t byfield on Fri, 21 Feb 2003 20:57:10 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> alan toner: rome f15 |
alan sent this to me in a private mail, though it was written for anyone and everyone else. forwarded with permission -- and pleasure, of course. cheers, t - date: Wed, 19 Feb 2003 20:37:10 +0000 from: Alan Toner Dawn. Already at 7.00 in the morning groups wandered the streets of our district draped in their rainbow flags that proclaimed their commitment to peace and opposition 'military humanism' in Iraq. As the morning progressed it became evident that what had been heralded at the biggest demonstration in the world against the war would rather be a thronging, an occupation, an inundation of the city by millions. One did not have the impression of being at a 'political' event, but rather a strange sociological experiment, perhaps akin to the mass mourning for Princess Diana. Thousands of buses and special trains - paid for by the CGIL trade union - converged on Rome from all over the country and from the windows of almost every condiminium hung banners and flags. Somewhat vexed, as ever, by consensus, I decided that the Florence- Hub slogan "Stop the World - Another War is Possible!"was more appropriate. My housemate instead opted for the tried and tested appeal to universalism: "Every day they trample on our rights, let's not let them take our right to live - Peace!". Not your usual gang..... The crowd was peppered with children - including large numbers of boy and girl scouts!! -, strangely visible for once in a country where the average age is now over 38, and numerous nuns and priests - interestingly almost none of them white europeans - responded to the exhortations of il Papa and hit the streets in their threads. The communists were there of course,as was the counterculture of the social centres in ritual black garb, and the Negri-ite Dissobedienti, Rete Lilliputians, Greens, trade unionists of almost every hue. Clusters of stray American citizens pronounced their opposition to the Caligula's USA in speech, placards and banners. The other political gangs such as the Democratici della Sinistra (in government until 2001) also had a significant presence. But most of all there were enormous numbers of heterogeneous freelancers, 'normal people', with their handmade signs, determined to show their opposition to Berlusconi and his sycophantic prostration before Bush. Strange Things Curious bedfellows abounded. At one point in the demonstration a large red and black banner bearing a slogan in favour of drug decriminalisation advanced in step with the standard of the local administration of Spoletto in Tuscany - anarchists and municipalists together at last! Nearby, just off the Piazza del Cinquecento a group with a pink banner anxiously pressed leaflets into the hands of passersby. Big deal? A cursory examination revealed them as none other than the Raelian Movement, masters of human cloning hoaxes and specialist in the creation of media surplus value.... Elsewhere I read that they had in fact also been present in Florence, but the lesson I drew was that something has snapped in the air, in long neglected corners of the human mind, and its resurrection attracts every band of monstrous philosophers extant. Just around the corner another spectacle was in course: the Campo Anti-Imperialista, a marxist-leninist group of the old stripe and surprisingly young adherents, marched with quasi-military step wielding a massive banner that stated: God Smash America! (Hard on atheism!) My arrival was perfectly timed as the announced that they would now present the national colours of Iraq! What a thrill! Each of their perfectly presented militants - impeccably presented with yellow construction hat and equipped with a sort of wooden club - be prepared! - held an emergency flare and their precise choreography achieved the desired affect to the delight of photographers present, some of who approached these hardened revolutionaries to take their portraits. Cheekbones remained taut in defiance as the semiotic gift was conveyed to the media - good work, comrades! Whilst such oddballs had no numerical significance they contributed mightily, if unwittingly, to the Barnum circus quality of the day. Pleasure Our friends from Forte Prenestino arrived shortly thereafter to return some carnivalesque defiance to the day, mostly thanks to the hordes of youthful ravers mustered behind their truck-platform. By the time that we reached Santa Maria Maggiore - almost a mile from the designated destination of San Giovannni in Laterano - the crowd was backed up so far that further advance was impossible. Weary bums rested on the curb, beer bottle-tops popped open, spliffs ignited and torsos heaved to the audio fugue. Others busied themselves with the completion of the city's most recent coat of grafitti. At San G. Heidi Giuliani was reading a message from Marcos greeting 'rebel Italy' and remembering her dead son, Carlo. This demonstration was not Genoa x 10 but there is a thread that connects them deeply in so far as what happened in those days of 2001 has conditioned the opposition movement ever since. One need only consider the fact that the Feb 15 demo was launched by the European Social Forum in Florence, locked in the Italian imagination to Agnoletto's earlier Genoa Social Forum. Some rancor in the 'hood Back in the neighbourhood the mechanic and sculptor who lives downstairs confronted me on my return: why did we have these things hanging from our windows, who did we think we were demonstrating against etc. Despite my exhaustion I braced myself for one last outburst, but it took only the mention of our beloved Prime Minister's name, 'Berlusconi', for him to tun on his heels and walk off leaving me in mid-sentence! Pissed off perhaps? My point is that despite the jamboree quality and the superficial consensus of last weekend, there are still plenty of people supportive of the murderous political class or at least acquiescent or apathetic to their schemes. Troubling thoughts. What struck me politically was the inability of the radical edges to act significantly within the context of these mass mobilizations, similar to our experience in Florence. The political parties and historical civil-society actors are searching to grasp once again the collective desire to exert control over the social and political environment, to recuperate it, and the World Social Forum is just one example of the models they are using to successfully achieve this. Challenges on this scale put into perspective the sniping between different radical factions and pose once again the problems of representation. How can practices of self-organisation, democracy and direct action proliferate? Anyhow, enough. In many ways I'd rather have been in Dublin - having never seen 100,000 demonstrate in my hometown - or in NYC - where moments of collective action are more special for their rarity and anti-war sentiment has a different reasonance in the shadow of September 11. Not a bad day, a strange day but not a bad one. The vast nature of the 'demonstration' will have an effect on Don Berlusconi - if only for its value as focus group - but Italy ultimately is only the bit player in this bad movie. Caligula has abandoned Rome and now sits in Washington DC, directing this grotesque performance. Nonetheless, the rainbow flags still fly and a million discussions of the war have already begun, many of them amongst those accustomed to ignoring world events. This is a gap through which other ideas can flow. For radical groups and individuals - often resigned to impotence and isolation - it's time to remember that opening up to the social world is not only healthy and fun, but also subversive. Thus rather than complaining about the crowd's lack of radicality, it is certainly a time for the dirtying of hands Neither their war nor their peace. # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: [email protected] and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: [email protected]