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Title: Anarchism in Chile
Author: Larry Gambone
Date: 2009
Language: en
Topics: Chile, history
Source: Gambone, Larry. “Anarchism, Chile.” In The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest: 1500 to the Present, edited by Immanuel Ness, 111–113. Vol. 1. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell, 2009.

Larry Gambone

Anarchism in Chile

The first Chilean anarchists were mutualists. Francisco Bilbao and

Santiago Arcos visited Paris during the revolution of 1848 and were

influenced by the mutualist anarchism of Pierre Proudhon and the

Christian socialism of Felicité de Lamennais. Returning to Chile in

1850, they formed La Sociedad de la Igualidad (Equality Society) (SI)

Within a year the group was suppressed by the authorities, but not

before the La Serena branch enrolled 100 artisans in the first

functioning mutual aid society. Other mutualist societies were formed in

the late 1850s, but it was not until 1862, with the founding of La Union

in Santiago, that mutualism became influential among artisans. La Union

branches spread to more than a dozen cities, providing medical services

as well as a workshop for the unemployed.

The mutualists created an alternate culture, a microcosm of a workers’

republic. They believed capitalism could be transformed peacefully

through the practical application of the principals of liberty,

mutuality, solidarity, and self-education. In 1894 the Chilean

mutualists formed the Federacion de Trabajadores de Chile (Workers

Confederation) (FTCh), the first national federation. The confederation

fought for social reform, as well as the usual activities of education

and health insurance. By 1925 it had more than 100,000 members.

Revolutionary anarchism came to Chile in the 1890s through a Bakuninist

Spaniard, Manuel Chinchilla. Carlos Jorquera, the first Chilean

revolutionary anarchist, was influenced by Chinchilla and in 1892 they

formed the Centro de Estudios Sociales, and published a paper, El

Oprimido. Jorquera also organized a maritime union. Revolutionaries

within the Mutualist Confederation produced the journal El Grito del

Pueblo in 1896. Most of the early revolutionary anarchists were skilled

workers who came out of the Mutualist Confederation.

From 1900 to 1910 anarchists were the best organized of all the radical

groups, strong in printing, baking, shoe making, and the docks. The

first Resistance Society was formed in 1898 by railway workers, but they

also founded a Resistance Society among carpenters, which played a major

role in the Santiago General Strike of 1907. The Resistance Societies

were anarchist-inspired and influenced by Argentine anarchism. They were

decentralized, rotated leadership, and locally autonomous. The movement

was concentrated in central Chile, chiefly among industrial workers, and

by 1900 there were 30 societies. This mushroomed to 433 by 1910, with a

total membership of 55,000.

The mancomunales (brotherhoods) developed from the mutualist movement

and were simultaneously mutual aid societies and trade unions. First

organized in 1900 in Iquique by anarchists, they soon had 6,000 members

– the majority of the nitrate and maritime workers in the North, and all

the major strikes in that region were organized by mancomunales. The

movement favored direct action and a much greater level of organization

and solidarity than the Resistance Societies. While the Resistance

Societies were local, the Brotherhoods were organized on a territorial

basis, uniting different trades, first on a city-wide, then a

provincial, and finally at a national level. The mancomunales federated

in 1904 as the Gran Mancomunal de Obreras, uniting 20,000 members. The

movement almost died after the 1907 depression and military repression,

the worst instance of which was the Santa Maria Massacre in Iquique,

where 3,000 miners were killed by machine gun fire.

The Brotherhoods revived in 1916–18 and created the Federacion de

Obreros de Chile (Chilean Workers Federation) (FOCh). This organization

was an umbrella group containing all tendencies – mutualist, populist,

anarchist, and socialist – and was the first national labor federation.

As militancy increased, the FOCh radicalized. In 1919 the union adopted

anarchosyndicalist principles and a federal structure. Most trade unions

remaining outside of FOCh in the period 1917–22 were also

anarchosyndicalist. During this period and for several years after,

anarchism was more influential among workers than Marxism. The

syndicalist FOCh was short lived, however, and in a few years it was

taken over by the communists.

Many young intellectuals were attracted to anarchism, especially after

World War I. University and college students organized the FederaciĂłn de

Estudiantes de Chile (Federation of Chilean Students) (FECh) as an

anarchist union. Some important anarchist leaders of the postwar period

were Manuel Rojas, a novelist who was later in the Industrial Workers of

the World (IWW), and the writer Eugenio Gonzalez-Rojas. Pablo Neruda was

close to the anarchists at this time as well.

The Chilean IWW was officially launched in 1919 at a national

convention, and soon expanded to 19 cities. Total membership stood at

about 10,000 at this period. In 1925 Colonel Carlos Ibanez took power in

a coup, and in 1927 formally abolished the labor movement. Union offices

were raided, the IWW and anarchist groups disbanded, and all their

journals shut down. The anarchists and the IWW never fully recovered

from the coup. Even though more influential than the communists, they

had lost their leadership role among the workers.

In 1950 anarchists formed the Movement for Workers’ Unity to combine all

labor unions in one central body. Thus was born the Central Unitaria de

Trabajadores (Chile’s United Labor Center) (CUT) in 1953, uniting most

of Chile’s unions, including the CGT. The CUT executive had four

anarchist members, and anarchists controlled the shoe workers, printers,

and maritime unions. After the failure of the 1955 General Strike called

by CUT, most anarchosyndicalists withdrew from the federation. By 1960

anarchists had little influence in the union movement.

During the Popular Unity government of President Salvador Allende,

anarchists were too few to be of any great influence. Nonetheless, there

were developments similar in spirit to anarchosyndicalism. These

occurred spontaneously, such as the Cordones Industrials (a form of

workers’ councils), and the Commandos Comunales (self-governing

neighborhoods). Six years after the 1973 coup, the libertarian left

began to reorganize. An umbrella group, Socialist Ideas and Action

(PAS), was formed, bringing together anarchists and libertarian-leaning

members of the former Popular Unity coalition. Anarchists were involved

in struggles against the dictatorship in the 1980s. With the return of

“democracy” in the 1990s, many anarchist groups formed, disappeared, and

regrouped.

SEE ALSO: Allende Gossens, Salvador (1908–1973) ; Anarchism, Argentina ;

Anarchosyndicalism ; Industrial Workers of the World (IWW).

References And Suggested Readings

Angel, A. (1972) Politics and the Labour Movement in Chile. Oxford:

Oxford University Press.

DeShazo, P. (1983) Urban Workers and Labor Unions in Chile, 1902–1927.

Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.

Illanes, M. A. (1990) La Revolucion Solidaria – Historias de las

Sociedades Obrerade Socorros Mutuos, Chile 1840–1920. Santiago: SEDEJ.

Simon, F. (1946) Anarchism and Anarcho-Syndicalism in Latin America.

Hispanic American Review 26: 38–59.

Skidmore, T. and Smith, P. (1984) Chile, Democracy, Socialism, and

Repression in Modern Latin America. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Troncoso, M. P. (1960) Rise of the Latin American Labor Movement. New

York: Bookman.