Here We Go Again: Looting in Chile

March 6, 2010 § Leave a comment

By now we all know that Chile was devastated by a massive earthquake this week, and by massive, we’re talking 8.8 on the Richter Scale; by comparison, the earthquake that devastated Haiti in January measured 8.0, certainly massively devastating.

In the aftermath, looting has broken out in across the nation.  I find looting in the wake of natural disasters fascinating, as condemnations of it clearly show a disturbing trend of our culture: that private property in many cases is more sacrosanct than life.  Indeed, if Western history teaches us anything, it is that property was and is quite often more important than the lives of the commoners or the poor or the working-classes.  Indeed, this is clear from Thompson and his The Making of the English Working Class: property matters.  The state is constituted to protect men, true, but also, men’s property.  Especially that of wealthy men.  Indeed, as no less an authority as Jean-Jacques Rousseau points out in his Discourse on Inequality, it is private property that is at the heart of that inequality.  Thus we band together to be governed, surrendering some of our own personal sovereignty in order that our lives and property can be protected and, thus, at the same time, inequality.

Consider this passage from the Washington Post today:

Though there were middle-class looters — some carried off their booty in expensive four-wheel-drive vehicles — the pillaging was carried out largely by poorer Chileans, and it left some horrified onlookers wondering whether their country had really advanced as much as the economists and government officials had believed.

I can’t understand why it is that the poor looting carried out by the poor would cause such hand-wringing and soul-searching.  And this causes The Post to go onto a long discourse on inequality and poverty, the nation with the lowest poverty rate (14%) in South America.  But one also, according to Piero Mosciatti, a lawyer and director at Radio Bio-Bio in the city of Concepion.  He says that:

I think there are very big resentments on the part of those who are poorest and marginalized.  Chile is a country that is tremendously unequal, scandalously unequal. The statistics show it.

That may very well be.  But aren’t all Western nations predicated on this inequality?  It is one thing to wring our hands and tut-tut when the desperately poor of Port-au-Prince engage in looting.  But, culturally, we expect that.  We expect the desperately poor in a desperately poor nation to loot in the wake of a natural disaster.  But when it happens in a supposedly wealthy western nation, then we get concerned.  We saw this in New Orelans after Hurricane Katrina.  And we’re seeing the same thing in Chile after this earthquake.

The media is shocked to learn that there are poor people, an underclass in first-world nations.  Why this is is beyond me.  Any trip through any major city in the west, be it London, Miami, New Orleans, Buenos Aires, and one is confronted by the urban poor.  Our society is predicated on that inequality, for better or worse.  And quite often, wealthy, industrialised nations have a massive disparity between the rich and the poor.  This was made abundantly clear in the wake of Katrina in New Orelans in 2006.  And this is true of not just the United States.

According to one of the looters in Concepcion, Chile, “This is done for necessity.  Everything is abandoned, and we are looking for what has been left behind.”

At least the Chileans, according to The Post, are beginning to have the discussion as to whether or not Chile, which has developed rapidly, has done enough to bridge the gap between rich and poor.  This is a discussion worth having in Canada.

The Problem With Writing History

March 5, 2010 § Leave a comment

I just finished Orhan Pamuk’s brilliant novel, Snow.  It tells the story of a hapless Turkish exile poet, Ka, who returns to Turkey from Frankfurt.  Ka is a poet without poems.  He’s not written one for years when he accepts an offer from a friend who edits a Republican newspaper in Istanbul to travel to the distant eastern city of Kars.  In Kars, there has been a wave of suicides by young women wearing the hijab, which is seen as a challenge to the Turkish republic of Ataturk.  They were expelled from their university studies for refusing to remove them.  And so a group of them killed themselves.  But nothing is at seems in Kars, and Ka is drawn into the city’s murky underside, in part due to a bizarre coup led by an actor, in part because he falls in love for the beautiful Ipek, in part because of the radical Islamist terrorist, Blue.  Kars is a poor city, isolated, and caught in its place in history on the borderlands, caught between its Russian, Turkish, and Armenian pasts.  And Kars is isolated during Ka’s visit, it’s snowed in.  It’s a mountain city and all roads in and out, as well as the railroad, are blocked by heavy, heavy snow. This isolation has its own in-built tension between this forgotten borderlands city and the cosmopolitan capital of Turkey, Ankara, and its interntionalised largest city, Istanbul.  This tension within Kars echoes that of the Turkey that Pamuk presents, between this Europeanised cosmopolitanism and traditional Turkish culture, to say nothing of Islamism.  And Ka, as a westernised Turk living in exile in Germany, is a focal point for this tension.

