The secret to effective nonviolent resistance Jamila Raqib

War has been a part of my life
since I can remember.

I was born in Afghanistan,
just six months after the Soviets invaded,

and even though I was too young
to understand what was happening,

I had a deep sense of the suffering
and the fear around me.

Those early experiences had a major impact
on how I now think about war and conflict.

I learned that when people
have a fundamental issue at stake,

for most of them,

giving in is not an option.

For these types conflicts –

when people’s rights are violated,

when their countries are occupied,

when they’re oppressed and humiliated –

they need a powerful way
to resist and to fight back.

Which means that no matter how destructive
and terrible violence is,

if people see it as their only choice,

they will use it.

Most of us are concerned
with the level of violence in the world.

But we’re not going to end war

by telling people
that violence is morally wrong.

Instead, we must offer them a tool

that’s at least as powerful
and as effective as violence.

This is the work I do.

For the past 13 years,

I’ve been teaching people

in some of the most difficult
situations around the world

how they can use nonviolent
struggle to conduct conflict.

Most people associate this type of action
with Gandhi and Martin Luther King.

But people have been using
nonviolent action for thousands of years.

In fact, most of the rights
that we have today in this country –

as women,

as minorities,

as workers,

as people of different sexual orientations

and citizens concerned
with the environment –

these rights weren’t handed to us.

They were won by people
who fought for them

and who sacrificed for them.

But because we haven’t learned
from this history,

nonviolent struggle as a technique
is widely misunderstood.

I met recently with a group
of Ethiopian activists,

and they told me something
that I hear a lot.

They said they’d already
tried nonviolent action,

and it hadn’t worked.

Years ago they held a protest.

The government arrested everyone,
and that was the end of that.

The idea that nonviolent struggle
is equivalent to street protests

is a real problem.

Because although protests can be a great
way to show that people want change,

on their own, they don’t
actually create change –

at least change that is fundamental.

(Laughter)

Powerful opponents are not going to give
people what they want

just because they asked nicely …

or even not so nicely.

(Laughter)

Nonviolent struggle works
by destroying an opponent,

not physically,

but by identifying the institutions
that an opponent needs to survive,

and then denying them
those sources of power.

Nonviolent activists
can neutralize the military

by causing soldiers to defect.

They can disrupt the economy
through strikes and boycotts.

And they can challenge
government propaganda

by creating alternative media.

There are a variety of methods
that can be used to do this.

My colleague and mentor, Gene Sharp,

has identified 198 methods
of nonviolent action.

And protest is only one.

Let me give you a recent example.

Until a few months ago,

Guatemala was ruled
by corrupt former military officials

with ties to organized crime.

People were generally aware of this,

but most of them felt powerless
to do anything about it –

until one group of citizens,
just 12 regular people,

put out a call on Facebook
to their friends

to meet in the central plaza,
holding signs with a message:

“Renuncia YA” –

resign already.

To their surprise,

30,000 people showed up.

They stayed there for months
as protests spread throughout the country.

At one point,

the organizers delivered hundreds of eggs
to various government buildings

with a message:

“If you don’t have the huevos” –

the balls –

“to stop corrupt candidates
from running for office,

you can borrow ours.”

(Laughter)

(Applause)

President Molina responded

by vowing that he would never step down.

And the activists realized
that they couldn’t just keep protesting

and ask the president to resign.

They needed to leave him no choice.

So they organized a general strike,

in which people throughout
the country refused to work.

In Guatemala City alone,

over 400 businesses
and schools shut their doors.

Meanwhile,

farmers throughout the country
blocked major roads.

Within five days,

the president,

along with dozens of other
government officials,

resigned already.

(Applause)

I’ve been greatly inspired

by the creativity and bravery
of people using nonviolent action

in nearly every country in the world.

For example,

recently a group of activists in Uganda

released a crate of pigs in the streets.

You can see here that the police
are confused about what to do with them.

(Laughter)

The pigs were painted
the color of the ruling party.

One pig was even wearing a hat,

a hat that people recognized.

(Laughter)

Activists around the world
are getting better at grabbing headlines,

but these isolated actions do very little

if they’re not part of a larger strategy.

A general wouldn’t march
his troops into battle

unless he had a plan to win the war.

Yet this is how most of the world’s
nonviolent movements operate.

Nonviolent struggle is just as complex
as military warfare,

if not more.

Its participants must be well-trained
and have clear objectives,

and its leaders must have a strategy
of how to achieve those objectives.

