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Title: Resistance to Nazism Author: Anarchist Federation Date: October 2006 Language: en Topics: anti-fascism, fascism, nazism, popular opposition to dictatorship, resistance, 1930s, 1940s, World War II, Organise!, Italy, Germany, class struggle Source: Retrieved on June 4, 2015 from https://web.archive.org/web/20150604000855/http://www.afed.org.uk/ace/anarchist_resistance_to_nazism.html Notes: Anarchist Communist Editions (ACE) No. 16. This pamphlet brings together a series of articles previously published in Organise! about anarchist and libertarian resistance to Fascism in the mid-twentieth century.
In this pamphlet, we explore different forms of resistance to Nazism in
the 1930s and 1940s. Firstly, the Edelweiss Pirates, thousands of young
German people who combined a thirst for freedom with a passion for
street-fighting and satirical subversion of the Nazi state. Secondly,
the story of the FAUD, German anarcho-syndicalists who went underground
in 1932 and undertook a long struggle against fascism while continuing
to develop networks and ideas aimed at a free society through the
general strike against oppression. Finally, the Zazus, French
counter-culturalists and alternative lifestylers â in our terms â who
did much more than simply celebrate their difference and party. They
fought as well. These stories reveal the power of the organised working
class and the danger to capitalism and authoritarianism posed by the
innate and ever-present desire for freedom within every human being.
They also reveal the extent of a resistance hidden within the shadows
cast by the corpses of the remembered dead, the statues of victorious
generals and glorious martyrs or distorted by the commercialisation of
history.
The Second World War is remembered as a struggle between freedom and
oppression and so it was. But in social terms it was also a struggle
between two different forms of capitalism â authoritarian vs bourgeois â
in which progressive forces in society were almost entirely destroyed.
Of the 20 million people who died, many millions were communists,
intellectuals, students, socialists and anarchists; virtually the entire
movement of organised labour, its trade unions and left-wing parties and
organisations were physically eliminated by hanging, shooting,
starvation, disease and exile. This was a crushing blow and has haunted
anarchism ever since. Donât look for organisational reasons for why
anarchism or libertarian communism have been marginal forces in the
development of Europe since 1945. Look for the graves, seek out the
places where its tens of thousands â and the millions of other
progressive activists â went down fighting.
When we think about the resistance to Nazism, three or four images come
to mind: the dour but romantic French maquis blowing up German troop
trains, the beautiful SOE operative parachuting into Occupied Europe,
the tragic heroism of the student pacifists pitting wits and bodies
against the Gestapo and SS. Their struggles and suffering are portrayed
as a patriotic response to physical occupation and ideological
oppression, a thing that is forced upon them, an unnatural condition
which ends with the liberation until all that is left are grainy
photographs and the quiet voices of old people, remembering. There was
the French resistance, the Warsaw uprising, Yugoslav partisans: native
struggles in response to alien occupation, whose only ambition was
liberation and the restoration of the nation-state. But there was more:
blows struck, voices raised that once went unheard but that speak to us
still. This pamphlet is about that other resistance, one involving
hundreds of thousands of people, that began not in 1939 but many years
earlier. A resistance not against occupation but against fascism and for
freedom. A resistance that was international, rejecting the tired
slogans of empire and fatherland, not a desperate struggle for survival
against Hitlerâs ten year Reich but a war begun on the barricades of
1848: against tyranny, exploitation and war and for freedom, brotherhood
and peace. A resistance rooted in the organised working class and its
understanding that fascism brings only exploitation, terror and war,
that authoritarian and totalitarian governments of all kinds are good
only for one class â the ruling class, the merchants, the generals and
industrialists. These histories remind us of the almost limitless
strength of the aware and self-organising working class, its capacity
for struggle and sacrifice, itâs determination to hold on to its ideals
in the face of brutal oppression. There is another history that we are
writing even today.
Before Hitler could build the war machine he needed to acquire power for
himself and lebensraum for the German people â to be built amongst the
mass graves of the ethnically-cleansed east and south â he needed to
defeat this powerful and dangerous resistance. Hitlerâs first victims
were not the Jews, the intellectuals, the Poles or Russians. The first
victims of Nazism â deliberately so â were communists, trade unionists,
anarchists, working class communities and activists. Hundreds of
thousands of working class people, whole communities, trade union
branches, workersâ societies and leagues were liquidated, their members
arrested, imprisoned, exiled or driven underground, sent to forced
labour and re-education camps and later, konzentrationslager:
concentration camps.
It is difficult, now, to imagine the strength of that resistance. Hitler
is often portrayed as a progressive campaigner who took to the air to
criss-cross Germany, winning the hearts and minds of its people. Itâs
not well-known that this was a tactic forced on the Nazis because it was
less dangerous than travelling by road or rail! Just months before the
National Socialists seized power, Goebbels was chased out of Koln â his
home town â âlike a criminalâ by anarcho-syndicalist protests and mass
action. All over Germany before 1933, vigorous and determined action,
taken over the heads of social democratic and trade union leaders, gave
the Nazis a very hard time.
Marches by Nazis were often surrounded and had to be protected by the
police, their hit squads often ambushed and beaten up (or killed) by
organised workers. The resistance took its strength from the experiences
of workers and the lessons learned during the period of social upheaval
and repression following WWI. Its resilience and dynamism was rooted in
the desire for a socially-just, progressive and peaceful society, things
that millions of people were prepared to struggle, fight and die for.
Its weakness lay in the separate methods of organisation of anarchists,
socialists and communists and competition between them for the loyalty
of working people, rather than co-operation. And as with the period
before WWI, nationalism, patriotism and sectional identities weakened
the front for progress and justice. The Second World War was simply the
final phase of a seventy-year struggle between authoritarian and
bourgeois capitalism, a long struggle that decimated progressive forces
in Europe and elsewhere, precluding the possibility of forming any other
society in the ruins of the old except on democracyâs terms.
In the 1930s, the level of repression was so severe that only
individualist activities were possible. In Germany, assassination plots
â many against Hitler himself â and murders were attempted, pamphlets
and posters printed and distributed, sabotage in the factories carried
out. An underground network formed by the FAUD â German
anarcho-syndicalists â managed to raise money for anarchists fighting
fascism in Spain during 1936â39 and smuggled technicians across Europe
to assist them. But without a mass base, anarchists and those they
worked with were gradually hunted down, suppressed. Ernest Binder, a
FAUD member wrote in 1946: âSince mass resistance was not feasible in
1933, the finest members of the movement had to squander their energy in
a hopeless guerilla campaign. But if workers will draw from that painful
experiment the lesson that only a truly united defence at the proper
time is effective in the struggle against fascism, their sacrifices will
not have been in vain.â
âHopelessâ? Maybe. Squandered? Never.
