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Title: Cartography of Revolutionary Anarchism Author: Michael Schmidt Date: 17th May 2012 Language: en Topics: revolutionary anarchism, history Source: Retrieved on 9th April 2021 from https://anarchyinaction.org/index.php?title=Cartography_of_Revolutionary_Anarchism Notes: This bookâs author Michael Schmidt has been https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/alexander-reid-ross-and-joshua-stephens-about-schmidt as secretly espousing highly reactionary and perhaps even fascist views. As a result, AK Press has stopped publishing this book and it should be read with particular caution.
The revolutionary vision of anarchism gained a foothold in the
imagination of the popular classes with the rise of the anarchist
strategy of revolutionary syndicalism in the trade unions affiliated to
the First International.[1] It has since provided the most devastating
and comprehensive critique of capitalism, landlordism, the state, and
power relations in general, whether based on gender, race, or other
forms of oppression. In their place it has offered a practical set of
tools with which the oppressed can challenge the tiny, heavily armed
elites that exploit them. Anarchism and syndicalism have been the most
implacable enemies of the ruling-class industrialists and landed gentry
in state and capitalist modernisation projects around the world. They
have also unalterably shaped class struggle in the late nineteenth and
early twentieth centuries, producing several key effects that we now
presume to be fundamental aspects of civilised society.
This broad anarchist tradition had constructed, and continues to
construct today, concrete projects to dissolve the centralist,
hierarchical, coercive power of capital and the state, replacing it with
a devolved, free-associative, horizontally federated counter-power. This
concept of âcounter-powerâ echoes that of radical feminist Nancy
Fraserâs âsubaltern counterpublics.â[2] In essence, her subaltern
counterpublics are socio-political spheres separated from the
mainstream, which serve as âtraining-grounds for agitational activities
directed towards wider publics.â Likewise, anarchist counter-power
creates a haven for revolutionary practice that serves as a school for
insurgency against the elites, a beachhead from which to launch its
assault, and as the nucleus of a future, radically egalitarian
societyâwhat Buenaventura Durruti called the ânew world in our
hearts.â[3] As Steven Hirsch notes of the Peruvian anarchist movement,
they âtransmitted a counter-hegemonic culture to organised labour.
Through newspapers, cultural associations, sports clubs, and resistance
societies they inculcated workers in anti-capitalist, anti-clerical, and
anti-paternalistic beliefs. They also infused organised labour wit an
ethos that stressed self-emancipation and autonomy from non-workersâ
groups and political parties.â[4] In a sense, anarchist counter-culture
provides the oppressed classes with an alternate, horizontal
socio-political reality.
Beyond the factory gates, the broad anarchist tradition was among the
first to systematically confront racism and ethnic discrimination. It
developed an antiracist ethic that extended from the early multi-ethnic
labour struggles of the Industrial Workers of the World, through
anti-fascist guerrilla movements of Europe, Asia, and Latin America in
the 1920sâ1950s, to become a key inspiration for the New Left in the
period of African decolonisation, and later of indigenous struggles
today in regions like Oaxaca in Mexico. But anarchism was more than a
mere hammer to be used against prejudice: over the last one hundred and
fifty years, generations of proletarians developed a complex toolkit of
ideas and practices that challenged all forms of domination and
exploitation. The world has changed dramatically over those decades,
shaped in part by the contribution of anarcho-syndicalists and
revolutionary syndicalists, a contribution usually relegated to the
shadows, derided, or denied, but woven into the social fabric of
contemporary society.
Anarchism did not rise as a primordial rebel state of mind as far back
as Lao Tzu in ancient China or Zeno in ancient Greece as many have
speculated, nor was it the child of declining artisanal classes facing
extinction by modern modes of production as so many Marxist writers
would have us believe.[5] On the contrary, it grew within the seedbed of
organised trade unions as a modern, internationalist, revolutionary
socialist, and militant current with a vision of socialism-from-below,
in opposition to classical Marxismâs imposition of socialism-from-above.
Marxism has historically included some minority libertarian currents,
such as the âCouncil Communists,â âLeft Communists,â and âSovietistsâ of
the 1920s. However, the vast majority of historical Marxist movements
strived for revolutionary dictatorship based upon nationalisation and
central planning. Every Marxist regime has been a dictatorship. Every
major Marxist party has renounced Marxism for social democracy, acted as
an apologist for a dictatorship, or headed a brutal dictatorship itself.
Even those mainstream Marxists who critique the horrors of Stalin or Mao
defend Lenin and Trotskyâs regime, which included all the core features
of later Marxist regimesâlabour camps, a one-party dictatorship, a
secret political police, terror against the peasantry, the repression of
strikes, independent unions and other leftists, etc. Marxism must be
judged by history and the authoritarian Marxist lineage that exists
therein: not Marxism as it might have been, but Marxism as it has been.
Accordingly, I do not refer to âStalinismâ but rather simply to Marxism
or to Bolshevism in the postâ1917 period.
Over the past 15 decades, the global anarchist movement and its progeny,
the syndicalist movement, have been comprised mainly of the industrial
working classâseamen and stevedores, meat-packers and metalworkers,
construction and farm workers, sharecroppers and railwaymenâas well as
of craftspeople such as shoemakers and printers, and of peasants and
indentured labourers, with only a sprinkling of the middle classes, of
doctors, scientists, déclassé intellectuals, and journalists. It
developed a sophisticated theory of how the militant minority related to
broader trade unions, and to the popular classes as a whole, seeking to
move beyond an insurrectionary general strike (or âlock-out of the
capitalist classâ) to a revolutionary transformation of society. The
movement sought to achieve this through organised,
internally-democratic, worker-controlled structures, including unions,
rank-and-file networks, popular militia, street committees, consumersâ
co-operatives, and popular policy-making assemblies.
Many would ask what the relevance of the broad anarchist tradition would
be in todayâs world, a world of nanotechnology and space tourism far
removed from the gas-lit origins of the movement. The world has changed.
In 1860, Washington D.C. was a rough, provincial town. Today, it is the
unchallenged imperial capital of the world, the heart of the US
âhyperpower.â The telegraph had already begun to unite people, just as
barbed wire divided their landâyet successful trans-Atlantic telephone
cables and the Fordist production line had yet to see daylight. Many
countries, notably Germany, Italy, Czechoslovakia, Poland, the Baltic
and Balkan states, Vietnam, and South Africa, did not yet exist, nor did
much of the Middle East. Those countries that did, like Argentina,
Egypt, Algeria, and Canada, were narrow riverine or coastal strips of
the giant territories they would later lay claim to. In 1860, women,
even in countries as advanced as France, would have to wait a lifetime
merely to secure the bourgeois vote. Serfdom and slavery were
widespread, and the divine right of kings reigned supreme over vast
territories, including Imperial Japan, China, and Russia, and the
Ottoman and Austro-Hungarian Empires.
And yet, there are strong echoes of that world that still resonate
today, for it was a world experiencing a disruptive upsurge of
globalisation, evident in the colonial scramble, the ascendancy of the
modern banking system, and the integration of modern industrialising
economies. As the means of production modernised, shadows of unilateral
military interventions in the Middle East and Central Asia were cast,
and corporations wielded more power than governments in the developing
world. Established societal norms broke down and the rise of terrorism,
populism, religious millenarianism, and revolutionary politics took
their place, as means for the oppressed to explain their pain and fight
back. These phenomena are all remarkably familiar in todayâs world.
The broad anarchist movement has currency primarily because it remains a
proletarian practise that grapples with the question of power, in
relation to both intimate, interpersonal relations and the broader
balance of forces in society. The anarchist conception of power is in
opposition to the Marxist conception of the seizure and adaptation of
coercive, vertical, centralised, bourgeois power. Instead, anarchists
argue for, and in their innumerable revolts and their four main
revolutions have practiced, a free, horizontal, federalist, proletarian
counter-power that would equitably distribute decision-making powers and
responsibilities across liberated communities. In particular, anarchist
theorists have grappled with how to construct a real, living libertarian
communist praxis, thereby encountering the key question facing all
revolutionaries: how does the militant minority transmit the ideas of a
free society to the oppressed classes, in such a way that the oppressed
makes those ideas their own, moving beyond the origins of those ideas
into the realm of libertarian autogestion. Central to this essay are the
decisive moments in its history when the anarchist movement engaged with
that very question.
In parallel to this drive to build counter-power, the early anarchist
movement of the 1860sâ1890s was remarkable for its deliberate
construction of educational institutions everywhere that it put down
roots, including rational, modernist schools in many parts of the world,
and popular universities in Egypt, Cuba, Peru, Argentina, and China. The
movement realised the necessity of buttressing these attempts at
building structures of counter-power with a proletarian counter-culture,
at creating social conditions for counter-power to flourishâby cutting
the mental bonds binding the oppressed to the oppressor. While the
movement aimed to cause a cultural and mental rupture between the
oppressed classes and parasitic elites, they united elements of society
divided by those elites: anarchist educators trained freed black slaves
alongside white workers, and educated women and girls alongside men and
boys, on the grounds that the oppressed of all races and genders had
more in common with each other than with their exploiters.
Between 1870 and the early 1880s, the anarchist movement spread
dramatically around the world, establishing anarcho-syndicalist and
revolutionary syndicalist unions in Egypt, Cuba, Mexico, the US,
Uruguay, Spain, and arguably in Russia. This was due in part to the fact
that, until Lenin, there was no serious engagement in classical Marxism
with the peasantry or the colonial world. The founders of the doctrine,
Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, had dismissed in their Communist
Manifesto (1848) the colonised and post-colonial world as the âbarbarian
and semi-barbarian countries.â Instead, Marxism stressed the virtues of
capitalism (and even imperialism) as an onerous, yet necessary stepping
stone to socialism. Engels summed up their devastating position in an
article entitled âDemocratic Pan-Slavismâ in their Neue Rheinische
Zeitung of 14 February 1849: the United Statesâ annexation of Texas in
1845 and invasion of Mexico in 1846, in which Mexico lost 40% of its
territory, were applauded as they had been âwaged wholly and solely in
the interest of civilisation,â as âsplendid California has been taken
away from the lazy Mexicans, who could not do anything with itâ by âthe
energetic Yankeesâ who would âfor the first time really open the Pacific
Ocean to civilisationâŠâ Engels extended his racist polemic of inherent
ethno-national virility giving rise to laudable capitalist overmastery,
to argue that the failure of the Slavic nations during the 1848
Pan-European Revolt to throw off their Ottoman, Austro-Hungarian, and
Russian yokes, demonstrated not only their ethnic unfitness for
independence, but that they were in fact âcounter-revolutionaryâ nations
deserving of âthe most determined use of terrorâ to suppress them.
It reads chillingly like a foreshadowing of the Nazisâ racial
nationalist arguments for the use of terror against the Slavs during
their East European conquest. Engelsâ abysmal article had been written
in response to Appeal to the Slavs by a Russian Patriot written by
Mikhail Bakunin (1814â1876), a minor Russian noble who moved from a
position of Pan-Slavic liberation to become, over a lifetime of
militancy and clandestinity, in exile and on the barricades, anarchismâs
giant founding figure and Marxâs most formidable opponent in defining
the path to true communism; it was the dispute between their supporters
that would sunder the First International in 1872 into an anarchist
majority and a Marxist rump. In his Appeal to the Slavs, Bakuninâat that
stage not yet an anarchistâhad in stark contrast argued that the
revolutionary and counter-revolutionary camps were divided not by
nationality or stage of capitalist development, but by class. In 1848,
revolutionary class consciousness had expressed itself as a âcry of
sympathy and love for all the oppressed nationalities.â[6] Urging the
Slavic popular classes to âextend your had to the German people, but not
to the⊠petit bourgeois Germans who rejoice at each misfortune that
befalls the Slavs,â Bakunin concluded that there were âtwo grand
questions spontaneously posed in the first days of the [1848] springâŠ
the social emancipation of the masses and the liberation of the
oppressed nations.â By 1873, when Bakunin, now unashamedly anarchist,
threw down the gauntlet to imperialism, writing that âTwo-thirds of
humanity, 800 million Asiatics, asleep in their servitude, will
necessarily awaken and begin to move,â the newly-minted anarchist
movement was engaging directly and repeatedly with the challenges of
imperialism, colonialism, national liberation movements, and
post-colonial regimes.[7]
The record of the broad anarchist movement in the pre-World War II era
is dramatically more substantial than that of their Marxist
contemporaries, especially in the colonial and post-colonial world.[8]
The anarchist movement focused on encouraging the oppressed to start
resisting immediately, without promising an imminent revolution. There
was an understanding that revolutions are processes, not events,
requiring a massive confluence of historical circumstances, in addition
to the clear-sighted agency of the oppressed. It is because of this very
early and radical challenge to colonialism and imperialism, and to the
constructs of gender and race, that the anarchist movement penetrated
parts of the world that Marxism did not reach until the 1920s.
