Ablack bloc(sometimesblack block) is a tactic used by protesters who wear black clothing, ski masks, scarves, sunglasses, motorcycle helmets with padding or other face-concealing and face-protecting items.[1][2]The clothing is used to conceal wearers' identities from both the police and politically different organizations by making it difficult to distinguish between participants. It is also used to protect their faces and eyes frompepper spray,which is used by police during protests or civil unrest. The tactic also allows the group to appear as one large unified mass.[3]Black bloc participants are often associated withanarchism,anarcho-communism,communism,libertarian socialismand theanti-globalization movement.A variant of this type of protest is the Padded bloc, where following theTute Bianchemovement protesters wear padded clothing to protect against the police.
The tactic was developed in the 1980s in the Europeanautonomist movement's protests againstsquatterevictions,nuclear power,and restrictions on abortion, as well as other influences.[1]Black blocs gained broader media attention outside Europe during the1999 Seattle WTO protests,when a black blocdamaged propertyofGap,Starbucks,Old Navy,and othermultinationalretail locations in downtownSeattle.[1][4]
History
editPrecursors
editIn February 1967, the anarchist groupBlack Maskmarched onWall Streetin New York City wearing black clothes andbalaclavas.This was the first instance of a social movement in the western world utilizing masks and black dress, which were used not for purposes of disguise but to signify amilitantuniform identity. In this regard, Black Mask may have indirectly influenced the black bloc tactic.[5]
West German origins
editThe black bloc tactic to wear black clothing,[1]ski masks, scarves, sunglasses, motorcycle helmets with padding or other face-concealing and face-protecting items was developed in response to increased use of police force following the 1977Brokdorfdemonstration.[6][7][8]
On 1 May 1987, demonstrators inBerlin-Kreuzbergwere confronted by West Berlin police.[9]After this, thousands of violent rioters attacked the police with rocks, bottles and Molotov cocktails. The riots at theMay Day in Kreuzbergbecame famous after the police had to completely pull out of the "SO 36" neighborhood in Kreuzberg for several hours, and rioters looted shops together with local criminals.[10]
WhenRonald Reagancame to Berlin in June 1987, he was met by around 50,000 demonstrators protesting against hisCold Warpolicies. This included a black bloc of 3,000 people. In November 1987,Hafenstraßeresidents and thousands of other protesters and fortified their squat, built barricades in the streets and defended themselves against the police for nearly 24 hours. After this the city authorities legalised the squatters residence.[11]
Since the late 1980s, Berlin's Kreuzberg district has hosted May Day clashes between anarchists and police.[12][13]When theWorld Bankand theInternational Monetary Fundmet in Berlin in 1988,autonomous groups hosted an international gathering ofanti-capitalistactivists. Numbering around 80,000, the protesters greatly outnumbered the police. Officials tried to maintain control by banning all demonstrations and attacking public assemblies. Nevertheless, there were riots andupmarketshopping areas were destroyed.[14][15]
Unified Germany
editIn the period after the fall of theBerlin Wall,the German black bloc movement continued traditional riots such as May Day inBerlin-Kreuzberg,but with decreasing intensity. Their main focus became the struggle against the recurring popularity ofNeo-Nazismin Germany. The "turn" came in June 2007, during the33rd G8 summit.A coordinated black bloc of 2,000 international people came toRostock,Germany, built barricades, rioted the streets, set cars alight and attacked the police during a mass demonstration.[16]400 police officers were injured, as well as about 500 rioters, demonstrators and activists. According to the GermanVerfassungsschutz,the weeks of organisation before the demonstration and the riots themselves amounted to a revival for the militant left in Germany. Since the "Battle of Rostock", traditional "May Day Riots" after demonstrations every 1 May in Berlin, and since 2008 also in Hamburg, became more intense.[17]
International development
editNorth America
editThe first prominent use of the tactic in United States of America occurred at the Pentagon, in Washington, D.C., on 17 October 1988, although anarchists had been using similar tactics in small numbers in preceding years in places like San Francisco, culminating with several hundred anarchists in black smashing glass store fronts and attacking vehicles in the Berkeley Anarchist Riot of 1989.[18][19]In D.C., over one thousand demonstrators—a small number consisting of a black bloc—called for the end to U.S. support for the right wing death squads in El Salvador.[20]A black bloc caused damage to property ofGAP,Starbucks,Old Navy,and other retail locations in downtown Seattle during the 1999anti-WTO demonstrations.[21]They were a common feature of subsequentanti-globalizationprotests.[22]
