Standing outside the ChĆ© CafĆ©, wedged in a hillside on the University of California San Diego campus, David Morales says āthe radicals there terrified meā the first time he visited in 1987.
Just 18 years old, Morales was bewildered by the political and music scene there. It was alien to his experience growing up in conservative San Diego, a major port for the U.S. navy sandwiched between the massive Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton to the north and the militarized border with Mexico to the south.
Morales quickly warmed to the āincredible mix of cultural expression from students and youth,ā and fell in love with the ChĆ© CafĆ©ās eclectic music shows that spanned reggae to punk rock. He met his future wife at the shed-like cafe and it is a place infused with their familiy’s memories.
After graduating from UCSD in 1996 with a bachelorās degree in communication, the 45-year-old Moralesā focus shifted to his family, and he would only āshow up now and then to an eventā at the space.
Now heās a fixture once more at the ChĆ© CafĆ©, along with other old-timers and a slew of youths, because the UCSD administration is on the verge of booting out the collective, whichhas been running the cafe for 34 years.
Claiming there are safety concerns about the condition of the buildings, the administration is close to securing aĀ five-dayĀ notice to vacate, after months of maneuvering to squeeze both funding and student support.
CafĆ© supporters dispute the claims, pointing out that in April the universityās own facility inspectorĀ concludedĀ that that the space āis looking good in terms of safetyā other than one minor item of concern next to the main building.
Monty Kroopkin, who startedat UCSD in 1970, is the in-house expert on the collectiveās decades-longĀ battlesĀ with the administration. He says the three-building facility was established in 1966 and originally known as the Coffee House Express, or C.H.E. for short. In 1979, after the administration tried to turn it into a faculty club, the students gained control and established the ChĆ© CafĆ©,Ā changing the meaning of the acronym to āCheap Healthy Eats.ā
Since then, the collective has been fending off attempts by the administration to shut the cafe. UCSD officials have invoked health and safety issues repeatedly, going so far as to change the cafeās locks in 2000, before supporters occupied it, forcing the administration to back down. Thatās why Kroopkin, Morales and others are concerned about the looming eviction order, but are not yet hitting the panic button.
The threat of closure has generated an influx of supporters. ChƩ CafƩ recently delivered a petition with 14,000 signatures asking the administration to halt the eviction and negotiate a new lease.
While the administration claims the facility is used mainly by outsiders (which is true of the high-profile and independently-operated La Jolla Playhouse on the UCSD campus), students occupied an academic hall on November 24 in support of the Ché Café. They were alsoopposing planned tuition increases of 28 percent over in the next five in the entire University of California system.
The ChĆ© collective is growing, and members meet regularly to formulate responses to the administrationās moves.
When I popped by on a warmĀ Sunday afternoon in mid-November, they were discussing a university decree that they halt the cafe’s programming; its cultural lifeblood and business model. Before the meeting a handful of us gathered outside, as Moralesā youngest daughter and two friends raced around the patio, past a stenciled painting of an AK-47 emblazoned with the slogan, āNo Gods No Masters.ā
To those whoāve found a home in the ChĆ© CafĆ©, it represents radical possibilities. In 2003 Trevor Stutzman found in the ChĆ© an all-age venue steeped in San Diegoās ārich music history.ā He says at age 15 he was āexposed to a real alternative, a non-hierarchical worker collective. It affects you the rest of your life and how you see the world.ā
While Stutzman attended college elsewhere, he has been a regular at the cafe that is āa bridge between the community and university.ā The others nod in agreement. Kroopkin adds that the cafeās existence raises the question, āIs the universityās role to serve its āclienteleā or is it to serve the broader community?ā
The single-storey wooden buildings are splashed with radical-history murals by painters like Victor Ochoa and Mario Torero, whoseĀ worksĀ are also found in San Diegoās famed (and contested)Ā Chicano Park.
