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Title: Constructive Anarchism
Author: Kevin Doyle
Date: February 25, 2005
Language: en
Topics: platform, platformism, debate, book review
Source: Retrieved on 14th October 2021 from http://www.anarkismo.net/article/31
Notes: Despite its relevance, The Organisation Platform of the Libertarian Communists is as controversial as ever. Kevin Doyle reviews Constructive Anarchism, a new pamphlet from Monty Miller Press in Australia that has collected The Platform and some of the early responses to its proposals into one useful edition.

Kevin Doyle

Constructive Anarchism

This pamphlet from Monty Miller Press in Australia gathers together some

of the early documents that emerged in the anarchist movement in

response to the publication in 1926 of The Organisation Platform Of The

Libertarian Communists. The Platform, as it was to become known, was

written and produced in Paris by the Dielo Truda (Workers’ Cause) Group,

among whose members were Nester Makhno, Ida Mett and Peter Arshinoff.

Makhno, Arshinoff and Mett were by that time in exile in Paris from the

repression and persecution that had followed the Bolsheviks’ rise to

power in Russia. All had fought and participated in the Russian

Revolution.

Though written with this in mind, the Platform did not seek to address

the specific problems experienced in Russia. Rather it concerned itself

in the main with the realities of the then existing anarchist movement.

The opening paragraph described its predicament as follows:

“It’s very significant that in spite of the strength and incontestably

positive character of libertarian ideas...and...the heroism and

innumerable sacrifices borne by the anarchists in the struggle for

libertarian communism, the anarchist movement remains weak despite

everything, and has appeared very often in the history of working class

struggles as a small event, an episode, and not an important factor.”

It went on, in the next paragraph, to pointedly state:

“This contradiction ...has its explanation in a number of causes, of

which the most important... is the absence of organisational principles

and practices in the... movement.”

As the other documents in this pamphlet show The Platform became, almost

immediately, a subject for debate. Though written by persons who,

undoubtedly, had the best interests of the movement at heart, it

nevertheless became an object of scorn and was attacked. Maximoff,

another Russian exile and author of the longest (and most long-winded)

reply to the Platform (included in this Monty Miller edition), was

careful to use words such as ‘childish’ and ‘primitive’ in his

descriptions of the arguments made by the Platformists. In doing this he

hardly served his cause well, and his contribution, to my mind, is by

far the weakest, and of little value even now. The other two main

‘views’ (also included here) are that of Malatesta, the Italian

anarchist (then imprisoned by Mussolini), and that of another grouping

of Russian exiles among whom was Voline. Though both Malatesta and this

group did oppose the main thrust of The Platform, they did so in a

well-intentioned and informative way.

So what were the issues that The Platform raised, and why were they so

contentious?

Though the Platform was written with a practical agenda in mind, it is

concerned throughout with questions of a theoretical nature, and with

the implications of these. These theoretical questions have either not

been addressed adequately in the anarchist movement in the past or they

have not been addressed at all. One of the key questions is this: If, as

anarchists, we are primarily concerned with achieving a free socialist

society, then how can we proceed towards achieving this aim without

abandoning our libertarian character? Since organisation is

indispensable to achieve any real results, how do we preserve

libertarian politics in an organisation and at the same time move

forward?

Such a question is far from mute. And the question, moreover, is of

importance not just to anarchists but to all libertarian socialists.

Revolution raises special problems for libertarian as opposed to

authoritarian socialists, a point that has become plainly obvious with

the defeat of the two key revolutions of this century: Russia and Spain.

The Platformists were committed anarchists. As such they were concerned

with an issue that almost always comes to the fore in any revolutionary

situation. This is the relationship between the revolutionary minority

and the mass of people. Firstly is such a distinction valid i.e. between

the revolutionary minority and the large mass of people? The

Platformists say yes. How is the relationship to be described? Would it

be possible to ignore it? If not what is important in it, relative to

the overall aim of a revolution: freedom?

There are other questions too: What ideas do people take into a

revolution with them? Does everyone overnight become spontaneously

anti-authoritarian or must a struggle ‘to win hearts and minds’ take

place even within a fully fledged revolution? How should anarchists deal

with profoundly authoritarian ideas that also appear to be revolutionary

(Leninism)? Should it ignore such ideas? Should it confront them? If

anarchists confront them, is that method of action in itself

authoritarian, and counterproductive to the spirit of the revolution?

These questions are crucial issues of revolution, according to the

Platformists — and they are right of course. The issue of preserving the

libertarian character of revolution while at the same time putting in

place a new means for economic and social administration is the main

problem not yet solved in any revolution, this century or any other.

Mass movements constantly throw up forms of grass-roots democracy that

could indeed be the basis for a new society: the Factory Committees in

Russia, the collectives in Spain, etc. Yet, time and again, these forms

of revolutionary organisation have been overrun before their existence

has been consolidated and extended.

Perhaps because of their experience in Russia, the Platformists were

unashamedly pro-anarchist. One of their key conclusions (in the

Platform) goes as follows:

“More than any other concept, anarchism should become the leading

concept of revolution, for it is only on the theoretical base of

anarchism that the social revolution can succeed in the complete

emancipation of labour”.

