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Title: Italian Anarchist Militant
Author: Maurice Colombo
Date: 1988
Language: en
Topics: Italy, Kate Sharpley Library
Source: Retrieved on May 8, 2022 from https://www.katesharpleylibrary.net/c5b0kp
Notes: Oringally published in Le Monde Libertaire, Paris, No 725, 10 November 1988. Translated by: Paul Sharkey.

Maurice Colombo

Italian Anarchist Militant

The anarchist movement has always had its share of driving forces and

tireless propagandists. Italy, ever since the days of the First

International, has produced a number of exceptional agitators - Carlo

Cafiero and Andrea Costa, back at the beginning; Luigi Galleani and

Pietro Gori at the turn of the century; Errico Malatesta, Luigi Fabbri

and Camillo Berneri and Armando Borghi in more recent times.

With the death of Borghi in 1968, the Italian movement lost one of its

finest representatives. Over a 60-year period, Borghi forged

relentlessly ahead with his activities with a truly outstanding belief

and enthusiasm.

He died at the age of 86. Born in Castel Bolognese in the Romagna on 7

April 1882, he embarked upon his activities as an anarchist militant at

the age of 16. In his major work A Half-Century of Anarchy he describes

with his subtle and sparkling style the ups and downs of his frantic

life as an activist and propagandist. He relates how, in 1898, when he

was barely 16 years old, and unbeknownst to his parents, he travelled to

Ancona to attend the trial of Malatesta on the charges of justifying

criminality and plotting against the State that arose from his having

published the weekly L'Agitazione in Ancona. It was at this point that

Borghi had his chance to view Errico Malatesta in the flesh (as he used

to say) in the dock. He conceived a lifelong fondness for Malatesta.

From then on, Borghi was up to his neck in activity and in the struggle.

In 1900 he settled in Bologna and there, following the assassination of

King Umberto I by Gaetano Bresci (on 29 July 1900) he unreservedly

endorsed the heroic act, in contrast to those socialists, republicans

and a small clique of Rome-based anarchists who had condemned the

killing.

His first arrest came in Bologna in 1902, over anti-militarist

propaganda. In April 1903, he won his spurs as a public speaker, again

in Bologna, when he was chosen by the anarchists to address a huge rally

called to protest at military expenditure. The young anarchist, then

just 20, made his mark. He was welcomed to the rostrum by Andrea Costa.

It was his very first success as a public speaker. He became the

official spokesman of the anarchists at all rallies. A flurry of

innumerable arrests and trials followed. His defence counsel at all

times was Pietro Gori who always showed up for his trials. Armando

Borghi was arrested during a demonstration in 1904 and spent several

months in the San Giovanni in Monte prison.

In 1905, he was sentenced again in Ravenna to a five month prison term

for "incitement to crime". Between 1903 and 1906, he spent longer behind

bars than as a free man. In May 1906 he had barely come out of prison

when he was commissioned in Ravenna as editor of L'Aurora, an anarchist

weekly, taking over from Domenico Zavaterro. It was from the columns of

L'Aurora that he severely upbraided anarchist individualism. It was from

the same platform on 9 July 1906 that Borghi marked Gaetano Bresci's

assassination. He was indicted over this vibrant article which earned

the author as well as the managing editor a year behind bars.

Borghi saw imprisonment again in Ravenna and then in Piacenza. He was

freed early in July 1907. It was at this point that he agreed to take up

a post as trade union agitator. He was invited to join the secretariat

of the Bologna and District Construction Union. However, he was not

converted either to trade unionism or to anarcho-syndicalism but

remained comprehensively and full-bloodedly anarchist. But he found it

useful to mix with the workers in order to fight for their emancipation.

The Bologna Construction Union was not affiliated to the CGL (General

Confederation of Labour), but belonged, as did many another

organisation, to the National Direct Action Committee.

Borghi stayed in Bologna as secretary of the Construction Union for over

three years and, along with Giuseppe Sartini, represented the old

Chamber of Labour which was independent of the CGL. But even then he did

not neglect anarchist propaganda. When, on 13 October 1911, trooper

Augusto Masetti fired a gunshot in the parade ground of the Cialdini

barracks in Bologna at his colonel by way of a protest at the war in

Libya while shouting out 'Down with the war! Long live Anarchy!',

Armando Borghi and Maria Rygier immediately composed a special edition

of L'Agitatore welcoming the action of the rebel soldier.

Borghi's article was entitled "Anarchist revolts shines through the

violence of war". The newspaper was impounded and a round-up of

anarchists began. Maria Rygier was the first to be arrested. Borghi got

away by the skin of his teeth and fled to Paris.

He stayed abroad until the end of December 1912, involving himself in

active anti-militarist propaganda, giving lectures in France and

Switzerland. After the Italian government offered an amnesty to mark the

conclusion of a peace treaty with Turkey, he returned to Italy. In the

autumn of 1912, the Italian Syndicalist Union (USI) had been launched in

Italy. It ought to be noted that Borghi, in exile in France at the time,

had no hand in the launching of the USI but affiliated to it in his

capacity as organiser for the labour unions independent of the CGL.

Which brings us to the "Red Week". A national campaign committee had

promised protest rallies all across Italy in protest against militarism,

the disciplinary battalions and to press for the release of Augusto

Masetti. These were scheduled for the first Sunday in June.

Following a rally in Ancona - addressed by Malatesta - there were

clashes between the crowd and the police and three young demonstrators

were killed. A general strike was called in all of the big cities in

Italy. In the Marches and in the Romagna region, the strike took the

form of out and out insurrection. Betrayal by the leaders of the CGL

prevented the revolutionary uprising from scoring the success it

deserved. The government backlash soon gained the upper hand. Malatesta

managed to evade arrest and fled to London. On 7 June Borghi was

speaking in Florence. The moment he heard of the deaths of the three

young people in Ancona he made for the Romagna to do his bit in the

uprising. To his great surprise, on this occasion he was not arrested.

