Struggling with (Non)violence
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About this ebook
The author calls on communities committed to (non)violence to invest in a model for social change which
1) roots itself in contextual, historical analysis;
2) includes other-than-human lives as necessary partners;
3) values practices that dismantle violence over theological abstractions;
4) emphasizes creative communities of active, counter-cultural resistance over individualism;
5) experiments with diverse, disruptive tactics; and
6) urges a self-critical solidarity that welcomes differences regarding various means of social change.
The Interviewees are
Rita “Bo” Brown (B♀)
Ward Churchill
John Dear
Vincent Harding
Dolores Huerta
Derrick Jensen
Kathy Kelly
Alice Lynd
Staughton Lynd
Katherine Power
Sarah Schulman
Akinyele Umoja
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Struggling with (Non)violence - Julie Marie Todd
Acknowledgments
This volume is a book version of my doctoral dissertation for the University of Denver/Iliff School of Theology Joint Ph.D. program in 2012. I published it with the title Evaluating Violence and (Non)violence: A Critical, Practical Theology of Social Change.
The original acknowledgments are still true.
I express my deep gratitude first of all to the twelve persons I interviewed for this dissertation. Taken together, they understand more about the violence in and of the United States than I can reasonably communicate so as to do justice to their experience and knowledge. These twelve persons have studied, experienced and articulated for and with their communities more about suffering and death, resistance and transformation than is almost fathomable. I both honor and lament what they know. I was humbled by their acceptance of my invitation to interview them and continue to live in awe of what I learned from them. They will forever inspire me as a scholar, activist, and human being.
I thank my dissertation committee chairperson, Dr. Katherine Turpin, for her unending encouragement that this was an important project, and so to improve the quality of my writing and the clarity of my thinking.
With undying affection and respect, I thank my student colleagues in the DU/Iliff Joint Ph.D. program, without whose camaraderie and support this program would have meant little.
I offer my gratitude and love to the community at Nada Carmelite Hermitage in Crestone, Colorado, who provided me solitude and refuge during which the bulk of this project came together.
To my parents, Mary and Jim Todd, thank you for your unconditional love for me and whatever I seek to do in this world.
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I also acknowledge Wesley White, the publisher and primary editor of this book project. Since I completed the dissertation in 2012, he has consistently encouraged me to publish it. Without his persistent nudges and detailed attention to its editing and formatting, this book would not be in the world in this form. In addition, I thank Brenda Smith White whose never-failing personal encouragement and attention to word choice make what I wrote so much better.
Thank you to Mekhi Mendoza for the original cover art. I love the image that he offered in response to the themes of the book I described to him. Here’s what he wrote about the meaning of his original drawing:
The Five of Wands in tarot is the fifth card of the wands, the fire element of the Minor Arcana. It is associated with the planet Saturn, and the dates between July 21 and August 1, which is when this statement is currently being written. My own rendition of the Five of Wands shows a seemingly chaotic arrangement of 5 intersecting wooden sticks within a circle, all of which are in flames. The energy of this card is challenging. There is strife as each of us strives for our individual and collective desires to be tended to. Pressure is building and is seeking release due to inner and outer conflict. A revolution is on the horizon. What would happen if we collectively strive for each other’s liberation?
I dedicate this particular volume to my mentor and one of the interviewees for this study, Dr. Vincent Harding. My eternal gratitude to you, Dr. Harding. I know your power and guidance continue on in this earthly realm. May your spirit of struggle rest in peace and your soul live on in all of its power in those of us you have touched.
Preface
One of the biggest blessings of being in Denver at the Iliff School of Theology for my Ph.D. was getting to know and be mentored by Dr. Vincent Harding. Dr. Harding was the Emeritus Professor of Religion and Social Transformation, President of the Veterans of Hope Project, and was himself the quintessential veteran of hope. He and his wife, Rosemarie Freeney Harding, were central figures in the Black Freedom struggle in the American South in the 1950s and 1960s. He was a deep listener, most pointed questioner, and profound respondent in conversation. His deliberate pace of thought and cadence in speech would literally stop this anxious querent of spirit and struggle in my tracks.
