US Social Forum: Atlanta in Late June

2007-03-15

Richard Moore

Original source URL:
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/031407F.shtml

    Uniting the Movements: Atlanta in Late June
    By Ted Glick
    t r u t h o u t | Guest Contributor
    Wednesday 14 March 2007

How will we bring about significant change in the USA? There are a number of 
things that need to happen, but one bottom-line, essential requirement is the 
coming together of a critical mass of organizers and activists into a 
grassroots-based, politically independent, popular and progressive network, 
alliance and/or party. Given what we are up against here in the belly of empire,
it's hard to see how we have any hope of change absent such a development.

Some of us got an idea of the impact such an alliance could have 20 years ago 
during the period from 1983 to 1989. Because of the 1984 and 1988 presidential 
campaigns of the Reverend Jesse Jackson, a grassroots-based National Rainbow 
Coalition began to emerge. This African-American-based and African-American-led 
formation brought together leaders and groups from a mix of constituencies and 
movements: Latinos, labor, farmers, women, lesbian and gay people, peace 
activists, community groups and more. Between 1986 and 1988, it began to take 
root via local and state coalitions, developing as a progressive alternative to 
two-party politics-as-usual. It consciously linked activists operating in the 
Democratic Party with activists building independent organizational forms and 
parties, united behind a consistently progressive political program.

This type of a Rainbow Coalition movement no longer exists, but there is an 
important initiative underway that has the potential to advance a different kind
of unity- and alliance-building process across lines of race, culture, issue and
geographic region - a process that we desperately need: the United States Social
Forum, happening in Atlanta, Georgia, June 27th to July 1st.

Organizing toward this event was initiated by Grassroots Global Justice, an 
alliance of over 50 grassroots organizations representing people of color and 
low-income communities in the US. Over the last couple of years, it has been 
putting the pieces in place to make this major event possible.

    World Social Forum Origins

It is significant that the US Social Forum is emerging out of many years of 
World Social Forums that have been happening in countries of the Global South. 
Originally begun in Porto Alegre, Brazil, in 2001, the first World Social Forum 
(WSF) was organized as an alternative to the world ruling elite's World Economic
Forum in Davos, Switzerland. The second and third WSFs were held in Porto 
Alegre; the fourth one in Mumbai, India, and the fifth one back in Porto Alegre.
Beginning with 12,000 people in 2001, it grew to 155,000 registered participants
in 2005.

The sixth World Social Forum was "polycentric," held in January 2006 in Caracas,
Venezuela, and Bamako, Mali, and in March 2006 in Karachi, Pakistan. The forum 
in Pakistan was delayed till March because of the Kashmir earthquake that had 
recently occurred in the area.

Earlier this year, in late January, the seventh WSF was held in Nairobi, Kenya, 
attended by 60,000 people.

There have also been regional and national social forums in Europe, Asia, the 
Mediterranean, Italy, and in the USA in Boston, the Southeast, the Midwest, the 
Southwest and just recently in Washington, DC.

This first national social forum in the US is coming at a particularly 
auspicious time. Bush, Cheney and the Republicans are on the defensive, 
struggling to maintain support for their agenda of wars and occupations for oil 
and empire abroad and, at home, the destruction of basic constitutional rights 
and cutbacks to education, health care, Social Security and other human needs. 
Yet there is also widespread, popular dissatisfaction with the Democratic Party 
and with corporate, big-money domination of both major political parties.

Jerome Scott and Walda Katz-Fishman, leaders of Project South: Institute for the
Elimination of Poverty and Genocide, a key group within the leadership of the US
Social Forum process, recently summarized its importance in this way:

"The social forum process was initiated by social movements of oppressed and 
exploited peoples in the Global South; and no one group in the US 'owns it.' 
Second, the social forum is being brought home to the US by grassroots 
organizations - with people of color and low-income-led organizations in the 
leadership. Third, the social forum is a convergence process of all our fronts 
of struggle; it is multi-issue and multi-sector, and inclusive of all who are 
struggling for justice, equality and peace. Fourth, the social forum is a space 
where a broad range of political analysis is welcomed - from progressive to 
revolutionary.

"This is why the US Social Forum is the place to be this summer if you are a 
movement builder, if you have a vision of another world, if you want to make it 
happen!"

    Let's make it happen. See you in Atlanta!
    --------

Ted Glick is a founder and is active with the Climate Crisis Coalition and the 
Independent Progressive Politics Network. More than seven years of his Future 
Hope columns are archived at www.ippn.org. He can be reached at •••@••.•••.

    (For more information and to register, go to http://www.ussf2007.org).
-- 

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