Chiapas, 15 years later
- Opinión
January 1st of this year marked 15 years since the Zapatista uprising in
The uprising symbolically marked the beginning of a new international cycle of protest to the “new world order” proclaimed by Bush Senior in 1991. This moment arose out of the reorganization of world powers, following the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, during the first Gulf War in 1991, and right on the eve of the USSR´s disintegration, to come at the end of that year.
The Zapatistas were the first to codify a general criticism of the new world order, situating their specific fight within a framework of defense of “humanity against neoliberalism”. In the words of the subcommander: “Marcos is gay in San Francisco, black in South Africa, Asian in Europe, Chicano in San Isidro, anarquist in Spain, Palestinian in Israel, indigenous in the streets of San Cristóbal, “chavo banda” in Neza, rocker in the CU, Jew in Nazi Germany, ombudsman in the Secretary of National Defense, feminist in a political party, communist in the Cold War...”. The Zapatista revolt combined a peculiar form of the new and the old, the defense of indigenous rights together with new technologies and swift communication policies. Its language and its strategic approach were innovative, even with its limitations and its contradictions, during a moment of crisis and uncertainty among the left.
The Zapatistas were also pioneers in their attempts to articulate the incipient international resistance against the new world order, calling the 1st Intercontinental Meeting for Humanity and against Neoliberalism, in the Lacandona Jungle in 1996. They gave a decisive impulse to the emergence of what would later come to be called “internationalism of resistances” and which would take its greatest expression in the abrupt beginnings of the “antiglobalization” movement during the
Already in this new century, the specific visibility of the Zapatistas has lost its power precisely because of the rising “antiglobalization” movement, with its track of international mobilizations during the official summits which took its greatest splendor in the period of 1999-2003; because of the rise of the World Social Forum proceedings starting in 2001; the anti-war movement of 2003; and the rise of resistance to neoliberalism in the whole Latin America initiated symbolically with the “water war” in Cochabamba (Bolívia) in April of 2000, together with several experiences of progressive governments in Venezuela, Bolívia, Ecuador and now Paraguay. Despite all of this, the Zapatistas have still had important moments of visibility and political prominence, during their principal initiatives, such as the “Caravana a
The current world is rather different than it was fifteen years ago. The “new world order” announced by Bush Sr. has staggered. If the
Since the Zapatista uprising, neoliberal politics have become deeper, more rapid, and more generalized. Yet by their own internal contradictions, they have engendered a number of growing, various resistances, although they remain without the force necessary to overthrow neoliberalism, and provoke a paradigm shift.
“Ya Basta” (“Enough”) was the shout which showed the wrath and indignation of the Zapatista insurrection. “Ya Basta” is what millions of people have felt, thought and expressed during these fifteen years of rebellion against the current order of things. And so, they have buried the thesis of “the end of history” proclaimed shortly before the Zapatista uprising by Francis Fukuyama, and embraced by then confident neoliberal ideologues. Deeply to the contrary, history has not ended, and the result of the match has yet to be determined.
- Josep María Antentas is a member of the editorial board of the magazine Viento Sur, and a professor of sociology at the Autonomous University of Barcelona. Esther Vivas is a member of the Centre for Studies on Social Movements (CEMS) at Universitat Pompeu Fabra. She has published several books including En pie contra la deuda externa and is a member of the editorial board of Viento Sur (www.vientosur.info).
(This article was published in originally in the Spanish newspaper Publico the 31/12/2008).
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