IPD Activist School Launched
Institute for Popular Democracy
November 30, 2004
IPD, through its Outreach and Communications training program and the vital assistance of the NGO Popular Education for People's Empowerment (PEPE), formally opened the 'Activist school' (AS) last October 22, 2004 in a successful launch held in Fersal Hotel in Quezon City. The AS is an informal education program that aims to facilitate critical analyses on the Left's sectoral and social movements through the process of discourse among activists from across generations gathered together to listen, share and discuss.
A concept that has been envisioned by IPD and the popular democrats movement years ago, the AS challenges Left activists to rethink the very foundations and assumptions that define and permeate their strategies and interventions for development and democracy. It hopes to mediate a process that hopes to contribute to the redefinitions on “what is being Left” in the Philippines. The AS sees this rethinking as crucial in light of the key roles of the Left in transforming the power relations in the country on behalf of the marginalized people.
The AS consists of a series of thematic discussion sessions lasting three months. So far four sessions were already conducted since the launch. These include the first session which introduces the AS to its 'students' and its role in reforming the Left as well as its aim to facilitate a process of debates, advocacy and rethinking among post-Edsa activists in dialogue with pre-Martial Law and Martial Law activists.
This was followed by a session on sectoral movements, which reflects on the historic contributions of Left's sectoral movements in the Philippines and interrogates them in the current social realities and issues. Peasant and Agrarian reform issues as well as labor and unionism issues were discussed here.
The third session is about social movement – an 'investigation' of key social movements and how they are interwoven in the people’s (or activists’) collective actions at the local and national levels and how the Left grapples with these movements that are not traditionally defined by the structural analysis. These include discussions on women's, environmental and other social movements in the country.
Emerging activism was the fourth session. Discussions looked into the brand of activism that is not traditionally influenced by the Left ideologies that also ascribes its commitments for the interest of the poor Filipinos. Media, religious groups and the so-called EDSA 3 forces were central in the deliberations.
Three more sessions will complete the first AS program. These include thematic discussions on globalization and international issues, state and political reform, and finally the question: What is being left of the Left? The AS is expected to wrap up on January 2005.