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Title: Anarchism in Italy
Author: Vittorio Sergi
Date: 2009
Language: en
Topics: Italy, history
Source: Sergi, Vittorio. “Anarchism, Italy.” In The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest: 1500 to the Present, edited by Immanuel Ness, 129–133. Vol. 1. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell, 2009.

Vittorio Sergi

Anarchism in Italy

Anarchism in Italy has its origins in the second half of the nineteenth

century in the context of the political radicalism of intellectuals and

popular leaders who struggled for national liberation and a republican

government, such as Giuseppe Garibaldi (1807–1882) and Carlo Pisacane

(1818–1857). From 1864 on, the influence of Mikhail Bakunin was decisive

in the creation of a radical and autonomous political doctrine. Together

with initial industrialization in the urban centers of the center and

north of the country, there was an important growth in workers’

associations (societĂ  operaie), often organized by profession, in which

anarchism found supporters. In the south of the country, the majority of

workers were landless peasants who, led by an enlightened elite, had

engaged in several failed insurrections. This activity was soon

channeled into continuous guerilla actions often mixing brigandage with

social protest. In 1869, under the influence of Bakunin, Carlo Gambuzzi

and Stefano Caporosso founded the first anarchist journal, Eguaglianza

(Equality), in Naples, edited by Michelangelo Statuti. The first Italian

anarchist organizations, such as the Federazione Operaia Napoletana

(1874), emerged in the south. There, Bakunin found important supporters

and natural leaders such as Carlo Cafiero (1846–1892) and Errico

Malatesta (1853–1932). When anarchist tendencies spread to the north,

from Rome to the eastern region of Marche and Romagna, Tuscany, and the

industrial centers of Milan, Turin, and Genoa, they gained supporters

among the working class, artisans, and the urban underclasses. Italian

anarchist organizations and groups were part of the First International

Workingmen’s Association, and at the first meeting of the Italian

section of the International, held in Rimini from August 4 to 6, 1872,

Cafiero and Andrea Costa (1851–1910) supported the anarchist position

against the Marxist currents that would soon drive the anarchists out of

the International.

From 1870 to 1880, Italian anarchism defined itself as autonomous from

socialism and republicanism, and with the leadership of Costa and

Malatesta, tried to find a common organization as a revolutionary party.

Anarchists supported and participated in several popular revolts until

their important insurrectionary plans were frustrated by the police: in

August 1874 near Bologna and Castel del Monte in the southeast, and in

1877 in the northwest of Campania in the Matese region, where after

several guerilla actions the rebels were defeated. The crisis of a

common organizing project and harsh repression by the state provoked by

individualist terrorist practices escalated across Europe, as acts of

“propaganda by the deed” were often performed by the hands of Italian

anarchists. In 1887, the Italian anarchist Michele Angiolillo (1871–97)

killed the prime minister of Spain, Antonio Canovas; in 1894, Sante

Caserio (1873–94) stabbed French president Sadi Carnot to death; and in

1898, Luigi Luccheni (1873–1910) stabbed and killed Princess Elisabeth

of Austria. Malatesta criticized this individualist tendency and

promoted instead participation in popular organizations and trade

unions. An anarchist-led, nationwide protest for “food and work” started

in Ancona in January 1898, ending with barricades and bloody military

repression in Milan in May. The repression was also enforced by an

international anti-anarchist conference of European police forces in

Rome from November 24 to December 21 of that year. In this context,

Gaetano Bresci (1869–1901), an Italian immigrant to the United States,

shot and killed King Umberto I in Monza on July 29, 1900 as a revenge

for the victims of the military repression of 1898.

From the Rise of Syndicalism to the Rise of Fascism

At the turn of the century, Costa broke with Malatesta and joined the

Italian Socialist Party together with a section of the trade union

movement that chose the liberal democratic political terrain opened up

by the introduction of universal suffrage. Anarchism in this period was

characterized by intense activity among workers, leading to the

formation in 1912 of the Italian Syndicalist Union (Unione Sindacale

Italiana, USI) as a branch of the International Workingmen’s Association

(Associazione Internazionale dei Lavoratori, AIT/IWA). Meanwhile,

anarchists participated in the General Chamber of Labor (Camera Generale

del Lavoro, CGDL), today the Italian General Confederation of Labor

(Confederazione Generale Italiana del Lavoro, CGIL), with the aim of

gaining positions within the working-class organizations. Beginning in

1912, protests against Italy’s colonial war in Libya led to nationwide

strikes and to generalized standoffs, with a revival of individualist

attacks against military personnel and politicians.