With the complete collapse of organised labour resistance to Nazism â
its leaders in prison or exile, activists in concentration camps or
underground, working class districts terrorised by SA and Gestapo raids
and arrests, its funds and printing presses seized, its organisations
and newspapers declared illegal â anarchist resistance too had to go
underground and gradually lost coherence and the ability to act. This
didnât just occur in Germany. Italian anarchists continued to fight the
fascist gangs throughout this period, forming their own partisan bands
as social struggles became military but retaining a hard political
analysis and edge, continuing their call for social revolution. The
anarchist movement in France â because it was internationalist and
anti-war â was suppressed in 1939â40 for resisting mobilisation, with
activists arrested, imprisoned for refusing to be drafted or forced into
hiding. After the occupation in 1939, Polish trade union organisations
were proscribed but syndicalists gathered its militant remnants together
in the Polish Syndicalist Union (the ZSP) and organised both propaganda
and overt resistance. An illegal new-sheet, the Syndicalist, was
published and the ZSP actively resisted in co-operation with the
National Army (the AK) and Peopleâs Army (AL); ZSP detachments took part
in the Warsaw Uprising in 1944.
Resistance coalesced amongst affinity groups or upon the remains of
pre-war political and industrial networks amongst organised workers.
Anarchists who had direct experience of fascism, for instance in Germany
and Italy, retained their internationalist and revolutionary goals and
organised separately, though often co-operating with resistance groups.
They published radical pamphlets and bulletins and continued to call for
social revolution. One example is the Revolutionary Proletarian Group
formed in France in 1941 by revolutionaries of many nationalities and
which issued a manifesto in 1943 calling for an international republic
of workers councils. It urged economic resistance, the disaffection of
German soldiers and workers and resistance to forced labour drafts
whilst forming clandestine factory committees and militias. Thousands of
German soldiers did desert but at the cost of hundreds of lives:
executed, starved, shot âwhile escapingâ or simply disappeared. At the
same time, a secret congress of anarchists and libertarians was held
under the noses of the Vichy authorities in Toulouse. It formed the
International Revolutionary Syndicalist Federation and aimed to organise
a mass general strike as soon as conditions permitted, while continuing
guerilla resistance and economic sabotage.
Other anarchists were drawn into the struggles against Nazi occupation
as an extension of their long fight against fascism or the hope of
social progress with liberation. In 1940 there were 230,000 Spanish
Republican exiles in France, of whom 40,000 â anarchists, socialists and
communists â joined the maquis; perhaps as many as 30,000 died in the
struggle. Spanish exile units fought in many battles during the war and
anarchist battalions with names like âDuruttiâ, âGuernicaâ and
âGuadalajaraâ on their vehicles took part in the liberation of Paris
while 50 French towns, including Toulouse, were liberated by Spanish
guerilla groups.
Yet, as the post-war settlement proved, democracy is simply a more
benign form of capitalist authoritarianism. National liberation and
anti-imperialist struggles â though ultimately victorious â simply
further entrenched capitalist social relations within society. Some
anarchists predicted this. The Friends of Durutti, a radical group
during the Spanish Revolution, argued that anarchists and libertarians
who had set aside revolutionary goals to help the bourgeois Spanish
Republic fight fascism had gained nothing, suffering defeat, exile,
death and the destruction of their popular workers collectives and the
other organisations by which people were self-managing society in the
midst of war. Even after victory, oppression continued: anarchists who
had refused to be drafted in 1939 or who had carried out âillegalâ
actions against state targets were arrested and convicted despite
serving in the Resistance.
What this history tells us is the importance of fighting fascism
wherever it rears its ugly head, of the need to put aside sectarian
differences. An aware, progressive and mobilised working class is one of
the most powerful forces in the world, strongest when it acts from its
own sense of what is necessary, weakest when badly led. And because
fascism is a facet of capitalism, it cannot be fought except upon the
basis of the social relations capitalism creates. National liberation
without social revolution merely postpones an inevitable struggle and
continues an oppressive and deadening life without freedom.
Anarchist Federation, April 2006
Why were the Nazis able to control Germany so easily? Why was there so
little active opposition to them? Why were the old parties of the SPD
and KPD unable to offer any real resistance? How could a totalitarian
regime so easily contain what had been the strongest working class in
Europe?
We are taught that the Nazis duped the German population and that it
took the armed might of the Allies to liberate Europe from their
enslavement. This article aims to show how the Nazis were able to
contain the working class and to tell some of the tales of resistance
that really took place.
Acting with a ruthlessness that surprised their opponents, the Nazis
banned their opponents, the Social Democrats and the Communists. For the
working class this was far more serious than just the destruction of two
state capitalist parties. It was accompanied by the annihilation of a
whole area of social life around working class communities. Many of the
most confident working class militants were arrested and sent to
concentration camps.
The repression was carried out legally. The SA (the Brownshirts) now
acted in collaboration with the police. Their brutal activities which
once had been illegal but tolerated now became part of official state
activity. In some circumstances this meant simple actions like beatings.
In others, SA groups moved into and took over working class pubs and
centres. The effect was to isolate, intimidate and render powerless the
working class.
Many workers believed that the Nazis would not remain in power forever.
They believed that the next election would see them swept from power and
âtheirâ parties returned. Workers only needed to bind their time. When
it became clear that this was not going to happen, the myth changed. The
role for oppositionists became to keep the party structures intact until
such time as the Nazis were defeated. There is no doubt that even the
simple act of distributing Socialist (SPD) or Communist (KPD) propaganda
took an incredible degree of heroism, for the consequences of being
caught were quite clear to all â beatings, torture and death. It meant
that families would be left without breadwinners, subjected to police
surveillance and intimidation.
The result was often passivity and inaction. As early as 1935, workers
were aware of the consequences that âsubversiveâ activity would have on
their families. A blacksmith in 1943 expressed the problem simply: âMy
wife is still alive, thatâs all. Itâs only for her sake that I donât
shout it right in their facesâŠYou know these blackguards can only do all
this because each of us has a wife or mother at home that heâs got to
think ofâŠpeople have too many things to consider. After all, youâre not
alone in this world. And these SS devils exploit the fact.â
Throughout the period of Nazi rule there was industrial unrest, there
were strikes and acts of disobedience and even sabotage. All these,
however, attracted the attention of the Gestapo. The Gestapo had the
assistance of employers and stooges in the workforce. The least a
striker could expect was arrest. As a consequence, those who were
politically opposed to the Nazi state kept themselves away from
industrial struggle. To be arrested would have led not only to personal
sacrifice, but also could have compromised the political organisations
to which he or she belonged. To reinforce the message to workers, he
Gestapo set up special industrial concentration camps attached to major
factories.
To put the intensity of Nazi repression into context, during the period
1933â45, at least 30,000 German people were executed for opposing the
state. This does not include countless others who died as a result of
beatings, of their treatment in camps, or as a result of the official
policy of euthanasia for those deemed mentally ill. Thousands of
children were declared morally or biologically defective because they
fell below the below the Aryan ânormâ and were murdered by doctors. This
fate also befell youngsters with mental and physical disabilities as
well as many who listened to the wrong kind of music.