In the years after the end of the Vietnam War, protest in the US came to assume more legalistic, orderly forms, and was increasingly dominated by the middle-class.[23]This corresponded with the rise of a highly effective police strategy ofcrowd controlcalled "negotiated management".[24]Many social scientists have noted the "institutionalization of movements" in this period.[25]These currents largely constrained disruptive protest until 1999. In an unprecedented success for post-Vietnam era civil disobedience, the WTO Ministerial Conference opening ceremonies were shut down completely, host city Seattle declared a state of emergency for nearly a week, multilateral trade negotiations between the wealthy and developing nations collapsed, and all of this was done without fatalities. This occurred in the midst of mass rioting which had been set off by militant anarchists, some of them in a black bloc formation.[26][27][28]
The call for the Seattle protest had originally come fromPeoples' Global Action(a network co-founded by theZapatistas) which supporteddiversity of tacticsand a highly flexible definition of nonviolence.[29]In the aftermath of the shutdown, however, various NGO spokespeople associated with Seattle DAN claimed that the riotous aspect of the WTO protests was counterproductive and undemocratic. They also asserted that it was only an insignificantly small group from Eugene, Oregon that engaged in property destruction.Medea BenjamintoldThe New York Timesthat "These anarchists should have been arrested",[30][31]whileLori WallachofPublic Citizenstated that she had instructed Teamsters to assault black bloc participants.[32]Barbara Ehrenreichdecried the NGO leaders as "hypocrites", and wrote that nonviolent activists ought to be "treating the young rock-throwers like sisters and brothers in the struggle." She also criticized the dominant nonviolent paradigm as "absurdly ritualized".[33]The solution to Ehrenreich's impasse was the growing acceptance of black bloc tactics in the anti-globalization movement.[34][35][36]
Duringprotests againstthe2010 G20 summitinToronto,a black bloc riot damaged a number of retail locations including anUrban Outfitters,American Apparel,AdidasStore, Starbucks and many banking establishments.[37][38]
On the day of PresidentDonald Trump'sinauguration in 2017,black bloc groups were present among other protests in Washington, D.C., and other places. The groups engaged in vandalism, rioting, and violence.[39][40]At least 217 were arrested and six police officers sustained minor injuries, and at least one other person was injured.[39][41][42][43][44]
In February 2017, an event at theUniversity of California, Berkeleyby commentatorMilo Yiannopouloswas cancelled by college administrators afterprotestorsof a black bloc broke windows, shot fireworks, and caused a light fixture to catch fire.[45]The cancellation of the event brought mainstream attention to anarchism and black bloc tactics.[46]
In May 2021, Portland protesters in black bloc turned out at multiple rallies and marches that marked the one-year anniversary of themurder of George Floyd.At one event the protesters wheeled a dumpster into the street and set its contents on fire, drawing police out. The rally was declared a riot by police.[47]
Brazil
editDuring theJune–July 2013 mass public demonstrations,groups of people using Black Bloc tactics started attending demonstrations, especially those held across the street from governor of Rio de Janeiro StateSérgio Cabral Filho's residence and the state government palace.[48][49]Police face accusations of infiltrating the movement and, at times, acting as agents provocateurs by starting confrontations. Many leftists claim that video footage shows an infiltrated police officer throwing a molotov cocktail that wounded a riot policeman, although this has been denied by the police and hasn't been proven until today (2017).[50]Protester violence occurred regularly during the Brazilian protests (particularly the week of 17 to 21 June) even when not linked with the black bloc, or with police infiltration.[51][52]
Despite the denunciations by media, police, and even some activists, the black bloc tactic persisted in the movement. By October 2013, "The mask-wearers were welcomed by the protesters who wanted to wreak havoc during manifestations... Indeed, this sense of solidarity amidst the demonstrations, this shared manning of barricades, inspires a common determination to fight against the fear of repression." According to a report by two Brazilian leftists published in Al Jazeera, this coincided with a revival in the breadth of the street protests that had not been seen since its early days in June.[53]On 10 October, the Rio teachers' union (Sepe) officially declared support for the recent black bloc actions, stating that the bloc were "welcome" at their demonstrations. Postings on teacher Facebook groups praised bloc participants as "fearless".[54][55]
Europe
editOn 1 May 2018, over 1,200 black bloc took part in demonstrations in Paris, France. Public infrastructures and stores were damaged.[56]During the demonstrations of theYellow vests movement(autumn 2018-spring 2019) major damage was done by black bloc inParis,ToulouseandBordeaux.The protest resulting in the most significant amount of property damage took place in Paris when protestors took to the streets on theChamps-Élyséeson 16 March 2019.[57][58]
