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		<title>¡YA BASTA! Reflections on Asian and Latino Workers in the Immigrant Rights Movement</title>
		<link>http://jalanjournal.org/2008/03/latino-asian-solidarity/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 04 Mar 2008 07:54:08 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[by Lauren Ray

Over the past three years, a whirlwind of reports have circulated in newspapers and the hums of disgruntled conservative news pundits have filled airwaves.  This latest cause of controversy, the latest so-called â€œthreatâ€ to American civilization is the uproar of an incipient, Latina/o-led immigrant rights movement that has organized in schools, neighborhoods [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>by Lauren Ray</p>

<p>Over the past three years, a whirlwind of reports have circulated in newspapers and the hums of disgruntled conservative news pundits have filled airwaves.  This latest cause of controversy, the latest so-called â€œthreatâ€ to American civilization is the uproar of an incipient, Latina/o-led immigrant rights movement that has organized in schools, neighborhoods and workplaces across the country.  Policy analysts and rightwing forces complain that this movement represents the â€œHispanic challengeâ€ and signals the â€œclash of civilizations.â€  Some others discuss the immigrant rights movement as â€œawakening a sleeping giant,â€ bringing to the surface repressed memories of immigrant radicalism that have defined workplace struggles in this country for centuries.  As participants in the 8-hour workday movement in the late 19th century, members of the early Industrial Workers of the World, rabble rousing miners, striking railroad workers, and insurgent laundry and garment workers in the 19th and 20th centuries; immigrants of all colors have organized and fought both the U.S. state and employers, long ago disproving the stereotype of immigrant workers as helpless, frightened victims of American capital.  </p>

<p><span id="more-27"></span></p>

<p>Amidst the debates on both the left and the right about this movement, there has been a deafening silence in considering one question: where are all the Asians?  Arenâ€™t there communities of Asian workers whose labor is also being exploited within the U.S.?  Isnâ€™t Asian-Latina/o solidarity important for this burgeoning immigrant rights movement?  Or are all Asians middle class, business owners, A+ students, and model minorities as they are often painted to be?</p>

<p>The U.S. has a rich history of Asian-Latina/o workersâ€™ solidarity that undermines any illusions that Asian immigrants are somehow opposed to or absent from working class immigrant radicalism and rebellion.  In  the early 1900s , for instance, agricultural workers organized the Japanese and Mexican Labor Association (JMLA) in Oxnard, CA, and went out on strike over pay and control of working conditions.  Some 1,200 farm workers, or approximately 90% of the workforce, stayed out for over a month until the Association was able to win various gains from employers.  The American Federation of Labor (AFL) offered to represent the striking workers but refused to allow Japanese laborers into its federation.  The JMLA in turn declined the AFLâ€™s offer and opted for multiracial class solidarity instead, unwilling to compromise class solidarity on the behalf of white supremacy.  Several decades later, Filipino and Yemeni farm workers joined with Mexican laborers to organize the United Farm Workers (UFW) in California. Philip Vera Cruz and Cesar Chavez became household names of the farm workerâ€™s movement.  More recently, the Korean Immigrant Workers Association (KIWA) gave its support to Latina/o workers who were organizing against Korean and Korean-American employers in Los Angeles.  </p>

<p>Despite brave efforts like these, todayâ€™s movement has yet to fully explore the potential for Asian-Latina/o solidarity that it contains.  The immigrant rights movement has undoubtedly declined over the past year, but it is neither dead nor defeated.  How Asian workers will be integrated into this larger movement, and on what terms, will be critical to its advancement.  How can Asian and Latina/o workers organize together from the bottom up?  What is deterring this solidarity now?  On what basis and around what politics can Asian-Latina/o solidarity be revived and advanced?</p>

<p>The â€œImmigration Crisisâ€ and the Invisibility of Asian workers</p>

<p>Many sense that there is a growing crisis in American society.  The downward economic spiral that working class communities have been facing â€“ wages cut, pension plans and benefits gutted, city infrastructures, education and public health torn asunder â€“ has created a juggling act for the U.S. political elite as it struggles to maintain high profit margins for American business while subduing an increasingly agitated working class.  </p>

<p>Official society complains that this economic and social crisis is being caused by unchecked immigration (and immigration of the â€œwrong kindâ€ of people at that) and competing tendencies have offered an array of so-called solutions.  Expulsion of undocumented workers?  No, that would mean fewer cheap laborers for American capital.  Amnesty for undocumented immigrants?  No, because that would mean alienating a growing white populist constituency that increasingly articulates its frustration against capitalism as a form of anti-immigrant racism manifested most succinctly in  militias like the Minutemen.  Militarize the U.S.-Mexico border?  Higher application fees for citizenship?  Guest worker programs?  Back and forth the political elite go, attempting to reconcile and alleviate the tensions that are inherent in the current political and economic order.  </p>

<p>The immigrant rights movement has represented a definitive â€œÂ¡ya basta!â€ to the decades-long capitalist attack on the working class and its manipulation of immigration to cover that attack.  This movement has international implications, in that it connects the attack on American workers with the ongoing neo-liberal assault against workers in third world countries.  The two are, in fact, parallel and inter-dependent processes.  </p>

<p>American capital has been expanding rapidly across the world, tearing up the countryside of scores of nations as it loots and plunders their resources.  Many former farmers are unable to find work in the growing cities and migrate even further to American towns and cities.  This has been accomplished through the complicity of national ruling classes in countless countries whose own tenuous class rule often couldnâ€™t be achieved without American dollars and weapons.  This is coupled today by the rise of other capitalist powers in East and South Asia, whose growth has made both landless and jobless millions of workers within their own borders.  And yet the â€œimmigration crisisâ€ has been portrayed largely as a crisis of Latina/o immigration, ignoring its connection to these global trends. </p>

<p>The invisibility of Asian workers in this debate is telling on two fronts.  First, under the logic of white supremacy, Asian immigrants have been identified as a model minority and thus have not been seen as a social or political threat in the way that Latina/o immigrants are portrayed.  In fact, their â€œracial superiorityâ€ has been used as a foil to attack other people of color and has been a contributing factor deterring Asian-Latina/o solidarity.  Second, the model minority myth has propped up a small, highly educated middle class of Asian businesspeople with conservative politics as the representative image of all Asian immigrants. This obscures the presence of Asian sweatshop workers, service workers, and industrial workers in small shops across the country.  Because they are so-called model minorities Asian immigrants supposedly do not yield the same potential for a burgeoning working class movement, and thus are often ignored in discussions about immigrant radicalism.  </p>

<p>You wonâ€™t need to take a fine tooth comb through history to find that both of these justifications for Asian â€œinvisibilityâ€ hide an underlying class and racial reality.  Despite being a so-called model minority, Asians have been regularly targeted by the U.S. state for attack.  This is not only the case internationally, where areas like Iraq and Afghanistan are under military attack by U.S. imperialists or others like Iran and Korea face the prospects of similar campaigns.  Inside the U.S., the Patriot Act has also dealt heavy blows to Asian communities â€“ in particular plaguing people of South Asian and Middle Eastern origin and descent â€“ where the infiltration of spies into mosques and temples, and heavy surveillance by both local police and federal law enforcement has led to many false arrests and cases of entrapment.   Deportation and the detention of both documented and undocumented people has been a political tool for the American ruling class to attack the self-organization of immigrant communities inside U.S. borders; to disrupt the solidarity expressed between Arabs and Muslims here with anti-imperialist forces in the Middle East; and to create an atmosphere of fear and repression that serves to silence the rest of the U.S. population, whose aspirations and instincts for a different kind of society could otherwise coalesce into a national movement.  We should not ignore that there is a class basis to the Patriot Act, which has disproportionately targeted working class communities of color.    </p>

<p>Besides this one dynamic of state violence against Asian immigrants. grassroots violence also has its own independent and long history.  Dating back to the 1800s, groups like Anti-Coolie Leagues and Anti-Chinese Associations have boycotted California ranchers who employed Chinese workers.  Organized labor is not without its shameful past; the White Labor Union, the Japanese and Korean Exclusion League, the Knights of Labor, the American Federation of Labor (AFL), and other labor groups have all organized and/or allied with white supremacist attacks against Asian laborers during the 19th and 20th century.  In the 1920s a â€œSwat the Japâ€ campaign was initiated by the Ku Klux Klan and the Native Sons of the Golden West which included violence against Japanese residents and housing and labor exclusion of Japanese workers.    The 1943 Zoot Suit Riot saw attacks mostly on Mexicans, but also on Blacks and Filipinos.  Today the Minutemen, and other white populist anti-immigrant groups, trace their lineage to this history of vigilantism.  We should not doubt for a moment that such forces, after dealing with the â€œHispanic Challengeâ€, would direct the same energies towards Asian folks.  Many Asian immigrants have used both civil disobedience and armed means to defend themselves, and we would be wise to closely study and advance those traditions today.  </p>

<p>From the West Coast to the Gulf Coast: Drawing Lessons from the Past and Present
 The model minority myth only goes so far when it comes to state and grassroots violence.  Despite depicting Asian immigrants as non-threatening and as one monolithic socio-economic category, the model minority myth has not protected Asians from the violence of white supremacy in American society.  Yet, the myth still exists.  What is its material basis?  What purpose does it serve?  What does it have to do with class?  And how is that affecting Asian-Latina/o solidarity within the immigrant rights movement?  Rather than tackle these questions abstractly, it would be better to locate their answers within the context of two concrete examples: the 1992 Los Angeles Riots and post-Katrina New Orleans.  </p>

<p>The 1992 L.A. uprising began after the acquittal of four police officers charged in the severe beating of Rodney King.  This event acted as a lit match to ignite the dynamite of long-growing racial and class tensions in South Central L.A.  Large numbers of Latinos and Blacks seized goods from stores, set entire buildings on fire, and fought cops and the National Guard when the latter attempted to suppress the rebellion.  Anger over the situation was so fierce that Seattle, Atlanta, Las Vegas, and other cities also saw several days of demonstrations and riots.  Attempting to preserve the wealthier areas in L.A. from violence, the police blocked off streets and directed protestors towards L.A.â€™s Koreatown neighborhood instead.  At the end of the rebellion, some 1,500 Korean American businesses were destroyed.  </p>

<p>Headlines proclaimed the L.A. riots a â€œBlack-Koreanâ€ ethnic conflict.  Others showed armed Korean store owners as heroes and heroines protecting the American dream (private property) from destruction.  Still others depicted a Korean community victimized by brutal mobs for its hard work ethic, honesty, and successful entrepreneurship.  In rushing to paint this as a race war, many failed to explore two key questions: why did Blacks and Latinos attack Korean businesses?  And why werenâ€™t Koreans also joining the rebellion in large numbers?  </p>

<p>To understand the first question we must see the L.A. riots as a rebellion over both racial and class tensions.   There were undoubtedly expressions of anti-Korean racism â€“ which in any future rebellion would need to be opposed by anti-racist minded Blacks, Latinos, Koreans, and others â€“ but the larger momentum among Blacks and Latinos went into an attack on property relations, which had been a prominent form of their exploitation and interwoven into their exclusion from the â€œAmerican Dream.â€  That a large number of Black and Latina/o-owned businesses were also burned to the ground demonstrates this class relation. In fact, many Koreans had bought their South Central liquor stores from former Black owners who had acquired the stores after the Watts rebellion in 1965 but had gotten tired of getting robbed and attacked by working class and unemployed Black and Latino youth.  </p>

<p>Further, it is important to see why Korean immigrants opened up small shops in predominantly Black and Latina/o areas.  Contrary to what some might argue, this was not out of a desire by Koreans to exploit Black and Latina/o customers.  Rather, structural restraints â€“ both linguistic barriers and economic factors â€“ largely prevented Koreans from opening up businesses in the more affluent white neighborhoods.  They typically didnâ€™t have the capital available to operate anywhere besides the poorest neighborhoods.  Meanwhile, the 1970s saw an accelerated deindustrialization of L.A. and the flight of large chain stores from poor people of color neighborhoods.  Affordable healthy food was virtually nonexistent and the small liquor stores and corner stores were a poor substitute for grocery stores.  Many residents were angry about the lack of options and directed this rage against the small Korean shops.  Belated plans by multiracial community coalitions to replace liquor stores with food markets were unsuccessful. </p>

<p>Not all Korean immigrants were business owners, nor were even a majority, but they tended to have a higher frequency of business ownership over Latinos or Blacks for two reasons.  Historically, Black folks have had the least access to capital in American society and thus tend to have the lowest levels of business ownership, along with the highest levels of unemployment.  In addition, the business ties between the U.S. and South Korea and other booming capitalist economies in Asia boosted immigrantsâ€™ access to the capital necessary to open businesses.  Most reports of the riots ignored these material realities.  Instead, viewers glued to TV screens across the country, watching the unfolding rebellion, saw countless images of Korean storeowners defending their shops with guns and one over-simplified, racist message emerged: Koreans were hardworking immigrants who had the wherewithal to â€œmake itâ€ in America, and for that they were being punished by less capable people of color.  </p>

