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Title: May Day
Author: Sophie ZaĂŻkowska
Date: May 1st, 1912
Language: en
Topics: May Day
Source: Retrieved on 10th September 2021 from https://forgottenanarchism.wordpress.com/2015/05/02/may-day-by-sophie-zaikowska/

Sophie ZaĂŻkowska

May Day

This day was chosen by our fathers so that the proletariat throughout

the world protest and demand rights in a global movement. The boldest

among them saw there, in a faraway future, the means for the proletarian

class to rise up against oppression, to grab social wealth, and to

establish a fairer system. In the meantime, to everyone, it was a means

to remind the bourgeoisie that workers were tired of being treated like

beasts of burden, and that they demanded a few immediate improvements.

The main demand was and still is the 8-hour day: to have 8 hours of work

a day, okay, but also 8 hours of leisure and 8 hours of sleep.

Every demand must stem from economic conditions and not from a desire,

as justifiable as it can be. The 8-hour day propaganda was intense for a

number of years, but, in in the industry, commerce and agriculture, such

a reform could only ever be imposed by force. Maybe a firm will of the

proletariat acting directly, in a revolutionary capacity, could have

succeeded in imposing this demand. But we know how the May Day march was

transformed, we know that it was mutated into a delegation to public

powers. Some of us have in front of our eyes the painting in which

Guesde and a group of Socialist deputies give a man the notebook of

worker’s demands in an office.

On May 1^(st), 1912, there won’t even be a delegation, some Socialists

town councils will officially celebrate May Day. And in quite a few

places where workers are conscious and organised, after a day’s work,

they will attend meetings and parties!

Of course, many workers wish to obtain a shorter working day. But even

if we achieve some results to that effect, we can see that it is not as

a class that this demand is imposed. Shorter hours are obtained in such

and such a trade, then in another by a series of strikes and struggles

limited to that industrial branch.

May Day has totally failed. Maybe a small result was obtained in some

industries, but that’s all. In the textile industry in Vienna, for

example, thanks to the energy of some of our comrades, among whom was

Pierre Martin.

May Day has failed like everything that the ignorant, cowardly mass of

workers has ever undertaken, as they stop at the first obstacle on their

way: even in Vienna, where workers obtained a few improvements in the

brutality of their exploitation only thanks to anarchists, when a strike

occurred, the women who had especially benefited from past struggles

exclaimed: “If anarchists get involved, we are going back to work. We

don’t want any more martyrs.”

Women, who sabotage every social movements by their narrow and personal

minds, would need to be educated so that they acquire, like many men,

some personalities. Unfortunately, this issue is never addressed

head-on. People try to lure women, are afraid to scare them. As high as

the motives which lead militants to try and win over women may be, they

approve women who, like Jacqueline in “La Bataille Syndicaliste” (The

Syndicalist Fight) flatter their sisters’ prejudices.

Still, “La Bataille” is truly the best daily paper, the only workers’

paper, but Jacqueline wants her sisters to read it, so she writes:

“Even without being greedy like many of these women are (women of the

bourgeoisie) let’s not allow people to steal from us. Let’s keep a

watchful eye and tell ourselves that this money which we get from our

partner’s sweat and labour must be used in the most intelligent way and

in the way that benefits the community the most.”

Proudhon had said: either a courtisane or a housewife; Jacqueline boldly

claims: a courtisane and a housewife!

By giving us advice, Jacqueline tells us that when some friends

unexpectedly visited, she bought a piece of roast beef which, all things

taken into account (parts to be discarded, inaccurate weight and so on)

she paid 2,70 franc a pound. She adds, grumbling:

“It is still necessary to have some on the table sometimes, especially

in Paris to compensate for the air we don’t get. Workers need food well

thought-up: not too much, not too little.”

Later she says: “we must not forget that beef stew is the basis of

family food.”

Jacqueline’s main course is always a meat dish! The inevitable beef

stew, that workers’ ignorance believes to be a healthy and fortifying

food, is, even for the partisans of meat-eating, recognised to be a

breeding ground for microbes, in such a way that it acts on our

organisms like a real poison.

Ignorant like every courtisane, like every housewife, vegetarianism,

dairy products and eggs don’t seem enough for her to feed her man who’s

been working all day!

But this poor Jacqueline talks about cooking like Jouhaux talks about

workers’ needs. That is because among the militant proletariat there is

a unity of opinion on the issue of needs.

Jouhaux, in a study entitled “The Minimum Wage” (its social value),

demands a minimum wage which should be indexed on the absolute

necessities of the life of a worker’s family, that is: “rents, necessary

foods: bread, meat, wine or beer, vegetables, clothes, etc.” And he

concludes that “it is for an extension of our needs that the fight for

wage increases must go on.”

How do you want a worker to work less while spending more and having to

feed his courtisane—his wife—on top of that?

Workers can’t wait to go back to the factory because they are always on

the break of terrible misery, despair, thanks to the excellent advice

from Comrade Jouhaux, from revolutionaries, who tell them to increase

their needs instead of reasoning them.

It is obvious that if consumer demand decreased, working days would be

shorter. People will say that the number of unemployed people would

increase without the working day getting any shorter. I’ll say that it

is possible that unemployment rates would momentarily go up, but it

would be such a danger that measures would have to be taken, because

revolt would soon threaten. The people is great only when it is hungry,

it is like my neighbour’s cow who moos when her hay is late.

People will say that there has been high unemployment rates in some

capital cities at some time, and that this did not lead to the

revolution. It is easy to reply that this was only momentary, that it

was only some economic disturbance. But I believe this disturbance would

soon become a chronic condition, if workers reasoned their needs. And

then, and only then, would the bourgeoisie be forced to let workers’

demands be imposed by the course of events itself!