Red Light Politics

Welcome to my short form Tumblr blog. My name is Flavia Tamara Dzodan, I am a business developer, writer, public speaker, ideas instigator, content creator, media facilitator and trend watcher living in Amsterdam.

This Tumblr is about the spaces and intersections between politics, culture, race and gender matters with some humor and pop culture thrown in the mix.

My long reads blog is Red Light Politics.

I also blog at Tiger Beatdown.

If you would like to know more about me, visit this page .

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10 posts tagged Spain

Remember my post earlier with a photo of Spanish King Juan Carlos hunting elephants? Someone has created a better depiction of the so called “safari”. Photo via.

The King of Spain, Juan Carlos de Borbon, hunting elephants in Botswana this past week. Photo via.

There is a huge uproar in Spain at the moment over this. The “safari” (it’s the name the Monarchy is using) resulted in a serious injury for the King who broke his hip and had to be urgently hospitalized. If it wasn’t for that accident, the whole hunting elephants would have never come out as his trips are usually not disclosed to media. And in a country plagued by soaring unemployment figures and an increase in people living below the poverty line, this one trip alone cost more than 45,000 Euros for a mere week of “entertainment”. Not to mention the fact that a Head of State should not go around shooting elephants in Africa, in a colonizer deja vu that is unpalatable for a great number of people.

In its less than two months in office, Spain’s new conservative government has begun to introduce sweeping educational and reproductive health reforms, prompting protests from the opposition and from civil society groups, which see them as a throwback to an earlier era.

SPAIN: Conservative Government’s Reforms Draw Fire - IPS ipsnews.net

From the article:

The measures proposed by the government of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy of the centre-right People’s Party include a modification of the law on sexual and reproductive health, known as the abortion law, in effect since July 2010. 

Justice Minister Alberto Ruíz-Gallardón announced that he would seek legislative changes in the timeframes for legal abortions, and would make parental consent obligatory for girls aged 16 and 17. 

For its part, the health ministry said it would seek restrictions on the emergency contraceptive pill, or “morning-after pill”, which has been available in pharmacies without a doctor’s prescription since 2009. 

More at the link above. Also, this attack on reproductive rights seems to be spreading across continents, specifically, in virulence. 

Report about the treatment of immigrants in Spanish detention center

Pueblos Unidos, a Spanish NGO devoted to the rights of migrants and ethnic minorities released a report about the detention center for undocumented immigrants in Madrid. It’s in Spanish but since I know many of the people who follow this Tumblr speak the language, I thought I’d share a link.

Though I must warn you, the whole thing was an extremely difficult and disturbing read. The report is based on research carried out through more than 1,000 visits to the detention center, each to follow up on the conditions in which detainees where kept. The report is a scathing collection of incidents of racism and dehumanization in an unsanitary environment. As the researchers point out, these immigrants live in much worse conditions than convicted criminals kept in Spain’s prison system.

The “Spanish Revolution” explained

I’ve been posting about this since yesterday (here, here and here a photo roundup of the movement spreading to other European cities).

Here is a comprehensive explanation at The Huffington Post by Martin Varsavsky (he is a native Spanish speaker, quite well known in Latin American media).

And here is the Tumblr tag “Spanish Revolution” which contains a good number of videos and first hand accounts (both in Spanish and English).

Now, let me be clear on this: this is not yet a revolution. This is a nascent social movement. They (the protesters) have chosen the name “Spanish Revolution” (in English) so that they could get international media attention. There have been instances of police repression already (at the Tumblr tag I linked above there are videos) and according to Spanish newspaper El Pais (in an article from earlier today), the protesters are refusing to leave Madrid’s Puerta del Sol for the time being.

More about the social upheavals in Spain

Yesterday I posted some photos I took in Lille, France, of the nascent movement of “Indignant Ones” that is spreading from Spain into other European countries.

Today, I’ve been reading more about it (from personal blogs of people involved in it to in depth political analysis from Spanish writers) and I remain skeptical of the whole thing. I wish I wasn’t, especially because some favorite words of mine are constantly thrown around in their rhetoric. Concepts like “direct democracy” or “questioning systems of oppression”, etc. I guess the reason I am not enthusiastic of this new Spanish movement is because I have not seen, up to now, an open, in depth acknowledgement of the ingrained racism and xenophobia in Spanish society. As it is now, this so called revolution seems to be yet another case of middle classes co-opting the language of the working class to reclaim the welfare (and well being) they feel entitled to.

Spain remains (and I have written about this several times before), one of the most xenophobic, structurally racist countries of the EU. A “revolution” that doesn’t seek to question these problems is yet again, a revolution for “some”, one that will continue to cast immigrants and minorities aside. Which is, you know, business as usual.

Postcards from Lille, France (or the slow spread of “The Indignant Ones”)

There has been a social upheaval in the making for the past couple of weeks in Spain. Hundreds of thousands of young people have taken to the streets to protest harsh living conditions and a seemingly hopeless future. This article from last Friday at Financial Times summarizes the gist of it better than I could:

A week before last Sunday’s elections, thousands of young Spaniards, organising themselves through Facebook and Twitter like Arab revolutionaries, took to streets nationwide to protest at high unemployment and the domination of politics by the Socialists and the rightwing Popular party. They occupied city centres, including Madrid’s Puerta del Sol and the Plaza de Catalunya in Barcelona, from which police yesterday tried to expel them using baton charges.

