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Title: Italy and the Platform
Author: Nestor McNab
Date: 2004
Language: en
Topics: Italy, platform, platformism, Northeastern Anarchist
Source: Retrieved on 14th October 2021 from https://anarchistplatform.wordpress.com/2010/04/21/italy-and-the-platform-italian-involvement-in-the-debate-on-the-%e2%80%98organisational-platform%e2%80%99-by-nestor-mcnab-fdca/
Notes: Nestor McNab is a member of the Federazione dei Communisti Anarchici (FdCA), and the Italian editor for the international A-Infos Collective. This essay is from The Northeastern Anarchist #9 (Summer/Fall 2004)

Nestor McNab

Italy and the Platform

The debate which surrounded the publication of the „Organisational

Platform of the General Union of Anarchists – Project“ between June and

October 1926 was lively and widespread, involving a great number of

anarchists both in France, where it had been published, and abroad.

However, as Paris in those days was a sort of magnet for anarchists who

had been forced to flee their countries of origin or who were drawn

there by the great activity of others already present, a large part of

the debate regarding the proposals of the Group of Russian Anarchists

Abroad (GRAZ)[1] was centred on Paris.

Publication of the „Platform“ itself was preceded by a series of

articles regarding anarchist organisation in Delo Truda, notably the

GRAZ article „The Problem of Organisation and the Notion of Synthesis“

in March 1926. The notion of a synthesis of the three main strands of

anarchism (anarchist communism, anarcho-syndicalism and individualism)

had been proposed by SĂ©bastien Faure and was supported by figures such

as Volin. Itself a controversial idea, „synthesism“ was to prove to be,

in the years that followed, the counterpart to the „platformist“ idea of

organisation and the organised movement was destined to be polarised

over the years into federations based on a synthesis and those based on

a tendency.

The debate accompanied the piecemeal publication of the Platform and

took place in the pages of various anarchist journals, including the

promoter group’s own Russian-language paper, Delo Truda, and the French

paper Le Libertaire. Following comments by some comrades, the GRAZ

published a „Supplement to the Organisational Platform“ in November

1926, which addressed certain points which had been raised by Maria Korn

Isidine.

A series of meetings and conventions were also held. The meeting of

February 12, 1927, presided over by the Italian anarchist Ugo Fedeli,

who had worked with Makhno and who initially supported the project,

reached a decision to appoint a Provisional Secretariat which would call

an International Conference, leading to the foundation of a

Revolutionary Anarchist Communist International.

The International Conference took place on March 20, 1927 in Paris and

discussed the proposal presented by the Provisional Secretariat which

succinctly summarised the debate of the previous months:

As a basis for the union of homogeneous forces and as the ideal logical

and tactical minimum upon which comrades should agree, we propose the

following points:

the anarchist system.

of communist anarchism.

itself on ideological and tactical unity and collective responsibility.

revolution.

The conference, however was interrupted by the French police, who

arrested the participants, later expelling many from the country.

However, before the meeting was broken up, one of the two Italian groups

present, the „Pensiero e Volontà“ Group (represented by Luigi Fabbri,

Camillo Berneri and Ugo Fedeli), succeeded in having the first point

changed into:

against the authority of the State and capital, being the most important

factor in the anarchist system.

This group had also prepared alternative versions of three of the other

four points, which due to the police action were not decided upon:

methods of anarchists’ revolutionary action.

Anarchists having the same final goal and the same practical tactics,

based also on collective responsibility.

realize the social revolution.

In the months to follow, debate on the „Platform“ raged on. In April,

Volin and a group of other Russian anarchist exiles including Mollie

Steimer and her husband Senya Fleshin, published a fierce, lengthy

attack on the Platform“[2]. This elicited a stinging collective response

in August of that year from the GRAZ[3], who accused Volin and his group

of deliberately misrepresenting the spirit of the draft Organisational

Platform. In May 1927, the Provisional Secretariat, composed of Nestor

Makhno, Maxim Ranko and Chen (Yen-Nian?) issued invitations to join the

new Revolutionary Anarchist Communist International, or International

Anarchist Communist Federation, based on the original five points above

(but not including the counter-proposals of the Italians, a fact which

would certainly not have been appreciated by Fabbri’s group).

