BIPoC musicians and artists are still very underrepresented in music and art scenes. They are under-appreciated by labels, broadcasters and booking agents, both in terms of recognition and financial terms. From a historical point of view alternative music has mostly associated with white British and white US-Americans acts. The music’s originally black roots have been actively concealed for decades. Although Black people invented rock and roll, BIPoC artists in this scene are either comparatively less well known or invisible, as the audience doesn’t know and acknowledge that they are BIPoCs.
In order to counteract this discrepancy and give a diverse artist community its rightful space, DECOLONOIZE, a Berlin collective of BIPoC musicians and music lovers, organizes concerts and events in the old punk way: From The Scene – For The Scene.
Follow the Decolonoize Blog for interviews with your favorite bands & articles about topics surrounding the influence of artists of color to modern music. Decolonoize is also on Instagram and instabio.
“If they touch one of us, they touch us all”
An interview with Charly Fernandez by Cherry Adam and Ksenia Krauer-Pacheco discussing the role of Argentinian social movements acting as a force for social cohesion.
Charly Fernandez is an Argentinian activist and a member of FOL (Frente de Organizaciones en Lucha), a social organization dedicated to empowering the most marginalized families within the Argentine working class. FOL strives to self-organize and advocate for the rights of these families, aiming to improve their material, social, and cultural conditions of life.
Since the election of Javier Milei, who is known for his feverish anarcho-capitalist fantasies, there has been a widespread media and discursive campaign against social organizations. The attack has been centred on the belief that individuals receiving social aid do not work, painting them as barriers to Argentina’s efforts to overcome its socio-economic challenges.
Nevertheless, FOL remains steadfast in its goals, which include advocating for fair employment with decent wages and working conditions, promoting gender equality, the emancipation of women and dissidents, and fighting for improved access to healthcare, education, housing and suitable living conditions. Additionally, FOL is committed to defending the rights of indigenous peoples, children, and youth, as well as advocating for human rights, access to culture, and recreation.
Tell us more about you and when you started organizing and advocating for the rights of the marginalised.
I have been an activist since I was quite young. I started during the process that began in Argentina with the 2001 assemblies. This was during the closing of the convertibility cycle, the first wave of strong neoliberal measures, and globalization.
Argentina’s exit was an exit from a lot of social conflict – very different from what is happening now. At that time, there was a tendency towards the left, where people began to register in popular assemblies, factories were taken over, and soup kitchens and work co-operatives were organized.
It was a time of great political participation, and I was one of those young people who began joining resistance assemblies. We started organizing ourselves in a situation where our neighbors and families suffered the consequences of years of neoliberal policies and unemployment.
How was the political movement at that time? How did it evolve?
These assemblies rotated from more central locations to neighborhoods and the countryside, especially the city’s shantytowns. However, my activism was in Buenos Aires. The process in other provinces and even in the Buenos Aires metropolitan area was different, so we began to form a link with comrades who came from movements of unemployed workers who had started to organize long before.
From that experience, I became involved with a group of comrades until we formed FOL, Frente de Organizaciones en Lucha. This front is a mix of movements: the MTD (Movimiento de Trabajadores Desocupados), the MTR (Movimiento Teresa Rodríguez – also an MTD), and others. We are talking about the year 2000, 2001.
Today, we continue to build our organizations, but now we are in almost all the country’s provinces. We have developed work co-operatives where many comrades work, from services to productive units to housing. We also have comrades who live in rural environments, and in these cases, there are also food production co-operatives and other types of things that do not exist in the cities.
How is it today?
Today, social movements, and we, in particular, do complex territorial work. It is not that we only attend a soup kitchen or a popular dining room. We have a framework of different spaces of intervention and spaces of health, gender, and environment that promote rights and articulate struggles.
For more than twenty years, we have been winning partial victories, and from those partial victories, we have been winning rights that have often been transformed into devices or public policies.
Are these organizations an alternative to what the State should do and provide for the people?
The lack of fundamental rights for colleagues to join the formal labor market and access to housing or health means that social organizations begin to take over this role. Many times, we’ve been accused of being a “para-state” or an outsourcing of the state. But what happens is that if we are not there? There is nothing. In reality, the alternative is narco-criminal gangs, as has happened in other places in Latin America.
One of the things that we are discussing today with all politicians is: look, the pandemic showed it. If social movements are not building territory, building community, and being part of the social network, there will be narco-criminal gangs. We, the social organizations, have limited and have acted as a barrier against the development of these gangs. The most robust movements are rural rather than urban.
