Africans Rising. Can activism change the world?

Panel discussion 14 March 2023

More to watch

TV report (in German) by W24

Videos by Fatima Sidibe aka AfricanDiva and Paula Wangai Njeru on Pan-Africanism, White Savourism, climate crisis, African diaspora and Africans Rising.
 

Program

Mutemi wa Kiama

community organizer, movement coach and board member of Africans Rising, Kenya

Grace Atuhaire

poet, freelance writer, and social justice activist, member of FemWise Afrika, Uganda

Lucia Steinwender

climate activist, System Change not Climate Changen, LobauBleibt, Austria

Jahson The Scientist

science teacher, musician and “Spoken Word Artist, AEWTASS, Austria/UK

 

Moderation:

Téclaire Ngo Tam

Südwind

Welcome:

Hardi Yabuku

Coordinator of the  pan-African network Africans Rising, Ghana

Franz Schmidjell

VIDC

Workshop report "Decolonise development"

Workshop report ‚Decolonize development cooperation and aid’

The panel discussion on 14th March ‘African Rising. Can activism change the world?’ was followed by the workshop on 15th March ‘Decolonise development cooperation and aid’. During the first part of the session, the aim was to collectively trace how colonialism is, until today, deeply enshrined in Western  development assistance. Thereupon, for the second part of the workshop, the participants tried to find ways on how to decolonize development cooperation. This would mean pushing for a whole new concept of collaboration beyond the donor-recipient relationship.

read more...

Author

Marlene Eichinger

Kurator

Franz Schmidjell

In times of worsening inequality around the world and a climate catastrophe that even the Global North can no longer deny, activism is also on the rise. In and from Africa, a continent which is contributing least and affected most by climate change, protest groups have been building a Panafrican alliance called Africans Rising. On March 14th, Ugandan expat Grace Atuhaire and Kenyan ‘community organizer’ Mutemi wa Kiama, two members of Africans Rising took part in a panel discussion at VIDC. Together with Austrian ‘System Change, not Climate Change’ activist Lucia Steinwender, Caribbean expat artist ‘Jahson the Scientist’ as well as Ghanaian Hardi Yakubu, who joined the panel via video-call, they talked about their values and hopes that led them to their activism. On a more pragmatic note, the panelists also elaborated on the challenges activists individually and collectively face vis-à-vis hegemonic powers which are pursuing other, ultimately conflicting goals. Téclaire Ngo Tam, Education Officer at the Austrian development organization ‘Südwind’, moderated the panel.

The panel discussion was part of the VIDC series "Africa. Beyond Crises".

Civil society’s controlling function

After a short introduction by Franz Schmidjell, who emphasize the priority of local struggles but also the need for more transnational and transcontinental collaboration between social movements against the backdrop of global challenges.  Hardi Yakubu started his input. He criticized that globally ‘masses don’t even have what it takes to survive, while others have so much more than they need’. The fact that some of the latter even profit from the climate crisis would show that it is high time for a new system, claims Yakubu. It would need critical activists to control and challenge those in power who currently follow a path that accelerates inequality and the destruction of nature. The idea that no African around the world would have to fight individually but can engage in this struggle with their African comrades represents the foundation for a long time, but many activists felt the need for transnational collaboration and exchange which led to Africans Rising in 2016.

Offering new narrative

As a negative example, Jahson takes the movie ‘Welcome to Sodom’ which portrays the problem that electronic waste in Ghana poses to the people there. Focusing on Ghana, which according to Jahson is not specifically exposed to electronic waste compared to other African countries, creates the image that the Ghanaian situation would be something unique, an exception. Yet, this is not the case at all. Electronic waste is a problem many African countries face. It is a symptom rooted in the system. “What narrative you are showing students if they have no other knowledge about African realities?” He asked this question as a science teacher who became involved in AEWTASS, an anti-racist organization which is engaged in bringing more diverse narratives to the Austrian education system. Students are limited by narrow perspectives which are mainly western perspectives. According to Jahson, we have to overcome this limited world view by valuing the whole individual and not limiting it which will, in turn, provide a bigger and more realistic picture. Instead of a superficial, atomistic ‘snapshots’ from afar it would need direct contact to people that are mostly affected by pollution, racism and other injustices to understand the ‘wholeness’ of their reality.