In August 1914, the Great War erupted. In keeping with his basic

anarchist principles, Borghi immediately declared his opposition to the

war.

De Ambris, Corridoni and Masotti and other USI leaders hoped to

'convert' the USI-affiliated unions to the interventionist cause. They

called a general congress of the USI in Parma in September 1914. Borghi

steadfastly argued the need for the USI to come out against the war. The

USI branches endorsed Borghi's resolution by an overwhelming majority.

Borghi took up the secretaryship of the Italian Syndicalist Union. The

USI relocated its headquarters to Bologna and thereafter Armando

Borghi's time was entirely consumed by anti-war propaganda. But not for

long - because after May 1915 - when Italy entered the war - he was

interned in Impruneta, a small town near Florence and later in Isernia

in the Abruzzi.

When the war ended in November 1918, Borghi resumed his activities as

USI secretary and director of the weekly Guerra di Classe. Ever by his

side as a priceless collaborator and beloved spouse was Virgilia

D'Andrea. Very active during the cost of living campaigns in July 1919,

Borghi was an active, zealous agitator, not merely in his trade union

organiser capacity but also, indeed primarily, as a fervent anarchist.

In late December 1919, Errico Malatesta returned to Italy and in Milan

he ran the daily newspaper Umanita Nova. Borghi and Malatesta were on

the same wavelength and their respective propaganda drives brought the

Italian people to crucial revolutionary accomplishments such as the

factory occupations in August-September 1920.

Armando Borghi was not in Italy at that time. In May 1920, he had left

for Russia at the invitation of the Bolshevik leadership, keen to talk

with a representative of the USI and, if at all possible, with its

secretary. It was a particularly adventurous trip, as detailed in A

Half-Century of Anarchy. In Moscow Borghi had an audience in the Kremlin

with Lenin. Lenin asked him if he were opposed to centralism and Borghi

replied: "You have that right. How could any anarchist be in favour of

centralism?" To which Lenin retorted: "Freedom ought not to be the death

of the revolution." Borghi countered with: "In the absence of freedom,

the revolution would be a horror." Their conversation proceeded quietly.

Learning of the factory occupations back home, Borghi scurried

homewards. This second journey brought him to Milan by 20 September, by

which time the reformist trade union organisations had ordered the

factories to back down on 17 September. There was nothing that he could

do by then, but he declined an invitation from the government that he

join, as representative of the USI, a commission drafting a law on

workers' control. Meanwhile, the government was cracking down heavily

again.

In October, Borghi, Malatesta and other anarchists were rounded up on no

particular charges. In the San Villore prison in Milan, on 14 March

1921, Malatesta, Borghi and Quaglino launched a hunger strike to force

the court authorities to set a trial date. After nine months in prison

on remand, by late July 1921, they were brought for trial to the Assizes

in Milan. All of those charged were freed. Malatesta and Borghi had

offered a zealous defence of themselves.

Fascism was now in the ascendant and the lives of antifascist militants

were in the balance. Borghi and Virgilia D'Andrea were continually

receiving death threats.

Armando Borghi fought against the fascists by promoting the "Labour

Alliance" in an attempt to erect an obstacle in the path of the fascist

victory. But after the March on Rome in October 1922, all attempts to

fight fascism were in vain. Along with Virgilia D'Andrea, Borghi had to

leave Italy in 1923 and they went into exile, first in Berlin and then

in Paris.

In France he carried on his fight against fascism. He penned his first

volume of memoirs Italy Between Two Crises. It was published in Paris in

July 1924. In October 1926, Borghi left France for the United States. He

arrived to find the campaign for Sacco and Vanzetti at its height. At

the invitation of their support committee, he gave many talks and

appeared at meetings. But even in the States he could not escape arrest

and trial and was often released only on payment of huge bail bonds. An

active contributor to L'Adunata dei Refrattari he often signed his

articles with a pseudonym, with the police forever on his trail.

Virgilia D'Andrea was always at his side. She was an active propagandist

and a fine public speaker. But on 12 May 1933 she died while still quite

young.

In the United States, Borghi struck up friendships with Gaetano

Salvemini and Arturo Toscanini and his son, Walter. After the downfall

of fascism he returned to Italy, landing in Naples in October 1945.

Immediately embarking upon a frantic lecture tour.

In 1946, he visited all the major cities of Italy - Rome, Bologna,

Ancona, Milan, Carrara, etc. In December that year his car crashed into

a lorry. He came away with serious head wounds and some broken ribs but

his travelling companions emerged unscathed. He spent a long time in

hospital in Ravenna, followed by a lengthy convalescence. He stayed in

Italy until March 1948, involving himself in active propaganda and

affording his comrades the benefit of his long experience and his

thorough knowledge of the many issues confronting the anarchist

movement. Then he felt the urge to return to the United States, weary

from his frantic, restless lifestyle in Italy. He stayed in the USA

until 1953 returning to Italy that year and he was in perfect health

when he took part in the March 1953 congress of the Italian Anarchist

Federation (FAI) in Civitavecchia.

Once again, Armando was the centre of the Italian anarchist movement

which was experiencing a promising revival. He settled in Rome,

assisting Gigi Damiani and Umberto Consiglio in bringing out Umanita

Nova. He stayed in Italy after that and his activities were genuinely

beneficial to the movement. For twelve years up until October 1965, the

presence of Armando Borghi in Umanita Nova in the shape of his lively,

vivacious articles, left an indelible mark. He died on 21 April 1968.