This Is Not A Love Story: Armed Struggle Against The Institutions Of
Patriarchy
Many feminist theorists and activists categorically
condemn "violence"-- be it offensive or defensive,
physical or verbal--
on the grounds that
"violence" (an extremely ambiguous term in itself) has
it’s roots in patriarchal culture and the patriarchal
mindset, and is somehow the "invention" of men-- as if
violence doesn’t appear everywhere in the natural world
in myriad forms, usually contributing in significant
ways to the balance of local ecosystems. While certain
feminist thinkers put forth an analysis of violence and
hierarchical power relationships that is well worth
considering, a wholesale condemnation of revolutionary
violence aimed at the destruction of that which
oppresses us is a gross oversimplification of an
extremely complex situation: that is, the web of
patriarchal tyranny that all of us, wimmin and men
alike, find ourselves born into, where violence is used
by our oppressors to enforce our political and social
submission, and where we are all desperately looking for
effective ways to reclaim our lives. Analyzing the role
of armed resistance movements (and wimmins participation
in them) in the larger liberation struggle against
patriarchy and civilization from an entirely
"essentialist" perspective -- as Robin Morgan does in
her often cited work The Demon Lover -- is a
misleading and deceptive form of Herstorical
revisionism, as it completely discounts the lives of
wimmin like Harriet Tubman, who led armed guerrilla
raids into the southern united states (basically a
slave-owning armed camp) to rescue fellow New Afrikans
from captivity, as well as numerous other wimmin like
Assata Shakur, Marilyn Buck, and Bernadhine Dhorn, who
enthusiastically embraced armed struggle as a tactic and
had no regrets about it. This article will not attempt
to defend armed struggle (because in our opinion it
requires no justification) but will instead focus on two
very specific groups (of many) that engaged in violent
rebellion against the institutions of
patriarchy.
"No one who understands the feminist movement,
or who knows the soul of a real woman, would make the
mistake of supposing that the modern woman is fighting
because she wants to be a man. That idea is the
invention of masculine intelligence. Woman is fighting
today, as she has all the way through the ages, for the
freedom to be a woman." Anne B.
Hamman
A Herstory Of The Revolutionary
Cells and Rote Zora Armed Resistance In West
Germany
The Revolutionary Cells (RZ) made their first
appearance on November 16th, 1973 with an attack against
ITT in West Berlin to point out the participation of
this multinational corporation in Pinochet’s military
putsch in Chile. In 1975, the first high-explosive
attack was undertaken by the wimmin of the RZ against
the Federal Constitutional Court in Karlsruhe, Germany,
the day after it supported a new abortion law. The RZ
wimmin naturally demanded the total right for every
womyn to have an abortion, as a right to
self-determination over their own bodies. In 1976,
numerous wimmin broke with the RZ and formed their own
splinter group and from 1977 onwards, the militant
feminist anti-patriarchal urban guerrilla group Rote
Zora (Red Zora) acted autonomously and independently,
though some wimmin still participated in the
Revolutionary Cells, which had by then shifted it’s
focus to acts of clandestine sabotage in support of the
larger anti-nuclear movement in Germany.
Red Zora attacked predominantly patriarchal
institutes, companies, and persons representing and
building up a male sexist society, which is oppressing
and exploiting wimmin worldwide. They have conducted
campaigns against porn traders, sex shops, international
traders of wimmin (those who profit from importing Asian
wimmin as "brides" for West German men), doctors who are
carrying out forced sterilizations, the Doctors Guild
("We see the Federal Doctors Guild as exponents of rape
in white trenchcoats" - RZ), as well as drug companies
like Schering who produced the birth-defect causing drug
Duogynon. Another popular Red Zora tactic was the
illegal reprinting of bus and streetcar fares. In
individual cases, the Red Zora worked to put together a
critique of the peace movement in 1984. In this paper,
they criticized the peace movement as a bourgeois
movement with an apocalyptic vision. The Red Zora said
that the major mistake of the peace movement was to
concentrate their political goal only on the
preservation of peace in the metropolis instead of
discussing the imperialist context between armament and
crisis: Third World misery and social cutbacks; sexism
and racism.