Do you see parallels between Argentina’s form of social organization and other social movements in Latin America?
I have had the opportunity to travel to other countries in Latin America and talk to comrades about this. The role that we play is not against the government apparatus. The problem is that there is a territorialized, armed, millionaire force (narco-criminal gangs), and the state is impotent. So, what we tell them is: do you think that the drug traffickers are going to intervene, and then they won’t try to play in politics and to try to lead the country or lead states?
That is what happens in many places in Latin America. We see that there is a minimum democratic consensus, the understanding that organizations are not part of the problem but rather part of the solution.
What is the situation of the social movements in Argentina and Milei?
We have achieved family allowances, access to resources on gender violence in companies, education, and financing for building popular neighborhoods. All these were achieved not because of the goodwill of the government in power but because there were comrades who died fighting in the streets for this.
They call us the “CEOs of Poverty.” We are “poverty managers.” That is the problem, isn’t it? But, if one looks at how the picket movement began, how the social movements began, and all the rights that have been achieved in the neighborhoods over the years, of course, they want to destroy us.
There was a minimum wage, and the only thing we did was raise the salary ceiling during all these years. We have achieved family allowances, access to resources on gender violence in companies, education, and financing for building popular neighborhoods. All these were achieved not because of the goodwill of the government in power but because there were comrades who died fighting in the streets for this.
And, well, this is what the political class, the establishment, and the capital seem willing to do: destroy and eliminate these rights. Milei has been sent to execute this plan. But if we ask other sectors of politics, they will say exactly the same.
Is there a possibility of co-operation between these movements from below? Does it make sense to co-operate, even with these structural differences?
It is necessary. There is a clear coordination of the global far-right. It’s not a coincidence that Milei comes to Spain to meet with Vox (the ultra-right party in Spain), goes to meetings in the United States, or is invited to Austria to receive an honorary title.
All these societies and think-tanks are part of the apparatus of these digital militias — devices and networks created to fight a cultural battle of aggression and social control.
There is co-ordination, a kind of global far-right international acting, financing itself, and taking over states where they can. And they are saying it everywhere. Milei said it in Davos: we must break with everything progressive, gender culture, ‘woke’ or whatever you call it.
What is your wish or hope for the international left movements and the ones in Germany? How can they show solidarity with the popular movements in Argentina?
We see that there are no such networks of articulation on the side of left-wing progressivism. If there are, they have become old, bureaucratized, and institutionalized, as we see in the social movements in our region, Latin America, and here in Germany. We need to strengthen those ties. The advances we achieve in Argentina, or those achieved here in Berlin or Brazil, will depend on the levels of resistance we can build.
We must build on the idea that ”if they touch one of us, they touch us all,” an old slogan of the international left, emancipatory movements, and national liberation. All movements try to survive, resist, and face daily state repression battles. But we must undertake this task because this is on a global scale.
The mission now is to talk with other comrades and ask ourselves: How do we build a roadmap, understanding our origins and the different ideological perspectives in the international movement? This is a central task.
We are strengthening ties with the comrades of El Bloque Latinoamericano in Berlin, obviously because we are close. Many of us have been activists, and we have known each other and our comrades in their countries of origin. Our actions range from concrete aid to raising awareness about what is happening in Latin America.