I visited Dr. Harding in his book-filled, first-floor office in the Veterans of Hope office in Schlessman Hall. He would sit in the same wing-back chair. He always inquired about my parents. We would discuss this or that life, school, or world topic. Then he would proceed with, So, sister Julie, what would you like to talk about today?
After that I would carry on about whatever philosophical or personal issue I was having. He listened intently with his eyes on me and occasionally asked questions for clarification. When I finished, he would raise his two hands from his lap, palms together, rest them against his lips and chin, close his eyes, breathe through his nose, pause for a while, then begin to speak his thoughts. His responses always attended to the deep layer of meaning underneath the apparent surface of my presenting ideas and questions. He provided concrete insights, guidance, and resources. He was always connecting me with people he thought might help me.
When it came time to focus on the work of my dissertation, I knew I wanted to write about (non)violence. I didn’t know how to approach the topic. Dr. Harding told me that writing a dissertation was like being married to a person. You had better truly love your topic because you were going to spend a lot of time with it and, at times, dislike it intensely. If you were not committed to it completely, you would never see it through. So he asked me, What would you do if you could simply do what you love?
I said, Interview people about violence and (non)violence – people who have really been in the middle of struggle and have thought through these things because they have lived it.
He told me to make a list of dream people I would want to talk to if I could. He told me that he could put me in touch with some people that he would recommend, which included Dolores Huerta and Alice and Staughton Lynd. And that was the beginning. I interviewed twelve amazing individuals who have committed their lives to the pursuit of justice and the liberation of human communities.
The worst part of this project was to put those conversations in an academic form. But my dissertation advisor, Dr. Katherine Turpin, encouraged me to make the writing my own. Nonetheless, it was an academic project that had to meet certain expectations. This book is my light rewrite of that project, eight years after I completed the dissertation. My purpose in rewriting is to make what I already wrote accessible in a book form, removing unnecessary jargon, footnotes, and methodological and theoretical description.
OVERVIEW
I just don’t want one person killed. I don’t believe in that any more. I don’t want to kill anybody, no matter how noble the cause is. I don’t see it. I don’t see that as bringing peace. I don’t understand it any more. So, it’s all bad…. I’m against all violence at all levels.¹
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I believe very strongly in nonviolence. I really believe that it does have a very strong spiritual force. Because I’ve seen it…. When I talk about the strength of it, it’s also a communication. It spreads from the person to the perpetrators.²
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I thought [nonviolence] was a good idea. I don’t have a problem with that. Whatever works! It’s all tools. By any means necessary. Sometimes you need a hoe; sometimes you need a shovel. Sometimes you need a mule. A plough. It depends on the ground.³
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You want to do a million people protest? You did that at the onset of the Iraq war. Biggest protest they say, ever. At the very onset of a war, did you notice some kind of effect on the war? I didn’t. I drew a lesson from that. And this is my point. If you believe in it, try it. If it works, great. But when it doesn’t work, now what? Well, now, that’s a different question for you, having your moral objections when there’s people who are literally being turned into hamburger.⁴
- - - - - - - - - -
These four quotations represent a spectrum of belief
about the justifiability and effectiveness of social change strategies from principled nonviolence to by any means necessary.
⁵ These words come from four of twelve persons I interviewed for my dissertation, all of whom represent different histories and emphases along this spectrum. Some believe that only nonviolent practices of social change are appropriate, effective, and justifiable means to greater economic and political justice. They reject violent tactics as a means of social change. Others believe that circumstances of suffering and oppression are so extreme, so intractable and accepted by the population at large, that a commitment to nonviolent means alone will never mount a strong enough challenge to structures of injustice. Therefore all means, violent and nonviolent, must be potentially considered and employed. The main topic for this book is to consider the contours of these varying perspectives along this spectrum. Also examined are how these perspectives relate to the social location of individuals and communities and the religious/ethical resources in which they are grounded, deliberated, and decided.