<p>Herein lies the purpose of the model minority myth: it is not merely a stereotyping of Asian immigrants but rather it is an appendage of white supremacy that estranges Asians from other people of color in order to keep Asians from rebelling with them and in order to further criminalize their rebellion.  While upholding Asians as a model for other people of color, the constraints of white supremacy and capitalism keep Asian immigrants in constant, direct competition with other people of color for limited infrastructural and economic resources.  Capitalismâ€™s final solution for neighborhoods is to withdraw basic social infrastructure, leave various groups to fight it out over the remaining crumbs, and then seal the whole area off with a  militarized cordon, a containment system of cops, cameras, and prisons.  This fed the flames that erupted in Los Angeles in 1992. </p>

<p>Yet this still doesnâ€™t account for the apparent lack of Koreans expressing solidarity with Blacks and Latinos in the streets during the rebellion.  What was perhaps a primary contributing factor to this absence was that so few Koreans actually lived in Koreatown, despite its name.  At the time of the riots, only about 10% of Koreatown was actually Korean; the majority living there, and working in the Korean restaurants and small shops, were Latinos.  Many Korean shop owners questioned how their own Latina/o employees could burn and seize goods from the store.  They were used to exploiting the labor of their own nieces, nephews, and distant cousins, smoothing over the tensions inherent in the employer-employee relationship with a concept of ethnic and family loyalty.  But in reality much of the working class in Koreatown was Latino and hence didnâ€™t buy into this loyalty. </p>

<p>The consequences of this factor become more apparent when considering those businesses which were family-run, where the employees were all related or close kin to the owners.  For many Korean workers in that situation, because of their closeness to the employer, an attack on their relativeâ€™s shop often led to a defense of private property rather than collusion with the rebellion that was going on right outside their storefront.  Historically, the social relation of small mom-and-pop shops has blurred the distinction between shop owner and the wage-earning employee, and the Korean owned stores in L.A. were no exception.  Some young Asian shop workers might have been frustrated by the fact that they had to work long hours for exploitative uncles, aunties, and parents and some may have felt tempted to join in the rebellion. But the family bond was a lot harder to overcome for young Asian workers being exploited by their families than by young Latino workers being exploited by people they had no social connection to.  </p>

<p>This is related to a larger problem.  Mom-and-pop storeowners, while often coming from a working class background, generally have a different position in the capital-labor relation and see their interests as separate from the working class.  The shopowner may face the constant threat of bankruptcy due to competition with larger chain stores and corporations, but they see that their ownership of a store (their means of production) and being â€œtheir own bossesâ€, although limited, are two things the working class is denied in daily life.  The independent producer â€“ be they owners of a small shop or skilled craftspeople who work for themselves â€“ prefers her position, even though it becomes more precarious every day, to that of the working class person, who herself is constantly trying to climb up into the ranks of the middle class.  As an intermediate class of sorts between the ruling class and working people, the impulse of these middle class elements is not to join a rebellion against capitalism and white supremacy but rather to choose whatever side seems to be able to secure their class position.  </p>

<p>This is not to say that middle class folks canâ€™t be won over to rebellions and revolutionary politics; only that it will take both mass upheaval and strong, independent working class self-organization â€“ whose demands, strategies, and visions are defined by that class â€“ to win them over.  The middle class political orientation of the Korean community at the time of the 1992 rebellion, and its lack of independent working class organizations, meant that Korean workers for the most part stayed divided from the other communities of color.  This problem was deepened by feelings of anti-Black racism amongst the Korean middle class.  Such a context prevented until after the riots any exploration of what their involvement in the rebellion couldâ€™ve meant.  In future rebellions this political choice will be absolutely decisive.  </p>

<p>Race, Class, and â€˜Recoveryâ€™ in New Orleans</p>

<p>The â€œrecoveryâ€ of post-Katrina New Orleans betrays another example of the problems undermining Asian-Latina/o solidarity.  The headlines speak volumes.  â€œAn Immigrant Community Thrives.â€  â€œVietnamese Rebound in New Orleans.â€  â€œThe Vietnamese American Community Recovers After Katrina.â€  Rightwing correspondents remark that perhaps â€œother communitiesâ€ of New Orleans should follow the example of their Vietnamese neighbors and stop â€œwaitingâ€ for government hand-outs.  Story after story, readers are reminded that the Vietnamese are a strong people â€“ as though endurance were an intrinsic characteristic they were born with â€“ whose example should be truly enlightening for the â€œrestâ€ (read = Black folks) of New Orleans.  These headlines ignore the problems Vietnamese folks have faced post-Katrina, including detentions at the hands of immigration officials and the denial of recovery services due to failure to prove citizenship.  Yet those details are less important to reporters and racists.  What is important is a thinly veiled racist logic that justifies the destruction of the Black working class of New Orleans and the intentional prevention of their return home, on the false premise that theyâ€™re not working â€œhard enoughâ€ to recover. </p>

<p>Meanwhile, tens of thousands of Latina/o workers have come to the Gulf Coast to find work in the rebuilding of numerous towns and cities.  They have been a preferred workforce because they have been filling labor shortages at low wages, with little to no benefits, and are by and large seen as a temporary workforce.  Many are undocumented, and as employers turn a blind eye to this fact, local elites and politicians feel assured in the docility of Latina/o immigrant laborers who, they assume, can be easily disposed of if they get organized and rebellious or when rebuilding needs are met and their labor is no longer needed.  ICE raids and visits from the Department of Homeland Security are already foreboding the possibility of increased harassment, detention, and deportation of these workers.  </p>

<p>Latina/o labor has in fact been used to break the last legs of Black working class communities who were living in New Orleans and along the Gulf coast before Katrina.  While some politicians have called for a massive tightening of immigration policies post-Katrina and others have applauded Latina/o workers for their â€œgood work ethicâ€, both camps have pointed an accusing finger at unemployed and underemployed Black workers who are seen as the bane of New Orleansâ€™ existence.  Yet with automation, outsourcing, and declining social infrastructure, New Orleans had years ago become a de-industrialized shell of its old self, leaving thousands of Black workers without a means of livelihood.  This process, along with Katrinaâ€™s physical destruction of Black communities, laid the groundwork for the dismantling of Black self-organization that was on the rise in the 1960s.  It is pure propaganda to chide Black folks to â€œget a jobâ€ because their jobs simply are not going to come back.  Official society saw Katrina as wiping away this â€œdemographic problemâ€ and has intentionally used Latina/o labor to prevent its return.   </p>

<p>In reality, most Vietnamese folks face a similarly bleak future.  Testimonies that attribute the high recovery rate amongst Vietnamese Americans to some sort of innate racial character ignore that New Orleans was home to a largely middle class Vietnamese community.  Predominantly working class Vietnamese communities in places like Biloxi, Mississippi, have had little success in returning home or finding any sort of economic stability.  Economic policies implemented by the Biloxi City Council have opened land and coastline to casinos and the tourism industry.  In doing so, they are eliminating any viable recovery of the fishing industry which employed a sizable portion of the Vietnamese community before Katrina and Rita hit.  Meanwhile, Vietnamese families, largely renters and not homeowners like in New Orleans, have received little to no assistance in securing new housing.  </p>

<p>Tensions may continue to develop as the situation worsens in the region.  Black folks, Latinos, and Asians are being positioned (yet again) in competing roles, roles which are abstracted from the material realities these communities currently face.  Without an autonomous organizing effort â€“ independent of the NGOs, non-profits, and political parties â€“ this could further breakdown potential for anti-racist solidarity and a Gulf Coast recovery from below.  A lack of organization on the job and a tendency among organizers to focus on â€œproviding servicesâ€ to the detriment of building working peopleâ€™s power has contributed to feelings of competition for aid, resentment, and mistrust between people of color.  There are some organizations that have made inroads into organizing amongst all three communities, such as the Mississippi Immigrant Rights Alliance (MIRA), yet this work must be expanded.  </p>

<p>Prospects for Solidarity</p>

<p>Weâ€™ve seen some of the factors that have deterred a higher level of Asian-Latina/o solidarity in recent times.  We can speculate how Asian and Latina/o workers might actually organize together from the bottom up, and further, on what basis and around what politics Asian-Latina/o solidarity might be revived and advanced.  </p>

<p>Within the immigrant rights movement, there have been important developments of local union militancy and new workplace strategies. In a number of cities across the country, Asian and Latina/o immigrant workers find themselves in similar jobs and industries, if not workplaces.  Many work in labor-intensive, long hour and low wage jobs for small workplaces like grocers and restaurants, or in more isolated positions like custodians and caregivers.  There are multi-shop and neighborhood orientations which strengthen the possibilities for victory among relatively isolated workplaces like small grocers and restaurants. The growth in workersâ€™ centers across the country has encouraged solidarity across workplace and industry lines.  </p>

<p>Such solidarity is instrumental not only on an anti-racist front.  On another level, strikes, sit-ins, pickets, and other forms of direct action on the job can be difficult to sustain at small businesses without solidarity from other workplaces, and when isolated it can be even more difficult for labor campaigns to spread and be sustained in other locales.  Latina/o and Asian immigrants also find themselves working together in low skilled positions in larger workplaces, such as in poultry plants in states like North Carolina and Georgia, or as staff in hospitals and hotels.  There have been successful organizing campaigns among delivery workers in New York, among hotel workers and garment workers in California, and among agricultural workers in Florida, so we should have every expectation that Asian-Latina/o solidarity can be built in new and creative ways that speak to the conditions of labor today.  </p>

<p>Ultimately, solidarity should not be mistaken for an abstraction.  The political character that inevitably shapes such solidarity will be key.  Some solutions have been offered by the immigrant rights movement, though the shortcomings must be sorted out from the strengths.  One tendency within the movement has attempted to revive a liberal-labor coalition where the middle class helps the ruling class formulate new policy on how to overcome the current â€œimmigration crisis.â€  This leadership has pushed the movement to ride the coattails of the Democratic Party and trade union bureaucracies, a relationship which has only weighed down grassroots organizing in bureaucratic red tape and lobbying.  Meanwhile direct action and rank &amp; file control of the movement are discouraged or even outright opposed.  </p>

<p>Our current historical predicament shows that both direct action and autonomous organizing from below are necessary now more than ever.  The liberal-labor forces have gone so far as to make connections with big business interests to hold some sway with Congress but they have absolutely no social base for such a coalition.  The old base of the â€œsocial democraticâ€ coalitions linked to the liberal labor and state bureaucracies was dismantled during decades of neoliberal â€œplanningâ€ that broke down both rank and file institutions in the workplace and social infrastructure in working class communities.  This breakdown was facilitated because the union bureaucracy, joined in the 1970s by the middle class, collaborated with the bosses to attack the self-organization of everyday people.  </p>

<p>Many of these same class tensions are present within Asian immigrant political organizations and they demonstrate that these sorts of cross-class alliances are a dead-end road.  The only alliances that can secure victories for Asian workers will be united fronts which are defined by and organized around working class, not middle class, demands.  Asian workers are increasingly confronting a small Asian American employing class that has been exploiting them in Chinatowns, Manilatowns, and other immigrant enclaves across the country.  When Asian workers protest they are chastised and reminded of the favors done for them by their â€œbenefactorsâ€, of the hostile racism of American society that the employers are protecting them from, of the debts they may owe for their travel into the U.S., and more.  The time has come for Asian workers, alongside Latina/o workers, to refuse to be beholden to any employer, Asian or non-Asian. </p>

<p>The immigrant rights movement must overcome the contradictions of this tendency within it.  There can be no â€œpartnershipâ€ between labor and capital, between oppressed communities and the ruling class, because the establishment of such a partnership requires not only working peopleâ€™s loyalty to imperialism but also to a closed shop in terms of immigration.  It is not by separating our struggle from that of workers in other countries that we will get our â€œslice of the American pie.â€  Rather, because their impoverishment and alienation under capitalism is interdependent with our own, it is only by building with them, not against them, that we will create a strong movement.  </p>

<p>There has been important ground covered in this respect, as seen by the diverse crowds present at anti-Minutemen protests in cities across the country.  Some organizations, such as KIWA, the New Orleans Workersâ€™ Center for Racial Justice and the Mississippi Immigrant Rights Alliance (MIRA), have made this a cornerstone of their organizing.  Yet this work must be advanced.  The examples of 1992 L.A. and 2008 New Orleans show how racial and national divisions can undermine a larger rebellion.  Anti-immigrant racism by American workers (of any color) and likewise anti-Black racism by immigrants must be challenged and defeated wherever it may come up.  They also demonstrate that dependence upon middle class liberalism only derails working class activity and rebellion.  </p>

<p>As pointed out in the beginning of this article, there is a proud tradition that we can draw from today as we build stronger Asian-Latina/o solidarity within the immigrantsâ€™ rights movement.  We cannot be frightened by the challenges â€“ of state and grassroots violence, of increasing poverty and dismantling of social infrastructure â€“ nor can we be sidelined by the contradictions present in the movement itself.  It will only be through the autonomous self-organization of working people, immigrant and non-immigrant, that we will take a decisive step towards a new society and a new way of living for all.  </p>
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		<title>Retrieving an Asian American Anarchist tradition</title>
		<link>http://jalanjournal.org/2008/03/retrieving-an-asian-american-anarchist-tradition/</link>
		<comments>http://jalanjournal.org/2008/03/retrieving-an-asian-american-anarchist-tradition/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 04 Mar 2008 07:47:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>jalan_journal</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Article]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://panasian.spindrop.us/2008/03/retrieving-an-asian-american-anarchist-tradition-2/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[by Jane Mee Wong

[Author's note: This piece has been published in the Spring 2008 issue of Amerasia Journal]


  I may be old and lonely, but I have resisted in wars, agitated in movements, and marched numerous times to where the crowd gathered.