The technique of war has been developed
over thousands of years

with massive resources

and some of our best minds
dedicated to understanding

and improving how it works.

Meanwhile, nonviolent struggle
is rarely systematically studied,

and even though the number is growing,

there are still only a few dozen people
in the world who are teaching it.

This is dangerous,

because we now know that our old
approaches of dealing with conflict

are not adequate for the new
challenges that we’re facing.

The US government recently admitted

that it’s in a stalemate
in its war against ISIS.

But what most people don’t know

is that people have stood up to ISIS
using nonviolent action.

When ISIS captured Mosul in June 2014,

they announced that they were putting
in place a new public school curriculum,

based on their own extremist ideology.

But on the first day of school,

not a single child showed up.

Parents simply refused to send them.

They told journalists they would rather
homeschool their children

than to have them brainwashed.

This is an example
of just one act of defiance

in just one city.

But what if it was coordinated

with the dozens of other acts
of nonviolent resistance

that have taken place against ISIS?

What if the parents' boycott
was part of a larger strategy

to identify and cut off the resources
that ISIS needs to function;

the skilled labor needed to produce food;

the engineers needed
to extract and refine oil;

the media infrastructure
and communications networks

and transportation systems,

and the local businesses
that ISIS relies on?

It may be difficult
to imagine defeating ISIS

with action that is nonviolent.

But it’s time we challenge
the way we think about conflict

and the choices we have in facing it.

Here’s an idea worth spreading:

let’s learn more about where
nonviolent action has worked

and how we can make it more powerful,

just like we do with other
systems and technologies

that are constantly being refined
to better meet human needs.

It may be that we can improve
nonviolent action

to a point where it is increasingly
used in place of war.

Violence as a tool of conflict
could then be abandoned

in the same way that bows and arrows were,

because we have replaced them
with weapons that are more effective.

With human innovation, we can make
nonviolent struggle more powerful

than the newest and latest
technologies of war.

The greatest hope for humanity
lies not in condemning violence

but in making violence obsolete.

Thank you.

(Applause)

从我记事起,战争就一直是我生活的一部分

我出生在阿富汗,
就在苏联入侵六个月后

,尽管我还太小,
无法理解正在发生的事情,但

我对周围的苦难和恐惧有着深刻的感觉

这些早期经历
对我现在对战争和冲突的看法产生了重大影响。

我了解到,当
人们面临一个根本性的问题时,

对于他们中的大多数人来说,

让步不是一种选择。

对于这些类型的冲突——

当人们的权利受到侵犯时,

当他们的国家被占领时,

当他们受到压迫和羞辱时——

他们需要一种强有力的方式
来抵抗和反击。

这意味着,无论
暴力的破坏性和可怕程度如何,

如果人们将其视为唯一的选择,

他们就会使用它。

我们大多数人都关心
世界上的暴力程度。

但我们不会

通过告诉
人们暴力在道德上是错误的来结束战争。

相反,我们必须为他们

提供至少
与暴力一样强大和有效的工具。

这是我做的工作。

在过去的 13 年里,

我一直在教导人们

在世界上一些最困难的
情况下

如何使用非暴力
斗争来进行冲突。

大多数人将这种类型的行为
与甘地和马丁路德金联系在一起。

但是人们
几千年来一直在使用非暴力行动。

事实上
,我们今天在这个国家所拥有的大部分权利——

作为女性

、少数民族

、工人、

不同性取向的人和

关心环境的公民——

这些权利并没有交给我们。

那些为他们而战并为

他们牺牲的人赢得了他们。

但由于我们没有
从这段历史中

吸取教训,非暴力斗争作为一种技术
被广泛误解。

我最近会见了
一群埃塞俄比亚活动家

,他们告诉我
一些我经常听到的事情。

他们说他们已经
尝试过非暴力行动

,但没有奏效。

多年前,他们举行了抗议活动。

政府逮捕了所有人,这就
结束了。

非暴力
斗争等同于街头抗议的想法

是一个真正的问题。

因为尽管抗议可以成为
表明人们想要改变的好方法

,但他们本身并没有
真正创造改变——

至少改变是根本的。

(笑声)

强大的对手不会

仅仅因为他们问得好……

甚至不那么好,就给他们想要的东西。

(笑声)

