Yesterday we hung a banner in Neukölln reading "CRIMINAL QUEERS SUPPORT OHLAUER REBELS". We
do not speak in place of, or wish to speak over the voices of the folks
occupying the Ohlauerstrasse school. The actions of these rebels have
echoed loudly and powerfully from Berlin to Istanbul, Athens and beyond.
To threaten to burn down a building and jump off the roof seems to us
to say: "revolt or death".
The occupiers' threats to the city and cops
express a clear refusal to passively submit to the fate set out for
them, and a choice to instead use their bodies to enforce their
survival. For nearly a week now the occupiers have endured constant
police harrassment on the roof, while rejecting as misleading and
insufficient every empty "offer" from the city. For these actions we
have only respect and admiration.
At
the same time, we have sensed a certain discord between the content of
such actions and the form of some of the language used to describe them.
A discourse of "nonviolence" and "human rights" keeps resurfacing, one
which has made a point of distancing itself from "criminals". We find
the refugees' rebellious actions inspiring, but we won't position
ourselves against those who are structurally criminalized. We count
ourselves as among those for whom today's prisons are built, and don't
wish to portray ourselves as innocent or blameless...on the contrary. We
do not strive to legitimate or represent ourselves within the existant.
We see this as a losing game, which ultimately serves only to demarcate
who is killable and rapable, while positioning the State as an ally. In
addition, to place undue emphasis on acceptance and admission by the
ruling elite renders us vulnerable to the good cops (Greens) / bad cops
(CDU) trap, when we know that all politicians have no other agenda than
eviction and deportation in the end.
The
self-assertion of the criminalized cannot avoid bringing with it a
dimension of social rupture, an unrecognizable and illegible element
intolerable to the present order. Distinct from simple invisibility, to
be unrecognizable in this sense can be a strength, if one accepts that
integration within civil society is a dead-end street for many people.
As
the Refugee Strike movement has consistently highlighted, breaking
isolation means more than simply revolting against the physical
separation of bodies: it implies a refusal of the entire system of
tracking, containment, control, and petty administration which is put in
place to break down the 'humanitarian' subjects it governs, an entire
system of soft tyrannies intended to make life under asylum unlivable.
Similarly,
for us queerness is about mutiny, not acceptance or integration: if we
refuse to attach any positive identity to our sexualities, this is
because we have no interest in carving out a space of marginal
recognition within this necrophilic civilization for a 'legitimated'
queer subjectivity. As some friends elsewhere wrote, "we are captured by
the state every time we make ourselves intelligible. Whether it be a
demand, political subject, or formal organization, each intelligible
form can be recuperated, represented, or annihilated [...] We have
nothing to gain by speaking the language of, or making demands to, the
existent power structures".
We
can fully understand the refugees' immediate demand for and urgent need
of legalization and papers. As for the three long-term demands of their
movement (to close all Lagers, stop all deportations, abolish the
Residenzpflicht system), their strength lies precisely in their obvious
incompatibility with the aims of the existing order: they serve less as
terms for a peaceful compromise or a future date announcing the
expiration of hostilities than as means to reveal the antagonism that
defines the everyday life of illegalized persons in Germany. To
persistently demand something that the system cannot accommodate can
break open a horizon of what is not yet possible...it shows not that
'nothing is possible' but rather that 'nothing presently imaginable is
sufficient'.
However,
as queers who refuse the symbolic integration of our bodies into the
administered governmental space of market identity, and as people for
whom anonymous and informal criminality will remain a feature of our
lives as long as material survival is tied to the capitalist system of
production, we feel it is important to affirm, extend and circulate
these conflictual aspects of our existence, rather than to downplay,
justify, apologize for them or attempt to make them coherent to the
state and capital. We would rather break open new spaces of social
rupture and illegibility than distance ourselves from all those for whom
legality and legitimacy will never be an option.
While
the day to day realities of our lives are in many ways distinct from
those of the migrants who have barricaded themselves on the roof of the school, and those differences cannot and should not be erased, we see
ourselves facing a common enemy: a state and civil society that wishes
to police every aspect of our lives, to categorize and contain us, and a
capitalist market which tosses away everything and everyone that is
not immediately able to produce value for it. For this reason we choose
to throw our support fully behind the squatters, not as allies but as
accomplices.
Against deportation, against all borders, against the false promises of legitimacy, legality, and innocence.
Solidarity and strength to the refugee rebels!
- Some criminal queers and accomplices
Die Europäische Presse fängt an zu berichten
The Guardian
Asylum seekers in standoff with police at Berlin protest
Police surround a building in Kreuzberg where a group of asylum seekers are protesting against their treatment in Germany
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jun/30/berlin-protest-asylum-seeke...
bilder vom tage
https://www.flickr.com/photos/neukoellnbild/sets/72157645396540656/
tweet des Tages
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S9DwkIs7nZM&feature=youtu.be …
Meine Nachbarn in meiner Strasse. Man kann sie nur liebhaben :) #ohlauer