Connecting Struggles Throughout the Americas: Documentation from the Social Forum of the Americas, Guatemala, October 7-12-08
Full article originally published by Upside Down World:
http://upsidedownworld.org/main/content/view/1567/1/
The campus of the University of San Carlos, Guatemala City, rich with a history of youth and student movements, was the site of the The Third Americas Social Forum from October 7-12 12, 2008. People from a wide variety of social movements throughout the Americas attended the forum, participating in workshops, marches, and cultural events towards the goal of connecting and strengthening movements for justice and liberation in the face of neoliberalism, imperialism, and capitalism.
According to forum organizers, “The 3rd ASF will embrace the range of struggles, proposals, and experiences that have been strengthened, renewed or emerging over this rich period of common searching that has been taking place across the continent. It will stimulate stronger interconnections and aim to create more effective spaces for self-guided construction of shared platforms for emancipation… Overcoming geopolitical divides, peoples of the continent are moving toward an ever more shared identity between South and North, and between the different regions of the Americas. The struggles are growing closer and stronger in solidarity, as peoples who are confronting capitalism, imperialism and patriarchy.”
At the center of the forum’s infrastructure laid six main themes, attempting to reflect the wide variety of the hemispherical social movement agenda: 1) Scope and Challenges of the Changes in the Hemisphere: Post-Neoliberalism, Socialism(s), Civilizational Changes, 2) Peoples in Resistance to Neoliberalism and Imperial Domination, 3) Defending quality of life in the face of predatory capitalism, 4) Diversities and Equality: challenges for achieving them, 5) The ideological dispute: communication, culture, knowledge and education, 6) Original, Indigenous and Afro-descendant Peoples and Nationalities: “Good living” and its keys for the future. Lastly, the the cross-cutting themes of gender, diversity and youth were included.
Social forum organizers intentionally chose the location of Guatemala City. This is the first social forum of the Americas to occur in Central America, which enabled more Central Americas to attend than that past SFAs, which took place in South America. Guatemala was chosen as the location for its historical and ongoing indigenous resistance. This region, according to organizers, “…has lived through heroic struggles throughout its past and recent history, so as to demonstrate solidarity, and to better understand the alternatives that have arisen here in the face of war, destruction, fear, and the perverse legacy of forms of violence displaying the most ferocious examples of militarized neoliberalism, including femicide.”
The forum opened on the night of October 7th with the Inauguration, in which speakers discussed the range of themes and movements represented at the forum. The following five days were filled with worksops, marches, and cultural events. The forum culminated on the last day with a march through Guatemala City celebrating Indigenous People’s Day. The following recordings and photographs were taken throughout the week.
_____________________________________________________________________________
A speech given by a young Ecuadorean during the inauguration, October 7, 2008 (In Spanish):
http://radio.indymedia.org/en/node/17037
Sowing Memory, We Harvest Struggles: Historical Memory Track
In the days of the forum, this week-long Historical Memory track created a space to give testimony and develop the struggles against impunity and for the defense of land, truth, memory and justice, This track was planned buy the Center for Legal Action in Human Rights (CALDH), The Anti-imperialist Block, the Center of Christian Services Foundation (FUNCEDESCRI), and Sons and Daughters for Identity and Against Forgetting and Silence (HIJOS).
Recordings from the workshop (In Spanish):
http://radio.indymedia.org/en/node/17062
Plan Mexico- Imperialism's New Offensive
October 10, 2008
Plan Mexico, also know as the Merida Initiative, or Plan Merida, is a US military aid package for the governments of Mexico, Central America, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic. Presenters are from the Program of the Americas (Mexico City), The Guatemalan Human Rights Commission (US), Narco News (US/Mexico), and Radio Zurda (El Salvador).
Audio recording of the workshop (In Spanish):
http://www.narconews.com/Issue54/articulo3218.html
Globalization and Migration: Effects in Indigenous Peoples
October 11, 2008
Panelists discussed the impacts of globalization and migration on the indigenous peoples of Latin America with personal stories and descriptions of their organizations’ work. They also presented proposals and models of how to unite struggles within the United States to migrants’ the communities of origin.
Recordings of the panelists (In Spanish):
http://radio.indymedia.org/ms/node/17065
Moving Forward to Build A Movement for Justice Throughout the Americas
The Third Social Forum of the Americas created a space to celebrate resistance, identify common struggles, and strategize on a continental level towards building stronger and more unified movements against imperialism, neoliberalism, and capitalism. At the very least, the SFA created the opportunity for people to listen to stories and struggles of others and to build relationships on individual and organizational levels. The social forum event as model is limited in that it requires massive amounts of resources and energy, they do not create a secure space in which to discuss detailed strategies, and there are so many issues and movements represented that it is difficult to do focused, detailed work. Nonetheless, forums such as these are an important part of building a globally connected social movement in response to the assaults of to globalized capitalism and neoliberalism.
Belem, Brazil, is preparing to host the next World Social Forum, from January 27 to February 1st, 2009. In the meanwhile, movements represented at the Third Social Forum of the Americas will continue their work, propelling from what hopefully was an energizing and useful experience in Guatemala City.


Comments