The Red Zora in the
90’s
In the first two or three years of the 1990’s, the RZ
concentrated their actions on the issue of West German
foreigner and refugee policies. Attacks such as the one
on the Center for the Central Register in Cologne, or
the kneecapping of Hollenburg -- the Chief of
Immigration Police in West Berlin -- show the wide range
of these militant politics. While those who were
attacked were directly responsible for the racist
refugee policies in Germany, the intentions of the
attacks on the institutions involved in formulating
these racist policies -- whose documents, files and data
were destroyed -- was to procure a space which wasn’t
controlled or regulated by the State.
Since the early 70’s, the RZ and Red Zora have
carried out over 200 attacks against the infrastructure
of patriarchal culture. Red Zora’s most comprehensive
and successful attack campaign so far has been the
planting of incendiary bombs in ten branches of the
Adler Corporation, one of West Germany’s largest
clothing manufacturers selling discount clothing in the
FRG, produced by low paid wimmin in South Korean and Sri
Lankan factories. "The wimmin at Adler in South Korea
struggle against the exploitation of their capacity for
work and are putting up a fight against the daily
sexism. They call for support from the FRG for their
struggle. As a result, the shitty living and working
conditions of wimmin in the vacuous production centers
of the three continents and especially those of Adler in
South Korea and Sri Lanka are becoming more widely known
here through leaflets, events and actions at Adler’s
retail centers. In these actions, anti-imperialism can
be practical. So it was possible for the struggle there
(by the wimmin in South Korea) and the struggle here (by
Red Zora) are compatible: We aren’t fighting for the
wimmin in the Third World, we’re fighting alongside
them." (Quote from Red Zora, in their Adler
statement.)
In 1987, when Red Zora and their sister group in West
Berlin, the Amazonen, fire bombed ten Adler outlets
throughout West Germany, they caused millions of dollars
in damages. Because of this, Adler was forced to meet
the demands of the textile workers, clearly proving that
militant resistance can be very effective. Both the
Revolutionary Cells and Red Zora have anti-authoritarian
structures and a decentralized decision-making process
for choosing targets. As well, they point out that
militant direct actions are just one part of the
revolutionary movement: "Although we participate in
far-reaching and extensive legal work campaigns and
social movements through our militant actions, these
actions aren’t of any more importance than handing out
flyers or leaflets, going to demonstrations, having
sit-ins, publishing newspapers, educating people, or
squatting houses. We don’t have a hierarchical system
for choosing actions. Thinking in hierarchical divisions
puts actions in a perspective of privilege and makes it
prone to a patriarchal way of thinking." (Quote by
members of the RZ in an interview that appeared in
Autonomie in 1980).
One reason for the tactical successes of the Red Zora
is that in their direct actions--militant as they are -
they address issues that many people are already
educated on and sympathetic to. For example, Red Zora
has gained wide popular support because their actions
appeal to the massive feminist movement that already
exists in West Germany, where the anarchist and radical
media had been doing much work for a long time to
educate the public on issues involving sexism, wimmin’s
oppression and exploitation, and wimmin’s rights to the
control of their own bodies. While the RZ doesn’t claim
as much support as Red Zora, in 1987, supporters of the
Revolutionary Cells published the book Der Weg Zum
Erfolg (The Way To Success), explaining their
strategies, politics, and actions. Less than a week
after the book hit the shelves of radical bookstores,
the entire printing(around 3000) was sold out.
The high degree of effectiveness of many RZ and Red
Zora actions wouldn’t be possible without popular
support. By themselves, their actions might only serve
to alienate them from the more long-term struggle.
However, with the support of the mass movements, members
of the RZ and Red Zora are able to work among the
numbers of people active in the above-ground struggle
without exposing their underground identities. In their
herstory, only one womyn has been arrested for
membership in Red Zora, but due to lack of evidence
against her, charges were dropped.
Resistance Is Possible: Excerpts
From An Interview With Two Anonymous Members Of The Red
Zora
(Editors note: This was first published in June of
1984 in the German women’s magazine, Emma, and
was the first interview where active members of the Red
Zora explain why they struggle autonomously inside the
RZ’s and the nature of their relationship to the wimmins
movement)
Let’s start with who you are.
