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Title: Incognito Author: Anonymous Date: 2007 Language: en Topics: clandestinity Source: Retrieved on July 11, 2012 from http://digitalelephant.blogspot.com/2010/08/incognito.html Notes: Original title: In incognito. Esperienze che sfidano lāidentificazione, Guido Mantelli, Cuneo, 2003. Translated from italian by Barbara Stefanelli. Published by Elephant Editions, London, 2007
This book is about living in hiding. It pierces the darkness and leaps
into the secrecy of the incognito, a parallel dimension in which even
what could be said often is not. Out of excess of tact, fear or because
one thinks it is not relevant. Or, in certain milieux and in the worst
cases, due to mere political tactics. But, even at a glance, the world
of clandestine people is not a desert land; on the contrary it is
populated by living beings, experiences and ideas that are very close to
ours, in both the most miserable and the most fascinating aspects of our
lives, close to our most ardent desires and passionate daydreams.
The following contributions tell of this world. They are the voices of
people who have lived or are still living in hiding, voices of different
tones and emotions, each bearing their own message. They tell their
experience of a clandestine situation, which can derive from personal
choice or causes beyond oneās will. For some this experience was a
result of their revolutionary struggle; for others, the many who, along
the road of exploitation and the atrocity of borders have nothing more
to lose, not even ID, this experience is a result of their social
condition.
If the names of the authors are not to be found in this book it is not
out of caution or ideological choice. It is more a question of, letās
say, good taste. In fact, we prefer the clandestine experiences to speak
for themselves, rather than the identity of those who are talking about
them. Nevertheless, as identity is not just a question of personal data,
these written lines will inevitably reveal traces leading to the author
of the text.
When we decided to write this book we thought that would be the most
genuine and direct way to present the uniqueness of the experiences it
would contain, rather than a theoretical or historical discussion on
living in hiding as intended by revolutionary movements. On the
contrary, we chose a form that expressed the most personal aspects of
the clandestine dimension in complete freedom: the situations that the
authors of the texts had had to face, their reflections and proposals,
their practical and theoretical considerations.
With a great effort that often tore at our hearts and penetrated our
inner being, we managed to obtain a series of data and emotions that can
offer the reader a āguideā, also concerning ātechnicalā suggestions, in
the eventuality that he or she might one day face conditions like the
ones described in the pages that follow.
So it is a āguideā; but it is also a lens through which to look with
more sympathetic complicity at the nameless exploited, bandits,
refugees, and all agitators who run to ground and who still pursue, in
the links of the chain that grasp the planet, desire and the reality of
a free life.
It is terrible when a man has to give up his identity. Living with a
good girl, deceiving her day after day and concealing a part of oneās
life and personality. Sometimes you feel a strong need to open up and
search for moral complicity, but you canāt do that out of precaution or
for fear of not being understood... you feel empty and donāt desire
anything in particular.
Horst Fantazzini
It is not easy to talk about certain questions. Moreover, the most
difficult thing is to start, especially, as far as I am concerned, as
Iām not what youād call a āstory tellerā, but rather the opposite.
I had already thought of writing something about living in hiding, not
so much about my personal experience (I donāt like self-celebration), as
about the way we see clandestinity in our āmilieuā.
Letās forget any digressions as to the meaning of the word. Up until I
experienced this situation, both negative and positive at the same time,
I thought it was something that didnāt concern me. Then, out of the
blue, I found I had plunged into it. That is exactly how it happens.
Maybe you imagine it differently, but itās just like that, from one
minute to the next you find yourself absolutely alone (even if you are
with someone when you first hear the news). Then, if you decide to live
in hiding out of choice, methods of struggle or simply bad luck, you
suddenly find yourself in a strange situation. A least that was my
impression. When I heard there was an arrest warrant out for me, I felt
completely lost. Perhaps if we thought about living in hiding as a
consequence not so much of our actions and way of life as of pure
repression against those who decide to live outside the rules of the
System/Capital, things would be much clearer. Those who want to rule our
lives know perfectly well how hard it is to find yourself completely
alone all of a sudden, how difficult (and frightening) it is to speak to
others and the fear and paranoia that other people experience when they
mention you. All this should not just be regarded as a repressive
measure (such as prison, house arrest, bail, etc.) but as a precise
method aimed at cutting off relations between individuals and
situations. The difficulties and fear involved in any discussion on the
subject in the environment where the individual on the run used to live
are extremely damaging to the latter, and extremely advantageous to the
enemy, whoever they are. What I think we should do when a comrade is in
the shit is TO TALK ABOUT IT. When someone ends up in jail he can
receive mail and visits from lawyers and relatives. This could also be
the case for those living in hiding (be it by choice or by necessity),
with due precaution and method. But people find it difficult to talk
publicly and openly about that. When I had friends living in hiding I
was scared to talk about them or even to organise solidarity
initiatives. But now that I have experienced that situation myself, I
think that itās absolutely vital to start a discussion on the subject,
especially so that those living in hiding can feel they are as close as
possible to the situation they lived in before. I can assure you that
itās not always like that, especially at first.
I donāt have the solution to this problem, but I think that proper
discussion and analysis (between those who have experienced
clandestinity and all those who feel like discussing this repressive
measure) could be very useful.
I think, as Iāve already said, that the System finds it easier to file
an arrest warrant and force those who donāt want to rot in jail to live
in hiding, rather than carry out arrests and then put up with solidarity
actions, demonstrations, initiatives, a lot of noise, etc.
Of course the repressors only allow this to happen on certain occasions,
according to the moment, but I donāt think this hypothesis is unfounded.
I believe this is a very important question because the System only
decides to act immediately when it is pressed by the media and public
opinion, and it often risks giving shit performances, as we have seen.
Moreover, given that the judicial system is making gigantic strides
daily with the intent of reaching TOTAL CONTROL, and that its disgusting
servants the TV and the press spread whatever news they are told to, the
System has plenty of time to control these situations as it likes. This
is also possible thanks to the spread of submission and conformity in
general (even if, in various contexts, there are faint signs of a
reawakening here and there).
If these aspects are taken into account, people living in clandestinity
might decide to put an end to it and, for instance, give themselves up
because they think this might be better than staying underground. I
donāt consider this choice to be a cowardly one, as some comrades do.
When you are living in hiding your perception of the situations you
lived in before changes, as you are looking at it from the āoutsideā.
You probably manage to be a bit more rational.
But it is exactly this āliving outsideā that makes you feel alone and
sometimes unable to face the paranoia that goes with a clandestine
situation.
The importance of these few lines doesnāt lie in the fact that they fill
up a pamphlet but because they remind us of the many people and comrades
who, as we are doing our shopping, enjoying a gig or life in general,
are compelled to stay away from the people and places they love.
Being aware of the problem doesnāt mean that we solve it, but itās a
good step towards making sure that people in hiding, and all those who
might become such, not only live this condition better but are also able
to keep on struggling alongside their comrades.
Iāve never had any strong feelings of belonging to one specific country,
with its traditions and culture. Iāve never felt any roots grow inside
me to such an extent that that could keep me in one place. I think that
this helped when I decided āto go to earthā and hide from bureaucracy
and the law.
The first time my house was searched a cop asked me if I had been
expecting it. My answer was yes. I was an anarchist and known to them as
such, so I wasnāt surprised. Nor was I surprised when I realized that it
would be better āto have a changeā. Choices like that are a question of
responsibility. When you are fighting an enemy you will also certainly
want to escape from it and its repressive grip, even if you have to pay
quite a high price and keep away from the places and people you love.
This was something that I had taken into account, something I knew might
happen to me. So I wasnāt surprised when it became real and urgent. But
I was pretty confused, both because reality is always different to what
you imagine and because I found myself in a situation I had never
expected: becoming clandestine, not on my own or with my partner, but
with my child. In fact, he was born a few months before, and I was still
under ānew-mother shockā when I understood it was not the case to have
my life ruined by the bullies of the law. There was no arrest warrant
out for me at the time, but they started harassing me after arresting a
comrade who was very close to me, and claimed they had identified a
āRoman gangā. I didnāt intend to be under pressure every day and so I
chose to go to earth. The day after my departure I learned that my house
had been searched and that my partner had been harassed, which they kept
on doing afterwards, also to my friends and relatives. I realized I had
made the right choice.
At first it was very difficult. Even if, as I said, I had pictured that
moment so may times, I was not ready either at a practical or
psychological level. For example, I had nowhere to go and it wasnāt easy
to find a suitable place. My comrades were all well known to the cops
and that period was not at all calm or favourable. I think that many
people were really worried and solidarity, practical and effective
solidarity, was not easy to practise and therefore to find. I was really
sorry about that, and I am still absolutely convinced that this is
something that comrades should discuss carefully in the future. I mean
we should try to create the minimal conditions so that comrades are not
left alone with their problems and excluded from all their
relationships.
Coming back to my time in hiding, I felt the need to take all the things
that made me feel āat homeā with me wherever we went: certain books,
tapes and objects (maybe Iām a bit fetishist) that kept me in touch with
my previous life. In general, we succeeded in not being noticed wherever
we went: I introduced myself to others as a mum taking her baby on
holiday to healthy resorts. It was summer and certain places would be
healthy for anyone! I played my part very well; I was very careful about
what I told anyone about us and tried to be coherent in my role. I also
made my attention more acute by focussing it on even the most
insignificant details. It must be borne in mind that people (not to
mention landlords) are very curious about a new member of their
community, and that you cannot always answer the questions (too many
questions) they ask evasively, otherwise you would seem strange. You
have to be careful because in a ānormalā situation questions like āwhere
do you liveā, āwhat do you studyā and āwhatās your jobā or even an
invitation to dinner that you would rather refuse, could be annoying;
and an unfriendly and unsociable answer could cause trouble. When you
are in hiding it might be dangerous either to make relationships or to
be too reserved. It is quite a delicate situation. As I said, I tried to
tell people the same story about myself but I also tried not to give a
picture that was too different from what I actually was. I mean that in
the long run (Iāve been in hiding for 6 years) it is impossible to be
completely different to what you are. It was okay, for example, to be a
mother taking care of her child, but I couldnāt give a picture of myself
as if that was my only aspiration: just to be a mother! My opinions,
considerations and way of being couldnāt be completely repressed even if
they emerged in a softer and less obvious way. At the beginning this was
one of the most difficult aspects to cope with as I was a new mother, a
situation that in itself presents a lot of contradictions that are not
easy to sort out. Sometimes fear and anxiety were too strong, and I
thought that I wouldnāt manage to keep on going for long. I often had to
suddenly run away from the place where I was staying because of the
dirty job of the media (one of the TV programs that made me anxious and
angry was āChi lāha vistoā [āWhoās Seen Herā, popular TV programme
calling for public participation in the sighting of missing persons] or
because my childās father was being followed (who in the meantime was
living his normal life and meeting up with me occasionally). My moves,
therefore, often occurred out of the blue, without me planning them. I
often trusted my sixth sense (which I still do), which is not enough if
it is not accompanied with the greatest attention. When I felt it was
time to have a change, I prepared my stuff in a great hurry and moved to
temporary accommodation until I found a more durable and reliable
situation.
In the long run I realized that my first choice, i.e. a period in hiding
while understanding what the judiciary wanted, would turn out to be the
only one. The game: āletās see if I can fool themā would go on. My
relationship with my childās father deteriorated, pushing us further and
further apart. It is impossible to keep a love affair alive if the
parties involved donāt both make the choice to live in hiding. The two
lives inevitably become different and moments together are burdened with
tension because of the risks you are running. So we decided to split up
and I decided to make the big step: my child and I would go far away.
At this point I had to consider which place would be most suitable.
First of all I took into account the possibility of being able to walk
in the streets without running the risk of being immediately recognized
as a foreigner and therefore of being stopped by the police. I needed a
cosmopolitan town where I could be anonymous as much as possible. I also
had to avoid contact with comrades so that I wouldnāt be recognised.
Furthermore, having a baby would make things much more difficult: sooner
or later, be it owing to health problems, school or the need to
guarantee him normal social relations, I would risk finding myself in
the chains of bureaucracy. I therefore needed a place where structures
for non-official residents, the so-called irregulars without stay
permits could be found. A place where the minimum social needs of a
foreigner could be guaranteed and I could walk around without running
the risk of being arbitrarily stopped by the police (i.e. for no valid
reason). A place where I could go out without necessarily taking an
identity card with me and where it was possible to find a way to
survive. I chose the place and asked some friends of friends to put me
up for a while, until I acquired knowledge of the environment and the
capacity to live on my own. So I decided to venture, and crossed the
border without my child who was eventually brought to me. The separation
was terrible, and so was the fear of not making it. I crossed the border
with a rucksack on my back and snow up to my calves. I remember being
very excited at that moment, finding strength and a confidence that I
had rarely experienced before. Finally I made it, I was having a
cappuccino in a foreign country after crossing that cursed border. I
only hoped that my child would join me soon and without difficulty. I
stopped for two days at a very dear comradeās place and then I left by
train for my final destination. I arrived on a splendid morning in May,
warm and comfortable even though I was in the north. This seemed to me
to be a good omen; and when my child joined me a week later, I felt
safer and more determined because I was also out of Italy. In spite of
this, I soon realized that the situation could become dangerously
relaxed, which I absolutely had to avoid.
