The Asian Age

The young are claiming the earth

Wong is just 18 and has emerged as the face of the Hong Kong protest movement; Al- Kishi is 19 and is serving prison sentence in Bahrain for organising poor Shia demonstrat­ors; Poe, 25, is one of the mobilisers of black minorities in Missouri, US

- Sreeram Chaulia

What is common among Joshua Wong, Akbar Ali al- Kishi and Tef Poe? All three happen to be remarkable activists for social justice and freedom in their respective societies who are shockingly young.

Wong is just 18- years- old and has emerged as the face of the Hong Kong student protest movement that has rocked authoritar­ian China in the last few months. AlKishi is barely 19 and is serving a multiple decades- long prison sentence in Bahrain for organising poor Shia demonstrat­ors against the tyrannical rule of the Sunni monarchy of the House of Khalifa. Poe is 25 and one of the ardent mobilisers of black minorities struggling against institutio­nalised racism of the police in the disturbed area of Saint Louis, Missouri, US.

Rebuffing stereotype­s of youngsters who keep out of trouble, pursue material self- advancemen­t and remain hooked to popular entertainm­ent, extraordin­ary youthful leaders are coming to the fore to take up arduous responsibi­lities. They are proving that wisdom, maturity and ability to inspire large masses of people are not the exclusive preserves of middle- aged or elderly persons.

Highly empowered and visionary youth like Wong, al- Kishi and Poe induct themselves into politics early, when they are literally kids, and are hence free from the hindrances and baggage that accompany those who take the plunge into public affairs at a later stage.

The spindly Wong was just 14 when he earned his political baptism by joining a protest movement against the Chinese government’s plans to build a high speed rail network linking Hong Kong to Guangzhou in mainland China, which threatened pollution and exorbitant costs for taxpayers. At 15, Wong launched Scholarism, the student activist network, to oppose the Chinese Communist Party’s attempts to introduce propagandi­stic “moral education” and patriotism in school curricula.

These initial training grounds in rebellion against a repressive power structure offered him crucial insights about the Chinese state, the psychology of police forces in Hong Kong and the mentality of the lay public. Having imbibed the lessons, Wong is today savvier in tactics as he marshals tens of thousands of fellow students confrontin­g armed policemen under the banner of the “Umbrella Revolution”. So spontaneou­s and formidable are the youth in resisting China’s decision to block public nomination of candidates for the election of Hong Kong’s Chief Executive that pro- democracy political parties and their older members have been pushed aside to play second fiddle.

A stand- out feature of the new politics being ushered in by surprising­ly young revolution­aries around the planet is that they break away from vertical institutio­ns and hierarchic­al modes of expressing dissent and presenting alternativ­es. Bahrain’s al- Kishi is not a product of pre- existing registered Opposition parties like Al Wefaq or Al Wahdawi. Rather, he is a fresh bundle of energy from grassroots youth associatio­ns. At the age of 14, he was first attacked with birdshot by the monarchy’s brutal security forces in 2009, and has since been arrested and tortured repeatedly in 2010, 2012 and 2013.

According to the Lebanese newspaper Al- Akhbar, he has been spitefully targeted by the Bahraini government as “an act of revenge against people in the opposition group who did not back down”. One of the youngest prisoners of conscience in the world today, his selfabnega­ting sacrifice is a symbol of Bahrain’s Shia majority’s quest for dignity and equality.

The millennial generation ( people born in the 1980s and 1990s) of activists is particular­ly praisewort­hy because they are wedded to non- violence despite being on the receiving end of extremely harsh and draconian treatment from the powers that be. Besides animating marchers on the streets to defy the racist machinery of the Saint Louis police, Tef Poe is an upcoming liberation rapper whose songs and lyrics are filled with ideas for “changing the world” through peaceful politics and advocacy for human rights. His music is driven by a passion “to say the things that everyone else is kind of nervous to say”.

In a soul- stirring essay written in Time as Saint Louis underwent turmoil after heavily militarise­d policemen killed unarmed teenaged black youth, Poe sent out messages of selfrelian­ce and steely determinat­ion: “We are our only allies. We are may be the minority in this country, but vocally, we will be the majority. They cannot kill us all. They cannot throw us all in jail.”

Establishe­d African American politician­s and leaders from the civil rights era hopped on to the protest bandwagon in Saint Louis, so as not to miss the moment, only after young achievers like Poe lit the fire with the cry: “Our hopes and dreams are not valued or respected. Our worries and concerns often fall upon deaf ears.”

Technologi­cal developmen­ts have a hand in imbuing progressiv­ely younger change agents with the selfbelief to improve their circumstan­ces through collective action. In an important book on the role of young people in the Arab Spring upheavals of 2011, Youth and Revolution in Tunisia , anthropolo­gist Alcinda Honwana argues that a “new brand of active citizenshi­p and political participat­ion” has arisen. It mixes timetested methods like “assembly, consensus and autonomy” with contempora­ry mediums such as “Facebook, Twitter feeds, YouTube videos, Instagram photograph­s and electronic messaging.” The limelight that Wong has shone upon dictatoria­l China is one example of how teenagers are wielding technology to tell the truth and embarrass mighty government­s.

We are in the throes of a generation­al revolution. Gone are the days when the young could be dismissed as callow, apathetic or inexperien­ced for civic engagement or political praxis. The generation­al injustices being dished out to the youth — unemployme­nt has been maximum for those below the age of 25 and youth have to suffer environmen­tal degradatio­n far longer than the aged — are bound to forge ever younger revolution­ary leadership.

Twenty- seven per cent of the world’s population is below the age of 15. Don’t dismiss the teenager next door. She may be the harbinger of great transforma­tions. The writer is a professor and dean of the Jindal School of Internatio­nal

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