As a specifically successful example of ‘making the unheard heard’ Jahson cited the initiation of Black History Month by Black and antiracist activists. A major achievement by them was to vehemently call out Marcus Omofuma’s murder by three Austrian police officers in 1999 and the shockingly lenient criminal consequences the officials faced. Despite the subsequent attempts by the government to slander the activists, their engagement made Omofuma’s case known as an example of racist police violence in Austria. Jahson stated a huge number of activist groups could be named like fresh-zine and Black Austria. But the important issue is that they changed the Austrian society, they challenged the media, judiciary and the political system. If we operate unified and harmonised the impact can be much greater. Jahson: “One plus one does not equal two, it can be much more.

Knowing your enemy

Lucia Steinwender from “System Change not Climate Change”, founded 2015, argued that the climate crises is rooted in a system which produces not for the needs of the people but for profits of few. Therefore, it is necessary to tackle a dominant discourse that individualizes the responsibility.

Lucia Steinwender recognizes that activism also sharpens activists’ own awareness: “ A conflict strategy to shows who is profiting from the crisis, who is your enemy and who is your ally”. Steinwender described how she and other climate activists quite naively started to occupy Lobau, a floodplain in Vienna, to prevent it from getting destroyed through the construction of a highly controversial motorway project. It was only through this protest that many activists fully realized who their friends and who their enemies were, who would fight with them for humanity and a good life for all and who, in contrast, fights for the realisation of profit, no matter how destructive that venture might be. Steinwender herself, for example, was surprised by the harsh means that the Viennese social-democratic municipal government used to protect the interests of construction corporations where they took ruthless action against the very young activists, some of them not older than 13 years. This intimidating tactic was made even more plain when Vienna’s mayor Michael Ludwig soberly declared that this is what political protesters will face. On a more positive note, though, the activists learnt which actors should be combated in the broader struggle against inequality and climate injustice and with whom to ally with.

Shrinking political spaces

Regarding the violent repression of climate activism through the state it was also mentioned later at the event by several panelists and someone from the audience that, sadly, in the Global South a deadly degree of repression is ‘normal’. The need for activists’ protection was raised several times and was set as a joint homework for the future as well as to adopt the strategies of movements.

Also, more recent phenomena like the rising numbers of people risking their lives by trying to get to Europe because they cannot find dignity in the Global South must be seen and tackled in a broader political concept that holds neo-colonial and racist powers accountable, said wa Kiama. As example he mentioned that Europe enforces new borders on Africans to prevent migration. But for Africans Rising free movement and a borderless Africa is a central demand.

However important fighting from the ground is, according to Grace Atuhaire, progressive forces should additionally use the way of institutionalized bourgeois democracy or party politics to push for change. Atuhaire herself was active in the party Alliance National Transformation back in Uganda and regretted that many young activists in Europe seem to shy away from this path. The major reason for this reluctance would be political disenchantment regarding the institutionalized supposedly democratic processes and the involved parties that have greatly contributed to conserving the status quo over the past decades. Yet, based on her own experience in Uganda, Atuhaire stands fast that progressive activists should also push themselves into the ballot and into the community.

Unite forces

What all speakers equally concluded from their experiences was that individualism including the individualization of racist incidences and climate injustices needs to be conquered by means of solidarity and unity by progressive forces worldwide. Regarding the hegemony that the symbiosis of neoliberal politicians and transnational corporations exercise and which systematically and uncompromisingly exploits most of the global population as well as the environment in general, it is all the more important to build alliances – not only across the Global South but also between Global South and Global North. For Africans Rising a more intense collaboration with the diaspora became important. Ultimately, the deconstruction of racist/colonial and neoliberal narratives must not end with weeping the status quo but with taking united action against it.