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We Are Still Not Counted as Human: Reflections on the Struggle for Dignity in South Africa

We Are Still Not Counted as Human: Reflections on the Struggle for Dignity in South Africa in Chattanooga, TN

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We Are Still Not Counted as Human: Reflections on the Struggle for Dignity in South Africa

Barnes and Noble

We Are Still Not Counted as Human: Reflections on the Struggle for Dignity in South Africa in Chattanooga, TN

Current price: $16.00
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We Are Still Not Counted as Human contains reflections from S'bu Zikode, the President of Abahlali baseMjondolo (AbM), the largest popular movement to emerge in South Africa since apartheid. Founded in Durban in 2005, AbM now organizes over 180,000 members across four provinces. The movement was catalyzed by a deep disappointment in 2005 when the ANC betrayed a promise of land for housing, responding to protests instead with police violence and criminalization. This moment clarified that for shack dwellers, "freedom and the African National Congress (ANC) were two different things" and that their demand for inclusion in decisions about their lives was treated as criminal. The central demand became the recognition of their dignity and humanity, captured by the statement, "We Are Still Not Counted as Human". AbM developed a unique political philosophy based on 'a politics of the poor' and 'living politics'. This approach was necessary because existing political systems excluded the poor, leading AbM to develop their own language and ideas, guided by the principle: "nothing for us, without us". The movement insists that governance and development must be participatory. AbM's political praxis is grounded in the values of ubuntu and centers on building democratic socialism from below, often referred to as a 'living communism' achieved through building communities and communes. This stance has been met with intense, sustained repression, including constant police harassment, torture, criminalization, and informal violence. This violence, which has claimed more than twenty lives, is intended as a lesson to teach poor people to "know our place". Despite the horrific level of repression, the movement sustains its democratic structure and growth by centering its humanity, recognizing that courage and perseverance in the struggle are responsibilities that come with being human. AbM views itself as a space where people become "more human" by listening and acting together.
We Are Still Not Counted as Human contains reflections from S'bu Zikode, the President of Abahlali baseMjondolo (AbM), the largest popular movement to emerge in South Africa since apartheid. Founded in Durban in 2005, AbM now organizes over 180,000 members across four provinces. The movement was catalyzed by a deep disappointment in 2005 when the ANC betrayed a promise of land for housing, responding to protests instead with police violence and criminalization. This moment clarified that for shack dwellers, "freedom and the African National Congress (ANC) were two different things" and that their demand for inclusion in decisions about their lives was treated as criminal. The central demand became the recognition of their dignity and humanity, captured by the statement, "We Are Still Not Counted as Human". AbM developed a unique political philosophy based on 'a politics of the poor' and 'living politics'. This approach was necessary because existing political systems excluded the poor, leading AbM to develop their own language and ideas, guided by the principle: "nothing for us, without us". The movement insists that governance and development must be participatory. AbM's political praxis is grounded in the values of ubuntu and centers on building democratic socialism from below, often referred to as a 'living communism' achieved through building communities and communes. This stance has been met with intense, sustained repression, including constant police harassment, torture, criminalization, and informal violence. This violence, which has claimed more than twenty lives, is intended as a lesson to teach poor people to "know our place". Despite the horrific level of repression, the movement sustains its democratic structure and growth by centering its humanity, recognizing that courage and perseverance in the struggle are responsibilities that come with being human. AbM views itself as a space where people become "more human" by listening and acting together.

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