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Title: The Path of Anarchism
Author: Gaston Leval
Date: May 8, 1924
Language: en
Topics: Libertarian Labyrinth
Source: https://www.libertarian-labyrinth.org/working-translations/gaston-leval-the-path-of-anarchism-1924/
Notes: Gaston Leval, “Le chemin de l’anarchisme,” L’idée anarchiste No. 4 (May 8, 1924): 1–2. [Working translation by Shawn P. Wilbur]

Gaston Leval

The Path of Anarchism

Our friend Content is engaged in the review of certain questions

concerning anarchism. The rather languid state of our movement inspires

in him a host of questions about the direction that it should take and

he examines them honestly, anxious to render service to the spread and

triumph of our ideas and, consequently, to the cause of all human

beings.

This state of uncertainty in which he finds himself is undoubtedly

shared by many comrades, and I am one of those. But, when it comes to

what the interests of our movement demand, I have arrived at some

conclusions that are quite distinct and, on certain points, opposed. So

I will lay them out and I would be pleased if the confrontation of our

theses could help some comrades form an idea of proper and determined

action, for, whatever method one might be a partisan of, the important

thing is to put that method into practice, with our most intense energy.

Is there anything to retract, modify or withdraw from anarchism, as a

philosophy and doctrine of human life or as a historical social

movement? In my opinion, no. In the work of our great thinkers, there is

only one error to reveal: a date. They had announced — though not all —

revolution before the end of the last century, and that revolution has

not come. But the fundamental truths in the name of which they demanded

that revolution, and the revolutionary means that they advocated — I

speak here particularly of Bakunin and Kropotkin, to whose influence we

have been most subject in the Latin countries — remain correct. The

latter have been verified by the experience of the Russian revolution,

where the most firmly revolutionary, the most truly transformative, have

been improvised by the masses who would already have assured their

livelihood, without bosses and without the State, if those forces had

not shattered their attempt. The former are confirmed every day by

universal experience.

The means of revolutionary advocated by Bakunin and Kropotkin are the

only means of liberation. And it is precisely these that Content seems

to reject as factors diverting our movement, because they cannot be

implemented at the appointed hour. He writes: “Because the predictions

of a Kropotkin and other anarchist thinkers have not been realized and

their deductions have proven erroneous, it is no longer enough for me to

embrace this new fatalism, which consists of saying ‘anarchy will reign

tomorrow’ in order for it to be so.” But, first, no anarchist thinker

has supported this theory that anarchy would be established overnight,

on our sunny sphere. In the famous work of Kropotkin, The Conquest of

Bread, we do not find a plan for a future society. Kropotkin was too

intelligent for such impertinence. He limited himself to sounding the

problems of the social revolution, which is not yet the perfect anarchy

sung by the poet and desired by use, and demonstrating that it was

possible to accomplish that revolution without resorting to the methods

recommended by all the authoritarian or timid schools.

Malatesta has often insisted on this point that our dream will certainly

not spring up, suddenly, from the magic of an upheaval, but that, on the

contrary, we must pass through a long period of practical incubation, in

the course of which we will prune away the errors and learn, in the

light of the facts, to guarantee, without exploiters and without

masters, the necessary and fundamental conquest of every revolution —

the conquest of bread.

If the predictions have not been realized, it does not follow inevitably

that the deductions were erroneous. If the birth of a child occurs later

than expected, that does not mean that we must stop giving them the care

we had prepared.

Either our ideal entails the transformation of society or it does not;

that transformation must be violent or it must not; the new state of

things must have an authoritarian or libertarian basis, and its

construction demands an individual and preparation, subjective and

objective, moral and technical, or it does not. In the first case, there

is nothing to do but get to the heart of our task and set about creating

all that we lack in order to take advantage of favorable circumstances;

in the second, there is nothing to do but patiently roll that Ixion’s

wheel that is educationism.

It is wrong to note our lack of preparation as a factor of our general

orientation in the revolutionary period, sufficient to conclude that

anarchism is a state of mind or an ideal, which has no other impact then

to inspire isolated operations, always counterbalanced by losses and

adjustments. No, anarchism is not that. It is a conception of life,

individual and social, but especially social, and a doctrine of

transformation. Its means could be education or violent revolution — and

they will be both — but its aim will always be human equality and

fraternity, produced on a liberated earth.

Ends and means — that is, in my opinion, the great confusion into which

Content has fallen. In Spain, we suffer precisely the same evil, but in

an opposite sense. Here we are violent by temperament, through the

decisive influence of the past and present, and we confuse violence,

which must overturn the obstacles over which humanity must pass in its

march toward anarchy, with anarchy itself. In France, many comrades

confuse the means of individual education with the great social

aspiration that is anarchy. And they bring anarchism back to this

reduced idea, this partial method, confining it within narrow limits,

where it withers and perishes as a militant social force.

The weakness of a thing does not destroy its truth. If anarchist is

still not securely equipped for the work of practical achievements,

there is nothing to do but undertake the task of undeniable necessity.

The state of mind that consists of abandoning at will what we have not

found already well established is condemned to sterility! We must

create, create and create.

Creators! That is what anarchism lacks the most. None of our thinkers

have wanted to make a holy book of their writings, and yet the majority

of those who have read them have done so with the mentality of a

believer. They have demanded solutions from them everywhere. Those among

them who have found an answer to the questions that haunted them, have

bent their servile thought beneath the ideas of the idol and set out in

a procession of the faithful, singing praises to the glory of their

prophet and their complete paradise. Those who have not found an answer

have found the work insufficient, have rejected the postulates of the

incomplete exposition, either in its theoretical bases or in its

material consequences, or they have rejected both at once.

And this is the greatest evil from which anarchism suffers. The great

fundamental truths regarding principles and tactics are contained, in

embryonic form, in the works of our thinkers. But they have said nothing

definitive regarding that last point. They were anarchists, and not

makers of Christian or Marxist bibles. That is why they have shown us a

path that they have opened themselves, but that we must extend and widen

and complete with new paths.

On the foundation that they have created, we must create more. The

elaboration of the scientific bases of anarchism will not stop with the

works of our departed pioneers, nor will the critiques of the present

society or the ideas for future accomplishments. We must add to what

they have created, provide new thoughts, fill the gaps, perfect that

which is imperfect, complete that which is incomplete, strengthen that

which is weak and not despair at the spectacle of our imperfections and

abandon that which is not as developed as we would like.

We must create, create, create; we must find solutions to the problems

that emerge, face those problems bravely and resolve them. We must

create in all domains: in doctrine and propaganda, in philosophy and

organization, in economy and in the work of destructive preparation and

reconstruction. We must continue the work that our fallen comrades have

left unfinished, because anarchy, having no barrier, will always be an

uninterrupted creation.