A group of about 400 black bloc demonstrators took part in the2011 London anti-cuts protestwhere they targeted various high end retail outlets; according to journalistPaul Masonthis may have been the largest ever black bloc assembly in the UK. Mason says some of the participants were anarchists from Europe, others were British students who joined the demonstrations after participating in the2010 UK student protests.[59]A black bloc protested the opening of theuniversal expositionExpo 2015in Milan.[60]
Amongst hundreds of thousands of protesters protesting the G20 Summit in Hamburg Germany were thousands of black clad rioters who clashed with police in a 3-day standoff resulting in millions of euros in property damage. At least 500 protestors were injured and more than 200 were arrested.[61]
Egypt
editOn 25 January 2013, on the second anniversary of the Egyptian Revolution, black blocs made an appearance in the Egyptian political scenes where they reportedly[62]attacked various Muslim Brotherhood headquarters and government buildings and stopped traffic and metro lines in more than eight cities.[63][64][65][66][67]A group of young protesters, who identified themselves as the "Black Bloc", have marked the second anniversary of the Egyptian revolution by blocking the tramway tracks in Alexandria on Friday.[68][69][70]Egyptian Prosecutor General Talaat Abdallah ordered the police and armed forces to arrest any participant in the Black Bloc, pointing out that the group was carrying out "terrorist activities"[71]and was considered by the government and under the new constitution a violent radical outlaw group.[72]
Police infiltration
editOn occasion, police and security services have infiltrated black blocs, for purposes of investigation. Allegations first surfaced after several demonstrations. At the 2001G8 summit in Genoa,among the many complaints about the police[73]there was mention of video footage which "suggests that men in black were seen getting out of police vans near protest marches."[74]In August 2007,Quebec policeadmitted that "their officers disguised themselves as demonstrators" in Montebello. However, the officers purportedly did not engage in violence, and claimed that they were carrying rocks because other protesters were doing so. They were identified by genuine protesters because of their police-issue footwear.[75][76]According to veteran activistHarsha Walia,it was other participants in the black bloc who identified and exposed the undercover police.[77]
Tactics
editWhen we smash a window, we aim to destroy the thin veneer of legitimacy that surrounds private property rights... After N30 [30 November], many people will never see a shop window or a hammer the same way again. The potential uses of an entire cityscape have increased a thousand-fold. The number of broken windows pales in comparison to the number of spells—spells cast by a corporate hegemony to lull us into forgetfulness of all the violence committed in the name of private property rights and of all the potential of a society without them. Broken windows can be boarded and eventually replaced, but the shattering of assumptions will hopefully persist for some time to come.
— ACME Collective, quoted in Paris (2003)[78]
Tactics of a black bloc primarily includevandalismof private property,rioting,and demonstrating without a permit. Tactics can also include use of defensive measures such as misleading the authorities, assisting in the escape of people arrested by the police ( "un-arrests" or "de-arrests" ), administeringfirst aidto people affected bytear gas,rubber bullets,and otherriot controlmeasures in areas where protesters are barred from entering, buildingbarricades,resisting the police, and practicingjail solidarity.[79][80][81]Property destruction carried out by black blocs tends to have symbolic significance: common targets include banks, institutional buildings, outlets formultinational corporations,gasoline stations, and video-surveillance cameras.[82]
There may be several blocs within a particular protest, with different aims and tactics.[83]As anad hocgroup, blocs often share no universally common set of principles or beliefs[83]apart from an adherence to—usually—leftist orautonomistvalues, although some anarchist groups have called for the Saint Paul Principles to be adapted as a framework in which diverse tactics can be deployed.[82]A few radical right-wing groups, like some of the "autonomous nationalists"of Europe[84]or the Australian so-called "National-Anarchists"[85]have adopted "black bloc" tactics and dress. The political scientist Nicholas Apoifis, in his ethnography of anarchism in Athens, Greece, argues that black bloc action can constitute a form ofprefigurative politics,due to its "flat and horizontal organisational structure, alongside its focus on solidarity."[86]
See also
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- ^Alexander Cockburn and our readers,"WTO: Workers of the World United?"The Nation,14 February 2000.
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- ^Heath, Renee Guarriello; Fletcher, Courtney Vail; Munoz, Ricardo (29 August 2013).Understanding Occupy from Wall Street to Portland: Applied Studies in Communication Theory.Lexington Books. pp. 108–109.ISBN9780739183229.