So we started again... I didnāt know how long it would last but I did my
best to make our freedom last as long as possible. I think that in cases
like this you mustnāt stay in the same place for a long time even if
everything seems to be going well. You cannot avoid leaving traces if
you stay in one place (at least in Europe) for too long. You have to
move frequently, which I chose not to do. This wasnāt due to
resignation. As I said before, choices imply taking oneās
responsibilities and I had also chosen to have a child. I didnāt want to
involve him in sudden transformations and changes that only concerned
me. I also experienced periods of acute loneliness. I was afraid of love
affairs, as I didnāt trust anyone and I couldnāt find comrades to share
rebel choices with. But I wasnāt nostalgic because I had managed to
overcome any nostalgia for people and places. I convinced myself that
everything would come back to me and that I was living a break of an
unlimited duration. This break, however, was worth living intensely. In
fact today I miss the people, the places and the moments I experienced
during this long and very emotional journey. I canāt help saying, not
that it was the best time of my life (especially as my life hasnāt
finished yet!), but that it was certainly the period in which I
understood best who I was and how I face life. I also understood that
living beyond the rules and normality, with no name, surname, address,
and a false number on oneās ID card stimulates creativity, imagination,
and dignity, and makes you take back whatās yours. Time is yours,
choosing and overcoming difficulties is yours, the decision to play the
cat or the mouse is yours, the moment when you decide to say āStop!ā is
yours.
And all this is also for you... wherever you are.
I began living in clandestinity in 1980 and it was a necessity rather
than a free choice. At the time it was quite difficult as police
informers were springing up like mushrooms in autumn. It was thanks to a
couple of these vile disgusting people that I had to leave (not without
problems) the house of my parents in the suburbs of the town where I was
born. It was not at all the right moment, I had nowhere to go and fear
and diffidence reigned between friends and comrades. Many had already
received a visit of the police and Carabinieri, many others had already
ended up in jail and those who were clean just feared for their own
safety... and they were right. If you took someone on the run into your
house you risked being charged with āarmed gangā and sentenced to many
years in prison. I remember knocking on many comradesā doors and their
astonishment and desperation: āWe canāt help youā. The worst moment is
when you find you donāt have anywhere to go at night. Of course you
canāt go to a hotel like a normal person. At first I spent my days and
nights on trains: I took the 17.30 MilanāReggio Calabria, reached my
destination 22 hours later, got off and eventually took another train to
Milan. I did that for days on end, it was hard but at least I had a bed
and a roof over my head, always moving. It wasnāt a solution, however,
it was just something temporary (and dangerous, as police often check
documents in stations) while waiting to find something better. After all
I was not prepared for being on the run.
I had just got out of San Vittore prison where I had been held only six
months and released due to a legal time expiry. I secured a simple job
as a representative for mechanical tools. I didnāt earn much and I used
to give all my salary to my parents. So I couldnāt save enough money to
secure a calm period in clandestinity, which would have been the best
thing to do at the time. It wasnāt easy to find someone to rent you a
flat or to find money to live on. The most difficult thing was not so
much finding a suitable landlord, but the money to live as a wanted
person, which costs a lot, believe me! A simple salary doesnāt allow you
to save enough to go to earth in a relaxed way when the time comes. One
solution was to rob banks, but when I left home I had no weapons, no
documents and very little money in my pocket. You canāt stay free for
long under such conditions. I could just count on a few armed
organisations that I knew. I was lucky, if I can say that. I knew a few
comrades who would help me, but under conditions that I couldnāt accept,
like joining their organisation as a militant serving it. So, after a
short break to reflect, I kept on looking desperately for another
solution. I didnāt want to join any organisation as the one I had
belonged to and created along with other comrades, the P.A.C. (Armed
Proletarians for Communism), had been dismantled following arrests and
the individuation of most members. I didnāt feel like joining another
one. This situation of instability lasted 6 months. I often found
accommodation in comradesā houses but it only lasted two or three days.
As a dear comrade of mine used to say: āguests begin to stink after
three daysā. So I went around, more and more desperately looking for a
hole to live in and helped by old comrades as regards money. Finally,
when I least expected it, I found the way not to have to depend on
others. This is the essential point: not to depend on anything that is
not your own will. You have to prepare to be clandestine before waging
war on the System... I donāt think Iām exaggerating.
What I have described till now is obviously a particular situation: the
condition of clandestinity as a setback that I had to face in a
traumatic and sudden way.
But the problem is wider if it is seen in all its aspects: to be
compelled to be clandestine, to run off, to refuse to join given
organisations whose ideology isnāt your own, to look for independence as
a way of keeping on the struggle you believe in, to have money, to find
the means to achieve all that.
At first I found living in hiding quite hard and pointless as I was in a
situation of total uncertainty. But in the long run I found the right
balance, i.e. a small group of comrades who had the capacity to carry
out big operations and launch strong attacks against the economic and
political system with a level of perfection that resembled that of the
big organisations. In the Eighties (and today) good results could be
reached by small groups of 3ā4 comrades who were prepared at a military
level and had gathered essential information. Any project of attack
would be impossible otherwise.
When you live in clandestinity, be it out of choice or necessity, you
are waging war on the State. If you simply walk in the street with a
bashed up identity card, you have to make a sudden choice if you are
stopped: to run away, give yourself up or react. You can imagine the
consequences of the first two possibilities, as for the third, only your
ability and experience can save you.
It is not true that wanted people are alone, what is true is that they
feel as if they are alone. It is just a temporary sensation, which
disappears as soon as you have a document in your pocket that makes you
feel safe. The world belongs to us. The advantage of our time is that
you can always be well informed about anything, given that moving from
one place to another is only a question of hours... providing you have a
good document.
The problem is to keep relationships going. It is sure that if you have
a partner thereās only one choice: either your partner comes with you or
you must split up for good.
It is impossible to see each other in secret from time to time. Apart
from the work of grasses and the mistakes you might make, police and
Carabinieri manage to find you by systematically following those close
to you (including parents and relatives). If you decide to play cat and
mouse with them on this issue, you will certainly end up in jail in a
short time. Is living in hiding useful? I think it is. In these times of
war, the System wants to impose globalisation and one way of thinking on
everyone. Repression is growing as well as the militarisation of the
entire world. The US empire intends to wage war on all those who, in one
way or another, oppose its policy of dominion. The military budget grew
70% in six years during Clintonās presidency. The EU is following in the
same direction and has created an army specialised in military
operations in order to defend the interests of the European
multinationals, including arms dealers that will compel countries to
purchase a huge amount of arms. The United States are the main agents of
this dynamic, as they know they wonāt otherwise be able to face their
serious economic problems and national debts. Of course they are not
willing to pay for their economic crisis and are pushing other countries
into a paranoid union held together by the fear that a big front against
their worldwide hegemony could be created in the third world (see the
post September 11 situation). Letās bear in mind that the western
countriesā main goal is to create an unstable and explosive situation in
order to justify NATO military interventions and destroy any strong
State that they canāt manipulate. Individuals and peoples who donāt
submit to the orders of the International Monetary Fund and the CIA will
end up in trouble. It is obvious that this strategy for world war has
already begun: the USA, backed by the NATO, have come into action in
various areas, which is fundamental in this strategy as it represents
Washingtonās military supremacy over its allies.
In this context repression is getting stronger with the full approval of
both the left and rightwing political parties (which both win
elections), also thanks to media campaigns carried out by the four media
agencies that control international politics. The information they
spread is already a declaration of war and it is impossible to be
neutral. Their information is a lie, and they present repressive laws as
an absolute necessity. When I read the press, watch TV or listen to the
radio, I canāt understand anything of what is happening, and this is
very dangerous. The State has acquired new penal codes and new
repressive means that match the reality that the system wants to fight.
In Spain, for example, the new penal code doesnāt consider the terrorism
of the State but only that which strikes the State (be it buildings or
people). At the same time an impressive number of arrests are inflicted
on those who demonstrate, even peacefully, and quite heavy sentences are
meted out... for example 10 years imprisonment for burning rubbish skips
(like the latest laws concerning teenagers āoffencesā approved in the
Basque countries). Repression is therefore focusing on groups and
individuals that represent rebellion against the System in general. The
message of the powerful is clear: put up with it or youāll end up in
prison (if not dead) in the worst conditions of isolation.
Given that the struggle in the streets is losing its strength, we will
eventually have no choice but to live in hiding and organise in small
affinity groups.
Finally, I tell you, I only ever felt really free when I was in hiding.
Discuss ideas, actions and projects of people who want to be free along
with others who are free, in time and space, in the endless struggle
against the cancer of authority. As it is endless, it changes
continually, and faces, tensions, perspectives and possibilities also
change.
Itās a whirlwind and you are at the centre of the cyclone, on your hands
and feet, thrown towards a giant leap, and you try to ward off the blows
and hold on to an offensive position, and you improvise along a path
that many think is not worth taking. They think it cannot be proposed
because too many have attempted it already... and where are the results
of so many efforts and attempts?
Maybe those who really took up the challenge of freedom know the answer,
in the thread that links the steps of those who were, are or will be
enemies of imposed rules and commands.
They have who knows what secret joys and victories. Or maybe just an
obstinate desire to carry on and keep on gambling oneās self and all the
rest. A boost to engaging in this struggle without reserve, and so to
finding the courage to propose it to others; this means that the freedom
in oneās step and motivations has to be moulded and lived in first
person, it cannot be put off to some glorious future.
Today, in a world of slaves, banks, laws and chains, my freedom exists.
It is on the edge of experience.
Nobody pushes himself so high as the one who ignores his goal.
Cromwell
Traveling can mean many different things during oneās life.
There are monotonous journies, endlessly repeated along the tracks of
daily survival, taking millions of people to the temples of
exploitation.
In the daytime and at night, through the countryside or suburbs darkened
by the smoke of the factories and the misery of alienation; thousands of
hours and thousands of miles that change nothing... the same disgusted
faces, dirty windows, rituals to be repeated until flesh and soul are
consumed.
It is the pace of exploitation, it is a world dominated by artificial
and deadly needs and ambitions that are sweeping away everything natural
and balanced that the human race has conquered for itself through
hundreds of years of hard work and ingeniousness, in its confrontation
with the elements and other living beings on the planet, and during
hundreds of years of struggle against the inequality that other human
beings have imposed on their fellows.
Today, all over the world, what gives a meaning to oneās existence is
consumerism: consume, consume and consume again. It doesnāt matter
whether the product is material or intellectual, and it doesnāt matter
about the quality, what counts is that our purse can afford it. The most
important thing is that the economic machinery producing and
commercialising goods that are basically useless and harmful, but are
tempting in the market and can represent a goal to be achieved, keeps on
functioning.
Objects, food, experiences, kilometres, lands and culture are to be
consumed in order to make people feel satisfied with the way they spend
their days.
It is the same āspiritā that makes tourism fascinating, even though the
distances to be covered and places to be reached are cut out in
pre-confectioned packets and the duration, if there are no unforseen
unpleasant events, is known in advance. Moments of recreation from the
daily routine with which people hope to find, at least until their next
holiday, just enough boost to prevent them packing their suitcases once
and for all.
After all, the tourist industry, i.e. the transformation of journeys and
the planning of territory, resources and production into commercial
goods for this purpose, offers a considerable service to the maintenance
and reproduction of the capitalist disaster. On the one hand it creates
and spreads the market to places that couldnāt otherwise be exploited,
be it due to their natural features or particular demographic and human
conditions; on the other it guarantees that journeys be protected from
the risk of unpredictability and possibly really being able to change
oneās existence.
And for sedentary people, there is the option of comfortable journeys on
the sofa in the emotion of TV or substances, legal or illegal, it makes
no difference, to deepen oneās dissatisfaction.
But there are journeys that shock our habits and certainties. Not only
ours, but also those of the whole culture that has inevitably
conditioned our way of intending life, from the day we were born to the
day we set off.
I want to talk about this kind of journey.
These are journeys with no return, as others told me, because to retrace
oneās steps or come back to the point where one started off is simply
another adventure, another journey.
Day after day, step after step, you find sensations and places, faces
and experiences that make you understand who you are and what surrounds
you. It is a discovery that transforms your way of being and strengthens
and reinforces attitudes that will never leave you, and at the same time
it offers you experiences that can shock you and take you beyond these
ācertaintiesā.
A journey where nothing is mapped out in advance and during which all
your truths come out and blossom, the truths that you cultivate for
yourself and which make you behave and act. Truths that are continuously
put in question and become stronger or weaker under the blows of our
merciless critique. Intuitions and ideas and firm beliefs that are dealt
with, fight with one another and finally go along with other peopleās
truths in a common path. These are the criteria representing the sense
of our journey, and show us where to look, where to go, who is on our
side and who is our enemy.
Iām talking about the truths that stimulate confrontation and growth far
from the monstrous Truth that is the same for everybody, social and
ethical dogma imposed in advance that fights and fears the other truths.
You always need to be ready to face new situations. The reality you deal
with is continually changing. Sometimes these changes lead you to paths
that, at best, you only ever visited in your imagination.
This can happen to anybody... but especially to those who cultivate a
desire to shake rules and regimes and open up their todays and tomorrows
to different ways of life, social relations and ways of getting and
managing what they need, both as individuals and members of a community.
In this case the chance of taking a path that goes beyond the codes of
availability and identification grows significantly. This is proved by
the experiences of those who have engaged in the struggle for freedom,
with all the meanings that these words have taken in space and time.
It is a path along which you can find yourself because it is the only
one left. But it can also be a choice made to follow your needs,
projects and desires, in your own time.
