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Title: Signor Malatesta Explains Author: Enrico Malatesta Date: 23 August 1899 Language: en Topics: class struggle Source: The Method of Freedom: An Errico Malatesta Reader, edited by Davide Turcato, translated by Paul Sharkey. Notes: Translated from “Il signor Malatesta si spiega,” Il Progresso Italo-Americano (New York) 20, n. 200 (23 August 1899). Malatesta had arrived in America on 12 August and held his first conference in Paterson, New Jersey, on 16 August. The Progresso Italo-Americano, one of New York’s Italian newspapers, had published a report of Malatesta’s speech in its 20 August issue. The address provided by Malatesta is that of Pedro Esteve and his wife Maria Roda, with whom he was staying. Esteve was the Spanish anarchist with whom Malatesta had toured Spain in 1891. Esteve had since emigrated to America.
Signor E. Malatesta wishes to amend certain views, not reflective of his
thinking, carried in the report sent to us by third parties on the talk
he gave on the evening of the 16^(th) inst., in Paterson, NJ.
To which end he has sent us this letter in which he asks that we
accommodate him, which we are happy to do as follows.
750 Clay St., Paterson, 20.08.99
---
Dear Editor-in-chief,
I read in your edition of today’s date that I am supposed to have stated
in Paterson that “henceforth it is no longer a matter of class struggle
against the bourgeoisie as the older socialist schools wished us to
believe.”
Since this does not accurately reflect my thinking, allow me to
reiterate for your readers what I actually did say.
As I see it, it is not the case that the bourgeoisie forms a single body
in the struggle against the proletariat and that government, army,
bench, church, etc. have no reason to exist other than the protection of
bourgeois interests, just as the various schools of socialism believed
once upon a time.
The current position in Europe is there as evidence, even for the most
pig-headed, that the bourgeoisie is split into a number of factions
competing among themselves, and that the various political, court,
military, religious institutions, etc., not only champion the
bourgeoisie against the proletariat, but indeed have interests of their
own, which they protect even at the expense of placing bourgeois
interests in jeopardy.
This situation represents a benefit and a danger as far as the laboring
population is concerned; a benefit insofar as the enemy is divided; a
danger in that it might lead the workers to forget that “all” bourgeois
are its enemies.
So we anarchist socialists should cash in on the divisions within the
enemy camp; and, if it can be done to some purpose, ally ourselves with
this or that bourgeois faction in order to rid ourselves of the most
immediate obstacles such as, in Italy, the monarchy; but we must always
remain what we are, namely, implacable enemies of capitalism and
authoritarianism, and, insofar as we have it in us so to do, prevent the
workers from being used yet again as footstool for new rulers and new
exploiters.
The point is not to give up on the class struggle but rather to prevent
the workers from straying from the Polar Star of class struggle in the
complex struggles at the present hour and in the near future.
The debate centers on a de facto matter, to wit, the influence,
exclusive or otherwise, of the class struggle in a wide variety of
historical events. But all socialists, of no matter what school of
thought, are—or ought to be—in agreement on the necessity of the
proletariat’s always being guided by the interests of the working class;
given that, as far socialists are concerned, there is no equitable
solution to the social question other than the destruction of all
parasitical classes through the eradication of private ownership and the
conversion of all able-bodied men into useful workers.
In the hope that you will be willing to publish these few lines for the
sake of the truth, thanking you in anticipation.
Yours Enrico Malatesta