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Title: On Order Author: PĂ«tr Kropotkin Language: en Topics: introductory Source: Retrieved on March 1st, 2009 from http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/anarchist_archives/kropotkin/order.html][dwardmac.pitzer.edu]]. Proofread version from [[http://www.revoltlib.com/?id=403.
We are often reproached for accepting as a label this word anarchy,
which frightens many people so much. “Your ideas are excellent,” we are
told, “but you must admit that the name of your party is an unfortunate
choice. Anarchy in common language is synonymous with disorder and
chaos; the word brings to mind the idea of interests clashing, of
individuals struggling, which cannot lead to the establishment of
harmony.”
Let us begin by pointing out that a party devoted to action, a party
representing a new tendancy, seldom has the opportunity of choosing a
name for itself. It was not the Beggars of Brabant who made up their
name, which later came to be popular. But, beginning as a nickname — and
a well-chosen one — it was taken up by the party, accepted generally,
and soon became its proud title. It will also be seen that this word
summed up a whole idea.
And the Sans-culottes of 1793? It was the enemies of the popular
revolution who coined this name; but it too summed up a whole idea —
that of the rebellion of the people, dressed in rage, tired of poverty,
opposed to all those royalists, the so-called patriots and Jacobins, the
well-dressed and the smart, those who, despite their pompous speeches
and the homage paid to them by bourgeois historians, were the real
enemies of the people, profoundly despising them for their poverty, for
their libertarian and egalitarian spirit, and for their revolutionary
enthusiasm.
It was the same with the name of the Nihilists, which puzzles
journalists so much and led to so much playing with words, good and bad,
until it was understood to refer not to a peculier — almost religious —
sect, but to a real revolutionary force. Coined by Turgenev in his novel
Fathers and Sons, it was adopted by the “fathers,” who used the nickname
to take revenge for the disobedience of the “sons.” But the sons
accepted it and, when they later realised that it gave rise to
misunderstanding and tried to get rid of it, this was impossible. The
press and the public would not describe the Russian revolutionaries by
any other name. Anyway the name was by no means badly chosen, for again
it sums up an idea; it expresses the negation of the whole of activity
of present civilisation, based on the opression of one class by another
— the negation of the present economic system. The negation of
government and power, of bourgeois morality, of art for the sake of the
exploiters, of fashions and manners which are grotesque or revoltingly
hypocritical, of all that present society has inherited from past
centuries: in a word, the negation of everything which bourgeois
civilisation today treats with reverence.
It was the same with the anarchists. When a party emerged within the
International which denied authority to the Association and also
rebelled against authority in all its forms, this party at first called
itself federalist, then anti-statist or anti-authoritarian. At that
period they actually avoided using the name anarchist. The word an-archy
(that is how it was written then) seemed to identify the party too
closely with the Proudhonists, whose ideas about economic reform were at
that time opposed by the International. But it is precisely because of
this — to cause confusion — that its enemies decided to make use of the
name; after all, it made it possible to say that the very name of the
anarchist proved that their only ambition was to create disorder and
chaos without caring about the result.
The anarchist party quickly accepted the name it has been given. At
first it insisted on the hyphen between an and archy, explaining that in
this form the work an-archy — which comes from the Greek — means “no
authority” and not “disorder”; but it soon accepted the word as it was,
and stopped giving extra work to proof readers and Greek lessons to the
public.
So the word returned to its basic, normal, common meaning, as expressed
in 1816 by the English philosopher Bentham, in the following terms: “The
philosopher who wished to reform a bad law,” he said, “does not preach
an insurrection against it.... The character of the anarchist is quite
different. He denies the existence of the law, he rejects its validity,
he incites men to refuse to recognise it as law and to rise up against
its execution.” The sense of the word has become wider today; the
anarchist denies not just existing laws, but all established power, all
authority; however its essense has remained the same: it rebels — and
this is what it starts from — against power and authority in any form.
But, we are told, this word brings to mind the negation of order, and
consequently the idea of disorder, or chaos.