Anyway, I don’t want to give away the plot, because if you’ve not read Snow, you should.  It’s not for nothing that Pamuk won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2006.

What I want to point to is a discussion the narrator of the novel has with an associate of Ka’s, Fazil, at the end of the book.  The narrator, Pamuk himself, responds to Fazil’s early declaration that he can only write about him in the book Pamuk is writing on Ka’s visit to Kars if he agrees to include what Fazil wishes to say to Pamuk’s readers.  He says this:

‘If you write a book set in Kars and put me in it, I’d like to tell your readers not to believe anything you say about me, anything you say about any of us.  No one could understand us from so far away.’

‘But no one believes in that way what he reads in a novel,’ I said.

‘Oh, yes, they do,’ he cried. ‘If only to see themselves as wise and superior and humanistic, they need to think of us as sweet and funny, and convince themselves that they sympathize with the way we are and even love us.’

Fazil’s words have resonance for me as an historian.  I study the working-classes, I study people by-and-large excluded from, or oppressed by, systems of power.  The community I study is one that was an inner-city, working-class slum.  The people who lived there, grew up there, they’ve escaped, moved up the social ladder.  But that history is still there.

A few years ago, I was hired as a consultant by an advertising agency working on behalf of Devimco, the development company that was planning to radically re-build Griffintown.  Devimco was trying to make its plans more palatable, so they hired this advertising agency, as well as a consultant, an American living in London.  This consultant has done some impressive things with shopping malls across the UK and in places like Dubai.  Anyway.  He prepared a text for all of us to ponder for our 2-day summit on the future of the Griff.  Basically, he wanted us to come up with a marketable narrative for Griffintown, which was why I was there; the historian.  In this text, he wrote:

Griffintown represents the next generation in Montreal’s long history of bold waterfront stewardship.  What makes it unique is that it restores the public’s access to the waterfront, making it home for a real community, instead of simply an industrial workforce.

Leaving aside the fact that Montréal actually has a long history of the opposite of “bold waterfront stewardship” (Autoroute Bonaventure, anyone?  How about all those port facilities?), the part I’ve italicised, dismissing the former residents of the Griff as simply an industrial workforce really just echoes what Fazil says in Snow.  This consultant is dismissing these real people, arguing that because they were the working-classes, they couldn’t have culture or community.   We’re supposed to feel superior to them, we’re supposed to see ourselves as better than them.

This is something that plagues historical scholarship, going back to the days of Herodotus.  Even despite E.P. Thompson’s entreaties to be fair to the working-class (or any other subaltern group, really), to “rescue them from the enormous condescension of posterity” (to quote from his masterful The Making of the English Working Class), it’s a hard road to hoe.  Indeed, Thompson himself is partly to blame for this, by taking on this providential charge to “rescue” the working-classes.  We shouldn’t do that, either.

Instead, what we strive to do is to take our subaltern, down-trodden, excluded, or what-have-you, people is to take them for what they are/were: people like us.  This is hard to do, it is hard to be sensitive to our historical actors, to recognise them as multi-dimensional actors, with agency, just like us.  Joy Parr helps us see that in her The Gender of Breadwinners, wherein she reminds us that the roles our historical actors play were not sequential, but simultaneous.  We are many things at the same time, and so, too, were our historical actors.

This is something I think historians of the subaltern need to be reminded of regularly, it’s not something we can read in a book once and keep in mind when we’re actually doing our work.  This point needs constant reinforcement.  It’s easy to forget, really.  For me, that Devimco session helped.  So, too, does doing oral history.  And so, too, has the reading of Snow.  I must keep Fazil’s words in mind.

Nuit Blanche à Griffintown

February 20, 2010 § Leave a comment

This Saturday, 27 February, is Nuit Blanche in Montréal, and there will be an event in Griffintown to celebrate.  Organised by Le Comité pour le sain rédeveloppement de Griffintown, spearheaded by Judith Bauer, the event will be taking place at the site of the New City Gas Works, owned by Harvey Lev, located at 140 and 143, rue Ann.

There’s a whole bevy of cultural events on deck, including talks about the history of the neighbourhood, poetry readings, live music, artwork, and all kinds of other fun stuff.  The website is here.

