Looking for more to do on May Day?
Check out this Fundraising event presented by
Radstorm & the Halifax Anarchist Book Fair
Sunday, May 1
Doors – 2 PM | Screening – 3 PM | Music – 5 PM
All ages/Dry space
$10 or Pay What You Can
Radstorm, 2177 Gottingen
Masks required
Musicians:
Jah’mila
(roots reggae/reggae soul)
https://jahmila.bandcamp.com/
Test@
(anarchist hip-hop/rap)
https://testtheirlogik.bandcamp.com/
Dang.
(dark ambient/experimental /electronic/field recordings)
https://dangk.bandcamp.com/
Panties
(post-soviet immigrant harsh pedal noise)
https://inyourpanties.bandcamp.com/
Burdened
(punk rock/doom metal)
https://www.instagram.com/burdenedband/
Snarler
(fastcore/hardcore punk/powerviolence/grindcore)
https://snarler.bandcamp.com/
Documentaries:
Transmissions Part One
(33 minutes)
By: Submedia
“Part one of a four part mini-series focusing on the various dimensions of intergenerational relationships among anarchists. Part one is a collection of anarchist stories focusing on origin stories from the 60’s through the early 00’s, while the second part focuses on relationships.”
Celebrating Seven Years of Self Governance in Cherán, Michoacán
(23 minutes)
“Cherán has been practicing a traditional form of self government for 11 years. On April 15th, 2018 the Indigenous Purépecha municipality Cherán Michoacán celebrated the 7 year anniversary of their uprising against what they all call today: The Narco Government.”
We Are Now: The Story of an Armed No-Cop Zone in Atlanta
(22 minutes)
By: Crimethinc
“On the night of June 12, 2020, Atlanta police officers murdered Rayshard Brooks, a 27-year-old Black man, at a Wendy’s in south Atlanta, Georgia. This took place immediately following the high point of the countrywide uprising in which people responded to the murders of George Floyd in Minneapolis, Breonna Taylor in Louisville, and countless other Black people around the United States. In response, a new wave of protest and revolt broke out across Atlanta, in which the Wendy’s burned to the ground. Armed Black demonstrators occupied the site of the Wendy’s, mourning for Rayshard Brooks and seeking to create spaces of Black empowerment.”