Above photo: Members of the Southern Movement Assembly in Tampa, Florida on the Southern Peopleâs Power Tour in 2018.
Lessons from the Southern Movement Assembly and the Peopleâs First 100 Days.
As winter storms rocked Texas and others across the South last week, Southern organizers waited for no one to do what they do best: stepping up to make it happen. Volunteers signed up to phonebank for wellness checks, and mutual aid networks continue to expand their capacity to intervene where policy has failed.
The government failures may continue to pile up while Southern communities are left to resolve multiple crises on their own, but people are building collective power across the Southâpeople committed to making sure our communities not only survive, but thrive.
Mutual aidâalong with regional action and local policy changeâis just one of the tactics central to the Peopleâs First 100 Days, a regional organizing campaign to grow Southern movement power. Itâs the first step in a year-long action plan developed when members of the Southern Movement Assembly (SMA) gathered in 2019, knowing that regardless of the outcome of the 2020 election, our communities would still need to fight for equity and justice.
Launched in 2012, the SMA is a collective of organizations and individuals committed to shaping a multiracial, multi-issue alliance to uplift frontline communities. More than 100 organizations from across the region, including the Global South, have participated in SMA intensives. Anchor organizations based across the regionâincluding Project South, National Council of Elders, SpiritHouse, Southern Rural Black Womenâs Initiative, Black Workers for Justice, and Crescent City Media Groupâare connecting their wide range of local efforts to make lasting regional change.
Modeled after the first 100 days of the new presidential administration, the Peopleâs First 100 Days launched at the start of the new year, with input from hundreds of Southern freedom fighters.
Beyond response in moments of crisis, the resilience of historically affected communities has led to some of the most decisive victories in history. Organizing to thrive and providing opportunities for communities to lead for themselvesâinstead of waiting for piecemeal policy approachesâis critical for our advancement.
Providing both a space for collective visioning and action, Southern people-power is more than an electoral strategy. This coalition is tackling real-world issues like climate change, immigration, housing, and jobsâand their momentum is not deterred by the barriers to access and opportunity built into the political system.
Hundreds gathered on January 9 for the first mass meeting of the Peopleâs First 100 days. Participants from Little Rock, Durham, Nashville, Birmingham, and Jackson, to rural communities in South Carolina, West Virginia, and Kentucky gather virtually to set a mutual agenda. Nina Morgan from the Greater-Birmingham Alliance to Stop Pollution and Nia Wilson from SpiritHouse were among session presenters.
Driving home the message that âWE GONNA BE ALRIGHTâ, speakers framed the current movement moment and ongoing intersecting crises of white supremacy, COVID-19 pandemic, and economic strife as opportunities for organizing.
The meeting came just three days after the white supremacist attack on the Capitol. Southern movement elders challenged the group to consider three questions:
- What is the historical context of this moment and what is the meaning for our movements?
- What are the opportunities opened by the insurrection on January 6th?
- What are collective healing practices we can offer each other for holding rage and griefâand for creating safety and strength for the long haul?
Reflecting on these questions together, in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic the capitol riots exposed the many lies that sit at the heart of this country. Leaders challenged us to not simply channel our rage and grief into action, but to take the moment to breathe and heal. Safety and healing are critical to our existence in a hostile terrain.
This week marks the halfway point through the Peopleâs First 100 Days, and neither major political party has shown the will and determination to put people first. This isnât the resistance of champagne liberals. Driving people-powered action while nurturing and growing our ranks will force our issues to be at the forefront.
Here are the main takeaways from the Southern Movement Assemblyâs plan for The Peopleâs First 100 Days:
1. To make history, we have to understand our history
â Nelson Johnson, National Council of Elders and co-founder of the Beloved Community Center in Greensboro, North CarolinaâWe are on this call because we are a part of a diverse Southern-rooted multiracial, multicultural, multi-gendered, multi-abled, multi-generational movement,â reflected Nia Wilson with Spirit House in North Carolina. âWe are committed to using the truths that we know to create the world we deserve.â
Our rage is real and valid, especially in the battle for narrative control over whiteness and white supremacy.
Wilson pointed to the need for intentional healing in order to stand fully in our power. âWe must build collective intercommunal power that is rooted in the wisdom of our ancestors and our elders.â
The innovation and collective reimagining of how to show up in moments of sustained trauma and crisis has elevated the work that is being done across the board. It has opened opportunities to address simultaneously long standing issues and fortify our institutions.
2. Nobodyâs free until all of us are free
â Carol Blackman, Human Rights Coordinator for the Southern Rural Black Womenâs Initiative for Economic and Social Justice, Mississippi
âNowâs the time for us to dig in deep,â proclaimed Shafeah MâBalia with Black Workers for Justice. âWe have to build and strengthen our local organizations, communities, networks, neighborhoods, [and] coalitions. Our strength starts from there.â
MâBalia emphasized the necessity of building more opportunities for collective organizing and planning. Building around the commonalities we share helps in group self-determination. Defining priorities and objectives on our own terms leads to demands that actually meet the needs and conditions of our communitiesânot just goals that sound good on paper.
This is the value of having an effort like the Peopleâs First 100 Days, and a space like the Southern Movement Assembly, where people can convene and co-vision. Reflecting on the regional formations represented on the call, Emery Wright highlighted the importance of political education.
âWe need to really be using this moment like we have today to do deep political education with each other to share analysis and perspective,â Wright said. âSince the beginning of Project South, we have been focused on the U.S. South, focused also in our neighborhood in South Atlanta, but [weâre] also international in both our perspective and in our work.â
Coupled with the narrative power to build stronger movements, Wright encouraged everyone to have a global perspective.
3. We have the rightâand responsibilityâto build our own futures
â Shafeah MâBalia, Black Workers for Justice
There are no saviors. No masked avenger will swoop in and make everything better.
But with the collective planning of Southern Movement Assembly member organizations and allies, we move beyond simply talking about our visions and learning how to heal from our traumas to actually taking action.
The Peopleâs First 100 Days builds on the experience and passion of movement assembly members. It is the first step to growing movement power, and developing self-determined governance and cooperative infrastructure to support our shared vision for the future.
This campaign provides space to center the needs and desires of people who are deciding for themselves what is enough and what they deserve. Each action moves us one step closer to liberation.
Stephanie Guilloud, who co-leads Project South, said that while we may be halfway through the Peopleâs First 100 Days, there are still plenty of opportunities to engage and commit to growing collective power across the region.
âThe insurrection at the capitol and the stateâs alignment with white violence revealed more of what we already know to be true. It is time for our communities to build our own solutions,â Guilloud said. âItâs time to build mutual aid projects rooted in local communities but coordinated with one another for greater strength. Itâs time to sharpen our policy campaigns to divest from harm and invest in community control of resources.â
Participants from over 50 groups, representing 13 states, are meeting weekly to work on these issues and more.
Join in the SMA #HearThePeople action the weekend of April 10, and commit to joining local policy fights for community control of resources, and connecting or initiating mutual-aid projects and centers. Guilloud encourages those interested to become an SMA member and join a work team.
This work takes all of us. But we gonna be alright.
Source: Popularresistance.org