(en) Anarchist Book Fair in Lima, Peru: Report

Last weekend, C. o. participated in the first Anarchist Book and Propaganda Fair in Lima, 
Peru. Here follows his detailed report, including a few comments on the situation of 
anarchists in Peru. ---- Disclaimer: I claim?no, I exclaim!?that this account is 
incomplete and erroneous. It is brought to you through the lens of a North American 
traveler with a less than skillful mastery of the Spanish language. Nonetheless, this is 
how I experienced the First Anarchist Book and Propaganda Fair in Lima, Peru. ---- It?s 
been almost ten years since I came to Peru. The country was about to inaugurate a new 
president, only the second president to take office since the Fujimori dictatorship of the 
1990s. Although ?democracy? had arrived and the Shining Path had largely disintegrated, 
the country wasn?t in good shape.

An incomplete 20-year-old monorail system loomed over the city, casting shadows of past 
leaders? empty promises. The center of counterculture was a graffitied, three-block street 
called Jiron Quilca. It housed an anarcho-punk infoshop, Asko Social, a couple of 
anti-capitalist cultural centers, as well as bookstores and little shops with bootleg 
metal and rock paraphernalia. On Jiron Quilca, I was lucky enough to attend a celebration 
of the 70-year anniversary of the beginning of the Spanish Civil War.?

Today, Jiron Quilca still has much of the same commerce, but its status as a 
countercultural hub has evaporated. Many of the bookstores, music bootleggers, and 
graffiti are still there, but Asko Social and the other anti-capitalist spots are gone, 
and with them much of the street life. A nearby church that owns much of the property has 
run these establishments out, hoping to cash in on the gentrifying downtown. While Jiron 
Quilca seems like a ghost town, the long delayed metro-rail project has been completed, 
and a speedy metro-bus system has been introduced. The neighborhood where Abimael Guzman, 
the leader of the Shining Path guerrillas, was finally arrested?a reputation that you 
might think would drive down property value?is now one of the fastest gentrifying parts of 
the city, with new luxury apartment buildings and a gigantic mall. This was not the city I 
had seen almost a decade ago.

But the anarchist movement has changed too. There is new blood?young blood?and there are 
new ideas as well.?

One of these new ideas was to host Lima`s first-ever Anarchist Book and Propaganda Fair. 
The fair took place the weekend of February 1-2, 2014. It was hosted in the union hall of 
the Federation of Bakers, Star of Peru (Federacion Obreros Panaderos Estrella del Peru), a 
union with anarcho-syndicalist roots founded in 1887.

The day before the book fair, in exchange for use of the space, local anarchists and 
visitors helped repair furniture, fix the bathroom, sweep, and dust the space, and one 
gringo even gave the tall, decaying face of the building a new (albeit mediocre) paint job 
via an incredibly dangerous ladder! The day of the book fair, the space was transformed 
with beautiful, large posters expressing solidarity, impromptu art exhibitions, and red 
and black flags.

??Over twenty different publishers and projects tabled. These included radical media 
projects, a DIY feminist craft collective, regularly published anarchist periodicals, 
authors with their own books on anarchist history, an anarchist hip hop journal, and 
plenty of anarcho-punk distributors. Our C. cell was a proud participant, albeit with a 
meager selection of translations. However, many other distributors had translated 
CrimethInc. texts on their tables as well. If you want to help translate more material, 
please get in touch!

?One of the most popular items on our table was a Spanish version of the Gender Subversion 
poster. An older, conspicuously non-punk woman insisted on paying one of the neighboring 
tablers for the poster even though the ex-worker staffing the table was not present. When 
this ex-worker returned, the neighbor recounted this woman?s enthusiasm and background. 
She grew up in a shantytown of Lima known for an especially high level of 
self-organization. The women of this area self-organized public kitchens, education 
committees, and sewage and electricity projects. In what became one of the highest-profile 
murders of the era, a socialist woman who led these efforts was eventually assassinated by 
Maoist Shining Path rebels who were suspicious of anyone organizing outside their 
authority. This book fair attendee had a granddaughter who raps and skateboards, who is 
criticized for not acting girly enough. The grandmother was excited to give her 
granddaughter the poster and to continue the tradition of strong, self-determined women 
that she grew up around during the Shining Path conflict.