However, Nazi domination of the working class did not rely solely on
repression. Nazi industrial policy aimed to fragment the class, to
replace working class solidarity with Nazi comradeship and solidarity
with the state.
To start with, pay rises were forbidden. To strengthen competition,
hourly rates were done away with. Piece rates became the norm. If
workers wanted to earn more then they would have to produce more.
Workersâ interests were to be represented by the German Workersâ Front
(DAF), which they were forced to belong to and which of course
represented solely the interests of the state and employers.
Unable to obtain pay rises with their employers it became common in a
situation of full employment for workers to move from one factory to
another in search of higher wages. On the one hand, this defeated the
Nazi objectives of limiting pay; on the other hand it further weakened
the bonds of solidarity between workers. Knowing that they could not
rule solely through fear, the Nazis gave âwelfareâ concessions to the
working class. Family allowances were paid for the first time; organised
holidays and outings were provided at low cost. For many workers this
was their first opportunity to go away on holiday. Social activities
were provided through Nazi organisations.
There is little evidence that the Nazis won over the working class
ideologically, nonetheless, this combination of repression and
amelioration served to confuse many who would otherwise have been
outright opponents. The spectacles we have all seen of Nazi rallies,
book burnings, parades and speeches are not evidence that workers were
convinced of Nazi rule. It was clear to all what the consequence of not
attending, of not carrying a placard or waving a flag would be. However,
they must have increased the sense of isolation and powerlessness of
those who would have liked to resist. As a result there was little open
resistance from working class adults to the Nazis throughout their
period in power.
If the Nazi policy towards adults was based on coercion, their policy
towards young people was subtler. Put simply, the intention was to
indoctrinate every young person, to make them a good national socialist
citizen proudly upholding the ideals of the party. The means chosen to
do this was the Hitler Youth (HJ).
By the end of 1933, all youth organisations outside the Hitler Youth had
been banned â with the exception of those controlled by the Catholic
Church that was busy cozying up to the Nazis at the time. Boys were to
be organised into the Deutsches Jungvolk between the ages of 10 and 14
and the Hitler Youth proper from 14 to 18.
They quickly incorporated around 40% of boys. Girls were to be enrolled
into the Bund Deutsche Madel (BDM), but the Nazis were much less
interested in getting them to join. The objective was to get all boys
into the HJ. When this failed to take place, laws were passed gradually
making it compulsory by 1939. In the early days, being in the HJ was far
from a chore. Boys got to take part in sports, go camping, hike, play
competitive games â as well as being involved in drill and political
indoctrination. Being in the HJ gave youngsters the chance to play one
form of authority off against another. They could avoid schoolwork by
claiming to be involved in HJ work. The HJ provided excuses when dealing
with other authority figures â like parents and priests. On the other
hand, they could also blame pressures from school in order to get out of
more unpleasant Hitler Youth tasks! In some parts of the country the HJ
provided the first opportunity to start a sports club, to get away from
parents, to experience some independence.
As the 1930s went on, the function of the HJ and BDM changed. The
objectives of the regime became more obviously military and aimed at
conquest. The HJ was seen as a way recruiting and training young men
into the armed forces. As war became more likely, the emphasis shifted
away from leisure activities and into military training, State policy
became of one of forcing all to be in the HJ. T made seemingly harmless
activities, like getting together with your mates for an evening,
criminal offences if they took place outside the HJ of BDM.
The HJ set up its own police squads to supervise young people. These
Streifendienst patrols were made up of Hitler Youth members scarcely
older than those they were meant to be policing.
By 1938, reports from Social Democrats in Germany to their leaders in
exile were able to report that: âIn the long run young people too are
feeling increasingly irritated by the lack of freedom and the mindless
drilling that is customary in the National Socialist organisations. It
is therefore no wonder that symptoms of fatigue are becoming
particularly apparent among their ranksâŠâ
The outbreak of war brought the true nature of the HJ even more sharply
into focus. Older HJ members were called up. More and more time was
taken up with drill and political indoctrination. Bombing led to the
destruction of many of the sporting facilities. The HJ became more and
more obviously a means of oppression. As the demands for fresh recruits
to the armed forces became more intense, the divisions within the HJ
became more acute. The German education system at the time was sharply
divided along class lines. Most working class children left school at
the age of 14. A few went on to secondary or grammar schools along with
the children of middle class and professional families. As older HJ
members were called up, the middle class school students took the place
of the leaders. The rank and file was increasingly made up of young
workers hardly likely to take too well to being ordered about at HJ
meetings!
It is not difficult to imagine the scene of a snotty doctorâs kid still
in school trying to give orders to a bunch of young factory workers and
having to use the threat of official punishment to get his own way.
Dissatisfaction grew. Initially, the acute labour shortages of the early
war years meant that the Nazis could not resort to the kind of Nazi
terror tactics that they employed against other dissidents. As the war
went on, many of these young peopleâs fathers died or were sent to the
front. Many were bombed out of their own homes. The only future they
could see for themselves was to wear a uniform and fight for a lost
cause.
One teenager said in 1942: âEverything the HJ preaches is a fraud. I
know this for certain, because everything I had to say in the HJ myself
was a fraud.â By the end of the 1930s, thousands of young people were
finding ways to avoid the clutches of the Hitler Youth. They were
gathering together in their own gangs and starting to enjoy themselves
again. This terrified the Nazis, particularly when the teenagers started
to defend their own social spaces physically. What particularly
frightened the Nazis was that these young people were the products of
their own education system. They had no contact with the old SPD or KPD,
knew nothing of Marxism or the old labour movement. They had been
educated by the Nazis in Nazi schools, their free time had been
regimented by the HJ listening to Nazi propaganda and taking part in
officially approved activities and sports.
These gangs went under different names. Their favoured clothes varied
from town to town, as did their badges. In Essen they were called the
Farhtenstenze (Travelling Dudes), in Oberhausen and Dusseldorf the
Kittelbach Pirates, in Cologne they were the Navajos. But all saw
themselves as Edelweiss Pirates (named after an edelweiss flower badge
many wore).
Gestapo files in Cologne contain the names of over 3,000 teenagers
identified as Edelweiss Pirates. Clearly, there must have been many more
and their numbers must have been even greater when taken over Germany as
a whole. Initially, their activities were in themselves pretty harmless.
They hung around in parks and on street corners, creating their own
social space in the way teenagers do everywhere (usually to the
annoyance of adults). At weekends they would take themselves off into
the countryside on hikes and camping trips in a perverse way mirroring
the activities initially provided by the HJ themselves.
Unlike the HJ trips, however, these expeditions comprised boys and girls
together, so adding a different, more exciting and more normal dimension
than provided by the HJ. Whereas the HJ had taken young people away for
trips to isolate and indoctrinate them, the Edelweiss Pirates
expeditions got them away from the Party and gave them the time and
space to be themselves.
On their trips they would meet up with Pirates from other towns and
cities. Some went as far as to travel the length and breadth of Germany
doing wartime, when to travel without papers was an illegal action.