There are rules, conventions, pieces of paper, technological innovations
that organise the existent according to the needs of production and
social management developed by the ruling Power.
There are moments when all this is too suffocating for those who want to
blow up this huge prison. Then you need other spaces, abilities and a
different dimension in which to learn to move. It is the dimension of
secrecy, a series of expedients, relations, projects and actions that
allow you to keep your initiative and strengthen your ability of
intervention without being identifiable, controllable and therefore
locatable. The dimension of secrecy runs parallel to that of the
existent as we normally intend it, it penetrates it or moves away from
it according to our needs and goals.
13:28
Iām on the train. I left the last shadows that were following me some
hundreds of kilometres away, after a quick run between the shelves of a
double exit supermarket and a sudden ride on two buses heading towards
the suburbs. Trains also stop in the suburbs and there are fewer cameras
that you can easily avoid. Nobody is following me and in my wallet I
have documents with details that are not mine. A new haircut, a pair of
glasses, some anonymous clothes and itās not me any more. Before
catching this train I took one of those bags that it is never convenient
to keep in your house. Iāve got what I need and I know that, thanks to
the precautions I took, I donāt run the risk of ending up at some
dangerous checkpoint, unless something very unfortunate happens. I know
my route, even if Iāll have to take roads Iāve never taken before and
visit places Iāve never seen. The journey of someone on the run is not
like taking a break from daily routine. Wherever you arrive you
immediately have to understand what the space youāre in is like. You
have to find the conditions that best satisfy your needs in that place.
You try to see the dangers as well as characteristics that could be
useful. The route you take is a photo album where you put strategic
spots, underground passages and one-way streets, houses of friends,
discreet bars, hotels where you are not asked for documents and parks
where you can camp without anyone noticing you. Iām here now, an unknown
person among unknown people and I know very well what I want to do. A
false step, a word said at the wrong time, a suspicious look or gesture
that attracts too much attention to myself: these are the mistakes that
I have to be very careful not to make if I donāt want to run any danger.
It is important to move now, determined but self-assured, like a fish in
water. Here he is. My guide is waiting for me under the clock in the
square. He starts walking a few metres ahead, on the other side of the
road. I follow him and I know that in the distance Iām watched by other
eyes, friends and accomplices. Good, I think that a journey like the one
we are about to undertake is more fascinating if it is made in company.
A journey undertaken by someone on the run is not at all carefree. There
are insidious passages and you always have to consider the possibility
of a forced return to the situation you are escaping from, with all the
consequences that this implies.
You learn to live with the possibility of facing death more than you do
in other circumstances. Such a possibility is not so unlikely within the
context of an unreserved struggle against Power and its guards. It is
not paranoia, it is just one of your thoughts, the awareness that death
is one of the many possible conclusions of your adventure.
It is not at all easy to face conditions like these, especially as they
imply running away from everything that surrounds you, in a more or less
drastic way depending on the specific circumstances of your journey. And
you might feel lonely without your usual friends and loved ones. It is
as if a part of you has been torn away from your inner being. You walk,
you have your legs, your arms and your brain but something is missing.
It is a void that it would not be too difficult to give in to.
This strange wayfarer can ease the nostalgia that accompanys him with
encounters along the way, soften it with new relations and experiences
that he wouldnāt otherwise have had the chance to meet. I donāt just
mean those who are living in the same condition in this open prison
without bars, or that he wishes he could meet.
We can say that he finds a new way of facing human reality in its more
concrete needs, depressing misery and real joy and sincerity. This
condition not only depends on your own new way of making relations
(because you need them or because they happen owing to some particular
circumstance), but also on the way in which others relate to you and
interpret these relations.
As you cannot count on identity, allowing others to recognize you for
things you have done in your life or for what people say or think about
you, the clandestine rediscovers the very essence of his choices and
aspirations. He realizes that the reasons for the obstinate desire for
subversion that animates him are deep, clear and meaningful. So he can
experience a more authentic and immediate way of communicating and
making relations that he maybe never had the opportunity to experience
before. And he finds a new language to express the essence of his
character and certitudes to others.
EL MELFI
We arrived in the town the night that the local football team won an
unlikely victory in the championship. In the bars, disillusioned people
gave vent to the habitual rite of hurling abuse and drinking in front of
big screens, at times not even allowing one to follow the ball. El Melfi
had already arrived and his presence was rife in the laughter that
accompanied our night.
El Menfi is a sensation that becomes alive and takes flesh and blood, a
way of moving among people, smiling or gazing in a way that hits your
face and transforms your muscles and nerves.
If you feel his presence it will never leave you.
El Melfi was on our side in the carefree fun to which we were dedicated
in the metropolitan green of the camp where we were guests. And he made
us taste, through the voice of memory, the exceptional quality of the
few moments we lived together.
El Melfi carries in himself the unique dimension of an individual who
has run away from home and is strongly convinced in his heart that if he
put everything at stake, and maybe also lost a lot, it was for an
overpowering change, not only in his own condition.
He is the sense of coming back to something that you had begun, to a
land that loses its shape in recollection and becomes something ideal
and that pushes you to look for it elsewhere, in people and situations
that you havenāt met so far.
For this reason El Melfi shows himself to the unknown person at the
half-open door and the colourful yard full of strong smells of peasant
cooking and of men, women and children looking for a future in the
chains of an existent that crushes freedom and hope.
For this reason El Melfi runs in the woods and across the rocks to
penetrate the heart of oppression and push his knife deep into it.
We know that; we look at each other out of the corner of our eyes, and
our thoughts go farther than the half words and curiosity of our
companions of the night can go, right there where our freedom meets El
Melfiās.
That night we threw our bags in the corner of a mattress, and at dawn
for the nth time we left an oasis of temporary convivial tranquillity
and lost ourselves in the tangle of thousands of streets and ideas. But
we were sure that we would never abandon each other on any account.
But in the end, after all this moving, discussing, shouting and
planning, you are alone. You are alone in the face of your
responsibilities and your ability, real or imagined, when communicating
with others. You are alone in the face of your tenacity and obstinacy,
which you have to hold on to in order not to collapse in the slime that
surrounds you, in the misery of human relations and perspectives, in the
small and great resignations of daily life.
You are alone, but you have something inside you that pushes you into
making new relations, plans and struggles.
Living as a clandestine therefore becomes an attitude among the many
that can complete your way of being, thinking and acting. It is a
journey that gives you a filter to interpret what surrounds you
according to criteria that transform the way you see life, the time and
space of your movements and the way you settle yourself. I try to
reflect... to see what has been done and what not. And I find myself
following strategic and improbable choices. Improbable, not because they
are not appropriate to the social context in which I find myself or
because I made some terrible mistake in understanding the needs that the
movement of struggle against authority expresses.
Improbable because they donāt take into consideration what I really am,
the roads I cover, the gulf that, in the deepest part of myself, stands
between me and most of the people I meet.
This gulf cannot be insurmountable, on the contrary it must be overcome.
You go through it one way then you come back through it the other. It is
a gulf that doesnāt prevent you from living common experiences with
others... but it is a gulf all the same, and when I run inside it I find
out what I am and what I have had the chance to know, develop and put
into practice in my clandestine journey, be it by chance or by lucid
thinking. Only in the awareness of the distances I inevitably covered in
my experiences, my abilities and my way of facing life and therefore the
struggle, do I feel I can fix my determined eyes on the paths of future
journeys.
The repressive system is evolving. Like any sector of the big market
that society has become, it is testing new methods to control
individuals and subject them to its needs.
New measures of control have been introduced in addition to jail as
such, measures that simplify the problem of overcrowded prisons and
allow those who govern our destiny to earn a lot of money. House arrest,
for example, is a good investment: not only does the prisoner manage his
own detention, but an impression of democratic repression is also given.
And what about the electronic bracelets that are applied to the ankles
as though people were guinea pigs? These bracelets are provided by
specialised companies, so new jobs are introduced. Why donāt they call
them anklecuffs? Maybe the sentence āYou are obliged to wear anklecuffsā
doesnāt sound good in court.
Prisons exist everywhere in our society and invest all aspects of life.
Arenāt certain factories and offices where you sell your time to get
what you need to keep on suffering and producing, real prisons? Arenāt
the structures of schools and universities where exploiters and
exploited are formed rather than people, real prisons? And what about
hospitals, where you go to die of cancer after a stressful meaningless
life; what about rehabilitation centres, where new methods of
rehabilitation back into the productive system are tested? And what are
the concrete cubes called houses, where people swear; what are the slums
where people enjoy their recreational hour; what are the supermarkets
where you can buy the rubbish that you produce; and what about the
streets where people die like flies?
Arenāt those who are compelled to work for a miserable wage prisoners?
Arenāt the idiots who perform in programs like āBig Brotherā their own
jailers? Arenāt all those who morbidly watch the exasperating monotony
of such programs also jailers of themselves? Prisoners in a world where
the only freedom is the amount you have in your bank account. By
creating more and more efficient networks of control and using more and
more sophisticated instruments, dominion has penetrated all intimacy and
turned all the places where people are forced to live into prisons.
More than 50,000 people are taken to prison every year in Italy alone,
prisons with bars and guards, where torture is constantly practised and
beatings are the normal procedure. Prisoners submitted to 41bis regime
in Italy and the FIES regime in Spain know all about that. Most
prisoners have committed crimes against property or related to drug
trafficking. Most are immigrants from lands where western colonisation
has left nothing but misery. āLaws are made by the rich in order to
exploit those who cannot respect them owing to brutal necessityā(B.
Brecht).
I will never have any respect for a society whose aims are profit and
war, and that locks up those who donāt accept it. When I heard that they
wanted to lock me up I had no doubts: in the face of the certitude of
reclusion I preferred to run away. It was an instinctive choice; a
choice that implied being taken away from what my life had been until
then but also the satisfaction of not being caught by the inquisitors.
The life of a fugitive is like that of an incognito prisoner inside the
big prison that is society. I canāt say whether running away is better
than being in an official prison or worse than being in the
prison-society. Iāve never been in jail but I know the alienation and
mediocrity of life when you are exploited very well. They are different
aspects of the same problem: that of not being free. I will never be
free so long as exploitation, prisons, and all kinds of property and
authority exist, as they are the main causes of social inequality.
Far be it from me to idealise the condition of clandestinity as a
winning formula for insurrection, but I cannot help pointing out its
positive aspects. If you must face a prison cell, it is worth trying
this adventure, which will also give you the possibility of discovering
the chances that life as fugitive can offer and the importance that this
experience can have in a revolutionary perspective. It is also a
question of principle. Your character and tensions play the most
important role when it comes to making such a decision. In fact, it is
better to stay at home and wait for events to overcome you rather than
become a prisoner of fear and of yourself. For me this is a journey on
the fringes of society during which Iāve tried, not always successfully,
to hide myself the least possible and to keep my own
individualism/identity even if I had to hide my story and my past. Iām
not scared about not knowing where Iām going to put my sleeping bag
tomorrow. Iāve always had a nomadic spirit and traveling was my school,
and the journey Iām making now is by far the most interesting and
authentic one. It is the journey that has taught me how to find new
equilibriums even if I had to keep moving. And, although with great
difficulty, it has taught me to remain an individual who struggles and
not become a shadow hugging a wall. The choice of being a fugitive
implies that you have to leave all public life, all relations with
friends and relatives forever and adopt a continuous tension and
attention in what you say and do. It is a choice that should be
considered carefully before being undertaken, a choice that brings
thousands of contradictions in itself but, if faced with awareness and
without falling into paranoia, it can keep your senses well alive and
strengthen your capacity to adapt to any circumstances. You start
looking at the country in a different way, you discover a new world when
you pick up a map in your hands, geography becomes a science that leads
you to consider territory as something global, to think beyond borders,
to look beyond forced passages and find ancient ones. It is a choice
that transforms your relations with others and with your daily life,
often in a disagreeable way. For example, when you meet someone you
know, you risk putting him/her in trouble, and when you ask him/her a
favour you have the impression that you are putting him/her up against
the wall. By contrast, solid relations, the deep ones in which
complicity is spontaneous, become more concrete and passionate.
Making friends without telling the truth is not easy. It is your
attitude and need for communication that will decide. To live on the run
is not easy. Your way of speaking, strange behaviour and the lies you
have to tell surround you with an air of mystery that could be
interpreted negatively. Everyone has a dear friend whom they trust
completely, and that way everybody gets to know everything. Discretion
is a virtue that is getting more and more rare.
I think that the safest way is to keep moving continuously so that your
enemy has very little chance of locating you. You absolutely must avoid
telephone calls to relatives and friends, visits and letters addressed
to known places. In fact, investigators turn their attention precisely
on to these people because they know that you will naturally feel like
listening to the voice of a loved one and letting him/her know that you
are all right. You have to bear in mind that there are at least two cops
on all long distance trains and that there are police stations in all
the big railway stations. You have also to know that if you are too
untidily or too flashly dressed you will attract attention. The total
militarization of the country compels you to find spots where you can
move about, the weak links of the net through which you can pass
unobserved, to see which hours of the day are more convenient and which
are the most convenient places to spend the night. It is not at all nice
to be hunted down, and it is even worse to know that the repression also
and mainly concerns the people you love.
Living in hiding, however, even if done with dignity, is still only one
side of the coin. The other, the thought of your imprisoned comrades
being submitted to humiliation and violence, cannot be forgotten.
