The Process Is the Point
PORTO ALEGRE, Brazil-When the
World Social Forum opened yesterday
with a panel calling for the
cancellation of billions of dollars in
foreign debt to aid the countries
devastated by the Dec. 26 tsunami, I
must admit I felt a bit cynical. The
panelists, mostly activists from the
affected countries who were joined by
Argentine Nobel Peace Prize-winner
Adolfo Pérez Esquivel, argued
convincingly that Third World nations
were already crippled with interest on so-called foreign aid-$23.6 billion
in 2003-and that simply canceling the debt would be far more helpful
than saddling them with new emergency loans.
Still, when I asked the panelists if they had had any indication that the
International Monetary Fund and other major lenders might suddenly
agree to wipe out their debts, they acknowledged that they didn't expect
it to happen any time soon. Nor had they sent any delegates to Davos,
where the British government has announced it is going to push for debt
relief.
"If the players in Davos really care about what the people think, it is
their burden and their challenge to come to Porto Alegre," said Filipina
delegate Lidy Napcii.
If this was going to be the tone of the conference-we are right, and it is
up to the powers that be to realize it-I was worried. The bigwigs in
Davos seem pretty happy right where they are. True, they have been
trying to soften their image lately, with panels this year like "Will income
disparities always be with us?" "Mobilizing a disenchanted workforce,"
and "Why rich countries can't buy happiness."
Davos, of course, is really about networking, and that seems to be the
overriding theme of Porto Alegre as well. I've been calling it a meeting of
the left, but that's imprecise because it suggests some kind of electoral
agenda. Much of what is going to happen here is the trading of ideas and
business cards. It's a way to know that you are not working in a
vacuum, said Gururaja Budhya, who works at a women's rights
organization in Shimoga Karnataka State, India. At last year's forum,
which was held in Mumbai, India, Budhya says he "met people from
different countries working on the same issues. I encountered activists
from Thailand, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, and Europe. We kept in touch. It was
empowering."
The program itself is a hodgepodge, composed
of two 134-page volumes, plus an additional
12-page section of corrections. It was released
only yesterday. As in years past, there will be
dozens of meetings devoted to the dangers of
globalization, the misdeeds of the World Bank
and IMF, and how the left can best organize
itself, all crisscrossed with varying shades of
feminism, Marxism, environmentalism, and
human rights activism. Other panels read like
something you might see on the Learning
Channel, such as a meeting on the
"Unbearable Lightness of Equality," while
another addresses the no doubt pressing issue
of "the development of the grocery retail
sector in the Italian market and its impact on the farming sector in the
South."
The forum kicked off last night with a massive march that resembled a
politicized Mardi Gras, with separate sections of the parade devoted to
different causes. There were women's rights organizations in bright
purple wigs, rain forest advocates carrying coffins, Indian trade unionists
in traditional dress, and a bebopping delegation of middle-aged education
advocates. The parade was massive, kilometers long, snaking through
Porto Alegre as crowds cheered from sidewalks, bridges, and apartment
windows.
The whole mishmash, tens of tens of thousands of people, converged in
one of the city's central parks. Guys with Trotsky and Che T-shirts
chatted with Brazilian tribesmen in traditional dress; others held banners
with slogans like "Education Is Inclusion," "Davos No, Samba Yes," or
one from antihunger group that simply had the image of a crossed fork
and spoon.
It is difficult to describe the tone of the gathering-it was part political
convention, part Woodstock, part Carnival, and like nothing I've ever
encountered in America. As a reporter, I've covered political conventions,
protests, and rock concerts for a decade, and I've developed the usual
reporter's cynicism for all things done by large groups. I'm also a serious
music snob.
The crowd sang songs about dignity and the forum theme "Another
World Is Possible." The tone was not polemic. It was passionate and also
optimistic. Groovy, even. It was strange-and very un-American
(although not particularly anti-American).
When Gilberto Gil took the stage, the crowd went wild. This is who they
had been waiting for. One of the country's most beloved musicians, he
was jailed by the military dictatorship in the 1960s because his politics
were too radical. Today, he is the minister of culture in the Lula
government.
The next day, I ran into Gil at the forum and asked what he thought the
significance of the event was. Would this big bunch of meetings involving
all these different groups really change anything? Gil leaned back and
smiled. He looked me in the eye and said: "I answer your question with
a question. Do you think that change happens?" This was a guy who
knew something about change.
Playing an acoustic guitar alone in front of a football-stadium-sized crowd
is no easy feat, but Gil's rich voice and swinging playing had seemed to
fill the huge park with ease.
When Gil hit the opening chords to John Lennon's "Imagine," I was
surprised to find that I was no longer feeling cynical. I don't even like
Lennon or the Beatles, but this was something different. I was smiling. I
had even started to dance.
Copyright by Samuel Loewenberg and/or the publication in which it first appeared
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