In 1914, conditions of low wages and high prices were exacerbated by

heavy police repression. A political meeting attended by Malatesta in

the city of Ancona was attacked by the police, and the ensuing protests

culminated in riots which soon spread to the major urban centers of the

country, as well as to regions where anarchists had strong bases, such

as Romagna and Marche. Riots, strikes, and acts of sabotage broke out

all over Italy, often led by anarchists. The majority of republican,

socialist, and anarchist leaders chose not to push the popular unrest

into a general insurrection, and the state regained control through

another round of repression that sent many anarchists to jail and

Malatesta into exile. In the same year, anarchist newspapers and

activists led a campaign against the possible participation of Italy in

the war. When Italy attacked Austria and Germany in 1915, many

anarchists chose to respond by acts of individual and collective

desertion and sabotage. After the war, in 1919, the Union of Italian

Communist Anarchists (Unione Comunista Anarchica Italiana, UCAI) was

founded in Florence. One year later it approved Malatesta’s “Anarchist

Program” (Malatesta & Richards 1993: 182–98) and became the Italian

Anarchist Union (Unione Anarchica Italiana, UAI), publishing its own

newspaper, UmanitĂ  Nova (New Humanity).

When, in 1920, there was another nationwide protest following on from a

revolt of military conscripts in Ancona that had popular support,

anarchists such as Pietro Ferrero (1892–1922) and Maurizio Gorino joined

the radical socialists and the collective of Antonio Gramsci’s Ordine

Nuovo (New Order) in promoting the occupation of factories and the

takeover of the production of essential goods and services. The movement

was strong, especially in the main industrial districts of Turin and

Milan. This revolutionary movement was defeated in 1921 by the rising

violent reaction emerging from the newborn fascist organization. In

response, many anarchists joined the Arditi del Popolo, a paramilitary

organization formed by ex-soldiers and political militants that

practiced armed struggle against fascists until 1924.

Italian Anarchists Abroad

From the second half of the nineteenth century through the 1920s,

Italians had migrated to the Americas by the millions. The Italian

anarchist presence in the United States, Argentina, and Brazil was

significant enough to sponsor newspapers and initiatives, as well as to

provide economic support to prisoners and organizations, all of which

had a strong impact in Italy itself. Two of the most important Italian

anarchist newspapers were founded in New York: Il Martello (The Hammer)

in 1918 by Carlo Tresca, which was an organ of revolutionary

syndicalism, and L’Adunata dei Refrattari (The Call of the Refractory

Ones), an organ of the anti-organizational and individualist tendency

founded in 1922 by Armando Borghi. In Buenos Aires, Italian anarchism

had a strong influence within the labor movement and gained a reputation

for its violent and open resistance to repression, notably with the

group around Severino di Giovanni (1901–31). La Battaglia (Battle) and

Guerra Sociale (Social War), among many other journals, were edited in

Brazil. Giovanni Rossi founded the experimental colony of CecĂ­lia in the

province of Paranà (1890–4), and one of his associates, Gigi (Luigi)

Damiani, became an important union leader during the strikes of 1917–19

in SĂŁo Paulo. In addition, individual anarchists, including such

luminaries as Malatesta, Galleani, and Luigi Fabbri (1877–1935), also

made journeys around the Mediterranean, establishing small groups,

educational projects, and publications in Algeria, Egypt, Lebanon,

Tunisia, and Turkey (Khuri-Makdisi 2003; Gorman 2005).

The rise of the fascist regime in Italy in 1926 forced many anarchists

into exile or underground. Various anarchist groups went to Spain to

participate in the anti-fascist resistance there on the side of the

anarchosyndicalist ConfederaciĂłn Nacional del Trabajo-FederaciĂłn

Anarquista Ibérica (CNT-FAI), most notably in the enlistment of

anarchists from the UAI with the republican organization Giustizia e

LibertĂ  (Justice and Liberty), part of the Italian Ascaso Column led by

the anarchist Camillo Berneri (1897–1937), later assassinated by

Stalinist agents.