Living in hiding is a challenge, an occasion to test your ideas out, a
choice that leads you into a life full of emotions, a reckless life that
can be very sad at times, as all choices are. Living in hiding is like
making a gamble, day after day, a gamble on your present because your
future is a dark cloud, a series of miserable dates in your diary. At
first you dream of cops and escapes, then you dream of visiting friends
and turning up in your usual bar. In particular, I have to say that my
dreams have changed and become terribly real. I often ask myself if
running away is still reasonable, then I realize that I will never want
to enter a prison. Iāll keep on running, as this is my nature, and Iāll
keep on cursing those who persecute me.
It is a choice that radically changes your way of life, your vision of
life, your judgements about things and your feelings.
You become a bit hard and you can only express yourself freely on the
rare occasions that you meet friends, but then time is always too short
to discuss whatās going on and what has changed. You have to content
yourself with a reality seen through the eyes of others. I think that I
could have many more possibilities if there had been a solidarity
network and widespread discussion on the question of living in hiding.
To offer space for discussion and real possibilities of surviving to
those who are compelled to hide is in my opinion an essential part of
any revolutionary experience. I think that the life of fugitives would
be easier if reference points existed, as they are indispensable in
order to keep in touch concerning any needs: information, legal
questions, solidarity, money. I donāt intend to put forward a proposal
for the creation of any formal structure with fixed responsibilities in
the long term, I am just thinking of a coordination of individuals and
groups that want to show their solidarity, or who already do that, to
those who are hit by repression. I think that such a coordination could
open gaps in the walls they are building around us, a coordination that
takes into account relatives and friends of the persecuted, who are also
hit by repression. And if the latter are sensitive to certain subjects,
discussions could be suggested to help them understand repressive
mechanisms better and get in touch with others in similar conditions and
maybe create their āownā way of organising solidarity. If you hide
yourself too much, break off all contacts and disappear not only
physically but also from your projects, then you definitely contribute
to your own isolation. In this way you would be playing the same game as
those who want to get rid of us. For this reason it is extremely
important that if you are compelled to run away you keep on living with
dignity and donāt lose your chance to act or intervene in discussions.
As you have always done.
Why did you decide to leave your community and a situation that was
quite well known to you, even if it was also difficult and dramatic?
What did you expect and what did you actually find?
Maybe that is precisely the point. A situation can be known to such an
extent that there are no aspects to be changed, there is no will to
change your life or even to keep on living. Life is continuously
threatened and you can be killed from one moment to the next. But it was
not always like that. The threat of being killed has been hanging over
all Algerians, not only me, for the last few years, since the Nineties.
Before reaching this situation where your life is threatened, it was
already dangerous. When I was at university I was involved in a union, I
was an extreme leftwing activist. When the terrorism started, therefore,
politically active people were its main targets, I realized that I had
to become clandestine in order to act because I couldnāt do it openly
any longer. As long as the risk was that of being physically attacked,
both me and my friends and relatives, I could carry on. But when death
came to threaten the whole family, including the children on their way
to school, the only solution for me was to leave the country. To leave
doesnāt mean to surrender and go, no way. There existed a kind of fork:
on the one hand the Algerian secret services, on the other the
terrorists. At the time I was working for an Algerian public company,
the only telecommunications company in the country. We received letters
inviting us to stop working for the State. But if you stopped work the
police would come to your house claiming you were a terrorist; so if you
escaped from the terrorists, you had to face the police. I was disposed
to risk physical aggression for that before, but when the concrete risk
of being killed came I had only one choice: to enlist against the
terrorists or become a terrorist myself. I was not interested in either
of these options as it was not my struggle. The situation was forcing
people to take a position for one side or the other. The price was not
only having your house burnt or losing your job but also risking your
life and that of your relatives. This is the main reason that pushed me
to leave the country. Economic reasons are also involved in such choice
of course, but in my case I had a well paid job that allowed me to
survive. After the fundamentalist parties took power, however, and
religion became politics and society was subjected to moral rules,
freedom was no longer possible. The simple fact of going out with your
girlfriend carried the certitude that you would be assaulted. A girl is
not allowed to go around wearing the clothes she likes and she is
compelled to cover herself with a veil. It is precisely personal freedom
of choice that is totally threatened. It is a social problem because all
aggressions remain unpunished. For example, gangs of fundamentalist
students patrol the campuses and if they see a couple they will
certainly beat them up.
Who can resist and risk every single day?
Economic concerns were not relevant for me as I earned one million
dinari in Algeria, 100 euros more or less, you can live on this, as
prices are not so high there. Over the last few years, however, owing to
terrorism, economic reforms, sabotage of factories (they say perpetrated
by terrorists, but the Algerian State is clearly involved as it can sell
off factories for a dime), life has become much harder from the economic
point of view, and buying power is diminishing at a hectic pace even if
you have average wages. Prices have gone up 10%, 20% with the excuse of
terrorism. Once upon a time the State gave its support and covered the
price of basic needs (flour, bread, milk, etc) up to 80% so that people
were actually paying only 20%. All this ended with the advent of
terrorism. Deep economic reforms were introduced so that my salary was
no longer enough to lead a dignified life. Besides this there stands a
dream, a dream of Europe where you can live in freedom, and Iāve always
had this dream.
You have often mentioned terrorism. Can you explain what you mean with
this word? What is the situation in your country?
The terrorism I am talking about is that of certain studentsā or local
organisations. The leader is the Imam of the mosque and his aim is to
impose moral rules on society: women cannot wear miniskirts or drive a
car; men cannot let them go out alone, and if they do both of them will
be punished; it is absolutely forbidden to drink wine to a such a point
that fundamentalists went around smashing coffee-shops in the towns. The
police, who controlled this movement, left them to do their job. When
the latter won the elections in Algeria the military stopped the
elections and jailed the leaders of the fundamentalist parties. The
reaction of the most hardcore militants was to take up arms and carry
out massacres.
Once upon a time you could fight them with ideas, make propaganda
against them and resist their threats. Now they donāt limit themselves
to burning your house or throwing acid on women, they also kill you and
put bombs on buses. For example, when I worked we had to go out of the
building at least five times a day as they claimed there was a bomb on
the second floor, and all of us ran off. They sowed terror: 200,000
people died in Algeria between 1992 and 2002. They were harmless people,
people who couldnāt escape abroad or take up arms against terrorists or
defend themselves against the Algerian secret services. Algerian
security agents and the military infiltrate the terrorist movement and
have no intention of defending citizens against massacres, on the
contrary. If you stay there you have to kill, as you have no hope of
surviving or fighting back. I donāt want to kill anybody; I donāt want
to be a terrorist. There was a massacre one night in Algiers, I was
working there at the time, 400 people were killed in one night, shot or
butchered. The people who managed to escape from the village went to the
nearest military barracks, not police headquarters, you know, when you
are in danger you think that the authorities will help you, well, the
military shot these people and killed them. This is terrorism.
Terrorists have killed common people, poor people who couldnāt react,
they have killed farmers. Many farmers have been killed in isolated
spots over recent years with the complicity of the State. This didnāt
happen by chance: there is no private land in Algeria as all the land is
cultivated by communities and by people from the villages and it doesnāt
belong to anybody. Now the land is being sold thanks to a process of
privatisation that is bringing a lot of money to the State and the army.
But there are farmers who donāt want to leave, and it is exactly there
that people are being killed, from the eldest down to five months old.
Businessmen coming from abroad also want to buy in Algeria. I say
terrorism because it is not known who kills who, any of us can die but
we donāt know why, we donāt know who is going to kill us, we donāt know
what is going to happen next. If there is any sacrifice to be made for a
cause, thatās ok. But here the cause is incomprehensible and
uncontrollable and it is pointless to be killed under these conditions.
So you tried to emigrate...
I expected to find freedom here, individual and collective freedom. I
was completely wrong as concerns individual freedom, as for collective
freedom I realized that it is not so simple: as we ignore reality, we
are seduced by the western media that give us a false image of it. And
then emigrants coming back on holidays donāt talk about the real
situation. As I said before, it is a moral question: in a society where
nobody tells others their problems, emigrants who live a very hard life
abroad say that they are ok in the foreign country, that they can do
this and that. On the contrary for me it was different.
The first place I arrived at was a little village in the north of Italy,
where a friend of mine had come one year earlier. I used to talk to him
on the phone and it seemed that it was ok for him; he never talked about
his problems even if I can imagine what they were like. I used to say to
myself: no matter what problems I find in Italy they will never be like
the ones I face here... mind you, there are Algerians who emigrate to
Nigeria! As life is at risk in Algeria people also experience social
frustration: there is no freedom of expression because of both the
morals of society and the rigidity of the political system. You cannot
fail to be terrorised when you see the head of a friend or a relative of
yours hanging on a village signpost. And when you are terrorised and you
agree neither with the military or the fundamentalists you have no
choice but to leave the village.
When I arrived in Italy, I found this friend of mine who was an
agricultural worker and lived alone. He tried to get a job for me too.
In fact, as soon as you arrive you need to survive. I started working in
a vineyard and there I experienced everything I would never do to
others. What do I mean? I mean that I worked from 7am till sunset or
even 10pm and got 6,000 liras per hour. At first I was happy with that,
the important thing was not to starve. I kept on working hard and I
experienced things that I would never have imagined. I didnāt know that
such things existed; they donāt exist even in Algeria. At the vineyard
everybody cut bunches of grapes whereas my friend and I had to carry
baskets along the line, very hard work indeed. I remember it was very
hot and I told the woman boss that I needed to rest and asked to cut
bunches instead. She didnāt accept, as she wanted us to do the hardest
job. Then we were paid half what the others were, who were all Italian.
I found disgusting discrimination, which shouldnāt be possible in
Europe, the land of human rights. We were not even allowed to stop and
have a cigarette. I was very angry and thought of looking for another
job, but the village was small, I knew only one Algerian and didnāt find
anything else. So I kept that job, as I had to pay the rent.
Before finding a house to rent, we lived in an abandoned uninhabitable
house with an unsafe roof, which was given to us by another boss. We
lived there for two months, and then we rented a house in the village. I
kept on working there: it was ok to endure physical suffering, even if
it was not easy to adapt myself, but I could keep my dignity and pay the
rent. Physical suffering can be overcome, I repeated to myself, this is
just a passing moment. When the grape harvest finished and also the job
I felt alone. I didnāt know anybody and the people of the village were
scared and didnāt trust us. Not only ignorant people but also leftwing
militants were unwilling to open up to us. People considered me inferior
because I was from an āunderdevelopedā country. So I said to myself: I
must absolutely leave this place now.
Meantime another friend arrived and in three we rented quite a big house
in the village that was not so expensive. We stayed fifteen days in the
house thinking about what could be done, and we decided to get out of
the village and see what there was outside. We decided that it was not
what we wanted and maybe it wasnāt the same everywhere. So we decided to
go to a bigger town and approach some organisation, certainly not the
Northern League. We looked for the premises of the communist party, we
went there and talked about ourselves and said that we were Algerians
and wanted to meet local leftwing militants. Even if our Italian was
quite bad, we managed to make ourselves understood. They sent us to the
CGIL union as they said there was a member of the communist party who
spoke French and maybe he could help us. We talked to him for hours, and
then came back home. What for? Clearly that man was not in the least
touched by our problems, frustrations and the message we wanted to
communicate. We needed to find someone who could understand us and do
something, but we didnāt find anyone.
It was quite disappointing to find out what the western political world
was like. Political parties and the so āenviableā western democracy are
not any different from the corruption and the tricks that characterize
power in Algeria: the same way of ruling and the same structure of
government, parties and unions. I can even say that they are
complementary because one cannot exist without the other.
We stayed in the village a little longer. The last friend to arrive in
Italy got a 6-month student visa and requested a stay permit. A couple
of months later he went to take his permit but was given a deportation
order instead. He had to leave the country within 15 days. At that point
his situation was worse than mine as he had a deportation order, so we
remained in the village. Problems soon arose between us. We were always
stuck at home and didnāt go out because there was nobody around. Maybe
people peeped at us from their windows to check that we were not
stealing anything. Moreover we were afraid we might meet some
Carabinieri, who would certainly arrest us in those conditions if they
found us alone in the street. Once a car of the finance police stopped
us. We spoke in our language even if we could speak a little Italian,
but it was better to pretend we didnāt understand. They told us we had
to go to the police headquarters to get stay permits but we knew that we
would be given expulsion orders. For this reason we didnāt go out and it
wasnāt easy to get on together. My friend who was here before I arrived
had regular documents and he wanted to leave the house, which of course
was rented in his name. The situation was very difficult: I couldnāt go
back to Algeria or sleep rough. I didnāt want to accept the fact of
having to sleep rough; it was something I had never considered in my
life. I mean sleeping outside not because you donāt have any money but
because you donāt exist, donāt have documents and canāt go to a hotel.
Nobody would say: you can sleep at my place tonight. I didnāt want to
accept this situation. So I decided to call a friend of mine who is now
in America but used to live in Italy. I told him I wasnāt ok and he gave
me the number of a friend who spoke French. I called him and found out
that he was Indian, married to an Italian woman and had children. I told
him I was living with a friend who had to leave and that I didnāt have
documents. He invited me to go and stay with him in his house. When I
spoke to him, there was a female friend of his there. Even if I spoke
poor Italian, I understood that she was telling him he would be fined or
risked going to jail if he gave me hospitality. But he said he would
risk going to prison to help me. So I moved into his home and lived
there for two months. He even tried to find a job for me in another town
but he didnāt find anything.
