http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/opinion/world-social-forum-spawns-a-new-form-of-solidarity/583678

World Social Forum Spawns a New Form of Solidarity
Justin Hyatt | April 04, 2013

 Tunisian protesters deploy a giant Palestinian flag during a global 
anti-capitalist demonstration to demand justice at the closing of the World 
Social Forum (WSF) on March 30, 2013 in Tunis. Tunisia must find a new economic 
model to raise the roughly 20 percent of its people living in poverty from 
their quagmire, President Moncef Marzouki said on Saturday. (AFP Photo/Fethi 
Belaid) 

Tunis. The conference drew both supporters and opponents of Syrian President 
Bashar al-Assad; conflicting opinions about the Polisario Front and the 
politics of Western Sahara; Palestinian activists and the Jewish Anti-Zionist 
Network. In short, the 13th edition of the World Social Forum, held in Tunis on 
Mar. 26-30, was a melting pot of struggles and a search for common ground.

To the thousands of participants gathered in Tunis, where determined public 
protests toppled former dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali in January 2011, it 
was clear that a key function of the annual meeting is to build solidarity 
across movements for peace, justice and freedom.
 
Widely recognized as the cradle of the Arab Spring, Tunis was selected as the 
site for this year’s WSF in part to pay homage to the deceased fruit vendor, 
Mohamed Bouazizi, whose self-immolation sparked the Tunisian revolt and the 
ongoing Arab Spring.
 
Together in what is now an iconic city, over two years after the Tunisian 
revolution, activists reaffirmed their commitment to international unity.
 
“Our mission is to create a new form of solidarity, which is opposite to 
competition and exists to engender equities,” Mamdouh Habashi, member of the 
Egyptian Socialist Party and the South-South People’s Solidarity Network, told 
IPS, calling this “the spirit” of South-South cooperation.
 
The network comprises numerous grassroots movements throughout the world, and 
sees itself as a champion of democracy, equated here with people’s power and 
social progress.
 
For Rita Silva from the No-Vox Network, founded during the first European 
Social Forum in 2002, international solidarity could be the make or break 
factor in a successful movement. When the No-Vox Network addresses formidable 
tasks such as preventing evictions or demolitions in developing countries, she 
said, international support is key.
 
Those struggling in countries like Angola or Zimbabwe, for example, are largely 
cut off from the rest of the world. “They can easily be killed and no one says 
anything , but if they are connected [to international networks], they have 
protection,” she said.
 
Representing the International Alliance of Inhabitants, Mike Davies stressed 
the need to have a functioning platform from which local communities can speak 
to the world. Problems often arise, he said, when northern NGOs mediate the 
voices of their constituencies, who are either forced to learn the jargon of 
the NGO world or get lost in the process.
 
“Our sole focus is to strengthen communities to [enable] them to help 
themselves, and not continue to be victims of charity,” Davies said.
 
Although the Arab Spring has inspired protest movements for democratic change 
around the world, not all of its outcomes are cause for celebration. The Syrian 
civil war, which has so far claimed over 60,000 casualties according to 
conservative estimates, served as a grim reminder to the WSF participants that 
the consequences for failing to find common ground can be catastrophic.
 
Sara Ajlyakin, an activist in the Syrian uprising, stressed that while the 
outcome of the conflict is not yet clear, it has opened up vital spaces for 
organizing and building unity.
 
“It is a historical advance that can not be reversed,” Ajlyakin told IPS. “We 
felt the power of the streets, the collective, and no one can take that away.”
 
Until the Arab Spring, she said, the population of Syria had no outlet for its 
frustrations and grievances. “But that is gone now, if you are a woman, a 
worker, a student, a member of the LGBT community, whichever walk of life you 
come from, you can now collectively express your opinion.”
 
Acknowledging that conflicting visions and ideologies impact the nature of a 
movement of conflict, Ajlyakin dismissed the notion of “Islamists versus 
secularists” as a false binary.
 
The only binary she recognizes is between “revolutionary and 
anti-revolutionary” activity. “The Islamists are not the devil,” she said. “By 
isolating them you encourage the historical mistake of the Arab Left, which 
equates secularism with atheism.”
 
“It is my job to communicate a message to political Islamists: ‘I’m not 
planning to eliminate you, I’m a part of you, you’re a part of me, but you also 
can’t isolate me’,” she said, echoing the conference’s theme of sowing unity, 
rather than division.
 
In the true spirit of international solidarity, the Palestinian cause took 
center stage at the Forum, with the concluding event consisting of a march 
through Tunis that ended at the Palestinian embassy to commemorate Palestinian 
Land Day.
 
According to Amjad Shawa, director of the Palestinian Non-Governmental 
Organizations Network, it was “fully apparent” that the Palestinians were in 
the minds and hearts of the participants here.
 
“Solidarity comes from all sides,” Shawa told IPS, naming the presence of such 
organizations as the Jewish Anti-Zionist Network who came to the Forum 
demonstrated alongside the large Palestinian delegation.

Inter Press Service

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