Author Archives: Abahlali_3

Conjunctural remarks on the political significance of ‘the local’

Conjunctural remarks on the political significance of ‘the local’

Richard Pithouse

Popular protest is occurring on a remarkable scale in South Africa. Nonetheless, there is a significant degree to which it tends to be organized and articulated through the local. This contribution argues that while the political limitations of purely local modes of organization are clear, it should not be assumed that local struggles are some sort of misguided distraction from building a broader progressive movement. It is suggested that, on the contrary, the best prospects for the emergence of a broader popular struggle lie in building, sustaining and linking local struggles.

The Power of Organizing the Urban Poor to Advance Tenure Security

Monday, 27 May 2013

The Power of Organizing the Urban Poor to Advance Tenure Security

Presentation by S'bu Zikode at the Regional Consultation on Security of Tenure called by UN Special Rapporteur on Adequate Housing, Raquel Rolnik, in Johannesburg.

It is always a pleasure to write and speak on the organising strategies and tactics of Abahlali baseMjondolo. I wish to take this opportunity to thank SERI and the Ford Foundation for including our movement in this special consultation. More importantly I wish to thank the UN Special Rapporteur on adequate housing, Raquel Rolnik, for calling this meeting. We had a very good relationship with the previous Rapporteur, Miloon Kothari, who we hosted in the Kennedy Road shack settlement in Durban in 2007. We are happy to welcome Raquel Rolnik to South Africa. When we formed our movement in 2005 we made it very clear that talking about us was not the same as talking to us and that we were determined to take our place in all discussions about our lives and futures. We are a democratic membership based organisation and we can take our place in a discussion like this in confidence that we represent our members rather than donors, projects or narrow political agendas.

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“We are Poor, not Stupid”: Learning from Autonomous Grassroots Social Movements in South Africa

https://www.sensepublishers.com/media/1468-learning-and-education-for-a-better-world.pdf

“We are Poor, not Stupid”: Learning from Autonomous Grassroots Social Movements in South Africa

by Anne Harley

During the course of 2008, six militants from two South African social movements met every month to reflect on what they were learning through the struggle they were engaged in as social movement actors, and what they were learning as participants in a Certificate-level course at the local university. They called these sessions ‘Living learning’. Their reflections were written up after each session, and published in late 2009 as Living Learning (Figlan et al., 2009). ‘Living learning’ was intended partly as a space to reflect on what and how to take back the things that the militants, mandated by their movements to attend the course, had learned in the classrooms of the academy:

For a living learning, the critical question was always how best to take back to our communities whatever we might gain?; how best can our communities benefit from the few of us who are lucky to have access to the course?; how will we utilise the academic skills we can gain?; how do we take this information back? It has always been the task of a synthesis and a breaking down of the University theory so that we can work out properly what we can learn from it – and so we can understand for ourselves in what way it is different from the daily learning of struggle and life emijondolo [in the shacks] or eplasini [on the farms] (Figlan et al., 2009, p. 7).

But, significantly, ‘Living learning’ was also about how to combine the university of struggle and the academic university, and indeed ‘disrupt’ the academic university.

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“We are Poor, not Stupid”: Learning from Autonomous Grassroots Social Movements in South Africa

Abahlali baseMarikana Protest in Observatory on 25 May 2013

http://bushradionews.blogspot.com/2013/05/abahlalibase-marikana-protest-in.html

AbahlaliBase Marikana protest in Observatory
Athenkosi Mvane
26 May 2013

On Saturday, Abahlali Base Marikana went to Observatory to protest over the City of Cape Town’s Open Streets initiative.

Abahlali said the Open Streets will please only a few people whilst having houses built will be a project that will be more beneficial to more people.

Cindy Ketane said that the City supports Open Streetsand sidelines the poor, because the poor are excluded.

The Open Street initiative aims to promote the use of roads for bicycles and roller skate.

Ketane said they were also protesting against the scourge of police taking their material and destroying their houses.

“The same city that is making some people happy is also making people suffer; other people do not know what is happening in Marikana, so they wanted to expose the problem they have with the City of Cape Town” Ketane added.

Click here to see some photographs of this protest.