Daring to enjoy themselves on their own was a criminal act. They were
supposed to be under Party control. Inevitably they came across HJ
Streifendienst patrols. Instead of running, the Pirates often stood and
fought. Reports sent to Gestapo officers suggest that as often as not
the Edelweiss Pirates won these fights. âI therefore request that the
police ensure that this riff-raff is dealt with once and for all. The HJ
are taking their lives into their hands when they go out on the
streets.â
The activities of the Edelweiss Pirates grew bolder as the war
progressed. They engaged in pranks against the allies, fights against
their enemies and moved on to small acts of sabotage. They were accused
of being slackers at work and social parasites.
They began to help Jews, army deserters and prisoners of war. They
painted anti- Nazi slogans on walls and some started to collect Allied
propaganda leaflets and shove them through peopleâs letterboxes.
âThere is a suspicion that it is these youths who have been inscribing
the walls of the pedestrian subway on the Altebbergstrasse with the
slogans âDown with Hitlerâ, âThe OKW (Military High Command) is lyingâ,
âMedals for Murderâ, âDown with Nazi Brutalityâ etc. However often these
inscriptions are removed within a few days new ones appear on the walls
again.â (1943 Dusseldorf-Grafenberg Nazi Party report to the Gestapo).
As time went on, a few grew bolder and even more heroic. They raided
army camps to obtain arms and explosives, made attacks on Nazi figures
other than the HJ and took part in partisan activities. The Head of the
Cologne Gestapo was one victim of the Edelweiss Pirates.
The authorities reacted with their full armoury of repressive measures.
These ranged from individual warnings, round-ups and temporary detention
(followed by a head shaving), to weekend imprisonment, reform school,
labour camp, youth concentration camp or criminal trial. Thousands were
caught up in this hunt. For many, the end was death. The so-called
leaders of the Cologne Edelweiss Pirates were publicly hanged in
November 1944.
However, as long as the Nazis needed workers in armament factories and
soldiers for their war, they could not resort to the physical
extermination of thousands of young Germans. Moreover, it is fair to say
that the state was confused as to what to do with these rebels. They
came from German stock, the sort of people who should have been grateful
for what the Nazis gave. Unwilling to execute thousands and unable to
comprehend what was happening, the state was equally unable to contain
them.
So why has so little been heard of the Edelweiss Pirates? When
researching this article, it was extremely hard to find information
about them. Most seemed to revolve around the research of the German
historian Detlev Peukert, whose writings remain essential reading.
Searches of the internet revealed only two articles. A number of
explanations come to mind. The post-war Allied authorities wanted to
reconstruct Germany into a modern, western, democratic state. To do
this, they enforced strict labour laws including compulsory work. The
Edelweiss Pirates had a strong anti-work ethos, so they came into
conflict with the new authorities too. A report in 1949 spoke of the
âwidespread phenomenon of unwillingness to work that was becoming a
habit of many young people.â The prosecution of so-called âyoung idlersâ
was sometimes no less rigid under Allied occupation than it was under
the Nazis. A court in 1947 sent one young woman to prison for five
months for ârefusal to workâ. The young became enemies of the new order
too.
The political opponents of the Nazis had been either forced into exile,
murdered or hid their politics. Clandestine activity had centred on
keeping party structures intact. They could not afford to acknowledge
that physical resistance had been alive and well and based on young
peopleâs street gangs! To the politicians of the CDU (Christian
Democratic Union) and SPD, the Edelweiss Pirates were just as much
riffraff as they were to the Nazis. The myth of the just war used by the
allies relied heavily on the idea that all Germans had been at least
silent during the Nazi period if not actively supporting the regime. To
maintain this fiction the actions of âstreet hooligansâ in fighting the
Nazis had to be forgotten.
Fifty-five years on, interest in the Edelweiss Pirates is beginning to
resurface. More is being published on them and a film has been produced
in Germany. We need to make sure that they are never forgotten again. As
the producers of the film say: âthe Edelweiss Pirates were no absolute
heroes, but rather ordinary people doing extraordinary things.â It is
precisely this that gives us hope for the future.
The 43 Group was formed by Jewish ex-servicemen and women as a direct
action organization to combat the re-emergence of Britainâs fascists
after WW2, firstly on the streets of London and later throughout the
country. Itâs history is told in a fascinating book (see below); a
hidden history of working class resistance and a manual of modern-day
direct action campaigning offering many useful insights into
organizational methods.
After WW2, Jews were alarmed at the resurgence of Britainâs fascists,
aided and abetted by the Labour Governmentâs complacency and often the
connivance of the police, town halls, watch committees and local
magistrates, who defended the Fascistâs right to free speech but cracked
down hard on counter-protests (sound familiar?).
Fascist groups and parties re-formed, newspapers and âbook clubsâ
flourished, candidates stood and hectored. After bitter and frustrating
experiences directly confronting the fascists only to be met with police
strong-arm tactics and court appearances, 43 Jewish ex-servicemen and
women met to form a group aimed at destroying the growing fascist
movement.
The group organized from the bottom up and by word-of-mouth with most
recruitment on a personal basis. It formed local cells but with access
to the resources of the whole organization, which grew quickly. Taxi
drivers provided transport and a quick getaway, people with fighting
skills organized in flying wedges to drive in and break up fascist
street demos and meetings, others worked in intelligence and
counterintelligence (some even joining fascist groups) and security
(looking for moles, moving equipment). Contact was made with sympathetic
policemen and journalists and local communities mobilized against
fascist groups and activities. It was a tough job: fascism was still an
international movement, thuggish Nazi prisoners-of-war had remained
behind in Britain, it could call on the wealth of the lunatic fringes of
the aristocracy and bourgeoisie for money and influence. But the
constant pressure of the 43 Group and its supporters and allies, notably
the Communist party, paid off. Fascist groups found they could not
organize and were under constant surveillance and attack, meetings were
constantly disrupted, local newspapers began to openly scorn the
fascists and indignantly call on the government to act against them and
the town halls, now aware of the depth of local feelings, began to deny
them access to the school halls and meeting rooms that gave them an air
of respectability. By the early 1950s, after years of struggle, the
fascist menace was largely defeated â still present, they were not
likely to pose a serious threat and did not again until the 1970s.
This is a little-known but largely positive history, marred only by the
fact that the Jewish establishment, like many bourgeois liberals,
attacked the 43 Group (which had, at its height, thousands of members
and supporters) for being âthugsâ, âheaviesâ who delighted in violence â
a sorry accusation leveled at Class War in the 1980s and 1990s and the
Black Bloc even today. Any activity the middle classes cannot control
frightens them to death. The book is a good read that repays careful
study. The 43 Group, Morris Beckman, a Centerprise Publication ISBN: 0
903738 75 9
Rhineland
The anarcho-syndicalist union the Freie Arbeiter Union (FAUD) had a
strong presence in Duisberg in the Rhineland, with a membership in 1921
of around 5,000 members. Then this membership fell away and by the time
Hitler rose to power there were just a few little groups. For example,
the number of active militants in Duisberg-South was 25, and the
Regional Labour Exchange for Rhineland counted 180 to 200 members. At
its last national congress in Erfurt in March 1932, the FAUD decided
that if the Nazis came to power its federal bureau in Berlin would be
dissolved, that an underground bureau would be put in place in Erfurt,
and that there should be an immediate general strike. This last decision
was never put into practice, as the FAUD was decimated by massive
arrests.
