Andalusian nationalism in solidarity against
neoliberalism
MAJOR THEME 2.2.2 DISCUSSION PAPER - Miguel Moya Guirado y Mariano
Junco Gonzalez, Nacion Andaluza activists.
Andalusian nationalism in solidarity against the neoliberalism
that marginalises and imposes uniformity. It's nothing new, but every
day it's more insistent. Cultural uniformity is trying to impose
itself on the vitality of the different peoples. They are trying to
make us forget even who we once were.
The Andalusian people is suffering a constant assault on its
identity, and European and Spanish ways are forced upon us which are
not our own. The Andalusian people has always lived in a relationship
with the Mediterranean, and more particularly with its Southern and
Eastern limits. Today we have naturally much more in common with the
peoples of Latin America than with those of Europe. But when one of
our sisters or brothers from Latin America (so close in terms of
culture and history), or from the Magreb (so close in geographical
and historical terms) wants to visit our lands, the European Union
requires us to act as police dogs, because our lands do not belong to
us but to Europe. On the other hand we are supposed to consider
people who are at a distance of thousands of miles from us
geographically, historically and culturally. Why must we hate those
close to us and yet be forced to love those who are most distant from
us?
Let us speak of three ways in which we are oppressed:
1. Our history is stolen from us. In Andalusian schools pupils
study about kings whose only relation to us is that their countries
invaded us centuries later, while we are told practically nothing
about how the people of Tartessos, Betica or Al Andalus lived, these
being three of the epochs of our very rich history. The coats of
arms of our cities bear the symbols of the Monarchs who conquered us
and made us lose our independence. In several important towns and
cities this conquest is celebrated, which really meant the ruin of
the whole Andalusian country and a genocide for its people - a
prelude to what occurred in America. The brainwashing has reached
such an extent that even in progressive circles it seems natural to
protest against the genocide commenced by the Castilian Crown in
America in 1492, but they forget that it was accompanieed by another,
proportionally similar genocide in Andalusia itself, and that the
same date is equally significant and unfortunate for us, for it saw
the conquest by the Catholic Monarchs (Fernando and Isabela) of the
last bastion of independence in our lands and allowed an implacable
campaign of ethnic and cultural cleansing to commence. In fact, today
this day is celebrated in various cities (Jerez, Granada, Sevilla,
Malaga, Almeria). UNESCO condemned this barbaric custom in 1996, but
the authorities continue celebrating it.
2. Our culture too. We might speak of how our traditional forms of
singing have been prostituted or how many people are now ashamed of
our popular traditions. But let us speak only of our language. The
language we speak is quite different from the Castilian of the Royal
Academy of the Spanish Language. There is nothing wrong with this:
our language meets the requisite of every community of speakers - it
serves them as a means of communicating. It is also a good deal more
universal than the form of language they want to impose on us, since
some of its features are fairly widespread on the American continent.
But instead of respecting the way we speak they revile us. Children
are made to believe from the very beginning that there is something
wrong we speaking in Andalusian, that it shows a lack of education.
In the media broadcasting from Andalusia the presenters make a
constant effort to avoid speaking in the Andalusian language. Thus
people speak one language when broadcasting but another as soon as
they are back in the street.
3. We are used as police dogs against the Third World. Andalusia
is one of the areas of lowest production per capita in Europa, and
constant limitations are placed on its opportunities for economic
development (attempts to close shipyards, some of us think that the
EU doesn't care about us). And yes, one of the missions entrusted to
us is that of guard dogs for the European "paradise", to prevent the
entry of the disinherited people of the Third World. Andalusia has
closed its borders and since 1990 has been the gendarme of the South
in impeding the free movement of people. This authentic marine
fortress has caused countless deaths among people desperately trying
to get across from the nearby African coasts (a mere 14 km away).
As left-wing Andalusian nationalists we believe that the best way
to struggle for human freedom in this land is to join up the
different alternative struggles (feminists, trade unions, ecologists,
young people, international solidarity groups, etc.) in the fight to
recover our identity as a nation and to take our place among the
community of peoples and thus be able to act in solidarity instead of
being used as a barrier.