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Title: Anarchists in Greenwich Village
Author: Guido Bruno
Date: June 3, 1916
Language: en
Topics: New York City, anarchist movement, Libertarian Labyrinth, Emma Goldman
Source: Retrieved on 26th April 2021 from https://www.libertarian-labyrinth.org/the-sex-question/guido-bruno-anarchists-in-greenwich-village-1916/
Notes: Bruno’s Weekly 2 no. 23 (June 3, 1916): 743–737.

Guido Bruno

Anarchists in Greenwich Village

Have you ever seen a real live anarchist? Just to be honest, you never

wanted to see one. Is it because the B follows the A in the alphabet or

because of a close association of ideas for which you are not

responsible, you think immediately of bombs? Bombs and anarchists are

inseparable in the minds of most of us. Mysterious destroyers of life

and of property, merciless men who have pledged their lives, their

knives, or their guns to some nefarious cause or another, who assemble

in cellars lighted with candles or in road-houses which seem uninhabited

and in reality are dynamite storehouses and bomb factories—aren’t these

the anarchists of your imagination? Aren’t these the men of whom you

think if you read that a king or a prince has been killed by an

anarchist or that anarchists plan to blow up the Cathedral on Fifth

Avenue?

An anarchist, to you, means a criminal and being an anarchist is his

crime. Is it possible today to explain Christianity to one who knows the

term alone but not its meaning? And just as many denominations,

constitute the Christendom of the world, just as many kinds of

anarchists are existing. It is not absolutely necessary to go out and

kill Jews to earn the title, Christian. Millions of us would not even

think it possible that Jews were and are being killed in the name of

Christianity. And millions of anarchists today will deny stoutly and

firmly that the real anarchist would manufacture a bomb, destroy other

people’s property or murder a fellow-being.

Millions of anarchists? Of course. There are millions among us. Some say

they are anarchists and usually are not, and others would be shocked to

be called such, yet they really are. It is just like with Christianity,

and the same country that shocked Christian civilization with outrages

in the name of Christianity put a bloody meaning in the spelling of

anarchism. To judge a creed by extreme actions of fanatics cannot lead

to an understanding. The religious maniac who is seized by temporary

insanity and murders his wife and his children is a mere incident of

everyday life and does not cast reflections upon the religious belief

which is more or less responsible for his delusion. To take the essence

of a religion or a political creed or of anarchism and to compare it

with the lives that men actually live, with their actions and the

results of their actions, is a scientific and humane way in which to

pass judgment.

Some of the biggest men in our public life are anarchists by their

actions and they would protest vigorously against being called

anarchists. Others confess they are anarchists and nobody would believe

them. The men and women whom we are accustomed to call anarchists who

are proclaimed as the apostles of anarchism and are supposed to be

dangerous individuals recommended to the special care of police

surveillance, are in reality harmless creatures, living a conventional

life—professional preachers of anarchy, evangelists like Billy Sunday

who are passing the plate. They might be sincere, but they surely get

their share out of it.

Romance is more essential to everyday life than most of us imagine.

Anarchism has all the qualities of romance a twentieth century man or

woman could possibly look for. The moving picture screen is their source

of information. Here they see the Russian anarchist who sacrifices his

life for the sake of the cause. Meetings in cellars, exquisitely dressed

society women, girls in rags, aristocrats, drunkards, statesmen, rich

and poor, well educated and know-nothings, all are sitting around the

same table, all take the same oath, all social differences erased, the

motto is “all for one and one for all.” This romance is so colossal as

to be beyond the ken of ordinary mortals. Not the overthrow of the

government, not the planning of a murder, interest the hundreds of

onlookers; but this comradeship among people, who under ordinary

circumstances would hardly ever meet, spurns the craving for comradeship

and equalization of all.

Jack London, who declares himself as a revolutionist says: “It is

comradeship that all these masses want. They call themselves comrades.

Nor is the word empty and meaningless—coined of mere lip service. It

knits men together who stand shoulder to shoulder under the red banner

of revolt. This red banner, by the way, symbolizes the brotherhood of

man, and does not symbolize the incendiarism that instantly connects

itself with the red banner.”

It is this craving for comradeship, for relations free of the masks and

limitations necessitated by our society that brings men, and women

together under the banner of anarchism, at least what they call

anarchism in New York. And that longing for adventure and romance plays

a big part in these circles is evident in the fact that since the start

of the European struggles certain elements, regular habituees of

anarchistic circles found a new field in their activities abroad in

different capacities, or here, working for the benefit and the

propaganda of universal peace and immediate help for the sufferers in

the war zone.

Emma Goldman has a national reputation. She is a professional anarchist.