The meetings and articles continued, with contributions from Faure,

Volin, Linsky, Ranko, Isidine, Grave and Chernyakov amongst others, not

forgetting Arshinov and Makhno. In October that year, Errico Malatesta,

the Ă©minence grise of Italian anarchism who was living in enforced

isolation in Italy, responded to the proposed „Platform“ in a letter[4]

which was replied to several months later both by PĂ«tr Arshinov[5] and

Makhno[6]. In the meantime, there had also been important interventions

by Luigi Fabbri[7] and Maria Korn Isidine[8], to whom Arshinov replied

with another article[9]. It was not until a year later in late 1929 that

Malatesta was able to reply to Makhno’s letter[10] and it has to be said

that many of his doubts about the project had by that time been cleared

up, though there did remain serious problems regarding the concept of

collective responsibility. Malatesta would, in fact, write once again on

that subject in the pages of the French journal Le Libertaire as late as

April 1930[11] stating, however, that he was quite prepared to believe

that the difficulty could simply be a result of linguistic differences.

(It should at this point be remembered that the version of the text used

as a basis for consideration by non-Russians was Volin’s French

translation and, in fact, Alexandre Skirda has since drawn attention to

the somewhat biased nature of this translation. Indeed, there was an

exchange of articles around the question of the faithfulness of the

translation in Le Libertaire in the spring of 1927.) By that stage,

however, the impetus had evaporated and support for the „Platform“ was

restricted to only a few groups such as the Union Anarchiste Communiste

RĂ©volutionnaire. Arshinov had been expelled to Belgium in January and

one of Makhno’s last public acts was his speech at the UACR Congress.

The two Italian groups present at the 1927 meetings went their separate

ways. The group represented by Giuseppe Bifolchi, „had already begun

their own process of criticism in the search for a new revolutionary

strategy, [and] lent their support to the Platform’s programme [
].

Believing that the concept of internationalism was the real basis for

the existence of every anarchist organisation, they joined the

International Anarchist Communist Federation as its First Italian

Section“[12]. The Manifesto of this group has now been translated into

English for the first time[13]. Bifolchi was forced to leave France in

April 1928 and went to Belgium. There, he founded the monthly journal

Bandiera Nera (Black Flag) before moving on to Spain during the years of

the Spanish Revolution, where he fought as a commander in the Italian

Column. Fedeli had edited the Italian version of the trilingual

International Anarchist Review from November 1924 to June 1925, when it

merged with two other journals into La Tempra. He was expelled from

France in 1929 and was repatriated to Italy in 1933 to face prison and

confinement after spells in Belgium, Argentina and Uruguay.

Naturally, the strong anti-organisationalist element in Italian

anarchism was not interested in the project of the Platform. Neither

were the Italian comrades who had made the choice to remain in fascist

Italy (with all the difficulties that entailed). Those held in

confinement were fighting to stay alive, while the few remaining in

liberty were engaged in anti-fascist activity and trying to keep

anarchist ideas alive among the Italian workers.

If the short-lived First Italian Section of the Anarchist Communist

International failed to amount to much, it was partly as a result of the

Fascist repression in Italy but also due to the fact that both Malatesta

and the prestigious „Pensiero e Volontà“ Group eventually distanced

themselves from the „Platform“. Despite apparent differences within this

latter group, they eventually sent a reply to the invitation of the

Provisional Secretariat in which they politely refused the offer to join

the initiative as they considered that for the time being „the best road

to follow is the one which, in four years of public life, the UAI has

laid out for itself“[14].

It is interesting to note that while Malatesta’s disinclination to

endorse the Platform stems mostly from his doubts regarding „collective

responsibility“, the letter from the „Pensiero e Volontà“ Group seems to

indicate reservations regarding the principles of theoretical and

tactical unity („exclusivism“), whereas their proposals to the

International Conference actually endorsed the need both for unity of

tactics and for collective responsibility.

But the Unione Anarchica Italiana[15], was already dead. The fascist

regime in Italy, which had in preceding years forced anarchist groups,

newspapers (such as UmanitĂ  Nova) and the anarchist-dominated

revolutionary trade union USI[16] to disband, made public life so

impossible for Italian anarchists that the UAI convention of January

1926 was to be its last.

The UAI, born in 1919 as the Unione Comunista Anarchica Italiana

(UCAI)[17], had been a somewhat inefficient organisation and in fact for

several years before its demise there had been attempts to form a

federation which did not include the individualist and

anti-organisational elements which were seen by many, Malatesta and

Fabbri included, to be responsible for much of the organisation’s

inability to achieve concrete results. In the years following the rise

to power of the fascists, Italy’s anarchists became sorely divided, some

militants remaining in Italy (most of whom would be kept in confinement

in remote parts of the country for over a decade), while many others

were to emigrate, often first to other European countries, later on to

the Americas. It was from this point on that the anti-organisationalist

element was to become dominant among Italian anarchists, both in Italy

and abroad (partly thanks to the influence and hegemony exercised by

journals with a strongly anti-organisationalist line, such as l’Adunata

dei Refrattari, published in New York).