An examination of the movementâs industrial and social foundations helps
to explain the spread of anarchism and its appeal to the popular
classes. Aside from Guiseppe Fanelliâs dramatic conversion of the bulk
of the organised Spanish working class to anarchism in 1868,[9] there is
probably no better example of an industrial vector of anarchism and
anarcho- and revolutionary syndicalism than the Marine Transport
Workersâ Industrial Union (MTWIU), a section of the Industrial Workers
of the World (IWW), the most international of all the syndicalist
unions. The IWW had been founded in the United States in 1905, as the
joint heir of the anti-racist, anti-sexist, internationalist traditions
of the Knights of Labor founded in 1869, which had dominated organised
American labour with a peak of 700,000 members by 1886 (weirdly, while
the Knights had a large black membership, it violently opposed Chinese
immigration, it also established sections in Canada and Australia, only
closing up shop as a shadow of its former self in 1949), and of the
explicitly anarcho-syndicalist traditions of the Central Labor Union
(CLU) of 1883â1909. Despite intense repression and splits over the
question of the majorityâs opposition to electoral politics, the IWW
rose to about 250,000 members in 1917 in the US alone, and in its
incarnation as the âOne Big Union,â perhaps 70,000 members in Canada in
1919. It was above all a movement of the poorest and most marginal
workersâpoor whites, immigrants, blacks, Asians, and womenâmany of whom
worked in insecure and dangerous jobs as dockworkers, field hands,
lumberjacks, miners, and factory operativesâand earned its stripes
organising across racial lines in the American South. It was also an
international phenomenon, with IWW groups and unions, and IWW-inspired
organisations forming in Argentina, Australia, Britain, Canada, Chile,
Cuba, Ecuador, Germany, Japan, New Zealand, Mexico, Peru, Siberia, South
Africa, Ukraine, and Uruguay; it had direct influence on the global
labour movement as far afield as Burma, China, and Fiji; and in more
recent times, it established sections in Iceland, Sweden, and Sierra
Leone. In his essay on the IWWâs MTWIU,[10] Hartmut RĂŒbner writes,
âBased on statistical information on the period between 1910 and 1945,
the evaluated material indicates an over-proportional number of
industrial actions in the sector of shipping. In many of these labour
disputes, seamen exhibited a close affinity to those forms of action
which are generally characterized as typically syndicalist patterns of
conflict behaviour.â
Asking why syndicalism was so prevalent, and why a relatively small
group of revolutionary syndicalist militants could exercise such great
influence, RĂŒbner concludes that the sheer cosmopolitanism of maritime
labourâs
common experiences in remote parts of the world[11] certainly created a
âsense of internationalism,â that helped to overcome the separations
between union activists and the rank and file⊠In the harbour districts,
the seafaring-reliant community maintained a tight-knit communication
network that provided the individual seaman with the necessary
information interchange to accomplish recreation and job opportunities.
Loadinghouses, employment agencies, hiring halls, trade union offices
and International Seamenâs Clubs were situated in the direct
neighbourhood of the docklands. When conflict situations arose, the
localities and meeting places of the harbour districts often functioned
as initial positions for collective strike activities.
This docklands community was not automatically progressive or
revolutionary, but as RĂŒbner notes, traditional socialist and union
organisers tended to shy away from organising there, leaving the field
open to proletarian revolutionary syndicalists. Moreover, the strongly
anti-racist stance of the revolutionary syndicalists stood in sharp
contrast to those of the traditional unions, in keeping with the
seafaring and longshoring communities, where discrimination made no
sense. In fact, he argues that the strength of âsyndicalism in shipping
should be seen in correlation to the dwindling attractiveness of
exclusive trade union policiesâ that weakened workersâ power by
splintering them into ethnic groupings. On the other hand, according to
RĂŒbner,
syndicalism promoted a programmatic internationalism and placed its
perspectives upon the idea of a multinational counterpole to the
interconnections of capital⊠[and] Organizations like the Industrial
Workers of the World (IWW) offered access for the semiqualified or
non-white workforce. Due to this accessibility, the IWW scored their
first organizational successes amongst those black and Hispanic seamen
and dockworkers, formerly neglected by the exclusive and chauvinist
union policy. An indication for the outgrowth of seamenâs radicalism can
be seen in the fact, that maritime [revolutionary] syndicalism had
gained remarkable strongholds in France, Netherlands, Italy and the USA
before 1914. Through seafaring members of the IWW (âWobbliesâ) and
returning immigrants, the idea of industrial unionism spread over to
Australasia, Latin America and Europe. In the aftermath of the war, the
Maritime Transport Workersâ Industrial Union No.510 of the IWW developed
to be the driving force behind international maritime syndicalismâŠ
Between 1919 and 1921, maritime syndicalism overrode its minority
position and became a factor to be seriously reckoned with.â
Thus, maritime revolutionary syndicalism both counteracted the economic
concentration of the industry and rose to meet the challenge of the
motorisation of shipping. While RĂŒbner incorrectly writes of the MTWIUâs
âcentralized industrial unionism,â rather than its decentralised
structure, he recognises its superiority over the outmoded craft
unionism of competing mainstream unions, and notes that the unionâs
âelementary council democracyâ was based on ââshipâs committees.â Its
delegates were supposed to cooperate with the dockworkers in a common
âport district council.â This model of âindustrial communismâ which
[was] based on regional councils connected to an âinternational
headquarters,â was implemented to overcome the ânational frontiers.ââ
In RĂŒbnerâs final analysis of why maritime revolutionary syndicalism
lost the high ground of the early 1920s, he says that, firstly, the
revolutionary syndicalists were excluded from new corporatist
arrangements implemented in many countries, and, secondly, despite their
flexible approach to modernisation, crew reductions and the redundancy
of entire classes of maritime labour (such as the firemen and coal
trimmers) put members out of work. Lastly, the general dilution of
radicalism ashore seriously undercut the ability of the anarcho- and
revolutionary syndicalist cause to stay afloat. RĂŒbner does recognise
that âsyndicalism displayed its greatest effects in its attempt to
overcome both the divisions in craft as well as⊠ethnic segregationâŠ
[but] failed to stabilise radical workplace militancy in a lasting
framework.â
RĂŒbner goes on to admit that the Marxist movement stepped into the
vacuum, but could only do so by âimplementing the proven parts of the
syndicalist strategy,â including shipâs committees. Today, as the
corporatist labour arrangements that sustained the status quo in both
Marxist and right-wing dictatorships collapse, and neoliberal austerity
bites deep into the welfare gains once assured elsewhere, many workers
are again as industrially excluded as their forebears were. And thus,
revolutionary syndicalism, sometimes under the mentorship of the old
anarcho- and revolutionary syndicalist unions and traditions, is being
rediscovered as a means of shifting power back onto the shopfloor. As
globalisation creates conditions whereby, for example, Bangladeshis are
working for slave wages in Sudan, the appeal of anarcho- and
revolutionary syndicalismâs multi-ethnic approach is becoming viable
again.
The social conditions in which workers live, and not only their working
life, contribute greatly to their understanding of the world, and inform
the methods they adopt to defend their interests. Bert Altena offers
insight into the importance of class and culture in various communities
of workers, in determining whether anarchism and anarcho- and
revolutionary syndicalism gained a foothold within them.[12]
As Altena states,
revolutionary syndicalism contains [both] an authentic labour movement
and one with a tradition. Revolutionary syndicalism was in fact either a
continuation of very old labour movements or, as I will argue, a
phenomenon in which the world of the workers was isolated from the rest
of society. In these circumstances, workers generally had to rely on
themselves for social security and they could develop their own workersâ
culture. Parliamentary politics belonged to the world of the
bourgeoisie, which was completely foreign to workers⊠The anarchists,
who during the 1880s and 1890s saw that their strategy of insurrection
and terror did not help their cause, brought to these workers only a
sharper theoretical articulation of their beliefs by introducing them to
the concepts of the general strike, direct action, the value of action
by workers themselves, the importance of direct democracy. They also
gave them a broader cultural perspective. They only taught the workers
to state more clearly what they already thought, to do better what they
already practiced and they brought them the perspective of a class
society beyond the local sphere.
Altena takes as his examples two neighbouring towns of equal size
(approximately 20,000 residents) in the Netherlands in 1899: the
industrial port town of Flushing; and the local government seat and
market town of Middelburg, a mere six kilometres away. At this time,
Dutch anarcho-syndicalism was enjoying its first successes, evidenced by
the growth of the National Workersâ Secretariat (NAS), and Flushing was
dominated by one big shipyard, while other employment was to be found on
the docks or on the ferry to England. By comparison, Middelburg had
small construction yards, a metalworks, and a timber company. According
to Altena,
As a result of the townâs economy, the social structure of Flushing
consisted of a broad working-class base, a rather small layer of middle
classes (shopkeepers, teachers and clerical workers) and a very small
elite. The social structure of Middelburg was much less lopsided and at
the same time more differentiated. The town had a rather broad layer of
shopkeepers. The educated middle classes were much stronger because of
Middelburgâs function as the administrative and judicial centre of the
province and its rich collection of educational institutions. The elite
of Middelburg (gentry, magistrates and some entrepreneurs) consequently
was much larger and more strongly represented in the town than its
equivalent in Flushing.
The shopkeepers in Flushing were pretty poor themselves, so the class
function they could have performed as social middlemen between workers
and the elite was weak. The municipality itself was too impoverished to
assist workers in times of crisis, forcing them to rely on themselves.
By comparison, in Middelburg, the broad middle class produced many
social-democrat teachers, artisanal entrepreneurs, and lawyers, who not
only provided the workers with a social connection to the elite, but
who, enabled by the townâs greater wealth, could assist the workers in
troubled times. As Altena notes,
Socialism appeared in Flushing much earlier (1879) than it did in
Middelburg and it was entirely a working class affair. It developed in a
libertarian direction. For the next forty years the labour movement of
Flushing would be dominated by revolutionary syndicalism. It proved
extremely difficult to establish a branch of the social-democratic party
in this working-class town. Only in 1906 a tiny and weak branch was set
up. The revolutionary syndicalists, however, developed a rich culture:
choirs, a freethought union with its own library, musical societies and
a very good theatrical club, which performed an ambitious repertoire⊠it
was much easier to keep the syndicalist principle intact with the help
of cultural activities than on the shopfloor only⊠Flushing presented no
problem to the syndicalists in further developing their cultural
activities. Bourgeois cultural life, with its own concerts, plays and
libraries hardly existed in the town.
By comparison, in Middelburg, âAfter 1895, even their [the workersâ] own
branch of the social-democratic party was dominated by socialists from
bourgeois origins⊠The workers of Middelburg not only found it much more
difficult to develop an independent culture of their own, independence
was also repressed on the shopfloor.â In Middelburg, where women often
worked as maids in the houses of the wealthy, a working-class attitude
of servility was cultivated, whereas in Flushing, where women were
active and visible anarchists/syndicalists, workersâ pride in their
skills, established through job control, was high. Altena concludes that
working-class cultural counter-power is as important to the
attractiveness of anarchism and anarcho- and revolutionary syndicalism
(which he equates) as its industrial counter-power. âWhen workers can
build a world of their own, the choice for syndicalism is a logical,
though not a necessary one. This could explain why syndicalist movements
tend to appear in mono-industrial, company townsâŠ,â according to Altena.
This was certainly true of, say, the mining towns of the American
Midwest, where the IWW became a force to be reckoned with, but not in
the more economically diversified worlds of port cities, where anarcho-
and revolutionary syndicalism entrenched itself, except to the extent
that maritime workers formed their own subculture, distinct from their
neighbouring railwaymen and meat-packersâas within the maritime workers,
the cooks and the stokers performed different social as well as
industrial roles. Altena argues that, whereas syndicalism created an
alternate world for workers, the mainstream social-democratic and
Christian unions, especially through parliamentarism, âintegrated
workers into the political structures and processes of the country.â
Except in countries where they were forced to act much like the
syndicalists, as an illegal counter-power, the Marxist unions also
served to integrate workers into the needs of capital and the state,
instead of standing opposed to it.
As Altena notes,
In cultural activities too the syndicalists were confronted with
competitors: sports (which many syndicalists disliked because sports
diverted from the essential struggle of the workers) or âcapitalistâ
forms of entertainment such as movies and dancing. The radio challenged
the syndicalist music and theatre with ârealâ professional culture and
made them look poor and amateurish. Possibly the most important factor
was that syndicalist culture was intimately intertwined with the
movement as a whole. It was always imbued with syndicalist norms and it
pointed to the big syndicalist goal. As soon as syndicalism lost the
realisability of its vision, its culture became hollow because its
message became hollow⊠In so far as the syndicalists did not abandon
their principles or disbanded, they had to accept marginalization.
Marginal movements, however, can still be very useful movements.
From a long-term perspective, the fortunes of the broad anarchist
traditionâlike those of the militant, autonomous working class
itselfârise and fall in waves. The nature of these waves is a complex
textile, entwining the weft of working class culture and activity with
the warp of capital in crisis, and the ebb and flow of the global
movements of people, capital and ideas.