Zora 1: If this is a personal question then we
are women between the ages of 20 and 51. Some of us sell
our labour, some of us take what we need, and others are
"parasites" on the welfare state. Some have children,
some don’t. We buy in disgusting supermarkets, we live
in ugly houses, we like going for walks or to the
cinema, the theatre, or the disco. We have parties and
cultivate idleness. And of course we live with the
contradiction that many things we want to do can’t be
done spontaneously. But after successful actions we have
great fun!
What does your name mean?
Zora 2: "The Red Zora and Her Gang" is a
children’s book about a wild street kid who steals from
the rich to give to the poor. Until today it seemed to
be a male privilege to build gangs or to act outside the
law. Yet particularly because girls and women are
strangled by thousands of personal and political chains
this should make us masses of "bandits" fighting for our
freedom, our dignity, and our humanity. Law and order
are fundamentally against us, even if we have hardly
achieved any rights and have to fight for them daily.
Radical women’s struggles and loyalty to the law--there
is no way they go together!
Yet it is no coincidence that your name has the
same first letters as the revolutionary Cells
(RZ):
Zora 1: No, of course not. Rote Zora expresses
the fact that we have the same principles as the RZ’s,
the same concept of building illegal structures and a
network which is not controlled by the state apparatus.
This is so we can carry out our subversive direct
actions--in connection with the open legal struggles of
various movements. "We Strike Back"--This slogan of the
women of May 1968 is no longer as controversial today
regarding individual violence against women. But it is
still very controversial, and most of the time taboo as
an answer to the power conditions that steadily produce
this violence. The women of RZ started in 1974 with the
bombing of the Supreme Court in Karlsruhe because we
wanted the total abolishment of 218 (the abortion law).
Then followed the bombing against Schering during it’s
Duogynon trial, and constant attacks against sex shops.
Actually, one of these porno stores should burn or be
devastated every day! Therefore we think it absolutely
necessary to tear the oppression of women as sexual
objects and producers of children out of the "private
domain" and to show our anger and hate with fire and
flames.
Do you understand yourselves as being part of the
women’s movement, or of the guerrilla movement, or both
and how do you see the context?
Zora 1: We are part of the women’s movement.
We struggle for women’s liberation. Besides theoretical
commonalities there also exists another unity between
our practice and the legal women’s movement, that is the
personal radicalization which can encourage other women
to resist and take themselves and the struggle
seriously. It is the feeling of strength if you see that
you can do things which before you were afraid of, and
if you see that it brings about something. We would like
to share this experience. We don’t think it has to
happen in the forms we choose. For example, take the
women who disrupted a peep show by drawing women’s
symbols and dropping stink bombs - these actions
encourage us, strengthen us, and we hope women feel the
same way about our actions. Our dream is that everywhere
small bands of women will exist, that in every city a
rapist, a women trader, a battering husband, a
misogynist publisher, a porn trader, a pig gynecologist
should have to feel that a band of women will find them
to attack them and make them look silly in public. For
example, that it will be written on his house who he is
and what he did, on his car, at his job--women’s power
everywhere! It requires a continuous movement whose aims
cannot be integrated, whose uncompromising section
cannot be forced into legal reforms, whose anger and
dedication to non-parliamentary struggles and
anti-institutional forms is expressed without
limit.
I Have Not Signed A Treaty With Any
Government
A Brief Look At "Direct Action" and "The Wimmin’s
Fire Brigade"
In 1982, five Canadian anti-authoritarian activists,
variously known as Direct Action, the Wimmin’s Fire
Brigade, and the Vancouver Five, conducted a highly
visible series of guerrilla actions against patriarchal,
industrial civilization. When the five anarchists - two
wimmin and three men-- who comprised these cells were
finally captured by the Canadian state in 1983, they
were charged with a host of clandestine attacks on
industries that represented some of the most notorious
war criminals, environmental despoilers, and exploiters
of wimmin and children.
The most serious charges that these anarchists faced
when they were caught were related to three bombing
operations, all conducted in support of massive public
campaigns of protest: one against the Litton Systems
plant near Toronto, where parts for Cruise missiles are
made; another against the environmentally destructive
Cheekye-Dunsmuir power project of British Columbia on
Vancouver Island; and also a smattering against retail
stores of Red Hot Video in Vancouver, where videotapes
glorifying rape and other forms of savagery toward woman
and children were sold. In addition, the Five were also
charged with conspiring to hold up a Brinks armored car
to finance their struggle (the hold-up never took place)
and a variety of other weapon offenses.
