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Dan Hancox - The Village Against The World

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The land belongs to those who work itLa tierra es de quien la trabaja.
One hundred kilometers from Seville, there is a small village, Marinaleda, that for the last thirty years has been at the center of a long struggle to create a communist utopia. In a story reminiscent of the Asterix books, Dan Hancox explores the reality behind the community where no one has a mortgage, sport is played in the Che Guevara stadium and there are monthly Red Sundays where everyone works together to clean up the neighbourhood. In particular he tells the story of the village mayor, Snchez Gordillo, who in 2012 became a household name in Spain after leading raids on local supermarkets to feed the Andalucian unemployed.

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First published by Verso 2013 Text Dan Hancox Photographs Dave Stelfox 2013 All - photo 1
First published by Verso 2013 Text Dan Hancox Photographs Dave Stelfox 2013 All - photo 2

First published by Verso 2013
Text Dan Hancox
Photographs Dave Stelfox 2013

All rights reserved

The moral rights of the author have been asserted

Verso
UK: 6 Meard Street, London W1F 0EG
US: 20 Jay Street, Suite 1010, Brooklyn, NY 11201
www.versobooks.com

Verso is the imprint of New Left Books

ISBN-13: 978-1-78168-130-5
eISBN (US): 978-1-78168-188-6
eISBN (UK): 978-1-78168-499-3

British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
A catalog record for this book is available from the Library of Congress.

v3.1

To Javi. Seriously, let me get the next round.

No one can stop us. There is not enough blood, nor enough walls, to prevent that one day, land, rights, and, of course, liberty will be achieved by everyone.

Marinaleda: Andaluces, levantaos,
Juan Manuel Snchez Gordillo, 1980

Contents
1 Meet the Village For as long as human beings have dreamed they have dreamed - photo 3
1 Meet the Village For as long as human beings have dreamed they have dreamed - photo 4
1
Meet the Village

For as long as human beings have dreamed, they have dreamed of creating a better world. The year 2016 will mark the 500th anniversary of Thomas Mores Utopia, his short book describing the fictional island of Utopia, a regimented but model community, whose name in Greek means no place. In the contemporary imagination, utopia has usually meant exactly this no place real at any rate; nowhere actually existing. A utopia is a projection of our disappointment with the real world around us, a photo-negative of its manifold injustices, and our weaknesses as a species. We are always disappointed, so we dream of better.

We are used to the idea of utopia as an imagined place. Its often a community located in an alternative, fictional reality; on earth, or in another universe. A made-up world, where the plot twist is often that although this place seems like paradise, it is really built on lies and horror. The stories we tell ourselves are full of cautionary tales that not only is building paradise an impossibility even attempting to build it is dangerous and hubristic. Aim high, and you will fall further.

If its not a projection into a made-up world, utopia is an idealised vision of the future, a manifestation of a political or religious project, a blueprint for how we should all live our lives and one day, if you would only join the party, or the church, perhaps we all will. These, like the literary utopias, are usually abstract intellectual exercises, rather than concrete attempts to forge a new community. But what if you actually tried to build utopia? How do you go from a fevered dream, an aspirational blueprint, to concrete reality?

In 2004, I was leafing through a travel guide to Andalusia while on holiday in Seville, and read a fleeting reference to a small, remote village called Marinaleda a unique place, a communist utopia of revolutionary farm labourers, it said. I was immediately fascinated, but I could find almost no details to feed my fascination. There was so little information about the village available beyond that short summary, either in the guidebook, on the internet, or on the lips of strangers I met in Seville. Ah yes, the strange little communist village, the utopia, a few of them said. But none of them had visited, or knew anyone who had and no one could tell me whether it really was a utopia. The best anyone could do was to add the information that it had a charismatic, eccentric mayor, with a prophets beard and an almost demagogic presence, called Juan Manuel Snchez Gordillo.

Eventually I found out more. The first part of Marinaledas miracle is that when their struggle to create utopia began, in the late 1970s, it was from a position of abject poverty. The village was suffering over 60 per cent unemployment; it was a farming community with no land, its people frequently forced to go without food for days at a time, in a period of Spanish history mired in uncertainty after the death of the fascist dictator General Franco. The second part of Marinaledas miracle is that over three extraordinary decades, they won. Some distance along that remarkable journey of struggle and sacrifice, in 1985, Snchez Gordillo told the newspaper El Pas:

We have learned that it is not enough to define utopia, nor is it enough to fight against the reactionary forces. One must build it here and now, brick by brick, patiently but steadily, until we can make the old dreams a reality: that there will be bread for all, freedom among citizens, and culture; and to be able to read with respect the word peace. We sincerely believe that there is no future that is not built in the present.

As befits a rebel icon, Snchez Gordillo is fond of quoting Che Guevara; specifically Ches maxim that only those who dream will someday see their dreams converted to reality. As I was to discover, in one small village in southern Spain, this isnt just a t-shirt slogan.

The heart of Andalusia is a wild place. For many years, the centre of this great region was the cradle of banditry, where the infamous bandoleros roamed. They were the celebrities of their day, the peoples heroes who robbed from the rich and gave, occasionally, to the poor. Centred around the Sierra Sur mountains, it is an area historically populated by vast tracts of farmland, impoverished landless labourers and popular outlaws and arrayed against them, the aristocratic landlords, the bourgeois political class, and the hired goons of the powerful: the detested military police force, the Guardia Civil. Spain, wrote Albert Camus, is the native land of the rebel, where the greatest masterpieces are cries uttered towards the impossible, and those cries resound loudest of all in Andalusia.

Andalusia is the second largest of Spains seventeen autonomous communities, and a region which is much more than a region its a sin of omission to call it the southern bit of Spain. Andalusia has a unique culture and politics, and, more than anything, a unique personality. Its history is marked by a succession of class wars and civil wars, invasions, conquests, uprisings, mutinies and riots, where in spite of these sporadic, often violent disruptions, the quiet but unadorned rhythms of peasant life have remained largely unchanged for millennia. The latest disturbance brought down upon the heads of the Andalusian people is, like the Inquisition, the Reconquista and the Spanish Civil War before it, one they had no responsibility for.

In spring 2013 unemployment in Andalusia is a staggering 36 per cent; for those aged sixteen to twenty-four, the figure is above 55 per cent figures worse even than the egregious national average. The construction industry boom of the 2000s saw the coast cluttered with cranes and encouraged a generation to skip the end of school and take the 40,000-a-year jobs on offer on the building sites. That work is gone, and nothing is going to replace it. With the European Central Bank looming ominously over his shoulder, Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy has introduced labour reforms to make it much easier for businesses to sack their employees, quickly and with less compensation, and these new laws are now cutting swathes through the Spanish workforce in private and public sectors alike.

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