commodities markets, shifting of grains to use for fuel rather than food, or for livestock rather than people, all have been identified as culprits. Thus, food riots raise anew – and emphatically at a global level – the question of the limits of the market in mediating the distribution of the most basic resources. At the same time, they remind us that food is still – despite the shift to ‘immaterial labour’ in many sectors of the post-Fordist economy and the continuing decrease in the percentage of the human population engaged in agricultural labour – a particularly volatile site of social struggle over concrete planetary resources. Not only does the concept of sugar not taste sweet, as Althusser was fond of saying, but you can’t put an advertisement for it in your coffee.1 Even as virtualisation technologies become ever more sophisticated, the World Food Program reminds us that 25,000 people still die in the physical world every day from hunger.2 In this context, food riots can be seen as a critique of the current determination of global priorities for the dissemination of resources, the development of technologies and the deployment of labour, as well as the failures of the market in establishing them justly. As such, they are a praxis whose theoretical implications – in addition to their practical ones– must be recognised.

Padkos: How many of us must die?

How many of us must die?

Reminder to come to the Padkos Bioscope (@ CLP offices) at 1pm on Tuesday, 30 April. We’ll be watching: “La Via Campesina in movement: … Food Sovereignty Now!”, a 20-minute documentary produced by the global movement of peasants and the landless, La Via Campesina.

Around Easter this year there were good reasons to be thinking about death and its meanings. For Christians there is a focus on the execution of Jesus, even if the story is ultimately of resurrection. But the hope of resurrection is properly meaningful only in light of the stark truth of the death that precedes it.

No amount of heretical spiritualising should ever hide the political character of Jesus’ execution. Here was a militant who refused to know his place in the politico-religious order of the day. Even more dangerous, he rallied many others behind the idea that they too were not predestined to servitude and oppression – they too should take their rightful place as the daughters and sons of God no less! And so those for whom this scandalous logic of egalitarianism is deeply threatening, plotted to kill him. And they killed Cícero Guedes of Brazil in January; and they killed Andries Tatane of Meqheleng in 2011, and they killed family members of Abahlali baseMjondolo (AbM) leaders of KwaNdengezi in 2013 – and then Abahlali says:

“on the eve of Easter when Christians remember the resurrection of Jesus Christ, we have one question to poor people struggling across the country: How many of us must die before we rise up, defeat the forces of oppression and their politic of fear and death and build a new society that recognises the full and equal dignity of every person? We will not stop our struggle until the land, wealth and power of this world are shared fairly”
(Abahlali baseMjondolo, ‘Murder in kwaNdengezi’, 30 March 2013).

In this edition of Padkos we have consolidated three short and powerful pieces:

* the above-mentioned statement from the South African shack-dweller movement, Abahlali baseMjondolo (AbM)
* a statement from the Landless Peoples Movement (MST) of Brazil on the death of Cícero Guedes
* an editorial from the City Press newspaper on the failure to convict Andries Tatane’s killers.

Apart from the appalling fact that they have clearly been targeted for violent elimination, there are other important and disturbing parallels in the stories of Guedes, of Tatane, and of the leaders of AbM in kwaNdengezi. First, like so many heroes of freedom, they too refused their ‘place’ of servitude and insisted on their fundamental humanity. Refusing to be mere objects of the elites that trample, insult and exploit, they became subjects of their own and their communities’ history. The rhetorical claim that our societies value active citizenship and selfless commitment to the people is, in fact, a cruel lie. It is perfectly clear that, on the contrary, those who put these values into practice risk their own and their families’ lives. Some decades ago we in South Africa might have entertained the hope that this fact was characteristic only of dictatorial and undemocratic regimes – but both Brazil and South Africa are hailed as ‘democratic’ countries.

But these deaths take us back to conclusions we drew in an earlier piece on ‘The Dark Corners of the State We’re In’ (CLP 2011) that brought together insights and reflections after the attack on AbM in Kennedy Road in 2009:

In the mythology of liberal democracy, the rights and freedoms of citizens are held to be the frame within which we all work together to solve our common problems and build a common, better future. AbM’s struggle has repeatedly spelt out a number of those challenges that really do need urgent and collective resolution if the harsh realities of life of the poor are to be put behind us. But, as one participant put it:

‘even if it was possible to do something about the legal, the economic, the environmental, the basic support services, that is, the immediate practical problems, there is something even more disturbing shadowing them – the strong suggestion that recent events show that those who attempt seriously to confront these problems will not be allowed to do so. That the more successful the attempt to solve the problems of poverty, the more those who hold power, or seek power, feel threatened’.

Thus it is not simply that ‘democracy’ does not exist for the poor. It is violently denied the poor when they abandon their allocated places as passive and silent objects of others’ projects, and assume instead their place as subjects of their own life” (CLP 2011).

The Gospel of Mark (in chapter 3) tells the story of Jesus’ healing encounter with “The Man with a Withered Hand”.

Again he [Jesus] entered the synagogue, and a man was there who had a withered hand. They watched him to see whether he would cure him on the sabbath, so that they might accuse him. And he said to the man who had the withered hand, ‘Come forward.’ Then he said to them, ‘Is it lawful to do good or to do harm on the sabbath, to save life or to kill?’ But they were silent. He looked around at them with anger; he was grieved at their hardness of heart and said to the man, ‘Stretch out your hand.’ He stretched it out, and his hand was restored. The Pharisees went out and immediately conspired with the Herodians against him, how to destroy him.

