Acts of Hope -- Challenging Empire on the World Stage
by Rebecca Solnit
What We
Hope For
On January 18, 1915, eighteen months into the first world war, the first
terrible war in the modern sense -- slaughter by the hundreds of thousands,
poison gas, men living and dying in the open graves of trench warfare, tanks,
barbed wire, machine guns, airplanes -- Virginia Woolf wrote in her journal,
"The future is dark, which is on the whole, the best thing the future can be, I
think." Dark, she seems to say, as in inscrutable, not as in terrible. We often
mistake the one for the other. People imagine the end of the world is nigh
because the future is unimaginable. Who twenty years ago would have pictured a
world without the USSR and with the Internet? We talk about "what we hope for"
in terms of what we hope will come to pass but we could think of it another way,
as why we hope. We hope on principle, we hope tactically and strategically, we
hope because the future is dark, we hope because it's a more powerful and more
joyful way to live. Despair presumes it knows what will happen next. But who,
two decades ago, would have imagined that the Canadian government would give a
huge swathe of the north back to its indigenous people, or that the imprisoned
Nelson Mandela would become president of a free South Africa?
Twenty-one years ago this June, a million people gathered in Central Park to
demand a nuclear freeze. They didn't get it. The movement was full of people who
believed they'd realize their goal in a few years and then go home. Many went
home disappointed or burned out. But in less than a decade, major nuclear arms
reductions were negotiated, helped along by European antinuclear movements and
the impetus they gave Gorbachev. Since then, the issue has fallen off the map
and we have lost much of what was gained. The US never ratified the
Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, and the Bush administration is planning to resume
the full-fledged nuclear testing halted in 1991, to resume manufacture, to
expand the arsenal, and perhaps even to use it in once-proscribed ways.
It's always too soon to go home. And it's always too soon to calculate effect. I
once read an anecdote by someone in Women Strike for Peace, the first great
antinuclear movement in the United States in 1963, the one that did contribute
to a major victory: the end of aboveground nuclear testing with its radioactive
fallout that was showing up in mother's milk and baby teeth. She told of how
foolish and futile she felt standing in the rain one morning protesting at the
Kennedy White House. Years later she heard Dr. Benjamin Spock -- one of the most
high-profile activists on the issue then -- say that the turning point for him
was seeing a small group of women standing in the rain, protesting at the White
House. If they were so passionately committed, he thought, he should give the
issue more consideration himself.
Unending
Change
A
lot of activists expect that for every action there is an equal and opposite and
punctual reaction, and regard the lack of one as failure. After all,
activism is often a reaction: Bush decides to invade Iraq, we create a global
peace movement in which 10 to 30 million people march on seven continents on the
same weekend. But history is shaped by the groundswells and common dreams that
single acts and moments only represent. It's a landscape more complicated than
commensurate cause and effect. Politics is a surface in which transformation
comes about as much because of pervasive changes in the depths of the collective
imagination as because of visible acts, though both are necessary. And though
huge causes sometimes have little effect, tiny ones occasionally have huge
consequences.
Some years ago, scientists attempted to create a long-range weather forecasting
program, assuming that the same initial conditions would generate the same
weather down the road. It turned out that the minutest variations, even the
undetectable things, things they could perhaps not yet even imagine as data,
could cause entirely different weather to emerge from almost identical initial
conditions. This was famously summed up as the saying about the flap of a
butterfly's wings on one continent that can change the weather on another.
History is like weather, not like checkers. A game of checkers ends. The weather
never does. That's why you can't save anything. Saving is the wrong word. Jesus
saves and so do banks: they set things aside from the flux of earthly change. We
never did save the whales, though we might've prevented them from becoming
extinct. We will have to continue to prevent that as long as they continue
not to be extinct. Saving suggests a laying up where neither moth nor dust
doth corrupt, and this model of salvation is perhaps why Americans are so good
at crisis response and then going home to let another crisis brew. Problems
seldom go home. Most nations agree to a ban on hunting endangered species of
whale, but their oceans are compromised in other ways. DDT is banned in the US,
but exported to the third world, and Monsanto moves on to the next atrocity.
The world gets better. It also gets worse. The time it will take you to address
this is exactly equal to your lifetime, and if you're lucky you don't know how
long that is. The future is dark. Like night. There are probabilities and
likelihoods, but there are no guarantees.
As Adam Hochschild points out, from the time the English Quakers first took on
the issue of slavery, three quarters of a century passed before it was abolished
it in Europe and America. Few if any working on the issue at the beginning lived
to see its conclusion, when what had once seemed impossible suddenly began to
look, in retrospect, inevitable. And as the law of unintended consequences might
lead you to expect, the abolition movement also sparked the first widespread
women's rights movement, which took about the same amount of time to secure the
right to vote for American women, has achieved far more in the subsequent 83
years, and is by no means done. Activism is not a journey to the corner store;
it is a plunge into the dark.