Recovery of the Movement and New Crises

After years of underground activity, exile, and detention, witnessing

the crisis of the fascist regime, anarchists confined in the island of

Ventotene held a clandestine congress in 1942 in which they planned for

the fall of fascism and a new revolutionary project. In 1943, the

Federation of Italian Anarchist Communists (Federazione dei Comunisti

Anarchici Italiani, FCAI) was founded. Anarchists often fought in the

popular armed resistance with the republican partisan groups of

Giustizia e LibertĂ , the communist Garibaldi brigades, or autonomous

anarchist fighting groups such as the Michele Schirru battalion in

Tuscany, or the Malatesta and Bruzzi battalions in Milan and Genoa. On

September 19, 1945, the Italian Anarchist Federation (Federazione

Anarchica Italiana, FAI) was founded in Carrara in an attempt to rebuild

anarchist unity. The directive committee of the federation refused to

support the National Liberation Committee (Comitato di Liberazione

Nazionale, CLN), which would be instrumental in the constitution of the

new republic. This position, together with the strong hegemony of the

Italian Communist Party, closed spaces for the anarchist initiative and

its presence among the working class.

In the 1950s, anarchism entered a deep crisis. At the beginning of the

1960s, the formal unity of FAI began to splinter into the three main

organizations and tendencies that have continued to the present time.

One breakaway group, claiming the heritage of the “anarchist party”

projected by Malatesta, gave birth to the Federation of Anarchist

Communists (Federazione dei Comunisti Anarchici, FDCA). Local autonomous

groups belonging to the anti-organizational and individualist tendency

left the FAI in 1965 and founded the Anarchist Initiative Groups (Gruppi

di Iniziativa Anarchica, GIA), and then in 1967 the Federated Anarchist

Groups (Gruppi Anarchici Federati, GAF), which became the Italian

section of the Anarchist Black Cross (an international prisoner-support

organization) and the hegemonic group in the country.

Anarchist Struggles AND THe “Strategy of Tension”

During the movements of 1967–79, anarchists were often attacked and used

by the security forces for provocation and infiltration, as part of a

“strategy of tension” aimed at arousing public hysteria toward the

Italian left (Censor 1975/1997; Sanguinetti 1979/1982). Nevertheless,

many anarchists participated actively in local organizations and

collectives, and several were imprisoned or killed, such as Giuseppe

Pinelli, killed in police custody in 1969 in Milan (the subject of Dario

Fo’s famous play, Accidental Death of an Anarchist), or Franco

Serantini, killed by the police in Pisa in 1973. When armed struggle was

on the rise, anarchists Gianfranco Faina and Salvatore Cinieri formed

their own armed initiative with the small affinity group-based

organization Azione Rivoluzionaria (1976–80). In the 1980s, a part of

the movement took on board the discourses and practices of radical

ecology, experimented with the creation of autonomous local communities,

or practiced individual forms of expropriation.

The 1990s were characterized by a strong repressive turn against

anarchists that followed the hegemony of the insurrectionary and

anti-organizational tendency. On November 16, 1995, the police launched

a major operation involving hundreds of activists. Alfredo Maria Bonanno

(b. 1937) and 53 others were accused by the public prosecutor Antonio

Marini of many offenses, including forming a terrorist organization.

Many were convicted, but their tendency was not defeated and it

experienced a strong revival with the start of the anti-globalization

movement. In 1998, due to several acts of sabotage against the

high-speed train (TAV) project in Piemonte, a number of anarchists were

arrested, two of whom, Edoardo Massari and Maria Soledad Rosa, committed

suicide in custody. While the FAI and USI maintained a national

presence, they did not play a major role in the anti-globalization

movement, and by the end of the 1990s neither had a strong influence

among the youth who organized mostly in informal groups and Centri

Sociali (volunteer-run community spaces, often in squatted premises).

Anarchists participated actively in the protests against the G8 meeting

in Genoa in 2001 as the so-called “black bloc.” From 1999 to the

present, various collectives have joined their anti-organizational and

individualist strategies and started campaigns of armed propaganda with

sabotage, explosive attacks, and arson. Since 2003, ten acronyms have

claimed to be part of an Informal Anarchist Federation (Federazione

Anarchica Informale, also sharing the acronym FAI) and have claimed

responsibility for more than 30 low-intensity bombings aimed at European

Commission president Romano Prodi, military and police stations,

detention centers, and tribunals. Responsibility for several other acts

of sabotage against productive infrastructure was not directly claimed.

