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The last Porto Alegre Mark Engler reports from the World Social Forum, now five years old It’s
not Paris or Tokyo, Beijing or New York. Nor is it Sao Paulo or Rio de Janeiro.
Enthusiastic residents of Porto Alegre, Brazil, will tell you that their modest
city of 1.5 million people in the country’s deep south is ‘the last bastion
of socialism and rock ’n’ roll.’ Indeed, stalls covered with black Iron
Maiden t-shirts stand in the public markets, and the municipality long served as
a stronghold of the Partido dos Trabalhadores (PT), the Brazilian Workers Party.
But today Porto Alegre is best known around the globe, especially among those
inclined to hold a critical opinion of capitalism, corporate power, and US
military aggression, as the original home of the World Social Forum. Five
years ago, after the late-1999 Seattle protests but before the terrorist attacks
on the Twin Towers, thousands of activists first converged on the city to
discuss the challenges presented by the likes of Enron and the International
Monetary Fund (IMF). With this year’s fifth consecutive summit, the idea of
holding a large, participatory people’s assembly to contrast with the World
Economic Forum – the exclusive annual gathering of economic elites in Davos,
Switzerland – is no longer novel. The Social Forum has attracted virtually
every personality from powerful heads of state to the most unencumbered of
wandering counter-culturalists. It is possible that the most naive of the
155,000 who attended this year (according to organisers’ counts) were those
journalists who came to gape at the much-debated gathering as if it had emerged
spontaneously and without precedent from the gaucho lowlands. If
this year’s was not the first World Social Forum, however, there are
indications that it will be Porto Alegre’s last, at least for the foreseeable
future. The famous local progressivism that brought the Forum to Porto Alegre
was called into question when an anti-PT mayor, Jose Fogaca, won election last
fall. Recognising the Forum’s multitudes as a major economic boon for the
city, Mr Fogaca toned down his past criticism of the summit as an ‘ideological
Disneyland’. Still, other cities are clamoring for their turn to host the
event. (While four out of five Forums have been held in Porto Alegre, the 2004
event took place in Mumbai, India). Moreover, these turns are slated to grow
more scarce. The unified global gathering is becoming bi-annual; next year
organisers will focus on holding forums at the regional level. The
question of Porto Alegre, then, and of the Forum’s fifth anniversary, is what
has become of the event that was once synonymous with the city’s name? And
what is the World Social Forum, alternately regarded as a laboratory of
progressive vision and a rapidly ossifying political Woodstock, building toward? Political
militant ‘I
am a political militant,’ said Brazilian President Luiz Inacio ‘Lula’ da
Silva, clad in a white jacket, as he addressed a stadium full of people during
the first day of workshops. ‘I belong here.’ Downplaying the roaring PT
loyalists, the press would overstate the impact of a small but energetic section
of protesters who chastised Lula for continuing to pay Brazil’s foreign debt
and for failing to buck the economic policies prescribed by the IMF. It is
nevertheless true that the President, a former metalworker and union leader who
many viewed as a leftist icon when he took office two years ago, had the record
of his administration critically scrutinized by a variety of panels throughout
the week. As in the past, Lula also visited Davos this year. He went, he said,
on a mission to confront wealthy leaders with the same demand of eradicating
poverty that he championed in Porto Alegre and to elaborate a ‘new
geography’ of politics in which southern countries would not submit to being
considered inferior. It
is also true that Lula did not receive as enthusiastic a reception at the Forum
as did Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, who addressed the same packed stadium
on the last day of workshops. Wearing a Che Guevara t-shirt as bright red as the
berets of his watchful security detail, Chavez was less prone than Lula to speak
of ‘partnership’ with the north and more likely to denounce
‘imperialism’. In a press conference before the rally, Chavez declared the
Social Forum one of ‘the most important political events taking place each
year in the world today,’ he invoked his ‘Bolivarian revolution’, and he
labeled the 2002 coup attempt against him ‘Made in the USA’. Ms
‘Condolencia’ Rice, he quipped, ‘may say that Hugo Chavez is a negative
force in Latin America. I say the government of the United States is the most
negative force in the world today!’ Even
as the two presidents book-ended the Forum, dozens of other speakers led panels
taking place simultaneously in tents and warehouse spaces spread over a nearly
three mile expanse along the banks of Porto Alegre’s Guaiba River. In past
years, the Forum was held at the city’s Catholic University and large morning
plenaries brought together participants to hear featured speakers. This year,
all of the events took the form of ‘self-organised’ workshop sessions.
