About group

Chto delat?

The platform Chto delat/What is to be done? was founded with the goal of merging political theory, art, and activism in early 2003 in Petersburg by a
workgroup of artists, critics, philosophers, and writers from Petersburg, Moscow, and Nizhny Novgorod. It originally consists of following members:

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Declaration

A Declaration on Politics, Knowledge, and Art

Our Principles: Self-Organization, Collectivism, Solidarity

The Chto Delat platform unites artists, philosophers, social researchers, activists, and all those whose aim is the collaborative realization of critical and independent research, publication, artistic, educational and activist projects. All of the platform’s initiatives are based on the principles of selforganization and collectivism. These principles are realized through the political coordination of working groups—the contemporary analogue of soviets.
The projects undertaken by any of these groups represent the entire platform and are closely coordinated with one another. At the same time, the existence of the platform creates a common context for interpreting the projects of its individual participants. We are likewise guided by the principle of solidarity. We organize and support mutual assistance networks with all grassroots groups who share the principles of internationalism, feminism, and equality.

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Rush /// We Have to Take People to the Next Level PDF Print E-mail
Written by RASH   
Saturday, 23 February 2008 13:47

At first I was in one of the communist parties. There, it was all "Jawohl, mein Fuehrer!" They did everything they did because that's what Lenin wrote. It was round then that I first read Kropotkin's and Bakunin's books about anarchy. That is why I left the party and became an anarchist.

The RASH movement [Red and Anarchist Skinheads] emerged here in 2003-2004. I was the first RASH. Nearly all of us were anarcho-punks who became anarcho-skinheads. We take part in demos. We publish pamphlets, broadsides, and a newspaper [Frontline, available for download at www.redskins.ru]. I am also involved in the skinhead and punk subcultures, so I organize concerts and do propaganda work within these groups. If folks react, we work with them. We try and develop them physically; we conduct training classes in martial arts and self-defense. When you go to an antifa concert there's a risk you'll be attacked by Nazis. If you're not prepared to defend yourself, the attack will probably end badly for you.


I've been in the hospital once with stab wounds. There's this [weekly] anti-war protest. First it was attacked, but the protesters fought off [the Nazis]. We figured there would be another attack the following week so we put a group together and went to defend the protest. It wasn't attacked, but after it was over we split up. There were seven guys with me, and something like twenty-five or thirty [skinheads] jumped us.

I've never been attacked at a concert, especially because I became more careful after this incident. At concerts, it is mainly the folks who let their guard down who get attacked-they go out to get beers by themselves or they walk from the metro to the concert alone. You absolutely shouldn't do this.

Xenophobia has always been very well developed in Russia. In the early part of the twentieth century there was the Union of the Russian People. It was essentially a Nazi party and it carried out pogroms against Jews. There was something like half a million people in this organization. Xenophobia didn't just emerge in the nineties, and it isn't a western import. When parents scream, "The wogs have flooded the streets!" or "It's all the fault of the Jews!" their children listen to this. Then those same kids see upper-form students who are "boneheads." For some reason they decide these guys are cool and they join them. Most of them, though, get tired of it quickly or they run into trouble-with the police, for example. And now we're on the beat, and they might run into us.

For me, anti-fascism is one aspect of the anarchist struggle. On the whole, there are good prospects for the development of Nazism in Russia. Right now the Nazis are moving to a new level; they're giving up Hitlerism. They're basing themselves on their "historic" roots: national patriotism, the Black Hundreds movement. This is the direction they're moving in, and they're members of organizations like DPNI (The Movement Against Illegal Immigration) or the Slavic Union. A lot of folks get worked up over these ideas: God, Tsar, great power status, empire. The Hitlerists don't have a leg to stand on here in Russia: the majority associates National Socialism with evil. But national patriotism, orthodox patriotism bordering on Nazism, could really take root.

