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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, November 28, 2019
Morales In Bolivia
The country's citizens rose up having been forced into becoming the silent majority, officials in Bolivia are in danger of letting history repeat

Although I am for over a decade a staunch supporter of Evo Morales, I
must admit that, after reading about the confusion after Morales’
disputed electoral victory, I was beset by doubts: did he also succumb
to the authoritarian temptation, as it happened to so many radical
Leftists in power? However, after a day or two, things became clear.
Brandishing a giant leather-bound bible and declaring herself Bolivia’s
interim president, Jeanine Añez, the second-vice president of the
country’s Senate, declared: “The Bible has returned to the government
palace.” She added: “We want to be a democratic tool of inclusion and
unity” – and the transitional cabinet sworn into office did not include a
single indigenous person.
This tells it all: although the majority of the population of Bolivia
are indigenous or mixed, they were till the rise of Morales de facto
excluded from political life, reduced to the silent majority. What
happened with Morales was the political awakening of this silent
majority which did not fit in the network of capitalist relations.
They were not yet proletarian in the modern sense, they remained locked
into their premodern tribal social identities – here is how Alvaro
Garcia Linera, Morales’ vice-president, described their lot: “In
Bolivia, food was produced by Indigenous farmers, buildings and houses
were built by Indigenous workers, streets were cleaned by Indigenous
people, and the elite and the middle classes entrusted the care of their
children to them. Yet the traditional left seemed oblivious to this and
occupied itself only with workers in large-scale industry, paying no
attention to their ethnic identity.”
To understand them, we should bring into picture the entire historical
weight of their predicament: they are the survivors of perhaps the
greatest holocaust in the history of humanity, the obliteration of the
indigenous communities by the Spanish and English colonisation of the
Americas.
The religious expression of their premodern status is the unique
combination of Catholicism and belief in the Pachamama or Mother Earth
figure. This is why, although Morales stated that he is a Catholic, in
the current Bolivian Constitution (enacted in 2009) the Roman Catholic
church lost its official status – its article 4 states: “The State
respects and guarantees the freedom of religion and spiritual beliefs,
in accordance to every individual’s world view. The State is independent
from religion.”
And it is against this affirmation of indigenous culture that Anez’s
display of the bible is directed – the message is clear: an open
assertion of white religious supremacism, and a no less open attempt to
put the silent majority back to their proper subordinate place. From his
Mexican exile, Morales already appealed to Pope to intervene, and the
Pope’s reaction will tell us a lot. Will Francis react as a true
Christian and unambiguously reject the enforced re-Catholisation of
Bolivia as what it is, as a political power-play which betrays the
emancipatory core of Christianity?
If we leave aside any possible role of lithium in the coup (Bolivia has
big reserves of lithium which is needed for batteries in electric cars
and it has featured in a number of theories about what brought down
Morales), the big question is: why is for overt a decade Bolivia such a
thorn in the flesh of Western liberal establishment? The reason is a
very peculiar one: the surprising fact that the political awakening of
premodern tribalism in Bolivia did not result in a new version of the
Sendero Luminoso or Khmer Rouge horror show. The reign of Morales was
not the usual story of the radical Left in power which screws things up,
economically and politically, generating poverty and trying to maintain
its power through authoritarian measures. A proof of the
non-authoritarian character of the Morales reign is that he didn’t purge
army and police of his opponents (which is why they turned against
him).
Morales and his followers were, of course, not perfect, they made
mistakes, there were conflicts of interests in his movement. However,
the overall balance is an outstanding one. Morales not Chavez, he did
not have not oil money to quell problems, so his government has to
engage in a hard and patient work of solving problems in the poorest
country in Latin America. The result was nothing short of a miracle:
economy thrived, poverty rate fell, healthcare improved, while all the
democratic institutions so dear to liberals continued to function. The
Morales government maintained a delicate balance between indigenous
forms of communal activity and modern politics, fighting simultaneously
for tradition and women rights,
To tell the entire story of the coup – and I am in no doubt it is a coup
– in Bolivia, we need a new Assange who will bring out the relevant
secret documents. What we can see now is that Morales, Linera and their
followers were such a thorn in the flesh of the liberal establishment
precisely because they succeeded: for over a decade radical Left was in
power and Bolivia did not turn into Cuba or Venezuela. Democratic
socialism is possible.
