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Title: Organization and Party Author: Maria Isidine Date: April 1928 Language: en Topics: platformism, organization, anarchist organization, party, the platform Source: Retrieved on 29th July 2020 from http://www.nestormakhno.info/english/isidine.htm Notes: Maria Isidine [aka Maria Isidorovna Goldsmith] was an anarchist and scientist of Russian and French decent, born in Zurich, Switzerland in 1873; she was a close friend of Kropotkin, and a prolific contributor to the French and Russian anarchist press of her day. She committed suicide in Paris, January 1933. This article was published in issues 36 and 37 of the journal Plus Loin.
The problem of the organization of the anarchist forces is of the order
of the day. Many comrades explain the fact that, in the Russian
Revolution, the anarchists, despite being at all times in the forefront
of the revolutionary battles, wielded only slight influence over the
march of events, due in large part to the lack of solid organization.
Thus they posit the creation of such an organization, an anarchist
party, as the premier requirement for more fruitful efforts in the
future. The word “party” of itself triggers controversy; can there be
such a thing as an anarchist “party”? It all depends on the meaning
which one invests the word.
The term “party” can be applied simply to the community of persons of
like minds, agreed with one and other on the aims to be achieved and the
means to be employed, even if they are bound by no formal link, even if
they do not know each other. The more united their thinking, the more
the devise a similar solution to the particular issues that arise, and
the more apt the use of the term “party” in relation to them. It is in
this sense that the International [International Workingmen’s
Association] talks about the “great party of the toilers,” and also in
that sense that Kropotkin, Malatesta, and other militants from our
movement, especially from the older generation of its founding fathers,
talk about the “anarchist party”. In that sense, the “anarchist party”
has always been with us; furthermore, in the anarchist movement, we have
always had organizations, well-defined organizations indeed, such as
federations of groups, embracing all the groups in a town, region or
country. Such federations have always been the customary form of
anarchist organization across the world.
In this respect, neither the scheme spelled out in the “Platform” of our
Russian comrades, nor the mode of organization adopted by the Union
Anarchiste at its last congress imply anything novel. But there is one
novelty and it is this. The “Platform” aims to amend the essential
character of the bond which has hitherto bound anarchist groups
together, and to change this unspoken “constitution” that has always
obtained in our ranks and which, uncontroversially, like something
self-evident, lay at the root of every anarchist organization. In their
yearning to tighten the bonds between militants, the authors of the
“Platform” propose to launch a new model of anarchist “party” along
lines espoused by other parties, with binding decisions made by majority
vote, a central leadership committee, etc. Such a party ought, as they
see it, to cure the anarchist movement of most of the ills that beset
it.
It is surprising to see that the experience of the Russian Revolution,
which has demonstrated with spectacularity the inappropriateness of a
party dictatorship as the pilot of social life, has not just led these
comrades to ask: what other organizations should have pride of place in
the work of the revolution, but, on the other hand, has inspired in them
an aspiration to a strong, centralized party. And the same goes for our
French comrades. We know that the Union Anarchiste at its congress in
Orléans has adopted a declaration of principles by which it plainly
broke ranks with the anarchists of the individualist school and
proclaimed a series of basic propositions regarding both anarchism’s
social ideal and its campaign methods. At the most recent congress, the
declaration has been endorsed as the foundation character of the Union.
That was not enough for the congress, and it saw fit to draw up
statutes, and it is here that the centralizing tendency at odds not just
with anarchist principles in general, but also with the text of the very
“charter” that had just been adopted, showed itself.
From the outset, the Orléans declaration announces that the authority
principle is the root of all social ills, that centralism has manifestly
failed, politically and economically, and that the free commune and free
federation of communes must form the basis of the society of the future;
for its part, the commune should be simply the gamut of the various
associations existing in the same area. All centralism is, as a matter
of principle, stricken from social organization, which should be supple
enough for each individual inside the association, and each association
inside the federation to enjoy complete freedom. All of which is
unanimously accepted by all anarchists, and, if the authors of the
Orléans declaration have seen fit to enunciate these truths yet again,
it was for propaganda purposes. And we were entitled to expect
“statutes” consonant with these principles. But that was not the case.
Thinking to create something new, our comrades have ventured on the
beaten tracks of other parties.