However, anarchist historiography has been distorted by the myth of the
âFive Highlightsâ or the crude potted history by which many anarchists
understand the high-water marks of their movement: the Haymarket Martyrs
of 1887 [13]; the French General Confederation of Labourâs 1906 Charter
of Amiens [14]; the Kronstadt Uprising of 1921 [15]; the Spanish
Revolution of 1936â1939 [16]; and the âFrenchâ Revolt of 1968 [17]. This
anaemic version of anarchismâs history suffers from a confused notion of
what anarchism is, by, for instance, over-inflating anarchist
involvement in the Kronstadt and Parisian Revolts, where anarchist
influence was marginal, and accepting the verdict of hostile state
socialists, by, for example, caricaturing the Ukrainian Revolution as an
adventurist peasant sideshow of the Russian Revolution. It also
completely ignores other Revolutions impacted by a major anarchist
influence, such as Morelos and Baja California, Mexico in 1910â1920
(where anarchist praxis was influential), the Shinmin Prefecture of
Manchuria in 1929â1931 (where the constructive anarchist social
experiment was profound), and the Escambray Mountains and underground
trade unions of Cuba in 1952â1959 (where mass anarchist traditions ran
eight decades deep), as well as several urban anarchist communes,
including in southern Spain in 1873â1874, in the mountains of Macedonia
in 1903, and in the port city of Guangzhou in southern China in
1921â1923.
The most obvious weakness of this history, however, is that it is
notably North Atlanticist, and ignores even the significant Dutch,
Scandinavian, and Eastern European anarchist movements.[18] A far more
important omission is the massive Latin anarchist and anarcho- and
revolutionary syndicalist movements which dominated the organised
working classes of Cuba, Mexico, Brazil, Portugal, Argentina, and
Uruguayâwhich I will detail later in this essay. Also excluded are the
powerful East Asian anarchist currents. Lastly, there was the key role
played by anarchist militants in establishing the first trade unions and
articulating the early revolutionary socialist discourse in North and
Southern Africa,[19] the Caribbean and Central America,[20]
Australasia,[21] South-East Asia,[22] South Asia,[23] and the Middle
East.[24]
To take a few examples: the initially anarchist anticolonial Ghadar
(Mutiny) Party, established in 1913, built a world-spanning movement
that not only established roots on the Indian subcontinent in Hindustan
and Punjab, but which linked radicals within the Indian Diaspora as far
afield as Afghanistan, British East Africa (Uganda and Kenya), British
Guiana (Guiana), Burma, Canada, China, Fiji, Hong Kong, Japan, Malaya
(Malaysia), Mesopotamia (Iraq), Panama, the Philippines, Siam
(Thailand), Singapore, South Africa, and the USA, with Ghadarites
remaining active in Afghanistan into the 1930s and in colonial Kenya
into the 1950sâafter Indian independence; meanwhile, in South Africa, a
constellation of revolutionary syndicalist organisations such as the
Industrial Workers of Africa (IWA) and the Indian Workersâ Industrial
Union (IWIU) were explicitly built on IWW lines for people of colour in
1917â1919, and consolidated into a single organisation, the
ideologically mixed Industrial and Commercial Union (ICU), which peaked
at 100,000 members in 1927, but which created sections in South-West
Africa (Namibia) in 1920, in Southern Rhodesia (Zimbabwe) in 1927âwhich
survived into the 1950sâand in Northern Rhodesia (Zambia) in 1931;
lastly, from 1907, a Socialist Federation of Australasia (SFA) began
spreading syndicalist ideas in Australia and New Zealand, with the
result that in Australia, the IWW established itself in 1910, becoming
the most influential radical labour tendency, albeit a minority one,
peaking at perhaps 2,000 members in 1916, surviving into the 1930s,
while in New Zealand, the IWW-influenced New Zealand Federation of
Labour (NZFL) was founded in 1911 and within a year, the âRed Fedâ
numbered all the unionised miners and dockworkers in its ranks, had
15,000 members; given the small size of the New Zealand population, the
âRed Fedâ wasâin relative termsâfifteen times larger than the American
IWW; overshadowed by the reformist federation, New Zealand syndicalist
tradition would nevertheless fight a last-ditch defence during the great
waterfront lockout of 1955.
In other words, âFive Highlightsâ is largely a martyrology and a
museum-piece, a quasi-religious tragedy recited like an anarchist
rosary, thereby reducing the broad anarchist tradition to an honourable,
yet failed, minority tradition of romantically doomed resistance. This
convention must be replaced with a far broader, balanced narrative of
the movementâs triumphs and tragedies, one that demonstrates its
universal adaptability and its global reach, its overwhelming dominance
in the organised labour movements of many countries, its numerous
revolts against capital and the state, its breakthroughs in fighting for
labour rights, gender equality, and against racism and imperialism, its
successful revolutionary experiments in building a new society in the
shell of the old, its complexities, challenges, and numerous arguments
over tactics and strategies, and its multi-generational lines of
ideological and organisational descent, as well as its current
relevance.
Instead of this impoverished conventionâwhich excludes the early
anarcho- and revolutionary syndicalist trade unions of Cuba, Mexico,
Spain, the United States, and Uruguay in the 1870s and 1880sâI prefer to
speak of âFive Wavesâ of anarchist and anarcho- and revolutionary
syndicalist militancy that rose and fell in accordance with a more
general expansion and contraction of objective conditions for the
organised popular classes. In the first volume of Counter-power,[25]
linkages between the poorly-understood international First Wave of
1868â1894 and the far better studied Second Wave of 1895â1923, including
the Revolutions in Mexico, Russia and Ukraine, are discussed, and I will
explore them in greater depth in this essay. In the forth-coming Volume
2 of Counter-power,[26] we will examine the equally famous Third Wave of
1924â1949, which embraces the Revolutions in Manchuria and Spain and
which, together with the Second Wave, constitutes anarchismâs âGlorious
Period.â Discussion will also focus on the Fourth Wave of 1950â1989,
which peaked with the Cuban Revolution in 1952â1959 and again with the
New Left of 1968, and the current Fifth Wave, generated in 1989 by the
fall of the Berlin Wall, and the rising âhorizontalistâ challenge to
hoary old Soviet-style Marxist âcommunismâ (in reality, authoritarian
state capitalism), right-wing dictatorship, and neoliberalism by the new
movements of the globalised popular classes. Our âFive Wavesâ theory is,
however, meant as a historical guide to high- and low-water marks, not
as an ironclad law of cyclical progress and reaction.
Firstly, our approach in Counter-power expands the history of the
broader anarchist movement beyond the limitations of the âFive
Highlights,â which presuppose an initial prominence through the French
CGT of the early 1900s, and a death on the barricades of Barcelona in
1939, with a belated last gasp in 1968. Secondly, it extends the
movementâs geographical range beyond the usual West European and North
American territories to the furthest reaches of the earth. By means of
this approach, adequately supported by primary research, we debunk the
common notion of âSpanish exceptionalismâ: the false idea that only in
Spain did anarchism achieve anything like a mass movement of the popular
classes. We also show the universality of the anarchist message, a
message that, while it was adapted to local circumstance, and which,
like all political tendencies, has its aberrations and betrayals,
remained and remains largely coherent and intact across space and time,
relevant to oppressed people everywhere.
SYNDICALISM
This essay is very far from a total history of the movement. It merely
sketches the broader outlines of the Five Waves theory. The anarchist
texts quoted do not form a holy canon, but rather indicate how, at
decisive moments, the movement grappled with the complex question at the
heart of making a social revolution, which has vexed all leftist
revolutionaries: what is the relationship between the specific
revolutionary organisation and the mass of the exploited and oppressed.
It is also deliberately imbalanced, for it is unnecessary to rehash the
wealth of knowledge on, for instance, the French and Spanish anarcho-
and revolutionary syndicalist movements. Rather, the emphasis is on the
comparatively larger but understudied Latin American anarchist and
syndicalist movements, as well as the powerful and significant, yet
often unknown, movements in regions such as South-East Asia or North and
Southern Africa.
First, however, we need to define what precisely we mean by âanarchismâ
and a vision of âlibertarian communism,â although these are sometimes
held to be two distinct tendencies (a distinction we find too fine and
unconvincing). The term âanarchist-communism,â often opposed to plain
âanarchismâ and also opposed to anarcho- and revolutionary syndicalism,
has been used quite differently, in different circumstances, in
different eras. In Black Flame, we show that it is false to set up a
dichotomy between anarcho- and revolutionary syndicalism and
âanarchist-communismââwe prefer the overarching term âanarchism.â As we
write: âNot only is this alleged distinction absent from the bulk of
anarchist writings until recently, but it also simply does not work as a
description of different tendencies within the broad anarchist
tradition. Moreover, the vast majority of people described in the
literature as âanarchist communistsâ or âanarcho-communistsâ championed
syndicalism⊠On the other hand, the majority of syndicalists endorsed
âanarchist communismâ in the sense of a stateless socialist society
based on the communist principle of distribution according to need. It
is difficult to identify a distinct âanarchist-communistâ strategy or
tendency that can be applied as a useful category of anarchism.â
Instead, we develop a distinction within the broad anarchist tradition
between two main strategic approaches, which we call âmass anarchismâ
and âinsurrectionist anarchism.â Mass anarchism stresses that only mass
movements can create a revolutionary change in society and are typically
built by formal, directly-democratic organisations, such as
revolutionary syndicalist unions, through struggles about
bread-and-butter issues and immediate reforms. Anarchists must
participate in such movements, to radicalise and transform them into
levers of revolutionary change. Critically, reforms are won from below
and act as a ârevolutionary gymnasium,â preparing the masses for taking
power in their own right. These victories must be distinguished from
reforms applied from above, which undermine popular movements. The
insurrectionist approach, in contrast, claims that reforms are illusory,
that even revolutionary syndicalist unions are willing or unwitting
bulwarks of the existing order, and that formal organisations are
automatically authoritarian. Consequently, insurrectionist anarchism
emphasises catalytic, armed action by small âaffinity groupsâ (such
action called âpropaganda by the deedâ) as the most important means of
provoking a spontaneous revolutionary upsurge by the masses. What
distinguishes insurrectionist anarchism from mass anarchism is not
necessarily violence, as such, but its place in strategy. For
insurrectionist anarchism, propaganda by the deed, carried out by
conscious anarchists, is seen as a means of generating a mass movement;
for most mass anarchism, violence operates as a means of self-defence
for an existing mass movement.
By syndicalism, we mean a revolutionary anarchist trade union strategy,
which views unionsâstructured around participatory democracy and a
revolutionary vision of libertarian communismâas a key means to resist
the ruling class in the here-and-now, and as the nucleus of a new social
order of self-management, democratic economic planning, and universal
human community. The âanarcho-syndicalistsâ explicitly root their
politics and practices within the anarchist tradition, whereas the
ârevolutionary syndicalistsâ avoid the anarchist label, either for
tactical reasons, or due to ignorance about the anarchist roots of
syndicalism. Both are simply variants of a basic revolutionary trade
union approach. That approach, as previously argued, was developed by
the anarchists of the First International. Anarcho-syndicalism and
revolutionary syndicalism are both part of a key mass anarchist strategy
of building revolutionary counter-power and revolutionary
counter-culture. The anarchist tradition, including all of anarcho- and
revolutionary syndicalism, is what we refer to as the âbroad anarchist
tradition.â
In this essay, an âanarchist-communistâ versus anarcho- or revolutionary
syndicalist binary will not be used to frame the issues discussed.
However, I will highlight at key points an important thread in anarchist
theory and strategy: the question of whether anarchists and syndicalists
need political groups dedicated to the promotion of the ideas of the
broad anarchist tradition, and, if so, what form such groups should
take. When the editors of the Paris-based, anarchist newspaper Dielo
Truda (Workersâ Cause) issued the Organisational Platform of the
Libertarian Communists in 1926, they were met by a storm of controversy.
Some anarchists saw the editorsâ advocacy of a unified anarchist
political organisation with collective discipline as an attempt to
âBolsheviseâ anarchism, and accused its primary authors, Pyotr Arshinov
and Nestor Makhno, of going over to classical Marxism. Nestor Makhno
(1889â1934), born a peasant in small-town south-eastern Ukraine, was
imprisoned in 1908 for terrorist actions, freed during the Russian
Revolution in 1917, and established the Group of Anarchist Communists
(GAK) and the Union of Peasants in his home town. Widely recognised as a
brilliant military strategist, the libertarian armed forces that he
established, the Revolutionary Insurgent Army of the Ukraine (RPAU),
successfully defeated the Central Powers, Ukrainian nationalist, and
White monarchist armies, before being betrayed by the Red Army. He died
in exile in Paris of tuberculosis.[27] Pyotr Arshinov, sometimes
rendered Archinov (1887â1937), was a Ukrainian anarchist metalworker,
who was jailed for 20 years for arms smuggling. He met Nestor Makhno in
prison, and went on to become a co-founder of the Alarm Confederation of
Anarchist Organisations (Nabat), and the key partisan historian of the
Makhnovist movement. Having escaped into exile in Paris, he returned to
Russia in 1935 where he was murdered during Stalinâs purges for
âattempting to restore anarchism in Russia.â
But Makhnoâs and Arshinovâs idea, essentially, originates with Bakunin,
and may be called a Bakuninist dual organisationist strategy. Namely,
this is the idea that a revolutionary anarchist/syndicalist movement
requires two distinct types of organisation: revolutionary mass
organisations of the oppressed classes, open to all working and poor
people, including a revolutionary anarchist/syndicalist line to form the
bases of counterpower; and specific, exclusive, anarchist/syndicalist
political organisations, based on tight political agreement. The former
are the mass movements that can overthrow the system; the latter are the
specific political organisations that systematically promote
revolutionary anarchist/syndicalist ideas through engagement with the
popular classes, ranging from propaganda to political struggles within
the mass organisations.