Also of note is that the Griffintown Horse Palace Foundation will have a table there to sign people up for membership and to raise funds for our ultimate goal, to buy and convert the Griffintown Horse Palace into a museum.

On Race, Haiti, and New Orleans

February 8, 2010 § Leave a comment

Watching the Super Bowl yesterday, we were inundated with stories of redemption and New Orleans (something I hope to return to in a post later this week, stay tuned), but something in my brain clicked when images of the immediate aftermath of Hurricane Katrina were shown, including the scene at the Superdome, the home of the New Orleans Saints, and I thought of coverage I have seen of the aftermath of the Haiti earthquake last month.

In both instances, there were wide-spread reports of looting and violence in the aftermath of these natural disasters.  In both cases, media coverage was overwhelming negative of these events, with a strong hint of moral condemnation (one headline in The Times speaks of “retribution” against rioters).  This coverage, it seems to me, is intimately tied up with questions of race and power.

In the aftermath of Katrina and the earthquake, large cities were destroyed (New Orleans and Port-au-Prince), meaning the survivors had no homes, no food, no shelter, things that humans require.  Basic requirements of life.  In both cases, aid was slow to arrive on the ground (David Letterman on the Super Bowl: “And the New Orleans Saints’ fans, I’m telling you, they have waited a long, long time for their team to get into the Super Bowl. Not as long as they waited for FEMA, but still, it’s been a very long, long time”).  This seems to me the very defintion of a desperate time calling for desperate measures.  Hence, the turn to violence to get the basics of life.  It is neither surprising, nor, really, as far as I see it, wrong (at least to a certain degree).

But coverage in the media is universally negative.  In New Orleans, the media focused on African-Americans who were engaged in looting.  Haitians are also black.  It would seem to me that nothing beyond racism fuels the apocalyptic coverage provided by the mainstream media in the US, UK, and Canada.

Cross-posted at Current Intelligence.

An Episode in the Life of a Diasporic City

February 5, 2010 § Leave a comment

Montréal is a city of literature.  It has been the home of many great novelists, both of Canadian and international reknown.  It is also a city that has been the setting of many novels, bestsellers at home and abroad.  For years, I lived in the neighbourhood that was the setting of Gabrielle Roy’s Bonheur d’occasion, Saint-Henri.  Prior to that, I called Duddy Kravitz’s Mile End home.  Presently, I call the setting of Balconville home.  The Plateau-Mont-Royal has been immortalised by the likes of Michel Tremblay, Mordecai Richler, and Rawi Hage.  One of the best academic reads of recent years was Sherry Simon’s Translating Montreal: Episodes in the Life of a Divided City.  Simon explores the cultural and social history of her Montréal through the literature, in both official languages, that depict the city’s multicultural landscape and lived experience.

Montréal’s literary authors, to say nothing of Simon herself, have projected and reflected the experience of immigrant groups and their diasporas through their works.  It was from Richler’s works that I learned so much of the Jewish experience of Montréal, that I came to understand the city as a Jewish one.  Indeed, Richler was instrumental in re-casting Montréal as something more than just a bifurcated locale, a city caught between French and English, in that he inserted the city’s Jews into the dialogue, his writing maturing with the city throughout the 2nd half of the 20th century.

Today, however, in trying to find a bowl of matzoh ball soup, I was kind of stunned by just how much Richler’s Montréal has changed.  As I wandered through the city’s downtown core, both searching for the soup and running a handful of other errands, I got to thinking about not just how diasporas inform and reflect off each other, but also how diasporas evolve, shift, and replace one another.  This was especially true, I thought, in a 5-block section of downtown just west of Concordia’s downtown campus.  In this stretch, there are, amongst other things, a German restaurant that has been there for most of my life, as well as newer Russian, Indian, Iranian, Lebanese, Irish, Armenian, Mexican, Central American, Chinese, and Thai restaurants.  And not a single place that served matzoh ball soup.  During Richler’s years studying at Sir George Williams University, one of the founding institutions of Con U, I’m sure matzoh ball soup could be found in the vicinity of the campus.  Of course, one would not have found the plethora of “ethnic” food (the term is in quotations because it is such an unsatisfactory one to use in this instance).

This is neither a lament nor a complaint, I eventually found the matzoh ball soup at Dunn’s, an old Jewish deli, on Metcalfe.  It just is what it is, an episode in the life of multicultural, diasporic city.