The basis for this claim, that was in effect to become a key contention

of the Platform, is that anarchist ideas articulate crucial aspects of

revolutionary method: in terms of advocating self-management, in terms

of linking means and ends, and in terms of advocating participatory or

grass-roots democracy. For these reasons, the Platformists argued,

anarchist ideas are the most advanced ideas of revolutions (or to put it

another way the practical tools necessary to win revolution). This claim

— by no means trivial — earned the Platformists the ignominy of being

described as ‘Bolsheviks’, or ‘bolshevised-anarchists’ — slurs without

parallel in the anarchist movement (it must be said).

How is this central assertion of the Platformists — that “anarchism

should become the leading concept of revolution” — to be judged? Is it

un-anarchist? Is it arrogant? Is it a recipe for authoritarianism?

Though Malatesta, Voline and others accepted that the Platformists were

‘sincere’ in their polemic and, to a point, honest about the state of

the anarchist movement, they nevertheless saw in this claim of the

Platform’s an attempt to ‘lead the masses’. This remains a central issue

in the dispute — even today.

It is rarely said — except by the obtuse — that the Platformists were

consciously authoritarian; such a reading of their efforts cannot, in

any case, be borne out. What is more usually claimed however is that the

Platformists were ‘enamoured with’ or perhaps ‘unduly affected’ by

authoritarian notions — perhaps because of their ‘close encounter’ with

Bolshevism during the Russian Revolution. We cannot know for sure — not

now anyway. However, what we can know — or, at least, can still discover

— is what was at issue in the debate in the past. This is illuminating

to say the least! Today, in some quarters, the Platformists are often

dismissed as ‘want-to-be leaders’. Yet this was not where Malatesta took

issue — he accepted that anarchists should take the lead. The question,

as Malatesta saw it, was not whether to lead, but rather how you should

lead — a fairly important distinction in the argument. Malatesta posed

two ‘alternatives’: Either we “provide leadership by counsel and example

leaving people themselves to.... quite freely adopt our methods and

solutions....’“or we “can also lead by taking command, that is, by

becoming the government...’” He asked the Platformists, “In which manner

do you wish to lead?”

Despite many efforts and many letters on the subject (in particular

between Malatesta and Makhno) this question could not be clarified to

either side’s satisfaction, in part because there was an additional

issue for dispute — this was the issue of organisation principles (which

in themselves make up a significant part of the original Platform

document). In his letter of reply to Makhno, Malatesta stated (Document

3):

“...it is clear that to attain their ends the anarchist organisations

must, in their constitution and operation, be in harmony with the

principles of anarchism, that is, they must in no way be polluted by

authoritarianism...”

A statement that was in effect to become the nub of the debate: did the

organisational form that the Platformists propose contradict basic

anarchist ideas?

The Platformists were without any doubt intensely focused in their

objectives, and it was this as much as any experience in Russia that was

to mark out their proposals about actual organisation. As they saw it,

The General Union Of Anarchists — the title they chose for their

organisation — should be a collective body of anarchists in spirit as

well as in operation; the GUA should clearly distinguish between

collective activity and individual acts of rebellion (indeed it should

have no part in the latter, they argued); and it should seek to operate

efficiently and democratically. In single-mindedly adopting this

framework the Platformists — in effect — rejected the notion that

efficiency, democracy, and a unity of theory and practice were

un-anarchist ideas and incompatible with anarchist organisation. They

said: we can be efficient and effective, and we can be libertarian, at

the same time — there is no contradiction. The debate, oddly enough,

still rages.

There is a final matter that is not touched on in this Rebel Worker

publication, though it is, of course, central: this is Spain. Written

ten years before the events of the Spanish Revolution, the Platform

appears on first reading to be contradicted by what was to occur there.

Indeed the Platform’s opening description about the ‘state of the

anarchist movement’ appears in sharp contrast to the mass movement that

was then emerging in Spain, and that was to flower in ’36. Moreover the

‘mass’ nature of the Spanish anarchist movement and its broad basis in

the working-class seem if anything to be the antithesis of what the

Platformists were arguing was the norm. How are we to view the Platform

against the example of Spain?

As the Monty Miller Press Introduction points out, there were certain

aspects of the Russian anarchist movement that marked the Platform, in

terms of its overall prognosis. Anarcho-syndicalism which had only

shallow roots in the Russian working-class was already by 1926 deeply

embedded in Spain. Anarcho-syndicalism was, by virtue of its membership,

organisationally driven and clear in terms of its objectives. It

succeeded because of this. However if wrong in an important way about

Spain, the Platform was right in a crucial way. The eventual outcome of

the revolution of ’36 clearly brought home the very deficiencies the

Platform had underlined: make anarchism the leading ideas of the

revolution or lose. It was a choice the CNT-FAI could not make in the

end.

The importance of the Platform as a document of revolutionary anarchism

has become lost in invective over the years. It is a poor reward that we

have for Makhno, Archinoff and Mett! Monty Miller Press are to be

commended for this re-issue, but also for including the various replies

and letters that followed on its heels. The debate is important still,

and lest we forget why, consider, on this the anniversary of 1937 — the

year of defeat for the Spanish Revolution — the conclusion of Jose

Periats, the anarchist historian aligned with the CNT. In Anarchists in

the Spanish Revolution he says:

“Anarchism is largely responsible for its own bad reputation in the

world. It did not consider the thorny problem of means and ends. In

their writing, many anarchists conceived of a miraculous solution to the

problems of revolution. We fell easily into this trap in Spain. We

believed that once the dog is dead, the rabies is over. We proclaimed a

full-blown revolution without worrying about the many complex problems

that revolution brings with it”

The Platformists, it has to be said, would probably have agreed.