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Title: Communism in France
Author: HS
Date: January 1989
Language: en
Topics: Socialisme ou Barbarie, communism, france
Source: Retrieved on October 27, 2009 from https://web.archive.org/web/20091027012800/http://ca.geocities.com/red_black_ca/echanges.htm

HS

Communism in France

The split of Socialisme ou Barbarie in 1958 was about organization.

After the de Gaulle coup d’etat in May 58, there was an influx of

members into S ou B. These are mainly students fighting against the

Algerian war because of the draft. The number of members jumped up

suddenly from less than 20 to more than 100. The problems of

organization that had previously been discussed almost constantly became

a practical problem and not simply theoretical speculation in a narrow

circle. This problem was closely connected to a political analysis with

two contradictory positions (this opposition never appeared publicly in

the review, but could be seen in the internal bulletins): on one hand a

majority followed, for a short period, Chaulieu (Cornelius Castoriadis)

in foreseeing a workers’ revolt against the “fascism” of de Gaulle; on

the other hand the minority said that de Gaulle was there to solve the

problems of French capitalism and to end the Algerian war.

Two months later, Chaulieu adopted this position but, on the way he

managed to push the minority out of the group using the army of new

recruits who wanted “to fight” to build the new organization in

traditional structures, thinking that, at last it would be the basis for

a new development of the group. We can see that the “wrong” analysis

manipulating the “mass” was then paving the road to the party. The two

proposed structures were not compatible:

meet from time to time in a general assembly to define the group’s

policy and to elect a political board which would have the function to

implement the adopted policy. The members would have had to defend the

position of the majority in public and to follow it even if they

disagreed. Disagreements would have to be contained inside the group as

a whole or in the cells.

problems would be discussed, even the general line discussed in general

assemblies. Everybody could express his own ideas at any moment and

through any means. It should be said that neither the majority nor

minority followed what they were looking for on paper.

Socialisme ou Barbarie was active up to the end of the Algerian war

(1962) and then started a slow decline. This decline began after the

split of Pouvoir Ouvrier, when Chaulieu openly dropped Marxism, and the

group disappeared in 1967 after a totally wrong political statement on

the impossibility of a general movement in France.

The ILO was formed with the members that had been obliged to leave

Socialisme ou Barbarie, (mainly students and intellectuals). In order to

follow their ideas, they organized regular workers’ meetings with

workers who had a militant extra syndicalist practice in their work

place. Initially these meetings were called the “Inter-factory

Committee.” Little by little these meetings became more important than

the ILO meetings and in 1962 the ILO group disappeared and the other

committee was transformed into the ICO. The structure of the ICO was a

practical structure rather than a political or theoretical structure. In

a certain way it was what the ILO dreamed of building when it split from

Socialisme ou Barbarie: Most of the participants of the regular meetings

were informal militants of informal factory groups. The ICO paper

reported the situation and struggles in each factory according to the

regular meeting reports and there was a kind of consensus around

autonomous activity rather than a political statement. Participants were

from various origins, anarchists, Marxists, or non- aligned militants,

but linked by a strong feeling about class struggle. Interest in other

struggles in France and abroad developed with more contacts, and from

time to time in more general discussions, but the group, though slowly

growing, stayed small up until 1968. In 1968 a lot of people, again

mostly students, became connected with the ICO. The ICO became a kind of

federation of small groups scattered all over the country. During the

15-day May General Strike, everybody was strongly involved in the

struggle at his place of work and everybody then agreed not to act like

a group “organizing the workers” but to encourage autonomy wherever he

was.

After 1968, the character of the ICO had completely changed. The group

had become more of a political organization with perhaps several hundred

loose participants. The workers were a minority and voted with their

feet as the discussions were moving very far from their struggles.

Several tendencies were fighting to lead the ICO toward a specific

orientation and after four years it burst into several pieces.

One of these pieces was Echanges. It was again different of what we had

seen previously. Echanges was built to try and maintain the close

international links created during the previous period in several

European countries (mainly through international meetings). This was the

reason why from the start Echanges had an edition in English and was

based more on England rather than France, and more on individuals in

each country connected with, an informal circle of supporters. Now after

more than twenty years Echanges is more centered on France, with a small

group meeting regularly mainly to discuss politics in general, struggles

and the content of the bulletin. Two years ago, on the proposal of an

American comrade we started a short news bulletin which appears every

two months, with a print run of up to 3000 copies. It is distributed

free and seems to be the start of a new basis of relations again all

over the country. The experience of the past twenty years has taught us

practically what some theoretical discussions had put on the table:

there is presently no room for the kind of traditional organization for

which many people are still looking. For the time going “organization”

is more a kind of network in which everybody, or some affective groups,

defines at any moment their participation in a struggle or in a

publishing activity and the connection between others doing the same

thing. We don’t think or don’t know if it will be a permanent thing and

if something else will appear. We think that in this important question,

we have to follow ( knowing exactly what we don’t want as workers), but

not to precede, to learn and to tell what we have understood and not to

teach.