Ray Jones 1968 



Contrary to racist beliefs of Asian passivity and apathy, Asian [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>by Jane Mee Wong</p>

<p>[<strong>Author's note:</strong> This piece has been published in the Spring 2008 issue of Amerasia Journal]</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>I may be old and lonely, but I have resisted in wars, agitated in movements, and marched numerous times to where the crowd gathered.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>Ray Jones 1968 </p>

<p><img height="200" width="350" img id="image36" src="http://jalanjournal.org/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/rjones2.jpg" alt="Cover of Equality Society Journal" /></p>

<p>Contrary to racist beliefs of Asian passivity and apathy, Asian Americans have historically contributed to revolutionary traditions in American politics. <span id="more-25"></span></p>

<p>However, one may argue, the political strands in progressive and radical Asian American circles have largely been dominated by state-driven conceptions of socialism. As Him Mark Lai documents in his important study of the Chinese left in America, Asian American involvement in the first half of the 20th century was mainly channeled into the Communist Party mechanism. The level of sophistication that the Comintern offered organizationally attracted many Asian radicals who subsequently endorsed the popular front tactics of Soviet Stalinism. From the 1960s onward, statist visions of Maoism also gained popularity for putting forth a vision of unity among third world peoples within the US and internationally. Nonetheless the mass-line and vanguardist approach of Maoism toward political organizing rendered it severely undemocratic, and vulnerable to unprincipled maneuvers of identity politics.  </p>

<p>It is within this context that the literature of Pingshe, otherwise known as the Equality Society, and the writings of Ray Jones are refreshing and inspiring. Jones offers a more democratic vision of Asian-American radicalism from below. Despite the limited amount of information available about him, the collection of his works, including those compiled by Him Mark Lai at the Ethnic Studies library archives at UC Berkeley, have been immensely valuable. These archives have allowed me, a young Asian American political activist, to piece together parts of an Asian American anarchist tradition. </p>

<p>Internationalist and American at the same time, the work of the Equality Society rips apart the notion of Asians as perpetual foreigners, interested only in the affairs of the homeland. It reflects how involvement in politics of the homeland and immersion into US domestic politics are not inseparable, but come together as necessary and integral aspects of internationalism.</p>

<h5>Ray Jones and the Equality Society</h5>

<p>An explicitly left libertarian, anarchist organization, Pingshe set up shop in San Francisco Chinatown around the 1920s. It was an overseas branch of the China-based Equality Society, involving known anarchists such as Ba Jin and Lu Jianbo. Ray Jones, otherwise known as Liu Zhongshi, was a worker himself and the main organizer of the US branch. In Joseph Spivakâ€™s account of organizing with Pingshe, as a member of the Road to Freedom, a New York-based English language anarchist publication, he compares the enthusiasm of Pingshe members, to that of â€œthe early revolutionists in Russia. â€ He describes Ray Joneâ€™s living environment,</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>I went up to see Comrade Red [Ray] Jones the secretary of the group. He lives on a second floor of a very old fashioned building in the Chinese section of San Francisco. He, as well as most of the Chinese there, is very poor. He occupies a small room and according to the number of beds
  in this room is occupied by three. Yet when I entered the room I felt I was in an atmosphere of Ideal! The room was actually filled with literature, every inch of space is made use of for this purpose. Comrade Jones immediately began to show me one book after another in the Chinese language which were received from China and which he spreads among the Chinese population. [sic] </p>
</blockquote>

<p>The San Francisco Pingshe office was part of a sophisticated network including mainland Chinese anarchists who were organizing under the threat of imminent state repression. In a letter to Ray Jones, Ba Jin writes, â€œOur distribution site has been discovered by the Kuomintang. We need to set up overseas branches, as most revolutionary organizations around the world do, to take over the publication of our journals. It is only a matter of time before we face state repression  â€ As we shall see however, the publications of San Francisco Pingshe were not simply confined to a mainland Chinese sensibility. The publication took on its own form, appealing to a Chinese American audience, set in both mainland Chinese and American political reality. </p>

<p>San Francisco Pingshe was an active publisher of two anarchist newsletters, the â€œEqualityâ€ journal and later, the â€œAnarcho-Communist Monthly,â€ both targeted at Chinese workers in San Francisco Chinatown. It also took on the organizational name, the Anarcho-Communist Alliance. Predominantly a propaganda circle, Jones and his comrades also published fliers and pamphlets. It is unclear from the literature in Ray Joneâ€™s archives, the degree and depth of organizing he engaged in at his own workplace. </p>

<p>This article showcases translations of articles from the two journals, the fliers, as well as selections of personal writings by Jones. I wish to highlight certain aspects of the Pingsheâ€™s that are valuable for young generations of Asian activists in constructing a vision of anti-statist, left libertarian politics that are both internationalist and relevant to the US. </p>

<h5>The Internationalism of the Equality Society</h5>

<p>The anti-statist politics of Pingshe comes up most clearly in its polemics against the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and the Nationalist Party, the Kuomintang (KMT). One can only imagine the repercussions that these anarchist comrades faced for publicly denouncing the latter in the KMT-stronghold of San Francisco Chinatown. It is not surprising that their public denouncement also won them the wrath of the US government. In a report to an Anarchist Conference held in New York City in 1928, Equality Society members wrote that â€œ[â€¦] a few months ago, the imperialistic government of America threatened to destroy [Equality Society] by arresting comrade Jones and confiscating all our literatures. However, this only made us more militant than ever before. â€</p>

<p>Their militancy made its way into propaganda pieces. In an article entitled â€œThe So-Called Peopleâ€™s Revolutionâ€ published in the June 1934 issue of the â€œAnarcho-Communist Monthlyâ€, Jones and his comrades write, </p>

<blockquote>
  <p>The Kuomintang claims to be for the peopleâ€™s revolution. The so-called Peopleâ€™s Revolution is presumably that which incites merchants, peasants, and workers to revolt. The merchants belong to the capitalist class, while the workers, the working class. Given that these two classes are fundamentally opposed to one another, is it really possible for them to unite? This kind of a revolution can only revoltingly kill the poor! [â€¦] Indeed, [KMT] is killing off the poor! Its officials and military are seizing power, depriving the masses of their livelihoods and exploiting the labor of workers and peasants. Those who seek justice have to fear for their lives. </p>
</blockquote>

<p>The scathing criticism against the class-collaborationist politics of the KMT that Jones and his Chinese American anarchist comrades laid out in 1934 had its precedence set earlier. Based in Shanghai, Ba Jin had written a polemic against the presumed left-wing of the KMT party in a 1928 special issue of the Equality journal. The issue was also distributed in San Francisco. His attacks suggest tensions regarding the organizing principles of Chinese anarchists during this period. Instead of building independent anarchist parties such as the Pingshe, influential anarchist thinkers such as Wu Zhihui had chosen instead to seek shelter within the umbrella of pre-existing bourgeois parties such as the KMT. They believed they could reform these parties from within, pushing them toward more radical politics . In his polemic against a self-declared left-wing KMT bureaucrat, Ba Jin confronts the conservatism of the KMT and the inability of a bourgeois party to reform itself. He writes,</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>[â€¦] I ask this again: â€œWhere is the left wing of the KMT?â€ Zheng says that the party is led by the leftist faction, yet in reality, there has never been right or left factions in the Three Principles because Sun Yat Senism was never a social revolutionary program [â€¦]  </p>
</blockquote>

<p>To the Pingshe anarchists, the KMT program included at best Sun Yat Senâ€™s â€œThree Principles,â€ bourgeois conceptions of nationalism, democracy and equality, and at worst, Chiang Kai Shek-style authoritarianism. It could only come to power at the expense of workers and peasants. Nonetheless, in their opposition against the KMT, the Pingshe anarchists were also quick to dissociate themselves from the burgeoning Chinese Communist Party, learning from the experiences of their Russian comrades. They were strongly influenced by the accounts of Alexander Berkman, Emma Goldman, and Nestor Makhno, all anarchists who had written about the schism between the anarchist ideals and the reality of Communist Party rule in Russia after the 1917 Revolution. Jones and his Equality Society comrades distributed a flier entitled â€œThe Difference between an Anarchist Party and a Communist Party,â€ where they say,</p>

<p>The Marxists claim to overthrow the state power of the capitalist KMT and replace them with the state power of the Communist Party. This, they term nicely as the â€œpower of the classless state.â€ Anarchists adamantly oppose all forms of state power as simply manifestations of a class above society, dominating over everyday people. The majority of people cannot exercise state power, neither do they need state power. What we need, is a stateless, self-governing and liberated socialist society.  </p>

<p>They go on further to assert that the Communist Party is simply another form of capitalism administered by the state: </p>

<blockquote>
  <p>What the Communists really mean by â€œcommunismâ€ is really â€œcollectivism.â€ Land, property and factories are completely confiscated by the state and nationalized. As a result, the state becomes a mega-capitalist. Today, the peasants and the proletariat of various countries have become the slaves of landlords and capitalists, through wage slavery. Under the Communist Party in Russia, peasants and the proletariat are enslaved by the state. Even though the state waves the banner of the â€œproletariat,â€ in reality, the state is the institution that exploits and dictates the proletariat.  </p>
</blockquote>

<p>In contrast, they highlight the self-governing aspects of their program:</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>What anarcho-communism means, is that all property will be run by everyday people. Land will be owned by peasants, and production will be organized by peasant councils. Factories will be run by workers and production organized by worker councils. All strategies pf distribution and production will be decided by workers and peasant organizations. There will be no dominating ruling class, and everyone will enjoy the fruits of their labor, expressing their capacities and talents to the fullest. [â€¦] This is true communism. There can never be communism under the state. Only anarchism can bring about true communism.   </p>
</blockquote>

<p>Like several Chinese Americans at that time, the Pingshe members did not limit their organizing to mainland Chinese politics. The Industrial Workers of the World (I.W.W), an anarchistic workers union that was active during 1920s, highlights the repression that Chinese workers in the I.W.W dealt with:</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>The Chinese workers in this country have discovered the I.W.W. And no sooner did it become known to the powers that direct the persecution against the I.W.W., than they began the usual raids on the meeting places of their locals, as for instance, in New York. We are informed that in Chicago they are trying to use the patriarchal mechanism of Chinese society to suppress and punish our Chinese fellow workers. Deportation is held out as an immediate prospect. Naturally they will first be held a long time in prison and suffer all kinds of brutalities [sic]. </p>
</blockquote>

<p>The I.W.W. article highlights particularly the collaboration between the Chinatown bourgeoisie and the US government in putting down workersâ€™ organizing attempts:</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>The Chinese number less than 100,000 in this country, and as they are mainly in occupations that keep them together and separate from other nationalities, we cannot see any other reason for this persecution than that the Chinese employers have turned to the headquarters of the persecution for assistance, which was, of course, cheerfully rendered [sic]. 
  Embodying the spirit of class solidarity across color lines and international boundaries, Pingshe members crafted their alternative vision of workerâ€™s control of factories, in a manner that resonated with the sentiments and conditions of Chinese American workers in San Francisco.</p>
</blockquote>

<h5>The Great Depression and the San Francisco General Strike</h5>

<p>In â€œGive us work!â€ published in Dec 1934, during the era of the Great Depression, Pingshe members undertake an analysis of the economic shakedown that had a strong class and internationalist analysis. They wrote:</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>The purpose of capitalist production today is not to meet the needs of people, but to increase profits for a few. Take the example of England exporting loads of textile to the Chinese market while many inside England are still walking around in tattered and torn clothes. The exports of every country are not the excess of that country. The wages that workers earn is not enough to buy the supplies that they need to live on. That is why these supplies are shipped to other countries to bring in profits for the capitalists. This is why it is not true to say that workers do not need these products. It is only that workers do not have the ability to buy these products that they need. </p>
</blockquote>

<p>Targeted at the working people of San Francisco Chinatown, the article attempted to link their hardships in U.S. with the poverty that their relatives in China were also going through. Their message broke down the notion of capitalist development in countries such as the U.S. and England by focusing instead on the experiences of the working class in these nations. In doing so, the article asserted an internationalist working class struggle that was both particular to the needs of a Chinese American working class, and broad enough to project solidarity with other workers.  </p>

<p>The article was also unique for its vision of who should run society. In addressing the workers, the article says:</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Even though government officials, capitalists and philanthropists try to save the situation, the reality is that conditions are becoming worse and worse. That is because these people simply have no ability to solve the problem. </p>
</blockquote>

<p>Lambasting â€œgovernment officials, capitalists and philanthropistsâ€ broadly, asserting â€œthese peopleâ€™sâ€ inability to solve the problems of unemployment, the Pingshe members reiterated their opposition to any states and ruling classes, regardless of nation. Instead, they pushed for workersâ€™ control of their own workplaces, planning and deciding production quota.</p>