Although hailed as a victory for democratic planning, this diminished the sense
of common purpose at the summit. It enhanced the feeling that there were many
forums, large and small, going on at once. ‘Three
years ago everyone was talking about Plan Colombia; two years ago it was
Iraq,’ a friend who has participated in several Porto Alegres said to me. For
this year, she identified the right to clean, public water as the Forum’s
emergent issue. But, with a several-hundred page program listing panels on the
challenges of global poverty, trade, war, and debt, as well as on Open Source
software, the trafficking of women and girls, and the impact of culture on
social change, any attempt to identify a single focus would necessarily be
arbitrary. The
presence of Lula and Chavez raised its own issue for discussion, and its own
suggestion for what the Forum might build toward: namely, state power. Far from
‘Disneyland’, one of the most significant changes in Latin America in past
years is the rise of left-leaning governments – not only in Brazil and
Venezuela, but also, to varying extents, in Argentina, Uruguay, Ecuador and
Chile. The
shift presents a challenge for the globalisation movement, which has always had
an awkward relationship with the state. On the one hand, some arguing against
the power of unaccountable financial institutions have uncritically held up the
principle of state sovereignty, contending that elected governments
should be able to decide for themselves what economic policies to pursue. This
stance proves problematic for those campaigning in countries ruled by right-wing
elites. On the other hand, the anarchist suspicion of any engage- ment with the
state precludes some real alternatives to neoliberalism – accomplishments like
Venezuela’s redistributionist social programmes and Argentina’s decision to
defy the IMF and freeze most of its debt payments. Thus
far the Forum’s charter, which at least formally prohibits participation of
political parties, has held firm. Those who cheered Chavez’s social democratic
reforms cited active participation at the local level as the most positive part
of the government’s transformation. And even those inclined to defend Lula
said that pressure is needed to train state focus on the needs of Brazil’s
poor majority. During each presidential address, the dozens of other panels
outside strategised about how to generate this pressure – and how to apply it
to all governments, no matter how friendly. Bare
chests and Bermuda shorts ‘Maybe
if I were younger,’ a veteran activist commented to me, ‘I could deal with
the heat.’ The late-January summer in Porto Alegre was unrelenting. Brazilians
wandering the sweltering expanse of tented workshop areas sported bare chests,
Bermuda shorts, and skirts, treating the Forum like a beach. For those less
acclimated, a new morning might bring a fresh willingness to believe that the
seeds of a new society were being planted in the manifold meetings of the day.
But an afternoon of solar radiation had a way of intensifying one’s
ambivalence about whether it was all worthwhile. While
Lula provided a place to start, it was not clear where one should go next in
trying to make sense of the hot, sprawling festival. Some of the names on the
programme most familiar to north Americans – Arundhati Roy, Noam Chomsky,
Naomi Klein, even Kofi Annan – did not materialise at promised places and
times, their presence in Brazil never having been confirmed. Still, there were
headliners. Among the Brazilian speakers, crowds gathered around dreadlocked pop
star and Minister of Culture Gilberto Gil, writer Frei Betto, and theologian
Leonardo Boff. If
state power represented a first possible conception of the Forum’s end goal,
some of these prominent speakers would ultimately provide a second suggestion
for what the event is building toward: a common agenda for political action. During
an event subtitled ‘Utopia and Politics’, Nobel Laureate Jose Saramago and
famed Uruguayan author Eduardo Galeano (sitting on a typically all-male panel)
held a contentious exchange about the relevance of Don Quixote for activists
today. With listeners clogging the aisles of a large auditorium, Galeano
celebrated the paradoxes of a world in which a novel cherished for centuries
began its life in prison, ‘because Cervantes was in debt, as are we in Latin
America’. He defended the utopian impulse as a force for social change, citing
Che’s statement in his last letter to his parents: ‘Once again I feel under
my heels the ribs of Rocinante,’ Quixote’s horse. Saramago
would have none of it. ‘I consider the concept of utopia worse than
useless,’ he argued. ‘What has transformed the world is not utopia, but
need.’ Also, ‘The only time and place where our work can have impact, where
we can see it and evaluate it, is tomorrow… Let’s not wait for utopia.’ The
ethos of the Forum would seem to favour Galeano’s view. The event’s charter
indicates that it is not a deliberative body; it does not take official