The Arctic: The Final Frontier

February 5, 2010 § 1 Comment

This weekend, the G7’s finance ministers are gathering in Iqaluit, in the Canadian Eastern Arctic, to discuss the fallout from last year’s global economic meltdown, as well as how best to prevent the same from happening again.  The meeting comes amidst questions about the on-going relevancy fo the G7 in the face of the creation of the G20 to handle the global economy.

That the meeting is being held in the Arctic is both interesting and significant, as Canada is currently attempting to bolster its claim to various lands and waters in the Arctic, as are the US, Russia, Norway, and Denmark.  That the G7 is meeting in the Canadian Arctic is surely no coincidence.

Canada is also caught up in a sort of new Cold War with Russia, its neighbour across the North Pole, in the Arctic.  Russia has just announced it is going to spend another $50 million USD on hydrographic and geophysics research along the Arctic Ocean bed.  This comes as Canada, Russia, and the other Arctic nations face a UN-mandated deadline to register their claims to the Arctic according to the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.  Norway did so over a year ago, whilst the other 3 Arctic nations.  The 5 Arctic nations face staggered deadlines, Norway’s was last year, Russia’s this year, Canada’s in 2013.  Denmark has a claim to the Arctic through its possession of Greenland.

Under UNCLOS, panels of scientists will assess the validity of uncontested claims in the Arctic, but the 5 nations themselves will sort out their own disagreements when it comes to disputed claims.

For example, Canada’s mapping effort is focussed on proving that 2 massive under-water mountain chains, the Alpha and Lomonosov, are geologically connected to North America.  If this is indeed the case, not only will Canada benefit, but so, too, would Denmark and the US.  Hence, whilst Canada is carrying out the majority of the mapping work, it periodically co-operates with the Danes and Americans.  Meanwhile, both Canada and the US will come to loggerheads over the Beaufort Sea and its oil & gas reserves, whilst Canada, Denmark, and Russia are expected to have competing claims to the territory around the North Pole.  And then there is the battle over the Northwest Passage.  Canada hopes to prove the waters within the Arctic Archipelago belong to it, meaning the Passage would be Canadian.  This would limit access to the Passage as a shipping chanel as global warming causes the ice in the passage to melt.

Cross-posted at Current Intelligence.

Web Resource: Transnational Urbanism in the Americas

January 27, 2010 § Leave a comment

This just came through on the H-Urban listserv.  Cambridge University Press has launched a multimedia companion, Transnational Urbanism in the Americas, a companion to a special issue of the journal, Urban History.  This is from CUP:

In this special issue, a project of the journal’s North American Editorial Board, six authors from Canada, France, and the United States explore a sweeping range of historical issues that linked cities of the Americas to the rest of the globe.  They write: “The emerging transnational paradigm suggests intriguing new possibilities for the historical study of cities. Transnationalism challenges us to map out the patterns of human life in neways as they cross and construct cities, nations, and other crucial formations.  Even as this new paradigm stimulates a fundamental rethinking of urban historical scholarship, the Internet and the World Wide Web are also challenging our received modes of scholarly communication.

This multimedia companion meets these challenges through a hybrid of cartographic, narrative, and photographic presentation, featuring the publishing debut of HyperCities, an online, open-source research and educational platform for studying and interacting with layered hypermedia histories of city and global spaces.

Access to the on-line companion is free.   Subscribers get access to the journal itself.

Off the Deep End…

January 26, 2010 § Leave a comment

Yesterday, Canada’s Fisheries Minister, Gail Shea, was hit in the face with a tofu cream pie, due to her support of the seal hunt in Canada.  PETA quickly claimed responsibility for the act.  OK, big deal.  A nice publicity stunt, got the topic back on the national radar here in the Great White North.  But today, Liberal MP Gerry Byrne, who represents a Newfoundland riding that has an interest in the seal hunt, suggests that this makes PETA a terrorist organisation:

When someone actually coaches or conducts criminal behaviour to impose a political agenda on each and every other citizen of Canada, that does seem to me to meet the test of a terrorist organization…I am calling on the Government of Canada to actually investigate whether or not this organization, PETA, is acting as a terrorist organization under the test that exists under Canadian law.

Moreover, says Byrne, the pie-in-the-face (which occurred in Burlington, Ontario, some 3,200km west of Newfoundland) is a threatening act which puts hunters and sealers at risk.

Oh boy.

Cross-posted at Current Intelligence.