In April or May 1933, doctor Gerhard Wartenburg, before being forced to
leave Germany, had the locksmith Emil Zehner put in place as his
replacement as FAUD secretary. He fled to Amsterdam, where he was
welcomed, with other German refugees, by Albert de Jong, the Dutch
anarcho-syndicalist. At the same time the secretariat of the
International Workers Association (the anarcho-syndicalist
international) was transferred to Holland in 1933, though the Nazis
seized its archives and correspondence. In autumn 1933, Zehner was
replaced by Ferdinand Goetze of Saxony, then by Richard Thiede of
Leipzig. Goetze reappeared in western Germany in autumn 1934, already on
the run from the Gestapo. In the meantime, a secret group of the FAUD
was set up, with the support of the Dutch section of the IWA, the NSV. A
secretariat of the FAUD in exile was set up in Holland. Up to the rise
to power of the Nazis, the worker Franz Bungert was a leading member of
the Duisberg FAUD. Without even the pretence of a trial, he was interned
in the concentration camp of Boegermoor in 1933. After a year he was
freed but was put under permanent surveillance. His successor was Julius
Nolden, a metalworker then unemployed and treasurer of the Labour
Exchange for the Rhineland. He was also arrested by the Gestapo, who
suspected that his activity in a Society for the Right to Cremation(!)
hid illegal relations with other members of the FAUD.
In June 1933, a little after he was released, he met Karolus Heber, who
was part of the secret FAUD organisation in Erfurt. He had been part of
the General Secretariat in Berlin, but after many arrests there had to
move to Erfurt. They arranged a plan for the flight of endangered
comrades to Holland and the setting up of a resistance organisation in
the Rhineland and the Ruhr.
Nolden and his comrades set up a secret escape route to Amsterdam and
distributed propaganda against the Nazi regime. Albert de Jong visited
Germany and via the FAUD member Fritz Schroeder, met Nolden. De Jong
arranged for the sending of propaganda over the border via the anarchist
Hillebrandt. One pamphlet was disguised with the title Eat German Fruit
And You Will Be In Good Health. It became so popular among the miners
that they used to greet each other with: âHave you eaten German fruit as
well?â As for the escape route, the German-Dutch anarchist Derksen, who
had a very good knowledge of the border zone, was able to get many
refugees to safety. Many of those joined the anarchist columns in Spain.
After 1935, with the improvement of the economic situation in Germany,
it was more and more difficult to maintain a secret organisation. Many
members of the FAUD found jobs again after a long period of unemployment
and were reluctant to engage in active resistance. The terror of the
Gestapo did the rest. On top of this, no more propaganda was sent from
Amsterdam.
The outbreak of the Spanish Revolution in 1936 breathed new life into
German anarchism. Nolden multiplied his contacts in Duisberg, DĂŒsseldorf
and Cologne, organising meetings and launching appeals for financial aid
to the Spanish anarchists. As a result of Noldenâs tireless activities,
several large groups were set up. Nolden went everywhere by bike! At the
same time Simon Wehren of Aachen used the network of FAUD labour
exchanges to find volunteer technicians to go to Spain.
In December 1936, the Gestapo, thanks to an informer they had
infiltrated, uncovered groups in Moenchengladbach, Duelken and Viersen.
At the start of 1937, 50 anarcho- syndicalists of Duisberg, DĂŒsseldorf
and Cologne were arrested, including Nolden. A little later other
arrests followed, bringing to 89 the number of FAUD members in Gestapo
hands. The trial lasted a year on charges of âpreparation of acts of
high treasonâ[1]. There were 6 acquittals for lack of evidence, the
others being condemned to prison sentences from several months to 6
years in January-February 1938. Nolden was sent to the Luettringhausen
Penitentiary from which the Allies freed him on 19^(th) April 1945. In
Whitsun 1947 he was at Darmstadt with other survivors of the Duisberg
group to found the Federation of Libertarian Socialists. In prison,
several anarchists were murdered. Emil Mahnert, a turner of Duisberg,
was thrown from a second floor window by a police torturer. The mason
Wilhelm Schmitz died in prison on 29 January 1944 in obscure
circumstances. Ernst Holtznagel was sent to Disciplinary Battalion 999,
of sinister reputation, and murdered there. Michael Delissen of
Moenchengladbach was beaten to death by the Gestapo in December 1936.
Anton Rosinke of DĂŒsseldorf was murdered in February 1937.
The anarcho-syndicalist Ernst Binder of DĂŒsseldorf wrote in August 1946:
âA massive resistance not having been possible in 1933, the best of
those at the heart of the workers movement had to disperse their forces
in a guerrilla war without hope. But if, from this painful experience,
the workers movement, the workers will draw from this the lesson that
only united defence at the right moment is effective in the struggle
against fascism, those sacrifices will not have been in vainâ.
In 1940, the Nazis had occupied France. The Vichy regime, in
collaboration with the Nazis and fascist itself in policies and outlook,
had an ultra conservative morality, and started to use a whole range of
laws against a youth that was restless and disenchanted.
In Paris, young people started meeting in cafes, passing their time
mocking the politics of the time. This spontaneous development was a
sharp response to the deadening effect on society of the Nazi-Vichy
rule. They met in cinemas, in the cellar clubs and at parties arranged
at short notice. These young people, who called themselves Zazous, were
to be found throughout France, but were most concentrated in Paris. The
two most important meeting places of the Zazous were the terrace of the
Pam Pam cafĂ© on the Champs Elysees and the BoulâMich ( the Boulevard
Saint- Michel near the Sorbonne. The Zazous of the Champs Elysees came
from a more middle class background and were older than the Zazous of
the Latin Quarter. The Champs Elysees Zazous were easily recognisable on
the terrace of the Pam Pam and took afternoon bike rides in the Bois de
Boulogne. In the Latin Quarter, the Zazous met in the cellar clubs of
Dupont-Latin or the Capoulade.
The male Zazous wore extra large jackets which hung down to their knees,
and which were fitted out with many pockets and often several
half-belts. The amount of material used was a direct comment on
government decrees on the rationing of clothing material. Their trousers
were narrow, gathered at the waist, and so were their ties, which were
cotton or heavy wool. The shirt collars were high and kept in place by a
horizontal pin. They liked thick-soled suede shoes, with white or
brightly coloured socks. Their hairstyles were greased and long . In
fact after the government decree of 1942 which authorised the collection
of hair from barber-shops to be made into slippers they grew their hair
longer! In a parody of Englishness they carried formal âChamberlainâ
umbrellas, always neatly furled, and never opened in spite of rainy
weather.