Berlin Anmeldung available online from mid-October
Newcomers to Berlin will be able to complete their Anmeldung (registration) online from mid-October 2024, receiving their documents by post. It means a Bürgeramt appointment will no longer be necessary. An Anmeldung within 14 days of arrival is mandatory for everyone who moves to a German city. The bureaucratic shortcoming creates a particularly large hurdle for newcomers since everyone in Germany needs to show their Anmeldung certificate for all kinds of administrative tasks, such as applying for a residence permit, opening a bank account or finding a job. However, even if the registration is about to become easier, finding an address in the German capital is still hard Source: iamexpat
Assassinated, just like that
On the afternoon of 11 July, a stranger stabbed William Chedjou in the stomach. In broad daylight and the middle of the street, at Gesundbrunnen in Wedding. Chedjou died of his injuries shortly afterwards. The police report of 12 July speaks of a “homicide.” What it doesn’t mention is that Chedjou was black and came from Cameroon. The alleged perpetrator is a German with a Turkish migration background. And the “dispute” was more of a sudden escalation. At least that’s what Cyrille Tasah Fotio, an eyewitness and victim of the attack, says. He and many other Cameroonians in Berlin agree: Chedjou died because of racism. Source: taz
Ari comfort woman statue to stay in Mitte
The dispute over the Ari comfort women statue in Berlin continues. The Berlin-Mitte District Assembly has approved a petition in favour of its preservation. A similar motion, initiated by the Greens, SPD and Die Linke, was also approved. The statue in Berlin’s Mitte district was erected as a peace statue in September 2020 by a pro-South Korean civic group after local authorities approved its installation for one year. The permit was then extended for a further year. Berlin Mayor Kai Wegner (CDU) also intervened and withdrew funding for an educational project on the topic of “comfort women.” Research by rbb showed that Wegner was doing Japan’s bidding. Source: sumikai
NEWS FROM GERMANY
Balcony solar panel boom goes on
2024 has so far been the year of balcony solar panels in Germany. The increase in solar panel numbers has to do with the Germany’s new Solar Package I policy, which came into effect in January 2024. In the second quarter alone, 152,000 more units were installed, according to the Federal Network Agency (Bundesnetzagentur). Bonn residents installed the largest number of units in the second quarter, with 5.16 new units for every 1,000 people. Dresden followed with 4.10 units, Essen with 3.37 and Leipzig with 2.94. Source: iamexpat
Student rooms only for heirs
At the start of the winter semester, a survey was once again carried out to find out how much rooms in shared flats cost in German university cities. The unsurprising result: without rich parents, you can forget Munich, Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Hamburg and Cologne. A room in a shared flat in these cities costs around 600 euros on average. The analysis of more than 9,000 offers for shared flats showed that rooms are more expensive almost everywhere than they were a year ago. The cheaper ones are in the east: in Chemnitz, for instance, a room can be rented for an average cost of 290 euros. Source: jW
Brandenburg elections bring some relief for SPD
The SPD’s Dietmar Woidke has been Minister President in Brandenburg for 11 years, where he is much more popular than SPD leaders at the national level. That could be an explanation for the party’s victory in the Brandenburg regional election, where, for the third regional election within three weeks, the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party was nevertheless able to record massive gains, becoming the strongest political force in eastern Germany. For the left-wing environmentalist Greens and the neoliberal Free Democrats (FDP), who form the federal coalition government in Berlin together with the Social Democrats (SPD), it was their third crushing defeat in a row. Source: dw
Deutschlandticket will soon cost 58 euros
A price increase is never a nice thing, affirmed North Rhine-Westphalia’s Transport Minister Oliver Krischer (Greens). The “Deutschlandticket” will cost 9 euros more from 1 January 2025, making it 58 euros per month. Nevertheless, it is good news for local transport and passengers in Germany, Krischer insisted. The new price is valid for the whole of 2025. The future of the ticket is therefore secured and another price debate is off the table for the time being. However, studies commissioned by the federal and state governments have shown that some of the approximately 13 million customers are unlikely to go along with the price increase. Source: taz
Who is Björn Höcke?
The Nazi past (and present) of the AfD’s rising star
This month, the Alternative for Germany (AfD) made history by winning its first state election in Germany. The party was led to success by Björn Höcke, a rising kingpin in the AfD. His influence has grown so much that the youth branch of the AfD, Junge Alternative (JA), once referred to themselves as the ‘Höckejugend‘. With a strong grass-roots following, Höcke has become one of the critical driving forces in the revival of the political far-right in Germany, and at his current trajectory, sights are set firmly on party leadership and even the Chancellorship.
Höcke positions himself as a radical alternative to the ‘theatre politics’ of Germany’s centrist parties, while the AfD’s politics are rather a copy-paste smorgasbord of ideas shared by other populist far-right movements in Europe, including Euroscepticism, pro-Russian sentiment, anti-immigration and anti-Muslim views. What particularly distinguishes Höcke within the AfD is his extremism, characterised by a focus on historical revisionism and his nationalist agenda.
History
Born in 1972 in the Ruhr region, his family moved to rural Germany to enjoy “a quiet country life”. His own mother describes his school years as rather typical, boisterous and at times outspoken, with frequent challenges to authority. Already at the age of 14, he was politically active, briefly joining the Junge Union, the youth organisation of the CDU/CSU coalition, but quickly became dissatisfied with the “career politician” approach he witnessed there.