非暴力斗争是
通过摧毁对手

而不是身体上的,

而是通过识别
对手生存所需的制度,

然后否认他们
的权力来源来发挥作用。

非暴力活动家
可以

通过让士兵叛变来中和军队。

他们可以
通过罢工和抵制来扰乱经济。

他们可以

通过创建替代媒体来挑战政府宣传。

有多种
方法可用于执行此操作。

我的同事兼导师 Gene Sharp

已经确定了 198
种非暴力行动方法。

抗议只是其中之一。

让我举一个最近的例子。

直到几个月前,

危地马拉还

与有组织犯罪有联系的腐败前军官统治。

人们普遍意识到这一点,

但他们中的大多数人对此
无能为力——

直到一群公民,
只有 12 名普通人,

在 Facebook 上呼吁
他们的朋友

在中央广场见面,
举着标语 一条信息:

“Renuncia YA”——

已经辞职了。

令他们惊讶的是,有

30,000 人出现了。

随着抗议活动在全国蔓延,他们在那里呆了几个月。

有一次

,组织者向各个政府大楼运送了数百个鸡蛋

并附上一条信息:

“如果你没有huevos”——

这些球——

“为了阻止腐败的
候选人竞选公职,

你可以借用我们的。”

(笑声)

(掌声)

莫利纳总统

回应说他永远不会下台。

活动人士
意识到他们不能只是继续抗议

并要求总统辞职。

他们需要让他别无选择。

于是他们组织了一次总罢工

,全国人民都
拒绝工作。

仅在危地马拉城,就有

400 多家企业
和学校关门。

与此同时,

全国各地的农民
封锁了主要道路。

五天之内

,总统

和其他数十名
政府官员

已经辞职。

(掌声)

世界上几乎每个国家的人们使用非暴力行动的创造力和勇敢都极大地鼓舞了我。

例如,

最近乌干达的一群活动人士

在街上释放了一箱猪。

你可以在这里看到警察
对如何处理他们感到困惑。

(笑声

) 猪被涂上
了执政党的颜色。

一头猪甚至戴着一顶

帽子,一顶人们认得的帽子。

(笑声)

世界各地的激进主义
者越来越善于抓住头条新闻,

但如果这些孤立的行动

不是更大战略的一部分,它们的作用就很小。

除非他有赢得战争的计划,否则将军不会将他的军队投入战斗。

然而,这就是世界上大多数
非暴力运动的运作方式。

非暴力斗争
与军事战争一样复杂,

甚至更复杂。

其参与者必须训练有素
并有明确的目标

,其领导者必须制定
如何实现这些目标的战略。

战争技术已经发展
了数千年,

拥有大量资源

和一些
致力于理解

和改进其运作方式的优秀人才。

同时,非暴力
斗争很少被系统地研究

,即使数量在增加,

世界上仍然只有几十
个人在教授它。

这是危险的,

因为我们现在知道,我们
处理冲突的旧方法

不足以
应对我们面临的新挑战。

美国政府最近承认

,它在
与伊斯兰国的战争中陷入了僵局。

但大多数人不知道的

是,人们已经通过非暴力行动对抗 ISIS

当 ISIS 于 2014 年 6 月占领摩苏尔时,

他们宣布他们将根据自己的极端
主义意识形态制定新的公立学校课程

但是开学的第一天

,一个孩子都没有出现。

父母只是拒绝送他们。

他们告诉记者,他们
宁愿让孩子在家上学,也

不愿让他们被洗脑。

是仅在一个城市发生的一种反抗行为的示例。

但是,如果它

与针对 ISIS 的其他数十种
非暴力

抵抗行动相协调呢?

如果父母的抵制

识别和切断
ISIS 运作所需资源的更大战略的一部分呢?

生产食品所需的熟练劳动力;

工程师
需要提取和提炼石油;

媒体基础设施
、通信网络

和交通系统,

以及
ISIS 依赖的当地企业?

可能很难

想象以非暴力行动击败 ISIS。

但现在是我们挑战
我们思考冲突的方式

以及面对冲突时的选择的时候了。

这是一个值得传播的想法:

让我们更多地了解
非暴力行动在

哪些方面发挥了作用,以及我们如何使它变得更强大,

就像我们对

不断改进
以更好地满足人类需求的其他系统和技术所做的那样。

也许我们可以将
非暴力行动改进

到越来越多地
用于代替战争的程度。

作为冲突工具的暴力可以

像弓箭一样被抛弃,

因为我们已经用
更有效的武器代替了它们。

通过人类创新,我们可以使
非暴力斗争

比最新
的战争技术更强大。

人类最大的希望
不在于谴责暴力,

而在于让暴力过时。

谢谢你。

(掌声)