Writers understand that action is seldom direct. You write your books. You
scatter your seeds. Rats might eat them, or they might just rot. In California,
some seeds lie dormant for decades because they only germinate after fire.
Sharon Salzberg, in her book Faith, recounts how she put together a book
of teachings by the Buddhist monk U Pandita and consigned the project to the
"minor-good-deed category." Long afterward, she found out that when Burmese
democracy movement's leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, was kept isolated under house
arrest by that country's dictators, the book and its instructions in meditation
"became her main source of spiritual support during those intensely difficult
years." Emily Dickinson, Walt Whitman, Walter Benjamin and Arthur Rimbaud, like
Henry David Thoreau, achieved their greatest impact long after their deaths,
long after weeds had grown over the graves of the bestsellers of their times.
Gandhi's Thoreau-influenced nonviolence was as important in the American South
as it was in India, and what transpired with Martin Luther King's sophisticated
version of it has influenced civil disobedience movements around the world.
Decades after their assassinations they are still with us.
At the port of Oakland, California, on April 7, several hundred peace activists
came out at dawn at dawn to picket the gates of a company shipping arms to Iraq.
The longshoreman's union had vowed not to cross our picket. The police arrived
in riot gear and, unprovoked and unthreatened, began shooting wooden bullets and
beanbags of shot at the activists. Three members of the media, nine
longshoremen, and fifty activists were injured. I saw the bloody welts the size
of half grapefruits on the backs of some of the young men--they had been shot in
the back -- and a swelling the size of an egg on the jaw of a delicate yoga
instructor. Told that way, violence won. But the violence inspired the union
dock workers to form closer alliances with antiwar activists and underscored the
connections between local and global issues. On May 12 we picketed again, this
time with no violence. Told that way, the story continues to unfold, and
we have grown stronger. And there's a third way to tell it. The picket stalled a
lot of semi trucks. Some of the drivers were annoyed. Some sincerely believed
that the war was a humanitarian effort. Some of them -- notably a group of South
Asian drivers standing around in the morning sun looking radiant -- thought we
were great. After the picket was broken up, one immigrant driver honked in
support and pulled over to ask for a peace sign for his rig. I stepped forward
to pierce holes into it so he could bungee-cord it to the chrome grille. We
talked briefly, shook hands, and he stepped up into the cab. He was turned back
at the gates --they weren't accepting deliveries from antiwar truckers. When I
saw him next he was sitting on a curb all alone behind police lines, looking
cheerful and fearless. Who knows what will ultimately come of the spontaneous
courage of this man with a job on the line?
Victories of the New Peace Movement
It was a setup for disappointment to expect that there would be an acknowledged
cause and effect relationship between the antiwar actions and the Bush
administration. On the other hand...
We will likely never know, but it seems that the Bush administration decided
against the "Shock and Awe" saturation bombing of Baghdad because we made it
clear that the cost in world opinion and civil unrest would be too high. We
millions may have saved a few thousand or a few hundred thousand lives.
The global peace movement was grossly underreported on February 15th. A million
people marching in Barcelona was nice, but I also heard about the thousands in
Chapel Hill, NC, the hundred and fifty people holding a peace vigil in the small
town of Las Vegas, NM, the antiwar passion of people in even smaller villages
from Bolivia to Thailand.
Activists are often portrayed as an unrepresentative, marginal rabble, but
something shifted in the media last fall. Since then, antiwar activists have
mostly been represented as a diverse, legitimate, and representative body, a
watershed victory for our representation and our long-term prospects.
Many people who had never spoken out, never marched in the street, never joined
groups, written to politicians, or donated to campaigns, did so; countless
people became political as never before. That is, if nothing else, a vast
aquifer of passion now stored up to feed the river of change. New networks and
communities and websites and listserves and jail solidarity groups and
coalitions arose.
In the name of the so-called war on terror, which seems to inculcate terror at
home and enact it abroad, we have been encouraged to fear our neighbors, each
other, strangers, (particularly middle-eastern, Arab, and Moslem people), to spy
on them, to lock ourselves up, to privatize ourselves. By living out our hope
and resistance in public together with strangers of all kinds, we overcame this
catechism of fear, we trusted each other; we forged a community that bridged all
differences among the peace loving as we demonstrated our commitment to the
people of Iraq.
We achieved a global movement without leaders. There were many brilliant
spokespeople, theorists and organizers, but when your fate rests on your leader,
you are only as strong, as incorruptible, and as creative as he -- or,
occasionally, she -- is. What could be more democratic than millions of people
who, via the grapevine, the Internet, and various groups from churches to unions
to direct-action affinity groups, can organize themselves? Of course leaderless
actions and movements have been organized for the past couple of decades, but
never on such a grand scale. The African writer Laurens Van Der Post once said
that no great new leaders were emerging because it was time for us to cease to
be followers. Perhaps we have.