Thus in Black Flame, we argue that the Platform and âPlatformismâ were
not a break with the anarchist tradition, but rather a fairly orthodox
restatement of well-established views. From the time of Bakunin, himself
part of the anarchist International Alliance of Socialist Democracy
operating within the First International, the great majority of
anarchists and anarcho- and revolutionary syndicalists advocated the
formation of specific anarchist political groups in addition to mass
organisations, such as syndicalist unions, peasant soviets, workersâ
militia, neighbourhood assemblies, and others. In other words, most
supported organisational dualism: the mass organisation, such as a
union, must work in tandem with specifically anarchist and syndicalist
political organisations. Moreover, most believed that these groups
should have fairly homogeneous, principled, strategic, and tactical
positions, as well as some form of organisational discipline. Today, the
term âanarchist-communismâ is sometimes used to refer to the Bakuninist
dual-organisationist approach. This is notable especially in Western
Europe and North America, whereas in regions such as Latin America,
terms such as Bakuninist and especifismo (specificity) are preferred.
Due, however, to the confusion surrounding the term
âanarchist-communism,â I have chosen to avoid the term wherever
possible.
Anarchist/Syndicalist Movement in the Era of State and Capitalist
Expansion
Looking briefly at the family tree of the broad anarchist movement and
its watershed dates, the French Revolution of 1793 gave rise to radical
republicanism, which embraced both Jacobin authoritarianism on the
âright,â and Enrage libertarianism on the âleft.â As a result of the
Pan-European Revolt of 1848, a distinct socialist current, containing
contradictory tendencies, branched out from radical republicanism, the
contradictions coming to a head in 1868, with the separation of distinct
anarchist majority and Marxist minority currents within the First
International. Marxism would further divide into moderate Menshevik and
radical Bolshevik strands in the Russian Revolt of 1905â1906. Earlier,
in 1881, an anarcho-insurrectionary minority favouring armed struggle
had branched off to the left of the anarchist working class majority,
approximating in many respects, in its purism and immediatism, the tiny
âleft communist,â âcouncil communist,â and âsovietistâ tendencies that
split to the left of Leninism in Germany, Italy, France, the
Netherlands, Bulgaria, and Britain during the period between 1918 and
1923.
The mass tendency of anarchism arose during an expansive phase of modern
capitalism in the 1860s, when imperialist pioneers began their surge
into the unconquered half of North America, and turned their greedy eyes
towards the materialâand humanâresources of Africa, Latin America,
China, and elsewhere. It arose from the ghettos of the
newly-industrialised proletariat, in the heartland of imperialism and
its key raw material producing nations, and its first decades infused
everyone from déclassé intellectuals to Mexican peasants with its raw
self-empowerment. The founding in 1864 of the International Working
Menâs Association (IWMA), or First International, realised all of the
pre-conditions for revolutionary anarchism/syndicalism: important
sections of the working class and peasantry had achieved an
internationalist, revolutionary consciousness, and created a
transnational federation of their own organisations, primarily based on
organised labour. The proto-anarchist, libertarian socialist mutualism
of Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, son of a barrel-maker, rapidly established
itself as the major current in the IWMA, but was just as swiftly
supplanted by its natural matured expression: anarchism/syndicalism
under the influence of Mikhail Bakunin and his circle. The main
wellsprings of anarchist-communism within the IWMA were the IWMAâs
worker organisations themselves, aided and abetted by the International
Brotherhood (IB) established by Bakunin in 1864, and replaced in 1868 by
his International Alliance of Socialist Democracy (IASD).[28]
So it was that a First Wave of anarcho- and revolutionary syndicalist
organisations sprang up: the Spanish Regional Federation (FRE), was
founded in 1870 by workers radicalised by IB agent Giuseppe Fanelli,
peaked at 60,000 members by 1873 when it ran several cities in southern
Spain during the Cantonalist Revolt, making it the largest section of
the First International, was revived in 1881 after the post-Revolt
repression as the Spanish Regional Labour Federation (FTRE), the largest
section of the anarchist âBlack International,â but was repressed in
1889, revived in 1891 under the influence of the Spanish Regional
Anarchist Organisation (OARE) as the Pact of Union & Solidarity (PUS),
but repressed again, a cycle that would repeat until anarcho-syndicalism
rooted itself intractably in 1910 with the foundation of the famous
National Confederation of Labour (CNT).[29] The early syndicalist
Proletarian Circle (CP) in Mexico founded in 1869, became the Grand
Circle of Workers (GCO) the following year with a significant anarchist
presence, growing to 10,000 members within five years, then a parallel
Grand Circle of Mexican Workers (GCOM) was established in 1876, with the
anarchists in control of both organisations, representing the bulk of
the organised Mexican working class, by 1881 (the CGO attained 15,000
members, while the GCOM attained 50,000 members and affiliated to the
âBlack Internationalâ). Both were repressed in 1882, but the GCOM was
revived as the Grand Circle of Free Labour (GCOL) in the early 1900s,
but was swiftly crushed, the syndicalist movement only reviving in 1912
during the Mexican Revolution.[30] The Regional Federation of the
Eastern Republic of Uruguay (FRROU) was founded in 1872, affiliated to
the anarchist wing of the First International, and was followed in 1885
by an anarcho-syndicalist Workerâs Federation (FO).[31] In Cuba, the
syndicalist Artisanâs Central Council (JCA) was founded in 1883,
becoming reorganised as the Labourerâs Circle (CT) in 1885, followed by
a string of initiatives culminating in the establishment of the
anarcho-syndicalist Cuban Labour Confederation (CTC) in 1895.[32] And
lastly, in the US, the anarcho-syndicalist Central Labor Union (CLU) in
was founded in 1883 (in anticipation of what would become a key
anarchist strategy in the twentieth century, the CLU was established by
and worked closely with an anarchist-insurrectionist âpoliticalâ
organisation, the International Working Personâs Association, IWPA,
which was affiliated to the anarchist âBlack International,â and grew to
about 5,000 members, surviving in much-reduced form until the First
World War).[33] The short-lived Northern Workersâ Union (NWU)
established in Russia in 1878 was arguably part of this First Wave:
echoing anarchists like Bakunin, the NWU demanded the abolition of the
state and its replacement by a federation of industrial and agrarian
communes, but took what could be seen later as an essentially De
Leonist[34] line in proposing the parallel tactic of working-class
domination of a constituent assembly.
The significance of this First Wave of anarcho- and revolutionary
syndicalist organising needs to be underlinedânot least by comparing the
sheer size of these working class organisations to the meagre 1,000
members world-wide who were affiliated to the Marxist rump of the First
International at the time. Firstly, it is important to note that of the
five countries where this First Wave entrenched itself, three were later
to experience revolutions with significant anarchist involvement. In
Cuba, the anarcho-syndicalist movement dominated the working class for
50 years, until the late 1920s, with a significant revival in the late
1930s and again in the midâ1940s, until its key, but usually ignored,
role in the unions during the Cuban Revolution of 1952â1959. In Mexico,
the movement was involved in the armed peasant risings in 1869 and in
1878, dominated the unions in the 1910s, and was the primary engine
behind the revolutionary peak of 1915â1916. In Spain, the movement had a
continuous trade union presence, in the FRE of the 1860s, continuing on
in five different organisational incarnations, each suppressed in turn,
until the formation of the famous National Confederation of Labour (CNT)
in 1910, and onwards into the 1930s, when it became the most important
revolutionary player in Spain. In Uruguay, the movement dominated
organised labour in the early twentieth century, and remained a strong
enough minority current to re-establish the dominant union centre in the
1960s, and to engage in guerrilla warfare and underground student work
against the state between 1968 and 1976. In the USA, however,
revolutionary syndicalism never grew to be anything more than a militant
minority tendency, overshadowed by more reformist unions. In Imperial
Russia, the movement was swiftly crushed, and it would take more than a
generation to establish a minority anarchist presence in the trade
unions there.[35]
Secondly, the presence of non-European organisations in this First Wave
undermines the convention that anarcho-syndicalismâthe application of
anarchist federalism and direct democracy to the trade union
movementâwas a âFrench inventionâ of the 1890s, and emphasises its
adaptability and applicability to countries as industrialised and
sovereign as the USA or as agrarian and colonised as Cuba. In other
words, it arose in both the global North and the global South, in
concentrations of expansive industrial and commercial agricultural
growthâbut not among the declining artisanal classes, as Marxists often
claim. Its social vectors were those of the intense upheaval created by
a massive, constant movement of workers around the world to satisfy new
growth, and the loss of political control experienced by the old landed
oligarchies, the latifundistas, resulting from the rise of a modernising
bourgeoisie and state bureaucracy, the inevitable corollary of which was
the rise of a militant, industrial proletariat. Politically, anarchism
arose during this First Wave period in response to the insufficiencies,
authoritarianism, and reformism of both radical republicanism and
Marxist socialism, and as an organised, mass-based corrective to the
vanguard adventurism of narodnik[36] populist terrorism.
The Paris Commune of 1871 was a dramatic, innovative, two-month-long
popular insurrection, in which several Proudhonists, alongside
Blanquists[37] and others, ruled the city after the bourgeoisie fled
from their guilt over initiating the disastrous Franco-Prussian War.
Although the Commune was not an anarchist affair, its salient feature,
that of workersâ control of the city, was anticipated by the earlier,
short-lived Bakuninist uprisings in Lyons and Marseilles. The fall of
Paris and the murder of approximately 20,000 Communards by the
reactionaries resulted in the First Wave break, the driving underground
of most European revolutionary organisations, and the subsequent split
of the First International into an anarchist majorityâbased on the
massed strength of the First Wave syndicalist unionsâwhich survived
until 1877, as well as a tiny, short-lived Marxist rump of perhaps only
1,000 adherents, which dissolved in practice after only a year. The
defeat also saw a huge Communard Diaspora radiate out from France and
settle in Belgium, Britain, Spain, Italy, the United States, and
French-speaking Québec, where they often had a significant radicalising
influence on the nascent working class organisations and where many of
them turned to anarchism/syndicalism. Meanwhile, the Spanish anarchists
gained valuable experience, as the 60,000âstrong, anarcho-syndicalist
Spanish Regional Workersâ Federation (FORE) ran its own âcommunesâ in
the southern cities of Granada, Seville, MĂĄlagar, Alcoy, and San Lucar
de Barramed, and co-operated on local communes with federalist
âintransigentsâ in Grenada, Seville, and Valencia, during the
Cantonalist Revolt of 1873â1874.[38] While the experience with these
communes grounded all future, large-scale, anarchist revolutionary
projects, the early âsocial cantonalistâ model was a narrow one, focused
on the FOREâs defence and provisioning of single cities, with no
overarching revolutionary plan. There were, nonetheless, significant
levels of social change, including measures of land reform and wealth
taxation, and large-scale peasant mobilisations, including land
seizures.