<p>It is within these efforts to push for an overthrow of the capitalist system and struggle for a workerâ€™s control system of production, that Pingshe members attacked President Rooseveltâ€™s attempt to resuscitate the capitalist economy in a top-down manner. Going against the current, Pingshe members condemned the New Deal and its accompaniment, the National Recovery Administration (NRA), which more prominent revolutionary parties in the country had supported. In a polemic labeling Roosevelt a â€œnumber one leading capitalist dogâ€ who answers to his â€œmaster,â€ the â€œcapitalist ruling class,â€ Pingshe members wrote,</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>The capitalist project that Roosevelt so carefully nourished has become bankrupt. His master, the capitalist riling class, will soon be greeted by the raving cheers of the victorious working class. In a bid to save his masters, Roosevelt has been cracking his brain day and night. Without the ingenuity of the Monkey God, his tactics, including the most famous NRA, have failed one after another. We see the loss of American jobs, the sharpening of revolutions, and we know that Roosevelt is helpless. To the Number One capitalist dog: It is time to give up! </p>
</blockquote>

<p>While the victorious claims of Pingshe members may sound like empty calls today, the verdict on the victory of the working class was not clearly out yet in the early 1930s. Therefore, it is important to understand Pingshe writings in the context of rebellion and upheavals taking place in the U.S. during that period. In the same June 1934 issue of Anarcho-Communist Monthly, Pingshe members spread news of the San Francisco General Strike that was taking place at that time. Initiated by the International Longshoremenâ€™s Association (ILA), San Francisco was shut down in a four-day long general strike that was as much in support of the demands of longshoremen unions to organize independently, as it was against the repression that the police employed against the striking workers. In support of these striking workers, Pingshe members entitled their piece, â€œCapitalist Dogs, Beware!â€ It said:</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>The agitation of dockworkers in San Francisco has been spreading from Seattle, Portland, to Los Angeles. The actions of these heroic people have burst the bubbles of the capitalist ruling class and their servants, the police. To protect the interests of their masters, the police have roughened up, by not only intimidating these revolutionary workers but also by threatening to massacre them to bring a halt to their revolutionary actions. However, the spirit of these workers will live on forever, even if their physical bodies are tortured. The calls of revolution have shaken the entire world, the blood of revolution will burst forth. When that happens, these servants, these dogs will lose their lives. We warn them now: You, the running dogs of capitalists, beware! </p>
</blockquote>

<p>The third issue of the Anarcho-Communist Monthly coincided with the failure of the San Francisco General Strike. The article acknowledged the courage of the striking workers in resisting state repression, yet went forth to critique some of its organizing methods. The two main criticisms of the strike was that it relied too much on the union bureaucracy which Pingshe believed, ultimately betrayed the workers. They write:</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>The failure of this strike stems from a lack of revolutionary move toward the confiscation of goods at the start of the strike. That is why the strike became so vulnerable to manipulation from traitors within, who thwarted the workers attempts to institute direct workers control. In the end, the strike was controlled by the bourgeois democracy. Any movement controlled by the bourgeois bureaucracy can only be a failure. </p>
</blockquote>

<p>It is not presumptuous to assume that the â€œbourgeois bureaucracyâ€ that the article referred to, was the Roosevelt administration and its union collaborators who sought to co-opt the revolutionary action of the workers toward more conciliatory directions, such as the New Deal.</p>

<p>The article concludes by offering some future lessons for striking workers to draw from:</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Despite its failure, this recent strike imparts some valuable lessons:
  1)The start of a strike needs to coincide with the confiscation of goods. Workers need to seize the fruits of their labor that have been controlled by the capitalists.</p>
  
  <p>2) The working class can only seek salvation in economic equality. This is why workers need to vehemently reject the battle for bureaucratic power and the negotiation of wages. Workers must not let their movement be controlled by the bureaucracy. Our fighting strategy needs to reflect the belief that â€œThe liberation of the working class is the matter of the working class itself.â€</p>
  
  <p>3) The vision of anarcho-communism is to abolish capitalist nations. Every anarchist worker must not deviate from this vision. To pursue this, workers need to expand their daily struggles into a working class struggle and work to destroy the very foundations of capitalism and the state.</p>
  
  <p>We, the workers need to remember these three lessons when we fight our next battle!  </p>
</blockquote>

<h5>A Struggle in Chinatown</h5>

<p>Women workers were at the forefront of workers struggles in Chinatown, as Pingshe would acknowledge. Calling for support of â€œfemale garment workers who suffer from severe lung diseases [â€¦] and thirty women who died from being overworked by the boss at the garment factory, â€ Pingshe called for a general strike in support of the striking garment workers in Chinatown. The flier had the title,</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Liberation has arrived for Chinese Workers
  Zhongxing Garment Workers are at the frontline
  All American workers unite in struggle </p>
</blockquote>

<p>Even while specifically organizing Chinese workers, Pingsheâ€™s flier projected their struggle as a nation-wide struggle alongside other American workers of â€œdifferent genders, races and nationalities. â€ </p>

<p>The support of Pingshe toward women in the community did not begin and end with labor struggles. Addressing a public letter entitled &#8220;Women&#8217;s Liberation&#8221; to a woman named &#8220;Yun,&#8221; that was printed in the newspaper, Jones urges her to use her education towards the liberation of other men and women, and not be satisfied with a job with the sole intention of making money. His critiques of patriarchy are targeted at the marriage traditions that are predominant not only in China, but also specific to the practices of Chinese American workers. He writes,</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>You see, people today still see marriage as a monetary exchange. Men and women alike are similarly oppressed by such traditions belonging to the old society, and so are unable to seek sexual liberation. There are many Gold Mountain workers in America who are also enslaving young women, degrading and insulting them, selling them to old men as young mistresses. There are many overseas Chinese who have lived in America for decades and suffered under capitalism, worked humiliating and degrading jobs, or committed some shameless crimes, and saved some meager amounts of money in the process. These people go back to their hometowns, pretending that they made a fortune as a big shot in the West. Actually, it is just posturing, showing off, and a way of deceiving poor young women into becoming their mistresses. These deceitful Gold Mountain workers should feel guilty for what they are doing.   </p>
</blockquote>

<p>Jones ties the liberation of men and women intricately, and discusses liberation beyond superficial appearances, albeit a secular one. He continues,</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>In the old society, it is not only women who experience oppression and pain. If women are not liberated, then men also cannot be liberated. You cannot think that simply because women have cut their hair short, or unbound their feet, and gone off to the factories to sell their labor as wage workers, that women are liberated. &#8220;Women&#8217;s liberation&#8221; is achieving true freedom for women, such that they are no longer bound by tradition, customs and all the repressions and authoritarianism of the old society.&#8221;</p>
</blockquote>

<p>By reiterating that womenâ€™s liberation is not achieved merely by their departure from the household, and entrance into factories as wage labors, Jones shows himself to be consistent with an anti-capitalist vision of women&#8217;s liberation, albeit a secular one that sees traditions, customs and the authoritarianism of the old society as one and the same. Nonetheless, Jones and Pingshe show themselves to be striving a vision of human liberation of which women&#8217;s struggles against patriarchy is an integral part. 
Ray Jones and the Equality Society have contributed to the history of the Asian American radical tradition that goes beyond a politics of achieving state power. The members of his collective were workers, intellectuals and immigrants, who involved themselves in the political events occurring in China, as well as in their new home, the US. As active organizers, they distributed fliers and newsletters, corresponding also with workers in Cuba, trying to organize a branch among the Chinese workers there. As Spivak describes, they were avid readers with libraries of books cramped in their small sleeping quarters. Their history is one that will give strength to young anarchist Asian American youth, as we search for our own alternatives today. I will end this article with a message from Jones, to the â€œyouth of today, â€</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>Library of Ray Jones</p>
  
  <p>A Glow in the Dark</p>
  
  <p>In this dark world,</p>
  
  <p>I have my precious books.</p>
  
  <p>Reading them word by word,</p>
  
  <p>I seek brightness.</p>
  
  <p>To the youth of today,</p>
  
  <p>Come read these books!</p>
  
  <p>The library of Ray Jones</p>
  
  <p>With brightness we dispel this gloom</p>
  
  <p>Freedom and fortune</p>
  
  <p>will be savored</p>
  
  <p>In the glorious future</p>
</blockquote>

<h3>Appendix</h3>

<div class="leftcaption"><img height="350" width="250" img id="image38" src="http://panasian.spindrop.us/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/rjones3.jpg" alt="rjones3.jpg" /></div>

<p><img height="350" width="250" img id="image39" src="http://panasian.spindrop.us/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/rjones4.jpg" alt="rjones4.jpg" /></p>

<p>letter from Ba Jin to Ray Jones (2 pages)</p>

<h4>Translations of Writings by Ray Jones (Liu Zhongshi åˆ˜ä¸­æ—¶)</h4>

<h4>and Pingshe (The Equality Society)</h4>

<blockquote>
  <h5>A. Give Us Work!</h5>
  
  <blockquote>
    <p>Unemployment has become an increasingly devastating problem facing
    our society. As the whole world sinks into deep economical crisis, we observe
    the increased dumping of goods, alongside increased poverty that
    leave hundreds and thousands of people cold and hungry. Even though
    government officials, capitalists, and philanthropists try to save the situation,
    the reality is that conditions are becoming worse and worse. That
    is because these people simply have no ability to solve the problem.
    This moment of dilemma explodes the myths that some economists
    believe in. In reality, we have never had that moment of â€œsurplus productionâ€
    that these economists talk about. In all honesty, there is nothing
    that is produced in the world today that is too much for anyone. For
    example, in China, there isnâ€™t enough rice to feed anyone, but rice is still
    being dumped out to maintain high prices.</p>
    
    <p>The purpose of capitalist production today is not to meet the needs
    of people, but to increase profits for a few. Take the example of England
    exporting loads of textile to the Chinese market while many inside England
    are still walking around in tattered and torn clothes. The exports of
    every country are not the excess of that country. The wages that workers
    earn are not enough to buy the supplies that they need to live on.
    That is why these supplies are shipped to other countries to bring in
    profits for the capitalists. This is why it is not true to say that workers
    do not need these products. It is only that workers do not have the ability
    to buy these products that they need.</p>
    
    <p>With regards to the complexities of this question, we will discuss
    further in â€œAnarchist Theory and Practicality.â€ For now, we will discuss
    the solutions that have been put forth before. What we produce, we
    should consume. Our message is: From each according to ability, to
    each according to need.</p>
    
    <p>Naturally, this is not a message that can be realized immediately. To
    shift from a system of production that is based on profits, to a system that
    is based on need and consumption requires hard work, cooperation and
    new methods of production. But for now, let us courageously declare that
    this is the most effective way to solve the problem of unemployment.
    Under a capitalist system of wage slavery, the problem of unemployment
    cannot be solved. We need as a starting point the abolishment
    of production based on profit, replacing it with a need-based production.
    Under this system, workers are no longer wage slaves. They are
    producing for everybody and for themselves. Workers can have what
    they need, and never again be in the conundrum of overproduction.
    There will be no more closed factories, but rather, factories will need
    more workers to produce to meet the needs of everyone.</p>
    
    <p>Even with everyone laboring to increase production, we will still
    not be able to meet needs. Our only worry will be that there arenâ€™t
    enough people working, and no longer will there be people who sit
    around with no jobs.</p>
    
    <p>Human beings are not lazy bums. Everywhere in the U.S., everywhere
    in San Francisco, everyone is shouting, â€œGive me work to do!â€
    Yet no one hears what they are saying, and even if they do, they do
    nothing about it.</p>
    
    <p>Unemployment! Joblessness! So much energy is wasted on people
    trying to find jobs, searching till they die. Many people kill themselves
    because they cannot find any work to do, regardless of how much is still
    needed in this world.</p>
    
    <p>â€œGive us work to do!â€ This cry has never stopped, and has even
    grown louder. My friends, there is work to do if you rise up! If you
    use the energy spent on searching desperately for jobs, to overthrow the
    capitalist wage system, then you will have work to do. It is the capitalists
    that have brought about your unemployment. You should not let
    them exist while you lower your pride to beg them for work.</p>
    
    <p>Hard work has always been a precious thing. It is only in a capitalist
    society like now, that peopleâ€™s labor is seen as something excessive
    and useless. To avoid this pathetic fate, people have resisted by shouting,</p>
    
    <p>â€œGive us work to do!â€
    My friends, there is no one who can provide us with work. We
    should unite and seize work for ourselves. This way, we can work to
    overthrow the injustices in our society!</p>
  </blockquote>
  
  <h5>B. â€Liberation has Arrivedâ€</h5>
  
  <blockquote>
    <p><img id="image37" src="http://panasian.spindrop.us/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/rjone1.jpg" alt="rjone1.jpg" /></p>
    
