NOT ONLY ARE WE STILL AROUND, WE’RE ALSO SETTING UP OUR OWN NON-HIERARCHICAL
SCHOOL, ORGANISING A FREE CAFE, AND COLLABORATING WITH OTHER GRASSROOTS GROUPS
~ The LMA Collective ~
There’s a story of how Lambeth Mutual Aid began, as a response to the Covid-19
pandemic: that immediate desire people had in March 2020 to support their
neighbours and make sure that no one was going without food or necessary
medicines. And then there’s a story of why Lambeth Mutual Aid still exists, five
years on: not collecting prescriptions or delivering emergency bags of food, but
digging into the deeper politics of how to survive a society that prioritises
wealth over wellbeing.
That story begins in December 2020. Most of the people who were furloughed over
the spring and summer are back at work now, and the neighbourhood WhatsApp
groups that flourished in the warmer months are quiet. No payments have been
made from the emergency fund in weeks, not because people haven’t needed a
top-up on their electricity meter or the bread and milk they cannot afford, but
for lack of volunteers to organise the distribution. By Christmas 2020 there’s
£7000 sitting in the donations account. And a decision to be made about what to
do next.
“In any moment in life”, writes social justice facilitator adrienne maree brown,
“there is a next elegant step—one that is possible and strategic based on who is
taking it and where they are trying to go”. In December 2020 there were five
people, no more, making that decision about Lambeth Mutual Aid’s emergency fund.
Sure, we could distribute the money to other grassroots groups in Lambeth, close
the account and wave goodbye to this experiment in mutual aid. But holding true
to our commitment towards mutual aid as a life practice rather than a crisis
response, the choice was already made for us.
Money wouldn’t necessarily get us there. In fact, the emergency fund, which we
renamed the Solidarity Fund in spring 2022, arguably hinders as much as it
enables. It encourages transactional relationships, and a sense of hierarchy:
Lambeth Mutual Aid as gatekeepers of the cash. It conveys an image of charitable
giving. And it relies for its existence on the wealth gap that we want to
destroy. But in December 2020, all we needed to think about was the next elegant
step. Stop, or keep going? We decided to keep going.
Fast forward to January 2025. One of the five is in the kitchen at Platform Cafe
in Brixton, washing dishes. There are maybe ten people in the kitchen with them,
chopping, stirring, cleaning, chatting, laughing. People involved in other
grassroots actions – such as anti-raids crews, copwatches, and autonomous winter
shelters—cook alongside people who are trying to make a life in the UK, but for
now are housed in hotels by the Home Office.
Another of the five is chatting with people at the tables, inviting them to help
themselves to a free hot meal, offering suggestions for groups to connect with
or places to find support, giving out £5 notes to people who need their travel
reimbursed. There’s a table covered with zines and materials for writing to
prisoners, another with materials for arts and crafts. Kids are looked after by
people from the organising group so that parents can have a little breathing
space: one parent sits with adults playing dominoes, enjoying this moment of
respite.
Someone new comes in, curious to learn: what is mutual aid? What does it look
like, what does it mean?
There are so many possible answers to that question. They might take the form of
the writings of Peter Kropotkin, anarchist thought, questions of justice –
transformative justice, disability justice, wealth justice —and practices of
abolition. But right now, for the many more than five people who have taken the
decision to be involved in Lambeth Mutual Aid, it means this monthly cafe.
And what does this cafe mean? It means a space in which all are welcome and met
with warmth – physical and emotional – and care. A space in which money doesn’t
need to change hands for people to be fed. A space in which people listen, in
which strangers are as important as friends, in which no one is judged, no one
is turned away. A space that defies the hostility of the Hostile Environment,
offering curiosity and solidarity, instead of suspicion. A space that keeps in
heart and mind those who are incarcerated. It means a group of people, connected
by nothing more than the arbitrary boundaries of a London borough, committing
time and energy to creating this space, and maintaining relationships outside of
it.
A lot of time and energy still goes into being gatekeepers of cash: the
Solidarity Fund remains a big part of what Lambeth Mutual Aid does. But we
distribute that money on a no judgement, no questions asked, principle of trust.
(Unless that trust is broken by someone trying to play the application system to
their own advantage. Sadly, not everyone shares our spirit of solidarity.) For
sure, there are many, many people whose connection to Lambeth Mutual Aid ends
with asking for and receiving a £30 grant. More meaningful are the requests for
a grant that open the door to all the other aspects of mutual aid: whether
that’s coming to the cafe, which we call Solidarity Sunday, every month to
socialise; cooking; responding to emails; or being part of the group organising
grants for others.
There have been a lot of inelegant steps taken by Lambeth Mutual Aid since
taking the decision to continue in December 2020. But when we make mistakes we
are honest and transparent, in ways that enable more people to get involved in
making decisions that are mutually beneficial. As the organising group of
Lambeth Mutual Aid has expanded—we’re now 70 people in a WhatsApp group, of whom
at least half are active in some way—we are able to take more steps, in more
directions. In 2025 we finally have the capacity to make something happen that
the group of five could only dream about: a space for thinking about and
learning together the skills that might be needed to survive the seemingly
inexorable rise of fascism. We’re calling it the School of Solidarity – because
those are good words and because they shorten to SOS, which makes us laugh.
We know the School is needed because wealth continues to be prioritised over
people’s wellbeing in ever more cruel and callous ways. Just to look at our own
borough, in March 2025 we learned that Lambeth Council is putting in place a £99
million budget cut to frontline public services, closing children’s centres and
schools, cutting libraries and the safety of young people – all by directors and
consultants who don’t live remotely near Lambeth and are paid eye-watering
salaries. Mutual aid rejects such violence, resists the narrative of
competition, and refuses the imbalance of austerity. Mutual aid asks us to build
solidarity and systems of support together.
Maybe, though, you still have a question. How come Lambeth Mutual Aid is still
around when so many of the mutual aid groups that flourished in 2020 didn’t make
it beyond 2021? Persistence, tenacity and obstinacy have a lot to do with it. So
does an embrace of the really boring aspects of organising: admin and more
admin. Kindness, too: that principle of no judgement, no questions asked applies
to everything. Can’t show up for the cafe or an admin task? We get it: life is
tough and full of difficulty, we know you’ll be back when you can, and in the
meantime there are others who can keep things moving. All giving time, space,
love, and taking what they need, according to capacity.
But maybe there’s one answer that brings all these things together—a comic spin
on the old advertising slogan: “A puppy is for life, not for Christmas”. We got
involved in mutual aid in 2020 because the pandemic demanded a crisis response.
We’ve stayed involved and people keep joining because mutual aid is a practice
for life, not just Covid.
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Images: LMA on Instagram
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