Meanwhile, insurrectionist strategies and tactics were tested by armed
anarchist uprisings against the newly consolidated Italian state in 1874
and 1877 and they failed because of their lack of social support. The
final collapse of the anarchist wing of the IWMA in 1877 ended the first
genuinely international attempt to organise the socially-conscious
working class, although its torch was soon taken up by the
Anti-Authoritarian International (AAI) or âBlack International,â founded
by the likes of Pyotr Kropotkin[39] in 1881, the year of the
assassination of Tsar Alexander II by narodniks. Pyotr Kropotkin
(1842â1921), was a Russian prince, polymath geographer, zoologist,
economist, and evolutionary theorist who turned his back on privilege to
become Bakuninâs ideological heir and champion of anarchism. Kropotkinâs
The Great French Revolution, 1789â1793 (1909) is the definitive
libertarian communist analysis, while his books The Conquest of Bread
(1892), Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution (1902), and Fields, Factories
and Workshops (1912) remain among the most accessible and widely read
anarchist texts. The Black International included the anarcho- and
revolutionary syndicalists of the CGO and the body that merged with it,
the Mexican Workersâ Grand Circle (CGOM), representing the majority of
organised workers in Mexico by 1880, and the Central Labor Union (CLU)
in Chicago. The Black International, however, later took an increasingly
purist stance, became dominated by the minority anarcho-insurrectionist
tendency, and only lasted until about 1893. More generally, the radical
working class movement entered a period of defeat that saw an anarchist
retreat from mass organisation, while terrorism became vogue for all
revolutionary tendencies, and capitalism contracted with two great
depressions, the last in 1893. The Black International cultivated an
attitude of dangerous clandestinity and, although the American CLU, for
example, continued to operate until 1909, it is primarily remembered
today for the 1886 state murder of the Haymarket Martyrs, its militants
who are recalled worldwide each year during the commemoration of May
Day.[40]
REVOLUTIONARY ORGANISATION
In 1868, Bakunin wrote his seminal work, Programme and Object of the
Secret Revolutionary Organisation of the International Brotherhood.[41]
He laid out the ground-rules for the International Brotherhood (IB)
founded that year. The Programme reflected Bakuninâs rejection of an
authoritarian statist solution to the social revolution, ârevolutionary
in the Jacobin sense,â as he put it, an indication of rising tensions
between anarchists and Marxists in the IWMA at that time. After spelling
out the principles of the anarchist revolution, the Programme went on to
address organisational matters following the dissolution of the
nation-state and its armed forces, bureaucracy, courts, clergy, and
private property. Anticipating the anarcho-syndicalist replacement of
the state with a decentralised administration of material production and
consumption, the Programme said that all church and state properties
would be put at the disposal of the âfederated Alliance of all labour
associations, which Alliance will constitute the Commune.â A
âRevolutionary Communal Councilâ based on a âfederation of standing
barricades,â comprised of mandated, accountable and revocable delegates
from each defensive barricade, would âchoose separate executive
committees from among its membership for each branch of the Communeâs
revolutionary administration.â This administration would be, according
to anarchist principles, of public services, not of people. It would be
spread by revolutionary propagandists across all old statist boundaries
in order to build âthe alliance of the world revolution against all
reactionaries combined,â the organisation of which âprecludes any notion
of dictatorship and supervisory leadership authority.â
The Programme discussed the specific role of the anarchist revolutionary
organisation in advancing the social revolution:
But if that revolutionary alliance is to be established and if the
revolution is to get the better of the reaction, then, amid the popular
anarchy that is to represent the very life-blood and energy of the
revolution, an agency must be found to articulate this singularity of
thought and of revolutionary action⊠That agency should be the secret
worldwide association of the International Brotherhood. That association
starts from the basis that revolutions are never made by individuals,
nor even by secret societies. They are, so to speak, self-made, produced
by the logic of things, by the trend of events and actions. They are a
long time hatching in the deepest recesses of the popular massesâ
instinctive consciousness, and then they explode, often seeming to have
been detonated by trivialities. All that a well-organised [secret]
society can do is, first, to play midwife to the revolution by spreading
among the masses ideas appropriate to the massesâ instincts, and to
organise, not the Revolutionâs armyâfor the people must at all times be
the armyâbut a sort of revolutionary general staff made up of committed,
energetic and intelligent individuals who are above all else true
friends of the people and not presumptuous braggarts, with a capacity
for acting as intermediaries between the revolutionary idea and the
peopleâs instincts.â
So, in the view of the IB, the anarchist revolutionary organisation is
little more than an intermediary, a midwife and an enabler of mass
social revolution, but is nevertheless clearly constituted as a distinct
organisation, albeit submerged within the social struggle.
In his International Revolutionary Society or Brotherhood, published in
1865,[42] Bakunin had spelled out the internal dynamics of such an
organisation, then in practice only in embryo form, and the duties of
members, following an exhaustive account of the revolutionaryâs
understanding and practical application of equality. âHe [sic] must
understand that an association with a revolutionary purpose must
necessarily take the form of a secret society, and every secret society,
for the sake of the cause it serves and for effectiveness of action, as
well as in the interests of the security of every one of its members,
has to be subject to strict discipline, which is in any case merely the
distillation and pure product of the reciprocal commitment made by all
of the membership to one another, and that, as a result, it is a point
of honour and a duty that each of them should abide by it.â This
discipline was entered into, Bakunin stressed, by the âfree assentâ of
the members, whose first duty was to society and only secondly to the
organisation. Bakunin, who called in one of his letters for anarchists
to be âinvisible pilots in the centre of the popular storm,â has
subsequently been much criticised for the clandestine nature of his
plotting, which has been presumed by some anarchists to be authoritarian
because of its secretive operations and requirements of discipline.
In light of such criticism, it must firstly be recognised that
repressive conditions required secrecy. Secondly, the discipline of
which he wrote was not an externally imposed one, but a self-discipline
to freely abide by commonly-agreed-upon commitments. Thirdly, Bakuninâs
IB had the practical result of helping to generate the first anarchist,
mass-based, revolutionary organisations among the working class, from
Spain to Uruguay: namely, the anarcho-syndicalist unions. In 1877,
influenced by Bakuninâs arguments, a German-language Anarcho-Communist
Party (AKP) was founded in Berne, Switzerland, one of the first of
scores of specific, self-identified anarchist/syndicalist organisations
around the world. The key question raised by Bakunin, that of the role
of specific anarchist/syndicalist political organisations, was to remain
at the centre of a core debate within the anarchist/syndicalist movement
over the ensuing 150 years.
Anarchist Organisation in a Time of War and Reaction
Capitalism began expanding dramatically in the mid-1890s, with the
opening up of the African colonies and significant parts of Asia to
imperialist exploitation, and a Second Wave of anarcho- and
revolutionary syndicalist organising, larger than the first, exploded on
to the world scene. An oft-forgotten precursor to this resurgence was
the National Labour Secretariat (NAS) of the Netherlands, founded in
1893, which dominated the Dutch labour movement for a decade and peaked
at about 18,700 members in 1895. In 1905, a Federation of Freedom-loving
Communists (FVC)âlater renamed the Country-wide Federation of
Freedom-loving Communists (LFVC)âwas founded in the Netherlands, and
worked alongside the NAS, but the syndicalists were forced by the
stateâs move towards an early version of the welfare state to cede
ground to the moderate Netherlands Union of Trade Unions (NVV). The NAS
experienced somewhat of a revival in 1919â1922 with a membership of
30,000 climbing to 51,000âbefore Bolshevik competition eclipsed it. This
Second Wave expansion took two primary forms: anarcho-syndicalism which
explicitly recognised its anarchist roots established itself across much
of Latin America; and revolutionary syndicalism which obscured its
roots, spread across much of the English-speaking world.
Latin American anarcho-syndicalism was largely modelled on, but was a
more explicitly anarchist version of, the General Confederation of
Labour (CGT) of France, established in 1895. The model proved attractive
because anarchist militants of the Federation of Labour Exchanges
(FBT)âa horizontal network of labour hiring halls and worker social
centres founded in 1892, spreading across France and into
French-colonised Algeria and French West Africa, that often survived
until independence in the 1960s[43]âhad established the CGT by merger in
1902 with the primary union centre, the National Federation of Trade
Unions (FNS), meaning that the CGT was based on the local democracy of
its FBT sections. In France, this powerful and worker-responsive
bottom-up structure had lead to a dramatic growth, with the CGT boasting
of 203,000 dues-paying members by 1906. Especially influential was its
ringing Charter of Amiens (1906), which famously declared that the
âtrade union, today a fighting organisation, will in the future be an
organisation for production and distribution and the basis of social
reorganisation.â However, the CGT was expressly âapolitical,â a weakness
that would later allow Marxists and other reformists to hijack it.[44]
This growth was accelerated by two other âjoltsâ that recalled the
direct-democratic practices of the French and Spanish communes, and
anticipated the soviets of the Russian Revolution: the 1903 Macedonian
Revolt and the 1905â1907 Russian Revolt. In Macedonia, anarchist
guerrillas were among those who established communes in Strandzha and
KruĆĄevo,[45] while anarchists were involved in establishing the first
soviets in Russia, in St. Petersburg and Moscow.[46] The Russian Revolt
also saw the establishment in occupied Poland of what is arguably the
longest-living, international anarchist organisation, the Anarchist
Black Cross (ABC)âoriginally the Anarchist Red Cross, a splinter off the
Political Red Crossâa prisonerâs aid network which has member sections
in 64 countries today.[47] These jolts helped light the fuse on the
formation of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) in the USA in
1905, establishing an âindustrial revolutionaryâ syndicalist organising
model that swept the Anglophone world in particular, including branches
in Australia, Canada, Britain, New Zealand, and South Africa, but also
in Argentina, Chile, Cuba, Germany, the Ukraine, Siberia, and
elsewhere.[48] The IWW still exists today as a fighting âredâ
unionâalthough usually as a transverse rank-and-file network across
competing unionsâwith branches in countries as diverse as South Africa
and Russia. The IWW Preamble was as influential in the Anglophone world
as the CGTâs Charter was in the Hispanophone world, because of the
clarity and intransigence of its class politics. According to the
Preamble,
The working class and the employing class have nothing in common. There
can be no peace so long as hunger and want are found among millions of
the working people and the few, who make up the employing class, have
all the good things of life. Between these two classes a struggle must
go on until the workers of the world organise as a class, take
possession of the means of production and abolish the wage system. It is
the historic mission of the working class to do away with capitalism.
The army of production must be organised, not only for everyday struggle
with capitalists, but also to carry on production when capitalism shall
have been overthrown. By organising industrially we are forming the
structure of the new society within the shell of the old.
