October 10th 7pm
Join us for orientation for new and potential members!
We’ll train you in how to start your own Cafe Anarquista distro!
Afterwords we’ll screen 2017’s The Antifascists

October 10th 7pm
Join us for orientation for new and potential members!
We’ll train you in how to start your own Cafe Anarquista distro!
Afterwords we’ll screen 2017’s The Antifascists

Join us Friday the 24th at 6:30pm for our first open meeting of the year and a screening of How to Blow Up a Pipeline.

From 6:30 to 7pm will be orientation for new members and a have a discussion of 2024’s activities.
At 7pm we’ll screen How to Blow Up a Pipeline.
At the Interference Archive.
Join us Thursday the 19th from 6pm to 8pm at the Interference Archive for our regular open meeting and Zinemas! We’ll have a short orientation followed by zine sharing. Bring zines and receive zines. Some food and drinks will be provided. All are welcome!
This is also our last night to submit a page for our community zine. The theme is “what I wish I knew when I first got started in activism.”
November 28th is marked by colonial revisionism and commercialist capitalist propaganda. For many New Yorkers it’s also a pretty lonely day but it doesn’t have to be! Join us November 28th for our Holiday Orphans community potluck and VHS watching party! Bring dishes and we’ll gather around the flatscreen and watch old tapes from the 2000 Chicago Anarchist Film Festival.
At the Interference Archive
Zine are a pillar of Cafe Anarquista. As such, their selection requires scrutiny and consensus. Any zine may be submitted but must be approved by the majority. This will be done at the regular meetings and not in the field. The following is a general guide for selection:
So here are some great examples of zines we love, and some we have turned down.
Blocing Up. The current version at Sprout Distro is our gold standard. It’s easy to print, short, doesn’t overwhelm the reader, lots of images, and has a tun of references in the back for further research. It’s everything we need a zine to be.
How to Form an Affinity Group from CimethInc is another good pick we always like to carry for similar reasons. While this is a bit text heavy compared to Blocing Up, it’s still a valuable introduction to the concept.
This brings us to stuff we have to turn down. The following are zines that might seem like a good fit at first glance but actually aren’t suited to CA.
How to Organize a Protest March from Sprout Distro. The page itself gives away why we don’t distribute this. No doubt the the first thing you noticed is the yellow text reading, “This zine was added to our catalog more than 5 years ago. You may want to verify information contained within is still relevant.” Given that it was uploaded in 2012, it’s safe to say it’s not up to date.
Some Notes on Insurrectionary Anarchism. With it’s flashy cover and short page count, this one seems like a winner. Personally, I haven’t made it more than a page in before my eyes get extremely heavy and my attention span starts to wain. This is a great example about why we don’t distribute zines that are just about theory.
A Civilian’s Guide to Direct Action by CrimethInc. Man oh man, talk about a heart breaker. This zine has it all. Easy to understand, beginner friendly, some fun images to keep the eyes busy, and a nice Q&A to dispel criticism of Direct Action. At 12 pages long – 6 per zine in printing terms – that’s just not feasible to bring this to a protest. That sounds reasonable if you’re printing a few for friends. But at CA, we’re gonna be taking dozens and dozens of zines into the field. I think we can all do the math on the paper, ink, and weight with this one. It’s tragic it can’t be in our library but it’s more important to us to get information out to as many people as possible.
What zines do you think we should carry? Reach out to us with suggestions!
6pm to 9pm at the Interference Archive
Each attending member will write one page about what they wish they knew when they first got started. It can be written, poetry, imagery, collage, however you want to convey the message.
What is mutual aid?
Wikipedia describes it as, “[the] voluntary, collaborative exchanges of resources and services for common benefit take place among community members to overcome social, economic, and political barriers to meeting common needs.” In normal people speak, it means sharing is caring and it can be fun! Mutual Aid is more than just resources. It’s the creation of connections to access those resources.
Why coffee?
Coffee is more than a way to get through your boring work day. It was what fueled the enlightenment, helped starving artists meet in rundown cafes, and helped anarchists meet as well. Emma Godlman was introduced to Alexander Berkman at Sachs’ Cafe. Cafes are supposed to be meeting places for people, not for upper class hipsters to charge their phones in. If we can no longer have cafes for the people, then we’ll just make our own.
No, really, why?
No bullshit? Marching is tiring, everyone is in a pissy mood, people take themselves too damn seriously. Too many people are marching to be seen on social media, not to be in solidarity. We need human connections. We need more revelry if we want a revolution!
To quote Emma Goldman, “I did not believe that… [anarchism]… should demand the denial of life and joy. I insisted that our Cause could not expect me to become a nun and that the movement would not be turned into a cloister… “I want freedom, the right to self-expression, everybody’s right to beautiful, radiant things.””
What IS Cafe Anaquista?
C.A. is a mutual aid movement to bring food, coffee, and radical literature to protests. Basically the things people usually forget to take, or don’t think to bring along with them. The goal is to help feed protesters and create a more communal environment. Anyone can be an Anarquista Barista, Bean Scout, or Coffee Commando.
Some guidance and suggestions:
And if you feel like it, wear all black with a small, removable coffee logo (in case you need to tear it off in a pinch). Or don’t. No pressure.
