Mobilizing for a better Toronto and a better world
   
 

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Want your organization's link here? E-mail tsf@ryerson.ca with your request. (Please note: in keeping with WSF guidelines, political parties and partisan events will not be posted.)

Past Events

Here are some of the past events held or sponsored by the Toronto Social Forum. If you have pictures you'd like to share from activist events around the Toronto area, send them in! You can e-mail them to tsf@ryerson.ca.


Thanks for making this year's World Social Forum Day of Action in Toronto such a great success! See pictures from the event, which was held January 26th, 2008.

Click to go to YouTube and rate our film of the event!

Also, check out this video (left) of the rally held at Ryerson University on April 9th:

Land Rights Not Mining Rights: Free Robert Lovelace and the KI-6


 

 

 

 

 

Another US is necessary

Reflections on the US Social Forum 2007 by Judy Rebick, on location in Atlanta, Georgia

"People are asking me when Atlanta has ever seen something like this," Jerome Scott of Project South and long-time Atlanta activist told the opening plenary of the US Social Forum. "I've been reflecting on that, and my answer is: Atlanta has never seen anything like this. The Civil Rights movement was mostly African-American, and last year's May 1st demo was mostly Latinos, but this march was the most multi-national action I have ever seen. It was amazing!"

And indeed, it was. It felt like the youth and the poor and oppressed people of the United States were rising up as one...a glorious day. You can see some photos here.

It is a gathering of the movements of the United States, and especially what they call here the "base-building" movements. Poor people, people of colour, queer and transgendered people, indigenous people, workers, women and a remarkable majority of young people. I've never seen a more diverse crowd, whether from the perspective of colour, age or class. And from the workshops I've attended so far, they are almost all deeply involved in community organizing.

The demonstration on Wednesday was extraordinary. Lively, colourful, musical, noisy, and one of those rare moments that you feel a real sense of history. I had the feeling that no one would forget that they were there on this day when all the people's movements across the United States of America joined together as one to oppose their government and demand justice and peace. The slogan of this US Social Forum is, "Another World is Possible, Another U.S. is Necessary." The people here understand their responsibility to bring down the empire that's destroying the world, but it's also destroying their communities. And therein lies a new basis of solidarity.

Fred Azcarate from the National Planning Committee explained to the opening plenary that he had attended the 2001 World Social Forum in Porte Alegre and came back to discuss with people here the idea of bringing together all the people's movements in the U.S. It took seven years because they wanted to do it right by building the neessary relationships among the grassroots organizations and ensuring the right outcomes.

Having it in Atlanta was symbolic because of the history of the civil rights movement in this city. It is clear that holding the US Social Forum in the US South is an important symbol of the kind of movement here people want to see: a movement, as some say, led by black and brown, who are the most marginalized and the most oppressed. And the racial diversity not only of the participants but of the leadership is remarkable. It is no longer just black and white; indigenous people have pride of place, there is a rainbow of immigrants and children of immigrants: Latino, Chinese, Korean, South Asian, East Asian, every place you can think of and always hyphenated with "American". There are more people with disabilities than I have ever seen at a movement event, and the LGBT presence is visible and proud.

It is also clear, as some of the organizers have said, that this is a process to build the movement. Three days go from consciousness to vision to strategy, and there is a meeting of people's movements at the end. Anyone who thinks that the World Social Forum movement has stalled and doesn't produce any results had better think again.


Quebec Social Forum showcases strong Quebec left

Vastly exceeding the predictions of organizers, more than 5,000 people participated in the first Quebec Social Forum (FSQ) in Montreal last weekend. It was the largest gathering of the Left in the history of Quebec. Facing a rise of the Right in Quebec, consolidated in the last election where the right-wing ADQ (Action Democratique du Quebec) displaced the PQ (Parti Quebecois) as the official opposition, the FSQ showed that the Left is alive and well in Quebec during this difficult time. Read the rest of the article at rabble.ca.


REPORT BACK FROM THE SOCIAL SUMMIT IN COCHABAMBA, BOLIVIA

DATE: Thursday, February 15, 2007, 6:30 - 8:30 p.m.
PLACE: 489 College Street, Suite 302
INFO: Centre for Social Justice

Hear from Canadians who attended the Social Summit of the Community of American Nations in Bolivia in December, 2006. Discuss the latest developments in Bolivia and throughout Latin America.

Presentation and Discussion with:
John Dillon (Common Frontiers)
Judy Rebick, Gindin Chair in Social Justice and Democracy (Ryerson University)
Eduardo Sousa (Council of Canadians)
Carlos Torres (Centre for Social Justice)

Sponsors: Common Frontiers, The Centre for Social Justice, The Gindin Chair in Social Justice and Democracy, Global & Ecumenical Relations Unit of the United Church of Canada.