Three kinds of presentations took place during the weekend: Talleres, which were more or 
less skillshares; Foros, forums for discussions of ideas and action; and presentations on 
current projects or newly published anarchist material. Many of the workshops and foros 
were also accompanied by newly published zines on their respective topics.??The workshops 
included capoeira, wood and linoleum printmaking, and anarchist poetry. There were forums 
on intra-movement work and cooperation, anarcho-syndicalism, anarcho-primitivism, free 
love, revolutionary violence vs. terrorism, the anti-mining conflicts in Cajamarca, and 
anarchist internationalism in regards to the legacy of the war of the Pacific that pitted 
Chile against Peru and Bolivia.??

Authors presented on a book about the history of Chilean anarchism between 1890 and 1990 
and herbal healing and medical self-determination. There was also a brief but 
well-received presentation about the Ex-Worker podcast.??

The space was drug and alcohol free, something anarchists in Lima seem to be experimenting 
with recently. This is a change from the Spanish Civil War anniversary during my last 
visit, at which many audience members had beer in their hands. To illustrate this trend, 
one local show space has been successfully hosting drug and alcohol free punk shows. One 
of the reasons for this is to avoid provoking repression, but many of the punks who live 
there have young children as well. This might also explain why the book fair had an 
enthusiastically attended childcare space with mats to play on, art projects, books, and 
fantastic volunteers.

In the middle of the first day, time was set aside in the tabling area for tablers to 
present their projects, explain why they were there, and express what they hoped to get 
out of the book fair. This turned out to be intimate and beautiful; perhaps book fairs in 
the US could try it. One presenter made a humble and touching speech: ?I believe every 
anarchist is a propagandist, whether we are talking to people on the street, our family, 
or our friends. Just because I am behind a table with books and you are in front of it 
doesn?t mean you know anything less about anarchism than I do. We all have something to 
learn from each other.??

In an interview carried out by the ex-worker, one of the book fair organizers explained 
the idea behind holding this book fair: ?We consider it very important to resist the whole 
set of distortions, defamations, and falsifications that are perpetrated by the means of 
power. This includes the press and even the realm of academia, which many times has 
attempted to silence, or make us forget, the history of anarchism, which has had a very 
important presence in Peru?s history. And also, to show that anarchists are involved in 
lots of different kinds of things. We?re hosting this book fair to promote the idea that 
people can assemble their own texts, edit their own texts, and disseminate them in spaces 
like this. Anarchists aren?t just involved in confrontations at demonstrations?I mean, 
they are doing that, but we?re doing other things too. So, we?re resisting this narrow 
view of anarchism and hopefully making people realize that anarchism is an alternative, 
one that can be fulfilled. Hopefully even more people can participate in the next book 
fair, and I believe were getting there, little by little.?

??Another participant explained her enthusiasm for the event: ?Many times when we have 
been in different conversations we have said ?Well, we see the same faces? and what we 
would really like is for other people, like young people like we see that are here, for 
them to be here, for them to be with us, sharing a different environment, a different type 
of thing that they don?t get to see in school, that they don?t get to see in the streets, 
that they don?t get to see in the TV or on the radio, nowhere. That?s the most important 
thing, for people that are not in these places to actually get to connect with these types 
events, these types of conversations, these types of talks, these types of relationships. 
Because the type of relationships we have is very much different from the type of 
relationship you see outside, which is mainly a type of mercantile relationship, an 
exchange, you talk to that person because you`re going to buy something or you talk to 
that person because you work with them. It?s all because of a capitalist relationship. 
What we?re harvesting here, in these places, is another type of relationship, a 
relationship of a different type of society that is not on a basis of money or 
exploitation or anything like that. And the thing is finding out how??

??At the end of the last day, a very old man from the Bakers? Federation, the union who 
shared their union hall for the book fair, shared some words. He spoke for five minutes, 
and concluded, ?This is a space that serves every comrade. It doesn?t belong only to our 
union, it belongs to anarchism? It animates me to see so many young people here. In you, 
the young, I put my faith that you will use this meeting as a step to reignite a 
revolutionary struggle. This is not the first anarchist meeting to take place here, and we 
hope it will not be the last. I can see that the libertarian vein runs through your bodies.???

After a loud round of applause and cheering, the book fair spontaneously transformed into 
an unstructured assembly for people to share their experiences, news about recent 
repression, and ideas for the future. Then someone took out a caj?n, guitar, and kazoo, 
and people sang, danced, and rapped until it was time to leave.

??While cleaning up, my Peruvian hosts and I discussed the book fair. Overall, people left 
energized and inspired. They said that their only real complaint was that there were not 
more people from Lima who attended. As an outsider but also as a comrade who has attended 
my share of anarchist book fairs, I hope that I impressed upon them what a success their 
event was, and that they worked together spectacularly. From South America to North 
America, a la mierda la autoritad!