UPDATED: It seems that PETA got a taste of its own medicine in St. John’s, Newfoundland.  On Friday, a PETA member dressed in a seal costume outside of a speech by Canadian PM Stephen Harper was pied in the face by an unidentified man.  No one is wondering if he’s a terrorist, however.

In slightly-related news, I saw a bumper sticker in rural Western Massachusetts that read: “PETA: People Eating Tasty Animals.”  Said bumper sticker was on a pickup truck with a gun rack, containing 3 rifles, and carrying 2 hillbillies in hunting gear.  I had to laugh.

Knee-Jerk Anti-Americanism…

January 26, 2010 § Leave a comment

Zach McKelvie is a prospect for the Boston Bruins, a defenceman playing for Army.  That means he signed up for the Army.  Today, word has come that rather than pursue his professional career, McKelvie must report for active duty and training at Fort Benning.  McKelvie says he understands the decision, but he also sounds pretty frustrated about it:

It’s frustrating on one side. At the same time, I can understand it…I have no problem serving in the military. This is what we train to do here. We train to be a part of this Army and help this country out. But at the same time … I feel like they never should have, I guess, led me on. And at the same time, it’s a pretty hard time to let someone play professionally. I totally understand that because of the situation that’s going on.

He thinks he was led on because, when he signed up, US Army policy was that if an athlete had a professional contract, s/he would be allowed to play for 2 years before being re-evaluated for future service.  That policy has since been changed, and there is apparently no grandfather clause.  He’s also frustrated because some prospective Olympic athletes are being allowed to pursue that by the Army.  Fair enough, I can understand why McKelvie is frustrated, but I can also understand why he would accept the Army’s ruling.

What I find stupid and pathetic are some of the comments on TSN’s website.  One commentor says McKelvie is brainwashed if he accepts the US Army’s ruling.  Others comment on the “militaristic US culture.”  My favourite, though, says this: “thats the usa for you.”  Um, no.  That’s not the USA for you.  It’s also got nothing to do with militarism.  Or brainwashing.  It has everything to do with signing up for the military.  In any nation.  The same would happen in Canada.  There are obligations and rules one must respect.  It’s that simple.  Knee-jerk anti-Americanism is just so boring.

Diaspora and the Haitian Earthquake

January 25, 2010 § Leave a comment

I spent a chunk of my weekend reading theory on diaspora and transnationalism, as I begin the process of writing the Introduction to the book, so these topics were fresh in my mind when I read The Gazette today.  Today, here in Montréal, a group of global bigwigs, including US Secretary of State Hilary Clinton, French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner, as well as foreign ministers from Canada, Japan, Brazil, and a hanful of other nations, plus the UN, are meeting with Haitian Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive to discuss rebuilding plans for Haiti. 

Upon arriving in Montréal yesterday and meeting with Québec Premier Jean Charest, Bellerive told reports that the Haitian diaspora is fundamental to the re-building of his nation:

We need a direct, firm and continuous support from them. This cataclysm has amplified the movement (of people) out of Haiti, unfortunately. We will have to work hard to encourage them to come back to Haiti…I’m very happy that the help has now arrived and is being distributed, because we had a lot of logistical problems in my country.

In other words, the Haitian diaspora is a transnational one, as it stretches across several nations in addition to Haiti (including Canada and the US), and a dynamic relationship exists between Haiti and its diaspora, diasporic Haitians have not just settled in places like Montréal and New York City, they also continue to send money back to Haiti, establish charities and trusts, and so on.  In the days since the earthquake there, and its aftershocks, I’ve been struck by the actions of prominent diasporic Haitians, such as Indianapolis Colts’ receiver Pierre Garçon, former Montréal Canadiens’ tough-guy Georges Laraques, Philadelphia 76ers’ Samuel Dalembert, and musicians such as Wyclef Jean and the Arcade Fire’s Régine Chassagne, amongst others.  They, along with less-well-known Haitians, have been working feverishly raising funds, visiting Haiti, helping in rescue efforts and so on.  Indeed, the Haitian diaspora has been instrumental in not just raising consciousness, but in keeping Haiti in the global consciousness beyond the initial burst of news of the earthquake, to work towards a rebuilding plan for a devastated nation. 

Bellerive’s recognition of that is impressive, as national leaders tend not to recognise the importance of their nations’ diasporas, even in times of trouble.  And yet, transnational diasporas are central to the homeland nation, as the Haitian example makes clear.