These questions are of central importance to my own life and work. I am a white, middle-class, Christian, cis-gender woman, and U.S. citizen. I was raised in a United Methodist pastor’s household during the era of anti-Vietnam war protests and the racial integration of schools through busing. I was born and bred into an activism in which nonviolent protest was assumed. I understood that nonviolence flowed naturally from biblical-prophetic, theological mandates for peace and justice rooted in the call of Jesus Christ, as found in the Bible. I assumed that the best form of social change was nonviolent social change, or, at the very least, the most suitable place to discover authentic forms of spirituality and religious practices that propel public faith.
Influential scholars in my doctoral studies encouraged my investigation of this topic by calling me to interrogate nonviolent theological proposals and religious practices from the perspectives of marginalized and oppressed communities. Through their influence, I began to suspect, despite what I understood to be the faithful successes of religiously motivated nonviolence in social change, that some theological commitments and practices of nonviolence might also be present in the maintenance of systems of injustice. This suspicion made me very uncomfortable. This project challenged me to continue to sit with this discomfort.
Other circumstances during my doctoral research also caused me to wrestle with alternative perspectives. Activist struggles with marginalized communities exposed me in greater depth to experiences of violence in society and social change movements. I witnessed the impact of the daily, brutal impact of all levels of violence upon undocumented day laborers. I began to understand both the motivating and debilitating effect of the consequences of state and interpersonal violence on organizing oppressed communities. In a nonviolent protest, I experienced the impact of police brutality in my own body, which shook the foundations of my privileged, white, Christian, citizen identity. While continuing to live my life in highly privileged communities, these glimpses into the realities of violence caused me to move in and perceive my world differently and uncomfortably, particularly regarding my assumptions about the role of nonviolence in social change.
My first foray into a critique of Christian nonviolence was an investigation of Matthew 5:38–48, Jesus’ commandment from the Sermon on the Mount to love the enemy, not resist an evildoer, and turn the other cheek. Walter Wink’s exegesis of this text results in an ethic of nonviolence that was extremely influential on me.⁶ Liberal Protestant peace and justice circles often refer to Wink. Yet no scholarly exegeses on this particular biblical passage appeared from marginalized perspectives. At the same time, I was reading Stony the Road We Trod: African Americans and Biblical Interpretation for a class. The author related a story about a grandmother’s outright rejection of Paul’s letters because they endorsed submission and slavery.⁷ Was there a similar dynamic going on here? Might some marginalized communities reject Matthew 5:38–42 because it has historically oppressed others by using Jesus’ words to demand passivity in the face of violence? I realized that to talk about nonviolence from the point of view of marginalized communities meant, first, to move away from a dominant interpretation of the text. This move surfaced one point immediately: the daily reality of the vast majority of exploited people in the world is that of violence, not nonviolence. To begin an analysis from a position of nonviolence may be to miss the reality of the oppressed.
If I have come to grasp one thing with clarity through writing this book, it is this very point: ignoring the complexity of what constitutes violence is where the nonviolent thought and praxis represented by white, liberal Christians in the United States has fallen short. We have failed to include a comprehensive analysis of concrete situations of structural violence and oppression within which nonviolence has historically operated. Any practice or theology of nonviolence must begin with a critical examination of the location of violence. This examination should make us extremely uncomfortable. Speaking about Jesus’ words in the Sermon on the Mount, Paul Ricoeur, a French academic, wrote that nonviolence …introduces vertically into this history an extremely difficult demand.
The first condition which an authentic doctrine of nonviolence must satisfy is to have passed through the world of violence in all its density.… It is first necessary to have measured the length, the breadth, and the depth of violence – its expansion throughout the length of history, the spread of its psychological, social, cultural, and spiritual ramifications, its deep roots in the plurality of consciousness itself. The recognition of violence must be extended to the point at which it displays its tragic grandeur, appearing as the very motor of history itself – the crisis, the critical moment and the judgment – which suddenly changes the configuration of history. Only at the price of this veracity does the question arise as to whether or not reflection reveals something left over, something greater than history, whether or not consciousness has any real basis for making claims against history and for recognizing itself as belonging to another order than the violence which forges history.⁸
In a seminal 1969 essay stimulating the field of peace research, Johan Galtung suggested that if the definition of peace is the absence of violence, then any viable discussion of peace hinges on making a definition of ‘violence.’
