The older I grow, the more I realize how lucky I am to have lived so long and been part of so many historic changes.When I became a radical nearly seventy years ago, you ran the risk of seeming ridiculous, as Che Guevara put it, if you thought Love had anything to do with Revolution.Being revolutionary meant being tough as nails, committed to agitating and mobilizing angry and oppressed masses to overthrow the government and seize state power by any means necessary in order to reconstruct society from the top down.In the last 50 years this topdown view of revolution has been discredited by the demise of the Soviet Union. At the same time our approach to revolution has been humanized by:
Detroit was chosen for the second USSF because, having suffered de-industrialization decades ago, Detroiters are now engaged in a City of Hope campaign, infused with new values of local sustainable economics, useful Work and participatory democracy, to rebuild, redefine and respirit our city from the ground up. Increasingly being viewed as a North American Chiapas, Detroit has become the mecca for young people, journalists and scholars, wondering if our efforts can help other cities address the increasingly urgent problems of homelessness and hunger created by the economic meltdown and the increasingly dangerous climate crisis caused by our consumerism and materialism.That is why I hope thousands of Detroiters will join in planning and preparing next June's second USSF.Normally it would take decades for a people to transform themselves from the hyper-individualist, hyper-materialist damaged human beings that Americans in all walks of life are today, to the loving, caring Americans we need in today's deepening crises.But these are not normal times, If we don't speed up this transformation, the likelihood is that, armed with AK47s, we will soon be at each other's throats.That is why linking Love and Revolution is an idea whose time has come.We urgently need to bring to our communities the limitless capacity to love, serve, create for and with each other that up to now we have practiced only in our personal relationships, We urgently need to bring the neighbor back into our hoods, not only in our inner cities but in our suburbs, our gated communities, on Main St and Wall Street and on Ivy League campuses.Beginning right now we can begin forging a new link between Love and Revolution so that when we gather next June in Detroit we will have already begun the revolution of the 21st century.© 2009 Boggs Center All rights reserved. |
| Grace Lee Boggs is an activist, writer and speaker whose more than sixty years of political involvement encompass the major U.S. social movements of this century: Labor, Civil rights, Black Power, Asian American, Women's and Environmental Justice. Visit the Boggs Center to learn more. |
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