She is doing it year in and year out, like an actress playing the big

circuit. Did you ever meet Emma Goldman? Did you ever see her? You could

never believe all the things you have read of her. Her home life is very

similar to that of any other woman who is lecturing and writing. I saw

her some time ago as hostess to many thousands of her followers and

admirers. It was at the anarchists’ ball, Bed Revel, they called it. It

was red all right, but not the red that stands for dynamite and shooting

and murder. It was the red Jack London speaks of, the red of

comradeship. They danced and laughed and were happy and if anyone would

want to call a gathering of young men and women like that dangerous, it

wouldn’t be safe to attend an opera performance or to enter a subway

train. But London claims there are ten million anarchists in the United

States. That would make one of each ten persons we meet.

The anarchists in New York mostly drink tea. They are men and women like

you and me. They work for their living. Of course they would rather

prefer not to work but so would every one of us. Anarchism in eighty out

of a hundred cases is the only luxury of their lives. There are certain

places in our metropolis which are known to the elect as anarchists

meeting places. But mighty little anarchism do they talk about. They

usually plan something. Something that any other club or any other

society could also plan—an outing, a picnic, or a dance. They attend

lectures and musicals and as a whole spend their time just as uselessly

as most of us do after working hours.

Old Greenwich Village is the home par excellence of anarchism. On

Bleecker Street still stands the building where the Chat Noir used to

open its doors every evening about seven o’clock and shelter

revolutionists of all nations. Here it was that the man who subsequently

killed King Humbert of Italy, predicted his deed in the presence of

many. But nobody took his utterances seriously, because he was known as

a fanatic whose fanaticism bordered on mania. The Chat Noir closed her

doors long ago. “Mazzini’s” is today in the same building. “Anarchists”

assemble there every night and have dinner, anarchists from lower Fifth

Avenue who arrive in their limousines, have a footman to open the door

of their car. They talk anarchism. Here are bits of the table

conversation: An elderly lady in black silk evening dress, deep

decolletee, diamonds in her ears, and around her neck and on six

fingers, speaking to a gentleman in evening dress. He is immaculate like

his shirt front: “I went to Emma’s lecture last night. Isn’t she a dear?

She spoke about those darling children of the Colorado miners and she

really made me cry. I’m so sentimental. I remember the time the pastor

spoke about the poor Chinese and how they haven’t even rice for their

little children. It affected me so I could not attend Mrs. R.’s

reception and she hasn’t forgiven me yet.” At another table. Two men,

the one looks rather prosperous; the other fellow looks like an artist.

“I say,” he says, “this fellow Berkman makes me sick. Imagine a man

being fourteen years in prison and living the balance of his life in

telling his fellowmen of his experiences in prison.” A fat Italian plays

on the harpsicord. Everybody eats roast chicken, drinks red ink and

enjoys being in an anarchistic place.

In a basement nearby is an Italian place. Rough-looking individuals sit

around small wooden tables. It would amuse you to understand the

conversation of these “anarchists” about the last letter they received

from home and when the long expected Anita is coming over to become

Antonio’s wife.

In the houses of Mystery on Washington Square are bushels of anarchists

living. They write anarchism, they draw, and paint anarchism. You can

see it on the newsstands or on the book shelves in the book stores.

Let us cross Fourteenth Street and enter that mysterious house on

Fifteenth, between Fifth Avenue and Broadway. It looks like a monastery

and was one, about sixty years ago. It later was a gambling house, a

house of ill fame, and its rooms are utilized at present as studios. It

is the property of the Van Buren estate, and the renting agent doesn’t

bother to send collectors if his tenants do not pay promptly. He knows

that if they do not appear themselves, little good will it do to send

collectors. Let us walk past the beautifully carved wooden doors of the

ancient monk cells and enter Hippolyte Havel’s abode, right under the

roof. Hippolyte Havel is the anarchist of New York. He looks the part.

He was one of the lieutenants of Emma Goldman in the beginning of her

career, he was delegate to numerous international anarchistic congresses

in Europe and in America. He knows everybody in the “movement” and

everybody knows him. What does he think about anarchists and anarchism,

in New York?

“To be an anarchist means to be an individualist. To be an individualist

means to walk your own way, do the thing you want to do in this life—do

it as well as you can. You must never impose on your fellowmen; you must

never be in their way; you must help everybody as well as you can; the

good you derive through your life belongs, in the first place, to you,

but you have to share it with the world if the world can benefit by it.

“About throwing bombs and killing other people? No true anarchist could

destroy something that is existing. It would mean to deny his own

existence, if he would not grant the right of existence to everybody and

everything created.”

How does that sound for the leader of the anarchists in our city?

To know anarchy, to really know it as it is, takes away its chief

attraction; the romance of a melodrama.