⁹ Similarly, in this book, I attempt to understand nonviolence for social change in the context of the depth and breadth of violence. In our interview, Dolores Huerta echoed the common lament, One of the things I say is we don’t have a good word for nonviolence. You know, it’s two negatives: ‘non’ and ‘violence.’
Huerta makes a familiar point: in our efforts to speak about eradicating violence, our primary option to describe an alternative to violence emphasizes its centrality.
While Huerta regrets this limitation of the English language, with this book, I decided to start writing the term (non)violence with parentheses because I believe it is critical to identify the pervasive violence to which (non)violence is a response. My purpose in parenthetically marking off the prefix non
from the word violence indicates that it is impossible to entirely negate the reality of violence with appeals to (non)violence either as a principle or as a strategy. We need to overcome an overly false dichotomizing of violence and (non)violence in historical analysis, as incompatible tactics, or as separate dimensions of social change. This parenthetical formulation is a form of accountability as it recognizes that even the most thorough-going efforts at individual and collective (non)violence are still implicated in violence.¹⁰
In the purest sense, there is no such thing as (non)violence. Feminist ethicist Beverly Wildung Harrison makes this point, critiquing an era of scholarship when white, male, progressive, U.S. academics in Christian theology failed to develop a critical awareness of how social location affected their theological and moral ethics, including a generalized opposition to the use of revolutionary violence advocated by some theorists within the early traditions of liberation theology. She wrote,
The presumption in favor of nonviolence must not be confused with the actual existence of nonviolence in our world. To discuss moral principles of nonviolence as if nonviolence existed is a fallacy of moral reasoning that renders a discussion untruthful from the outset.¹¹
Harrison recognized that these debates over the nature of violence and (non)violence were not new to Christian communities. The World Council of Churches argued and documented many of these issues, particularly during the emergence of Latin American and Black liberation theologies from world-wide revolutionary situations in the 1970s. Yet these rigorous and heated conversations have had little influence on white, liberal, Christian theology in the United States, which continues to privilege (non)violence alone despite the experience and knowledge of an earlier generation of activists and scholars living in and representing oppressed communities. Entering into similar discussions today reveals little to no knowledge of these earlier discussions. Why haven’t these controversies and insights been more thoroughly integrated into primarily mainstream, white, progressive, religious, peace and justice circles in the U.S.? Part of my answer is that the (non)violence of my own community is more spoken of than practiced, more individual than collective. It is a (non)violence that is not, by most standards, a challenge to the status quo. It is a (non)violence advocated by those of us who are part of the dominant power structure. As such, we are generally unwilling to sacrifice the many privileges our dominant identities bestow, but which radical social transformation demands.
Beverly Harrison provocatively suggests there is no such thing as (non)violence. It is not my intention to argue against (non)violence. Certainly (non)violence in practice not only exists but has arguably been a powerful force of positive, progressive, social change in modern historical memory. Some argue that the problem is not white, Christian (non)violence but white, Christian violence. The particular suspicion I bring is that the white, liberal Christian discourse and practice of (non)violence has to some extent served to obscure the operation of political and economic power and violence. Keeping these processes hidden maintains the violence and privilege of those in power, thereby undermining fundamental social transformation. Therefore, both the practice and the outcome of (non)violence constitute a kind of comfort zone where we demand change, but rarely have to reckon with the profound consequences of the change we seek, should we achieve it. I have desired to discover the ways in which my suspicion was both true and false, as well as any ways it is true or false. From my perspective as a white, middle-class, Christian woman in the U.S. whose own commitment to (non)violence was shaped by this social location, in practice Christian (non)violence has been neither sufficiently self-critical nor sufficiently revolutionary.
I am primarily writing to my own people – white, middle-to-upper-middle-class, U.S. Christians – invested in progressive or revolutionary social change. If white, Christian scholars and activists desire to continue to work for social transformation through (non)violent means, we must deepen and broaden historical, theological, and strategic analysis across different contexts and analyze the location of our own point of view. In our contemporary context, we have failed to address critical questions of our complicity in violence, failed to address power, and failed to define for ourselves the contours of violence and (non)violence.