    <p>Pingshe flyer in San Francisco Chinatown</p>
    
    <blockquote>
      <h6>#Liberation has arrived for Chinese Workers</h6>
      
      <h6>#Zhongxing Garment Workers are at the frontline</h6>
      
      <h6>#All American workers unite in struggle</h6>
    </blockquote>
    
    <p>We, the Chinese workers in America have experienced humiliation and
    hardship under our bosses for the past seventy to eighty years. Until now,
    we have not seen Chinese workers strike for better wages. This strike
    wave led by the male and female garment workers is an earth shattering
    action by Chinese workers. We, Pingshe, may not be in total agreement
    with the extent of their demands, but we fully respect the courage
    and persistence of these workers. Alongside our whole-hearted support,
    Pingshe would like to offer some words to all our fellow Chinese workers.
    This strike has given all American workers the opportunity to seek liberation.
    Those of us who are in unions should instantly respond in support
    and those without should immediately organize amongst themselves.</p>
    
    <p>Our fellow workers, we have been oppressed too long, with atrocious
    treatment, meager wages and long hours, under conditions that
    no human can take. Rise, rise! All of us of different gender, nationalities
    and race, unite together! Stop slogging our lives away! We have some
    words of utmost importance: All political parties, nations and bureaucrats
    plunder from the working class. They are all our enemies! All
    workers, do not be manipulated and deceived by them and their lackey
    organizations! Workers, we need to trust ourselves to rise and take on
    the responsibilities of the working class.</p>
    
    <p>Rise to fight for our freedom, struggle together!</p>
    
    <p>Forward, forward!</p>
  </blockquote>
  
  <h5>C. Letters from Ba Jin (Li Feigan) to Ray Jones (Liu Zhongshi)</h5>
  
  <h6>1. Letter received June 26, 1929</h6>
  
  <blockquote>
    <p>Zhongshi:</p>
    
    <p>I believe you have received the letter I sent. The small and big pamphlets
    can be ready at the same time. I intended to print one thousand
    five hundred copies of the small pamphlets, but the printers made a
    mistake and only printed one thousand. I have mailed eight hundred
    copies, with two hundred remaining here, while will be stored at the
    Freedom bookstore. When you run out, please let us know and we will
    send more. The books at Freedom bookstore are managed by Le Fu, and
    details can be sorted out later.</p>
    
    <p>Shu Raoâ€™s one hundred yuan has not arrived. I am wondering if its
    been sent.</p>
    
    <p>You mentioned before the idea of buying a [illegible]. I am considering
    it seriously now. . . . It is much more expensive buying it from the
    market.</p>
    
    <p>The publishing of Pingdeng in Shanghai is again running into problems.
    For one, Huiling is leaving. Also, our distributing site has been
    discovered by the Kuomintang. We need to set up overseas branches,
    as most revolutionary organizations around the world do, to take over
    the publication of our journals. It is only a matter of time before we face
    state repression. I am sending you the price list now. Please consider
    how we should next act.</p>
    
    <p>Feigan</p>
  </blockquote>
  
  <h6>2. Received date unknown, 1929</h6>
  
  <blockquote>
    <p>Zhongshi:</p>
    
    <p>I have received your letter. Buying type prints [illegible], but I think
    rather than getting type prints, why not buy the type mold? It needs
    only two thousand words, and costs less than five hundred yuan. I
    heard that in the U.S. you can typecast for less than four or five hundred
    yuan, all of which would cost less than a thousand yuan. But if
    you buy the type prints, it would cost you more than a thousand yuan
    (and maybe even more), and the shipping is expensive. Type prints also
    donâ€™t last as long as type molds do. What do you think? Is it convenient
    to find a typecast in the U.S.? I donâ€™t know about this and will need to
    count on you to find that out. [illegible].</p>
    
    <p>It is impossible for Pingdeng to be back on track. Huiling will not be
    staying in Shanghai for long, and so far has only published three issues
    and had a couple of meetings. Every time Huiling leaves the house, he
    is searched several times. There is no way to continue, and the person
    who is responsible for distribution is not trustworthy. All in all, there is
    no hope for Pingdeng to be distributed in Shanghai. My health is deteriorating,
    and there is much work, so I will not be able to bear total responsibility
    for publishing Pingdeng. I am remorseful about this, and can
    only hope that your publishing center will gradually flourish, so that we
    can return to publishing Pingdeng in the future. The books are printed
    already, and will reach you within half a month (because it is being packaged
    right now). I havenâ€™t received [illegible]. I suppose it should arrive
    soon. The eight hundred small booklets and the two hundred books can
    be mailed together. Please mail [illegible] separately.</p>
  </blockquote>
  
  <p>(back page)</p>
  
  <blockquote>
    <p>I have received Pugongâ€™s letter. Now we need to have a relentless
    spirit of endurance, even if now our supporters are few, and results are
    small, we will eventually make an impact. We must not be discouraged
    by our present situation, particularly when Chinaâ€™s movements are a
    disappointment to all people. But our ideal is the ideal of masses of
    everyday people, it is the ideal of all humanity. For everyone to achieve
    happiness, we need to realize this ideal. The pulse of peoplesâ€™ lives,
    the quest for liberation, depend on the success of this ideal. Regardless
    of our incapacities, it will continue to grow. The situation in China
    now makes it impossible to organize an A party, but we will continue to
    strive, and when the time is ripe, our hidden strengths will come forth,
    and our movement will grow in spurts. Wait and see, I [illegible].</p>
    
    <p>I wonder what Pugong thinks of this.</p>
    
    <p>Feigan</p>
  </blockquote>
  
  <h5>D. Letter from Carlos Cajan to Ray Jones</h5>
  
  <h6>Addressed to Pingshe</h6>
  
  <h6>1129 Stockton St,</h6>
  
  <h6>San Francisco California, USA</h6>
  
  <h6>April 10, 1929</h6>
  
  <h6>From: Carlos Cajan, Partada No. 19 Palmira, Cuba</h6>
  
  <p>Zhongshi,</p>
  
  <blockquote>
    <p>A few days ago I got a package full of articles from you through my
    co-worker. I have read through all of them, and know that you are very
    sincere. I regret that I havenâ€™t been able to thank you properly, and can
    do no better than write these simple words to express my gratitude.</p>
    
    <p>By not writing to you at all in the past year, I have not only let you
    down, but also let myself down by allowing my beliefs (anarchism) to
    dwindle and die. And the â€œapologiesâ€ you wrote in your letter for not
    having written, should have been said by me, not you.</p>
    
    <p>My ideas and revolutionary spirit are very weak, because I am an almost
    uneducated farmer, having received only two years of rough education.
    To add to that, I am not a naturally sharp person, and it is my greatest
    regret that I cannot effectively do the work of saving the masses. My
    last letter to you was made up simply of words for me to deal with my
    deep pain. Yet in response, you praised me for my ideas and spirit, didnâ€™t
    mind that it was too late, and instead told me about Yan [Zheng Zheng].</p>
    
    <p>I believe in this ideology with a fearless and sacrificing sort of spirit.
    The prisons, the guns and the barbwires are not enough to dampen my</p>
  </blockquote>
</blockquote>

<p>resolve. We are nothing like the opportunistic politicians of the ruling
party, nothing like the ridicules that Yan Zheng Zheng pass of us. To
trust him, is no different from believing in the Goddess Kwanyin. Even
though I have not directly been able to contribute to anarcho-communism,
I have struggled and fought, as I will share with you. But I want
to make clear first, that I am not trying to claim credit for my â€œselfless
courage,â€ because this is also a selfish personal struggle for me, and all
of humanity, to break through our chains, to fight for our freedoms, and
I canâ€™t possibly back out of working for this. I will tell you about my
experiences in this past year.</p>

<blockquote>
  <blockquote>
    <p>Last May when I was working as a wage slave at XX town, I started
    distributing anarcho-communist pamphlets during break, to inspire
    other workers. However, a co-worker reported me to the owner, saying
    that I was being counterproductive and hurting the business. His
    owner got all agitated and fired me. When this happened, I worked
    even harder to spread the word, even though my livelihood had become
    a problem. I scramble around in poverty and hardship, but I never gave
    in to the capitalist class. This is how I had been living my past year.</p>
    
    <p>Recently, I have been living in a village, hoping to awaken the farmers
    who earn only [illegible] eight cents [illegible] for every twelve hours
    that they work. . . [illegible] to fight against their wage allocation. Some
    of the workers asked me at first, what ideology I was saying. [illegible]
    But after ten over days, they gradually believed in it too. It was a disaster
    however, that the supervisor found out, and purposely focused on supervising
    me and ill-treating me. Eventually, being unable to tolerate this
    anymore, I retaliated and yelled at him for being inhumane, for being a
    running dog (in all honesty though, he and his wife have never had a full
    meal, and his pay is barely a dollar and one cent everyday). Hearing this,
    he responded by calling me a communist, and called on the owner to fire
    me. I wanted to [illegible] him but my co-workers held me back. When
    they heard about what happened, my co-workers all advised me to leave
    the place. Having experienced so much hardship, how can I bear not
    working harder in the struggle! Now I am trying to join another group of
    workers, and will write you with some news when it happens.</p>
    
    <p>Cubaâ€™s government is getting more brutal day by day, and the people
    are suffering immeasurably. They have arrested many revolutionaries
    recently, from the conservative party, the nationalist party, and the
    communist party [illegible]</p>
  </blockquote>
  
  <h5>Notes</h5>
  
  <p>The author would like to thank Professor Robert Lee, Wei Chi Poon, Him Mark
  Lai, the Ethnic Studies librarians at the University of California, Berkeley, and the
  Research at Brown grant for making this project possible.</p>
  
  <blockquote>
    <ol>
    <li>Jones, (n.d), Personal note. Ray Jones archives, Box 1: Folder 3. University
    of California, Berkeley, Asian American Studies, California.</li>
    <li>Him Mark Lai, â€œTo Bring Forth a New China, To Build a Better America:
    The Chinese Marxist Left in America to the 1960s,â€ in Chinese America: History
    and Perspective (San Francisco: Chinese Historical Society of America,
    San Francisco State University, 1992): 3â€“82.</li>
    <li>The Equality Society is the English translation of the Chinese name of the
    organization, Pingshe (å¹³ç¤¾). I use both names interchangeably throughout
    the piece.</li>
    <li>Ba Jin (å·´é‡‘) is the pen name of the well-known Chinese anarchist and
    writer, Li Feigan (æŽèŠ¾ç”˜). His pen name is derived from the names of two
    leading Russian anarchist thinkers, Bakunin and Kropotkin.</li>
    <li>Jones, in his writings, does not explain how he got his name. If I, as the
    translator, could wax lyrical on Ray Jonesâ€™s name, I would say it might
    150
    have been a combination of the imageries that he refers to in his poem:
    â€œGlow in the Dark, the Library of Ray Jones.â€ Ray as in glow, and Jones,
    a phonetic translation of his Chinese name, Zhong. I would imagine too
    that part of it was an attempt to â€œAmericanizeâ€ his name, and in some
    sense, even make his ethnicity somewhat ambiguous.</li>
    <li>Mitch, â€œChinese Anarchists in the 1920s USAâ€”The Equality Society,â€
    Anarkisimo, article posted October 31, 2005, http://www.anarkismo.net/
    newswire.php?story_id=1610 (accessed December 1, 2007).</li>
    <li>Ibid.</li>
    <li>Ba Jin, Letter to Ray Jones, June 26, 1929. Ray Jones archives, Box 1: Folder</li>
    <li>University of California, Berkeley, Asian American Studies, California.</li>
    <li>The Equality journal is the English translation of the Chinese title, Pingdeng
    (å¹³ç­‰). I use the two names interchangeably.</li>
    <li>Mitch, â€œChinese Anarchists in the 1920s USAâ€”The Equality Society.â€</li>
    <li>Pingshe, â€œThe So-Called Peopleâ€™s Revolution,â€ Anarcho-Communist Monthly,
    June 1934. Him Mark Lai Collection, Carton 1: 35. University of California,
    Berkeley, Asian American Studies, California.</li>
    <li>Arif Dirlik, Anarchism in the Chinese Revolution: The Revolution that Never
    Was (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1993).</li>
    <li>Ba Jin, â€œWhere is the Left?,â€ Equality Society Special Issue (July 1928): 2.
    Ray Jones archives, Box 1: Folder 15. University of California, Berkeley,
    Asian American Studies, California.</li>
    <li>Pingshe (n.d.), â€œThe Difference between an Anarchist Party and a Communist
    Party.â€ Ray Jones archives, Box 1: Folder 7. University of California
    Berkeley, Asian American Studies, California.</li>
    <li>Ibid.</li>
    <li>Ibid.</li>
    <li>One Big Union Monthly, Industrial Workers of the World, March 1919.</li>
    <li>See Appendix 1.</li>
    <li>Ibid.</li>
    <li>Anarcho Communist Alliance, â€œCapitalist Dog, Beware!â€ Anarcho Communist
    Monthly (July 1928). Him Mark Lai Collections, Carton 1: 35. University
    of California, Berkeley, Asian American Studies, California.</li>
    <li>Ibid.</li>
    <li>Anarcho Communist Alliance, â€œAn Analysis of the San Francisco General
    Strike,â€ Anarcho Communist Monthly (August 1, 1934): 1. Him Mark Lai
    Collection, Ctn 1: 35. University of California Berkeley, Asian American
    Studies, California.</li>
    <li>Ibid.</li>
    <li>Pingshe, â€œAn Alert to Fellow Chinese Workers.â€ March 4, 1938. Ray Jones
    Archives, Box 1: Folder 19. University of California, Berkeley, Asian American
    Studies, California.</li>
    <li>See Appendix B.
    Amerasia Journal 2008
    Pingshe
    151</li>
    <li>Ibid.</li>
    <li>Jones, (n.d.), â€œWomenâ€™s Liberation,â€ unnamed newspaper, page[?]. Ray
    Jones archives, Box 1: Folder 13. University of California, Berkeley, Asian
    American Studies, California.</li>
    <li>Jones, (n.d.), Manuscripts of essays. Ray Jones archives, Box 1: Folder 2.
    University of California, Berkeley, Asian American Studies, California</li>
    <li>Ru, â€œGive Us Work!â€ Anarcho-Communist Monthly December 1, 1934: 1.
    Anarchism collection, Ctn 1: 35. Him Mark Lai Collections, University of
    California, Berkeley Asian American Studies, California.</li>
    <li>San Francisco Pingshe, â€œLiberation has Arrived,â€ July 1938. Anarchism
    collection, Ctn 1: 34 / Him Mark Lai Collection, University of California,
    Berkeley, Asian American Studies, California.</li>
    <li>Letters from Li Pei Kan (Ba Jin) in Ray Jones archives had been transcribed
    by Yamayuchi Mamory (å±±å£å®ˆ), Nihon University Chair of Chinese
    Literature Department on October 30, 1995.</li>
    <li>Correspondence with Li Pei Kan. June 26, 1929. Ray Jones archives, University
    of California, Berkeley, Asian American Studies, California.</li>
    <li>Carlos Cajan letter to Ray Jones. April 10, 1929. Ray Jones archives, University
    of California,</li>
    </ol>
  </blockquote>
</blockquote>
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		<title>Rebel Desis of the Hip Hop generation</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 04 Mar 2008 07:43:04 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Article]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[by Shemon Salam

This is a sketch. All the foundations have not been laid. The contours are beginning to take shape. Many of the details are still missing. Tasks lie ahead.  