Each of these actions produced very specific tangible
results that assisted the above-ground campaigns they
were meant to compliment : In the case of Litton Systems
of Canada, there had already been an ongoing mass
struggle of sit-ins and other forms of civil
disobedience before their Toronto factory was partially
destroyed by a bomb attack in 1982. These demonstrations
escalated after the bombing resulting in Litton losing
their contract to produce the guidance system for an
advanced version of the Cruise missile being developed
by NATO and the United States military.
But the actions that we most want to analyze - within
the context of this article - are the actions carried
out by Ann Hansen and Julie Belmas, two members of
Direct Action who formed the Wimmins Fire Brigade and
firebombed three Red Hot Video Stores in the city of
Vancouver (Red Hot was an American chain that had built
up an inventory of video tapes pirated from hard-core
porn films). These actions are worth looking at because
they are a powerful reminder that the physical
dismantling of patriarchy is just as important and
necessary as the dismantling of patriarchy in our minds.
Wimmin’s groups had been fighting for six months against
the Red Hot chain when The Wimmin’s Fire Brigade lit the
way to victory with firebombs: Within a few weeks,
scores of wimmin’s groups of all stripes had issued
statements of sympathy and understanding for the action,
demonstrations had been held in a dozen centers across
the province, and six porn shops had closed, moved away
or withdrawn much of their stock out of fear that they
would be the "next target".
The Wimmin’s Fire Brigade (WFB) actions were so
successful because it was so well-integrated into, and
complimentary to, the public campaigns. As B.C.
Blackout, a biweekly autonomist newsletter put it,
"the action of the WFB could only have the impact it
did because of the months of spade work by many groups
and individuals educating themselves, doing research,
making contacts, pressuring the authorities, documenting
their case--in short, building the infrastructure for an
effective, grass-roots movement." Since Vancouver
already had a well-organized and militant campaign at
work in opposition to the merchandising of violence
against wimmin, the support was there when the WFB
struck.
The support was also there when Ann Hansen and Julie
Belmas went to trial the following year. Every day
hundreds of female and male supporters rallied on the
courthouse steps carrying banners with messages like "
Ann Hansen is a Freedom Fighter Not a Terrorist!’. In
her final court statement just before her sentencing,
Ann Hansen concluded with the comment: "Businesses
such as Litton, BC Hydro and Red Hot Video are the real
terrorists. They are guilty of crimes against humanity
and the earth, yet they are free to carry on their
illegal activities while those who resist and those who
are their victims remain in prison. How do we, who have
no armies, weapons, power or money, stop these criminals
before they destroy the earth? I believe if there is any
hope for the future, it lies in our struggle." As
expected Ann was given life (she’s now out) and Julie
was given 20 years. At her sentencing, Ann got one more
opportunity to express herself, and she did just that by
picking up a tomato she had smuggled into the courtroom
and heaving it in the direction of the judge. It
splattered on the curtain above his head, and he ducked
out of the courtroom before he was called on to witness
any further disruption of the courts decorum. In May
1983, the long-running canadian anarchist paper Kick It
Over published a statement by Ann Hansen and Julie
Belmas that was written from their jail cells. We would
like to conclude this article with a passage from this
prison statement titled, "We Are Not
Terrorists"... "Being womyn identified,
politically conscious, environmentalists and determined
to challenge the power and profit motives of the
patriarchal society that insures the rape and mutilation
of our mother earth, we refuse to accept their labels of
us as terrorists. We know that there are many sisters
who share our radical analysis of the issues around the
charges laid on us. For centuries the authorities have
reacted violently to womyn who resisted; they used to
brand us as "witches" and burned us, now they label us
as "terrorists" and will try to bury us in their cement
tombs.
The State and it’s media are portraying us as
elements of a "lunatic fringe" so that people will be
frightened of us instead of relating to us with their
rebellious spirits. We must not allow the liberalism of
this society to hide the sickness of the rulers and
rapers behind their institutions, laws and lies. We are
always threatened with their violence, whether it be
through nuclear power plants, nuclear weapons,
industrialism, prisons or sexual terrorism in our
everyday society. We will face their horrors boldly and
challenge their corporate interests with the
determination and strength of womyn warriors. We will
see a resistance movement building, in an attempt to rid
the earth of further corporate destruction so that
future generations can survive.
