People Don’t Give Up!

Fernando Esquivel-Suárez, Jackeline Victoria
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Abstract

In 2017 images of demonstrations, riot police, and tanks filled social media worldwide. Most of the videos and media coverage reported on the first wave of #BlackLivesMatter uprisings were catalyzed by police brutality in Ferguson, New York, and Baltimore. In June of that year, similar footage came from Buenaventura, on the Pacific coast of Colombia. This predominantly Afro-descendantpo rt city is responsible for the transit of about 60 percent of the country’s commerce, while unemployment and inequality are rampant, and the infrastructure is on the brink of collapse. The affected local communities responded to these conditions of structural racism with a direct action named Paro Civico: a general strike planned for years by a coalition of grass-rootsAfro-Colombi an organizations demanding clean drinking water, health care, education, and policies to combat drug trafficking-related violence. Resisting police attacks while negotiating with a high-ranked delegation from the Colombian government, the months-long general strike achieved the majority of its goals and, most importantly, galvanized the momentum into the election of one of the movement’s leaders as mayor of Buenaventura. However, the leaders of the Paro Cívico’s Executive Committee have been emphatic in naming this a multiethnic movement and rejecting any specific racial discourses as organizing guiding principles for the direct action. In addition to contextualizing Paro Cívico, this article uses Tianna Paschel’s concept of “organizing while black,” to explain this omission in a racial context determined by the politics of mestizaje in Colombia. It also explains how Paro Cívico strategically exhibited the political power of the communities of the African diaspora without verbalizing it, becoming one of multiple factors that ushered in a new chapter of racial politics in the nation.
人们不会放弃
2017 年,示威游行、防暴警察和坦克的画面充斥着全球社交媒体。大多数关于第一波 #BlackLivesMatter 起义的视频和媒体报道都是由纽约弗格森和巴尔的摩的警察暴行催化的。同年 6 月,哥伦比亚太平洋沿岸的布埃纳文图拉也发生了类似事件。这座以非洲裔为主的城市承担着全国约 60% 的商业中转任务,而失业和不平等现象却十分严重,基础设施濒临崩溃。受影响的当地社区采取了名为 "Paro Civico "的直接行动来应对这些结构性种族主义状况:一个由非洲裔哥伦比亚人组成的基层组织联盟策划了多年的大罢工,要求获得清洁饮用水、医疗保健、教育以及打击毒品走私相关暴力的政策。长达数月的大罢工在抵抗警察袭击的同时,还与哥伦比亚政府的高级代表团进行了谈判,实现了大部分目标,最重要的是,为运动领导人之一当选布埃纳文图拉市市长注入了动力。然而,Paro Cívico 执行委员会的领导人一直强调这是一场多民族运动,并拒绝将任何特定的种族言论作为组织直接行动的指导原则。除了对 Paro Cívico 的背景进行分析外,本文还使用了 Tianna Paschel 的 "黑人组织 "概念,在哥伦比亚混血政治所决定的种族背景下解释了这一疏忽。文章还解释了 Paro Cívico 如何在不言明的情况下战略性地展示了非洲移民社群的政治力量,成为哥伦比亚种族政治新篇章的多重因素之一。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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