en:brochures:unclassified:kipriako_anarxikoi
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- | ====== Cyprus: the National Issue and the Anarchists (Pamphlet) ====== | + | ====== Cyprus: the National Issue and the Anarchists |
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As we have tried to show elsewhere, nationalism was essentially the unifying element of the hegemonic ideology. In '74, nationalism went through its most intense crisis in decades. In the space of a few months it was forced to change its face and went from being Greek with tsarouhia and davuls to Cypriot with vraka pants and lute. For a while it seemed that this change would be as successful as what was happening before '74. Around the end of the 70s, however - and especially from the 80s onwards - a general indifference among Cypriots and a shift to a petit bourgeois individualism began to emerge. The national isssue is of course everywhere - but there is also a cynicism at the same time. | As we have tried to show elsewhere, nationalism was essentially the unifying element of the hegemonic ideology. In '74, nationalism went through its most intense crisis in decades. In the space of a few months it was forced to change its face and went from being Greek with tsarouhia and davuls to Cypriot with vraka pants and lute. For a while it seemed that this change would be as successful as what was happening before '74. Around the end of the 70s, however - and especially from the 80s onwards - a general indifference among Cypriots and a shift to a petit bourgeois individualism began to emerge. The national isssue is of course everywhere - but there is also a cynicism at the same time. | ||
- | The rallies are thinning out and the parties are forced to resort to spectacular political crises in order to keep the interest of the viewers-voters. At first glance, this shift may seem uninteresting or perhaps even worse than before. Leftists, who feel their loneliness more acutely, have a literature around "the situation getting worse" | + | The rallies are thinning out and the parties are forced to resort to spectacular political crises in order to keep the interest of the viewers-voters. At first glance, this shift may seem uninteresting or perhaps even worse than before. Leftists, who feel their loneliness more acutely, have a literature around "the situation getting worse" |
+ | But, again, someone will say, what about the Cyprus problem, AND YET THE PROBLEM EXISTS. After all, there are so many thousands of refugees, there is the problem of free settlement, the Turkish danger, etc. Anyway, we said at the beginning that nationalism may be an ideology, but there are real-objective problems that one has to face even after criticizing it. | ||
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+ | Let's start with the bogeyman of the " | ||
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+ | So, yes, there is a certain vague possibility of war somewhere in the future. But what we have said above can be said with equal accuracy about the Greek state. A war, whoever starts it, will be the height of nationalist hysteria. So what do we do? Unionists are concerned, of course, about the morale of the army. But, from a radical point of view, the point is to avoid a war. | ||
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+ | The struggle against nationalism is also a struggle against a war of states - a meaningless massacre in front of monuments to heroes. | ||
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+ | Today' | ||
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+ | There is always the possibility of war, as long as there are states - the bogeyman, however, is the ideological use of this issue (by projecting a " | ||
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+ | But, of course, the Cyprus problem exists without war. And this is an existent problem. However, we need to make some things clear from the outset. The Cyprus problem will be solved away from us - and the rest of the Cypriots. Politicians will tie and stitch and impose the solution through the votes of their supporters. This is for those who think that tomorrow they will be asked how the problem will be solved. Of course, this approach solves nothing. After all, one might say, this is tradition. I would say it is " | ||
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+ | The issue, however, goes further. It is a refusal to rekindle nationalism. Because at the moment the only other solution, apart from refusing to put the national issue at the centre of the debate, is to start talking about the " | ||
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+ | The Cyprus problem is a problem of many dimensions and we are only now beginning to criticise the ideology (nationalism) that created it. The logic of 'if you have no solution to propose, keep silent' | ||
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+ | **THE ANARCHIST " | ||
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+ | On a utopian level, of course, we know what we want: an anarchist organisation of Cypriot society, based on the principles of non-power, pluralism and autonomy-decentralisation. The state (centralised or bi-zonal), the other power structures (patriarchy, | ||
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+ | These are not fantasies. They come out of the anarchist critique of nationalism and the historical experience of anarchist movements (see Spain). And they are not completely unrealistic suggestions for Cyprus. On the contrary, they are the continuation of the resistance against the power and the ideology of the flattening-homogenization of nationalism on the island. However, it is utopian to talk today about such a " | ||
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+ | a) the struggle against and the overcoming of nationalism and its historical wounds | ||
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+ | b) the revival and redefinition of the tendencies for decentralisation, | ||
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+ | c) the opposition to power, both as a structural phenomenon and as a diffuse form of constitution of interpersonal relations. The diffusion of anti-authority and its constitution as an alternative political-cultural pole is a necessary condition for an anarchist revolutionary society. | ||
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+ | Of course, all this is not that simple to accomplish. We need action and antiauthoritarian discourse. And it is a necessary honesty to ourselves and those who listen to us to admit that we are still at the beginning of this process. We are still trying to push the national issue aside from the center of the debate. It is precisely our understanding of the stage we are at that makes us refuse to provide ' | ||
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+ | a) The need to oppose nationalism at every level and in every form. And this implies a critique of the ideology of nationalism, | ||
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+ | b) The need to form an alternative space that will cease to be a tail of hegemonic ideology (like the Trotskyists and the unionists) and that will collectively seek through its disocurse and praxis a way out of the current impasse. | ||
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+ | c) The removal of the national issue from the center of the debate, but also the simultaneous expansion of its limits. Some of the first minimalist " | ||
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+ | These are, as mentioned, minimalist positions. They do not constitute a unity for a solution to the Cyprus problem etc.; they could perhaps constitute the " | ||
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+ | Radical critique is a critique that tries to connect the utopia of a liberated society with the problems of society and everyday life in the here and now. It is an attempt to find alternative perspectives in the general misery and deadlocks of today' | ||
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+ | ----- | ||
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+ | NOTES: | ||
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+ | (1) There were and are various Trotskyist tendencies (most with 4-5 people). The reference to Trotskyists here is aimed at the group around [[en: | ||
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+ | (2) The existence of various tendencies was also present here. The reference is usually to the group around the " | ||
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+ | (3) For examples from the Greek experience, one only has to look at the course of ethnic minorities in Greece. Some interesting facts are also found in the article by Th. Kalomylos "The Modern Greek Nation", | ||
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+ | (4) These conflicts appear from the very beginning - even in the French Revolution. See, for example, the contradiction between the direct democracy of the " | ||
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+ | (5) The following analysis is brief and descriptive. For an extensive analysis of the historical experience of nationalism in Cyprus, see [[en: | ||
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+ | {{tag> | ||
+ | Condition:" | ||
+ | Condition:" | ||
+ | " | ||
+ | Groups: | ||
+ | " | ||
+ | " | ||
+ | Areas: | ||
+ | Subject:" | ||
+ | Subject:" | ||
+ | Subject:" | ||
en/brochures/unclassified/kipriako_anarxikoi.1736248577.txt.gz · Last modified: 2025/04/20 19:43 (external edit)