What will happen in the future is bound by what has happened in the past. What will happen in the future is also free [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>by Shemon Salam</p>

<p>This is a sketch. All the foundations have not been laid. The contours are beginning to take shape. Many of the details are still missing. Tasks lie ahead.  </p>

<p>What will happen in the future is bound by what has happened in the past. What will happen in the future is also free of what has happened in the past. This is not a play of words or a typo, but a profound duality that is integrated into one total movement of the future. It is the interplay of human agency, historical facts and forces. None of these can be determined precisely. Even history at times turns into speculation and possibilities. Human agency is complicated and at times, speculative. That is its beauty and terror, all at the same time.  </p>

<p><span id="more-24"></span></p>

<p>This essay however is not a metaphysical exploration of these questions, but a concrete analysis of a group of people who have found themselves in America. I speak of my own peopleâ€”South Asian Americans. It is within this context that I explore further questions, seeking for some guideposts to arrive at a few conclusions. I do not have all the answers. This essay is the beginning of a dialectical perspective that calmly and explosively looks at the South Asian experience not historically, but philosophically and theoretically. This is not about sociology or anthropology, but about how the perceived truth of reality can be destroyed by the â€œspontaneousâ€ movement of millions in a matter of days.  It is a spontaneity that is neither mystical nor fetishized, but one borne from daily facets of everyday life in a capitalist society.  </p>

<p>I hope to take up contemporary issues, historical events, and cast light on future possibilities of South Asian Americans in the United States. My own understanding of these questions have been influenced by left-libertarian perspectives which challenge contemporary takes on immigration, nationalism, and democracy. Contrary to popular belief, South Asians today are not free in the United States. We are bound, not only by an imperialist, racist, and capitalist government, but also by patriarchy, racism, and class tensions in our own community. It is only through the self-activity of working-class South Asians that our community can be free. </p>

<p>We are unevenly integrated into the American tradition, history, landscape, culture and politics. What is our future as South Asian Americans? How do we relate to our Latino, Asian, and Black brothers and sisters in this country as peers and not perpetual foreigners? No book, no professor, or otherwise, can clearly answer this question for us.  The interactions of daily life, cooked in American-style class tensions, racism, and patriarchy will unleash movement politics that will resolve this question. We only need to look back to the 1960s to see how profound questions around race, immigration and sexuality were addressed through mass movement. </p>

<p>It is a hot stew that we have found ourselves in. We came with hopes of a new and clean start. Some, in the middle class, believe they have achieved this. Their playhouse will not stand for long. And if it does, it will bear the blood and tears of their own kin, blood and family. The options are starker than ever before: barbarism or freedom.  </p>

<h5>Americanization of South Asians</h5>

<p>South Asiansâ€”in varying degreesâ€”carry the political, cultural, and historical traditions of their respective nations when they arrive in the United States. Some might hope to leave as much as possible behind for a variety of reasons. Others come here to replicate their homes, except with fuller stomachs. Most know that they will give up something to gain another and are willing to take that risk.  Few can imagine what lies ahead.</p>

<p>Immigrants are influenced by their experiences of race, class, gender, and sexual dynamics in the U.S. On certain issues, we use political tools forged back at home to grapple with this countryâ€™s realities. In other situations, immigrants pick up liberal racism through the media, day-to-day experiences and stories from the more established immigrants. More often than not however, sexual dynamics are understood as they were in the home land.  The need to preserve them is key because control of private space through women and the household is often regarded as grounds for cultural autonomy Pre-existing class relations within the community also help maintain hierarchical authorities in the family. This readjustment process is one that all immigrants, including Europeans go through. There is nothing degenerate or unique about South Asians.  </p>

<p>This process is one of Americanization. Unfortunately, it has been muddied by the rulers of this country for too long; it has been monopolized, tarred with imperialist notions of patriotism, racist anti-immigrant sentiments and politics; it has been plagued with a white supremacist politics for millions of Black folks that will haunt future generations to come.  This nation stateâ€™s vision of America is doomed. It will have nowhere to go when the US population becomes majority people of color and U.S. empire abroad continues to be ruthlessly resisted from Iraq to Korea. The alternative version of â€œAmericanizationâ€ I refer to has nothing to do with getting immigrants to speak English, acquiring citizenship, or assimilating them into WASP culture.  </p>

<p>When I refer to America and to the process of Americanization, I hope to convince the reader that a different concept of Americanization can exist. When I speak of â€œAmericaâ€, I speak of the working people of this country. They are Black folks standing proud, Chicano folks protesting in the streets, the LGBTQ community with no fear, Muslims and Arabs protesting the war in Iraq and the occupation in Palestine, Southeast Asian youth resisting police brutality in their neighborhoods, and Korean Americans protesting the Free Trade Agreement between Korea and the US. I see these people carving out a new definition of America that is multi-racial, anti-racist, egalitarian, and more democratic than anything the rulers of this country could imagine. I base this on our histories, which stress moments of solidarity, compassion, hope, care, and struggle against forces of racism, colonialism, heterosexism and patriarchy.  It might appear that these moments are few, but in reality they are happening all the time in small doses. Once in a while, when things come together they explode into beautiful protests, like the immigrant rallies led by the Chicano community in 2006.  This America has a place for people from all walks of life, and it is about being in solidarity and finding solutions to American social problems. </p>

<p>When I speak of Americanization, it is also critical for us South Asians to broaden our political perspectives, to break down artificial divisions that make South Asian political reality distant and foreign to a US political reality. What happens in South Asia is not just an issue about American foreign policy; it is also an American domestic issue. Who it is in the U.S that has the power to dictate white supremacist and capitalist foreign policies in South Asia, cannot be separated from  American racial, class, and gender politics as well. This means that our community needs to articulate South Asian politics on a local and national level in the US, in a way that intersects with concerns of Black, Chicano and Asian American communities. We cannot come up with demands that make issues appear as if they are relevant only to South Asians. As I will elaborate more later in this piece, the Hindutva issue, and current events in  Pakistan are challenges that South Asian Americans must generalize and integrate into American society. With that,  the community might even begin to speak on behalf of American-domestic issues to represent trends in the broader society, the way the Black Power movement started to do in the 1960s.  </p>

<p>Americanization can only happen when South Asians are living and working side by side with other American communities. This molecular process is already happening on a daily basis but is extremely difficult to see, let alone understand.  Usually, this process is discussed in terms of culture, which is critical, but has its limitations.   The issues of dating and different lifestyles also carry political germs, but are usually discussed in terms of defending our cultural heritage alone.  This cultural nationalist argument attempts to close deeper political discussions about more radical ideas of sexuality and lifestyle choices. At times, dissent  around individual cultural and lifestyle choices also become substitutes for other forms of broader, more socialized political battles which are also integral parts of Americanization.  The completion of the Americanization of South Asians can only happen in political and social struggle which demand freedoms, outreach to other oppressed sectors of the community, and begin to connect South Asian issues to American issues.  </p>

<p>The tragic events of September 11, 2001 were a horrible, but nonetheless powerful  igniter for the debate of what America means for many Muslim South Asians.  So far, the broader community has handled it in quiet ways, hoping to be good people of color and assimilate into American society.  This strategy is running into problems as South Asians are being harassed by the FBI and Homeland Security, often with the help and collaboration of middle-class Muslim leaders. This is hardly a program that will convince youth that they are equals of this country. It is only a matter of time before the dam breaks and sections of the community are fed up with this accommodationist stance.  Will this result in new mass movements?  How will this mass movement relate to other social problems facing the nation?  In the cultural front we see the slow incorporation of  South Asians and hip hop with artists such as DJ Rekha and Malabar to name only a few in this growing genre. These artistes rap about the ways in which Brown people in the US are collectively oppressed, and highlight the solidarity that is necessary between Black and Brown people in the US.  How these artists will affect broader American society is unclear.  In the South Asian community, they represent a force that will not cower before the US state, finding strength and solidarity instead with other people of color here.  </p>

<p>My argument boils down to the following: the South Asians might be Americans in the way we dress, talk, eat, and behave, but we are not Americans in our politics, traditions, and beliefs. I am referring to how we conceptualize ourselves; how we concretely see our interests in relationship to other everyday Americans; how we interact with anti-Black racism, class conflict in this country.  Oftentimes, we think ourselves to be outside the racial problems of this country.  We think we can exist above them or outside them.  We claim not to be Black or White, but too often we also end up siding with white supremacy in our political and cultural behavior.  We have failed to come up with a South Asian American racial and class identity that is at the same time independent and confident of its own origins, and related to the racial and class conflicts of this country.  Instead, we feel we are a social class destined to be doctors and engineers, and ignore the class differentiated societies we left back home. I am not looking for programmatic answers to these questions but searching for what they look like when people are on the move in the workplace, neighborhood, and their schools. What people do is often more important then what they say. On both counts, the verdict is not good at the present moment; however the future is not doomed either.  </p>

<h5>Class Dynamics in the South Asian Community</h5>

<p>Myths are sometimes distorted reflections of  truth. There is no exception to the one pertaining to South Asians in the U.S.: the model minority myth.  In 1965, Congress passed the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) which encouraged skilled professionals to enter the United States. This meant a substantial number of doctors, scientists, and engineers entered the country for more than a decade. In 1976, a new set of laws made it difficult for skilled professionals to enter the country. The new laws still allowed family reunification for immigrants. This meant that the influx of immigrants from South Asia would not stop, but the class character of the immigrants would change. The 1980s and the 90s saw an increase in South Asians coming under the Family Reunification clause. These have tended not only to be of more working class origins but also from less developed countries like Bangladesh, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, and Nepal.  These new class forces in the United States have been cause for tension.   The very social relations and material realities for working class South Asians become a brutal school of authentic Americana: the hard knock life of racial conflict, class warfare, family problems, patriarchy, sex, drugs, and more. At the level of work, school, and neighborhoods, South Asians are forced to interact with an American experience.<br />
The future of the South Asian working class is different from its middle-class counterpart. While the middle class has settled into its own sensibilities, ambitions, and a way of life, this door for the working class is closed except for the occasional individual here and there. For many youth, unemployment, poor education, and ghettoization are either already realities, or will soon be. Our generation will have to resolve a distinct set of American questions that have plagued the Black, Native American, and Latino communities. How they will be resolved, and what kind of leadership is needed, are challenges we have to take up.<br />
Because of the influence and familial closeness of the South Asian middle class to the working class, the question of leadership becomes critical. </p>

<p>The classes in immigrant communities are literally related and tied to one another in much sharper ways then many white ethnic communities. Tribal family relations, arranged marriages, hierarchical gender roles, class antagonisms, not to mention caste from South Asia are brought to the U.S. This does not mean that they did not already exist in American society but under different political, social and cultural circumstances and frameworks.   The problem is compounded since capitalist countries like the United States have no qualms with tribal family relations. In fact, there is no evidence that there is a fundamental contradiction between the two. Comparisons of whether the USA or South Asia is progressive or backward on this are much more complicated than theorized by thinkers of modernity, colonialism, or empire.  </p>

