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Signs of The Times
Making the Forum Truly Global
http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4213
Making
the Forum Truly Global
Jamal
Juma'
| May 8, 2007
Editor: John
Feffer
The
existence of the World Social
Forum is already a historic
achievement. After the fall of the Berlin Wall and the crisis of the
alternative movements and theories that opposed the current system, the
fact that there was again a place stating that there is an alternative
was an important step.
More than
this, it finally gave people, movements, and organizations
the possibility to meet and to discuss and this was probably even more
important. Those that still had a vision of the alternative or a
concrete target of what had to be overcome in order to create this
other world could meet and discuss together or even plan common action.
However, has
the WSF brought people closer or did it only bring them
together? Sometimes it seems that now that many people know each other
better, the gaps between them simply are more clearly defined. Many
questions are not addressed. For instance, the charter of principles
has become a dogmatic cornerstone and not a dynamic work-in-process
document. When differences become little more than “enriching
diversity,†the process is doomed to enter into internal
friction
without mechanisms to solve it. The assertion in its charter that the
WSF “does not constitute a locus of power to be disputed by the
participants in its meetings†is simply false. It is clearly a
locus of
power. It is so even more since, in the only deliberating body over its
process – the International Council (IC) - political decisions
are not
discussed or argued through and remain hidden behind
“logistical†or
“methodological†reasoning.
The more and
more open call of the “social movements†vs. the
“NGOs†is
symptomatic of these never-confronted (and hence never-resolved)
issues. It’s clearly not an organizational issue. It’s
also not (only)
a question of South vs. North or money vs. people. It’s a
question of
political analysis and vision for which the WSF space has no language
that is admissible.
Only if we
create again the necessary language -- and allow open
discussion about power and conflict within the large magma of forces
and ideas within the WSF -- can we find a way to check and balance
power and really transform differences into “enriching
diversity.†Then
we can face up to one of the other big challenges the WSF faces: it is
growing in size but not in impact.
Strategic Choices
Without a
doubt, the greatest impact the WSF has ever had on real
existing struggles was the call for global mobilization against the war
on Iraq. It came out of the anti-war assembly convened in Mumbai in
2004, became somehow a “natural†priority, and was
taken up in the
largest mass mobilizations ever. Since then the WSF has met several
times without ever producing out of this space another call that had
the same power of mobilization.
The core
question of why this call was particularly effective has been
discussed in many places. I want to raise here only one point out of
the many reasons given. There are objectively moments in history when
collective action on some issues has a chance to make a difference
while not on others. Recognizing the possibility of strategizing
without defining hierarchies among the struggles is important if we
want to move forward and have political impact.
If not
bringing people closer in their analysis, six years of talking
together should at least give us a better understanding of our common
ground. Not only international networks should be created but also
trust and understanding among the networks and organizations. If this
is possible, we can frankly discuss the global situation we are facing.
For example,
the struggle against Israeli apartheid will long remain
the utmost priority for Palestinians. Every day is a struggle for
existence, and the world has for 60 years delayed withdrawing its
support from the Israeli occupation. Nevertheless it is not every year
or every moment that even a concerted global mobilization could make a
difference. Only when U.S. policy in the region is shaky, the European
Union is in conflict with the United States, Arab countries start
showing signs of discontent with the level of U.S. colonization to
which they are subjected, and Palestinian leadership is ready at least
to endorse an escalating struggle and to bring home the political gains
can concerted global mobilization really make a difference.
The same is
valid for other issues. Not every G8 summit or WTO meeting
can be blocked, and not each of these meetings holds the same
importance. If we want common struggles, we have to learn to sometimes
take a step back to let other struggles make gains as this will be
exchanged in mutual solidarity. If we really believe that all struggles
are interlinked, and if the fear of strategizing (and hence
prioritizing) is abolished, we can start collectively building a vision
on how to weaken the system step by step so that all of us can gain.
The way the WSF is built now, however, everybody tries only to make
their own struggles visible on a meaningless agenda.
The
Arab World
To build a
general framework in which the various struggles can find
their place and strategies can be developed, the WSF has to be a truly
global process in which all major global struggles are participating.
The WSF over
the years has made enormous steps in this direction, and
its process encompasses almost all continents. However, one core region
around which focuses much of today’s global diplomacy,
military, and
economic attacks is not yet integrated into the WSF: the Arab world.
This is caused by a series of interrelated dynamics as well as the
hesitations of some Western forces to enter into contact and relations
with the movements and struggle in the Arab world as they are today.
This is not
only because of the role Islam plays in many movements. It
is also because the system imposes its domination predominantly with
military means in this region. This means that resistance will include
the necessary forms to respond to war and military occupation.
It is thus
important that the WSF has begun to take steps to integrate
the Arab world. It will be up to us to ensure the movements in our
region are aware of the importance of the WSF as a process.
WSF
Process
If we really
want to create open discussion that brings conclusions
that transparently direct the WSF process, we need to analyze and maybe
change the relationships between the IC, the WSF process, and WSF
participants.
The relation
between the IC and the WSF event participants and then the
WSF process is not transparent and therefore disempowers the ordinary
participant. The process is defined by the WSF IC, definitely not by
the WSF participants. Participants can take advantage of the space but
have no possibility to change the direction of the WSF process.
The IC, while
a simple and useful coordination body at the beginning,
today finds itself de facto guiding a process without having almost any
of the necessary credentials to do so. Considering that the IC does not
discuss politics (while de facto deciding over very political
decisions), its language is not understandable for outsiders, its
meeting minutes are not published, and access to the IC is gained via
recommendation. No turnover or rotation mechanisms are in place. There
are no accountability mechanisms.
The proposal
of the expansion commission to reform the whole IC
creating some form of balance among its member organizations according
to a set of criteria unfortunately never went anywhere. We might want
to work toward a reformed IC or new strategizing spaces and bodies. In
any case, we need to overcome the current stalemate in the WSF process.
Too many important steps forward have been made to abandon the process.
Jamal Juma' is
coordinator of the Palestinian grassroots campaign Stop
the Wall (www.stopthewall.org) and a contributor to Foreign Policy In
Focus (www.fpif.org).