In 1930, the Unione Comunista Anarchica dei Profughi Italiani[18], an

organisation of tendency, was created in Paris. However, three years

later it was renamed the Federazione Anarchica dei Profughi Italiani[19]

and in November 1935 completed the process of transformation into a

federation based on synthesis, becoming the Comitato Anarchico d’Azione

Rivoluzionaria[20].

Things went somewhat better (for a while) for the „Platform“ in France

and in Bulgaria, where the Bulgarian Anarchist Communist Federation

actually adopted the „Platform“ as its constitution. The principles of

the „Platform“ were accepted (albeit in an excessively rigorous way) by

the French federation, the Union Anarchiste (founded in 1920 by Faure as

a synthesist organisation) at its congress in November 1927 when it

changed its name to the Union Anarchiste Communiste RĂ©volutionnaire[21],

recalling the name of the proposed International. Those members who were

against the change left to set up the Association des Fédéralistes

Anarchistes[22], whose theoretical and organisational ethos was summed

up by Faure’s „La Synthùse Anarchiste.”

By 1930, however, a group of syndicalists who had remained within the

UACR on purpose had managed to gain a majority within the federation

which resulted in the name being changed back to Union Anarchiste and a

return to a more synthesist approach. Eventually, the Fédération

Communiste Libertaire[23] was set up by supporters of the „Platform“ in

1935, but this too would disappear during the war years.

[1] Gruppa Russkikh Anarkhistov Zagranitseii.

[2] ‘Reply to the Platform’ by „some Russian anarchists“ (Sobol,

Schwartz, Steimer, Volin, Lia, Roman, Ervantian, Fleshin), April 1927.

[3] ‘Reply to Anarchism’s Confusionists: A Response to the „Reply to the

Platform“ by Several Russian Anarchists’, Group of Russian Anarchists

Abroad, August 18, 1927.

[4] ‘A Project Of Anarchist Organisation’, in Il Risveglio (Geneva),

October 1927.

[5] ‘The Old And New In Anarchism’, in Delo Truda N°30, May 1928.

[6] ‘About The Organisational Platform’, in Il Risveglio, December 1929.

[7] ‘Su un progetto di organiszazione anarchica’, in Il Martello (New

York), 17/24 September 1927.

[8] ‘Organisation And Party’, in Plus loin N°s 36 – 37, March/April

1928.

[9] Elements Old & New In Anarchism, in Delo Truda N°30/31,

November/December 1928.

[10] ‘Reply to Nestor Makhno,’ in Il Risveglio, December 1929.

[11] ‘A proposito della responsabilità collettiva’, in Le Libertaire

N°252, 19^(th) April 1930. English translation under the title „On

Collective Responsibility“ available on the Nestor Makhno Archive.

[12]

A. Dadà, L’anarchismo in Italia: fra movimento e partito, Milan 1984.

[13] Manifesto of the First Section of the International Anarchist

Communist Federation. The original Italian version of the manifesto is

in IISG, Fondo U. Fedeli, b. 175, and now also in A. DadĂ , op.cit.

[14] Letter from the „Pensiero e Volontà“ Group to the Provisional

Secretariat of the International Anarchist Communist Federation. Italian

original in A. DadĂ , Ugo Fedeli dalla Russia alla Francia: un anarchico

italiano nel dibattito dell’anarchismo internazionale (1921–1927),

Università di Firenze, Facoltà di Magistero, „Annali dell’Istituto di

Storia“ vol.III, 1982/84, Florence, 1985.

[15] Italian Anarchist Union.

[16] Unione Sindacale Italiana [Italian Syndical Union].

[17] The UCAI Congress at Bologna in 1921 had decided to drop the term

„Communist“ from the name so as to avoid confusion with the Bolsheviks.

[18] Anarchist Communist Union of Italian Refugees.

[19] Anarchist Federation of Italian Refugees.

[20] Anarchist Revolutionary Action Committee.

[21] Revolutionary Anarchist Communist Union.

[22] Association of Anarchist Federalists.

[23] Libertarian Communist Federation.