<div dir="ltr"><div class="gmail_quote"><div dir="ltr" class="gmail_attr"><br></div><br><br>Dear Friends, Comrades,<br>we would like to invite you this Sunday to join in what we hope will be the first of several <br>
encounters thinking through this moment, the current invasion of Ukraine <br>
by the Russian military, this war in a sea of wars we have been <br>
assembling and thinking through over these last 22 months.<br>
<br>
Our friends Olga Kopenkina and Dmitry Vilensky have been at the heart of <br>
trying to bring together and create this space of assembly.<br>
<br>
Anna Engelhardt, Josh Nadeau, Larissa Babij, Elena Ischenko are among <br>
those invited who have said they will be able to join and help us <br>
construct a space of sharing questions, positions.<br>
<br>
Below you will find login details and an introduction for Sunday.<br>
<br>
<br>
_____________________________________<br>
SUNDAY'S SUMMIT<br>
<br>
PLEASE NOTE:DIFFERENT START TIME<br>
DIFFERENT LOGIN<br>
February 27th, 202212:00 PM (EST)<br>
<br>
WAR BY<br>
OTH ER<br>
NAM ES<br>
<a href="https://zoom.us/join" rel="noreferrer" target="_blank">https://zoom.us/join</a><br>
<br>
Meeting ID: 934 0924 8883<br>
Passcode: Exter<br>
<br>
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__________________________________<br>
INTRODUCTION<br>
<br>
Since 2020, we have been testing assembling drawing on friendships old <br>
and new from all the various parts of our shared planet, considering the <br>
current conjuncture. We felt then, in the urgencies of 'lockdown' and <br>
imposed 'social distancing' to find new ways of recomposing the <br>
cartographies of struggle in the face of what could only be another <br>
crisis through which states and capital would opportunistically <br>
manipulate toward their advantage.<br>
<br>
Our thesis has been confirmed time and again as states, especially those <br>
bearing the imprint of supremacist mandates, imperial or colonial <br>
histories, have used in the most wretched manner the pandemic and its <br>
conditions of distraction to further their capacities to exert and <br>
extend their will to govern and control.<br>
<br>
A global war has been pronounced against a virus. And in the middle of <br>
that war many other wars have and are taking place. Wars against <br>
indigenous communities, migrant peoples, displaced, houseless peoples, <br>
wars of dispossession, wars of occupation, of omission, sometimes as if <br>
by accident, organized neglect, in the name of safety, security, law, of <br>
restoring territorial integrity or restoring old empires.<br>
<br>
But these wars are like palimpsests, taking the same writ, the same <br>
sheets of proclamation and rewriting over them new conditions, new <br>
rules, new impositions, and new justifications. Amidst the seas of war <br>
are floating peoples, communities, multitudes who struggle to find a <br>
side, a way, a path toward autonomy, subsistence, if not bare survival.<br>
<br>
The current invasion by Russia of Ukraine is a moment of intensification <br>
in an ongoing war, which inherits the legacies of a cold war and the hot <br>
wars which preceded it, always risking to spill into surrounding <br>
territories and justifying new forms of weaponry for forced forms of <br>
pacification. These wars certainly have their locality and specificity <br>
but they cannot be read outside also the larger forces at play.<br>
<br>
But understanding these forces also does not necessarily arrive to <br>
understanding how they implicate each of us wherever we are. As we have <br>
asked implicity or explicity in our many assemblies, the Conference of <br>
Butterflies, a Conference in Shards, as well as our vigil, Fukushima at <br>
10, how to reimagine solidarity today?<br>
<br>
Over the course of these following weeks, we will try to enter <br>
collectively a process of thinking together the various forces at play, <br>
the questions this invasion by Russia raises, the various modes of <br>
discourse and practice it may call into being in order to struggle <br>
against the supremacist, imperial, colonial, fascist, racist, <br>
patriarchal, capitalist forces which continue to invent and direct new <br>
causes of war and war by other names.<br>
<br>
NOTE ON ORGANIZATION<br>
<br>
As a form of organizing this summit, we will try to share responsibility <br>
with friends. We began this process leading to this first encounter with <br>
a letter from Dmitry Vilensky of Chto Delat on February 6th asking how <br>
we may organize something together in response to a potentially <br>
devastating war.<br>
<br>
Given Belarus's implication in this, we asked our friend Olga Kopenkina <br>
to join us in situating occasions and inviting friends from Ukraine, <br>
Belarus, and beyond to think and share questions.<br>
<br>
Whatever we have planned or written has seemed to be inadequate by the <br>
day as the situation has deteriorated from a potential war or attack to <br>
a full scale Russian invasion of Ukraine.<br>
<br>
At the level of organization, we would like each encounter to have its <br>
own approach to thinking and finding a way to discuss what is taking <br>
place in a manner that can go beyond news and toward nourishing our ways <br>
to conjoin struggles wherever we are situated.<br>
<br>
INVITATION<br>
<br>
This Sunday, February 27th, we would like to invite you to the first <br>
encounter and share with you Olga Kopenkina's introduction:<br>
<br>
We will begin this act with an analysis of the current moment created by <br>
the Russian invasion and bombing of Ukraine and Belarus being used as a <br>
military platzdarm, focusing on post-cold war colonialist expansion and <br>
the human cost of sustaining national sovereignty and territorial <br>
integrity.<br>
<br>
With Ukraine being now invaded and Kyiv apparently turned into a <br>
'theater of war,' how does the international left address concepts such <br>
as 'national sovereignty' and 'territorial integrity' in a situation <br>
when a geopolitical positioning and proximity to the imperial power <br>
create a state of permanent vulnerability?<br>
<br>
Left political thinker Tariq Ali has recently suggested that 'national <br>
sovereignty' is a myth created by liberal ideologists to submit smaller <br>
and weaker nations to the international order dominated by unequal power <br>
dynamics. At the same time, it's a nation that is under attack right <br>
now. Meanwhile, in Ukraine’s neighboring nation Belarus, voices worn <br>
down by two-years of political crisis, ongoing suppression of human <br>
rights, including its own military threat from Russia, call for <br>
reconciliation and submission.<br>
<br>
Can we mobilize a potential Left movement (that includes "new left": <br>
feminist movements, movements for black life, LGBTQ+, indigenous <br>
nations, struggles, and others) that resists the logic of permanent <br>
vulnerability within the capitalist geopolitical divisions and create <br>
solidarity in support of vulnerable nations and peoples in struggle?<br>
<br>
We invite you to think with us along these lines.<br>
<br>
__________________________________<br>
<br>
Please note, for those who have expressed interest in these weeks to join our assemblings, we have made a list to send to you each week the details for joining.<br>
<br>
If for any reason you prefer to not receive these updates, we have made it easier.<br>
<br>
You can simply write an email to:<br>
<a href="mailto:assembling-leave@16beavergroup.org" target="_blank">assembling-leave@16beavergroup.org</a><br>
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