We succeeded in doing what the anti-Vietnam War movement infamously failed to
do: to refuse the dichotomies. We were able to oppose a war on Iraq without
endorsing Saddam Hussein. We were able to oppose a war with compassion for the
troops who fought it. Most of us did not fall into the traps that our foreign
policy so often does and that earlier generations of radicals did: the ones in
which our enemy's enemy is our friend, in which the opponent of an evil must be
good, in which a nation and its figurehead, a general and his troops, become
indistinguishable. We were not against the US and for Iraq; we
were against the war, and many of us were against all war, all weapons of mass
destruction -- even ours -- and all violence, everywhere. We are not just an
antiwar movement. We are a peace movement.
Questions the peace and anti-globalization movements have raised are now
mainstream, though no mainstream source will say why, or perhaps even knows why.
Activists targeted Bechtel, Halliburton, Chevron and Lockheed Martin, among
others, as war profiteers with ties to the Bush administration. The actions
worked not by shutting the places down in any significant way but by making
their operations a public question. Direct action seldom works directly, but now
the media scrutinizes those corporations as never before. Representative Henry
Waxman publicly questioned Halliburton's ties to terrorist states the other day,
and the media is closely questioning the administration's closed-door decision
to award Halliburton, the company vice-president Cheney headed until he took
office, a $7 billion contract to administer Iraqi oil. These are breakthroughs.
The
Angel of Alternate History
American history is dialectical. What is best about it is called forth by what
is worst. The abolitionists and the underground railroad, the feminist movement
and the civil rights movement, the environmental and human rights movements were
all called into being by threats and atrocities. There's plenty of what's worst
afoot nowadays. But we need a progressive activism that is not one of reaction
but of initiation, one in which people of good will everywhere set the agenda.
We need to extend the passion the war brought forth into preventing the next
one, and toward addressing all the forms of violence besides bombs. We need a
movement that doesn't just respond to the evils of the present but calls forth
the possibilities of the future. We need a revolution of hope. And for that we
need to understand how change works and how to count our victories.
While serving on the board of Citizen Alert, a Nevada nonprofit environmental
and antinuclear group, I once wrote a fundraising letter modeled after "It's a
Wonderful Life." Frank Capra's movie is a model for radical history, because
what the angel Clarence shows the suicidal George Bailey is what the town would
look like if he hadn't done his best for his neighbors. This angel of alternate
history shows not what happened but what didn't, and that's what's hardest to
weigh. Citizen Alert's victories were largely those of what hadn't
happened to the air, the water, the land, and the people of Nevada. And the
history of what the larger movements have achieved is largely one of
careers undestroyed, ideas uncensored, violence and intimidation uncommitted,
injustices unperpetrated, rivers unpoisoned and undammed, bombs undropped,
radiation unleaked, poisons unsprayed, wildernesses unviolated, countryside
undeveloped, resources unextracted, species unexterminated.
I was born during the summer the Berlin Wall went up, into a country in which
there weren't even words, let alone redress, for many of the practices that kept
women and people of color from free and equal citizenship, in which
homosexuality was diagnosed as a disease and treated as a crime, in which the
ecosystem was hardly even a concept, in which extinction and pollution were
issues only a tiny minority heeded, in which "better living through chemistry"
didn't yet sound like black humor, in which the US and USSR were on hair-trigger
alert for a nuclear Armageddon, in which most of the big questions about the
culture had yet to be asked. It was a world with more rainforest, more wild
habitat, more ozone layer, and more species; but few were defending those things
then. An ecological imagination was born and became part of the common culture
only in the past few decades, as did a broader and deeper understanding of human
diversity and human rights.
The world gets worse. It also gets better. And the future stays dark.
Nobody knows the consequences of their actions, and history is full of small
acts that changed the world in surprising ways. I was one of thousands of
activists at the Nevada Test Site in the late 1980s, an important, forgotten
history still unfolding out there where the US and UK have exploded more than a
thousand nuclear bombs, with disastrous effects on the environment and human
health, (and where the Bush Administration would like to resume testing, thereby
sabotaging the unratified Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty). We didn't shut down
our test site, but our acts inspired the Kazakh poet Olzhas Suleimenov, on
February 27, 1989, to read a manifesto instead of poetry on live Kazakh TV -- a
manifesto demanding a shutdown of the Soviet nuclear test site in Semipalatinsk,
Kazakhstan, and calling a meeting. Five thousand Kazakhs gathered at the
Writer's Union the next day and formed a movement to shut down the site. They
named themselves the Nevada-Semipalatinsk Antinuclear Movement.