One fascist magazine commented on the male Zazou :â Here is the specimen
of Ultra Swing 1941: hair hanging down to the neck, teased up into an
untidy quiff, little moustache a la Clark Gable,âŠ.. shoes with too thick
soles, syncopated walkâ. Female Zazous wore their hair in curls falling
down to their shoulders or in braids. Blonde was the favourite colour,
and they wore bright red lipstick, as well as sunglasses, also favoured
by some male Zazous. They wore jackets with extremely wide shoulders and
short pleated skirts. Their stockings were striped or sometimes net, and
they wore shoes with thick wooden soles.
The Zazous were big fans of chequered patterns, on jacket, skirt or
brolly. They started appearing in the vegetarian restaurants and
developed a passion for grated carrot salad! They usually drank fruit
juice or beer with grenadine syrup, a cocktail that they seem to have
invented.
The zazous were directly inspired by jazz and swing music. A healthy
black jazz scene had sprung up in Montmartre in the inter-war years.
Black Americans felt freer in Paris than they did back home, and the
home-grown jazz scene was greatly reinforced by this emigration.
Manouche Gypsy musicians like Django Reinhardt started playing swinging
jazz music in the Paris clubs.
The Zazous probably got their name from a line in a song âZah Zuh Zah by
the black jazz musician Cab Calloway famous for his Minnie the Moocher.
A French crooner poular with the Zazous, Johnny Hess, also had a song Je
suis swing in early 1942, in which he sung the lines âZa zou, za zou, za
zou, za zou zeâ.
An associate of the Zazous, the anarchist singer-songwriter, jazz
trumpeter, poet and novelist Boris Vian was also extremely fond of z
words in his work! The long drape jacket was also copied from zootsuits
worn by the likes of Calloway. âThe zazous were very obviously detested
by the Nazis, who on the other side of the Rhine, had since a long time
decimated the German cultural avante garde, forbidden jazz and all
visible signs ofâŠ..degenerations of Germanic cultureâŠâ Pierre Seel, who
as a young zazou was deported to a German concentration camp because of
his homosexuality.
When the yellow star was forced to be worn by Jews, those non-Jews who
objected to this began to wear yellow stars with âBuddhistâ âGoyâ
(Gentile) or âVictoryâ. Some Zazous took this up, with âZazouâ written
below the star. When the French Jews were removed from the scene, the
Vichy regime and their Nazi masters turned on the Zazous. Vichy had
started âYouth Worksitesâ in July 1940 in an attempt to indoctrinate
French youth. The same year, they set up a Ministry of Youth. They saw
the Zazous as a rival and dangerous influence on youth. By 1942, Vichy
high-ups realised that the national revival that they hoped would be
carried out by young people under their guidance were seriously effected
by widespread rejection of the patriotism, work ethic, selfdenial,
asceticism and masculinity this called for. The Zazous were degenerate
and dandified and so werenât a lot of these scum obviously Jews?
78 anti-Zazou articles were published in the press in 1942 ( as opposed
to 9 in 1941 and 38 in 1943). The Vichy papers deplored the moral
turpitude and decadence that was effecting French morality. Zazous were
seen as work-shy, egotistical, and Judeo- Gaullist shirkers. Soon
roundups began in bars and zazous were beaten on the street. They became
Enemy Number One of the fascist youth organisation Jeunesse Populaire
Francais. âScalp the Zazous!â became their slogan. Squads of young JPF
fascists armed with hairclippers attacked Zazous. Many were arrested and
sent to the countryside to work on the harvest. acquiescence,
At this point the Zazous went underground, holing up in their dance
halls and basement clubs. With the Liberation of Paris it appears some
zazous joined in the armed combat to drive out the Nazis â certainly
they had a few scores to settle. But the Zazous were suspected by the
official Communist resistance of having a âcouldnât give a fuckâ
attitude to the war in general.
The Zazous were to be numbered in the hundreds rather than thousands and
were generally between 17 and 20. There were Zazous from all classes but
with apparently similar outlooks. Working class Zazous used theft of
cloth and black market activities to get their outfits, sometimes
stitching their own clothes. Some of the more bohemian Zazous in the
Latin Quarter varied the outfit, with sheepskin jackets and
multicoloured scarves. It was their general attitude of ironic and
sarcastic comments on the Nazi/Vichy rulers, their dandyism and
hedonism, their suspicion of the work ethic and their love of âdecadentâ
jazz that distinguished them as one of the prototype youth movements
that were to question the values of capitalist society .Though they did
not suffer like their contemporaries in Germany, the working class
Edelweiss Pirates, some of whom were hanged by the Nazis, nevertheless
in a society of widespread complicity and acquiescence, their stand was
courageous and trail-blazing.
By the end of World War I, the working class in Italy were in a state of
revolutionary ferment. Not yet ready for the conquest of power
themselves, workers and peasants by 1918 had won a variety of
concessions from the state: an improvement of wages, the 8-hour day, and
recognition of collective contracts.
By 1919 a new radicalism had descended upon the labour movement. In that
year alone there were 1,663 strikes across the peninsula, while in
August the newly-formed shop stewardsâ movement in Turin (the forerunner
of the workersâ councils) underlined the growth of a new vibrant
militancy that drew its strength from the autonomous capacity of workers
to organise themselves along libertarian lines and which had âthe
potential objective of preparing men, organizations and ideas, in a
continuous prerevolutionary control operation, so that they are ready to
replace employer authority in the enterprise and impose a new discipline
on social lifeâ[2].
In the countryside the peasantry opened up a second front against the
state by occupying the land that had been promised them before the war.
The Visochi decree of September 1919 merely validated the cooperatives
that had already been set up while the âred leaguesâ assisted the
formation of strong unions of day labourers. 1919 also marked the
initial signs of capital defending itself against the growing onslaught.
A meeting of industrialists and landowners at Genoa in April sealed the
first stages of the âholy allianceâ against the rise of labour power.
From this meeting were drawn up plans for the formation, in the
following year, of both the General Federation of Industry and the
General Federation of Agriculture, which together worked out a precise
strategy for the dismantling of the labour unions and the nascent
councils. Alone, however, the industrialists and landowners could not
undertake the struggle against the labour movement. The workers
themselves had to be cowed into submission, had to have their spirit of
revolt broken on the very streets they walked and the fields they sowed.
For this, capital turned to the armed thuggery of fascism, and its
biggest thug of all: Benito Mussolini.