Then the work season in the village started again and I didnāt want to
disturb them further. I was living with a family and sometimes there
were arguments between them, which is normal, but I felt uncomfortable
even if my friend kept on saying there was no problem. I found another
boss who could give me accommodation and I came back to work in the
countryside, especially as I didnāt have any perspectives there, I could
only wait. But for what? I had to move.
I made an agreement with my new boss: I would be paid one million liras
per month and he wouldnāt declare I was a worker. Of course nobody in
the village, including him, knew that I was clandestine... it would be
trouble! He told me he wouldnāt declare I was his worker in order to
avoid paying a lot of tax and I accepted because I had no other choice.
I knew that my wage was a misery when compared with the working hours
and in addition I had no insurance. So we decided I wouldnāt work every
day and would stay at home when there was not much to do. I worked for
him for 6 months sometimes from 5am till midnight, and then I decided to
take a 5-day holiday to go and see my Indian friend. But the boss was
not happy and called me to ask me to come back to work. I came back,
talked with him and defended the agreement we had made. Everything
seemed to be ok; I worked for another two months without stopping and
then resolved to have a rest. This time he threatened he would sack me
if I didnāt turn up. That would be a tragedy for me but I didnāt intend
to accept his threat. I wanted him to pay me 10,000 liras per hour
because I was angry about his threats. He was scared that I would
denounce him and vice-versa. In the end he paid me not exactly the
amount I had asked but neither the misery he wanted to give me. So I
went away. I did a few days work here and there and sometimes I stayed
at home. Then the end of the season arrived and so did a very bad time.
Meantime my friend who had come with a studentās permit got a stay
permit for legal reasons. He left the village and I was left alone with
the other friend whom I had argued with. There was nothing to do from
October until March, just snow outside and us quarrelling inside. Once
again he said that he wanted to leave the house and I was left with no
choice but to get in touch with my Indian friend. He gave me hospitality
for another three months and tried to help me find a job and a house,
but it was useless. He had to go to India for 2 months and I didnāt want
to stay in his house with his wife and children. I had nothing to do,
which was terrible and really destroyed me. Iāve got a sister who lives
in France, where she is regularly married. My friend offered to take me
to her and a female friend of his agreed to come with us. We left one
night and tried to pass the border, which was not at all easy owing to
the controls. We tried to find a mountain pass but it was December, a
real disaster. We had to turn back but my friend was determined to go
through customs. He was always dressed smart, with suit and tie, and was
convinced weād make it. On the contrary I was about to give up and told
him I wanted to go back to Algeria. In the end we tried. It was terribly
cold, it was 1am and there was nobody on guard. As the friend who was
driving saw that there was nobody there, she accelerated and soon the
guards appeared. She didnāt know she had to slow down and wait for them
to call; they already saw us as people on the run. They stopped and
questioned us. I gave them the details of a friend of mine who had got a
stay permit and the guards had confirmation from the police
headquarters. Then they accused my friend of being involved in smuggling
illegal immigrants. He was offended and said he wanted to be formally
denounced so that he could denounce the guards. In the end they let us
go. The French customs was one hundred metres further on. My friend
decided to get out of the car and talk to the guards. He said we were
very late and that we had already been controlled by the Italian guards,
and everything was all right. So we arrived in France, we slept in a
hotel and the morning after I went to my sisterās.
In France I found far more problems than I had experienced in Italy.
Even if I knew I was able to maintain myself I could do nothing, which
made me suffer once again. To want to do something but not be able to is
a condition that leads you to madness.
From a situation of solitude or even of troubled relations with the
people you worked with, you arrived at a place where you would certainly
find more people of your country and also your relatives. What was this
experience like, which in a sense reminded you of your country?
Relations with relatives are quite obvious. My sister knew I was
clandestine and she didnāt mind. The problem was in myself. In the
morning my sister woke up, got her children dressed and went to work.
Her husband did the same whereas I stayed there doing nothing. This was
not good at all. My relationship with the people of my country was quite
particular because there was a big problem: I absolutely didnāt want my
parents to know about my conditions. I couldnāt cope with the idea that
they knew how I lived. So I obviously never told anyone how things were
going and that I was compelled to call on someone and ask for a place to
sleep. The other Algerians didnāt tell me about their problems either,
so our relationship was quite superficial. We met, had a chat and a
drink together and then everyone went back home.
I also made many friends there who were clandestine and had exactly the
same problems as me. They were immigrants who, like me, had emigrated
during the second wave of migration, in the Nineties, to escape
terrorism. A special decree was issued by the French government for all
these Algerians, who were thousands. French intellectuals and a certain
political class pushed the government into adopting this solution, which
is a kind of asylum similar to political asylum. It allows you to stay
in the country and wait but you donāt have the right to work, actually
you donāt have any rights, you just have to wait. I still know people
who have been waiting for 4 years.
In the end 8 months passed in France, whereas I had planned to sort out
my situation in two months. Then the Napolitano decree was issued in
Italy, a kind of amnesty. My Indian friend called me one day and offered
to help me regulate my situation. I was very happy because I had wanted
to stop living as a clandestine for many years. There was still the
border to be crossed but I was able to make it thanks to him. As soon as
I was back in Italy I applied for documents and had to wait ages. You
need a job and accommodation in order to get a stay permit. How can a
person without documents get a tenancy agreement? Thatās absurd!
Thanks to my Indian friend, an Egyptian sorted my accommodation problem
out. As for the work contract, my friend employed me as a member of the
household staff. In the end he managed to put together the dossier that
would allow me to make a request for a stay permit. I had come back from
France in September but I was not given anything until May. I just got a
document stating that I was waiting for a stay permit. At least I
couldnāt be arrested, so I started moving around looking for something
to do. I went to a big town, which was a great change for me, as I could
finally get out of the village! I found a job giving out fliers, but I
still had the problem of where to sleep. I was paid 30,000 liras a day
and had to travel in order to reach the town where I worked. The most
important thing, however, was that I could move, and even if my wages
were nothing I had the chance to know the town, its people and places,
not the monuments of course. The documents, however, didnāt arrive and
at a certain point I felt I was a burden on the family that gave me
hospitality, and I said to myself that I had to get the thing sorted out
as soon as possible. I had already caused a quarrel between husband and
wife as I was still in her house along with their children. And if I got
a stay permit, what would change? I realized that my situation was
related not only to a stay permit but also to the dreams I wanted to
realise.
For example, I had the chance to attend a welcome centre, which was
something Iād never imagined encountering in Europe or anywhere else in
my life. I couldnāt imagine that there were people compelled to
experience the situation I was enduring day after day.
To go there and ask for hospitality involved a total lack of dignity for
me, as Iām in good health and, most importantly, my father spent money
to allow me to study. I found it unacceptable to be in a situation like
that. So I went into the centre run by the church in the town suburbs,
where I slept with people of other communities, Albanians, Tunisians,
Moroccans... but my stay permit still didnāt arrive and there was also a
time limit for staying at the centre, you canāt stay there for long and
need to find another one after a while.
What kind of document did you have to be able to move around while
waiting for the stay permit?
I had a receipt while waiting for an answer to my request. So I stayed
in the centre thatās run by the church and kept on working giving out
fliers. But I didnāt have enough money as I got 30,000 liras per day and
sometimes I only worked one to three days a week. So I decided to work
in agriculture again. I called someone in the village where I had
already worked, he told me there was a vacancy and I started working in
the village again while still sleeping at the centre. It meant that I
had to travel (the village was 60 kilometres from the town), work all
day long and come back at 11pm. I felt it was something I had to do
especially as I couldnāt do that before... I mean, I was afraid to buy a
ticket and travel before.
Finally I got a stay permit, a year after I applied for it, and the
first thing I did was to buy a ticket to Algeria. Of course I didnāt
have the money, in fact it was my Indian friend who paid.
I acted this way because I had another big problem: my girlfriend was in
my country, which might seem nothing, but it wasnāt because she wasnāt
doing so well in Algeria either. The main difficulty was that her
parents knew about our engagement, which was unusual in that country,
itās not like here where you can invite your fiancee home. It was like a
word of honour... and I couldnāt ignore it on any account because my
father and a series of social factors were also involved. We have been
together for ten years and during the three years I spent here I didnāt
see her at all, which was another cause of suffering, for both me and
mostly her. So I bought that ticket and a week later I was in Algeria. I
saw her and my friends again and stayed there for a month and a half. On
my way back to Italy I wondered where I would go, given that I couldnāt
go back to that centre. Once again it was my Indian friend to invite me
to his house as he had to go to India and said I could stay with his
wife and children. I went there until I said to myself: āStop it now,
Iāve got a stay permit, I went to Algeria and saw my girlfriend and
friends, what am I doing still in this house?ā. My Indian friend
suggested I take my time as it was not at all easy but I couldnāt keep
going on like that.
I enrolled in a council centre and got a room with another six people.
It was a terrible experience that deepened my disappointment in my
search for freedom. For example I had never imagined having to
experience things such as concealing drinking some wine. To drink wine
is a risk in Algeria too, but why was not I allowed to drink wine in
Italy, a European democratic country? In that centre drinking wine was
forbidden and I had also to leave the place at 7am. Anyone who goes to a
place like that is forced to do so because they have no money for rent
or cannot rent for other reasons. At 7am, therefore, even in winter when
it is 10 C below zero, a woman who works inside as a guard tells the
people to get out. At 9.30pm all the lights are off and you have to
sleep. A terrible disappointment to me, heavy treatment: wine cannot be
drunk because āMoroccans make troubleā and discipline must be respected.
A real disaster! At the age of 30 I have to be told what to do because
they want me to be the way they like: what rage, what frustration...
Then although I had a stay permit I had to work in agriculture again.
Actually the stay permit didnāt change my economic situation much. I
also did temporary work, for example in factories, where I was even
injured. As I said before, I had never imagined this kind of situation.
I still hoped to get a job in Italy where I could use my diploma. I was
really confident in my skills and that I would be able to do this job in
Italy or elsewhere, especially as some friends of mine who had studied
telecommunications, like me, had found jobs in the field. The hope of
finding this kind of job kept me going. I did hard work in the hope of
finding something else later and so I also did temporary jobs for 15
days while staying at the welcome centre. Unfortunately the time limit
for staying in the centre arrived and I didnāt know what to do. It was
out of the question to go back to my Indian friend. So a friend of mine
who had also finished his time in the centre, and I, decided to rent a
house. Actually we had no other choice.
It took days and nights... If we answered some advert directly we were
denied everything and if we asked some Italian friend to make the
telephone call for us, when we arrived on the spot we were told things
like: āMy daughter has rented the house to her boyfriendā, āMy husband
has already rented the houseā, all excuses not to rent a house to us.
The last week before expulsion from the centre a female Moroccan friend
found a house and she knew I was looking for one too. The landlord told
her that he could rent the house for 3 million liras because he had done
some work on it and he would also leave a washing machine. My friend
said she would decide with her husband. She was not my wife and this was
only an expedient for getting the house. They thought we were married.
When we went to see the administrators of the building, my friend wore a
veil and I said she couldnāt speak Italian. We wanted to avoid falling
into contradiction if they asked us any questions. It might seem easy,
like a game, but the situation was actually very serious as we risked
ending up in the street. My other friend and I agreed to pay 3 million
liras per month but obviously we didnāt have the money. A friend working
in another town, however, sent us some money, so we gave the landlord
1,700,000 liras plus the money for the rent and settled in the attic.
One week later my friend found a job with his diploma and his situation
improved considerably. Fifteen days later I found a job in a big
telecommunications company. We would therefore apply for a loan, which
we would repay with our work.
Now I had to keep my word with my girlfriendās father and marry her. As
they say in my country, if you make a promise it is like a gunshot that
goes out and cannot be taken back. It was also a question of dignity
concerning my family and hers. So I went there and got married.
When I was in Algeria I got the money that we had borrowed from the
friend who had already helped us to pay the landlord: four million
liras, which is quite a large amount in Algeria if you consider that you
cannot earn more than 200,000 liras per month there.
As I came back to Italy after getting married, the struggle to bring my
wife to Italy began and with it new frustrations arrived. In fact,
neither my stay permit nor the job with my diploma could make me feel
free. I didnāt feel as if I had found what I was looking for. The
problems had simply changed.
What are the actual differences and perspectives in passing from illegal
to legal immigration status?
As you wait for the stay permit you have the illusion that your
situation will change, but when you get it new problems and frustrations
come as well. At least you have hope when you are waiting for the stay
permit.
In the end it is worse owing to the new problems that you have to face.
For example, when you have a baby in Italy you can get money for it from
the council. But when my daughter was born we were not given anything
because we were foreigners.
That is not a minor problem compared with the ones I had had to face
before: my daughter has been discriminated against since birth, as she
is considered inferior. Iām disgusted by the fact that she also has to
face problems that once only concerned me. And I canāt do anything
because it doesnāt depend on me. It is exactly the same as when I was
clandestine, thatās why I said that the frustration is the same. When I
was clandestine I couldnāt decide for myself but had to wait for others
to decide and give me documents. Even if I knew I had the physical and
intellectual skills to improve my situation, I couldnāt do anything
about it.
Iām experiencing the same problems concerning my daughter even although
in a different way.