The 1905â1907 Russian Revoltâand especially the exultation by colonised
peoples all over the world at the spectacle of the defeat of a âwhiteâ
empire by a âyellowâ empireâhad a direct impact on the radicalisation of
social struggles in the Far East. Anarchism implanted itself in Japan
from 1906, challenging the second-class status of both women and the
Burakumin outcasts who worked with meat productsâand the divine status
of the Emperor. Initially embroiled in attempts to assassinate the
Emperor, and bloodily persecuted for supposedly causing the devastating
1923 earthquake, the movement finally consolidated in 1926 with the
formation of the All-Japan Libertarian Federation of Labour Unions
(Zenkoku Jiren), the third-largest of Japanâs labour federations, after
the moderates and the Marxists, which rose to 16,300 members in 1931,
when an explicitly âanarcho-syndicalistâ faction, the Libertarian
Federal Council of Labour Unions of Japan (Nihon JikyĆ) split off,
claiming 3,000 members. These numbers exclude the ethnic Korean
syndicalist unions in Japan, the various âblack societiesâ (anarchist
political groups), and the anarchist tendencies within the Burakumin and
peasant movementsâall of which were suppressed by the fanatically
militarised state from 1934 onwardsâdespite maintaining a twilight
presence that survived into the post-war era.[49]
In China, where the movement was first activated in the early 1900s in
the Portuguese enclave of Macau (near British-occupied Hong Kong, which
became an entry point for IWW ideas) by deported Portuguese anarchists,
the nascent anarchist movement threw itself alongside republican forces
into the overthrow of the royal dynasty in 1911âthe shock of which
echoed across Asia. Shifu, the nom de guerre of Liu Szu-fu (1884â1915),
was the leading Chinese anarchist, who modelled his views on Kropotkin,
founded the Society of Anarchist Communist Comrades, and was the pioneer
of Chinese syndicalism: the anarcho-syndicalists took the honours of
establishing the first modern Chinese trade unions, with the
11,000âstrong Teahouse Labour Union in the southern port city of
Guangzhou in 1918; Guangzhou would remain an anarchist stronghold for at
least a decade after the 1921â1923 period when the entire city was run
as an anarchist commune. Further afield in the landmass of China,
anarcho-syndicalism initially established itself by 1921 as the majority
tendency within the Shanghai-based Confederation of Labour Associations
(GLH), which had provincial affiliates as dispersed as the 5,000âstrong
syndicalist Hunan Workersâ Association (HLH). Black Societies, anarchist
schools, and peasant associations flourished, but the flirtations of
some leading figures with the heterogeneous Guomindang proved fruitless
and the movement was suppressed from 1927 as the nationalists
consolidated their hold on the cities. By the time the âMaoistâ Marxists
(Mao having been an anarchist in his youth), defeated the nationalists
in 1949, the remaining 10,000 syndicalists had to choose between
absorption into the official communist union federationâor exile in
reactionary Taiwan.[50]
In Korea, the movement initially arose as a result of radical migrant
labour exchanges with Japan, but truly consolidated after the 1910
invasion of the peninsula by Imperial Japan. Despite the proliferation
of Black Societies and even of syndicalist trade unions such as the
Wonsan General Trade Union and the Free Trade Union in the 1920s, it was
in exile across the border in Manchuria that the Korean anarchist
excelled. There, in 1929, in a long, mountainous valley, they achieved
the least-known anarchist revolution, establishing the Shinmin free
zone, based on village direct-democracy and defended by a peasant
militia (I will detail this in the Third Wave). When Shinmin was
defeated by direct Japanese invasion in 1931, the Korean anarchists
fought a long retreat alongside their Chinese comrades, and both
guerrilla units and some syndicalist unions survived into the post-war
era.[51]
The Russian Revolt also resulted in a London gathering of exiled Russian
anarchists, including the anarchist theorists Pyotr Kropotkin, Maria
Isidine, and Daniil Novomirsky to discuss an organised response. Maria
Isidine, the nom de plume of Maria Isidorovna Goldsmith (1873â1933), was
a Russian-French scientist and anarchist, and an advocate of an extreme
anti-organisationistâsvobodnikistâposition. Daniil Novomirsky, the nom
de guerre of Yakob Kirilovsky (1882â193?), the foremost Russian
anarcho-syndicalist of his Second Wave generation, was sent to a labour
camp in Siberia in 1905, but escaped and settled in New York where he
became a prominent pro-organisationistâburevesnikistâanarchist
journalist. Novomirsky argued that, in order to fight reaction, all
âanti-authoritarian socialists should unite into a Workersâ Anarchist
Party. The next step would be the formation of a vast union of all
revolutionary elements under the black flag of the International
Workersâ Anarchist Party.â Such a party required theoretical unity to
enable âunity of action.â It would be âthe only revolutionary party,
unlike the conservative parties which seek to preserve the established
political and economic order, and the progressive parties [like the
Social Democratic Labour Party: both its Menshevik and Bolshevik
tendencies] which seek to reform the state in one way or another, so as
to reform the corresponding economic relations, for anarchists aim to
destroy the state, in order to do away with the established economic
order and reconstruct it on new principles.â Novomirsky said such a
âPartyâ was âthe free union of individuals struggling for a common goalâ
and as such required âa clear programme and tacticsâ that were distinct
from other currents. It needed to âparticipate in the revolutionary
syndicalist movement [as] the central objective of our work, so that we
can make that movement anarchist,â and to boycott all state structures,
substituting them with âworkersâ communes with soviets of workersâ
deputies, acting as industrial committees, at their head.â
In 1907, at the International Anarchist Congress in Amsterdam, 80
delegates from Argentina, Austria, Belgium, Bohemia, Britain, Bulgaria,
France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Poland, Russia, Serbia,
Switzerland, and the United States met and debated anarcho- and
revolutionary syndicalism and the role of specific anarchist/syndicalist
organisations.[52] The individualists, who opposed all formal
organisation, were roundly defeated by the organisationists, the key
resolution being that âanarchy and organisation, far from being
incompatible as has sometimes been claimed, are mutually complimentary
and illuminate each other, the very precept of anarchy residing in the
free organisation of the producers [the syndicalist influenced trade
unions].â The congress further hailed the âcollective actionâ and
âconcerted movement,â stating that â[t]he organisation of militant
forces would assure propaganda of fresh wings and could not but hasten
the penetration of the ideas of federalism and revolution into the
working class.â The Amsterdam Congress also agreed that labour
organisation did not preclude political organisation and urged that âthe
comrades of every land should place on their agenda the creation of
anarchist groups and the federation of existing groups.â As a result,
participating delegates helped establish a plethora of new anarchist
specific organisations. These anarchist federations, some of which were
affiliated to the âAmsterdam International,â worked in parallel to (and
often inside) the anarcho- and revolutionary syndicalist unions. One of
the best examples is the Anarchist Communist Alliance (ACA), founded in
France in 1911âits descendants in the 2010s are the Anarchist Federation
(FA), founded in 1945, and the recent FA splinter the Co-ordination of
Anarchist Groups (CGA)âas well as the anarchist Libertarian Communist
Organisation (OCL) and Libertarian Alternative (AL).[53]
This powerful shift towards the adoption of Bakuninist-type,
specifically anarchist/syndicalist organisations, within the context of
mass (including anarcho- and revolutionary syndicalist) organisations
and movements, was driven by the likes of the Argentine Regional
Workersâ Federation (FORA), founded as the countryâs primary labour
centre in 1901, which adopted anarchist-communism as its goal in 1904
and provided the template for similar Second Wave anarcho-syndicalist
federations across Latin America, almost all named in echo of the
FORA.[54] The FORA totally dominated Argentine organised labour for two
decades. It first converted to revolutionary syndicalism its socialist
rival, the Argentine Regional Workersâ Confederation (CORA), then
absorbed it in 1914, leading to the hardline âanarchist-communistsâ
splitting off and forming the FORA of the 5^(th) Congress (FORA-V), and
leaving a rump French CGT-styled âapoliticalâ anarcho-syndicalist FORA
of the 9^(th) Congress (FORA-IX), which had peaked at perhaps 120,000
members in 1919. The FORA-IX was absorbed into a new union centre in
1922, which later became Marxist-dominated, but the FORA-V, which peaked
at 200,000 members in 1922, reverted to the name FORA and maintained a
continuous, if tenuous, presence through decades of dictatorship from
1930, until today. And this is not to mention the MTWIU, which
established its Latin American headquarters on the Buenos Aires docks in
1919âor the constellation of specific organisations such as the
FORA-IX-affiliated Argentine Libertarian Alliance (ALA), the
FORA-V-affiliated Anarcho-Communist Port-workersâ Group (ACAOP), the
5,000âstrong autonomous Resistance Society of the Port-workers of the
Capital (SROPC), and scores of womenâs organisations and resistance
societies.
Inspired by the FORA, anarcho-syndicalism spread rapidly across the
âSouthern Coneâ of Latin America. The Uruguayan Regional Workersâ
Organisation (FORU) was founded in 1905, drawing on 40 years of
anarchist organisational experience dating back to the
anarcho-syndicalist FRROU section of the First International from 1872.
The the FORU peaked at 90,000 members in 1911 as Uruguayâs dominant
labour federationâwith a powerful âFeminine Sectionâ (this was not a
gender ghetto, but rather a vanguard, reflecting the dominance of women
in the textile sector which was at the forefront of industrialisation
across Latin America; and the Feminine Section model was replicated by
all anarcho-syndicalist unions on the continent). Although the FORUâs
dominance was undercut by an early form of welfare state, and from 1923
by the incursion of Bolshevism into the workersâ movement, the movement
survived the imposition of dictatorship in 1930 and established an
Uruguayan Anarchist Federation (FAU) in 1938 that appears to have
survived until 1941âbeing powerfully revived in 1956.[55]
The Brazilian Regional Workersâ Federation (FORB) was founded in Rio in
1906, but within months, it was replaced by a Brazilian Labour
Confederation (COB) at national level and a Workersâ Federation of Rio
de Janeiro (FORJ) at state level. Although revolutionary syndicalism
rather than a more explicit anarcho-syndicalism, dominated Brazilian
labour during the Second Wave, the sheer size of Brazil meant the COB
never achieved true national status and it folded in 1909, being revived
between 1913 and 1915. However its constituent regional federations, the
FORJ, the Local Federation of Labour of Santos (FOLS), the Workersâ
Federation of the state of Rio Grande do Sul (FORGS), and the powerful
Workersâ Federation of SĂŁo Paulo (FOSP), predated and outlived the COB:
the FOSP was still SĂŁo Paulo stateâs most important union centre by 1931
under the GetĂșlio Vargas dictatorship.[56]
In 1905, anarcho-syndicalists formed the Chilean Labourersâ Federation
(FTCh), which was reformed in 1912 along FORA lines into the Chilean
Regional Workersâ Federation (FORCh). The FORCh attained a peak of
60,000 members by 1921âbut operated alongside the Chilean IWW which was
a significant labour centre in its own right with 25,000 members by
1920.[57] The Paraguayan Regional Workersâ Organisation (FORPa), founded
in 1906, was absorbed in 1916 as the Paraguayan Regional Workersâ Centre
(CORP), Paraguayâs main labour federation, but which in the 1920s lost
ground to the Marxists. In 1928, Paraguayan anarchists established among
the peasantry a Nationalist Revolutionary Alliance (ANR) the objective
of which was âto establish Paraguay as a Communal Republic, part,
ultimately, of a âFederal Union of the Peoples of Latin America.ââ But
an anarchist insurrection in 1931 was crushed and the unions outlawed,
so syndicalists played a role in the underground Workersâ Trade Union
Reorganisation Council (CORS) until all resistance was suppressed by a
joint Marxist and fascist coup in 1936 which laid the groundwork for the
pro-Nazi dictatorship of Higinio MorĂnigo in 1940.[58]
On the Caribbean Rim, the Havana Labour Federation (FOH) was a
reformation in 1921 of the moribund Cuban Workersâ Confederation (CTC),
founded in 1895, and was a forerunner of the Cuban National Labour
Confederation (CNOC) which was founded in 1925 on Spanish CNT lines with
200,000 members, Cubaâs main labour federation.[59] The Mexican Regional
Workersâ Organisation (FORM) was a reorganisation in 1915 of the House
of the World Worker (COM), founded in 1912 but with a resilient
organisational heritage stretching back to the 1860s, Mexicoâs main
labour federation with 150,000 members, and rebuilt as the General
Confederation of Labour (CGT) in 1921, which broke apart a decade
later.[60] In the late Third Wave, the Venezuelan Regional Workersâ
Federation (FORV) was formedâI will address this later.
In the Andes, the Peruvian Regional Workersâ Federation (FORPe), founded
in 1913, was replaced in 1918 with the Local Workersâ Federation of Lima
(FOL), which became Peruâs dominant labour federation.[61] The Colombian
Workersâ Federation (FOC) was founded in 1925 as the national Colombian
trade union central.[62] In Bolivia, the Local Workersâ Federation (FOL)
of La Paz was founded in 1927 as the reformation of a body founded in
1908, and in the same year, established its formidable Feminine Workersâ
Federation (FOF). The FOL was reformed in 1930 on FORA lines as the
Bolivian Regional Workersâ Confederation (CORB). Although the CORB was
suppressed by dictatorship in 1936, its FOL/FOF core survived, the
latter until 1964.[63] In Ecuador, the Guayas Workersâ Regional
Federation (FORG) was established by 1928 by the anarcho-syndicalist
current in the 30,000âstrong Ecuadoran Regional Federation of Labour
(FTRE), founded in 1922. The FORG was suppressed by dictatorship in
1934.[64]
On the Iberian Peninsula, the movement matured with the formation of
Spainâs massive National Confederation of Labour (CNT), founded in
1910,[65] and the relatively larger National Workersâ Union (UON) of
Portugal, founded in 1914.[66] The CNT was a revival of a long line of
Spanish anarcho-syndicalist labour federations, stretching back to the
âgrandmotherâ of them all, the FRE founded in 1868, and rose to 2
million members in 1936. The UON, founded in 1914 with 50,000 members,
changed its name to the General Confederation of Labour (CGT) in 1919
when it peaked at 90,000 members, but was suppressed in 1926 by the
militarist regime that survived until the âCarnation Revolutionâ of
1974âwhich had a devastating effect on anarchist organisations in the
Portuguese sphere of influence, such as Mozambique (where an anarchist
Revolutionary League had been established in the early 1900s).
In 1910, the first great anarchist-influenced revolution broke out in
Mexico, providing the template to be replicated in other upheavals, as
to how anarchist-specific organisations, anarcho- and revolutionary
syndicalist unions, and armed worker-peasant militia could work in
parallel, and sometimes in concert: in the north, the eastern seaboard
oil-fields, and Baja California, the Mexican section of the IWW and the
MagĂłnistas of the Mexican Liberal Party (PLM)[67] worked together.
Ricardo Flores MagĂłn (1874â1922) was the leading figure behind the PLM,
which he turned into an armed insurgent anarchist organisation whose
militants initiated the Mexican Revolution in 1910. Living much of his
life in exile, he died apparently of diabetes in an American prison. In
Mexico City and the the central Mexican states, the
anarchists/syndicalists of the Struggle (Lucha) group worked with the
50,000âstrong anarcho-syndicalist House of the World Worker (COM)âthe
direct descendant of the First Wave Proletarian Circleâdefended by its
Red Battalions; while south of the capital in Morelos state, Emiliano
Zapataâs deeply anarchist-influenced Industrial Union of North and South
America (UIANS), defended by its Liberation Army of the South (ELS),
based on guerrilla militia of 200 to 300 fighters each, numbering 70,000
in total by 1915. This Mexican Revolution also illustrated how things
could go awfully wrong. Despite the fact that the interventionist USA
had its imperialist intentions diverted by a 1917 entry into the First
World War, the MagĂłnistas in the north failed to link up with the
Zapatistas in the south, and the anarcho-syndicalists of the COM
dramatically failed their watershed test of class solidarity, with some
in the COM leadership breaking ranks with the Zapatista peasantry, and
sending COM Red Battalions to fight the ELS, on behalf of the statist
Constitutionalists. This class betrayal provoked a massive rupture in
the COM, with revolutionaries siding with the Zapatistas in the rural
areas and the IWW in the oil fields, and the reformists with the
treacherous leadership. In disgust, some of the Lucha anarchists, such
as Antonio DĂaz Soto y Gama (1880â1967), broke with the COM, by then
reorganised as the FORM. Originally a middle-class lawyer, Soto y Gama
had been jailed for writing against the dictatorship in the PLM
newspaper, became involved with the Lucha organisation and then the ELS,
then backed the Zapatistas. But the fragmented Revolution never
consolidated its libertarian zones. It sputtered and finally died after
ten exhausting years, gutted by the Constitutionalistsâ ability to
divide and rule the working class and peasantry. A disillusioned Soto y
Gama founded the libertarian reformist National Agrarian Party (PNA) in
1920, serving in parliament until 1928. He later wrote the seminal work,
The Agrarian Revolution of the South and Emiliano Zapata, Its Leader.