Immediately following the end of the war, there was a veritable
flowering of antilabour leagues: Mussoliniâs Combat Fasci, the
Anti-Bolshevik League, Fasci for Social Education, Umus, Italy Redeemed
etcâŠAt the same time, members of the Arditi, the war volunteer corps, on
being demobilised organised themselves into an elite force of 20,000
shock troops and were immediately put to use by the anti-labour
movement. This movement was mostly comprised of the middle or lower
middle class. Ex-officers and NCOs, white collar workers, students and
the self-employed all allied themselves to the fascist cause in the
towns, while in the countryside the sons of tenant farmers, small land
owners and estate managers were willing recruits in the war against the
perceived Red Menace. The police and the army both actively encouraged
the fascists, urging ex-officers to join and train the squads, lending
them vehicles and weapons, even allowing criminals to enroll in them
with the promise of benefits and immunity. Arms permits, refused to
workers and peasants, were freely handed over to the fascist squadrons,
while munitions from the state arsenals gave the Blackshirts an immense
military advantage over their enemies. By November 1921 the various hit
squads were welded together into a military organisation known as the
Principi with a hierarchy of sections, cohorts, legions and a special
uniform.
To compensate for the shortcomings of the Socialist Party (PSI -Partito
Socialista Italiana) and the main trade union, the CGL (see below),
militants of various tendencies, anarcho-syndicalists, left socialists,
communists and republicans formed, in June 1921, a peopleâs militia, the
Arditi del Popolo (AdP), to take the fight to the fascists.
While politically diverse, the AdP was a predominantly working class
organisation. Workers were enlisted from factories, farms, railways,
shipyards, building sites, ports and public transport. Some sections of
the middle class also got involved in the form of students, office
workers, and other professional types. Structurally, the AdP was run
along military lines with battalions, companies and squads. Squads were
comprised of 10 members and a group leader. 4 squads made up a company
with a company commander, and 3 companies made up a battalion with its
own battalion commander. Cycle squads were used to maintain links
between the general command and the workforce at large. In spite of its
structure, the AdP remained elastic enough to form a rapid reaction
force in response to fascist threats. AdP behaviour was dictated by
whatever political group held sway in a particular locale although most
sections were allowed virtual autonomy over their actions.
These sections were quickly set up in all parts of the country, either
as new creations or as part of already existing groups like the
Communist Party of Italy (PCdI â Partito Comunista dâItalia), the
paramilitary Arditi Rossi in Trieste, the Children of No-One (Figli di
Nessuno) in Genova and Vercelli.or the Proletarian League (Lega
Proletaria â linked to the PSI). Overall, at least 144 sections had been
set up by the end of summer 1921 with a total of about 20,000 members.
The largest sections were the 12 Lazio sections with about 3,300
members, followed by Tuscany, 18 sections, with a total of 3,000
members. Other regions were as follows:
(s-section, b-battalion)
The AdP very quickly built up its own cultural identity with individual
sections proudly flaunting their own logos and images of war. While the
AdP as a whole was easily recognisable by a skull surrounded by a laurel
wreath with a dagger in its teeth, and the motto âA Noiâ (To Us), the
Directorates logo was a dagger surrounded by an oak and laurel wreath.
The ivetavecchia meanwhile didnât leave much to the imagination when
choosing their banner â an axe smashing the fasces symbol! Although they
did not have, nor want, their own uniform, the average AdP member
preferred to dress in black sweaters, dark-grey trousers, with a red
flower in their buttonholes. Their songs were as direct and
confrontational as they themselves were:
âRintuzziamo la violenza/ del fascismo mercenario./ Tutti in armi!sul
calvario/ dellâumana redenzion./ Questa eterna giovinezza/ si rinnova
nella fede/ per un popolo che chiede/ uguaglianza e libertĂ .â
âWe curb the violence/of the mercenary fascists/ Everyone armed on the
cavalry/of human redemption/ This eternal youth/is renewed in the faith/
for the people who demand equality and freedom.â
The Italian anarchist, Errico Malatesta, commenting on the massive
factory occupations in northern Italy in September 1920 which involved
600,000 workers, predicted âif we do not carry on to the end, we will
pay with tears of blood for the fears we now instill in the
bourgeoisieâ. His words were to be prophetic as both the PSI and CGL,
instead of expanding the struggle from the factories into the community,
collaborated with the state to return the workers to their jobs. It was
from this moment onwards that the state moved onto the offensive, and
Mussoliniâs ârevolutionary actionâ squads were supplied with enough arms
to take to the streets.
Until the formation of the AdP, the fascists had things mostly their own
way. Starting off with an attack on the town hall in Bologna, the
fascist squads swept through the countryside like a scythe, undertaking
âpunitive expeditionsâ against âredâ villages. Following their success
there, they began attacking the cities. Labour unions, the offices of
co-operatives and leftist papers were destroyed in Trieste, Modena, and
Florence within the first few months of 1921. As Rossi writes, they had
âan immense advantage over the labour movement in its facilities for
transportation and concentration⊠The fascists are generally without
tiesâŠthey can live anywhereâŠThe workers, on the contrary, are bound to
their homesâŠThis system gives the enemy every advantage: that of the
offensive over the defensive, and that of mobile warfare over a war of
position [3].â
However by March 1921 there were growing signs of working class defence
structures being put in place. In Livorno, when a working class district
(Borgo dei Cappucini) came under attack by the fascists, the whole
neighbourhood mobilised against them, routing them from the town. In
April, when the fascists launched an assault on one of the union centres
(Camero del Lavoro), the workers held strike action on the 14^(th) and
surrounded the fascist squad, only for the army to rush to the fascistsâ
defence. By July, the working class had created their own armed militia
âthe Arditi del Popolo.
The AdP first saw action in Piombino on July 19^(th), when they attacked
a fascist meeting place and rounded up the fascists inside. When the
Royal Guard tried to intervene, they too were forced to surrender. The
AdP held the streets for a few days before the sheer size of police
numbers forced them to withdraw. In Sarzana, they went to the aid of the
local population that had managed to capture one the fascistsâ most
important leaders, Renato Ticci. When a squad of 500 fascists attempted
to rescue Ticci, the AdP was there to force the fascists into the
countryside. 20 fascists (probably more) were killed and their squadron
leader commented: âThe squad, so long accustomed to defeating an enemy
who nearly always ran away, or offered feeble resistance, could not and
did not know how to defend themselvesâ.
However, just as the AdP was building up the momentum on the streets,
they were betrayed by the PSI who were more interested in signing a pact
of nonaggression with the fascists; this at a time when the fascists
were at their most vulnerable. Socialist militants were forced by their
leadership to withdraw from the AdP, while the CGL union ordered its
members to leave the organisation.
One union leader, Matteotti, confirmed the sell out in the union paper
Battaglia Sindicale: âStay at home: do not respond to provocations. Even
silence, even cowardice, are sometimes heroic.â
The communists went one step further by forming their own pure âclass
consciousâ squadrons thus decimating the movement further. According to
Gramsci, âthe tactic⊠corresponded to the need to prevent the party
membership being controlled by a leadership that was not the party
leadership.â Quite soon, only 50 sections of 6000 members remained,
supported both by the Unione Sindicale Italiana (USI) and the Unione
Anarchica Italiana (UAI). A number of these sections went into action
again in September in Piombino when the fascists, who had burned down
the offices of the PSI (the same organisation that had sold them out a
month before), were intercepted by an anarchist patrol and forced to
flee. Piombino was soon to become the nerve centre of the defence
against fascism, defending itself against a further fascist onslaught in
April 1922, before finally succumbing after 1 œ days of fierce fighting
when the fascists, aided by the Royal Guard, were able to capture the
offices of the USI.