Ward Churchill provided me with the term, the comfort zone,
in relation to (non)violence.¹² I believe (non)violence, if it truly is going to address violence and create fundamental social change, must include multiple practices that take us out of our comfort zone. Part of getting out of the comfort zone means confronting histories of violence and critiques of (non)violence. Without getting out of this comfort zone, we may as well consign our practice of (non)violence to practical irrelevance. If we wish to argue against there being no such thing as (non)violence
in this country, then we had better be prepared to argue what constitutes a sufficiently transformational (non)violence and demonstrate that such a thing
exists in our practice. This book seeks to give people who claim social justice as a goal the critical skills to think about their practices and to challenge them to greater commitment outside of their comfort zones.
The Interviews
Questions and discussions about violence and (non)violence cannot be properly understood outside of a given historical context. Interviews with activists ground the ideas and practice of organized violent and (non)violent social change methods in the concrete experience of practitioners in social struggle. I focused this project on the thought and praxis within recent and contemporary historic social change movements in the United States. I hoped the interviewees would provide insight for analysis about social transformation at a critical time in which the United States continues to reveal itself as the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today.
¹³ There are a number of tensions with such a choice. The United States is not the center of radical or revolutionary movements in the world. It could be argued that the most interesting contexts for thinking about radical social change are found outside of the United States. But this would ignore our history of radicalism.
The twelve persons interviewed¹⁴ represented, as broadly as possible, some of the most forceful movements for social change in the twentieth century: Civil Rights and Black Power, Indigenous Sovereignty, Women’s and Gay Liberation, Worker Justice, Immigration, Earth Justice, anti-War, and anti-Globalization. Each one of these movements has held within it the tensions between the use of organized violence and (non)violence to achieve the movement’s various liberation aims. As both activists and scholars, the individuals demonstrated significant investment in reflecting on the efficacy of various means and ends for social change. I chose these persons because of their apparent commitments in their activism and scholarship to one or the other side
of a so-called violence–(non)violence spectrum. However, none of these persons fall neatly into one place on this spectrum. While their perspectives become apparent, I resist pigeonholing their positions. By engaging various perspectives on (non)violence – asking persons with a variety of commitments and diverse backgrounds in an open-ended, open-minded way – a more nuanced and accurate picture of organized violence and (non)violence emerges. Through this process, I do not intend to present a definitive position but to illumine the confusions, the contradictions, and the limitations of violence and (non)violence within the context of contemporary U.S. social change.
I intended that the interviewees’ identities would differ from one another as much as possible: where they live, their religious perspectives, race, gender, sexual orientation, and socio-economic class status. Although all of them were born and reside in the United States, they hold different views of their citizenship status. The advantage of interviewing such a diverse group of individuals, versus focusing on one movement, one racial/ethnic group, or religious perspective, is that it provides the kind of rich, complex, and grounded information that upsets neat answers to questions of violence and (non)violence. Structures of oppression and privilege in social change cannot be adequately understood through only one lens of identity, such as race or class.¹⁵ Additionally, my own Christian, liberationist commitment recognizes that movements for social change generally do not originate from the center of societies’ dominant cultures. I made every effort to include persons in the interview group who did not identify as white nor Christian with the assumption that their knowledge is critical to future movements for progressive social change.
I wanted to inspire myself and be challenged to deeper levels of awareness and action by speaking with revolutionary elders. All of them have confronted questions about the realities and uses of violence and (non)violence in social change. We talked about how they believe social change happens and the means by which they understand it is necessary to respond to end suffering and injustice. I asked them about their social locations and how their own and others’ race, nationality, socio-economic class status influenced the ways in which they understand violence and (non)violence in social change. I talked with them about what it means to be an ally across differences in social location in the pursuit of social transformation and also what it means to be in solidarity with persons and movements that differ over the means to achieve social change, violent or (non)violent. I inquired about their religious faith, non-religious, spiritual, and intellectual commitments and how they saw different aspects of identity impacting or not impacting perspectives on violence and (non)violence.
As well known as these persons are within certain circles of social struggle,