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Title: The Illegals
Author: Le RĂ©tif
Date: June 20, 1908
Language: en
Topics: illegalism, individualist, L’anarchie
Source: Retrieved on January  7, 2011 from http://www.marxists.org/archive/serge/1908/06/illegals.htm
Notes: First Published: Le Communiste, No. 14, June 20, 1908, under the pseudonym of Le Retif;  Source: LeRétif, articles parus dans “l’anarchie.” Textes réunis et présentés par Yves Pagés. Paris, Monnier, 1989;  Translated: by Mitchell Abidor for marxists.org;  CopyLeft: Creative Commons (Attribute & ShareAlike) marxists.org 2006.

Le RĂ©tif

The Illegals

Armand’s conviction in Paris for counterfeiting has brought back the old

question of the Illegals.

I don’t know Armand or the details of his affair. And so without showing

any particular interest in his personality — towards which I only feel

that sentiment of fraternity that binds all the militants of the idea —

I will simply pose questions of principle.

What should our attitude be towards Illegals (in the economic sense of

the word, i.e., people living off illicit labor) and particularly

towards the comrades in that category?

The answer seems so clear to me that if I hadn’t heard numerous

discussions on this subject — and even in our circle — the idea of

writing this article would never have occurred to me.

We approve and admire the anti-militarist who either by desertion or by

some other means refuses to serve the Masters’ Fatherland and in so

doing puts himself in open struggle against society, whose law he

violates: that of military service, otherwise known as servitude owed

the state.

After this, how can we disavow that other comrade whose temperament bows

as little before the regime of the workshop as the anti-militarist bows

before that of the barracks and who, by some illegal method puts himself

in revolt against the law of the slavery of work?

Every revolt is in essence anarchist. And we should stand alongside the

economic rebel (when he is conscious, of course) the same way we stand

beside the political, antimilitarist or propagandist rebel.

All rebels, through their acts, are one of us. Anarchism is a principle

of struggle: it needs fighters and not servants the away statist

socialism does, a machine with complicated gears that has only to allow

itself to vegetate in order to live in a bourgeois fashion.

But it seems proper to me to trace a limit. I said above “economic

rebel,” for if the Duvals and the Pinis, who steal because they can’t

submit to the oppression of the bosses, are our people, it isn’t the

same for many so-called anarchists who have paraded through the various

criminal courts over the past few years. Theft is often nothing but an

act of cowardice and weakness, for he who commits it has no other goal

than that of escaping work, while at the same time escaping the

difficulties of social struggle. Before the jury, instead of being a

common criminal the burglar or the counterfeiter declares himself an

“anarchist” in the hope of being interesting or appearing the martyr to

a cause he knows nothing about. He finds nothing better to respond to

the judge who condemns him but the traditional and a bit banal “ Vive

l’anarchie!” But if this cry in other mouths has taken on a powerful

resonance, it has here a flimsy title to our solidarity.

For our part these unfortunates deserve neither sympathy nor antipathy.

They aren’t rebels, but escapists. They have clumsily escaped from the

social melee. More clever, more daring, or luckier they would have

“arrived” and become bankers, functionaries or merchants — in a word,

honest men. They would have legislated against us like vulgar

Clemenceaus and without hesitation would have sent their unlucky

brethren to the penal colonies. Such shipwrecks denote so much weakness

and powerlessness that they can only inspire pity.

Between them and the militant who steals though revolt the distance is

as great as that between a revolutionary terrorist and the highway

murderer who kills a shepherd in order to steal ten sous from him. One

is a rebel of conscience, the other a rebel by powerlessness or bad

luck. The act of the former is an act of revolt; the act of the latter

is that of a brute too stupid to imagine better.

To stand alongside economic rebels does not in the least mean preaching

theft or erecting it into a tactic. This method has so many drawbacks

that preaching it would be madness. It is admissible and nothing more.

Noting this simply means acting as an anarchist who doesn’t fear that

what he says will be heard, and having the courage to take his reasoning

to its limits.

Admissible, and nothing else. For the anarchist, if he doesn’t care

about bourgeois legality and honesty, must above all aim at preserving

himself as long as possible for action and realizing to the greatest

extent possible for himself the life he desires . His work, rather than

appearing harmful and destructive, should be a work of life, a long

apostolate of stubborn labor, of goodness, of love. In order to partake

of the ambiance, the new man, the man of the future must live with

goodness, fraternity, and love. In this way, when he will have passed he

will have left behind him a trail of sympathy and astonishment that will

do more for propaganda than a whole life of petty and shady struggles

could have done.

But to work at his labor of life and to preserve himself all means are

good, for in order to reach the summits of clarity the route is often

dark.