Höcke was deeply politicised by his family, recounting how his grandparents inspired himwith stories of their homeland in East Prussia. History is a key component of Höcke’s identity and politics, later studying it at university and then becoming a history teacher in 2004. In his own words:
“But politics could not be escaped there either … Every day, I was confronted with the terrible consequences of absurd ideology projects such as ‘multiculturalism’ and ‘inclusion’”
He proudly notes that he shares the same birthday as Otto von Bismarck, the infamous Prussian leader who unified Germany through military power and shrewd politics, consolidating state control and elevating the German empire into a global superpower. Given the AfD’s strong anti-multicultural stance, it’s noteworthy that 19th century East Prussia was a testing ground for the German Empire’s “Germanization” policies, designed to assimilate non-German ethnic groups by promoting German culture and settling ethnic Germans in the region. Höcke claims that sharing a birthday with Bismarck strengthens his “commitment to orient (himself) to his stately size and his love for the country and people”.
Bismarck was also used by the Nazis as a symbol of German nationalist ideals: a strong, decisive leader, a defender of the traditional order, a unified national identity and culture. For Höcke, this period of German history is particularly significant, as he believes it allows modern nationalists to draw pride from a time unburdened by the guilt narratives tied with WW2 and the Holocaust.
When the AfD was founded in late 2012, Höcke quickly took steps to quit his job as a teacher and by April 2013 he had co-founded a regional branch in Thuringia. His efforts paid off when, by autumn 2014, the AfD secured 10.6% of the vote, gaining seats in the state parliament. By 2019, support for the AfD in Thuringia had nearly doubled, with the party receiving 23.4% of the vote.
Meanwhile, in 2015, Höcke co-founded Der Flügel, a radical ethno-nationalist faction of the AfD, self-described as a “resistance movement against the further erosion of the identity of Germany”, who widely adopted racist, Islamophobic, antisemitic, xenophobic, revisionist and denialist discourse. In March 2020, Der Flügel was officially classified by the German state as a right-wing extremist organisation, after which the Chief of the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution(BfV) described right-wing extremism as “the biggest threat to German democracy”. This made the leaders of the AfD pressure Höcke to dissolve Der Flügel, avoiding the entire party being banned outright.Controversially however, its founding members, including Höcke, were not asked to leave the party.
Banned Speech
After the classification of Der Flügel as an extremist group, the BfV began monitoring Höcke, considering him a danger to German democracy. Since then, he has repeatedly been fined for using a banned slogan, firstly during a party campaign speech in 2021 and again in December last year where he also encouraged the audience to join. He was fined €13,000 & €16,900 respectively for using the phrase “Alles für Deutschland!” (“Everything for Germany!”), a slogan used by Hilter’s SA Stormtroopers, and engraved on their service daggers. Höcke, the history graduate and history teacher of 10 years, claimed he didn’t know the historical significance of the term, the same excuse used by fellow AfD party & Bundestag Member in 2020, and yet another AfD politician in 2017.
However, the slogan is seemingly a favourite for the AfD. Shamelessly dancing around the edges of banned speech, “Alice für Deutschland” was encouraged by AfD event moderators, written on banners and chanted by AfD supporters at a rally in Freiberg this year, in support of Alice Weidel, chairwoman of the AfD, who has also since joked that Höcke was saying “Alice” not “Alles”. To some, this is a harmless statement of patriotism, to others an undeniable dog whistle signifying the party’s true radical agenda.
Höcke has previously criticised German hate speech laws as limiting free speech. A similar sentiment was expressed this year in a Twitter discussion with Elon Musk stating: “Germany is at the forefront of persecuting political opponents and suppressing free speech” on X. Elon Musk, X (Twitter) owner, replied by asking why that slogan was illegal in Germany. Höckereplied, “Because every patriot in Germany is defamed as a Nazi”.
Historical Revisionism
Höcke’s family influence is further evident in his other views, as it was revealed that his father subscribed to the Holocaust denial & revisionist literature. In 2017, Höcke spoke to the AfD youth faction, Junge Alternative (JA), in Dresden about Germany’s remembrance culture:
“We Germans are the only people in the world who have planted a memorial of shame in the heart of their capital”.
He went on by stating:
“This stupid coping policy is still paralysing us today. We need nothing other than a 180-degree turnaround in remembrance policy. We don’t need any more dead rites”.
Although later distancing himself from this sentiment, the intentional ambiguity, spoken in a neo-Nazi hotspot, clearly intended to provoke revisionist fantasies. Dresden is seen as a flash-point for victimisation narratives (i.e. that Germany was also a victim of the Second World War), and the AfD frequently commemorates the anniversary of the Allied bombing of Dresden. Furthermore, Höcke believes:
“It should be reported to the same extent that the Americans starved German prisoners of war in the prison camps in the Rheinauen after the end of the Second World War.”
