The Mapuche are an Indigenous people of south-central Chile and southwestern Argentina whose name in MapudungunâMapu (âlandâ) + che (âpeopleâ)âliterally means âpeople of the land,â a phrase that signals how tightly their identity is woven to territory, language, social structures and spiritual cosmology; historically concentrated in what they call Wallmapu, the Mapuche maintained autonomous polities and mounted sustained resistance first to Inca expansion and then to Spanish colonial conquest (most famously after the 1598 uprising that produced centuries of effective independence in large parts of AraucanĂa), before facing 19th-century military campaigns by the Chilean and Argentine states that radically altered their land base. Social life is organized around the lof (local community) and larger regional groupings, with leadership roles such as the lonko (chief) and the werken (spokesperson), and a religious-ritual specialist, the machi, who performs healing, divination and ceremonies tied to a rich cosmology of spirits (ngen) and a creator/ancestral force often referred to as Ngenechen. Mapudungun, the Mapuche language, remains a core marker of identity and is the focus of revitalization and bilingual education efforts alongside widespread use of Spanish; cultural expression includes distinctive weaving and textile arts, silverwork and jewelry, oral history, poetry, and music, as well as culinary traditions and the construction of the ruka (traditional house). Economically many Mapuche have combined subsistence and market agriculture, livestock rearing and artisanal production with wage labor in regional towns, while contemporary political life features strong movements for land recovery, cultural recognition, indigenous rights and environmental protectionâdriven by community assemblies, legal claims, and sometimes confrontational protestâbecause loss of ancestral territory to forestry, agriculture and infrastructure projects remains a central source of social tension. Despite centuries of dispossession and state pressure, Mapuche communities have shown resilient cultural adaptation: language and ritual continue to be practiced alongside modern forms of organization, and Mapuche intellectuals, artists and activists play visible roles in national debates about multiculturalism, autonomy and reparative justice; demographically they number in the hundreds of thousands, with vibrant urban and rural populations whose experiences and political demands are diverse but rooted in a shared history and commitment to cultural survival.
A Mapuche resistance group fighting against the historic discrimination and extreme poverty their people have suffered for centuries. They are heavily focused on combating the exploitation and expropiation of their ancestral lands.
Weâve come here as anarchists, to learn about the Mapuche struggle, to tell about our own struggles, to see where we have affinity, and begin creating a basis for long-term solidarity.
âThe Left consider the Mapuche as just another sector of the oppressed, an opinion we donât share. Our struggle is taking place in the context of the liberation of a people. Our people are distinct from Western society.â Moreover, the Mapuche people have a proud history of fighting invasion, resisting domination, and organizing themselves to meet their needs and live in freedom, so their own worldview and culture are more than sufficient as an ideological basis for their struggle.
This point is stressed by nearly everyone we meet, and I think our ability to become friends and compañeros rests directly on the fact that we respect their way of struggle rather than trying to incorporate them into our way of struggle.
Itâs an exciting time to be in Wallmapu. All the communities in resistance are united behind the hungerstriking prisoners, but behind the scenes, important debates are taking place. The hungerstrike, based directly on the ongoing struggle (all the Mapuche prisoners are accused or convicted of crimes related to land recovery actions, such as arsons targeting the forestry companies, or related to conflict with the Chilean state, such as the seizing of a municipal bus or a shooting that gave a good scare to a stateâs attorney), has focused the Mapuche nation and captured the attention of the entire Chilean population. It has won a popular legitimacy for the Mapuche struggle, undermining the demonization of the direct tactics they use and weakening the governmentâs position in casting these tactics as terrorism. In this situation, the Mapuche can go beyond calls for greater autonomy or land reform within the Chilean state.
âThe so-called Mapuche conflict doesnât have a solution. The demands we have necessitate a break with the framework of the state. What we demand is sovereignty and Mapuche independence. We consciously propose the historical foundations of these demands [...] Our struggle is fundamentally opposed to capitalism and the state [...] I believe we have to open a space internationally to spread our demands. The Mapuche struggle has to be internationalist, as the struggle of a people. Many of the things that affect us, like capitalism and the states that represent it, the US, the EU, are an enemy to peoples, First Nations as much as oppressed classes around the world, and thatâs a point of concordance.â
During my time in Wallmapu, I think a lot about what it means to be a people. From the traditional anarchist standpoint, a people or a nation is an essentializing category, and thus a vehicle for domination. However, it becomes immediately clear that it would be impossible to support the Mapuche struggle while being dismissive of the idea of a people.
Hopefully by this point all Western anarchists realize that national liberation struggles arenât inherently nationalist; that nationalism is a European mode of politics inseparable from the fact that all remaining European nations are artificial constructions of a central state, whereas in the rest of the world (excepting, say, China or Japan), this is usually only true of post-colonial states (like Chile or Algeria) that exist in direct opposition to non-state nations. Many other nations are not at all homogenizing or centrally organized.
So if Mapuche is a chosen identity based on a very real shared history, shared culture, and ongoing collective debate of strategy, is it actually all that different from the identity of anarchist? Well, yes: it has a longer history, tied to a specific geographic territory and cultural-linguistic inheritance. Anarchism also contains a greater diversity of worldviews, but on the flipside no one I met tried to present the Mapuche as homogenous, even as they talked about a Mapuche worldview.
In sum, the concept of belonging to a people brings a great deal of strength to the Mapuche struggle. Because the state falls outside of and against that people and their history, I find some elements of the Mapuche reality, of their world, to be a more profound realization of anarchy than I have found among self-identified anarchists. And considering that those anarchist movements that have been able to maintain just 40 years of historical memory (Greece, Spain) are consistently stronger than anarchist movements that have a hard time even understanding the concept of historical memory (US, UK), it is no surprise that the Mapuche, who maintain over 500 years of historical memory, are so strongly rooted that they seem impervious to repression.
July 17, 2022 - Sabotage of a company that supplies logging companies on occupied Mapuche territory. The militant Mapuche organisation CAM dedicated the action to Pablo Marchant, a CAM member who was murdered by Chilean police a year before. [video]/[link]
ES:
DeclaraciĂłn del PrĂncipe Federico I, de Araucania y Patagonia, con motivo del Bicentenario del Tratado de Tapihue del 7 de enero de 1825 - Discurso a los Lonko del Parlamento Ancestral Mapuche
EN:
Declaration of Prince Frederic I, of Araucania and Patagonia, on the occasion of the Bicentenary of the Treaty of Tapihue of 7 Jan 1825 - Address to the Lonkoâs of the Mapuche Ancestral Parliament