For a start, in the Union, decisions are reached by majority vote. This
question of majority is sometimes regarded as a mere detail, a handy way
of resolving issues. Now, it is of capital importance, for it is
inseparably bound up with the very notion of a society without power. In
their critique of all forms of the State, even the most democratic,
anarchists operate from the principle that decisions taken by one group
of individuals cannot be binding upon others, who have not reached them
and who are not in agreement with them — and it is of no matter whether
they are reached by a majority or by a minority. It is of course
pointless to enter here into a rehearsal of all the arguments, with
which our literature is awash, against the majority principle; all
comrades are conversant with these, especially as they make daily use of
them to expose the fictitious character of popular representation under
parliamentary regime. How come then, that this principle, whose
absurdity and unfairness are so plain where the future society is
concerned, turns beneficial and fair when it is to be applied to our own
circles? Either the majority is always entitled to prevail, or we should
drop this arithmetic of truthfulness and look around for another one.
In their infatuation with organization, our comrades overlook the fact
that, instead of strengthening the union, the overruling of the minority
will merely give rise to fresh intestinal struggles; instead of working
productively, energies will be squandered on winning a majority in
congresses, committees, etc. And understandably so. Life inside the
party is, in these conditions, easy only for the members of the
prevailing majority. The others are stymied when it comes to their
action. Moreover, the resolution from the congress of the Union states
this very bluntly, by proclaiming that, while entitled to criticize the
resolutions tabled, the minority ought not, once these had been passed,
to impede their implementation. That means that the minority has to hold
its peace or quit the party, and then, instead of a single party, we
have two, usually more venomous with each other than with the common
enemy. Another resolution from the congress states that there should be
no criticism voiced outside of the organization and that nobody has the
right to make use of the columns of Le Libertaire to criticize the
decisions reached. Now, Le Libertaire is the official organ of the
Union, and as such, should reflect the views existing within the latter.
It occupies a quite different position from that of an organ founded by
a group of comrades pretty well agreed upon propagation of their views;
these comrades are perfectly entitled not to accommodate opposing voices
in their organ, in that they claim to represent no one but themselves.
That is how things were in the old Le Libertaire, in Les Temps Nouveaux
and virtually all the organs of the anarchist press. But whenever a
newspaper styles itself the organ of the Union of the anarchist
federations of the whole of France, all the members of that Union have
that entitlement. Now, the resolution passed plainly shows that such an
entitlement is acknowledged only where the majority is concerned.
Although our anarchist movement may be open to reproach on several
counts, we have to give it its due: it has always been free of
congressional intrigues, electoral chicanery, the artificial cultivation
of majorities, etc. And that thanks solely to the principle that has
prevailed within it up to now, to wit, that decisions are binding only
upon those who have taken them, and may not be imposed upon those
unwilling to accept them. The force of such decisions and the commitment
given are all the greater for that, in that each individual is more
sensible of a decision taken by themselves than of some decision reached
without their input and very often contrary to their wishes.
We may perhaps be told: “if comrades band together on a properly thought
out and well-drafted program, accepted by everybody, differences of
opinion will relate only to details and the sacrifice asked of the
minority will be minimal.” This is far from always being the case.
Everyday life poses fresh problems, sometimes very important ones, but
which were not forseeable at the time when the compact was entered into;
differing replies may perhaps be forthcoming to such problems. Thus, in
the days gone by, the anarchists of France were split over the trade
union movement, more recently over the war, and the anarchists in Russia
— over the Makhnovist movement, the attitude to be adopted regarding
Bolshevism, etc. If, at those points, anarchists had been “banded
together into a real party,” would a congress decision upon questions of
that gravity have been accepted by everyone? These matters are for the
individual conscience and its conception of the revolution; in which
case, can a mechanical decision taken by a majority prevail?