<p>The carrying over of such family relations cause the South Asian American working class to trail their more visible and dominant middle class counterparts. Much of this can be attributed to a reliance on the latter as immigrants negotiate the economic and cultural aspects of American society.  A simple example should shed light on what I am discussing. There is a tension between settled middle class first generation of immigrants versus the working class immigrants who have come in the last twenty years. The working class immigrants might be cousins, nephews, or nieces of the middle class immigrants. They cannot prop themselves up without some help from the now settled first wave of immigrants. These latter immigrants are well-established doctors or engineers. Many of them are the biggest financiers of temples and mosques. Newer immigrants might have access to small amounts of capital from savings back home, or via loans from family members They might start small businesses or rent a taxi, but many more end up in unskilled working class jobs. This is a reflection of class, caste, and gender dynamics in South Asia.     </p>

<p>As South Asian American youth grow older, they have two sets of authorities they must deal with.  It is not only their parents, but also the communityâ€™s authority that is a constant check on the activity of young people.   In no uncertain terms, the middle class eye is always hovering over  poorer families as well as youth.  These middle class gate-keepers are the vigilant authority that often seeks idealistic notions of a pure religious or cultural order rooted in South Asia.  They cannot see that their future is tied to a South Asian American reality.  They see culture, religion, and identity as static, a-historic, and one-dimensional. I would argue that all these are extremely fluid, multi-dimensional, and constantly developing.  We should welcome this process of Americanization. Middle class patriarchs worry about how everything in the United States will poison their perfect images of the South Asia household and community, and in doing so only serve to compress our political activity.  Instead, we should recognize that South Asian identity has nothing to fear in the face of American culture. The question is rather, what will we contribute to this society?  </p>

<p>As I have discussed above, the material success and social prestige of the middle class largely explains why the working class takes its cue from them.  I hope I have successfully demonstrated that material and ideological pressures on the working class are immense. We can ask then, how will working class South Asian immigrants break from their middle class leadership? This is one of the lynchpins of the South Asian question. This question is tied to many other factors: young people need to be free of family control, women need to be free of patriarchal social relations, and racial politics need to be reconfigured on new axis. We will look at some other key contours and then come back to the question I have asked.  </p>

<h5>Model Minority#####</h5>

<p>Two social processes are happening together.  Americanization is a process which is determined by its class content. Middle class Americanization is more complex than simply assimilation on the one hand or romanticization of the homeland on the other.  More fundamentally, it is the belief in the model minority myth.  The model minority myth doesn&#8217;t say that the South Asian middle classes are &#8220;making it&#8221; because they have become &#8220;white,&#8221; but rather because &#8220;their own culture&#8221; is one of hard work and maintaining right family ties, both of which are recipes to success in American society.  What this really means, as we know, is capitalist obedience bolstered by feudal tribalism and reinforced by the US state&#8217;s engineering projects of the 1965 immigration act. All this served to put the dentist class of South Asians in charge of the community.   In any case, this middle class vision is not simply one of assimilating into whiteness but rather allying with the white middle classes against people of color and workers. Its ingenuity lies also in its ability to do the above and still maintain a sense of cultural authenticity, especially within the four walls of middle-class suburban houses where gender and age dynamics are strictly determined by tradition.</p>

<p>South Asian culture is seen as one which appreciates and promotes a hard work ethic, honesty, timeliness, and a host of other employer-friendly attributes. Often times, this perceived image of South Asian culture is contrasted  to Black civilization or culture which racists will argue is mired in the violence of street life, the patriarchy of hip hop, or the lack of family values. Racists can claim that they are not for white-supremacy by pointing out that they are for values instead of racial superiority.  Instead of racial slurs, they can point to the good cultures and bad cultures. From these racist points of view, it is nothing to do with white supremacy that so-called Black culture does not appreciate these values and skills. Nonetheless the racist rhetoric that vilifies anything indifferent to white middle class capitalist discipline is thinly veiled. </p>

<p>In this way, South Asians are posed as the solution to the Black and Latino problem.  These latter communities supposedly need to learn from South Asians.  We, South Asians are supposed to teach Black and Latino community how to be good people of color. This is not only about racism against other people of color, but also about which class perspectives monopolize and determine our lives.  We live in a capitalist society and nothing drives the engines of capitalism like the consumer appetites of 
good middle class people, regardless of their color.  </p>

<p>This Cultural Olympics way of â€œsolvingâ€ the â€œBlack and Latino Problemâ€ also ignores the structural, historical racism and oppression these communities have endured and continue to face.  It ignores state violence towards these communities.  It ignores the class dynamics and history of how each of these communities arrived in the U.S.  model minority myth assumes that it is not racism or empire that are the roots of the problem, but laziness, lack of values, and other cultural deficiencies.  It attempts to place blame on Black and Latino folks instead of the state, the police, and a failed education system.  </p>

<p>The model minority myth is also used to police â€œBad South Asiansâ€ inside the community who do not exhibit the same values that the â€œGood South Asianâ€ a.k.a. model minority folks. These are South Asian youth who want to be anti-racist activists and hip hop artists; they want to date people of different races, have pre-marital sex, and more, like many youth; they want to experiment with their career choices, and push the limits of what success means.  In all these ways, a standard of â€œGood South Asiansâ€ a.k.a. the model minority is a noose around the possibilities of any of these things happening. â€œGood South Asiansâ€ become doctors, get married, are good consumers, obey the law, and die peacefully  Any deviation from this is a threat to this safe identity and way of life. We only need to look at South Asia to find plenty of South Asians who never made it to the U.S. and are hardly the definition of the model minority.  How do their existences fit into the model minority picture? </p>

<p>The model minority myth not only has devastating effects in terms of broader race relations, but internally within the South Asian community as well.  It attempts to buttress white supremacy and empire by controlling the norms and behavior of a group of people of color. The fact that the South Asian middle class is so comfortable in playing this role should shed light on any â€œprogressiveâ€ role it might play.  It also demonstrates the importance of working class communities being independent of their middle class leaders.  </p>

<p>The consequences of the model minority are three-fold: First, it prevents the development of international anti-imperialist solidarity. Are the Pakistani youth who burn U.S. flags and chant â€œanti-American slogansâ€ the model minority?  Of course not: they are talked about as the uneducated and emotional third world brothers and sisters who need to be educated and civilized. While this might sound like Orientalist propaganda, it is also an often repeated sentiment by many progressive and liberal South Asians, quiet as it is kept. As discussed earlier, South Asian Americans, both liberal and progressive, too eager to play the part of the â€œgood,â€ â€œreasonableâ€ Muslim in contrast to their rowdy Muslim counterparts in the Middle East, highlight this point. Second, it ignores the discrimination that South Asian Americans have faced after 9-11, such as the countless name callings of â€œHabib,â€ â€œSand-nigger,â€ â€œCamel-jockey,â€ to name a few of the â€œtreatsâ€ that racists have in reserve for us.  In the post 9-11 world we have also been treated to a new round of deportations and interrogations by the FBI, CIA, and Homeland Security, not to mention the subordination of Pakistan and Afghanistan by U.S. Empire.  Third, the model minority also limits the possible and new identities that South Asian can explore.  It defines a narrow racial, cultural, and class vision. The realities of America and the energy and courage of South Asian youth are already showing that the model minority myth will become obsolete.  </p>

<h4>Problems We Must Solve</h4>

<p>The middle classes are pursuing their own vision of Americanization.  This has left a landmine of problems that must be dealt with by the growing South Asian youth population in the U.S. Three key points come to mind: the race question, gender and politics, and strategies in the post 9-11 world. </p>

<h5>Racial Politics</h5>

<p>Questions of race are can rarely be taken up on their own. In the United States, race is an inseparable part of class dynamics and vice versa. Subordination of one to the other leads to disaster. What I hope to show in the following section is an integrated analysis of class, race, and immigration in terms of the South Asian community.  </p>

<p>South Asian chauvinism has been re-conceptualized in the racial matrix of this country. This chauvinism takes a variety of forms: religious, sexual, civilizational, class, and of course racial. As discussed earlier, the feudal family conceptions and class background all pull the middle class to be soft on white-supremacy but ruthless and racist against Black Americans.  That reflects the power of white supremacy against Black folks in this country.  The conflict is most visibly seen in the large suburban density of many South Asians. The logic goes that, as soon as a family living in the ghetto has enough money, it leaves for white suburbs. It should be no surprise to those familiar with the community, how comfortable the South Asian middle class can be in white suburban communities seeking to create their enclaves away from the third world invasion and black islands left in the inner city.   </p>

<p>The question of where South Asians fall on the racial spectrum is a ticking time bomb. This conflict has not taken explosive dimensions as of yet, but the battles are happening in smaller ways. The key pivot in this question is our relationship to Black people in this country. Working class and unemployed Black folks are at the bottom of American capitalism and the labor market.  They are attacked as a community on almost every imaginable front.  It is off of their backs that many immigrants have made their stand in American society when they collaborate with the form of anti-black, white supremacy. An important piece of breaking down the destructive model minority myth is to forge a new relationship of solidarity and commonality between South Asian and Black folks. We see this happening organically among South Asian youth who are influenced by Black culture and history. Young South Asians are debating with their parents if they can hang out with, date, or marry Black folks. Arguments occur on other issues as well, such as whether Black folks  are prone to crime, their work standards, sexual behavior, family values, and lifestyles. Some young folks have accepted the racist perceptions of their parents and the media about Black folks. However, many others see a different reality.  </p>

<p>Hamtramck, Michigan provides a good case study of this problem.  I have lived in this â€œnew American cityâ€.  It is packed with Bengali, Yemeni, Somali, Polish, and Serbian immigrants, along with native Blacks and Whites.  In the elementary schools, many South Asian kids are friends with Black kids, but by high school these same kids are getting in fights with one another. What happens between those years is critical.  How do friends end up becoming such bitter enemies?  There is immense ideological persuasion going on at home from the parents and the community not to mention the media that demonizes and scapegoats Black folks.  </p>

<p>Racial identities are not chosen by simply sitting in the living room and pondering over them, or by going to meetings and discussing them.  Parents might shape the early years of racial perspectives but reality is also a powerful teacher.  Racial identities can be shaped by two forces: the first is the day to day experiences of South Asian folks with other people of color, and the second is when millions of people challenge white supremacy. In the late 1960s, Black rebellions shook the country and the Black Panther Party came to existence.  At this time Chicano, Native American, Asian American and white youth were forced to take sides with either the Black rebellions or white supremacy.  Many chose the former because they were inspired by the energy of the Black Power movement and saw their own liberation tied up with it. The same will be required of South Asian youth when future Black rebellions and organizations are born. Yet, this does not mean South Asian youth need to depend on Black organizations to become involved in anti-racist organizing.  In Hamtramck alone, issues of community control of schools, police brutality, gang violence, drug use, FBI and Homeland Security raids are all problems that South Asian youth can play an important role in. But the reality is, we cannot confront these issues without figuring out how to relate to our Black neighbors on the basis of solidarity. </p>

<p>Black folks will have to give up chauvinisms as well.  Common perceptions amongst the community are that Asiansâ€”broadly speakingâ€”are not oppressed, that they have gotten free money from the government, and have little to be angry about.  Just as South Asian Americans have to reach across racial barriers which structure this country, Black folks will have to do the same.  History can be an important teacher, reminding both communities of a time when South Asians were the inspiration of the Black liberation struggle in the United States.  The importance of Indian national liberation movement was pivotal in demonstrating that white-supremacy could be challenged, and it was pivotal in developing a method of struggle in the U.S.â€”I am referring to the non-violent strategies of Mahatma Gandhi.  Not to mention the important role India played in the Non-Aligned Movement, a coalition of African and Asian states attempting to forge a third path between American capitalism and Russian communism, despite the movementâ€™s extremely serious flaws and failings.   </p>

<p>What this means is that South Asian Americans do not have to become â€œBlackâ€ to be in solidarity with the community and have anti-racist politics.  Although I think it is great and healthy if South Asians Americans identify as Black in this country, the question I am more interested in, is whether  a South Asian American identity that is both independent from and  related to the Black community, can be developed. This is critical.  I believe this can only happen when a break with the South Asian American middle class is made, a break which will open new possibilities for young and old people alike.  Here, new dimensions of South Asian American and Black identity, culture, and politics can be explored when both communities are free to experiment, play, and struggle together without worries about purity and racial hierarchy.  Each nation offers new configurations of identity and political formations. The U.S. is no exception.  This country offers its own dynamic possibilities and we must go into the future with open minds and large ambitions.  To pass this opportunity by would be a failure of our imagination and actions. </p>

<h5>Women in the South Asian Community</h5>

<p>Women in the South Asian community are at the center of many important questions. They have been at the forefront of social movements such as Palestine solidarity, anti-war, anti-globalization, and third world solidarity. The broader communityâ€™s failure to recognize this has been pitiful. This is based on my own experiences as an organizer for all the above issues in the last six years of my political life. Throw in Arab and Muslim women in this mix and the problem is even deeper. Contrast it to the absence of men and it is shocking. What to do? What is the problem? This question falls in the matrix of class, feudalism, and patriarchy. How can this happen? Women have been the backbone, often the most militant activists I have seen throughout my political experience. Letâ€™s take a concrete example: Wayne State University during the buildup to the Iraq war. Arab, African, and South Asian Women formed the bulk of the anti-war organization, demonstrations and events that were held on campus. Yet, further involvement in political life was always in tension with, if not checked by family pressures to be the good daughter, future professional and wife.  </p>

