Download Youth for Democracy Anthology

Download Youth for Democracy Anthology

Youth for Democracy Learning from nonviolent struggle across the world Youth for Democracy Learning from nonviolent struggle across the world © Humanity in Action Copenhagen 2012 Learn more about Youth for Democracy go to: www.humanityinaction.org/youthfordemocracy Learn more about Humanity in Action go to: www.humanityinaction.org Editor Magnus Meyer Harrison Co-editors Ea Arnoldi, Rasmus Rasmussen, Isa Lindemann Elowasson, Cecilie Bjerre, Theis Spaanheden Dencker, Jakob Skovgard, Vibeke Førisdahl, Morten Østervang, Ibrahim Baig Humanity in Action would like to thank everyone who helped shape, articulate, create and influence this anthology - especially all the contributing authors - this book could not have been without your great contributions. This book is part of Humanity in Action Denmark, Youth for Democracy Learning from nonviolent struggles across the world conference in Copenhagen, October 28. & 29. 2011. Youth for Democacy - Learning from nonviolent struggle across the world is supported by the Foreign Ministry of Denmark LEARNING FROM NONVIOLENT STRUGGLE ACROSS THE WORLD & the Dutch Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sports Imprint: Lassen Offset A/S ISBN 978-87-994984-0-6 Contents Foreword · 9 By Anders Jerichow – Chairman of Humanity in Action Denmark A Chronicle of Nonviolence · 11 By Steve Crawshaw – Author, Chief of Staff for the Secretary General Amnesty International Become the Change You Want · 15 – How to become a successful nonviolent movement By Srdja Popovic, Jordan Maze, Slobodan Djinovic – contribution by Centre for Applied Non Violent Action & Strategies. In Need of a Future · 19 – Causes and consequences of high youth unemployment By Dorothea Schmidt – Senior Researcher International Labour Organization - Cairo (Find full text on our website) Think Again: Nonviolent Resistance · 23 By Erica Chenoweth – Advisor to the International Center on Nonviolent Conflict, Ass Prof. Wesleyan University Internet and Mobilization · 27 By Massoumeh Torfeh – Research Associate at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London Rethinking Democratic Development · 31 By Anders Prien – International Voulenteer, Teacher and Trainer RAPtivism · 35 – Arab rappers in solidarity with uprisings in the Middle East & North Africa By Aisha Fukushima – HiA Senior Fellow, Rapper and Documentarist Supporting the Democratisation of Others · 39 By Lars Engberg Pedersen – Senior Researcher at Danish Institute for International Studies Democracy is like love - You have to do it at least once a day Youth for Democracy · 43 Rodrigo Diamanti, President of “Un Mundo Sin Mordaza - A World Without Censorship” and youth activist from Venezuela Meet Yahia & Judith Contents 7 Foreword Youth for democracy By ANDERS JERICHOW ust a few years ago it was still a question; whether or not nations of dictatorship at home, and all of them were involved in a strug- Jin the East, the South, in the Muslim World, in the Buddhist gle for political accountability, democratization, equal rights and world, would ask for democracy. freedom of speech in countries such as Egypt, Zimbabwe, Syria, The so-called international community generally recognized Venezuela, the Sudan and Belarus. Other participants arrived on a that the need for stability would require acceptance and even sup- more successful background, having toppled the Serbian dictator- port of existing dictatorships. Although, one by one; repressive re- ship some 11 eleven years earlier. gimes had fallen in Central and Southern Europe, South Africa and They met in Copenhagen to share experiences from the fight South America, the somewhat arrogant notion by the international against repression, to create an international network of young community – that some people apparently are made for oppression activists and to formulate recommendations for the international – still prevailed. civil society in support of movements involved in the most noble Whenever another society calls for the overthrow of authoritar- endeavor possible: to hold their governments responsible and to ian rulers, international media and politicians to this day still claim call for the right to elect their own leaders, their own parliaments that it has come as a surprise – claiming, they could not know that and their own governments – in freedom and democracy. people would call for regimes to change. As if corruption in these In this book international activists and scholars offer an in- states was unknown. As if oppression in these states was popularly sight to the nonviolent struggle across cultural, linguistic and even appreciated. As if censorship was the deliberate choice of the com- political barriers. It takes on history, strategy, economy, statistics, mon people. technology, society, culture and democracy when depicting why Admittedly, it wasn’t. and how nonviolence is pursued - or can be pursued – as a means What was unknown - and apparently comes as a surprise time to bring democratic change. and time again - is the