The internationalist aspect of this new wave of anarcho- and
revolutionary syndicalism found expression in the 1913 Syndicalist
Conference in London (the British syndicalist movement was at its peak,
with the Industrial Syndicalist Education League, ISEL, boasting 150,000
members, while the IWW-influenced Irish Transport & General Workersâ
Union, ITGWU, in occupied Ireland, had some 25,000 members and would
peak at 120,000 members in 1917),[68] drawing delegates from trade union
federations in Argentina, Brazil, Belgium, Britain, Cuba, Denmark,
France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain, and Sweden. American IWW
and Russian observers also attended, while Austria adhered without
representation. The congress established an International Syndicalist
Information Bureau. Although disrupted by World War I, this conference
laid the initial groundwork for the formation of the International
Workersâ Association (IWA) in Berlin in 1922. Eric Hobsbawm, a Marxist
historian hostile to anarchism, was forced to admit that âin 1905â14 the
Marxist left had in most countries been on the fringe of the
revolutionary movement [and] the main body of Marxists had been
identified with a de facto non-revolutionary social democracy, while the
bulk of the revolutionary left was anarcho-syndicalist, or at least much
closer to the ideas and the mood of anarcho-syndicalism than to that of
classical Marxism.â[69]
The most powerful anarchist movement in Eastern Europe was the Bulgarian
movement, which rose in the 1870s, blooded itself with its valiant
defence of Macedonian freedom from the Ottoman Empire in 1903, and which
established its first trade unions in 1910. The Federation of
Anarchist-Communists of Bulgaria (FAKB) which was founded in 1919 had
branches across the country with youth groups in every large school and
was a multifaceted armed force to be reckoned withâthe third-largest
organisation on the left after the agrarians then the Marxistsâ by the
time it resisted the 1923 fascist coup, an extermination campaign in
which perhaps 35,000 leftists were slaughtered. By 1931, the rural
syndicalist Vlassovden Confederation had 130 sections nationwide, and
the urban Anarcho-Syndicalist National Confederation of Labour (ASNKR)
embraced 40 unions (excluding the IWA-affiliated Bulgarian Confederation
of Autonomous Unions). The movement fought against the 1934 fascist
coup, then as an underground force against the Nazi and later the Soviet
invasions, and by liberation in 1945, the FAKB newspaper Rabotnicheska
Misal (Workersâ Thought) had a circulation of 60,000 (at a time when the
communist Bulgarian Workerâs Party had only 15,000 members)âbefore being
suppressed by a cynical Marxist-fascist-agrarian alliance.
The Second Wave was not broken on the rocks of the First World War, into
which the CGT, now dominated by reformists, was drawn. The imperialist
powers had initiated the bloodbath because capital was in steep decline
and beset on all sides by a militant working class with a lot of
remaining momentum. Despite the scale of the slaughter, the conflict
unleashed two other RevolutionsâRussia and Ukraineâboth of which drank
deeply from the well of working class self-organisation before the
counter-revolution unlatched the guillotine-blade. The events in Russia
illustrated the danger of anarchists withdrawing from the battle into
purist ivory towers, while simultaneously proving Bakuninâs predictions
about the nature of the dictatorship of the proletariat to be chillingly
correct, in stark contrast to the anarchist-flavoured sovietism of the
working class. The Ukrainian Revolution showed the efficiency of an
innovative, armed, anarchist struggle, based on conventional armed
forces using rapid-deployment shock tactics. Out of the original
Makhnovist detachment (the Chernoye Sotnia, a cavalry unit of 500 with
machine-gun carts) arose the Revolutionary Insurgent Army of the Ukraine
(RPAU), which, by December 1919, was just over 110,000 strong, divided
into four Corps, consisting of 83,000 infantry, 20,000 cavalry, assault
groups, artillery, reconnaissance, medical, and other detachments,
including armoured cars and seven armoured trains, and was headquartered
at Aleksandrovsk, Nikopol, Yekaterinoslav, and Crimea, but swept like a
storm across south-eastern Ukraine.[70]
The true innovation, however, was not so much in battlefield tactics,
but in the fact that the RPAU forces were politically pluralistic
volunteers (including anarchists, social revolutionaries, Maximalists,
non-party fighters and even dissident Bolsheviks), who elected their
officers and, most importantly, secured the backing of the populace by
redistributing the landed gentryâs estates to the peasants. The forces
also submitted themselves to four Congresses of Peasants, Workers, and
Insurgents, which set the general socio-political direction of the
movement. In addition, they were linked, more organically than formally,
to Nestor Makhnoâs Anarcho-Communist Group (GAK) of Gulai-Polye, to the
Alarm Confederation of Anarchist Organisations (Nabat), founded in
Kharâkov, Kursk, and other centres in 1918, as well as to
directly-democratic urban and rural communes, anarcho-/ revolutionary
syndicalist-run factories, and the anarchist Black Guard militia which
defended them, as well as the 30,000 revolutionary syndicalist
coal-miners of the neighbouring Donetz Basin in the eastern Ukraine
organised along IWW lines (it must be stressed that the Donetz Basin was
by far the largest industrial zone in Europe at that time, putting paid
to the notion of the movement as merely a bunch of peasants with
pitchforks). Apart from those organisations in the broader Makhnovist
movement, which included the Congress of Peasants, Workers, and
Insurgents, most of these linkages were fluid and informal. Further
afield, insurgent Ukraine was linked to the Russian Revolution via the
clandestine network of the Pan-Russian Insurgent Committee of
Revolutionary Partisans, based in Moscow, which had branches in Russia,
the Ukraine, and Latvia. I presume that insurgent Ukraine maintained
links via the Trans-Siberian Railway to the 5,000 to 10,000âstrong armed
formations of I. P. Novoselovâs Anarchist Federation of the Altai (AFA)
in south-central Siberia[71] and to the revolutionary syndicalist
coal-miners of the Kuzbas Basinâs 16,000âstrong IWW section in Siberia,
founded in 1919, which appears to have survived as part of the
IWW-dominated âAutonomous Industrial Communeâ until being shut down by
Stalinâs regime as an anomaly in a command economy in 1928. The
now-familiar fluid mixture of syndicalist unions, specific anarchist
âpoliticalâ organisations, anarchist militia, and popular communes was
replicated in European Russia itself, albeit on a smaller scale: the
increasingly beleaguered All-Russian Confederation of
Anarcho-Syndicalists (ARKAS), which claimed 88,000 members in 1918, was
linked on the factory floor in the Petrograd working class district of
Vyborg on the east bank of the Neva River to organisations such as Iosif
Bleikhmanâs Petrograd Anarchist Communist Federation (PACF). In Moscow,
the Union of Anarcho-Syndicalist Propaganda (UASP), and the Moscow
Federation of Anarchist Groups (MFAG) were linked to the force of 1,000
Black Guards who defended the factories, and the nuclei of pluralistic
popular communes were discernible at the anarchist-occupied Villa
Durnova in Moscow and more so at the soviet at the Kronstadt naval base
located on an island which guarded the Baltic Sea approaches to
Petrograd.
While the self-described anarchist/syndicalist movement in Russia,
barring the critical exception of the PACF and the anarchist tendency
within the Kronstadt Soviet, failed to grasp the bull of power by the
hornsâin part because they never managed to achieve critical mass among
the popular classes as in the Ukraine, the Makhnovist strategy of
combining flexible military daring with a libertarian praxis of
pluralistic internal democracy, and submitting the whole to civilian
plenums, thereby liberating (for a time at least) a shifting territory
with some 7 million inhabitants, made the Ukrainian Revolution the most
holistic of the anarchist social experiments, despite the dire and
continually-shifting circumstances of the war, which prevented it from
achieving the continuity of the later Spanish Revolution. Both the
Ukrainian and Russian Revolutions, defended so bravely by the anarchist
forces from the assaults of the imperialists, indigenous nationalists,
and pro-monarchist Whites, were mercilessly put down by the Bolsheviks.
By the time the Global Revolt finally collapsed, with the last gasp of
the failed 1918â1923 German Revolution, during which libertarian
councillist praxisâthe Munich Soviet in particularâhad been tested and
found wanting, the world was a totally changed place. The First World
War and the Spanish Influenza epidemic had wiped out an entire
generation, the Conservative counter-revolution was in full swing, the
Chinese, German, Austro-Hungarian and Ottoman empires had collapsed, and
had been replaced by a constellation of fragile nation-states in which
right-wing nationalism ran rampant, and technological innovations like
steamships, tanks, aircraft, the telephone, and the automobile had
shrunk the world. All of this took place while Fascism and statist
Marxist âcommunismâ (or, rather, authoritarian state-capitalism) were
deluding the working class with false alternatives to capitalism.
And yet, the Second Wave transformed anarchism into a truly global
phenomenon, with sizeable mass anarchist organisations fighting the
class war from Costa Rica to China, Portugal to Paraguay, and Sweden to
South Africa. Furthermore, global anarcho- and revolutionary syndicalism
was drawn together in the International Workersâ Association (IWA),
founded in Berlin in 1922, a reformation of the libertarian wing of the
First International, and representing between 1.5 million and 2 million
revolutionary workers globally.[72] In 1922, the IWAâs largest sections
were the Italian Syndicalist Union (USI) with half a million members,
the Argentine FORA, with some 200,000 members, the General Confederation
of Labour (CGT) of Portugal, with 150,000 members, the Free Workersâ
Union of Germany (FAUD), with 120,000 members, and the Committee for the
Defence of Revolutionary Syndicalism (CDSR) in France, which had taken
100,000 members away from the now irrevocably reformist CGT, which had
peaked at 2.5âmillion members, most of them white-collar workers far
removed from the blue-collar origins of the CGT (one of the ironies of
this period is that when the CDSR founded the CGT Unitaire (CGTU) in
1921 as a revolutionary rival to the CGT, the new federation attracted
Senegalese sailors who had abandoned the Marxists in 1919 after a failed
strike). Minor anarcho-syndicalist organisations present at the founding
of the IWA came from Czechoslovakia, Mexico, Norway, and Sweden, as well
as the Chilean IWW (while most other branches of the IWW were closely
sympathetic, they never joined the new international).
The movementâs most remarkable achievements at this time included the
fostering of a deeply-entrenched tradition of rank-and-file labour
militancy and a global proletarian counter-culture that eschewed
bourgeois patronage, the establishment of near-universal labour
protections, such as the eight-hour working day and workerâs
compensation, a substantial contribution to the virtual annihilation of
absolute monarchism, and the mounting of the most serious challenge to
clerical control of education across the world. The defeats of the
Mexican, Russian and Ukrainian revolutions did, however, lead a lot of
anarchists to become defeatist, withdrawing from the fields of social
and industrial struggle they had dominated for decades, leaving the door
open to Bolshevism. Those critical of this retreat found themselves
having to defend the core principles of the social revolution.
ORGANISATIONAL PLATFORM
Following their defeat at the hands of the Red Army whose flanks they
had protected for so many years, Nestor Makhno and many surviving
Ukrainian anarchist guerrillas fled into exile in 1921 (a Makhnovist
underground would operate in the USSR into the 1930s), where they faced
some hard questions. The most important question was: if anarchism
places so much value on freedom from coercion, is it a powerful enough
strategy to defeat a united, militarised enemy? The survivors were not
only embittered by their experiences at the hands of the ârevolutionaryâ
Reds, they were also greatly disappointed in the poor support they
received from Russian anarchist comrades. Sure, the Nabat had worked on
an ad-hoc basis alongside the RPAU, the anarcho-syndicalist unions in
the cities, and the various Black Guard detachments of guerrillas like
Maroussia Nikiforova, but precious little aid had come from anarchists
further afieldâand the majority of the Nabat had split with the RPAU in
1919 over the latterâs third tactical truce with the Bolsheviks.