Morales guides me through the eucalyptus grove on the far reaches of the cafe grounds.He reminisces that it’s a place where heās āwatched owls make love,ā to the organic vegetable garden in back. It’s also the place he and his wife buried our eldest sonās placenta.
There I meet Jeanine Webb, studying toward a doctorate in poetics at UCSD, who has been a collective member for three months.
Webb laments, āThere are so few radical spaces left on University of California campuses.ā She argues the administrationās plan is to remove āstudent spaces that provide a place where free thought and culture can exist because they don’t support the neoliberal profit motive and have āuncontrollableā aspects inherent to them.ā
Kroopkin says over the years the university has been hostile to the ChĆ© CafĆ© and the three other student-run cooperatives on campus: the General Store Co-op, Groundwork Books, and the Food Co-op. He explains that they are the only student-run and cooperatively-organized entities at the university with their own revenue streams, bank accounts, payroll and insurance. āThey are legally autonomous,ā Kroopkin says. āNot even the UCSD student government is autonomous, unlike the UCLA or Berkeley bodies.ā
That is the heart of the conflict, says Webb. Spaces like the ChĆ© CafĆ© do not fit into the corporate university, which is why she says the administration wants to āsanitizeā them.
Itās hard to disagree. Whatās happening in the University of California system and the ChĆ© CafĆ© is a microcosm of U.S. society.
Radical spaces
Over time, as the market has extended its tendrils into all parts of daily life, radical spaces have disappeared in much of U.S. society.
In the late 19thĀ century, agrarian grange halls and entire utopian communities were commonplace. Decades later, labor temples, radical coffeehouses, theaters, publishers, bars and bookstores had their heyday along with socialist and communist halls and camps.
While you can still find radical spaces in many college campuses, union halls and cultural spaces, they are all under siege, save perhaps those hosted by progressive religious outfits.
Radical spaces in workplaces, public squares, churches, schools, and neighborhoods are breeding grounds for social movements of every stripe.
Factories have been a primary site of struggle since the industrial era began. Karl Marx argued capitalists would be their undoing, by bringing together laborers under one roof they would realize their common interests as a working class and overthrown the capitalist system.
While that prediction of solely a worker-led revolution seems unlikely to come to pass in an era when production has been outsourced through technology and fragmented around the globe, movements are unmoored without space to incubate, grow and survive.
Occupy Wall Street would never have existed without holding common space in dozens of cities, and it never recovered once it lost those spaces no matter how much activists told themselves, āYou canāt evict an idea.ā
Taking over public space enables everyday life to be reimagined. After Occupy took root in the fall of 2011, I would stand on the steps overlooking Zuccotti Park, just a stoneās throw from the New York Stock Exchange, and watch as hundreds of people clumped in knots exchanged ideas, food, books, technology, art, media, medical care, counseling, clothing, shelter, emotions and more. Not one exchange was mediated by money, which was in sharp contrast to the fevered consumption all around in Manhattan.
Different political and social forms were fermenting, especially ones where the market held far less sway than is normal in daily life.
As powerful and widespread as the protests have been against the failure to indict Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson for killing unarmed Black teen Michael Brown, outbursts in the street canāt replace spaces where community and trust is built, leadership and organization developed, and vision and strategy debated and implemented.
The reason so many radical spaces have closed down is the same reason ChƩ CafƩ is imperiled: money.
Recently one of the most storied alternative spaces in the country, New York Cityās Brecht Forum, shut down. A popular education institute and theater, the Brecht cited financial difficulties as the reason for packing it in after nearly 40 years, but some sources within the organization indicated there was a political decision to turn down substantial funding that could have saved it because it would have likely meant shifting its organizational form or vision.
An activist space in Brooklyn known asĀ The CommonsĀ is filling some of the needs met by a radical space, by providing classes in leftist history and politics. Its funding model is based on the investing savvy of its politically-minded owner, who purchased the building years ago in a depressed area that has gentrified, like much of the city. Thereās nothing wrong with politically-minded philanthropy as the radical left needs all the help it can get.
