Thursday, January 14, 2010

Solidarity

Solidarity
1. union or fellowship arising from common responsibilities and interests, as between members of a group or between classes, peoples, etc.: to promote solidarity among union members.

2. community of feelings, purposes, etc.

It's so foreign to our American experience that I had to look it up in the dictionary to get it right. In a session from Copenhagen's Klimaforum, May East (of Findhorn, Scotland and Sao Paulo, Brazil) asserts that lack of solidarity is precisely what is missing in our communities in the developed nations of the northern hemisphere.

We use the word "community" a lot, and we readilly agree that we don't have tight-knit "communities." But when we boil it down, what does lack of community mean? May East identifies it: lack of solidarity.

To explain this, she tells a story. (at approx 24:55 minute point in video) In journeying from the UK to Brazil, she brought her host a box of English biscuits (I think that means "cookies" in American). She tells how she had expected the man to take the precious box home to share with his wife and kids. Instead, an hour later she noticed the slum's children along the street: each one had a tiny fragment of cookie, and they were carefully breaking those tiny fragments into still smaller fragments to hand to their friends. They didn't have much, but what they had, they shared.

May East also notes how both the U.S. and South America were hit by major hurricanes, and in her observation South America was emerging from the crisis with far more resilience. Not just because of resilient "things" like we often talk about in Transition circles, but East asserts it was because of solidarity -- a common purpose, the same life outlook which had the street children sharing their cookie morsels. East calls solidarity "the fabric of your community."

Resilience and self-sufficiency

The Transition Network says that the goal of the movement is building "resilience." When Transition U.S. began its web presence (I see that this has since changed) it used to say something like "local self-sufficiency and resilience." This I can understand. In the elevator talk -- where you have 60 seconds to get your message across -- "resilience" doesn't sell; nobody knows what it means.

"Local self-sufficiency" rings a bell with people, because we Americans have cultural history there. The Pilgrims, Laura Ingalls Wilder, we have plenty of self-sufficiency stories, and the concept holds a certain glory. It appeals to the back-to-the-landers and to the peak oil survivalists and to the conservative individualists. It defines a clear position, and when used in conjunction with "resilience," self-sufficiency works because it helps to define the R-word. But in many cases, "resilience" remains about skills and things.

Perhaps the R-word itself needs to be modified. With "solidarity."

The missing ingredient of our communities

May East presented her biscuit story in remarks about what Transition in the developed North could learn from the global South. Within Transition we glibly say that we need to "build community," but solidarity identifies specifically that element which we are lacking.

In our current culture of peak-individualism, we have lost "common responsibilities." We outsource these to our government and nonprofits and expect them to handle it for us. Schooling our children, care of parklands, preservation of The Commons. It's not working too well.

In some ways we even outsourced our common responsibilities to corporations, and we are dismayed to discover that the corporate interests haven't upheld those commons. Hence the stumbling attempts to create corporate ethics.

In our culture of individualism and competition, we no longer understand community of purpose. In 4 years of activitsm in my SUV-intense neighborhood, I have so often heard the reaction "I'm glad somebody's doing this." They agree it's an important cause but they're happy to outsource it, and have someone else do the work. They don't have the time, which really translates into they're too busy competing in the workplace, competing for space on the freeway, competing that their children should have the best extracurricular activities and should get into the best colleges for the best future ...

May East's comments helped me to identify specifically what aspect is missing. We need to reawaken solidarity, that sense of common purpose.

Americans don't understand solidarity. We don't have a history in it. We don't have many cultural stories or models. Perhaps our closest example was the Revolutionary War, where colonists banned together -- but that same story is the source of our proud American independence.

And independence is perhaps solidarity's polar opposite.

How do we do it?

We need to become the kids sharing their cookie.

In reality, I don't know how to reawaken solidarity either. But I write this article so that you, as community leaders in this Transition time, might be alert to glimmers of it within your own community.

East says "we have been educated to compete." She says she doesn't know what it will take to get us to change course, change consciousness. I propose that we Transition leaders try the opposite: consciously educating people to be in solidarity.

At our initiating group in Los Angeles, we have seen glimmers of shared responsibility in our work days in the community garden. We see common purpose in urban harvest redistribution programs. The warmth of common interest bubbles forth in our community potlucks. I'm guessing that glimmers more will appear as we get going with noncompetitive means of exchange like time banks and LETS systems.

As we begin the New Year, I'm reviewing what has worked and what hasn't in the past year of Transition activities. Over and over my thoughts are returning to the simplest things. Our organic vegetable gardening class series has been a big success, not simply because it is growing garden knowledge (reskilling), or getting more people to try urban agriculture (physical projects), but because we now have a core group of regulars who know each other and recognize each other as fellows on the path. We are building relationships.

Our hands-on reskilling classes, whether those be pickling or breadbaking or building solar cookers, have drawn many of the same people. Guest speakers comment again and again how warm our circle is -- I'm in it every week, so it takes the comments of these outsiders to make me recognize it. This "warmth" is the caring and sense of sharing that people within our circle have begun to build.

As we go through the process of "year in review" and as we put together our calendar of Transition activities for 2010, we should be looking for those kind of activities which are most likely to build and further that warmth, that caring, those first glimmers of reawakened solidarity.

This article was reprinted from the blog at Transition United States.

If you would like to discuss the ideas of growing solidarity in Los Angeles neighborhoods, join our Transition Los Angeles discussion group at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/TTLA/