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{{cite book}}
:CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^Bacchi, Umberto; Iaccino, Ludovica; Mezzofiore, Gianluca (1 May 2015)."Milan Expo 2015: Violent May Day protests at No Expo anti-capitalist demonstration".International Business Times UK.Retrieved28 June2017.
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Further reading
edit- Albertani, Claudio (2002). "Paint It Black: Black Blocs, Tute Bianche and Zapatistas in the Anti-globalization Movement*".New Political Science.24(4): 579–595.doi:10.1080/0739314022000025408.ISSN1469-9931.S2CID143457869.
- Dupuis-Déri, Francis(2010)."The Black Blocs Ten Years after Seattle: Anarchism, Direct Action, and Deliberative Practices".Journal for the Study of Radicalism.4(2): 45–82.doi:10.1353/jsr.2010.0005.ISSN1930-1189.S2CID145429203.
- Dupuis-Déri, Francis(1 July 2014).Who's Afraid of the Black Blocs?: Anarchy in Action around the World.PM Press.ISBN978-1-62963-046-5.
- Dupuis-Déri, Francis(2019). "Black Blocs: A Complex Case of Radicalism". In Kinna, Ruth; Gordon, Uri (eds.).Routledge Handbook of Radical Politics.New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. pp. 291–302.ISBN978-1-138-66542-2.
- Feigenbaum, Anna; Frenzel, Fabian; McCurdy, Patrick (2013).Protest Camps.London: Zed Books Ltd. pp. 122–128.ISBN978-1-78032-357-2.
- Gautney, Heather (September 2009)."Between Anarchism and Autonomist Marxism".Working USA.12(3): 467–487.doi:10.1111/j.1743-4580.2009.00249.x.
- Gee, Teoman (2001)"Militancy Beyond Black Blocs".Alpine Anarchist Productions.
- Graeber, David (2009).Direct Action: An Ethnography.Oakland: AK Press.ISBN978-1904859796.
- Graeber, David (9 February 2012)."Concerning the Violent Peace-Police: An Open Letter to Chris Hedges".N+1.Retrieved28 May2012.
- Holloway, John;Sergi, Vittorio (2007)."Of stones and flowers – Dialogue between John Holloway and Vittorio Sergi".Dissent!.
- Mohandesi, Salar (2012)"On the Black Bloc."Viewpoint Magazine.
- Paris, Jeffrey (2003). "The Black Bloc's Ungovernable Protest".Peace Review.15(3): 317–322.doi:10.1080/1040265032000130913.S2CID144140995.
- Shantz, Jeff.Active Anarchy: Political Practice in Contemporary Movements.Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books, 2011.
- Black Blocs and Contemporary Propaganda of the Deed,by Jeff Shantz
- Zúquete, José Pedro (1 January 2014). "Men in Black: Dynamics, Violence, and Lone Wolf Potential".Terrorism and Political Violence.26(1): 95–109.doi:10.1080/09546553.2014.849920.ISSN0954-6553.S2CID145418547.
- Green Mountain Anarchist Collective (NEFAC-VT) & Columbus Anti-Racist Action;A Communiqué on Tactics and Organization to the Black Bloc, from within the Black Bloc,Black Clover Press, 2001.
- Van Deusen, David; West, Sean; Green Mountain Anarchist Collective;Neither Washington Nor Stowe: Common Sense For The Working Vermonter,Catamount Tavern Press, this pamphlet shows a genesis of focus from organizing Bloc Blocs to organizing towards a libertarian-socialist society in northern New England.
- Van Deusen, David;On Anarchism: Dispatches From The People's Republic of Vermont,foreword byJeff Jonesof theWeather Underground,Algora Publishing, 2017,ISBN978-1-62894-303-0.
- Van Deusen, David;Van Deusen On North American Black Blocs 1996-2001,The Anarchist Library, 2017.
- Van Deusen, David; Green Mountain Anarchist Collective;On The Question of Violence and Nonviolence As a Tactic and Strategy Within The Social Protest Movement: An Anarchist Perspective,Black Clover Press, 2001.
- Van Deusen, David; Massot, Xavier; Green Mountain Anarchist Collective;The Black Bloc Papers: An Anthology of Primary Texts From The North American Anarchist Black Bloc 1988–2005,Breaking Glass Press, Shawnee Mission, Kansas, 2010.ISBN0-9791671-0-8
- Van Deusen, David;The Rise and Fall of The Green Mountain Anarchist Collective,2015, this article looks at theGreen Mountain Anarchist Collective,why they came to take part in Black Blocs, and how they moved beyond the Black Bloc.