October 12: International Day for reparations

On October 12, 1492, Christopher Columbus set foot on the so called “New World”, ushering in a cycle of occupation, violence, genocide and slavery: this was the beginning of colonization.

Colonization is a global phenomenon: there is hardly a country in the world that has not been colonized, a colonizer, or both, such as the United States. Colonization is one of the phenomena that has most disrupted humanity. It has left a deep and lasting impression on all continents and the consequences of this are

• demographic: there are millions of people who have been exterminated, deported, or sold into forced labour.

• political: in Africa, America, Asia, and Oceania, cities, kingdoms and empires have disappeared. Traditional communities were gradually disrupted and subjected to European domination.

• economic: the entire economic fabric of societies was brutally dismantled. Crops were looted and famines became more frequent. Dispossessed of their own wealth, those who were colonized were permanently immersed in a state of chronic poverty.

• cultural: colonization destroyed many civilizations, languages, cultures and religions. Those who were colonized often lost their roots and their identity. The social image of the non-European was degraded and this has facilitated the development of racist theories, which has fuelled violence and discrimination of all kinds.

• ecological: the introduction of technologies in the service of profit and productivity focused visions caused the ransacking of millions of hectares of forests, the wasting of natural resources, the pollution of whole regions and it has made the environment fragile and deteriorated public health. It has also helped to disrupt ecosystems and, of course, the most devastating effect of colonization from an ecological aspect is the increase of global warming.

Begun in the late fifteenth century, colonization lasted several centuries and continues to this day in modern forms (imperialism, mining, land grabbing, military interventions, etc.) .

When a wrong has been committed, it must be repaired. If you recognise that colonization has been a source of massive crimes against humanity, then reparations are legitimate. If you refuse these reparations, then you deny the criminal nature of colonial crimes.

This is why we are forcefully demanding reparations, and this demand is non-negotiable. Since the beginning of colonization, over five centuries ago, men and women have fought against it and demanded justice.

Whether it is genocide in the Americas, the transatlantic slave trade, or colonization in Africa, Asia and Oceania, figures as famous as Condorcet, Callie House, Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, Frantz Fanon, Desmond Tutu, and Wole Soyinka have defended the principle of reparations.

The 2001 UN conference in Durban has strengthened the mobilization of peoples and now states and even regional organizations have involved. As of now, this issue is being debated in the African Union, Caricom, in much of the Americas, Africa, Asia, Oceania, and Europe. Some states have even begun to implement their own reparations policies.

On October 12 we are launching the International day for reparations related to colonization. Approved and supported by the Assembly of Social Movements of the World Social Forum held in Tunis in March 2013, this initiative will give more strength and visibility to actions around this topic: Our credo is Unity is strength.

One may certainly discuss the terms of reparations, but it is important that it is effectively implemented as soon as possible. From this day on, now and every year forward, we will aim to advance justice in the world. Because it is not only the past, but the present and the future potential of all things is hampered both by the weight of the past colonialism and by new forms of imperialist domination.

We invite citizens, NGOs, and governments to seize this iconic date and implement any and all action necessary to advance the cause of reparations all over the world (press releases, conferences, exhibitions, media campaigns, street actions, cultural festivals, radio broadcasts or television, political decisions, etc.).

Our parents and grandparents fought for independence and freedom, we must continue their fight to get justice.

AfricAvenir
Africa-Hamburg
Association des Jeunes Méditerranéens pour les Echanges Culturels (AJMEC)
Association pour la Taxation des Transactions financières et pour l’Action Citoyenne (ATTAC) Togo
Association Tunisienne de Sociologie (ATS)
Berlin Postkolonial
Bundeskoordination Internationalismus (BUKO)
Colonialism Reparation
Comité International des Peuples Noirs (CPN)
Comité pour l’Annulation de la Dette du Tiers Monde (CADTM) Lubumbashi
Conseil Représentatif des Associations Noires (CRAN)
Glokal
Informationsbüro Nicaragua e. V.
Mouvement International pour les Réparations (MIR)
Plataforma DESCAM
Réseau National Dette et Développement (RNDD) Niger
Slave Trade Reparations Project (STeR)
Union des Femmes pour la Dignité Humaine (UFDH)

It is possible to join the Call here: http://www.colonialismreparation.org/en/what-you-can-do/join-the-call-for-the-international-day-for-reparations.html

7 thoughts on “October 12: International Day for reparations

    Kenneth Munroe Brown

    Bravo to Caricom and all involved in the Reparstions effort. We have been advocating for Reparations for over7 years and was the only political party to include Reparationsin it’s Manifesto in the 2020 General Elections. In fact, it was our Number One flagship policy, a policy which was followed up with correspondence to the powers that be. We would very much love to join in, in the effort to seek, knock, and demand Reparations.

    Unrepresented Peoples’ Party

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