It has been suggested that this group may be provocateurs, the initials

FAI chosen for their similarity to those of the Federazione Anarchica

Italiana.

Anarchists are today present nationwide and are involved in all the

principal social and political conflicts, with more than 60 active

spaces and an articulated presence on the Internet and in the militant

press. Centri Sociali, libraries, and USI union sections are divided

into the two main historical tendencies: unions and federated

associations maintain open, public activity, while the

anti-organizational and individualist tendency refuses any kind of

formalization, stressing the importance of direct action and underground

organizing.

SEE ALSO: Anarchism, Argentina ; Anarchism, Spain ; Anarchism in the

United States to 1945 ; Anarchosyndicalism ; Autonomism ; Bakunin,

Mikhail Alexandrovich (1814–1876) ; Fanelli, Giuseppe (1826–1877) ;

Fascism, Protest and Revolution ; G8 Protests, Genoa, 2001 ; Galleani,

Luigi (1861–1931) ; Gori, Pietro (1865–1911) ; Gramsci, Antonio

(1891–1937) ; Infoshops ; Internationals ; Italian Labor Movement ;

Italy, Centri Sociali ; Italy, from the Anti-Fascist Resistance to the

New Left (1945–1960) ; Italy, from the New Left to the Great Repression

(1962–1981) ; Malatesta, Errico (1853–1932) ; Pisacane, Carlo

(1818–1857)

References And Suggested Readings

Anon. (2005) The Marini Trial: Italian State Repression of Anarchist

Revolt and Anarchist Responses. Sacramento: Black Powder Press.

Antonioli, M. (1990) Azione diretta e organizzazione operaia:

sindacalismo rivoluzionario e anarchismo tra la fine dell’Ottocento e il

fascismo. Manduria: P. Lacaita.

Bayer, O. (1986) Anarchism and Violence: Severino Di Giovanni in

Argentina, 1923–1931. London: Elephant Editions.

Berti, G. (2003) Errico Malatesta e il movimento anarchico italiano e

internazionale 1872–1932. Milan: Franco Angeli.

Bianconi, P. (1988) Gli anarchici italiani nella lotta contro il

fascismo. Pistoia: Archivio famiglia Berneri.

Bonanno, A. M. (1998) Armed Joy. London: Elephant Editions.

Censor [Sanguinetti, G.] (1975/1997) The Real Report on the Last Chance

to Save Capitalism in Italy. Fort Bragg: Flatland Books.

Gabaccia, D. R. & Iacovetta, F. (Eds.) (2002) Women, Gender, and

Transnational Lives: Italian Workers of the World. Toronto: University

of Toronto Press.

Gabaccia, D. R. & Ottanelli, F. M. (2001) Italian Workers of the World:

Labor Migration and the Formation of Multiethnic States. Urbana:

University of Illinois Press.

Dadà, A. (1984) L’anarchismo in Italia fra movimento e partito. Milan:

Teti.

Di Lembo, L. (2001) Guerra di classe e lotta umana: l’anarchismo in

Italia dal biennio rosso alla guerra di Spagna (1919–1939). Pisa: BFS.

Gorman, A. (2005) Anarchists in Education: The Free Popular University

in Egypt (1901). Middle Eastern Studies 41 (3): 303–20.

Khuri-Makdisi, I. (2003) Levantine Trajectories: The Formulation and

Dissemination of Radical Ideas in and between Beirut, Cairo, and

Alexandria, 1860–1914. PhD thesis, Harvard University.

Levy, C. (1989) Italian Anarchism, 1870–1926. In D. Goodway (Ed.), For

Anarchism: History, Theory and Practice. London: Routledge.

Levy, C. (1999) Gramsci and the Anarchists. Oxford: Berg.

Malatesta, E. & Richards, V. (1993) Errico Malatesta: His Life and

Ideas. London: Freedom Press.

Manfredonia, G. et al. (2005) La resistenza sconosciuta. Gli anarchici e

la lotta contro il fascismo. Milan: Zero in condotta.

Pernicone, N. (1993) Italian Anarchism, 1864–1892. Princeton: Princeton

University Press.

Ravindranathan, T. R. (1988) Bakunin and the Italians. Kingston:

McGill-Queen’s University Press.

Sanguinetti, G. (1979/1982) On Terrorism and the State: The Theory and

Practice of Terrorism Divulged For the First Time. London: B. M.

Chronos.