Can you Imagine The Size Of Freedom?
The team at Mwamko is glad and honoured to announce the call for applications for the inaugural Mwamko Fellowship. This Fellowship, which begins in July 2024, will run annually under the theme Can You Imagine The Size of Freedom?.
This inaugural cohort of the Fellowship will be the Toussaint cohort in honour and recognition of the Haitian revolution and its leadership.
The Toussaint L'Ouverture Cohort
A dedicated space for Pan-African exchange & solidarity
The Touissant cohort will be a convergence of progressive organisers, activists, revolutionaries, movements and organisations working towards fulfilling the aspirations of the Unfinished African Liberation Struggle. The program will enable and facilitate an exchange of thought, ideas and practices around Pan-Africanism, political economy, decolonisation, feminism, ecological sovereignty, solidarity economies, among others. The programme will aim to enable the diverse groups and movements represented in the Fellowship to self-organise and extend solidarity beyond borders in a manner that further advances our shared and diverse struggles.
The program will include (but is not limited to) a series of online sessions, personal readings, collective discussions and creative works. Parts of this programme will be co-designed with the 2024 Fellows.
OBJECTIVES OF THE FELLOWSHIP
- To deepen decolonial discourse and praxis of education and knowledge production in Africa.
- To enable a sharing of experiences and learning among activists and organisers, movements and organisations.
- To enable an understanding of revolutionary Pan-Africanism, political economy, feminism, ecological justice, neocolonialism, and solidarity economy.
- To expand networks of support toward our shared struggles by building solidarity and internationalism toward the Unfinished African Liberation struggle.
PILLARS OF THE FELLOWSHIP
It is important that the activists/organizers/movements applying to this Fellowship program are working on at least one of the thematic areas outlined below:
- Intellectual restoration:
African people, like all other peoples, are bearers of civilizational seeds that have blossomed throughout history. The colonial state worked to ensure that euro-centric worldviews were upheld, while African ways of being and knowing, our intellectual traditions, were treated as mere superstitions and myths. Psychological warfare waged against African people also reinforced, and still reinforces, inferiority complexes that have thrown the African intellectual tradition and the knowledge encapsulated in it, in all its diversity, into disarray.
We aim to discover the principles that undergird our various intellectual and rational orders from our respective homelands and create a renewal and a coming into our own that will reverberate in the multiple states of our being.
2. Economic self-determination
Our view of self-determination is rooted in a solidarity and cooperative economic model that moves beyond the thirst for profit and surplus to the development of the human being and her community. It is only by grounding the movement and the change impulse in the communal setting, as opposed to looking at the nation-state as the site of our development that we will achieve economic self-reliance
Our program is one of moving from a corporatist and overly-mechanised economy to a humane and cooperative economy that is able to draw strength from technological advances made over these past decades. To do this, we will build and deepen economic analysis rooted in solidarity and cooperative economic models, and work towards creating a broad-based anti-capitalist framework.
3. Ecological sovereignty
Today, large multinational corporations are waging war on the sovereignty of land, seed and food systems on the African continent and beyond. As the African savannah disappears to be replaced by an ever-encroaching desert and concrete, our seeds are concurrently being patented and small farm holdings criminalised. Every day, the callous hand of capitalism ravages Africa by grabbing land, extracting precious resources, and polluting Africa’s soil, water, and air.
At Mwamko, we will; explore older and newer responses that underpin a people-centric ecological practice and theory; struggle for the sovereignty of our land, seed and food systems; renew commitment to the land through groundings and material engagement with it; and build solidarity with progressive movements and organisations working on land, food and seed sovereignty.
4. The Unfinished African Liberation Struggle
African people worldwide who struggle daily against systemic, structural and institutional forces are part of an ongoing and unfinished struggle. Honouring that genealogy of resistance, rebellion and revolution and walking with it to the finish line is the only way to complete and full liberation. We state this out of the realisation that our movements didn’t issue out of a vacuum or an emptiness. They come from a historical process that updates and clarifies itself at every turn. Our conjuncture contains within it, the embers and fires of bygone struggles against class, race and gender and these are to be nurtured accordingly. We are not mere accidents of history but it’s very products.
Majority of the issues we are agitating and organising against need political solutions. We must politicise the mass-based dimensions of our organising. In the course of that process, our organisations and movements must remain vigilant and ensure that national mobilisation does not become a tool for the demobilisation of the Pan-African struggle. More importantly, we must never allow our struggles to be used by the anti-people system to legitimise itself.
We must imagine new worlds. Worlds of freedom, joy, rest, love, laughter, food and ecological sovereignty. We must work and struggle towards these not-so-distant lands. We must struggle toward economic democracy anchored in solidarity economies.
Further information to applicants
*Applicants to the 2024 cohort should be engaged in efforts to organise their communities or to extend solidarity across the four pillars outlined above.
*Deadline for submission of applications: 30 May 2024, 5 pm GMT.
*Fellowship dates: July – October 2024. Fellows are expected to commit to the full journey of the fellowship, and to dedicate at least 10 hours every month to fellowship-related processes.
*Fellows should have an open mind and willingness to understand challenging perspectives and contribute to the knowledge-building journey of other fellows.
*The fellowship will be conducted through a series of online sessions and related engagements.
*Applicants should show commitment to develop and deliver action plans that are relevant to the organising spaces they are connected to
*Mwamko will only contact shortlisted applicants.