Still another tendency is emerging, with regard to the introduction of
the majority principle and the limitation of the autonomy of the groups:
it would like to see all anarchist initiatives overseen by a single
organization of the hierarchical type, headed by a single Executive
Committee. The statuses adopted by the most recent Union congress
contain a series of propositions that sound peculiar to our ears. Take,
say, groups belonging to the minority, which is to say, not accepting
some resolution passed by the congress. That minority’s right to
criticize is indeed acknowledged (so far, at any rate) but its
criticisms must be addressed exclusively to the Federation to which the
group belongs (and to which it is obliged to belong if it wishes to be
apart of the Union) or to the central steering commission “which alone
has the competence to give them a hearing and satisfaction.” In other
words, the minority is not entitled simply and openly to peddle its
views among the comrades (not to mention the public); it has to address
itself to the bodies named, following hierarchical procedure. Likewise,
the unfettered initiative of groups tends everywhere to be replaced by
the principles of election and delegation; no one must attempt anything
at all unless the have the authorization from the competent
organization. A newspaper, a review, say, may not spring into life
through the decision of a group or individual, they can only be
published by Anarchist Federation delegates and must reflect only the
thinking endorsed at its congresses. The same holds true for the
publication of books or pamphlets, for lectures, clubs, even aid funds
for imprisoned comrades. At first glance, this “organization” appears to
certain minds to be a highly practical thing. But in point of fact such
rules (if anarchist circles proved capable of abiding by them) would end
up killing off the movement completely. Take a group of comrades
intending to set up a propaganda newspaper and possessed of the
wherewithal to do so. They have no right to do so; they must first seek
the approval of the existing organization as a body and invite the
latter to take charge of publication. Let us suppose that the latter
agrees and appoints its delegates to that end. Fortunately the ideas of
the instigators are in tune with those of the organization’s majority;
then they need only yield possession of the planned publication and pass
it on to others’ hands (which is not always a good move either). But
what if those delegates, speaking for the majority, are not of the same
mind as the instigating group? Then the latter has but one option: to
disown the publication. And the newspaper never sees the light of day.
Instead, whenever a group embarks upon a publication at its own risk and
peril, those whose aspirations it meets rally around it, disseminate it,
and magnify its scope for expansion. Others, of differing views, set up
other organs, and such variety of the anarchist press, far from harming
propaganda, simply works to its benefit.
Take a group of comrades who want to publish books or organize lectures.
“On whose authority?” they are asked. “We first of all must find out if
the existing agree to place you in charge of this and they endorse your
program.” Work grinds to a halt. Discussion begins inside the groups on
the drafting of a number of programs. In the end, as there is no way to
keep everybody happy, the venture is aborted and its instigators are for
a long time rid of their appetite for launching anything at all.
Only utter ignorance of the history ad life of the anarchist movement
could explain the eruption of such schemes for “organization”.
Everything valuable and lasting ever created in our movement has been
the handiwork of groups and individuals well endowed with the initiative
to press on without waiting for authorization from anybody. That is the
way the finest organs of the anarchist press have been created; the way
that propaganda began in the trade unions that led on to the creation of
revolutionary syndicalism; the way that the anarchist idea has survived,
in its purity and its logic, inside certain groups of staunch
convictions, in spite of all the desertions and betrayals. It does not
lie within the power of any mechanical organization to replace this
initiative. The role of an organization is to facilitate the work of
individuals and not to hinder it; this is all the more true in the
anarchist movement, which is not string enough numerically to indulge in
hindering the actions of its members and squander precious resources.
Which is how the tendency that emerged at the latest Union Anarchiste
congress will inevitably end up.
What the anarchist movement needs right now, is not so much new
organizational formulas as a concrete, well-defined program of work to
be undertaken, just as soon, in the wake of the successful revolution,
there will be scope for every initiative in the endeavor to create the
new society. Only familiarity with what they are to propose at that
crucial point will guarantee anarchists the influence to which their
ideas entitle them. For this, initiatives must not be stifled and minds
snuffed out, but instead, a free and lively exchange of all views is to
be encouraged. Otherwise, energies will be squandered on the pettiness
of internal frictions and the movement will not be advanced by a single
step.
It is always easy to criticize, some comrades may perhaps object; it is
a lot harder — and more useful — to put forward a practical mode of
organization that would help rid our movement of what keeps it weak.
Certain comrades seek to do that by creating a more or less centralized
party, based on the majority principle; others — and the writer of these
lines is one of them — believe that such a party would be more harmful
than useful [1]. Of course, they do not deny either the need for
anarchists to generally get organized, or the need to rid the movement
of the flaws that stop if from acquiring the social influence to which
its ideas entitle it. But what form of organization have they to offer
in place of the one suggested by the “Platform,” and upon what
principles are they going to found that organization, which they would
argue is more free, in order to achieve the same outcomes: agreement on
principles, a prescribed policy of practical action, and appreciation by
each individual of their duties towards the movement?