It is not possible in this society to be a
"liberated" womyn without being in a constant state of
conflict and struggle. However, if our conflict and
struggle is not guided by a consciousness of the
magnitude of the problem, then our energies will be
misdirected and futile. The womyn’s movement can not be
a one-issue oriented struggle, but must understand and
embrace the ecological struggle, indigenous peoples
resistance and anti-imperialist liberation movements
because the same patriarchal institutions that
perpetuate our oppression also oppress the animals, the
indigenous peoples, the third world peoples and the
earth."
In Total Strength And Resistance
Continually
spinning through sisterhood
Ann
Hansen
Julie Belmas
Once Again, this article is nowhere near as
comprehensive as it could be: herstory is full of
innumerable examples of strong, defiant wimmin who have
utilized revolutionary violence in their own struggle
for liberation, and to deny this or attempt to discredit
revolutionary violence by branding it " male identified"
is bullshit and an insult to wimmin everywhere.
Political oppression can only be ended through
resistance, and quite often this resistance will have to
take on "violent" forms. Every real freedom fighter -
whether they are female or male - recognizes this at
some point, and stops wasting their time engaging in
irresolvable philosophical debates and instead channels
their energies towards the destruction of that which
oppresses us all.
* For more information on the revolutionary politics
of Direct Action and the Wimmin’s Fire Brigade, we
suggest you order the pamphlet, "Writings of the
Vancouver Five (available through the Green Anarchy
Distro PO Box 11331 Eugene Oregon 97440 for
$3)
* Ann Hansen has also published a book
recently called "Direct Action: Memoirs of an Urban
Guerrilla", which is available through the AK Press
Mail-order Catalog
This article is from DISORDERLY CONDUCT
#5
TO GET A COPY:
Send cash, checks, or
money orders made out to GREEN ANARCHY
Check-out
back issues of DISORDERLY CONDUCT
Issues 1 and 2
($2ea), 3 - 5 ($3ea), and 1-5 ($10 for the complete
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The following comments are
owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible
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comment by professor rat
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 17 2002 @ 09:31 PM
PST
Thanks for this,one gets so tired
of manarchist babble.You dont have to look far to find obnoxious
alpha males,these will be with us even after the revolution.I would
hope femanarchists as motivated as those mentioned would consider
the new possibilities of combating 'in your face 'sexism and
patriachy with APster.Keep the fuckers in their place.(my 2
cents.)
Authored by: Anonymous on Monday, March 18 2002 @ 02:25 PM
PST
See what I mean? APster APster
APster. People seem to love the idea of killing people who disagree
with them. Bunch of twisted fucks. Should we kill all the state
communists because they disagree with us? Should we kill all the
capitalists? Hell, forget APster, why don't we just hijack a couple
airplanes and fly them into the World Trade Centre!
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, March 19 2002 @ 12:40 AM
PST
>> People seem to love the
idea of killing people who disagree with them. Bunch of twisted
fucks.<<
Actually only a few 'leaders' seem to
IMHO.They are the ones I want to assassinate.You dont have to
participate.Whats so funny bout peace,love and
understanding?
>>Should we kill all the state
communists because they disagree with us? <<
I'll chip
in to kill a few commie dictators.Yeah!
>>Should we
kill all the capitalists?<<
No,just a few of the
superrich to scare the others into disinvestment.Bill gates?"I'd buy
that for a dollar!"
>>Hell, forget APster, why don't we
just hijack a couple airplanes and fly them into the World Trade
Centre<<
APster is a lot more discriminating but if you
want to finish what the boys started in DC,dont let me stand in your
way.I hope they do finish what they started in DC.Going by the
succesful WTC hit,I'd say it was a slam dunk.Anarchs should move
away from such obvious targets. To 'not in mourning'dont read it
then.Have a nice day.
