As individuals, our racial identity is so intimately inscribed
into the ways that we see and experience the world,
and other people in it,
that it's often taken as a natural and unchanging fact of life
Race is a social construction,
meaning that the stigmas and divisions associated with it
are born out of political and cultural,
rather than purely biological factors.
But it's also a material reality
– one that plays a central role in shaping the ways
that power operates in a specific society.
Given the current wave of racist
and nationalist reaction sweeping the globe,
it is important that anarchists
develop a shared understanding of race,
and the role that it plays in constructing
and reinforcing oppressive hierarchies.
So... what is race, exactly,
and what do anarchists have against it?
Well, a broad definition would be to say
that it's a particular type of caste system,
or a way of classifying people into rigid social hierarchies,
based on perceived ancestry
and intimately associated with notions of nationalism,
citizenship and class.
Most commonly associated with the global system
of European colonial dominance known as White Supremacy,
race has other close parallels,
such as India's varna system,
the ethnic constructions of Hutu and Tutsi
in Rwanda and Burundi,
and even religious sectarian divides
such as those found between Catholics and Protestants in Ireland
or Sunnis and Shia in several Middle Eastern countries.
But while race can, and does assume a variety of different forms
based on local demographic and political factors,
it has always been, and remains to this day,
a cross-class alliance
– a way of binding the ruling class
and a segment of the exploited classes
through a compact of shared identity,
in order to project force against those who fall outside of it.
Or to put it simply,
it's a way that states manipulate large groups of people
into believing that they have more in common with their rulers
than with the fellow ranks of the oppressed.
An early precursor of modern concepts of race
lies in the idea of the barbarian,
which was developed independently by the rulers
of a diverse number of early states,
ranging from the Shang Dynasty in ancient China,
to the Greek and Roman Empires of Eurasia,
and Aztec and Inca Empires
of modern-day Central and South America.
By dehumanizing different ethnic groups
outside their borders as barbarians,
rulers were able to mobilize armies
and rationalize the enslavement of captured populations.
Centuries later,
the rise and spread of powerful monotheistic religions
added a new dimension to the construction of race,
as the ideological conception of the barbarian
was given new weight
by the introduction of the notions of “pagan” or “infidel”.
Religious dictates calling for the forced conversion of non-believers
sanctified new wars of conquest,
waged by the armies of Christianity and Islam.
Fearing the expansionary rise of Islam
which by the 11th Century had spread
deep into the heart of European Christendom,
the Catholic Church teamed up
with feudal elites to launch the Crusades,
a series of holy wars spanning nearly four hundred years
and planting the seeds of ethnic, national and sectarian rivalries
that continue to this day.
In the final years of the Reconquest of Spain,
the Catholic Church ramped up popular sentiments
of anti semitism and Christian hysteria
by launching the Spanish Inquisition
– a bloody purge and forced conversion of Muslims and Jews
that provided a horrific new laboratory for the development of race
as an internal system of division and social control.
The Spanish Reconquest was completed in 1492,
and was followed in quick succession by
Christopher Columbus' accidental invasion of the Americas.
Believing the so-called “discovery” of the New World
to be sign of divine providence after their holy victory against Islam,
Spain launched the colonization of the Americas
with a brutal religious fervour,
waging a genocidal campaign of extermination
against the continents' original inhabitants,
alongside mass forced conversions
carried out by Jesuit and Franciscan priests.
In the decades that followed,
Spain was joined in its pillage of the Americas
by Portuguese, Dutch, and French colonialists.
They were soon faced with a labour shortage, however,
after working many Indigenous slaves to death
and killing millions of others through diseases like smallpox.
So, beginning in the early 16th century,
Portuguese merchants established the transatlantic slave trade,
a grotesque process of racial dehumanization
whereby millions of people were kidnapped from West Africa
and shipped across the ocean to slave-trading posts in the Caribbean
and Portuguese plantations in Brazil.
Britain joined the fray in 1607
and quickly set to work expanding the transatlantic slave trade,
establishing the vast southern Plantation system
and kick-starting a process of unprecedented
mass European migration.
Within Britain's thirteen American colonies,
a new pact of racial supremacy was forged
between settlers of mixed European descent,
based on their shared experiences of killing Natives
and subjugating Africans.
This new system, white supremacy,
provided all white men with a share of the spoils
stolen through genocidal territorial conquest
and an economy built on slave labour.
It also happened to make a small number
of those white men unimaginably rich,
setting the stage for the rise of capitalism.
Despite ongoing controversy regarding her own racial identity,
one of the most comprehensive descriptions
of how white supremacy functions in the United States
was written by Andrea Smith,
who identified its three supporting pillars as:
Slavery/Capitalism,
Genocide/Colonialism
and Orientalism/War.
The first pillar, Slavery, rests on the commodification of Black bodies,
and to their need to be controlled through force and imprisonment.
The second pillar, Genocide, rests on the need for Indigenous nations
to disappear or assimilate into settler society,
in order to justify white people's claims to the lands
that they currently occupy.
The final pillar, Orientalism,
based on earlier conceptions of the barbarian,
conjures up the image of outside forces
seeking to infiltrate and destroy society,
whether they take the form of Islamic terrorists,
hostile foreign states,
or simply the spectre of “illegal immigrants” in general.
Over the centuries, these three racial archetypes
have been deeply ingrained in the white psyche.
And so when Black people cry out that their lives matter,
Indigenous people assert claims to their traditional lands and culture,
or refugees fleeing wars and poverty
demand their rights to political asylum,
it is unsettling to the power structure that these pillars prop up.
The response of states and rulings elites
will always be to attempt to reinforce these pillars
by fanning the flames of white paramilitary reaction.
For anarchists who seek a new world
built on the destruction of the state and capitalism,
our task is to help to knock out the pillars that these systems rest upon.
For some, this will mean severing the false bonds of whiteness
and joining the resistance
of those who have long struggled under its yoke.
Treason to whiteness is loyalty to humanity.