In July 1922, the reformist general strike to defend âcivil liberties
and the constitutionâ marked the final disaster for the labour movement,
as the work stoppages were not, and could not be, accompanied by
aggressive direct action. The fascists simply ran public services with
scabs and made themselves masters of the streets. With the strikeâs
collapse, the fascists mustered their forces to deal with the last
remaining outposts of resistance, one of which, Livorno, succumbed to a
force of 2000 squadristi.
So what lessons can we today learn from the arditi del popolo? First of
all, we need to learn the benefits of organisation. Like the AdP, we
need to form local anti-fascist groups, operating autonomously in their
own areas, but gelled together in a national network. These groups
should not refrain from applying militant direct action tactics against
the likes of the BNP; the only language the fascists understand. We need
to avoid the path of reformism, advocated by the recruiting agents of
reformist parties like the SWP and destroy, once and for all, the
nationalist myth that scapegoats our ethnic communities and which allows
governments across Europe to hoodwink large sections of the working
class into the belief the root of their socio-economic woes lies
elsewhere. To do this, we need to tie the fascistsâ agenda to that of
the state which supports it, and get across the message that fascism
will only ever be destroyed once the state itself is smashed. Only a
society run along the principles of anarchocommunism can ever hope to
achieve this.
Thanks to Nestor McNab, for his help with translation of parts of this
article.
Italy
Resistance and propaganda to fascism did not begin in 1939, 1936 or
1939. Nor did it consist simply of slogans hastily painted on walls in
the dead of night. A powerful anarchist underground press operated in
Italy throughout the period of fascist dictatorship and occupation
pressing the case for liberation through social revolution. To gauge the
extent of the resistance to fascism and Nazi occupation in Italy, here
is a review of the libertarian underground press at the time
Underground paper put out by workers of the Turin factory councils,
among them the anarchists Michele Guasco and Dante Armanetti. 8 or 9
issues in the first year of fascist terror.
Anarchist review open to all tendencies. Produced monthly in Paris in
1924â5, when together with the Italian section of Rivista Internazionale
Poliglotta (International Polygot Review) it ceased publication to
produce La Tempra
International anarchist review. Monthly from Paris from 1925â6 (lack of
information on his publication in following years)
Published in Paris for distribution in Italy. Subtitled: For armed
insurrection against fascism. The editions specifically for Italy were
produced in small format, three column
width on thin paper, with 3 to 4 pages that could be included in a
letter. Regular publication up till end of March 1931.
Milan , October 1943. Small format, 4 pages. The programme of the
revolutionary syndicalists of the Unione Sindacale Italiana. For a
@socialist republic of syndicates@. Edited by Aldibrando Giovanetti.
First of all in pamphlet form, then a paper. 12 pages. Published in the
Romagna with the support of the anarchists of Liguria, Tuscany, and
Romagna after a meeting in Florence.
libertarian communists)
Milan. Underground publication of first 3 numbers., first one appearing
18^(th) June 1944. Small format with 3 columns, 2 pages. Editor was
Pietro Bruzzi, arrested, tortured and shot by the Nazis at Legnano.
Milan. Paper of the Federazione Comunista Libertaria Italiana. First
appeared December 1944. Small format with 3 columns, 4 pages. In March
1945 its second issue appeared, and continued regularly until the end of
April 1945, with the final fall of fascism
Milan. 5 issues appeared from August to September 1944 in the same
format as above papers, and indeed most of the underground press.
Paper of the Liga dei Consigli Rivoluzionari (League of Revolutionary
Councils) From December 1944 included the programme of the Liga.
Composed of communists, anarchists and sympathizers. Second issue
appeared in February 1945.
âVoice of the libertarian communistsâ. Turin. First issue appeared in
October 1944, 2 columns, small format, 4 pages. 2^(nd) issue in November
â44 and third in March â45.
New York. At the end of â44 the New York Italian anarchist paper
published several supplements aimed at Italy. Thin paper, small format,
2 columns, 8 pages. It was distributed above all by soldiers in the
American Armed Forces, despite the American authorities heavily
punishing anyone involved in its dissemination. Issue 1 in December â44
and Issue 3 in March â45.
Anarchist paper. Genoa. Published just a little before insurrection
against the fascist authorities and in preparation for it, 22 April â45.
Small format, 3 columns, 4 pages. Continued numbering from when it was a
daily paper published in Milan and Rome and edited by Malatesta in
1920â1922.
Anarchist paper. Florence. Appeared 24^(th) September â44, without the
authorization of the Allied authorities. The printer Lato Latini was
arrested and condemned to 1 year in prison. In February â45, after a
suspension of several months, restarted on a monthly basis with Umanita
Nova; Fiorentina (Florentine)as subtitle and with announcement that the
Federzione Anarchica Italiana was being formed. Prematurely as it
happens, as the FAI was now constituted until the Carrara conference in
September 1945
Auf Ruf: Offizere, Unteroffizere und Mannschaften der Deutschen
Wehrmacht. Appeal in German put out by Milanese anarchists to the German
armed forces in March 1945
Published somewh ere in Switzerland. After the suppression of this Swiss
paper, small pamphlets of 16 pages on a monthly basis (half in Italian,
half in French) appeared from September 1940. Changed title several
times, but continued with a surprising regularity up until the end of
December 1946 with no.147
Organ of the libertarian groups of southern Italy. Bari. It was the
first official anarchist paper since the fascist takeover. Initially it
appeared on 30^(th) June â44 without Allied authorization, and was
distributed secretly until 16^(th) November â44 when it was legalized.
Milan. 2,000 copies printed. Edited by Mario Perelli with a vague ,
gradualist line. Came out from Autumn â43, with a short life.
Anarchist paper secretly printed and distributed in Genoa.
Single issue paper of the Federazione Comunista Libertaria of Livorno.
Appearing semi-clandestinely, because of persistent censorship of Allied
authorities in summer 1945, with false indication of its address (Rome)
Libertarian communist (Ravenna). Paper of the Romagna anarchists,; its
first 2 issues appeared clandestinely.
Political weekly of the partisans of liberty. Rome. Anti-authoritarian
political line , edited by Carlo Andreoni, libertarian Marxist militant
of the Unione âSpartacoâ. Underground publication from â43, continued up
until â45, probably tolerated by the Allied authorities because not
directly anarchist, but suspended for 4 issues in march â45, for âhaving
published forbidden notices of the Allied military censorshipâ.
Libera voce clandestine. Rome. Paper of âa group of partisans of the
Northâ taking the place of Il Partigiano during its forced suspension.
On its list of @friends and neighbours@ was Umanita Nova.
[1] Williams L. Proletarian Order 1975
[2] Williams L. Proletarian Order 1975
[3] Rossi, A. The Birth of Fascism 1938