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, March 19 2002 @ 12:53 AM
PST
>>APster is a system whereby
you anonymously pay anonymous assassins for killing
people.<<
Anonymity is not strictly necersary,see
'operation soft drill" Neither is an assassin if the person targeted
tops themself.You should know at least a little about something
before you froth up about it.John Filiss has his version
here... http://www.primitivism.com/assassination.htm There is
nothing unanarchistic or even illegal about it.Some objections are
archived in the 1996 cypherpunk hyperarchives.If you want to risk
writing me directly you can at profrv@nospamfuckmicrosoft.(just
remove the 'no spam' and remember that the P.I.Gs have seized 1
computer of mine already.)I prefer PGP where possible.
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, March 19 2002 @ 07:14 AM
PST
Professor Rat,
The main
problem with the original concept of "assassination politics" is
that it goes far beyond keeping nasty politicians in line. AP could
easily be used to put bounties on the heads of anyone at all ...
like anarchists. In fact, I wouldn't be surprised if the first truly
anonymous AP system was set up by a corporate conglomerate with the
first 'targets' being people like Jaggi Singh, Jose Bove, Vandava
Shiva or Naomi Klein.
Once the AP can of worms is opened, it
can never be closed. All activism would have to become anonymous,
because once your name and face got out to the public, anyone could
put a price on your head. It would only take two people to get you
killed: one to put down a large "wager" on the date of your death,
and the other to undertake the actual assassination.
This is
why AP is not some magic formula to rid us of nasty politicians, but
rather a terrifying formula for anonymous murders of all kinds of
people.
His name is Matt Stephen Taylor, by the way, and
he's from Australia. He has made a virtual career out of causing
trouble at Indymedia websites. His APster threats against cops
nearly got the Ohio Valley Indymedia shut down, for instance. I
would not be surprised if the cops use his presence here as a
pretext to shut down infoshop.org.
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, March 19 2002 @ 07:35 AM
PST
Oh yeah, I forgot to mention that I
really like this article. I wonder what the biology-is-destiny,
pagan-feminist, women-are-nurturers crowd will have to say about
it.
Authored by: Anonymous on Wednesday, March 20 2002 @ 03:40 AM
PST
>>He has made a virtual
career out of causing trouble at Indymedia
websites.<<
Any proof of that? Send it in cos Im tired
of waitng to be charged for any fucking thing.
>>His
APster threats against cops nearly got the Ohio Valley Indymedia
shut down, for instance. <<
Shame it is *shut down*,you
could check your facts instead of repeating hearsay.The Ohio
Keystone KKKops made absolute idiots of themselves.I am proud of
that.
>>I would not be surprised if the cops use his
presence here as a pretext to shut down
infoshop.org.<<
As they took my computer and are said
to use DIRT there is nothing to stop them pretending to be me.Just
remind me again,whats my crime?
Authored by: Anonymous on Wednesday, March 20 2002 @ 05:42 AM
PST
>the article marked 28 Feb 2002
is especially interesting)< If your a CATO shill+hack
capitalist reporter who was embarresed on his fave list by my
exposure that he,Declan Mc Catohead was a libertarian pod.See for
yourself at the cypherpunks hyperarchive. >a virtual career
out of causing trouble at Indymedia websites< I work there for
**** sake,who the **** are you anyway? **** off and die,I wont be
mourning. APster was created by an anarchist,it is anarchistic in
practise,not illegal and its kryptonite to kkkops,what else do you
want? We cant all be downtown burning down the bank.
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, July 20 2002 @ 10:56 PM
PDT
You know, if we killed all of the
people that disagreed with us, there would be barely any of us left.
Just two years ago, a young teen, I was a christian righty who
disliked feminism cuz i didn't understand it. And now, I'm extremely
leftist/anarchist/and feminist. I've learned this much about myself,
others, and the world and changed so much in such a short amount of
time by the influence of accidentally finding a feminist magazine
(Bitch magazine) lying on a chair in a Border's store and from a
semester of highschool philosophy class. If I could be that
influenced by these media/school sources, then we, as anarchist and
feminists might as well try to pull those righties, moderates, and
unenlightened to our side and show them reality. It can work! Guns,
war, and violence are usually not the answer. As far as Harriet
Tubman and other arm-bearing women go, they are reacting to the
violent and oppressive patriarchy, so they have the right to. Their
situations are totally understandable.