It's been almost two years since the uprising in Belarus was suppressed by the
regime. It left many anarchists in jails, while others had to flee from theircountry in fear of repression. In this text, a member of Anarchist Black CrossBelarus will dwell on what it's like to keep doing anti-repressive work when themovement is not really there anymore. ---- The two biggest groups of anarchistsare now distributed between Belarusian prisons and exile. ABC-Belarus, afteroperating for over 14 years in the country, also had to leave to protect itsmembers and keep up the work. ---- For the first half-year in migration, comradesseemed to be eager to stick together and do something - if not change the regimein the country, then at least attract attention to some 30 comrades who ended upin jails.Of course, this activity was impeded by the need to figure out one's life andpapers in a new place, lack of local language proficiency, people being scatteredall around Europe and Asia, and depressive states caused by forced migration andlack of any personal or political prospects.Every now and then, at our strategic meetings, ABCBelarus discussed the potentialof remaining one of or the only anarchist collective from Belarus. We askedourselves, if there is no movement anymore, would our work make sense? We don'tsee ourselves as a charity group that exists exclusively for the benefit of thosefacing repression. We see our work as political action that is only valid andlegitimate when we have a movement around that we can not only serve and beaccountable to, but also rely on.Our hardships are very much related to the context in which our group was formedand how it functioned. Trying to avoid repression, our members were anonymouseven to the most trusted comrades. That created problems with collecting moneyinside the Belarusian movement, the lack of channels of talking to groups andindividuals without compromising anonymity and the inability to personallyinterfere in the urgent situations of repression. We still needed the comrades todo the field work while we made sure people felt secure about their legalexpenses being covered by the movement, instead of become a burden of theirfamilies. We also pioneered the shaping of collective security culture to avoidpotential expenses and repression because of people's security neglects.It also created a disbalance in who people saw as responsible for doingrepression response work. It felt like comrades mainly relied on ABC-Belarus interms of raising money and organising lawyers, which was fine as long as we hadsmall amount of comrades to take care of in the course of the last decade.But things changed drastically after many of us had to leave and the number ofprisoners increased exponentially. It feels like the movement is slowly fading,with many people choosing to continue with normal life, while we can't reallyafford that, having 30+ comrades to care about, with some sentenced to terms of15-20 years in prison.Interestingly, it seems like when some Belarusian anarchists left the repressivecontext and they found themselves in a safer environment, the need for networkingor relying on the community became less pressing. And the inclination to avoidany clashes with the past reality in the form of reading sad letters of comradesor reports of ongoing pressure on them in jails is very much understandable as apsychological self-defence mechanism. Activists are traumatised and tired andneed some rest. Some will probably not return from that activist break. At thesame time, when they personally don't need the ABC-Belarus protection anymore,there is no need to follow and engage with us. Previously, people invested in ABCknowing that the structure will protect them and their comrades in case ofnecessity. Now this doesn't seem real.On the other hand, the fact that Belarusian anarchists found themselves in moreliberal countries that allow organising public campaigns there andawareness-raising or benefit events, they are not massively using this chance tofundraise for their imprisoned comrades. Even for simple tasks like helping tolayout a book by a prisoner or create some design to advertise our campaigns areno eager volunteers.Over time, activists also get disillusioned in the struggle for change inBelarus, because it is not really possible to greatly influence the situationthere, and being active in exile feels like fake and sectarian activism for thesake of activism. Moreover, like in most political movement, the "effective life"of an anarchist amounts to 3-5 years. It means, the more time passes in exile,the less comrades we will have around, with almost no influx, since the diasporasare not so numerous and mostly consist of the same tired, traumatised anddemoralised migrants.In light of this, ABC-Belarus remains a very specialised labour-force that seemsto be responsible and accountable for organising full-fledged and long-termsupport of our imprisoned comrades. Needless to say that we are also traumatisedand tired, just there is no one we can share this burden with or pass it to, sowe will have to carry it. Of course, not everything is so dark, we still can relyon some comrades, we are just concerned about the gloomy trend as the years go by.Anyways, our imprisoned comrades still need support, now more that ever. To beable to sustain the level of financial aid we used to provide to them, we needexternal help. Just recently, we have launched a 'personal supporter' campaignwhich implies looking for individuals and groups who would take custody over aBelarusian imprisoned anarchist and cover most or all of their expenses.Read more on the campaign on our website abc-belarus.org. Consider becoming sucha backer, seriously. www.abc-belarus.org/en/supportersWe also invite you to think about how solidarity and anti-repression work isorganised in your activist communities, because we all deserve to be reassuredthat we will not be left behind in dark times.ABC - Belarushttps://organisemagazine.org.uk/anti-repression-work-in-a-ghost-like-movement-international/_________________________________________A - I N F O S N E W S S E R V I C EBy, For, and About AnarchistsSend news reports to A-infos-en mailing listA-infos-en@ainfos.ca
Geen opmerkingen:
Een reactie posten