Another space taking shape elsewhere in Brooklyn aims to be a comprehensive community resource while adapting to market realities. Ana Nogueira and McNair Scott are the principals behind theĀ Mayday Community Space. I worked with the two for years at the New York City Indymedia Center, which got off to a roaring start in 2000, when a left-leaning hactivist donated a midtown office space to the group of media makers.
Noguiera is a former producer at Democracy Now!, and half of the team that made the award-winning film about the Israeli occupation of Palestine,Ā Roadmap to Apartheid. She says her inspiration for Mayday comes from one of her formative experiences as a teenager, āseeing a show at theĀ Wetlands PreserveĀ and discovering a whole world of environmental activism.ā During its 12-year run, Wetlands was located in the Tribeca neighborhood of Manhattan and fused live concerts with environmental activism, but was steamrollered by gentrification in 2001.
Nogueira says she hopes Mayday Space āplays a similar role, drawing people to music shows and introducing them to movements,ā while facilitating āaffordable space for people to use in a city where rents are super high.ā
To do that theyāve formed two separate entities: a for-profit bar, āwhere you come in, put down money, and get a drink,ā and a separate nonprofit community space. The bar has investors who will receive a share of profits. Nogueira says up to 25 percent of the profits will go āto front-line activist groups who need quick infusions of cash.ā She explains itās meant for groups that donāt have the time to apply for grants, offering as possibilities they batted around a protest called on short notice or support needed after a nonviolent direct action.
āOur investors support this vision and mission of sustaining a community space in Bushwick and a rapid-response activist fund,ā Nogueira says. The bar will also subsidize the community space. It got a test run this summer before the Peopleās Climate March after Avaaz andĀ 350.orgĀ paid Maydayās landlord $20,000 for three months use of the space.
Nogeuira says, āIt was amazing to see the place come to life. We couldnāt have picked a better inaugural event. People from across the city saw there was a space that could be a resource and it introduced us to the Bushwick community where weāre located. It introduced the space to movements we want to be connected to, and they got to see what the space could be. And it was a dry run on how to manage a dozen volunteers, create a safe space for everyone, and keep it open for 20 hours a day.ā
They already have a well-known tenant in the form of Make The Road, an immigrant-focused workers center that has successfully agitated for workplace rights and against wage theft in many cases. Nogueira says, āMake The Road is going to host workshops on adult literacy, English classes, and citizenship education in the Mayday Space. We are going to complement that with Spanish classes, tenantsā rights workshops, and legal workshops such as workplace rights and know your rights workshops.ā
The five-member Mayday collective is serious about serving the community, mainly comprised of low-income Puerto Rican and Mexican families. Tenantsā rights is one of the best tools to slow down the maelstrom of gentrification thatās been unleashed on Bushwick by the HBO show,Ā Girls, which is set there.
Nogueira says local groups planning to do workshops in the space include Bushwick Copwatch and Families Against Police Violence. Other projects in the works include starting a rooftop farm with youth in the community and cooking classes
Nogueira says the project holds unknown potential, āWe hope it will facilitate movement building across issues and be a neutral ground to meet where people can cross pollinate. Weāve seen that happen already through the climate organizing where people also ended up discussing police brutality, whatās happening in Ferguson, and NSA spying.ā
Thatās precisely the kind of role ChĆ© CafĆ© has played through its history, says Monty Kroopkin. Its crowning achievement was serving as an organizing hub for the student campaign in the eighties that pressured the University of California to divest more thanĀ $3 billionĀ of investments from companies doing business in South Africa. Nelson Mandela singled out the UC studentsā role in helping topple apartheid when he visited Berkley, California, in 1990 after gianing freedom.
No one knows what the future holds for spaces like the ChƩ CafƩ and Mayday, but their mere existence is a beacon of hope for new movements and activists alike.
To support the Ché Café and for the latest updates, go to checafe.ucsd.edu.The Mayday Space is holding a fundraising campaign to help them open successfully next year.
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