Report From Durban Meeting About the WSF, Nairobi
Immanuel Wallerstein
The meeting took place on July 22-23 in Durban, South Africa with
approximately 100 persons present. The origins of this meeting was that
a few people thought it would be a good idea to discuss some of the
strains within the WSF as well as ideas for what should happen at
Nairobi. Durban was chosen because, in the last week of July, the World
Congress of the International Sociological Association was taking
place, and it was hoped to piggy back on the fact that various
activists in the WSF would be present. The Center for Civil Society
(CCN), Univ. of KwaZulu Natal (UKZN) in Durban, headed by Patrick Bond,
offered to be the local co-sponsor along with the Forum on the Global
South (FGS). Patrick raised money to bring a number of African
participants from outside South Africa. Fewer non-African participants
came than originally hoped. The meeting in effect morphed into a
discussion of how to increase African participation in WSF, although
this remained ensconced in the larger question of the future
directions of the WSF.
The non-South African participants got a wonderful taste of the spirit
and energy of South African militants, with frequent interspersing of
shouts of Amandla (and its various responses) as well as spontaneous
singing.
In the opening session, Dennis Brutus,
South African poet, activist, and organizer of the sports boycott
during the apartheid regime, said in the opening session that the WSF
is the most promising global structure and the hope of our time. I
spoke about the tensions in the WSF between the concept of open space
and the demands for political action, and suggested some ways of
resolving this tension. Nicola Bullard (FGS) spoke of the evolution of
the WSF as a structure, arguing that the WSF itself was an experiment
in transforming social relations, and said that within that people can
set priorities for global issues.
A local Durban activist, Mnizeli Ndabankulu,
related recent local struggles, asking where was the WSF when they were
being shot, and said the WSF must not work for us, but work with us.
Finally, Trevor Ngwane (leader of a major social movement in
Soweto) concluded with an assessment of the 20th century as the age of
revolution that had been only partially successful. He argued that the
WSF inherits and builds on these struggles. He talked of the
disappointments in South Africa, aspirations that died on the altar of
capitalism. He criticized Pres. Mbeki, erstwhile Vice-Pres. Zuma, and
capitalist bosses, and said we draw a class line. The WSF should
equally draw a class line. The WSF is not a social movement, but a
collectivity of movements. The WSF should not pretend to speak on
behalf of all those who were not there. The WSF must move from rhetoric
to action.
In the discussion, Ashwin Desai (South
African intellectual and activist) argued that Mbeki-ism is wrong,
that Mbeki is Bush's point man in Africa, and that we should commit
ourselves to destroying Mbeki-ism. Although the SACP (So. Af. Communist
Party) and COSATU (the trade-unions in So. Af.) have colluded in this,
they are now, at least, discussing this issue. By doing this, SACP and
COSATU have opened space for the rest of us. He continued that, with
Mandela, we thought there was a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow,
but it was a pot of shit. We stand for a left progressive culture that
will not be co-opted yet again. We must be unreasonable and broaden
local struggles so that we can show the links between national and
world struggles. Let us not merely change the riders on the horses, but
the direction in which the horses are going. And to do that, we have to
discuss both local issues as well as global ones.
The second session focused on the WSF in Africa. There were
participants from Nigeria, Ghana, Senegal, Egypt, Kenya, Malawi,
Zimbabwe, Lesotho, and South Africa. We got reports on the struggles
within these countries, the state of social movements, and preparations
for Nairobi.
The evening session was co-sponsored by CODESRIA, and was a
celebration of ten years for the African Sociological Review, as well
as the fifth anniversary of the Center for Civil Society. Speakers
included
Samir Amin, Jimi Adesina (pres. of the South Af. Sociological Assn.),
Ari Sitas (of UKZN), Fred Hendricks (editor of Af. Soc. Rev.), Raquel
Sosa (Mexico), and Ebrima Sall (CODESRIA, which sponsors the Af. Soc.
Rev.).
The second day began with a session in which the WSF Charter was
outlined, in English and Zulu, for the benefit of local activists.
This was followed by a session in which Njoki Njoroge Njehu, a key
person in the local organization of the Nairobi WSF, gave a report on
preparations - the site, hotels, visas, plans for caravans to enable
Africans to come. She also explained the structure of the WSF and told
everyone that no one is going to organize issues for them and referred
people to the WSF website on consultations. She said that Nairobi is
planning for an expected arrival of 100,000 persons, and that they were
raising a solidarity fund to help participants who are in need of such
help. In general, she gave a very encouraging picture about the state
of preparations.
The next session was on two major, current issues. Salim Vally (of
South Africa) discussed the Israeli invasion of Lebanon, and Briggs
Bemba (activist in Zimbabwe) discussed what has been going on in
Zimbabwe. The group created two committees to bring back resolutions
for later voting.
We then divided into focus groups on the following themes as chosen by
those present: South African funding for Nairobi, refugees, human
rights, the SMI (Social Movements Indaba, of South Africa), women, and
caravans. After the focus groups, each reported to the whole group.
The afternoon began with a major political debate. Samir Amin
presented the Bamako Appeal. He said there were three themes in the
discussion - nationalism, development, and socialism. He said that the
WSF was a forum and that it should remain a forum, but that activists
should also move ahead with plans for action, and that the Bamako
Appeal was intended to stimulate such action.
Responding to Amin was the three "autonomists" - Franco Barchiesi
(South Africa/USA), Prishani Naidoo (South Africa) and Geoffrey Pleyers
(France/England). All three said that the Bamako Appeal was a return to
vanguardism and a reversion to the errors of the traditional left. Its
talk about the local level was confused, politically irrelevant, and
dangerous. They asserted that the WSF was now moving in the wrong
direction.
The presentations sparked a strong debate. Helmy Shawari (Egypt) warned
that capitalist forces could take over a forum. Lau Kin Chi (China)
asked everyone not to dichotomize, but to look for meaningful
articulations between open space and action. Hassan Sunmonu
(Nigeria) said it was not a crime to put forward ideas. Angela Miles
(UK) seconded Hassan, and said that the feminist movements have shown
that one can both strategize/theorize and talk. Another participant
argued that there are many Marxisms, and that they should not all be
painted with the same Stalinist brush.
At this point, I, and some others had to leave, but the discussion went
on. I do not think that Amin and the three autonomists reached any
meeting of minds whatsoever, and that the discussion will continue in
Nairobi.
In the final session (from which I was absent), resolutions on Lebanon and Zimbabwe were presumably adopted.
The meeting, as the report indicated, was a mixture of great
enthusiasm and energy and of strong debate. I myself consider the
level of debate and positive activism a sign of considerable health of
the WSF - in the world and in Africa. The next moment is in Nairobi,
in the land that lives under Jomo Kenyatta's famous post-independence
slogan of Harambee (which can more or less be translated as, let's get
working to complete the job).