Blockade Adani II - The power of Nonviolent Direct Action
Richard Lawless
Below is a collection of images from my first campaign experiences with nonviolent direct action. Words by Rowan Tilly with a link to the quoted video at the end.
“Non-violent direct action, in its entirety, right from the get go when you start to plan it, right through to the very end when you come out of prison… the whole thing is a dialogue”
“There’s dialogue in the planning - your motivations, your fears, your objectives. Then you get arrested - there’s more dialogue in the police station, and between the action and the press, what gets said about it, and it continues through the court.”
“The whole thing takes place as a dialogue and you’re inviting judgment, you’re inviting people to say what they want to say and say what they think about what you’ve done. So that’s a really important part of nonviolent action, to see it as a dialogue.”
“If it is effective, it will have an element of confrontation in it.”
“We tend to associate confrontation with violence, but it doesn’t need to be violent. It’s creating a tension, and that tension allows the dialogue to take place that will effect change.”
“As an example of that tension that we’re trying to create, if you imagine of a musical instrument, if the strings of that instrument are too slack, you won’t get a note out of it. If they’re too tight, it’s unbearable, you can’t hear it it sounds tinny”
“So to make music that tension has to be absolutely right. And it’s the same with non violent direct action, you need to get the tension of the confrontation absolutely right”
“The confrontation feeds into the dialogue and the dialogue feeds into the confrontation”
“The subtle difference between being non violent and not being violent. It’s a subtle thing. Think of being at the bus stop and nobody is talking. That is nobody talking. Think about a buddhist retreat where the people are ‘in silence’ - it’s a different thing, it’s a different quality of silence. The quality of silence has a sense of intention. It’s the same with non-violence, theres a quality to the people sitting on the bridge or whatever they’re doing - the sense of intention is palpable, people pick up on it. There’s a positive thing happening there”
"Why nonviolence? According to research on conflicts between non-state and state actors around the world between 1900 and 2006, it was found that 53% of nonviolent campaigns were successful as opposed to 26% of campaigns that used violence.
Moreover, of the violent campaigns, 95% had descended into dictatorship or totalitarian rule within five years. Basically if you want a chance at effective change against the state, non violence is the way to go.
Democracy and nonviolence in action
And lastly, some reminders of what we’re fighting for
It's likely that more than half the world population of southern black-throated finches is found on the Adani lease. "These birds will die if the mine goes ahead, simple as that." - Sean Dooley, Birdlife Australia