These self-proclaimed indignados (“the indignant ones”), mostly students and unemployed twenty-somethings, have plenty to complain about. Local politics is often steeped in corruption, and more than 100 candidates – some re-elected with increased majorities – are being prosecuted or investigated for such crimes. With unemployment at 21 per cent of the workforce, double the EU average, nearly 5m people are out of work. For those aged 24 or less, the rate is 45 per cent. For some political commentators, the only surprising thing about the youth uprising is that it did not happen sooner.

These young people get together in what is generally referred to as “Popular Assemblies”, that is, a horizontally organized group where anyone can take the podium and speak to the crowd. Someone usually takes notes and, at the end of each assembly, a “Petition” is drawn and sent to the authorities. On Friday I posted a link to the Flickr stream from one such group (a feminist collective gathering in Madrid’s Puerta del Sol). I know it can be difficult to assess or even understand what kind of change these types of organizations can bring upon. I’ve seen it happen before, though: in 2001’s Argentina, these Popular Assemblies brought down three governments in one week. The main issue I have with them is not what they can achieve, but what happens the day after. Because I’ve also seen what kind of structural change took place in Argentina after they brought down these governments (in short: nothing much). But I guess that’s a subject for another post.

(Image Description: A group of people gather in Lille’s main square to organize a protest).

Luck had it that, when I arrived to Lille, France, yesterday morning, I came across the nascent French branch of The Indignant Ones. A group of approximately 200 young people had gotten together in one of these Popular Assemblies, with signs calling for the movement to spread to the rest of the country.

As it is bound to happen, I took some photos. Since they are drawing inspiration and working together with their Spanish counterpart, the signs are written both in French and Spanish (translations all mine, so, if there is something wrong, you know who to blame):

This multilingual sign reads: The Kasbah (Tunisia), Tahir Square (Cairo), Puerta del Sol (Madrid), La Bastille (Paris), etc, etc, and in Lille?! Enough! Yallah! (The Arab word for “Let’s go” or “Let’s do it”)

The sign, in French, reads: National Assembly (the French equivalent of Congress): 17% of women, Average Age: 55 years old, Occupations: 1% Working Class (the French word for Blue Collar working class), 4% Employees (the French word for White Collar employees), 5% Civil Servants, 0  Representatives of the Unemployed.

Sign on the left, in Spanish, reads: We are all indignant. Sign to the right, in French, reads: Stop supporting the Oligarchy.

Sign, in Spanish, reads: Homeless, Jobless, Money-less but Fearless.

via gaelx Flickr stream, a sign at Madrid’s Puerta del Sol protest.

It reads, in Spanish: We do not want 50% of your capitalist hell, we want 100% of our feminist paradise.

 lost-in-norn-iron replied to your post:  haguenite replied to your post: Whine whine whine…

A bilingual friend of mine who has a very South American accent when speaking Spanish actually gave up on speaking Spanish when traveling in Spain because of the way people would treat him.

Heh, I speak more Dutch with the husband when we are in Spain than when we are home in The Netherlands. And it is exactly for the reason your friend gave up. I sometimes even ask him to ask for stuff in Spanish (which he speaks fluently but with an obvious Northern European accent) so that I do not have to deal with potential bigots.

Fun anecdote: a Catalonian friend of mine took me to visit his family up in the mountains a few years ago. He introduced me to his grandmother, father and mother. Upon hearing my “sudaca” accent, they look at me and do not inquiry about my trip or any niceties. They immediately decide to ask in a semi horrified way “You are not planning to move here, are you?!!”. To which, needless to say, I was offended, but retorted “Why would I give up the comforts of my life in Amsterdam to move to a place where South Americans have to work 12+ hours per day and two jobs to barely make ends meet? A sudaca like me is much better off in Northern Europe than here, after all”. They didn’t like my answer but it shut them up for the rest of the day.

 haguenite replied to your post: Whine whine whine etc.

Oh, I HATE when that happens. Best of luck with finding a different fun destination (I tend to scour the RyanAir site whenever such things happen).

Yeah, I guess I’ll stick to France where we can drive in a reasonable time frame. I had planned BCN because we have friends and family living there (whose homes are tiny and only suitable for staying a night or so). If I’m going to be totally honest, the main reason I wanted to go to BCN is because it’s the best antidote against my homesickness: the argentinian community is sizeble there and our foods are ubiquitous and to be found in every corner of the city. Moreover, I used to stay at an apartment right across the street from an Argentinian bakery only so that I could have breakfast every morning with my beloved overly sweet pastries. BCN has always acted as my “home away from home” destination in that sense.

 thebadmonkey replied to your post: Whine whine whine etc.

that’s, too bad. Barcelona is one of my favorite cities ever. Good luck finding an alternative!

I love the city… but only as a tourist. I do not like Spain much culturally speaking. For all my talks about racism in The Netherlands (which is where I live, the place I consider home and the country I love the most and the one of which I speak about because that’s where my involvement in civic life takes place), it is nothing compared to the stuff that goes on in Spain. I am sometimes even afraid to talk to strangers because I know my accent gives away my South American origin and the kind of vitriol they have towards South Americans is unheard of anywhere else. In The Netherlands, at least there are spaces that reflect differences. People like Geert Wilders would be too happy to have us all erased if he could, but there is an acknowledgement, at least in the broader political sense that he is out of line. Spain has never properly dealt with the legacy of Franco. And if you speak to Spanish folks, you can sense that, sadly.

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