"With the privatization of land comes the privatization of everything else" A letter from South Africa

The following is an open letter from the South African Shackdweller's Movement that was recently published in The Nation magazine.

 

Background: The Abahlali base Mjondolo (Shack Dwellers) Movement began in Durban,
South Africa, in early 2005. Although it is overwhelmingly located in
and around the large port city of Durban it is, in terms of the numbers
of people mobilised, the largest organisation of the militant poor in
post-apartheid South Africa.

 


To: All poor Americans and their communities in resistance

 

The privatization of land--a public resource for all that has now become
a false commodity--was the original sin, the original cause of this
financial crisis. With the privatization of land comes the dispossession
of people from their land which was held in common by communities. With
the privatization of land comes the privatization of everything else,
because once land can be bought and sold, almost anything else can
eventually be bought and sold.

 

As the poor of South Africa, we know this because we live it.
Colonialism and apartheid dispossessed us of our land and gave it to
whites to be bought and sold for profit. When apartheid as a systematic
racial instrument ended in 1994, we did not get our land back. Some
blacks are now able to own land as long as they have the money to do so.
But as the poor living in council homes, renting flats or living in the
shacks, we became even more vulnerable to the property market.

 

It is chilling to hear many people today speak with nostalgia about how
it was better during apartheid--as if it was not apartheid that stole
their land in the first place. But, in an obscure way, it makes sense.
Back then in the cities there was less competition for land and housing.
Because many of us were kept in the bantustans by a combination of force
and economic compulsion (such as subsidized rural factories), the
informal settlements in the cities were smaller and land less scarce.

 

But in the new South Africa (what some call post-apartheid South Africa
and others call neoliberal South Africa), the elite have decided it is
every man--or woman or multinational company--for him or herself. And
thus, the poor end up fighting with the rich as well as with themselves.
The elite use their wealth and their connections to all South African
political parties in the pursuit of profit. There is very little
regulation of this, and where there is regulation, corrupt and
authoritarian government officials get around it in a heartbeat. People
say that we have the best constitution in the world--but what kind of
constitution enshrines the pursuit of profit above anything else? They
claim it was written for us. That may be. But it obviously was not
written by us--the poor.

 

So, the recent realization that there is a financial crisis in the US
(we think the crisis has been there a long time, but was hidden by
economists) reminds us of where we ourselves stand. While our neoliberal
government has touted growth and low inflation figures as proof of the
health of our country, 40 percent unemployment has remained. While
Mandela and Mbeki were in power and the economy grew, poor South
Africans had their homes stolen right from under them. For our entire
lives, we have been living in a depression, and at the center of this
crisis is land and housing.

 

As the poor, we gave the African National Congress government five years
to at least make some inroads towards redistribution. But instead, the
land and housing crisis has gotten worse, inequality greater, and we are
more vulnerable than ever.

 

So, in 1999, 2000 and 2001, farms, townships, ghettos and shack
settlements all across South Africa erupted against evictions, water
cutoffs, electricity cutoffs and the like. We have been fighting for
small things and small issues, but our communities are also fighting two
larger battles.

The first is embodied in the declaration we make to the outside world:
We may be poor but we are not stupid! We may be poor, but we can still
think! Nothing for us without us! Talk to us, not about us! We are
fighting for democracy. The right to be heard and the right to be in
control of our own communities and our own society. This means that
government officials and political parties should stop telling us what
we want. We know what we want. This means that NGOs and development
"experts" should stop workshopping us on "world-renowned" solutions at
the expense of our own homegrown knowledge. This means we refuse to be a
"stakeholder" and have our voices managed and diminished by those who
count.

 

In the 2004 national elections and again in this year's elections, we
have declared, "No Land! No House! No Vote!" This is not because we are
against democracy but because we are against voting for elites and for
politicians who promise us the whole world every five years and, when
they get elected, steal the little we have for themselves. Elections are
a chance for those in power to consolidate it. We believe this is not
only a problem of corruption, but also a structural problem that gives
individuals and political parties the authority to make decisions for
us. We reject that and we reject voting for it.

 

Second, while our actions may seem like a demand for welfare couched in
a demand for houses, social grants and water, they are actually a demand
to end the commodification of things that cannot be commodified: land,
labour and money. We take action to get land and houses and also to
prevent banks from stealing our land and houses. When a family gets
evicted and has nowhere else to go, we put them back inside. (In
Gugulethu last year we put 146 out of 150 families back in their homes).

 

When government cuts off our electricity, we put it back on. In 2001, we
were able to get the City of Cape Town to declare a two-month moratorium
on evictions. We break the government's law in order not to break our
own (moral) laws. We oppose the authorities because we never gave them
the authority to steal, buy and sell our land in the first place.

 

Combined these are battles for a new emancipatory structure where we are
not stakeholders but people; where land is for everyone and where
resources are shared rather than fought over.

 

This anti-eviction movement you are waging has the potential to help
build a new kind of liberative politics outside of the political
parties. We have found that these politics must be about the issues
(including land and housing). It must not be about personalisation of
the struggle. No politician or political party can or will fight the
struggle for you. As a hero of your past once stated: power concedes
nothing without a demand. Being in the struggle for over nine years, we
have learned the following:

 

Beware of all those in power--even those who seem like they
are on your side.

Beware of money, especially NGO money, which seeks to pacify
and prevent direct action.

Beware of media, even alternative media written by the
middle class on behalf of the poor. Create your own media.

 

Beware of leaders, even your own. No one can lead without
you. Leaders are like forks and knives. They are the tools of the
community and exist to be led by the communities.

 

When you build your "Take Back Our Land! Take Back Our Houses!"
movement, build from below. Build democratically. Build alternative and
autonomous ways of living within your community while fighting for what
is yours. Build your own school of thought.

 

Make sure poor communities control their own movements because, as we
say, no one can lead without us. Make sure you break the government's
laws when necessary, but never break your own laws which you set for
yourselves.

 

Most important of all, do not forget you have much to teach us as well.
We all have much to learn from one another.

 

Amandla Ngawethu! Power to the Poor People!

 

The Western Cape Anti-Eviction
Campaign


South Africa

click for full image

Comments

No land, no justice

Thank you for posting this, milena. The rights to land is an issue that many people in Western nations no longer understand, but it is at the forefront of poor people's movements across the rest of the World. Our organization, the Henry George Foundation of America, educates people on land rights and land policy, and are working to help cities across the U.S. implement programs that release land for housing, jobs, agriculture, and other essential uses. If you're in Philly, come check us out: www.ourcommonwealth.org.

 

Also, check out this video by one of our collegues on the role of land in the crisis withing Zimbabwe.

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