On Saturday, May 4, 2013, the Village Muse Bookstore in Cumberland
(centrally located on Vancouver Island in British Columbia) will be
hosting the first ever Comox Valley Anarchist Book Fair at The Abbey,
featuring a May Day feast of subversive ideas and creative resistance
possibilities. As a black and green event, it is bathed in both the
radical legacy of the Cumberland mine wars and the soaring Beltane
spirit of the Merry Month of May, and has absolutely nothing to do
with Queen Victoria's birthday. This anarchist festival of the book
has been fomented in the cooperative spirit of mutual aid that unites
Cumberland and Denman Island co-conspirators. While we anticipate
that lots of anarchists and anarchist-friendly folks will converge on
Cumberland that weekend, you don't have to be a self-described
anarchist to attend the Book Fair. All you need is an open mind and
an anti-authoritarian sense of curiosity.
In The Abbey on this day, you will find rows of tables peopled by
individuals, distros, and bookstores that feature a wide array of
anarchist and anarchist-related books, zines, publications, and
crafts. Participating bookstores and distros, in alphabetical order,
so far include: BC Blackout (Vancouver/Denman Island), Black Banner
Distro (Vancouver), Black Sheep Collective (Calgary), Camas Books
(Victoria), One Way Ticket (Victoria), Red Lion Press (Nanaimo),
Spartacus Books (Vancouver), Village Muse Bookstore ( Cumberland),
and Warrior Publications (Vancouver). At this point, individual book
authors who will be at tables include: Gord Hill, Grant Schilling,
Jeff Shantz, Larry Gambone, Matta, Matt Rader, Miles Olson, Ron
Sakolsky, Sean Woods, and Tom Swanky. Only a limited number of tables
are still available, so please apply asap.There will be free food all
day and a potluck at the Abbey between 6 and 7 PM. The Abbey will
provide space for an “art wall”and an acoustic open-mic event
starting at 7:30 PM, dubbed The Creative Mayhem Anarchist Cabaret.
Across the street from the Abbey, at the OAP Hall, there will be a
series of free direct action, skill-sharing and radical history
workshops at the top of every hour all day. They will feature such
topics as: combating the Raven and Bear coal mines/anti-pipeline
solidarity; street theatre; rewilding; Cortes Island forest defense;
the BC government's historical use of biological warfare against
indigenous people through the spread of smallpox on Vancouver Island
and in the Comox Valley; grand jury resistance in the Pacific
Northwest,decolonization; and Cumberland's radical roots. Outdoors,
there will be a medicinal plant walk and a blacksmithing workshop. As
we get closer to the Book Fair date, we will provide more detailed
info on titles, facilitators and scheduling, as well as billeting
possibilities for out-of-towners.
On the occasion of this 2013 May Day event, we recognize the 127th
anniversary of the judicial murder of the Haymarket anarchists in
their fight against wage slavery back in 1886, and we remember Ginger
Goodwin, who was shot in the back by the law at Comox Lake for
militant union organizing activities among his fellow Cumberland mine
workers and for his principled refusal of conscription during the
First World War.
In turn, we commemorate the hundredth anniversary of local
resistance to the military invasion and occupation of Cumberland by
order of BC Attorney General Bowser in 1913. His kilted dragoons were
stationed in the village at the behest of the coal barons to protect
their financial empire by breaking the Vancouver Island miners'
strike of 1912-1914 and restoring order through the imposition of
martial law.
Today, anarchists, along with many others, are engaged
in an effort to prevent Cumberland from once again becoming a mining
town under the thumb of the coal bosses should the Compliance Energy
Corporation's proposal for a Raven coal mine project get approved,
which would then open the door for the proposed open-pit Bear coal
mine to be precariously perched over Comox Lake, threatening the
village's water supply.
Finally, we respectfully acknowledge that we are holding this
event on K'ómoks' territory, and we express our solidarity with
their ongoing struggle for their land and against colonization.
Contacts: Cathy Stoyko (250-218-0704)
cdstoyko@uniserve.com
Ron Sakolsky (250-335-0843)
oystercatcher@uniserve.com