Education

From Morocco to Nepal, Gen Z Is Using Discord To Rise Up

By Mandy Taheri

Copyright newsweek

From Morocco to Nepal, Gen Z Is Using Discord To Rise Up

Hundreds of young Moroccans, rallying under the banner of “GenZ 212,” have poured into streets across the North African country demanding swift quality-of-life reforms from the government.

The movement, which materialized rapidly online, has mobilized Moroccans across a dozen cities since Saturday. Clashes with security forces recently turned deadly, resulting in the deaths of three people and many injuries earlier this week.

The movement’s megaphone is Discord—once a platform for gamers but now a go-to hub for discreet, fast-moving organizing. Earlier this month, tens of thousands of young Nepalis rallied on Discord, spilling into the streets and even running discussion forums that selected an interim prime minister.

Newsweek has contacted the U.S. Embassy in Morocco for comment via email on Thursday.

Security forces disperse a gathering as youth-led protests calling for health care and education reforms turned violent in Sale, Morocco, on October 1. (AP Photo/Mosa’ab Elshamy)

Forget Facebook?

In late 2010, Facebook became revered as the gold standard of revolutionary organizing, sweeping across the Middle East and North Africa following the self-immolation of Mohamed Bouazizi in Tunisia.

The uprisings moved through the region as the Arab Spring ignited, and tens of millions of frustrated residents went online to coordinate. Facebook emerged as the predominant tool—particularly in Egypt and Tunisia—helping organizers broadcast calls to march, circulate videos and connect people across the country to turn out and oust their leaders.

Fifteen years later, it seems today’s digital generation is turning to Discord to mobilize anti-government movements. The platform’s private servers let activists organize out of the public eye, often under pseudonyms, and use text and calling features. The setup lends itself to young, fluid and leaderless movements.

People protest against corruption and for health care and education reform in Casablanca, Morocco, on October 2. (AP Photo)

Ola Galal, a clinical assistant professor in global cultures at New York University’s Liberal Studies, told Newsweek in an email that she “wouldn’t go as far to call the protests the ‘Discord Uprising’ in the same way that some have called the Arab Spring the ‘Facebook Revolution.’”

Galal’s not surprised the youth are using Discord for mobilization. “Gen Z is a generation that is versant in using and repurposing digital media technologies. Because of Gen Z’s proficiency in virtual social interactions, Discord, a platform initially used for gaming and leisure, was transformed into a tool for protest mobilization,” she said.

Jen Schradie, an associate professor at Sciences Po’s Centre for Research on Social Inequalities, told Newsweek, “Successful protest movements have always innovated the use of communication tools, from hiding printing presses during the Revolutionary War to more private Discord servers now in Morocco.”

Protesters aren’t relying on Discord alone to disseminate messages. While most are convening on its servers, they are also leveraging other social media platforms and messaging apps, such as Telegram and TikTok.

Reuters reported that membership in the GenZ 212, which derived its name from Morocco’s area code, has soared in recent days—jumping from 3,000 last week to 130,000 on Thursday.

Schradie said the use of Discord as the “precise tool” of mobilization is less important than the overarching themes drawing people together and broadcasting the movement to bystanders. She highlighted that this was “particularly effective in Nepal.”

In September, tens of thousands of Gen Zers mobilized to overthrow the government in the Himalayan nation. Youths frustrated at a social media ban, corruption and lack of economic opportunities coordinated mass protests via Discord that helped bring down the government. They then hosted server forums and discussions that emphasized support for former Chief Justice Sushila Karki as interim leader. Karki was later appointed to the post.

Discord estimates that there are over 200 million global monthly active users who collectively participate in more than 1.9 billion hours of gaming. The platform’s largest servers and communities are enormous. The Midjourney server, which is considered one of the largest, has over 20.4 million members.

Beyond the massive servers, researchers estimate that tens of millions of active servers span topics such as sports and study groups—proof that the app’s chat, voice and livestream tools have outgrown their gaming roots.

Morocco’s Gen Z Protests

GenZ 212, which identifies as a “new wave of activism in Morocco,” is seeking mass reforms in health care, education and job sectors—areas they say have “long been neglected by the government.”

On its website, the movement wrote, “With a youth unemployment rate hovering around 35.8 percent, and a public healthcare system in dire need of improvement, GenZ21…