The struggle for a new society in Brazil: Interview with landless workers'
movement activist
Editor's Note: The following is an interview with Monica Dias Martins, an
activist with the Brazilian Landless Workers' Movement (Movimento dos
Trabalhadores Rurais sem Terra, or MST). First formed in 1979, it now has
over 500,000 members and has engaged in innumerable land occupations and
protests. The interview was conducted on Nov. 2 by Peter Hudis.
Lou Turner
Could you tell us about the overall emphasis of the MST's work in this period?
The issue for the MST is not land reform per se. It starts with the problem
of land but addresses a host of other questions-like production, education,
socialism, and radical thought. We realize that we can't just occupy the
land, we have to also change the production relations. Goods like the
machines, the trucks, cannot be divided; there has to be social ownership
of the property by all the families. The land that is occupied doesn't
belong to the movement or the state, but to the group or family who are the
direct producers.
Everything is decided collectively. First, the people have to plan how to
use the land. Second, they have to create a fund to make various
improvements. In the process of discussing this the people start thinking
about what profit means in terms of the social process. Questions arise
like how to share the profit. How much of it should go to schools? How much
for health care and child care? The occupations have led to the discovery
of a cooperative labor process. It has emerged from the struggle itself.
This does not just happen on a small scale. Some of the settlements contain
over 800 families.
When we take goods to the market other problems arise. We want to show that
our system of cooperative work is better than the capitalist one. We want
to have an alliance with workers in the cities. Sometimes the producers
write small papers in their own hand and place them inside the bags of corn
or beans to tell others about how they're trying to produce in a different
way.
We understand that the Marxist theory is very important in creating a
production process for a new society. So besides working, everyone has to
have time for study. You work in the morning and study in the afternoon.
What you study relates to what you do. The schools are in the settlements.
You as a teacher have to work in the morning doing manual labor, since you
have to provide for your own means of subsistence. But someone has to
systematize the experiences, write everything down, so we don't lose all
these experiences.
In addition to discussions in the settlements, we have local, state and
national seminars each year, where we exchange knowledge about the
different things that we have done. From these meetings, strategies are
worked out concerning political change, governmental change and changing
capitalism. We take those discussions back to the settlements and have a
new exchange of ideas.
Would you say that the MST is consciously trying to break down the division
between mental and manual labor in light of this century's failed
revolutions?
I don't know if it was so clear from the beginning but now it is very
clear. It's not only the landless who have to study but also the
intellectuals by coming to the settlements and seeing how they work. The
grassroots movement from the church has argued that you have to be poor,
you have to be desperate, you have to abandon everything about being an
intellectual and become a worker. But the landless movement does not have
this prejudice. They accept intellectuals, but not to direct them. They
direct themselves.
I used to be a member of a revolutionary party, but I couldn't remain with
it. They thought it was good I was with the landless workers so that I
could direct them. But I said, I'm not there to be a transmission belt
between the popular mass movements and the party.
The educational process in the settlements, taking radical actions,
engaging in radical thinking-these are the issues that interest me when I
think of changing society. Many of the political parties say we shouldn't
discuss these things now because the important thing is the elections.
First let's win the elections, they say, then we'll discuss the problems of
women and the landless. I don't believe in this. Elections change so
little. We cannot wait. It's just like during the Spanish Civil War, when
the masses wanted to change production relations right away but the parties
told them to wait.
Is there discussion in the settlements about how to avoid the problem of a
new bureaucracy emerging after the revolutionary seizure of power?
You can't teach someone to be revolutionary. You can have socialist ideas
but if you don't change your process you can become as authoritarian as the
others. In the educational work we study Marx, Lenin, Gramsci, Che,
Luxemburg and others. The landless have respect for these people because
they had important ideas about social change. Even though they didn't
succeed, they are part of the process of learning how to create a new
society.
This is a very amazing and challenging movement, because every time we
think we have a solution to a problem, another one emerges. It never stops.
We cannot say: now I have socialist knowledge, so let me promote this as
the model. It's never that. All the time we are so busy trying to figure
out another problem, concrete social problems. We believe we are making the
social changes now that could lead to socialism in Brazil.
Have problems been encountered in breaking down sexism and the sexual
division of labor in the cooperatives?
Some think: I'm going to do revolution outside the house-but inside my
house I'll be very traditional. All the time that we're together, we try to
observe what is going on and discuss how to be different. It's part of
making the changes from inside us.
The women were the first to act during the land occupations. Women working
in the cooperatives receive as much pay as the men. Also, instead of women
doing the food in each case, or men doing it for each family, there is some
rotation. There are big changes that I've seen, but I don't see big changes
between women and men in terms of the interpersonal relations.
Has the MST developed relations with the feminist and Black movements in
Brazil?
Yes, and in an interesting way. I work in the Northeast of Brazil, which is
very conservative. We were invited to a meeting of women in the South,
where they are much more progressive in terms of women's issues. I helped
coordinate a meeting with 400 other women. It was big; everything the MST
does seems to be big. We met for four days in August 1997. We discussed
things like what is the role of women, how do we organize a household, what
should happen in the kitchen, what kinds of relations occur in the bedroom,
and so on. We discussed the organization of society, the public and private
relations between men and women.
The Black movement is strong in Brazil. Its roots go back to Quilombo [the
independent republic founded by escaped slaves]. They had a cooperative
production process as well. The MST has relations with several Black
organizations. As with the feminist movement, it's not with one
organization in particular. Many MST activists attend mobilizations put on
by Black organizations in the cities.
Could you mention just a few of the theoretical issues being discussed by
the MST recently?
The MST has a newspaper as well as a magazine that is more theoretical.
There is also an internal journal for the activists. The question of
neoliberalism has been raised and discussed in the MST newspaper. We are
discussing whether this globalization process is really something new or is
imperialism that has developed in a new form. We really are in a different
and new moment, so we decided that we should study people like Rosa
Luxemburg to see what she had to say on issues like imperialism. Some in
the MST have criticized Lenin's views of this. There is a ferment of ideas.
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