The fundamental error of those of our comrades who are supporters of the
“Platform” resides perhaps in the fact that they look to a union of
groups and even to a directing centre for the rehabilitation of our
movement, instead of looking to the groups themselves. It is not of the
federation by rather of the groups which make it up that we can require
such and such a policy line: the movement’s centre of gravity lies
there, the federation will be whatever its component groups are. And
whenever issues are broached and debated, not at the level of the
federation, but at group level, solution of them will be greatly
facilitated: a group can readily do what a huge organization cannot. The
devising of a single policy line for a complete federation presents
insuperable difficulties, for it presupposes decisions taken by a
majority vote and thus, inevitably, involves internal frictions.
Recruitment of members and the elimination of undesirables whose
presence compromises the movement, is a task that the federation’s
leadership body is incapable of carrying out with success. Any more than
it is capable of ensuring that the action of all its members conforms to
anarchist principles. But all of that can be easily and naturally
accomplished by each group within its ranks. So the premier issue to be
resolved is this one: what are the fundamental principles upon which an
anarchist group can base its existence?
There is no way that a sweeping answer, good for all groups, can be
given to that, for the answer might vary greatly according to the goals
pursued by the group and the context in which it operates, depending
whether the group was set up to tackle a particular practical task or
general propaganda, whether it operates in a period of calm or a time of
revolution, whether it operates openly or in clandestine fashion, etc.
But, even so, a few general considerations can be framed.
Take this first question: is it desirable that the group should comprise
of comrades with a common conception of the anarchist ideas, or can
anarchists of varying persuasions (communists, individualists, etc.)
really work in concert within it? This issue was raised at the most
recent anarchist congress. Certain comrades reckon that, since each of
the existing anarchist tendencies contains a kernel of truth, it would
be better not to dwell upon their discrepancies but instead to
“synthesize” everything that looks worthwhile, so as to arrive at a
basis for joint activity. At first sight, this approach seems very
logical and perfectly practical, but upon reflection, it transpires that
unity taken in that sense would be merely formal. Of course,
circumstances may arise in which anarchists of differing shades of
opinion will act in concert, but the same goes for all revolutionaries
in general: the anarchists in fact collaborated with the Bolsheviks in
the fight against the White armies. Such instances will always be
frequent in times of revolution; such arrangements, most often tacit,
are thus quite natural and necessary, but when it comes down to lasting
activity is a period of calm, agreement upon basic principles is not
enough. Suppose that an individualist anarchist, and anarchist communist
and an anarcho-syndicalist reach agreement upon declaring their
opposition to the State and their approval of the communist form of
property (assuming that the individualist agrees to it); of what
practical significance would this be, since they immediately go their
separate ways afterwards? The individualist is preoccupied with
liberating the individual this very day, in the existing social context
(colonies, living in nature, free love, etc.), contemptuous of the
masses and their movements, they are not going to identify with them. So
what could they undertake in common with their communist colleague? Then
again, a pure syndicalist comrade will place store only by labour
movement tasks and will collaborate only with certain of their communist
colleagues; they may even find themselves at odds with them, on the
issue of relations between the trade unions and the anarchist groups for
instance. And so it all goes. In day to day action, the methods proper
to such and such a tendency play such a significant role that agreement
upon general principles acknowledged by all is far from sufficient. When
disagreements inside a group are substantial and do not relate merely to
the use of certain labels, they hinder the action of the group, for the
members, being united neither in their propaganda nor in their chosen
methods, expend a lot of energy upon internal wrangling. A truly united
group, though, made up of comrades who have no need for further debate
about the most essential points and who, come what may, are as one on
propaganda and action, that sort of group can become highly influential,
even if it may not be numerically large. By comparison, other groups of
a different mentality will founder; not that there is any loss in that,
for there is nothing useful about trying to enfold the largest possible
number of comrades within the same organization.
Random recruitment of members is, perhaps, the prime cause of the
defects of most groups. Very often, people become anarchists all too
easily and all too quickly, without having familiarized themselves with
other schools of socialism, nor indeed with anarchism in the essentials
of its theories. That way, in the future, for oneself and for comrades,
lie sore disappointments, for, as one’s knowledge expands and one’s
horizon widens, it may perhaps be found that one has gone astray and
that one professed to be an anarchist only out of ignorance of
everything else. One day, a Russian Social Revolutionary was asked, in
my presence, at what point in his life he had ceased to be a Marxist:
“When I began to read something other than Marx” was the answer.