Another problem is the illusion that you can improve your economic
situation. It is true that in Algeria I couldnāt even afford to buy a
shirt and that made me angry... I woke up at 7am, came back home at 7pm
and I got a wage that didnāt allow me to afford anything. I felt the
same anger when my wife was pregnant and we asked the administrators for
permission to use a lift in a part of the building that was close to our
flat. We preferred to pay in order for her to use the lift but this was
denied us, in spite of the fact that we regularly made written requests.
How funny: when I said that if my wife had any problems they would have
a weight on their conscience they answered: āWe canāt have weights on
our conscience because we are catholicā. The fact that my wife had to go
up five floors when she could have used a lift made me so angry,
especially because I couldnāt afford a house with a lift. The problems
had changed but they didnāt let me sleep at night all the same.
If once I was scared I might be discovered as a clandestine and face
deportation, my fears doubled after I had papers. As a clandestine I had
to repress myself because I couldnāt have a public life or react to the
abuse inflicted on me owing to the lack of papers. Actually I am even
more controlled now that I have papers, both in my public and private
life. I am surrounded by terrible fears. Nobody is pointing a gun at my
head, but there is this closure, this invisible encirclement that is the
fear of going back to the beginning or even of being deported to Algeria
after enduring so much sacrifice. In fact the stay permit is nothing; it
is just a way for the authorities to control you. I feel the same fear I
had when I lived as a clandestine. I also realize that I was safer when
I didnāt have any documents because Algeria doesnāt accept people
without documents. On the contrary they can deport me more easily now
because they have my passport and I am more exposed to deportation. I
donāt need to kill someone to risk this, being sacked is enough. There
is also still frustration at the economic level. Of course my daily life
has changed for the better because in Algeria an attic like this, where
you can live peacefully with your family, is incredibly expensive. Here
Iāve got the attic but the fact of not being able to use a lift produces
the same frustration. If I said such things to someone living in Algeria
he would say that Iām crazy, but when you face problems like these
directly they acquire a new dimension. Compared with living as a
clandestine it is still a question of surviving. You are not safe with
the stay permit, as you canāt get involved in any political projects
with others. If I take part in a demonstration, be there clashes or not,
I risk double because Iām an immigrant. And what is the result? Well, I
canāt go on a demo even if Iād like to. It is such a waste of energy not
to be able to take part in any actions, be it a demo or anything else. I
want to do something but I canāt because Iām an immigrant, not because I
killed someone or robbed a bank, but due to the mere fact that Iām an
immigrant. This is the biggest disappointment for those who are looking
for freedom and hope to improve their conditions and those of their
family.
Living in clandestinity was a passage in the conditions you had to face,
whereas being an immigrant, with all that you left behind in the search
for freedom and the fulfilment of your aspirations, is something that
never ends and which you canāt escape from. It is a status that pushes
you into overcoming all difficulties and going ahead to find some
improvement that can cancel the immediate frustration. Although you know
that you might face more frustration when you find yourself faced with
whatever problem. It seemed to me that your condition as an immigrant,
more than that of clandestinity, affects your life day after day and the
perspectives ahead of you. Being an immigrant affects every aspect of
your life, especially as you donāt choose to emigrate but you are
compelled to. When you have to emigrate you always have the hope that
you will improve your situation, but you really just change your
problems and frustration. If you are frustrated because you canāt live
your sentimental life or because you donāt even have water to drink you
canāt calculate the level of your frustration and say that this problem
frustrates you more than the other. It is exactly the same thing.
You live as a clandestine in the hope that it will come to an end and
you face this condition without going crazy because you have the hope
that it will change. When you are no longer clandestine you realize that
your problems are still there.
Maybe the only way out as concerns being clandestine is not to get
identity papers, which you think will help you, but simply really be
yourself and follow your aspirations without the frustration that has
always accompanied you.
It is not recommended that you catch the night train for many reasons.
But if you are in a hurry it is the only train that allows you to go
through the whole country in one night. It is always full of clandestine
people trying to cross the border, people full of hope and desperation
like me.
I resolve to catch this train because otherwise I will be obliged to
spend the night in the cold or pay for a hostel. It is something past
one am when we arrive at .. There are few people on the train tonight
and we are three or four in the compartment. As usual, two or three
groups of youths get on the train and wander among the seats, clearly
with shady intent. As I know the route quite well, I keep my rucksack
safely between my legs, whereas my documents and money are next to my
body. As I live in the street Iām quite wary. In this no smoking section
there is also an old woman with parcels and suitcases well placed
between the seats. She has also noticed the strange movements. An hourās
journey later I realize that someone, one of the kids, sits down behind
me. Iām half asleep, so I wake up and see that another one is sitting in
front of me. I look at them without saying anything. The lights are off
but I can guess they are looking at me too, in defiance. They must be
fourteen or fifteen, but they are already adults with their short hair,
their older brotherās trousers and ordinary jackets and shoes. I see
them getting up and going to the next coach. I take advantage of the
passage of the ticket inspector and go to the toilet to have a big
spliff that makes me quite stoned. It is very good grass and I have to
pay attention not to let the smoke out.
āCowardsā: the old woman is cursing the same kids who have tried to
threaten her. āIām in the street too, shit!ā. She looks at me
disconsolately and I understand that she doesnāt trust me either. The
first daylight brightens up the mountains far away. Even if there is a
lot of snow, it is going to be a nice day. It is early in the morning
when we arrive at ... A group of pupils going on holiday are standing on
the platform with their bags. The train starts again; a few more hours
and I will be able to get out and eat something.
I hear the doors open behind me, and then I see them. There are three of
them with hats, uniforms and the badge on the jacket. While the first
asks the old woman for her documents, the other two point to me. There
are three passengers in the carriage, and three cops. āGood morning,
passports,ā they say with forced courtesy. They have just started their
dayās work, as I can smell coffee and cigarettes on their breath when
they transmit my details to the police headquarters.
Iāve got an upset stomach, and sweat is dripping from my chest and
armpits. They stare at me for a few minutes, ask for my details then
wait for a communication from the headquarters. We are going through an
area full of tunnels and there are disturbances. I must keep quiet, I
say to myself while looking at the landscape and trying to absorb its
colours. I concentrate on the houses made of stone and their
characteristic roofs. I am thinking this is the last time I will be able
able to enjoy a landscape.
I wonder if my partner wrote to me and I also wonder how sheāll know
that Iāve been captured.
The youngest cop is not married, whereas the other two are: they have
well-ironed shirts. They have given a kiss to their wives before going
to work. They are hunters and Iām the prey. When a gazelle feels the
lionās teeth sinking into her neck she abandons any attempt at
resistance. Iām suddenly wrapped in a strange calmness. I feel like
laughing and say to myself: āAfter all I knew this moment would arrive
sooner or later, it was even too good but now the day of reckoning has
comeā. Where will they take me? It is the first time since I left that I
have been subjected to such a control.
They obviously have problems of communication with the headquarters. The
youngest gives me back my document and apologizes. I look at him as
though I wanted to say that they know where they can find me and that
Iāve nothing to hide. As they go, I get up to relax and have a cigarette
in the corridor. I ask myself whether I should sit down or to get off at
the next stop. But the route is still long and I donāt have any chance
of escape. If they get an answer from the headquarters they will come
back to me. I think of the possibilities that are left open to me: pull
the emergency brake and jump out of the train, lock myself in the toilet
and destroy anything compromising that I have on me.
The old woman was looking at me suspiciously when the cops were trying
to identify me, and saw how nervous I was afterwards. When we arrive at
.., the old woman gets ready to leave the train with all her luggage. I
offer her my help but she firmly refuses, while I notice with great
relief that the cops are getting out too. I will be at the border in a
few hours.
I resolve not to think about what to do next; Iāve got the entire day to
do that.
There are no cops at the station but I prefer to take a walk. I eat a
sandwich and look at the sea and its waves in front of me. The weather
is fine here. I enjoy the last spliff I have. It tastes so sweet, like
freedom.
Iāve often heard that prison is a setback for revolutionaries because
those who are really convinced of the need to change the existent
radically and act consequently, will sooner or later face ending up in
jail. In fact itās obvious that the enemy reacts by sharpening its
knives when it faces a threat to its existence, even if the latter is a
mere possibility. Phonetapping, following, intimidation and any other
kind of attention that the repression can bring about will become more
and more concrete, and the cages of control will surround us. If we
reckon that āgetting the situation under controlā is not enough to face
the āevilā, then we will have to physically separate ourselves from the
social context and the danger we think it involves.
I think that, without falling into paranoia, this consideration must be
always taken into account by all those who decide to undertake the many
roads to their freedom and that of others. Iām convinced that nothing
could be worse than finding ourselves quite unprepared when faced with
the possible consequences of our actions, as though we were prey to a
dream that suddenly crashes against the thick concrete walls of reality
leaving us unable to react. I donāt mean that it is possible to be ready
for everything that might happen to us in advance; but at least we have
to think of hypothetical ways to react to certain situations in order to
keep on cultivating and arming our desires and practices.
Iām developing this argument because I had already thought about the
eventuality of living in hiding before it knocked on my door. Of course
I didnāt have any precise ideas about it but it was in my mind as a
possibility between controlled freedom (the one we experience when we
are not locked up) and reclusion. I had consequently prepared myself
concerning where to go and how to do it. Iāve never agreed with comrades
who consider living in clandestinity as the worst thing that could ever
happen to you; on the contrary Iāve always instinctively perceived it as
a stroke of luck and a chance to be grasped at once. Iāve never thought
that this choice implied hiding oneself somewhere and feeling hunted
down and deprived of all dignity or the will to act. And Iāve never
thought that running away means escaping oneās responsibilities: in this
case it was the judiciary that presented the bill, and Iāve never drawn
up any contract with them. On the contrary I think freedom is something
precious that is worth defending at any price.
I didnāt consider living in hiding as something you decide without
taking into consideration the conditions that go with it. The chance to
put this choice to the test came to me at a time when I either had to
accept it or face the bars of a prison. As for the unknown dimension of
living in hiding, at first I only knew that it would allow me to move
freely and look at the sky without seeing it through the contours of the
prison bars. This thought, strengthened by the practical attention that
I had dedicated to it in the past, was sufficient for me to decide to
run away.
If I had to say what living in hiding is like in a few words I would say
that it is like leaving without knowing your destination, for an
unlimited amount of time and with a one way ticket. It is therefore very
different from the journeys we are used to: it is not a parenthesis
between before and after but is a life spent on the move. As Iāve always
had a passion for nomadic ways of life to such a point that Iāve always
identified life with movement, that doesnāt scare me. During my period
in hiding Iāve had the chance to reflect on the different attitudes and
characters of human beings according to their sedentary or nomadic ways.
When you are on the road you meet travellers like yourself or people who
are settled in a given place. I observed that certain friends I made
wouldnāt be able to go on living if they had to leave their homes. Those
who donāt like travelling inevitably become creatures of habit, their
days are spent in the same framework and they establish strong, deep and
permanent relationships as only those that grow throughout the years can
be. Their life goes on in a specific place and there it takes form and
content, and it would lose its meaning anywhere else. On the contrary,
those whose nature is nomadic do not feel tied to one place, they adapt
easily and immediately feel, from experience, if the place where they
have temporarily settled is all right for them or not. These are quite
important aspects for those who are compelled to live in hiding. A
clandestine person cannot allow themselves to be identified and knows
that everywhere one goes one must make the decision to leave again
without any kind of impediment. It is a decision that has to be taken
out of the blue because things could go wrong out of the blue as well.
But letās come back to the idea of leaving without forgetting that this
kind of departure is an imposition, as we are talking about the
condition of being a ābanditā, i.e. someone who cannot come back. What
you leave when you run away is a whole life composed of friendships,
relationships, beloved landscapes, familiar sounds and smells, and
things that you care a lot about: it is therefore everything that
contributes to creating your identity, and thatās no small thing. The
nostalgia for what youāve lost can turn into a pain; a continuous pain
that can be so deep and lacerating that you cannot accept the present
serenely. I felt this pain too, sure I did, but Iāve always
circumscribed it and limited it in time. And I got over it in the
pleasure of being free and ready to experience life day by day, and all
that was going to happen. After all, as a person in hiding, you carry
within yourself the sensation that you have nothing more to seek in your
past and no certainty concerning the future. According to your
character, this can either throw you into absolute frustration or make
you feel dizzy at the thought that you are totally free from any links
and able to become anybody or nobody. The choice is up to you.
Paradoxically, I often asked myself, what if it were precisely the
condition of being clandestine that is the dimension of absolute
freedom.
To conclude: you need to be ready to travel light, without your past.
You have to be new and wear only your enthusiasm and the promise that
you will never look back.
So, someone on the run arrives somewhere. His or her first thought is to
create another identity, which doesnāt only mean inventing a name with
which to introduce oneself. It also means that you need to create a
concrete, plausible and legal life in order to be able to make
relationships and avoid raising doubts about youself. You must therefore
create a past that can be talked about and a valid and credible reason
for being in that place; you also need to respect the time and pace that
the latter requires and pay attention to your looks so that they conform
to your new identity. It is a real job that requires a good memory, time
and energy, and I have to say that it is not at all easy to act a part
and get used to answering when you are called by your new name. It is
not easy to talk about yourself, about your life and interests,
especially when you had always done that, as I used to, with your
comrades and didnāt need to give many explanations, maybe doing wrong
sometimes. It is sad to pass for a collectionist of dreams when your
greatest passion is to subvert the existent and struggle openly against
authority and injustice...