<p>The forces of middle class ambitions, feudal family relations, combined with patriarchy, held women back from further pursuing political work. Breaking this deadlock in this context has explosive potentials. In one single stroke all three can fall. What is holding it back? None of these forces are ideas alone. Overthrowing authoritarian ideas goes hand-in-hand with overthrowing authoritarian relations and material realities.  This is easier said than done. Much is at stake while possibilities of a better future are on uncertain grounds. Concretely, financial black mail, emotional threats, respectability, and ostracism from the community are at stake. Probably the most difficult is financial blackmail and the absence of a strong radical womenâ€™s movement to defend against it. The most courageous and politically daring women in the community are financially dependent on the familyâ€”a reality of most youth life. The absence of a womenâ€™s movement is devastating for women who do try to break from their families and are looking for solidarity amongst women who are going through or have gone through similar experiences.  When larger movements do not develop, extra attention and support have to be given to the brave women involved in political activity. This is the only way they can gain a sense of independence from their family. There is a tragedy in this story as far as I am concerned. Women face three independent and at the same time interlocked sets of objective factors that oppress them. Overthrowing them is a massive feat and many brave women attempt this. In non-movement times however, I can only imagine how difficult it is with the many retreats and disappointments. We must support and emphasize the importance of this struggle and hope that the few women that cross this chasm will lay the groundwork for many more women in movement times.  </p>

<h5>Welcome to the Post 9-11 World</h5>

<p>Two strategies so far have been developed in dealing with the new realities created by 9-11.  One has been vigorously pursued by the South Asian middle classes.  Leading up to the Afghanistan war, Bush held community sessions in Masjids.  The â€œgood,â€ middle class South Asian American leadership tried to make sure there was no resistance to U.S. Empire by offering no dissent against the Afghanistan and later, the Iraq war.  This type of prostration to U.S. Empire continues to this day.  When Masjids are attacked, the first people called are the FBI.  The contradiction in this behavior cannot be sharper considering it is this same FBI that infiltrates Masjids, rounds up South Asian-Muslims, and deport or interrogate  them.   </p>

<p>These have been immensely difficult times for young and working class South Asian Americans. It is in many of these communities that agents of state surveillance are operating.  And yet the middle class is demanding cooperation.  So far this pressure has held.  However, the dam will eventually break.  This has been the history of this dynamic in among Black, Japanese, Chicano and womenâ€™s groups in this country.  The middle class seeks cooperation with the very people who constantly harass, terrorize, and oppress their broader community.  The working class and youth are generally the victims. 
How long the U.S. can hold off the powerful Arab, South Asian, and Muslim movements in Europe, the Middle East, and South Asia from having effects which challenge this class cooperation is not clear.  The riots in France over the last two years, the famous anti-fascist struggles in England, the developing movements in Germany and Turkey,  not to mention the series of movements in the Middle East, cannot be treated as aberrations of the model minority forever.  The shakeup of this weak class coalition will result in new organizations, with much more militant politics, and provide resolutions to many of the questions we have been asking in this essayâ€”this is exactly what U.S. Empire and the South Asian middle classes are attempting to block for their own reasons, in their own ways.  </p>

<h4>What Next####</h4>

<p>When the Black struggle led to splits in middle class and working class people it led to the latter creating working class based organizations such as the Black Panther Party, Revolutionary Action Movement, League of Revolutionary Black Workers and Congress of African People. Each of these organizations would later find it immensely difficult to remain free of middle class domination whether internally or in coalition work.  These organizations give us a tradition and clues of what future groups might look like, what problems they might face, and how they are to be built.  What can South-Asian American history tell us?  </p>

<p>However, using historical examples as the only way to build a tradition of political activity in the United States has its limitations. How the Ghadar Party is often presented in South Asian progressive circles is an example that highlights the limitations of this method. The Ghadar Party was a group of ex-patriot Indians who built an anti-colonial organization in the United States. They hoped to send military aid and trained personnel from the United States to India This is a valid and highly important objective for anyone. However, it failed to sink roots in the American radical-left tradition of political and organizational activity. With the exception of the individual Hayar Dal, it had few other organizational and political ties with American groups. The Ghadar Party took little interest in the happenings of the U.S. working class, its race problems, etc. It was not able to make an impact in the trajectory and traditions of the variety of political trends that existed in the country. Today, its actual historical legacy is extremely faint. It is remembered by a few South Asian progressives. It is a historical example that is largely tied to the liberation of our own distant homeland, with little to say on matters of American politics.  </p>

<p>The problem becomes greater when looking at South Asian activity in other major movements that have occurred in the United States: the Industrial Workers of the World, the Congress of Industrial Organizations, United Negro Improvement Association, Communist Party, Socialist Workerâ€™s Party, or Workers Party just to mention some of the major organizations before the 1960s. The absence of South Asians in these movements has been a serious obstacle for young South Asians today to see themselves as part of an American radical tradition.  </p>

<p>The last political upheaval of the 1960s and 70s where numerous ethnic, racial, and religious groups articulated their demands and struggle for some measure of control and justice in their lives found South Asians missing again. This is an interesting historical point of fact for today, as that era has become a reference point for many young people today. It is often a starting point of icons, traditions, and a sense of belonging in the American radical tradition.  </p>

<p>Again, this is not about cheap historical examples and a few slogans. More importantly this is about missed chances for South Asian Americans. Our political and cultural interests do not lie just in South Asia but also intersect with the problems occurring in this country. The 1960s exposed the questions of Black community control, womenâ€™s rights, Chicanismo, Third world solidarity, queer liberation, and labor rights for the working class.  At this time, South Asians were not able to develop organic American-based traditions which determined where they would side, how they would expect support from other groups, and how they would explain themselves in the flow of movements.  This phenomena can be partly explained by a  relatively simple reason.  South Asians were a minuscule population until after these movements were destroyed.  We  were not in this country in large numbers to take up the nationalist, ethnic, and class politics that flowered in the 1960s and 70s.  It is not our  fault, but the consequences will have to be dealt with. </p>

<p>My comments above should not be taken to mean that South Asians do not have a radical history to draw upon.  The Ghadar Party is one living example, our involvement in the Black Power movement in Trinidad, in the nationalist movement in Kenya, in the anti-colonial struggle in India, the massive social movement in Pakistan in 1968 which brought down General Ayub Khan and a host of other examples.  The question is, how will these struggles be used in the United States?  Will there be recognition of this past and an integration of this into third world solidarity movements in the U.S.? Will there be sheroes rescued from this past?  Only the future can tell.  </p>

<p>Where do we go from here?  Can the absence of a tradition in the US by itself define our  community and its future political work? I believe they can be powerful factors but nonetheless not the only factor.  . To make it so would be to reduce political activity to digging for a political tradition.  Two aspects should be considered while looking at the development of South Asian American politics in the United States: how movements dealing with issues back in South Asia take shape and how movements dealing with domestic problems in the U.S. take shape. As I have discussed earlier in this piece, the relationship and connections made between these two aspects are crucial for the formation of a vibrant South Asian American politics.</p>

<p>The successful organizing of the New York Taxi Cab Alliance (NWTCA) shows that the struggles of working class South Asians have an important role to play in shaping US domestic politics. South Asian drivers constitute over half of the cabs in the city.  Contrary to myth, taxi cab drivers do not make pockets full of cash.  Instead they lease cars on a daily basis, pay for their own gas, and are hounded by New York City police who obviously enjoy handing them tickets on all sorts of frivolous charges .  The breaking point came when Mayor Giuliani imposed policies  to increase  cab safety. These policies were in reality, thinly disguised attempts to push through anti-labor legislation, designed to create an increasingly obedient workforce The ensuing struggle in the form of a strike helped build multi-racial solidarity across religious and national lines among the cab drivers.  Many drivers also  talked to their passengers, explaining what was going on.  In efforts to build working class solidarity in the 1998 strike, the taxi cab drivers had to deal with their linguistic and national differences if the action was to be successful.  The drivers put their issues and needs on the agenda of New York City. It was from this angle that  matters of race, religion, and language hato be dealt with.</p>

<p>Other issues have yet to find their mark in American politics, such as problems in South Asia: the rise of Hindutva, the partition of India into Pakistan and Bangladesh, the caste system, the Naxalite insurgency, the Tamil Tigers in Sri Lanka, the Maoist movement in Nepal, and the question of dictatorship or democracy in Pakistan. How each of these issues will be translated into South Asian-American issues is yet to be seen.  </p>

<p>There have been attempts made, but the most prominent examples have led to in-group only discussions with little ability to reach other Americans. One example is the â€œCampaign to Stop Funding Hateâ€. Relating Hindutva to social issues in this country has been a challenge.  One of the targets has been the Hindu Student Council national leadership and the organization in general.  The campaign has failed to create a movement. It has been relegated to small skirmishes inside an already small community.  I do not believe this  is because of the questions that the campaign is trying to address per se, but more to do with the political framework and organizing strategies undertaken. In general, the campaigns have  not â€œAmericanizedâ€ this question.  This does not mean liquidating the acutely Indian problem into the needs of an American constituency, but instead coming up with a framework that can make international politics more relevant here in the US.  Organizationally there has been little development of building towards grassroots campaign where there are organizers who push for concrete demands, recruit folks to a specific political perspective, and build coalitions with other American organizations.  </p>

<p>Pakistan is another example.  Although of national concern amongst rulers and planners of this country, Pakistan has also become a new side kick in the fight against terror. Yet, Pakistanâ€™s neo-colonial dependency, poverty, and issues of democratic freedoms have not become  the basis for an international solidarity movement in this country. There could be a variety of reasons for this.  Perhaps the movements in Pakistan do not cause the imaginative and movement leaps in this country that other struggles have (for example, Palestine or Venezuela).  Perhaps it is rooted in the class dimensions of the Pakistani community in the U.S.    It could also be that the anti-Muslim and Arab laws and hysteria pushed by the U.S. State has stifled the political variety of Muslim activism in ? of this country. All three factors could be inhibiting the development of solidarity movements in this country.   </p>

<p>Lastly, my own organizing experiences have shown contradictory results. I cannot claim to have done successful  organizing around South Asian identity.  Am I less South Asian because I have done multi-racial organizing around issues instead of around identity?  Is the organizing less pure or worthy? </p>

<p>What I can take credit for, as a South Asian American, is a contribution to the deepening of South Asian activists in American political struggles.  Most decisively this has been as a Palestine solidarity and anti-war (against Afghanistan and Iraq) activist.  In this context, I have organized with Muslims, Black folks, Whites, LGBTQ folks, and more.  I have seen Muslim and South Asian sectarianism towards more radical ideas. Ironically many such liberal formations  ignore the militant traditions of South Asia and the Middle East.  I have seen among them, contempt for the LGBTQ community as well. This ignores Muslim and South Asian LGBTQ communities long before any contact with the â€œWest,â€ which is often accused of importing this ideas.  But  I have also seen that it is in the act of struggle that people learn the limitations of their prejudices and what â€œbeliefsâ€ they must choose if they wish to be free. I have also experienced chauvinism and racism from other people of color inside the movement towards South Asians. Islam and Islamic politics has yet to be treated with the same care and nuance that Christianity and Christian liberation theology finds in many progressive circles.</p>

<p>I believe what my experiences demonstrate is that basing our political organizing on the basis of our ethnic identity  is not the only place to begin for activists.  It does not mean we lose sight of South Asians in the United States. Rather, we can choose to   think about this in a different framework, some of which I have outlined in this essay. â€œMy communityâ€ cannot be based just on the origins of my birth or my resemblance to what other people look like. Luckily, community and identity are not determined by these factors alone. South Asiansâ€”myself includedâ€”are slowly being recast into something different as we continue to live in this society. What this will mean when the next great rebellions break out is yet to be seen.
Just as new identities emerge based on our political environment, so do alternative organizational forms emerge, that reflect the needs of our society today. The politics of reformist organizations, such as those we are saturated with in the non-profit industrial complex, are fundamentally co-opted by capitalism and the structures of liberal racism. The monopoly that such reformist organizations have among many politicized folks is due to a general lack of historical knowledge and a failure of political imagination. </p>

<p>How then do we develop alternative organizations and politics that have  been missing in the broader American population and consequently in the South Asian community? The last great wave of these alternatives was the late 1960s and early 70s.  Today we are at  a similar historical juncture, where easy solutions are no longer possible.  Sacrifice and discipline are an inevitable part of liberatory politics and organizations.  To be missing any of the components: creativity, sacrifice, discipline, joy, or spontaneity is to narrow the complexity and success of political projects.  </p>

<p>Politically South Asian American youth have to  take bold initiatives in anti-racist struggles that not only affect  their own communities but that of Black, Chicano, and other Asians.   Hip hop, inter-racial dating, sexual freedoms, or the struggle for new identities should be related political struggles.  Not only new identities,  new cultures, and new political organizations, but a new way of life is at stake.    Pure identities, struggles, or organizations are a thing of the past.  Instead we should look forward to a future where our struggle for freedom begins to open up new possibilities that we could not have imagined before.  Whether these opportunities will forever remain a dream or become a reality is dependent on the defeat of forces which oppose us: white-supremacy, our own middle classes, and U.S. Empire.   </p>
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