Things may be a lot more serious if it is not just a matter of some
theory that one accepts or rejects, but at a cause to which one has
devoted part of one’s life and which one at some point feels incapable
of championing because one had never given prior consideration to the
criticisms of adversaries. Then again, the life of groups is often made
difficult by an excess of practical mentality; one accepts such and such
a comrade on account of the services he may render (as speaker,
theoretician, administrator, etc.) without taking care to ensure that
their overall moral or intellectual profile meets the groups
requirements.
Plainly, such close scrutiny in the selection of members can be
maintained only by the group and not by the federation, and no federal
statute will ever be able to guarantee it. But, if it is implemented in
the federation’s component groups, the federation will find that many
thorny questions resolve themselves.
In our conception, the bond between the various groupings is absolutely
free and arises from their needs alone; there is no centre, no
secretariat entitled to dictate to the groups with which, in some shape
and on some basis, they must unite. Links may be established for a wide
variety of reasons: likemindedness, concerted action, territorial
contiguity, etc. Generally, the rule is that groups from the same region
are in touch with one and other, but it can happen (and we have seen
examples of this) that a Paris group has closer bonds of solidarity with
a London or Geneva group than with a group in the next district. Broadly
speaking, set frameworks, where each group is obliged to belong to such
and such a federation, and each federation to maintain links with its
neighbor through the obligatory mediation of such and such a committee
can be a very useful agency in the facilitation of communications, but
it is merely a tool to be used when one feels it necessary.
The anarchist movement has always had congresses; they can be of very
great importance if they arise from the activity of pre-existing groups
which feel the need to share their work and their ideas. Certain
especial features of our congresses relate to the very principle of
anarchism. Thus, up to the present, comrades assembling for a congress
did not necessarily have to be delegated by the groups; they could
participate in an individual capacity. [2] Contrary to the practice in
other parties, where delegates take away from the congress resolutions
to which their mandataries have merely to submit, anarchist delegates
bring to the congress the resolutions, opinions and tendencies of their
respective groups. Congress is free to express an opinion of them — but
that is all. The counting of the votes (should that be judged useful) is
merely a statistical exercise; it may be interesting to know how many
comrades, belonging to which grouping, come down on this side of the
other. The importance of congresses is in no way diminished, and their
work only grows more serious. Instead of furnishing an arena for gambits
designed to win a majority, they can devote themselves to making known
the movement’s status in different localities, its successes and
failures, its different tendencies, etc. The resolutions cannot be
anything more than indications, expressions of opinion, for the
delegates to impart to their groups, which may adopt or reject them.
In short, this schema merely rehearses that which is familiar, things
that might even seem too self-evident to need mention; but the present
confusion of minds is such that one sometimes feels compelled to
reiterate old truths. The formal connection between organizations is
extremely loose here, because all of the emphasis is upon the
intellectual and moral internal bonds. Furthermore, in this schema, the
individual or group is formally free; the less subordination to
anything, the more extensive and grave the moral responsibility. Here
each member of the group is answerable for the action of the entire
group — all the more responsible in that the resolutions are reached by
common accord and not mechanically by any majority vote. Moreover, the
entire group is answerable for the deeds of each member of it, all the
more so, also, in that it has recruited its members only
discriminatingly, accepting only those who suited it. Then the
federation as a body answers for the actions of each of its component
groups — precisely because there is nothing to make the liaison engaged
in anyway binding, and because the groups know in advance with whom and
for what purpose to join forces. And each group is answerable for the
whole federation — precisely because the latter cannot do a thing
without its assent.
There is more. Every anarchist, whether they wish it or not, bears the
moral responsibility for the actions of their comrades, even if no
formal connections bind them; every act contrary to the anarchist idea,
every contradictory posture, has repercussions for the movement as a
body, and this extends the responsibility beyond the individual, beyond
even their immediate group. And it is this consciousness of their
responsibility that should by the great spur capable of maintaining the
solidarity in anarchist circles. Maybe this is not always properly
understood, and maybe that is the source of many of our movements
shortcomings, shortcomings that some would remedy by means of new forms
of organization. We are not persuaded of the efficacy of these measures;
our confidence is vested instead in other means, of quite different
nature, only a few of which we have touched upon here.
March/April 1928
[1] Events have borne this out even more quickly than might have been
expected: scarcely a few weeks had elapsed after the last congress of
the “Union” and the organization has split in two. And Le Libertaire now
manages to appear only with the greatest of difficulty.
[2] This state of affairs was amended at the latest Union Anarchiste
congress in respect of the introduction of the majority principle.