Nowadays there are quite a lot of immigrants, and the standard of living is fairly low. Why did the Nazi skinhead movement in England get a head of steam [in the seventies]? Because there were problems and there was someone to blame the problems on: foreigners. It's the same way now: [Russia has] social problems that can be blamed on others. And the authorities are playing both sides of the court: they come out publicly against Nazism, but on the other hand they promote it in all sorts of clandestine ways as a safety valve for the working class. So that the people don't blame the government, but blame the foreigners instead.

It is really stupid people who carry out the attacks. Either they're commissioned to do them or the idiots do them on their own initiative. In Moscow, the veteran boneheads say that these Petersburg midgets who butcher Tajiks have to be whacked because they don't achieve anything this way. The Tajiks will still keep coming-the country is going to the dogs. But because the skinheads butcher Tajiks, they get a reputation as extremists and murderers. The police give them a real hard time; they don't let them hold concerts. They lose money and they lose the folks they could have recruited at these shows.

People are so indifferent about racist attacks because they believe that the police should deal with them. Most policemen, however, are xenophobes themselves. I've been beaten up at the police station just for being antifa. Several times it's happened that the policeman rolls up his sleeves and there's a swastika on his arm. An ex-Nazi (or a current Nazi) and he's employed by the police!

*****

I worked actively to form a housing co-op in the building where I live. In theory, a co-op is a tiny libertarian cell. But everyone said, "What are you talking about? We can't run our own building. Let's leave everything to the state housing authority. The state won't rob us."

I also participate in the workers movement. It's also quite hard to explaining some things to them. Let's organize a union, you tell them. "We have a union already." Yeah, a shitty union, a state-run union that engages in appeasement.

All the guys at work are Gastarbeiters. If you say anything to them about unions, about fighting for your rights, they say, "What are you on?! All we worry about is that they don't depart us back to Tajikistan tomorrow." What needs to happen is that local workers start supporting each other first, and then start supporting the migrant workers.

But there are positive examples: the union at the Ford plant, grassroots groups like Living City and Save Yuntolovo. We try and interact with them-to help them grow and to use them as examples in our conversations with people: "People up and saved their local park. You can do this, too." Right now I hope we'll be able to get a movement on its feet in the neighborhood of the Politekhnicheskaya metro station, where the authorities are planning to demolish the Khrushchev-era housing blocks and relocate the residents God knows where. We plan to organize residents committees. But we don't to be an avant-garde-just a wind that will give them a little nudge so that they do everything themselves.

Because otherwise people don't want to live their own lives. That is why my work aims to help people at least think with their heads and take action in their daily lives. People are uneducated and unprepared. We have to take them to the next level. When they get the experience of this form of struggle under their belts, then we'll be able to do this.

 

 
 

Language

Current events

What is to be done?... The urgent need to struggle. Part 01

First solo show at Nova Galeria in Zagreb on 8th of June

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EXHIBITIONS

Chto Dealt participate at the exhibition at Riso, museo d’arte contemporanea della Sicilia

OTHERS

Le biennali d'arte di Marrakech Istanbul Atene a Palermo e Catania


 


12.05.2010  – 06.09. 2010

The Potosí Principle. How shall we sing the Lord’s song in a strange land? Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid

see concept of the exhibition project here >>>>

blog http://potosiprincipleprocess.wordpress.com/

 

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CONFERENCES

 

Николай Олейников участвует в дискуссии

Город активистов
3 августа, вторник, 19:00–21:00.
Институт Медиа, Архитектуры и Дизайна "Стрелка". Двор.

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Living Politically: A 48-Hour Communal Life Seminar

Jan van Eyck Academie, Maastricht, the Netherlands,
Friday 2 July, 10:00 – Sunday 4 July, 10:00

The Jan van Eyck Academie is hosting Living Politically: A 48-Hour Communal Life Seminar. The Communal Life Seminar is an initiative of the Chto Delat collective and the Vpered Socialist Movement (Russia) as a response to the acute need to establish alternate forms of collectivity. The fundamental principle of this seminar is that its participants constitute a temporary community for the duration of the event. By combining research, creative work and daily living, they are transformed into a commune.

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