So once you have got over doubts and suspicion about your interlocutor,
you find yourself talking about yourself by mixing truth and lies, real
memories with imagination; and you have to bear in mind that you must
remember what you have said and that it has to fit in with your new
personality and identity. You must constantly weigh up your words and
comments and always hide the reactions that you normally have when you
see certain things or hear certain kinds of news. In other words, you
have to be extremely lucid all the time and constantly keep the balance
between who you are and how you are presenting yourself. I often found
myself involved in conversations that left me exhausted from the huge
effort I had to make to keep concentrating. In fact, no matter what
discussion you get into, it will always reveal a part of you and your
way of behaving with others. Moreover when you meet someone particularly
interesting and your relationship with him/her grows through time, it
will be difficult to manage as you will find it hard to keep on playing
your part and avoid being discovered. Obviously you might feel quite
uncomfortable at some point, as you know that you are deceiving the
person you are dealing with and that the latter will never know you for
what you really are. Then you will feel nervous because even a simple
invitation to dinner might put your friend in serious trouble.
On the contrary, to sort out the problem of identity with the custodians
of order is much easier. For the latter the question is just a matter of
looks: you only need to become one of the many, nothing more or less,
avoid going around during āunusualā hours and attending suspicious
places, especially regularly.
It is an effort of concentration, as I was saying before, it requires a
state of lucidity that must be held for long periods. It is precisely
absolute attention that you need in order to avoid enervating paranoia,
endless doubts and general stress. You can trust nothing other than your
own attention to make sure that everything is okay and the situation is
under control. You also need to look to your safety and make sure you
are always free.
If you are a person in hiding, a normal event might appear suspicious to
your eyes; and it is true that the more you look at people with
suspicion and insistence the more you catch their attention. Suddenly it
can seem that everybody is looking at you or that someone is following
you. Then panic might come, and that is always difficult to cope with.
The only way to get over this shocking state of mind, and you must know
this very well, is by keeping your mind and nerves cool, sharpening your
senses and doubling your attention. Besides this, however, it is
recommended that you keep your eyes wide open to what is happening
around you. You have to learn to recognize faces, particularly the
features of the people around you, in one second flat, to develop a
photographic memory that allows you to recognize them at once and so be
able to spot a new face that might appear in the usual environment
immediately. A clandestine person looks at the present through different
eyes to those of people who are not in his/her condition as he/she sees
and fixes his/her attention on details that escape those who are not
clandestine. One day, as I went into the square of a big town, I noticed
two policemen in plain clothes asking a passer-by for his documents in a
very discreet manner, almost hiding under an arcade. The square was
crammed with people and I realized that no one was aware of what was
going on, not even those who were strolling a few steps ahead: I was the
only one who saw that it was a police identification and that there were
two cops standing there.
As it is hard to keep this kind of tension for long, you need to have a
place where you can go to relax. The most important place is undoubtedly
that where you spend the night. You must be sure that no one can come
and find you there and that you really are alone once you close the door
behind you. Then you find yourself with your books, your comments, your
proposals, and free from your new identity.
It is best that the people you meet never know the exact location of the
place where you live. Your photos might appear in the newspapers next
day, and anyway the more people know where you live, the less you will
feel safe in that house.
If you have the impression that someone suspicious might have followed
you and that your place is no longer safe, you will never be at peace
until you leave it. In order to keep your place as long as possible you
shouldnāt do your shopping or attend bars and public places in the
surrounding area (sooner or later someone you know will see you going
into your house). On the contrary, if you go to places far from your
house and someone recognizes you, you will have time to go back home,
pack your things and leave. Packing is the activity Iāve undertaken most
in clandestinity, as what you always need to achieve is the certainty
that you are the only one who knows your secret. This awareness will
give you the serenity to engage in any initiative whatsoever.
If you used to have the impression that you never had enough time to
cultivate your interests, when you are clandestine time is the only
thing you wonāt be short of. It is important, however, that you learn to
consider the timing and places of your interventions in a different way
in order to avoid frustration. Iām saying this because when I chose a
specific area of intervention, and decided to act promptly and quickly
in events concerning it, I often experienced a sense of impotence. In
fact, if you are living in hiding news from your own country and
comrades might reach you with months of delay, when it is too late to do
anything. Furthermore, when it comes to moving away from somewhere you
need time for gathering information about routes and means of
transport... you canāt just do things at random. I donāt mean that you
have to forget where youāre from, what you have to do is to look at it
in a different way, by planning long term projects and paying attention
to the details that you didnāt have time to do in your previous life,
even if you knew they were important. Consider that as a person in
hiding you have the chance to intervene rapidly in situations that you
didnāt even know about before. I realized how deep-rooted my idea of
borders between States was before and how little attention I had paid to
what happened ābeyond the bordersā, as I was also busy in the many
activities that life offers.
When you change your perception of time, you also change the way you
act. If you dedicate hours to a project and get to know all the details
involved, then realise it, the time you spent in planning it comes back
to you and gives more significance to every minute. Your sensations are
amplified by the total tension of your whole being in what you are
doing. It is a lucid awareness that keeps you away from the distracting
business of the people around you at that time.
I have reached the torrent after hours spent in a train, then walking.
It is hot and I can feel my shirt wet with sweat under my rucksack.
No one followed my steps along the road and through this little valley,
which means that still nobody knows who I am, where I am going or what I
am doing.
I walk along by the river, looking for a spot where I can stop and free
myself from the weight on my back and relax. I soon get the chance:
there is a large, clear pool of water surrounded by stones and a little
further on there is some shade under a few trees. This is the place.
I get rid of my rucksack and soon my lungs fill with air; I take a
couple of deep breaths and am full of energy once again. I have a quick
look around and I realize that I really am alone.
I get into the water, step by step, without hesitating, and reach the
middle of the pool. I plunge in and abandon myself to this embrace with
my face pointing to the sky. I am enveloped in a strong sensation of
freedom: at the same time I feel I am part of the totality and free from
any ties.
Soon my thoughts go to those locked up in jail who canāt enjoy any of
this.
Of course it is hard for me, but nothing will make me turn back. Moments
like this and the sensations they fill me with are sufficient to forget
any tiredness, they are the oxygen that keeps me going. I try to fix
this moment inside myself, my closed eyes turned towards the sun:
Now, in whatever part of the world, I am free.
I lived in a little town for many years; a normal life, as they say.
School, a job and a lot of time to dedicate to myself, my interests, my
passions and enjoyments.
I saw the world through a window, like a film full of images, some sad,
others joyful, without it making too much impression on me as though
what was happening around me was just the inevitable scenario of life
going by.
From my window I looked at other peopleās lives and saw them as though
they were a frame around mine. Letās say I was too busy living my life
to bother about that of others.
But I realized something was wrong and that is why I was not indifferent
when some protesters passed under my window or when some event in my
little town disturbed the monotony of my days. Moreover, this curiosity
and the attraction that I felt towards those who wanted to change the
scenery of everyday life pushed me into looking for these people,
listening to them and sharing experiences with them.
In the end I realized that I must do something to prevent the
wretchedness I observed from my window from entering my life
irremediably. So I engaged myself along with those I had met, so that
the scenery around us became an adventure worth living together without
laws, privilege and privileged people.
I started dealing with all kinds of problem and subjects along with the
others, who were certainly only a few compared to the population of my
town. And we tried to find concrete solutions that erupted into daily
life along with our discussions and proposals. We gathered and spread
information mainly concerning the most hidden and sliest aspects upon
which the collective wretchedness imposed on us was based: we
demonstrated in the streets and clashed with those who wanted to prevent
us from doing so, we tried to oppose any kind of abuse, or at least we
made it clear that not everybody would passively accept what power
wanted to impose.
We had very modest means perhaps, but we were armed with our tenacious
desires and the firm conviction that something, even if only in our
little town, would never be as before or as authority had planned. We
shared enthusiasm, ideas and practises for quite a long time, which also
gave me the possibility to widen my horizons far beyond the limits of my
little town and to meet people and situations similar to those I was
experiencing. I realized that big experiences are no more than the sum
of the little everyday ones: little rebellions gain strength and courage
from the bigger ones and give consistency, concreteness and reality to
the latter.
Then, step by step, the mosaic started to fall apart and we began to
take a distance from one another. Some also took a distance from
themselves, as they were anxious to find a decent place in the world,
which in spite of our efforts was not changing.
The situation was collapsing all around us: on the one hand there was
the most determined opposition to our demands, on the other there was an
unscrupulous use of our actions and ideas that were now being used to
renew the wretchedness, to perfect and reproduce it for future
generations. We were offered the opportunity to play an active role in
this process of developing the existent, i.e. the moderate voice of
dissent, and not a few of us accepted it. Of course they were not the
first to go over āto the other sideā nor were they the last. It is well
known that power and the crumbs it can distribute are attractive to
those willing to climb the ladder of success or who simply never really
believed in the dreams they used to boast about.
We remained very few, the strong and pure ones. In the long run we were
not so strong, and we were no longer pure. On the contrary we were
dirty... with impotence, regret, the lack of horizons to exhilarate
us... dirty with sad and bad drinking and with human miseries great and
small. Someoneās body and brain went off with the help of psychoactive
mixtures, before they fell into the abyss of doubt and desperation far
from the thrill of freedom that once touched them. For the few who
remained, the techniques of dissuasion employed by the guardians of
order lost both the formalities of the law and the tricks of the
cultural-democratic puppet-theatre. As long as juvenile exuberance was
recuperated and recycled into quieter spheres of opinion, those who were
still on the road of rebellion were simply seen as a question of public
safety, a threat to the tranquillity of the little town. Greater power
was therefore given to the repressors in order to persecute them.
What was left of our hopes and projects that we thought would illuminate
the future?
I could have gone back to my window, waiting for unforeseen events to
change the situation. But something still stirred out there, and it was
worth moving, even close to my town, to try to open up a glimmer of hope
in the darkness that was enveloping me day after day.
So I went away in search of the enthusiasm and engagement that were
sadly disappearing around me. In the long run, however, I realized that
my expectations concerning the destruction of the existent were not felt
with the same passion by those around me. Many of them were happy with a
few words, with their sphere of relations that gave them an illusion
against the alienating and devastated society. As a consequence, even if
ideas, attitudes and practises were still there, the projects and
initiatives that were carried out didnāt really try to subvert of daily
life.
I came back to my window and scouring the horizon, looking for a new
spur, a tiny signal to start again. But most of the time the colour I
saw in the street was that of the uniforms coming to exact the
retorsion.
Meantime I carried on with my small actions, trying to convince myself
that my sensitivity and hope werenāt clouded by the darkness of my town.
In fact, it was a demonstration of resistance, and the proof that things
can be done, even if many didnāt go any further than that. But in spite
of all the messages I spread in the wind, my own voice was the only
echo.
It was quite an absurd situation... I was looking for paths to share
with others, even if it implied adapting my tension and skills to those
of others. In the end there was no answer, only frustration, as I had
reduced my aspirations to a dimension that was not mine.
What was I turning into? Maybe a priest looking for good souls, or
rather a ghost or shadow that runs up against the wall with others not
wanting to come near it. And if I were really resentful I would say I
had turned into a plague victim who brought bad luck, as I was a sworn
enemy of order. After all, the forces of repression concentrate their
efforts on the few who donāt give up, given that they donāt have many
other objectives left. I made a decision. I wouldnāt accept the
inevitable fact that I was being spied upon, nor would I measure my
aspirations and actions according to what the imposed conditions
established. Control and coercion disturb our life enough, I found it
unacceptable to become my own controller.
So I decided not to let myself be tracked down any longer. I decided
that my time, space and experiences didnāt deserve to become fodder for
my enemyās appetite. When I made this choice I knew it was an adventure
that would not necessarily be final, but which could put me in some new,
unique and immutable condition in which to nourish my desires and
activities. I rather found myself in a parallel dimension that allowed
me to look for the completeness and freedom of movement that I lacked:
other places, other instruments and other conditions to keep on
stressing the ideas that had marked my life for a long time.
Sometimes I come back to the window but I know that my view is going to
reach wider horizons than those that I saw in the beginning.
I have had occasion to experience some kind of banishment for short
periods of time: life in hiding, prison, and expulsion. Even if they all
are conditions that are imposed by repression, each one is very
different from the other. I am going to talk about them, as they are
experiments in freedom.
However, I intend to expose the thoughts that these circumstances raised
in me rather than describe their practical aspects. Iām going to take
into consideration the āinnerā dimension involved, then Iāll try to draw
some general conclusions. This is the way I prefer. In fact, as concerns
the many events I experienced, I tend to remember the ideas and
emotional states that characterized them. Iām going to use narrative,
articulated discussion and short notes. Iām sometimes going to quote
other peopleās words, but only because these words had a decisive
importance for me on these occasions. And only some distant echo in the
readerās own experience will allow him to distinguish these notes from a
mere literary exercise. My most extreme experience doesnāt concern fear
or the privation of freedom. In one of his first world war poems, the
poet Ungaretti writes that one day he felt as though he was ādocile as a
fibre in the universeā. The poet, however, uses this expression to say
that he thought he was part of the universe, whereas my experience was
shocking and bewildering. I remember Ungarettiās words coming into my
mind as the most appropriate (when your heart throbs certain
correspondences of the mind push your ideas into a strange universe
called intuition). I proudly changed ādocileā into āfragileā and tried
to convince myself that the latter was the word the poet actually wrote.
