โEl pueblo unido, jamรกs serรก vencido.โ
The people, united, will never be defeated.
Midnight in Reno was early morning in Madrid, Spain. My plane glided through an abbreviated night over the Atlantic before landing in Europe in the madrugada (dawn).
I recently tripped to Spain for a conference, staying first at a hotel near the famous Puerta del Sol in the heart of Madrid. My husband and I took the subway and arrived at Estaciรณn de Sol and climbed out of the dark metro into the bright light of the Spanish Revolution.
Make that #spanishrevolution (Twitter) or www.democraciarealya .es (Real Democracy Now).
And make the morning damp and gray where tens of thousands marched before Spanish elections weeks earlier. When I arrived in early June, dozens had been camping for several weeks in colonies of Quechua-brand dome tents.
Think Renoโs Tent City meets a politically motivated Burning Man in an alternate universe where everyone speaks Spanish and buys eco-friendly camping gear. Unemploymentโs around 21 percent in Spainโfor youth. Leaders from conservative and liberal parties are under investigation for fraud and corporate kickbacks.
Fed up with limited political choices and furious over lack of representation, Spanish protestors (los indignados) from all walks of life took to the streets on May 15. Police estimated that 20,000 marched in Madrid.
The newspaper El Paรญs interviewed the two men inspired by social media use in Arab democracy movements to kick-start this Spanish revolution. Fabio Gรกndara is 26, unemployed, and has a masterโs degree in urban-planning law. Jon Aguirre is a college student who studies architecture.
โWe are neither anarchists nor working against the system, weโre just ordinary people,โ Gรกndara told El Paรญs. โThe real anti-system people are the sharks who ripped the financial system to shreds,โ Aguirre said.
After May 15, handfuls of protestors with evangelical zeal camped in city centers across Spain. Protesters staffing an info booth at Puerta del Sol gave media interviews, discussed political solutions with passers-by, played drums and gathered email addresses. Though media reported the campโs dismantlement in early June, a core group was still hard at work when my plane left Madrid June 18.
I spotted protest camps a block from Madridโs Prado museum and in Granada. I talked to pro-democracy folks in Ronda. There, protesters (holding but not wearing Guy Fawkes masks) gave me an English translation of the groupโs manifesto.
โWe are ordinary people โฆ who get up every morning to study, work or find a job, people who have family and friends.โ
โWe are all concerned and angry about political, economic and social outlook we see around usโcorruption among politicians, businessmen, bankersโleaving us helpless, without a voice. The situation has become normal, a daily suffering, without hope.
โBut if we join forces, we can change it.โ
Like others in the past year, Spainโs pro-democracy movement is connected and empowered by social media. When news media reported that protests were turning violent, protesters countered with YouTube videos showing peaceful protests interrupted by police in riot gear firing rubber bullets into the crowd.
Despite media coverage, the Spanish revolution is gathering steam. On May 19, a Madrid protest drew 40,000. In Barcelona, 50,000 marched. Across Spain, as I was back in Reno writing this, an estimated 200,000 indignant citizens were on the street.
This much I know: Young people are not apathetic in Spain, the Middle East, China or in the United States. When they actโin Carson City or in Egyptโthey wield power. The old guard should be shaking in its corpocratic shoes. Todayโs youth are knowledgeable and frustrated. They believe democracy can work. They engage with good humor.
A banner in Granadaโs Tent City featured Rosie the Riveter and an English slogan, โYes, we camp.โ