positions on behalf of the assembly. Yet Saramago’s defense of short-term
demands received a standing ovation. And at the end of the week, a group of
nineteen high-profile participants, including both of the writers, released a
statement dubbed ‘The Porto Alegre Manifesto’. Among its planks, the
12-point platform called for cancellation of debts, a Tobin tax on international
financial transfers, local control of the food supply, and the democratisation
of international financial institutions. ‘We’re confident that the great
majority of the people of the Forum will agree with this proposal,’ Ignacio
Ramonet, editor of Le Monde Diplomatique, told reporters. Critics
immediately charged that the celebrities’ document contravened the
‘horizontal’ character of the Forum. Some signers, like Brazilian Forum
organizer Chico Whitaker, took pains to emphasize that the proposal was merely
one of many to emerge. (The Forum’s closing press release cryptically
indicated that ‘352 proposals so far’ had been accepted.) Others like
Ramonet, however, made clear that they considered such a unifying platform
essential if the Forum is to move forward as a political force. Ramonet
is right that his manifesto would probably prove agreeable to most of the
participants; he is probably right, too, that the lack of a more well-defined
program of action will speed the sense that repeated world summits are growing
stale. At the same time, his Group of 19 pointed to a real problem. Absent
formal mechanisms for representation mean all efforts to exert leadership
at the forum must come from self-selected bodies. When not emanating from the
headline speakers, efforts at agenda-setting this year were most likely to
originate with high-profile NGOs. Oxfam and Save the Children, for example, were
among those who used the Forum as an occasion to announce a Global Call to
Action Against Poverty, which Lula endorsed and which received ample media
attention. Some
of the major criticisms of the Forum to emerge in the past few years have
targeted both the cloudy role of the event organisers and the power of
well-financed NGOs. The criticisms have some merit, but they end up highlighting
the fact that the event as a whole is self-selecting. Eighty-five per cent of
participants in the Forum over the years have come from the host country. This
year Brazilians again dominated, with neighbourly Uruguayans and Argentineans
also sending prominent delegations. For everyone else the cost of jet fuel was a
serious consideration. It is perhaps unusual that more trade unionists haven’t
taken to the forum, but not that large numbers of NGO campaigners attend.
Progressive-minded newspaper editors, professors, and foundation officers could
also be expected to fly in. But when it comes to participation from community
organisers, particularly those from the wider south, it is remarkable that their
presence even as a small but visible minority has held strong. Participants
who moved closest to formulating shared agendas without urging from above were
those who stayed together for tracks of workshops in specific issue areas.
Anti-war activists agreed on 19-20 March to hold coordinated international days
of action. (Plans for the massive protests of 15 February 2003 were similarly
birthed at a social forum). And several observers cited environmentalists’
progress in strategising around climate change as an important joint effort. Whether
these advances are sufficient to justify a trip into the Brazilian summer, or
whether a manifesto is needed to save the Forum, is subject to continuing
debate. Commercialism Back
when it was held on their campus, the Catholics significantly slowed the sale of
revolutionary t-shirts at the Forum. With no such repressive influence stemming
commercialism this year, food stands and souvenir vendors lined the river and
snaked through the workshop spaces. The presence of the Youth Camp in the middle
of Forum furthered the fair-like atmosphere. This expansive tent
city-within-a-city housed 35,000 young people. There, passersby could see
jugglers and drilling drum corps, late-night bonfires and the graffiti-covered
Casa de Hip Hop. The
carnival aspect of the event has been understandably maligned by those looking
to dismiss the Forum. But these open spaces also provided room for participants
to wander, to meet, and to hang out. If presidents and stadium crowds occupied
the ‘biggest’ social forum, and publicity-savvy NGOs the next largest, these
places offered room for the littlest interactions. And it was the small moments,
rather than the Forum’s penchant for grand pretence, that helped to assuage
some of my scepticism about the gathering. ‘Walking
between sessions with an Italian senator, talking over ideas for our
environmental campaigns – that’s what I got out of the Forum,’ one friend
told me. At a reception hosted by Grassroots Global Justice, a delegation of
representatives from community- based initiatives around the United States,
participants told me their interactions with other activists had been