But I didnāt only feel as if I was āfragileā, I was also ādocileā. Why?
I had got lost in a wood. While looking for a way out, I fell down a
cliff. Luckily my rucksack prevented me from breaking my back, but I was
in such pain that I remained motionless on the bed of a dry river for a
night and a day. I soon finished my food and water. I spent days trying
to climb and find a spot from where to orientate myself, and one night
in the rain. The fourth day passed and besides being hungry and very
tired I started to feel a strange interior dizziness. At a certain
point, the different aspects of my character started arguing with one
another as though they were different people. Their discourses were so
realistic that every time I woke up after falling asleep with my legs
wrapped around a trunk to avoid falling down, I couldnāt say if I had
really met someone or if I had just been dreaming. Two voices were the
most frequent: the pessimistic one and the optimistic one. The former
attacked the awkward ingenuity of the latter with arguments that I will
never forget. The quarrel was mainly about the relation between man and
nature. The optimistic one interpreted the shapes in the wood (branches
of trees, paths between the bushes, etc.) as signs of a way out and
cheered up. The pessimistic one sneered at this reassuring
anthropomorphism as he claimed that a wood didnāt give any signs, it
just was. But the optimistic one didnāt give up; on the contrary he
created deities for himself as companions of travel. It was when I slid
on a sloping rock dozens of metres up that I really felt as if I was a
ādocile fibre in the universeā. Out of the blue I realized that freedom
is often no more than a question of... balance. So many desires,
projects, and discussions on the power of the individual transforming
his life: a few centimetres further and everything was finished. I
regretted pathetically that I wouldnāt be able to write anything to the
world on whose fragile borders I was still advancing hesitantly. I
became strongly convinced that words are medicines (the Greeks intended
them as both medicine and poison) that keep us apart from the absolutely
other that Nature is. Wild nature is not as it is depicted in
primitivist-illustrated magazines; on the contrary it is a terrifying
place because it is āmuteāāa place of total communion and at the same
time of absolute loneliness. Extreme solitude is a medicine too because
it is a relation in which others participate in the form of absence. As
I was lying on the rocks of that dry river, I found myself thinking of
what my comrades would have said about that circumstance, and I laughed
heartily. My comrades...
Words as medicine. I experienced my most intense relation with theory
the night that I had to light a fire using a book of Hegel. I canāt
describe my hesitation when I tore out the pages nor can I describe my
thoughts around the fire or the light that Hegelās dialectics assumed in
the unusual way it was being used. I realized that, not by chance,
Heraclitus the obscure used to see in the flames of fire the sensitive
expression of things becoming reality.
Kafka says that logic cannot resist against those who want to stay
alive. I decided that each time I talked with certainty about the
struggle and radical projects I would always remember what I felt when I
was on that rock.
Life with its necessary illusions had always taken me away from
awareness of my ādocilityā towards the world. In fact, I couldnāt have
done anything had such awareness been alive. What can we destroy and
what can we build if we donāt know whether we will be there a moment
later or not? While I was in prison or in confinement I promised myself
I would do many things once my imprisonment was over. Of course it was
not so. Life absorbs you and makes you forget the punches you take head
on. But I realize that the sense of vacuity I experienced in that wood
has penetrated me like a note that secretly accompanies any affirmation
I make. If I were to listen to that rocky demon more often, I would talk
much less.
Upon those bare rocks where eagles build their nest, I guessed how
strong the thought of committing suicide could be. The idea that you can
say goodbye to the world at any time makes life wonderful. āGo ahead,
dare further, no one can compel you to live!ā: through the obstinate
voice of that demon we can face any enemy. In fact, all blackmail
collapses on the sharp point of this kind of awareness. On the edge of
an attractive cliff, in the absolute emptiness where fiction disappears
and only what counts really counts, I met unreserved love.
In other words, the optimist prevailed with reasons that reason doesnāt
know. When one night in the rain a kind of cosmic voice (my personal
Mephistopheles) proposed a pact to me, I felt an irrepressible euphoria:
āIf you renounce your ideas I will take you out of this woodā. I said
euphoria, which is what I felt when I refused the offer. Still
rhetorical even when he is delirious, some will say. After all, even our
hallucinations reveal who we are.
It might seem strange, but my experience as someone in clandestinity is
all there, in the experience Iāve just told you about. The rest is a
series of details. We only really remember what shocks us.
As I listened to my various selfs arguing in the wood, I understood the
meaning of Nietzscheās affirmation that what we call āIā is only an
illusion of grammar, our life being just a space which innumerable
entities in conflict pass through. After that, I have often found myself
thinking about the concept of identity.
What really frightens us is our lack of control over what surrounds us.
I am sure that the few days I spent in the woods affected me far more
than the months I spent in prison. Everything is, or seems to be, under
control in prison, at least it was like that under the conditions that I
experienced there. Of course your freedom is taken away and you hate
your jailers; but everything repeats itself in the same way, with you on
the one side and them on the other, and you can carry out your minimal
project. In other words, there is a code. There is a big difference
between the prisoner who absorbs this code until he becomes part of the
total institution and the one who cannot accept it. But even the most
determined rebel uses certain codes. On certain occasions, on the
contrary, all codes collapse because nothing, not even our lack of
freedom, is sure. I think that lack of all guarantees can lead to
insanity. In this sense, I perceived better what a radical critique of
psychiatry is.
I have often woken up suddenly with the fear of not having water (and in
such cases it has always been a great pleasure to find a bottle close to
my bed); on the contrary, I have hardly ever dreamt about prison.
As for the concept of identity, the condition of being in clandestinity
is a remarkable experiment on the subject and can be far more useful
than a lot of philosophy books. Coeurderoy said that we should be able
to change our name every day. That is also what I said to the cops when
they questioned me, and I added that the concept of identity is
authoritarian. The not so relaxed reaction of the cops showed me clearly
how categories of identity are dominionās pivotal point.
What is identity?
A certain image built up with a number of elements comes into play in
our daily relations. Our past and what others know about us become quite
habitual aspects, and we donāt usually give them much thought. When we
become intimate with someone, we open up to him or her what is most
precious to us, affections and ideas that in themselves have a story. A
clandestine person, on the contrary, continuously has to create his or
her identity, which has to be coherent in order not to be suspicious. To
get used to a name that isnāt yours is a very particular experience,
which might be impossible for someone (maybe because it is very similar
to āI is anotherā by a clandestine of poetry called Rimbaud). An
interesting and useful aspect of this condition is that it helps you to
develop a basic skill, i.e. it teaches you to talk about yourself with
extreme sincerity without mentioning any details about your life. It is
not so much a capacity for abstraction but rather the ability to
transform your experiences into a distillation of thoughts and emotions.
A different concept of identity is maybe what is left over from this
process of distillation. In the course of this interior alchemy you must
throw away something important, which can be painful. For example, owing
to my ācharacterā, it was hard for me to renounce to the public aspect
of my subversive activity. (I use the inverted comma because I canāt
forget a sentence of Valeryās notebooks in which he said that what we
call character is something temporary). Surely, a comrade on the run is
always thinking of his identity at risk and how to get involved in other
comradesā projects (do they remember me?). In this case coherence, which
in social relations is a guarantee of the āregularityā that shelters us
from fear and chaos, and which is often far less obvious than it might
seem, assumes a very particular dimension, where the tension between
theory and practise is at a more interior level. This coherence can
sometimes be reached by paying a high price in the sphere of affections.
I chose not to be too rigorous when I had to go clandestine (as proved
by the visit police paid me a few months later...). But I can guess how
one can open or close oneself by paying constant attention. I understand
the comrade who says he knew authentic freedom only as a clandestine,
when he traveled incognito through countries and people. I had a little
taste of this one night on a hill, as I looked at the lights of the
towns from the distance of the fugitive. Those who are banned can
overturn their condition and become bandits.
Oneās attention (as regards the territory where one moves, oneās looks
and behaviour, and unwanted contact with comrades) cannot be improvised
because it requires the necessary time and energy. But other comrades
with more experience than me can explain this much better.
Living in hiding and being held in prison are very different conditions
also as regards the perception of oneās identity. I remember having felt
a deep and almost euphoric joy when from my cell I started writing to my
comrades whom I hadnāt been in touch with for a long time. I was writing
with āmyā name, I was receiving letters and talking about past
experiences and future projects: all this filled my heart and days with
joy. Comrades talk about prisoners, organise solidarity initiatives and
make public their ideas. Those who live in hiding are even more
isolated. Their coherence is proud and difficult as they cannot have an
external insight. May the wanderers be remembered.
Living in hiding is an experience of strong relations and complicities,
but also of great solitude. The demon of nostalgia often visits you, and
brings you memories that you considered buried: a far off childhood
friend, the smell of the shop where you used to go as a child, a girl
you loved when you were teenager or maybe the beautiful woman who passed
in front of you the day before; and then words, places, songs,
everything seems to conspire to make you feel nostalgic. Nostalgia is a
strange world as it can make even a stupid Sanremo song sound sweet to
an anarchist...
Everybody knows the difference between nostalgia and sadness. The former
is a black-coloured sensation, but itās a black that gives you
something. Have you ever noticed that gloomy people have a distracted
and scrupulous kindness of their own? As they are caught by nostalgia
for their past, they develop a particular sensibility for unknown
people, as if they wanted to fill the emptiness with a promise of
happiness. Living in hiding is more or less like that.
FerrĆ©ās lyrics, which I quoted at the beginning, have just come back
into my mind. Curiously enough, I found them written on a wall with a
felt-tip pen. It is singular that anarchists are depicted as nostalgic
people, isnāt it? āThey have black flags of hope/and melancholy as their
dancing partnerā... Well, I think that living in hiding has turned me
into this: my irreducible optimism has become more melancholic, as
though it were accompanied by a gypsy tune.
The homologation of activities and gestures is making all critique more
and more inoffensive. We often have the impression that speaking is
pointless. Living in hiding and being held in prison were all very
different experiences for me from this point of view. In prison I
experienced the power of words. To speak to the guards, director and
staff in a certain way, or to speak to other prisoners during the
āsocialityā time has practical effects. Rebel words are likely to bring
about action; therefore they are feared.
If you are clandestine, the power of words is sometimes limited, and
this is not only for security reasons. It can happen that you think
twice before speaking because what you say risks looking as if you are
giving a lesson, because it canāt be put into practice (especially where
others would be exposing themselves publicly whereas you canāt). So you
prefer to keep quiet, unless you find a new form of complicity in a
common project. After all, you are even freer to act because you have an
advantage over the enemy: the latter doesnāt know where you are...
A form of punishment is adopted in some still existent primitive
communities, which they consider the hardest. It is not physical
torture, nor imprisonment or ostracism. When someone commits
particularly serious and blameworthy acts, the community react by
treating him as if he didnāt exist. As they donāt look at him, speak to
him or about him, the members of the community make him invisible for a
length of time. They say it is an unbearable punishment. Our
individuality is built up and completed by a continuous game of
communication and reciprocal recognition. We are invisible to one
another when we each feel guilty by our very presence, rendered awkward
and anonymous by the homologation that prevents us from establishing our
unions and talking sincerely without mediation.
This is very similar to the condition experienced by millions of
clandestine people in the world, mainly the economic refugees of the
capitalist massacre. They are invisible and compelled to run like
shadows along the walls of metropoli to expiate the guilt of being poor
and foreign. Clandestine people frighten us because, through them, we
perceive our condition as precarious, uprooted people, submitted to a
gigantic productive and technological apparatus beyond our control, and
shunted from one material need to another the meaning of which quite
escapes us.
Iām glad that this booklet also exposes the experience of someone living
in hiding for reasons other than those of many comrades. This doesnāt
mean that we have to eliminate differences, but that we have to
formulate a radical critique of borders and identity papers from a
social point of view. Unfortunately, the idea of subverting the
categories of dominion (worker / unemployed, citizen / foreigner, legal
/ illegal, innocent / guilty) was our idea in the first place, and not a
real trend. Categories must be destroyed in the struggle; itās not
enough to simply claim that they donāt exist. The condition of millions
of legally inexistent men and women, as a well-known servile Italian
political scientist called them, could be a painful yet formidable
occasion to destroy all collective and authoritarian identities. Those
who are invisible because they have been deprived of words and
relationships often look for some collective identity as a form of
defence. This is why fundamentalism exists, a speculative product of
capitalās negation of differences. A discussion on its social causes is
urgent, as it is certainly not with intellectual argumentations on the
inexistence of god that it is possible to formulate a practical critique
of religion. The need for communities in a world where the only
community is that of consumer goods, is getting stronger and stronger
and is easily manipulated by nationalistic and fundamentalist scourges.
The invisible people who are surrounded by hatred and indifference,
women and men who are faced with an ultimatum are more and more
numerous: they are either subjected and forced to integrate or deported.
Common grounds for rebellion, created from immediate needs in order to
go forward, are far more than solidarity. Our very freedom is at stake
because the possibility of social war is very likely to be transformed
into the certainty of āracialā war. It is in the overwhelming chaos of
languages and cultures that new desertions and unions need to be
experienced...
How is it possible to be invisible to power and its guardiansāin other
words, how it is possible to defy identificationāand at the same time be
socially visible? I think this is the main problem that regards all
clandestine comrades. I also think that we can begin to talk about our
wanderer comrades starting from the condition of wandering on a large
scale, so that our comrades are less distant.