Let us however make sure we understand one another — what order are we
talking about? Is it the harmony which we anarchists dream of, the
harmony in human relations which will be established freely when
humanity ceases to be divided into two classes, one of which is
sacrificed for the benefit of the other, the harmony which will emerge
spontaneously from the unity of interests when all men belong to one and
the same family, when each works for the good of all and all for the
good of each? Obviously not! Those who accuse anarchy of being the
negation of order are not talking about this harmony of the future; they
are talking about order as it is thought of in our present society. So
let us see what this order in which anarchy wishes to destroy.
Order today — what they mean by order — is nine-tenths of mankind
working to provide luxury, pleasure and the satisfaction of the most
disgusting passions for a handful of idlers.
Order is nine-tenths being deprived of everything which is a necessary
condition for a decent life, for the reasonable development of
intellectual faculties. To reduce nine-tenths of mankind to the state of
beast of burden living from day to day, without ever daring to think of
the pleasures provided for man by scientific study and artistic creation
— that is order!
Order is poverty and famine become the normal state of society; it is
the Irish peasant dying of starvation; it is the peasants of a third of
Russia dying of diptheria and typhus, and of hunger following scarcity —
at a time when stored grain is being sent abroad. It is the people of
Italy reduced to abandoning their fertile countryside and wandering
across Europe looking for tunnels to dig, where they risk being buried
after existing only a few months or so. It is the land taken away from
the peasant to raise animals to feed the rich; it is the land left
fallow rather than being restored to those who ask nothing more than to
cultivate it.
Order is the woman selling herself to feed her children, it is the child
reduced to being shut up in a factory or to dying of starvation, it is
the worker reduced to the state of a machine. It is the spectre of the
worker rising up against the rich, the spectre of the people rising
against the government.
Order is an infinitesimal minority raised to positions of power, which
for this reason imposes itself on the majority and which raises children
to occupy the same positions later so as to maintain the same privileges
by trickery, corruption, violence and butchery.
Order is the continuous warfare of man against man, trade against trade,
class against class, country against country. It is the cannon whose
roar never ceases in Europe, it is the countryside laid waste, the
sacrifice of whole generations on the battlefield, the destruction in a
single year of the wealth built up by centuries of hard work.
Order is slavery, thought in chains, the degradation of the human race
maintained by sword and lash. It is the sudden death by explosion or the
slow death by suffocation of hundreds of miners who are blown up or
buried every year by the greed of the bosses — and are shot or bayoneted
as soon as they dare complain.
Finally, order is the Paris Commune, drowned in blood. It is the death
of thirty thousand men, women and children, cut to pieces by shells,
shot down, buried in quicklime beneath the streets of Paris. It is the
face of the youth of Russia, locked in the prisons, buried in the snows
of Siberia, and — in the case of the best, the purest, and the most
devoted — strangled in the hangman’s noose. That is order! And disorder
— what they call disorder?
It is the rising of the people against this shameful order, bursting
their bonds, shattering their fetters and moving towards a better
future. It is the most glorious deeds in the history of humanity.
It is the rebellion of thought on the eve of revolution; it is the
upsetting of hypotheses sanctioned by unchanging centuries; it is the
breaking of a flood of new ideas, or daring inventions, it is the
solution of scientific problems. Disorder is the abolition of ancient
slavery, it is the rise of the communes, the abolition of feudal
serfdom, the attempts at the abolition of economic serfdom.
Disorder is peasant revolts against priests and landowners, burning
castles to make room for cottages, leaving the hovels to take their
place in the sun. It is France abolishing the monarchy and dealing a
mortal blow at serfdom in the whole of Western Europe.
Disorder is 1848 making kings tremble, and proclaiming the right to
work. It is the people of Paris fighting for a new idea and, when they
die in the massacres, leaving to humanity the idea of the free commune,
and opening the way towards this revolution which we can feel
approaching and which will be the Social Revolution.
Disorder — what they call disorder — is periods during which whole
generations keep up a ceaseless struggle and sacrifice themselves to
prepare humanity for a better existence, in getting rid of past slavery.
It is periods during which the popular genius takes free flight and in a
few years makes gigantic advances without which man would have remained
in the state of an ancient slave, a creeping thing, degraded by poverty.
Disorder is the breaking out of the finest passions and the greatest
sacrifices, it is the epic of the supreme love of humanity!
The word anarchy, implying the negation of this order and invoking the
memory of the finest moments in the lives of peoples — is it not well
chosen for a party which is moving towards the conquest of a better
future?