‘inspiring’, even ‘transformative’. When
Linda Sippio, a leader at the Miami Workers’ Center, visited a once-idle farm
near Porto Alegre that had been taken over by the Brazilian Landless Workers’
Movement (MST), she saw links to her own people’s struggle to hold ground in
their rapidly gentrifying Florida neighborhoods. ‘We’re meeting Brazilian
groups that are organising like we are, and we’re showing our support,’ she
said. ‘That helps us both build power.’ Strolling
through the Forum space could produce rewarding surprises. A colleague, Zeynep
Toufe of the Institute for Public Accuracy, told of how, ‘tired, hot, severely
underslept’, she stumbled into an afternoon panel on land rights and the
‘untouchable castes’ of India. She was unexpectedly blown away by the
testimony of homelessness and dispossession offered. ‘It was so uncynical that
I didn’t know what to feel,’ she reported. And when they burst into songs or
chants, she stated, ‘It was one of the most sincere, the least contrived
instances I have ever encountered of people shouting slogans… I tried to
explain what a privilege it felt like to be in their presence.’ Stanford
professor and free software guru Laurence Lessig wrote on his blog of walking
through the Youth Camp with Minister of Culture Gilberto Gil. Gil was
alternately protested by angry young people demanding free radio (Gil relished
the debate) and asked to perform songs from his pop opus (the whole crowd sang
along). ‘Here’s a minister of the government, face to face with supporters
and opponents,’ Lessig wrote. ‘There is no “free speech zone”. No guns,
no men in black uniform, no panic, and plenty of press. Just imagine.’ Elsewhere
I watched a group of high school students pull up chairs amidst the overflow
crowd outside a packed warehouse where several theorists were speaking. We could
not see the panelists, but a sound system carried their voices out over the
stifling heat. It occurred to me that this was a remarkable scene. To look at
those teenagers in the blazing sun, listening attentively to an impossibly
abstract lecture by the Empire co-author Michael Hardt, is to gain a new faith
in the patience and dedication of the next generation. Undeniable
influence Few
progressives would argue that the World Social Forum is without its faults. Yet
few, even among the critics, would hold that movements would be better off if it
ceased to exist. Evaluating the event involves blending criticisms and
potentials, often ending in an unsatisfying shade of gray. What,
then, can be said definitively about the state of the Forum? The
original concept of the event remains sound. There is value is having a place
for those social movements that spring out of hope and need to converge, a place
that invites people who sacrifice their energies to these movements to devise
transnational strategies for confronting globalised problems. Against the riches
of Davos, there is need for a place that draws legitimacy from its participatory
character. As
a positive space, not founded as a mass protest outside a World Trade
Organisation or IMF meeting, the Forum still provides a unique opportunity for
setting an alternative agenda for globalisation. Its influence on Davos, where
elites are now photographed pondering problems of poverty and AIDS, has been
undeniable. The Forum is still growing; each year it has been larger than the
last. It has not stagnated in this respect. It will enhance its relevance by
actively recruiting social movement leaders – making efforts to balance
against the constituents who already attend as self-selected representatives –
and by setting aside more time for dialogue not based on the standard model of a
university lecture panel. The
Forum needs to remain unexpected. It is wise for it to move to a bi-annual
schedule; the annual event was growing too routine, too familiar. And it was a
mistake to return to Porto Alegre. The Forum gained much in its trip to Mumbai,
and its forward momentum requires that it continue incorporating greater
representation from new parts of the world. The 2007 Forum, which will be held
in Africa, holds much promise for this reason. The
need to move on is not an altogether happy truth. On the last evening of the
Forum, I walked along the Guaiba feeling vaguely disappointed by the lecturing I
had seen that day. But then I felt a breeze off the river and looked around at
the crowds meandering in the dusk. A group in union shirts sat on a curb
chatting with vendors selling grilled meat; a capoeira troop sparred on the
street; anti-Bush satirists leafleted for their web site; a circle of people
outside an indigenous rights tent performed a dance. At that moment, I felt sad
to see it all go. Porto Alegre, no doubt, will be sad for it too. Mark
Engler, a writer based in New York City, is a commentator for Foreign
Policy in Focus. He can be reached via the website www.democracyuprising.com.
This article was published on www.zmag.org.
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