Saturday, August 6, 2016

Nonviolent Training

http://www.crmvet.org/info/nv3.htm

REMEMBER DON'T DO WHAT DONALD TRUMP WOULD DO !


Just as there were two kinds of nonviolence, there were two kinds of nonviolent training. Some training was in classic Gandhian nonviolence, learning why (and to some degree, how) to peacefully face and defuse hatred and violence with courage and compassion. The main purpose of training in philosophical nonviolence was to shape the individual person's attitude and mental response to crises and violence. Most of the nonviolent training that is carried out today seems to be of this philosophical sort.


On the other hand, the main purpose of training in tactical nonviolence was to learn the practical techniques of participating in, organizing, and leading, nonviolent direct action demonstrations, — and how to protect yourself from being maimed or killed while doing so.



These two kinds of training were not mutually exclusive, nor were they in opposition to each other,  — frequently they were combined. But a given training session usually emphasized one or the other. In the early years of the Freedom Movement, the late 50s and early 60s, philosophic training predominated, but by the time I became active in 1963 most of the training I was involved in was tactical rather than philosophical.

Why We Trained in Tactical Nonviolence

I used to teach tactical nonviolence at CORE, Non-Violent Action Committee (N-VAC), and SCLC training sessions. And there were good reasons why such training was necessary:
  • Physical safety. In the 50s and early 60s demonstrating for (or against) anything was dangerous (to say nothing of being considered "un-American").The notes from a training session I ran in late '63, listed the instances of violence that had been inflicted on local demonstrators in that area during the previous year:

  • Verbal abuse
  • Spitting on
  • Kicking and stepping on
  • Beatings with fists, chains, and police billy-clubs
  • Dragging female protesters across a room by the hair
  • Throwing manure, eggs, tomatoes, exploding firecrackers, rocks, & bricks at us
  • Knocking sit-ins over and rolling them down a flight of stairs
  • Chokings by police (the infamous "choke hold")
  • Attacks with home-made flame-throwers (hairspray ignited with a cigarette lighter)
  • Pouring hot tar over heads Cars attempting to run over pickets
  • Stabbing with a knife (fortunately not fatally)
  • Those abuses were endured civil rights demonstrators in Los Angeles, California in 1963, — not in Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, or Alabama. In the deep South the violence was much worse.

  • Discipline. To be effective, a demonstration has to adhere to a code of self-discipline so that a clear and positive message is conveyed to the public and the press. When faced with violence, discipline is essential for the safety of everyone in the action. When a mob has you surrounded, or the cops are itching for an excuse to whip heads and bust you on felony charges, one person "doing his own thing" can get a lot of folk hurt. But discipline does not come easy to the kind of people who protest against the way things are, which is why training in that discipline is so necessary.

  • How to demonstrate. Today almost everyone believes (incorrectly) that they know how to demonstrate. But it was not always so. When the direct action phase of the Freedom Movement began in 1960, almost two decades of repression had crippled, — driven underground, — most of a political generation. So in the early years of the Movement many people who participated in direct action, — particularly in the South and mid-West, — had never even seen a picket-line, much less been on one; or a sit-in, or a Freedom Ride, or a mass march.And the fact is that even today there are more effective and less effective ways to organize, lead, and participate in protest; and that direct action has an element of craft to it that can — and should — be learned.

  • Rite of passage. In the early years, before the Freedom Movement grew into a mass movement, we really were small bands of brothers and sisters in a hostile land. The training was something we all shared, and participating in the rough & tumble of a full-blown nonviolent training session forged mutual confidence, and acted as a rite-of-passage initiating new members into the circle of trust.

  • The songs.
          The songs elevated our courage,
               The songs bonded us together,
                    The songs forged our discipline,
                         The songs shielded us from hate,
                               The songs protected us from danger,
                                  And the songs kept us sane.In terms of political and moral effectiveness, group singing is to group chanting, as an elephant is to a mouse. But songs have to be learned. Moreover, the kind of singing that (trained) protesters do as an act of solidarity in the face of hatred and danger is very different from performance singing done on stage or in school. And just as a choir has to practice, so too do demonstrators. One of the reasons that the singing on modern mass marches is so pathetic and demoralizing is that no one's been doing any training or practice.
See also
      Two Kinds of Nonviolent Resistance
      Nonviolent Resistance & Political Power
      Nonviolent Resistance, Reform, & Revolution
      Notes from a Nonviolent Training Session

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