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The Magazine

We Are Not America

Photo of Abya Yala known as the “Americas” taken at the Somos Abya Yala 2016 Encuentros Continentales in Guatemala. Photo credit Danilo Zuleta.

Somos Abya Yala (We are Abya Yala) is an autonomous youth-led regional communications network and face-to-face convener of people around the region created in 2014 that connects grassroots organizations, Original Peoples, people of African descent, peasants, and social movements.  Our collective efforts and areas of work seek to align people across constituencies and borders to promote principles, processes, and practices that build economic and political power to shift away from capitalism, settler colonialism, border imperialism, and all extractive ideologies. Through our communications and youth Encuentros (gatherings), we work to build awareness, influence public discourse, reclaim the narrative, and shift the paradigms of what it means to be the people of Abya Yala, our beloved fertile land. 

Why Abya Yala? 

Abya Yala is a term derived from the Guna language of the Kuna nation (what is now the North region of Colombia and the Southeast region of Panama) which means “land in full maturity” or “land of vital blood” and rejects ideas of the Americas as the discovery of the “New World.” In the 1980s the World Council of Indigenous Peoples during the Second Continental Summit of Indigenous Peoples and Nationalities in Kiruna, Sweden had increasingly referred to the Americas as Abya Yala, enacting an Indigenous locus of cultural and political expression to decolonize epistemologies, fostering dialogue and creating alliances. By July 1990, the Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of Ecuador (CONAIE) together with the National Indigenous Organization of Colombia (ONIC) and the South American Indian Information Center (SAIIC) organized the First Continental Conference on Five Hundred Years of Indigenous Resistance. Hundreds of leaders and organizations throughout the continent formed a united front for autonomy and self-government, and Abya Yala gained broader use.

Since then, using Abya Yala has been a way of removing colonial vestiges, reclaiming our millenary past, and destroying the legacy of Spanish colonizers who slaughtered, enslaved, raped, robbed, and forced Christianity upon our ancestors. The defense of our traditions, beliefs, and knowledge is central to the struggle for our definite social liberation as a people. Today thousands of nations, such as the Mapuche from Chile, the Quechua from Peru, and the K’iche from Guatemala have embraced the term because it is a constant act of resistance to the Western world. Abya Yala is part of our ancestral heritage and our connection to our territories as communities. It also acknowledges the relationship between the Original peoples of North, Central, and South America before 1492. It is also about fulfilling our ancestors’ dream of sovereignty and creating a new level of intergenerational collective consciousness. It is about continuing to be the caretakers of  Pachamama(Mother Earth), protecting our lands, respecting wildlife and passing down our food system, spiritual traditions and millennial knowledge to future generations. It is about reclaiming Quiénes Somos (who we are).

How was Somos Abya Yala formed, and what are the thematic areas of focus? 

Somos Abya Yala was born at the continental youth gathering called “Youth Rooted in Resistance, Seeding Sovereignty” held in June 2014 in Sanare, Venezuela by SOA Watch, a nonviolent grassroots movement working to close the SOA / WHINSEC to expose and denounce and end US militarization, oppressive US policies, and other forms of state violence in the Americas. Youth from that gathering kept in touch and formed Somos Abya Yala. Two years after we put together our second continental youth gathering called “ Youth Waiving Life and “Youth Weaving Life and Popular Unity in Our America” held in “Petén Guatemala” in March 2016, where our major working areas were formed around the following issues: Confronting extractivism, militarism, capitalism, imperialism, and corporate power in the rural areas of our beloved Abya Yala. To stand against powerful economic and political interests driving land theft, displacement of communities, loss of livelihoods, and environmental degradation. Also, to restore the role of hope in social movements. We committed to the fierce struggles of rural working classes led by Original People’s movements, poor peasants, Black communities, landless people, immigrants, and urban communities in resistance – against neoliberal global capitalism. During our third continental youth gathering, called “We Are Abya Yala” we reinvigorated our own cosmovisions of buen vivir (living well) that destabilized mainstream notions of the political. We committed to uniting North, Central, Caribbean, and South of our beloved Abya Yala through continental youth gatherings to strategize and build power, nurture solidarity, and forge Un Mundo Donde Quepan Muchos Mundos (a world where many worlds fit) through autonomy as a response to injustices generated by neocolonialism.

Somos Abya Yala takes on this work through a two-pronged strategy using Continental Youth Encuentros for strategic alliances and communications work. Through our communications, we work to build awareness, reclaim the narrative, and shift paradigms, consciousness, and agency. We have the two following media platforms: 

Somos Abya Yala Magazine

Somos Abya Yala Magazine brings you inside cultures and struggles across Abya Yala since 2015. We share our ways of life, spirituality, vision, celebrations, and our fight for dignity & sovereignty all with stunning photography, poetry, art, music, and intimate insights from youth experts sharing about their communities. We have published 23 issues to help support our efforts for our relatives across the continent to keep their lands, languages, and cultures. You are welcome to suggest topics and read our past issues here:
https://bit.ly/SomosAbyaYalaMagazine

Radio a Desalambrar (Dewiring Podcast)

Radio Desalambrar is produced by youth leaders and adult allies who bring you the latest information on human rights, news headlines, and in-depth interviews with people on the front lines of Abya Yala’s most pressing issues. You’ll hear diverse voices speaking for themselves, providing a unique and sometimes provocative perspective on local, regional, and global events. Listen to, download, and share our 20 programs for free at https://bit.ly/Adesalambrar, on Spotify and YouTube. Our material includes interviews, discussions on social movements, and the strategies that frontline communities use to realize their rights. You can find them on

Contact Us: info@somosunaamerica.org / somosunaamerica@gmail.com

http://somosunaamerica.org

 

*English translation credit Natalia Patiño. 

*Editorial English translation credit Lucia Parson.

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About the Authors

Jorge Andrés Forero-González, also known as Achiote, is the son and grandson of campesinos with ethnic Muisca heritage from Boyacá, Colombia. He has 12 years of experience in the public sector, specializing in peace building, urban and rural youth programs, human rights advocacy, social movements, and non-profit management.

Forero-González is a co-founder and member coordinator of the international platform, Somos Abya Yala-Somos una América, a board of directors member of Crushing Colonialism, and works as a researcher, writer, and consultant focusing on environmental and land conflicts in Colombia and Latin América.