Later that same year, in an interview with the Wall Street Journal, Höcke continued his desire to discard the country’s historical guilt and pleaded for a more positive representation of Adolf Hilter, stating:
“Not everything was bad… The big problem is that Hitler is portrayed as absolutely evil. But of course, we know that there is no black and white in history.”
An Eco-Fascist Future?
One final note is evidence of the prerequisites to eco-fascism in Höcke’s rhetoric. Whilst the AfD is filled with climate denialists, Höcke has shown public support for Die Kehre magazine, which tries to reclaim left-wing environmentalism by rebranding “Klimaschutz” as “Heimatschutz”. His personal website also goes to great lengths to paint a picture of a grounded, nature-loving, everyday man, who is nevertheless willing to defend himself, if necessary.
Outro
What is dangerous about Höcke is perhaps less his ideas, but rather how toothless the institutional antifascist mechanisms in Germany seemingly are. The so-called “defensive democracy” policies of the modern German state seek to protect the state from descending back into nazism. Let’s see how Höcke checks up with the Verfassungsschutz:
Surveillance by the state ✅
Fines for usage of banned speech ✅
Banning of extremist groups ✅ (Der Flügel dissolved prior to a ban)
Revoking political financing …
Prison sentences …
At this point, we have to ask what the red line is for Germany and Höcke. Is it already too late? After all, Hitler was democratically elected into power.
Until the root causes of extremism are addressed, and the needs of the left-behind seeking a different politics are addressed, right-wing extremism will continue to flourish in Germany.
While scrolling on Instagram last spring I came across an interesting interview published by The Left Berlin that included alternative views on German memory culture from a Palestinian perspective. Specifically regarding the popular Holocaust memorial near the Reichstag. Rasha Al Jundi and Michael Jabareen are Palestinian artists. They offer what I believe is an interesting and unique challenge to Germany’s myopic and self serving memory culture. The latter often ignores or downplays both the genocide in Namibia and the Roma/Sinti victims of Nazi oppression.
There was something very visually arresting about this diminutive but determined looking woman standing there with those concrete slabs looming over her while wearing her keffiyeh, calmly gazing directly at the camera. “What about us?” was the question that seemed to hang in the air above her. One aspect of her creative intervention that only became obvious to me relatively recently was that this was a powerful display of embodiment. She seemed to acknowledge the reality of the Palestinian body as an inherently disruptive force within the German mainstream.
The role of the artist as a disrupter, provocateur and one who names what others fear to articulate is embodied very well in the historical figure of Elsa von Freytag Loringhoven, one of the founders of the Dada movement. ‘The Baroness,’ as she was known, was a counter-culture German woman. Her life and work is very important to my own artistic practice which concerns art as premonition and the craft of divination. It is those concepts that the Baroness fully embodied.
In retrospect, I see Rasha and Michael as engaging in similar provocations as the early Dadaists, who, unconcerned with social norms and propriety, were willing to challenge the establishment – often with their very bodies as instruments of disruption.
The gaslighting and machinations of the pro-Israel “anti-Deutsch” weirdos, as well as the arrogant and delusional attitudes of German mainstream liberals, left me feeling like I was in the Twilight Zone. Most grotesque of all is how the German mainstream claims to “protect Jewish life” via their demented staatsraison. Meanwhile ignoring and denying the diversity of thought and opinion that exists within the Jewish community. One worthwhile intervention involves unearthing hidden perspectives from history that are relevant to the current situation with the Palestinians. Like these diary quotes from German Jewish scholar and Holocaust survivor Victor Klemperer:
“I cannot help myself, I sympathize with the Arabs who are in revolt, whose land is being ‘bought.’ A Red Indian fate, says Eva.”
“We hear a lot about Palestine now; it does not appeal to us. Anyone who goes there exchanges nationalism and narrowness for nationalism and narrowness. Also it is a country for capitalists.”
Unfortunately, many European Jews who agreed with Klemperer in his sympathies with the Palestinians were murdered by the Nazis. Something we must reflect upon when surveying the current social landscape.
Reflecting on these photos of Rasha and Michael at Sachsenhausen with the events of the past eleven months in mind, it became clear to me – as an independent researcher, activist and socially engaged artist – that the flames of fascism were never fully doused. The embers were left smouldering and now the house is once again on fire, especially for those facing genocide today. During the Civil Rights movement Harry Belafonte was surprised at Martin Luther King’s pessimism about Black Americans “integrating into a burning house” and asked him what the solution was. His response is a message for us today. “…become the firemen.” King said, “Let us not stand by and let the house burn.”
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