fact that people eventually turn against re- Hopefully, it will serve as inspiration for activists still facing the pressive rulers. But then again: Did we seriously think that some need to replace authoritarian rule with participatory democracy. If people would opt for dictatorship rather than democracy? Did we it serves to activate, inspire, and make youth in Denmark as well seriously think that some people would prefer torture and censor- as around the globe conscious of the world they live in: Great. If it Christian Friis Bach, Danish Minister of Development Cooperation - speaking at the Youth for Democracy conference ship to the rule of law and freedom of speech? serves as inspiration for you in the support of civil society interna- In October 2011 the Danish branch of Humanity in Action tionally, great as well – it is needed! hosted a conference for youth activists from a broad range of socie- ties in political transition. All of them were facing various degrees This is humanity in action. Anders Jerichow Senior Correspondent at Danish daily newspaper „Politiken”‟. He serves as Chairman of the board of Danish PEN and Humanity in Action Denmark. Jerichow has published several books on the Middle East and human rights 8 Foreword 9 A Chronicle of Nonviolence By STEVE CRAWSHAW If at first you don’t succeed, try and try again. Then quit. No use being of nonviolent protest is the story of the Mahatma Gandhi, who a damn fool about it. took a 24-day march to the sea with a crowd of his supporters W.C. Fields and crumbled a handful of salty mud to protest at British salt tax laws, in India in 1930. Gandhi’s protest – including refusing to Our natural tendency to place the possible in the past leads us often to use violence, even when people were being clubbed to the ground overlook the acts of our contemporaries, who defy the presumably im- -- helped hasten the end of the British Empire. But that was only movable order of things, and accomplish what at first sight has seemed the beginning. impossible or improbable. Gandhi’s protests were very much in the minds of the civil Czesław Miłosz, 1987 rights protesters in the American South a quarter of a century later, in the 1950s. Racism was entrenched, both legally and socially. To et us be honest: at first glance, the analysis of W.C. Fields, above, give just one example: At the time when President Obama’s Ken- Lmay sound more plausible than that of the Polish Nobel-win- yan father married his Kansan mother, such a mixed marriage was ning writer Czesław Miłosz, with his apparently idealistic insistence deemed illegal in more than half of American states. that things may be achievable which we would never have believed The civil rights protests were imaginative and brave. Over- in. We all prize “pragmatism”, and we are taught from a young age whelmingly, they were led by young people. Some of the most no- that we should never expect to be able to change too much. table moments included the bus boycott of 1955 in Montgomery, And yet: Milosz was proved right, with remarkable speed. And Alabama, a protest against laws which forbade blacks to sit in the often, those who were at the forefront of change were the youth. front part of buses – and even obliged them to give up their seat Within two years after Milosz wrote those words, his native towards the back of the bus, if there were no more seats left for country, Poland, had gained a non-Communist prime minister, af- white passengers at the front. ter forty years of being run as a one-party state. Three months after his election, the Berlin Wall was down. Both Poland‘s changes and American Civil Rights Movement the changes in East Germany that brought the Wall down were the A view of the conference room, front row from the left; Kudakwashe Chakabva, Student Activist, Zimbabwe, Srdja Popovic, Student direct result of nonviolent revolutions. They were also the result of The most famous example of protest against that unjust system Leader in Otpor!, Serbia, Rima Marrouch, Journalist, Syria & Yahia Ramadan, Human Rights Activists, Egypt those who, on being told that their resistance was both dangerous was Rosa Parks, a seamstress who on December 1, 1955 refused to and futile, decided to continue anyway. give up her seat on a bus in Montgomery when ordered to do so. The driver asked Parks: “Are you going to stand up?” She said no. Starting Point When the driver threatened to have her arrested, Parks famously replied, “You may do that.” Much less famous than Parks – but in This brief essay makes no attempt to catalogue all the nonviolent some ways just as significant -- is the teenager Claudette Colvin, and youth revolutions that there have been over the years – nor to who made exactly the same courageous gesture nine months earlier, give a history of exactly how each of those revolutions happened. at the age of 15. The bus protests led to a year-long boycott of the Instead, I will seek to give an idea of just how varied some of the buses, which ended in victory for the civil rights protesters.

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