The Soviet Test Site was indeed shut down. Suleimenov was the catalyst, and
though we in Nevada were his inspiration, what gave him his platform was his
poetry in a country that loved poets. Perhaps Suleimenov wrote all his poems so
that one day he could stand up in front of a TV camera and deliver not a poem
but a manifesto. And perhaps Arundhati Roy wrote a ravishing novel that
catapulted her to stardom so that when she stood up to oppose dams and
destruction of the local for the benefit of the transnational, people would
notice. Or perhaps these writers opposed the ravaging of the earth so that
poetry too -- poetry in the broadest sense -- would survive in the world.
American poets became an antiwar movement themselves when Sam Hamill declined an
invitation to Laura Bush's "Poetry and the American Voice" symposium shortly
after her husband's administration announced their "Shock and Awe" plan, and he
circulated his letter of outrage. His e-mail box filled up, he started
poetsagainstthewar.org, to which about 11,000 poets have submitted poems to
date. Hamill became a major spokesperson against the war and his website has
become an organizing tool for the peace movement.
Not Left
But Forward
The glum traditional left often seems intent upon finding the cloud around every
silver lining. This January, when Governor Ryan of Illinois overturned a hundred
and sixty-seven death sentences, there were left-wing commentators who found
fault with the details, carped when we should have been pouring champagne over
our heads like football champs. And joy is one of our weapons and one of our
victories. Non-activists sometimes chide us for being joyous at demonstrations,
for having fun while taking on the serious business of the world, but in a time
when alienation, isolation, and powerlessness are among our principal
afflictions, just being out in the streets en masse is not a demand for
victory: it is a victory.
But there's an increasing gap between this new movement with its capacity for
joy and the old figureheads. Their grumpiness is often the grumpiness of
perfectionists who hold that anything less than total victory is failure, a
premise that makes it easy to give up at the start or to disparage the victories
that are possible. This is earth. It will never be heaven. There will always be
cruelty, always be violence, always be destruction. There is tremendous
devastation now. In the time it takes you to read this, acres of rainforest will
vanish, a species will go extinct, women will be raped, men shot, and far too
many children will die of easily preventable causes. We cannot eliminate all
devastation for all time, but we can reduce it, outlaw it, undermine its source
and foundation: these are victories.
Nearly everyone felt, after September 11, 2001, along with grief and fear, a
huge upwelling of idealism, of openness, of a readiness to question and to
learn, a sense of being connected and a desire to live our lives for something
more, even if it wasn't familiar, safe, or easy. Nothing could have been more
threatening to the current administration, and they have done everything they
can to repress it.
But that desire is still out there. It's the force behind a huge new movement we
don't even have a name for yet, a movement that's not a left opposed to a right,
but perhaps a below against above, little against big, local and decentralized
against consolidated. If we could throw out the old definitions, we could
recognize where the new alliances lie; and those alliances -- of small farmers,
of factory workers, of environmentalists, of the poor, of the indigenous, of the
just, of the farseeing -- could be extraordinarily powerful against the forces
of corporate profit and institutional violence. Left and right are terms for
where the radicals and conservatives sat in the French National Assembly after
the French Revolution. We're not in that world anymore, let alone that seating
arrangement. We're in one that for all its ruins and poisons and legacies is
utterly new. Anti-globalization activists say, "Another world is possible." It
is not only possible, it is inevitable; and we need to participate in shaping
it.
I'm hopeful, partly because we don't know what is going to happen in that dark
future and we might as well live according to our principles as long as we're
here. Hope, the opposite of fear, lets us do that. Imagine the world as a
lifeboat: the corporations and the current administration are smashing holes in
it as fast (or faster) than the rest of us can bail or patch the leaks. But it's
important to take account of the bailers as well as the smashers and to write
epics in the present tense rather than elegies in the past tense. That's part of
what floats this boat. And if it sinks, we all sink, so why not bail? Why not
row? The reckless Bush Administration seems to be generating what US
administrations have so long held back: a world in which the old order is
shattered and anything is possible.
Zapatista spokesman Subcommandante Marcos adds, "History written by Power taught
us that we had lost.... We did not believe what Power taught us. We skipped
class when they taught conformity and idiocy. We failed modernity. We are united
by the imagination, by creativity, by tomorrow. In the past we not only met
defeat but also found a desire for justice and the dream of being better. We
left skepticism hanging from the hook of big capital and discovered that we
could believe, that it was worth believing, that we should believe -- in
ourselves. Health to you, and don't forget that flowers, like hope, are
harvested."
And they grow in the dark. "I believe," adds Thoreau, "in the forest, and the
meadow, and the night in which the corn grows."
Rebecca Solnit is a regular columnist for Orion magazine. Her most
recent book is
RIVER OF SHADOWS
Eadweard Muybridge and the Technological Wild West