Why does this set of actions lead so immediately to a conspiracy – between Pharisees and Herodians who usually detested each other – to kill Jesus? First, it’s important to see the architecture of ritual and elite power that marks out space in the synagogue where the story unfolds. That architecture, and the rubric of the clean and the unclean, was all about reserving any access to power, or the mediation of power, to the class of religio-political experts and rulers. Condensed into the Gospel account above is a series of systematic and deliberate violations of all those codes of religious orthodoxy by Jesus – an explicit refusal to know his place. That he’s entered the synagogue at all is worth noting – and he proceeds to work on the sabbath presuming to act in the name of God’s power. The man with a withered hand falls into the category of the unclean. Instead of preserving the order of things, Jesus instructs him to ‘come forward’ into the centre of the synagogue – the refusal of place is not reserved for leaders and celebrity-activists, it is universal and egalitarian. And then of course the ‘miracle’ is achieved by simply telling the guy: “Do the thing you’re not allowed to do”.

So we register our outrage at the killings and recommit to the scandalous promise of the resurrection.

Action note: Soon after Guedes’ killing, another MST militant, Regina dos Santos Pinho, was brutally murdered in February in the settlement Zumbi dos Palmares, state of Rio de Janeiro. In response, the MST have initiated a “Campaign against Impunity” with an online petition (here).

Padkos: Food Sovereignty

Monday 05 December 2011

http://churchland.org.za/padkos.php

Today is ‘International Food Sovereignty Day to Cool Down the Earth’

Today, La Via Campesina, the international network of movements of peasants, landless, rural workers, and small farmers, has called for an ‘International Food Sovereignty Day to Cool Down the Earth’ during the COP17 civil society mobilisations. In this serving of Padkos, CLP looks at the history, politics and content of food sovereignty.

Today we are compelled to ask: how is it possible to remain faithful to the struggles and spirit that animated food sovereignty? In the light of unfolding developments at COP 17, the question must not be avoided. In CLP’s view, the official COP 17 process represents an “(anti)politics that is dead and morbid” but we also insist that “much of ‘civil society’ praxis [alongside the official processes] is deeply embedded in the politics of the terrain of the state – it too, is dead and morbid”.

We conclude that: “If food sovereignty is our necessary future – and it is – it will be led and thought by those who suffer most under the current crisis and who think its resistance. … The struggle for popular sovereignty, as much over food as any other aspect of our collective life, will require ongoing rupture and rebellion from below – certainly against capital and the state at all levels. But that struggle is also against any of the ways in which the power of a few over the many denies human freedom, even when that’s in the manipulative ‘representation’ of people by organs of civil society or against the domination of ordinary people by unaccountable and power-hungry practices and individuals who emerge from time-to-time within social movements”.

“Climate Change and global warming are perpetrated by the Capitalists to oppress the poor to make profit”

“Climate Change and global warming are perpetrated by the Capitalists to oppress the poor to make profit”

by Reverend Mavuso of the Rural Network

We are told that our world is at risk from global warming caused by the pollution of the capitalists over many years. These same capitalists have become rich by making the rest of us poor. We were forced off our land, forced to work in their mines, factories and homes and now we are told that there are no more jobs for us. We are left to rot. For us the world has been in crisis for a very long time.

We cannot be expected to pay the price for global warming. Many of us don’t even have electricity in our homes. The price for fixing global warming must be paid by those that have become rich while disrespecting and damaging this world that God created for all of us.

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“Our kids are no longer eating healthy food, they just eat to survive”

http://www.wdm.org.uk/blog/%E2%80%9Cour-kids-are-no-longer-eating-healthy-food-they-just-eat-survive%E2%80%9D

16 October 2011

“Our kids are no longer eating healthy food, they just eat to survive”

Rosa Fletcher, activism and events intern

Last week, Bandile Mdlalose, general secretary of the South African social movement Abahlali baseMjondolo was in the UK speaking at our climate justice speaker tour events. While she was here she spoke to WDM staff about rising food prices and hunger in South Africa.

She told us how rising food prices and the privatisation of land is causing her and her family to struggle to buy more than mielie-meal (a relatively course flour and staple food in many parts of Africa, often made into ‘pap’, a porridge) on a daily basis. South Africa’s 1996 constitution states that every South African citizen has a right to sufficient food and water, yet this has not been achieved. Bandile stated that one of Abahlali baseMjondolo’s roles is to ‘reveal the unrevealed’ and her story around food poverty really highlights this.

She described how her family and others in South Africa “are living in an environment we are unable to live in.” This is because more people are moving from being food producers to food consumers, vulnerable to price increases and volatility often linked to excessive financial speculation.

She described how her family’s food shopping has to be carefully calculated to make the most of their monthly social grants. Meat is a rarity in her diet and a varied diet is now no longer a priority, instead her concern focuses around having enough to eat. “Our kids are no more eating healthy food, they just eat to survive.” The long-lasting effects of malnutrition are well known to affect societies in a wide number of ways. Abahlali baseMjondolo Women’s League are leading the campaign against food price rises in South Africa along with the landless people’s movement and the KwaZulu-Natal rural network.

However, this not just a reality for Bandile, but is affecting people all over the world. Fareshare reported in early October 2011 that 35,000 people a day are being supported by their food donations in the UK. This is just one organisation and does not account for the hundreds of people that are fed each week at other food projects such as FoodCycle. My local Haringey FoodCycle cafe feeds over sixty people each Friday, with affordable, nutritious food.

We know that there is enough land and food to support people across the world and yet it is the politics of food that has been distorted. We live in a world where the richest countries in the world are unable to feed their people: in 2010, approximately one in seven Americans were food insecure. On top of this, there are simultaneously one billion people going hungry but one billion people that are overweight.

These figures surely call for a rethink of the global food system and the vested interests for profit that drive the market. Financial speculation in food is pushing the price of food up, which affects everyone that purchases food across the world. As Depelchin has said:

“The food crisis is not just about food, it is about understanding of humanity and its relation to nature.”