This dispute over strategy was to play itself out in exile in France,
between ex-Nabatists like Voline and ex-Makhnovists like Makhno. In
1926, Makhno, Arshinov, Ida Mett, and other exiles from the Workersâ
Cause (Dielo Truda) group in Paris published a pamphlet entitled
Organizatsionnaia Platforma Vseobshchego Soiuza Anarkhistov: Proekt
(Organisational Platform of the General Union of Anarchists: Draft) or,
more simply, the Platform.[73] Ida Mett (1901â1973) was a Russian
anarchist who escaped Bolshevik detention, becoming a writer in exile in
Paris; her analysis The Kronstadt Commune (1948) remains a devastating
critique of Bolshevism. The text caused big waves in the international
anarchist movement because of its call for tight internal discipline,
mutually agreed upon unity of ideas and tactics, and the formation of a
âgeneral union of anarchists.â By union, the writers of the Platform
meant a united specific organisation of tendency, rather than a trade
union. They supported anarcho- and revolutionary syndicalism, but
stressed that it was âonly one of the forms of revolutionary class
struggle.â Moreover, countering the notion that anarchist/syndicalist
unions were self-sufficient, they stressed dual organisationism: unions
needed to be united with anarchist political groups, anarchist militias,
and anarchist municipal soviets. The Platform emphasised the class
struggle nature of anarchism, reminding militants that it was a popular
class movement, of both the peasantry and the working class, but one
that was not exclusively focused on either industry or the trade unions.
It called for ideological and tactical unity, collective responsibility,
and a programme of revolutionary action. More controversially, it called
for an âexecutive committeeâ to be formed within the general union of
anarchists. By executive committee, the writers of the Platform meant a
working group of activists, whose job it was to carry out tasks mandated
by the union.
The Platformâs vision of the future social revolutionary soviet society
was arguably derived from an earlier Makhnovist document, the Draft
Declaration of the (Makhnovist) Revolutionary Insurgent Army of the
Ukraine, adopted in 1919 at a congress of the Military-Revolutionary
Soviet (VRS), the representative insurgentsâ body that linked the RPAU
General Staff (Shtarm), which ran military operations, to the Congresses
of Peasants, Workers and Insurgents. The Declaration called, as the
Kronstadt Soviet would in 1921, for a âthird revolutionâ against
Bolshevik coercive power over the working class, poor, and peasantry,
and stated that the basis of this revolution was the free soviet system,
âlibertarian organisation as taken up by significant masses,â freely
self-organised to oppose âthe notion of political power.â However, since
the soviets and the RPAU were pluralistic organisations, consisting of
anarchists, Social Revolutionaries, and other tendencies, including
unaffiliated members, the Declaration did not assign the anarchists a
specific social function by name. Instead, it stated that not only all
âpolitical activityâ based on privilege, coercion, and enslavement, but
all political organisation, presumably including all genuine socialist
revolutionary factions like the anarchists/syndicalists, would âtend to
wither away of themselvesâ under revolutionary conditions.
The Declaration further emphasised that the RPAU, while pluralistic,
volunteer, and working class-controlled, did form the âfighting core of
this Ukrainian peopleâs revolutionary movement, a core whose task
consists everywhere of organising insurgent forces and helping insurgent
toilers in their struggle against all abuse of power and capital.â The
militant minorityâs task was clearly pro-organisational, in support of
the popular revolutionary forces. The document, however, stopped short
of calling for a specific organisation of a distinct revolutionary
tendency to carry out that task, a call the Platform later issued.
Unlike the central committee of an authoritarian socialist organisation,
which would typically make all policy decisions, the Declaration stated
that the entire membership would form the decision-making body in a
platformist organisation. Delegates or committees would merely carry out
tasks mandated by that membership. The Platform was a restatement of the
positions held by numerous anarchist political organisations in previous
years, dating back to Bakuninâs Alliance. Yet now, some anarchists
eschewed the classical Bakuninist line, and put forward unfounded claims
that anarchism was traditionally opposed to solid anarchist political
organisations with a clear political line.
The Platformâs critics included veteran anarchist militants such as
Voline of Russia, himself a former Nabat member, SĂ©bastian Faure of
France, Errico Malatesta of Italy, and Alexander Berkman of the USA.
SĂ©bastian Faure (1858â1942) was an influential French anarchist writer,
journalist, and radical educator. Errico Malatesta (1853â1932) was a
diminutive mechanic and inveterate organiser, widely seen as the leading
anarchist theorist after Kropotkin. Spending much of his life in exile,
he moved from staging insurrections in Italy to founding
anarcho-syndicalist unions in Argentina. Mistakenly hailed as the
âItalian Leninâ on his return to Italy, he helped establish the Italian
Syndicalist Union (USI) and died under house arrest in the Fascist era.
Critics also accused exiles of trying to âBolshevise anarchism,â
substituting professional revolutionary elites for the revolutionary
masses. The subsequent and much-derided âconversionâ of Arshinov to
Bolshevismâwhich was merely a tactical move to enable the exhausted
militant to return homeâgave the critics lots of ammunition, despite the
fact that he was executed in 1937 during Joseph Stalinâs purges for
allegedly, according to the secret police, âattempting to restore
anarchism in Russia.â
In 1928, Faure published a response to the Platform, La SynthĂšse
anarchiste (The Anarchist Synthesis), which rejected the arguments of
the Platform in favour of a looser ideological mix, which he contended
was more in keeping with libertarian free thought; it is from his
response that this all-in approach acquired the label âsynthesist,â with
the opposing view termed âplatformist.â The two tendencies would
continue to divide the anarchist movement ever after. Malatesta later
conceded that there was no substantial difference between his
pro-organisational views, expressed at the 1907 Amsterdam Congress, and
those of the Makhnovists; this change of heart was to have a profound
impact on the development of platformism in Latin America, where it was
termed âspecificityâ (especifismo). Makhno and his co-authors argued
that it was exactly because of the disorganisation of Russian anarchists
that many of them went on to join the only group with a clear
revolutionary planâthe Bolsheviks. Anarchists, they said, needed to be
just as clear and as organised, but along libertarian, and not
authoritarian, lines and guiding, not dictating revolutionary workersâ
aspirations. Most of the anarchist opposition to the Platform has sprung
from misconceptions.
Importantly, its original title as a âDraftâ shows that the Platform was
intended as an internal discussion document within the international
anarchist movement, not as a final blueprint for the only possible style
of anarchist organisation. It was neither authoritarian (as we have seen
in discussing the executive committee), nor was it vanguardist, an
attempt to get a tiny group of activists to lead the working class. The
intention of the Platform was not to suggest that all anarchists should
be absorbed into one massive, monolithic âplatformistâ organisation. It
quite clearly stated that platformist groups would maintain links with
other revolutionary organisations. The platformist method of organising
was applied to all forms of anarchist/syndicalist organisation, whether
economic, political, military, or social. Most importantly, the Platform
was not an innovation, but a clear re-statement of the fundamentals of
mass anarchist/syndicalist organising, dating back to Bakuninâs time. It
spoke to the necessity for commonly agreed upon lines of attack, along
which anarchist organisations had become the primary promoters of
exclusively working class interests worldwide. It was in fact the
Platformâs harshest critics, such as Voline, who tried to revise
anarchism by making a principle of loose organisation without solid
politics, an approach that would have made Bakunin turn in his grave.
The intense debate over the Platform split the Russian and Ukrainian
anarchist movements in exile, notably in France, where the Group of
Russian Anarchists Abroad (GRAZ) fractured in 1927 into platformist and
synthesist tendencies, and in North America, where the Russian/Ukrainian
diaspora likewise split into burevestnikist (organisationist) and
svobodnikist (anti-organisationist) groupings. That year, the
platformist tendency in France founded a short-lived International
Anarchist Communist Federation (IACF), with sections in France and Italy
and delegates from China, Poland, and Spain. The IACF can be considered
the ideological descendant of Bakuninâs IB and, to a lesser extent, of
the organisational Amsterdam Anarchist International, but it never made
much headway. In Bulgaria, the platformist tendency proved strongest
within the Federation of Anarchist Communists of Bulgaria (FAKB), which
adopted the
document as its constitution. This may account, in part, for the
diversity and resilience of the Bulgarian anarchist movement, which
organised workers, peasants, students, professionals, and intellectuals,
and not only survived, under arms, the 1923 and 1934 fascist putsches,
but also the Second World War, only to be crushed by
Marxist-fascist-agrarian reaction in 1948.[74] It was unfortunate that
the Platform was not translated into Spanish early enough to influence
the Iberian Anarchist Federation (FAI). The FAI, founded in 1927, was
envisaged as an Iberian Peninsular organisation embracing Spanish and
Portuguese anarchist groups, although the suppression of the anarchists
in Portugal under Salazar made this difficult. It initially rescued the
CNT from reformism, but its lack of internal ideological coherence
allowed it to be hijacked in 1934 by technocrats who took it into the
Catalan regional then Spanish national governments during the Revolution
and were on the verge of transforming it into a conventional political
party when the Revolution was defeated. It has several active
descendants today, all claiming the FAI moniker; they reject reformism,
but remain synthesist.
The debate also influenced those anarchists remaining in Russia itself,
including former militants of the Nabat who had either been driven
underground or jailed. According to a Nabat veteran (unnamed for
security reasons), then in exile in Siberia, who wrote in Dielo Truda in
1928, the Nabat itself, initially a de facto âsynthesistâ organisation,
had been refining its organisational structure, in the âwhirlwind of
revolution,â in what approximated a âplatformistâ direction. The Nabat
veteran wrote that the organisation was, in a sense, a âparty,â in that
it was not a loose, affinity-based organisation, as claimed by Voline.
Rather, they wrote, the organisation was a federation of groups that
rallied âthe most determined, the most dynamic militants with an eye to
launching a healthy, well-structured movement with the prospect of a
standardised programme.â Nabat members submitted to majority decisions
reached at its congresses, which transcended its different tendencies to
promote a unitary âpolicy lineâââa single, coherent platform⊠In short,
it was a well-structured, well-disciplined movement with a leading
echelon appointed and monitored by the rank and file. And let there be
no illusions as to the role of that echelon [later referred to as the
âSecretariatâ, echoing the Platformâs âexecutive committeeâ]: it was not
merely technically executive, as it is commonly regarded. It was also
the movementâs ideological pilot core, looking after publishing
operations, and propaganda activity, utilising the central funds and
above all controlling and deploying the movementâs resources and
militants.â
Imperialism, Fascism, and Bolshevism
The Conservative counter-revolution of the 1920s generated anarchismâs
greatest challenge, that of two opposing totalitarianisms, Fascism and
Bolshevism, which would crush the autonomous, militant working class in
a deadly vise for decades to come. Bolshevism was in many ways more
insidious than Fascism, establishing a similar style of totalitarianism,
but posing as the liberator of the working class under the âdictatorship
of the proletariatâ (an early Marxist idea coined by former Prussian
military officer Joseph Weydemeyer and expanded on by Marx and Engels).
In Russia, the dictatorshipâs class structure was cynically revealed
when Bolshevik leader Leon Trotsky explicitly demanded the regimentation
of labour. Disoriented by the propagandist success of the Bolshevik
model and silenced in its gulags, anarchism lost ground throughout the
world. It did retain strongholds in Latin America and the Far East,
while in Brazil, China, Egypt, France, Mexico, Portugal, and South
Africa, anarchists helped establish the first âcommunistâ parties, which
were initially noticeably anarchist and syndicalist in orientation or,
at least, deeply influenced by anarchism/syndicalism until they were
Bolshevised on Moscowâs orders. It was, however, an era not solely about
repression: the Second Wave broke against reformism, the new welfare
state sugar-coating that defused militancy in countries as diverse as
Uruguay, Sweden, and the USA. While many anarchist/syndicalist
organisations were forced underground or destroyed in this long slide
into darkness, important struggles against fascism and imperialism were
unfolding in countries such as Bulgaria, Korea, and Poland.
In Poland, the anarchist movement had first consolidated during the
Russian imperialist period in 1907 with the formation of the Federation
of Anarchist-communist Groups of Poland and Lithuania (FAGPL), which
operated clandestinelyâyet several of its militants were executed by the
Russian authorities for belonging to the organisation. A new generation
established the Anarchist Federation of Poland (AFP) in 1926 in
independent Poland, and before long, a syndicalist General Workersâ
Federation (GFP) of about 40,000 members emerged. But in the same year,
Poland and Lithuania fell under the dictatorship of the socialist
ultra-nationalist Jozef Pilsudski, who in 1930 forcibly merged the GFP
with nationalist, independent, and socialist unions to form the Union of
Trade Unions (ZZZ) as as a yellow union affiliated to his regimeâan odd
mix of socialists, liberals, and right-wing ex-soldiersâalbeit
structured along the lines of the reformist syndicalist French CGT). But
the ZZZ grew to 170,000 members and became dominated by the syndicalists
who aligned as a tendency to the IWA. When the inevitable clash with
their employers and the state came, the conservative unions in the ZZZ
such as the munitions workers broke away, leaving the remainder to be
radicalised by the anarcho-syndicalists. The ZZZ was forced underground
by the Nazi invasion in 1939 but reformed as the clandestine Polish
Syndicalist Union (ZSP) with perhaps 4,000 members, and was active in
the underground resistance to Nazism, publishing papers, cooperating
with the Home Army, and, though its contribution is seldom recognised
today, participating directly in the 1944 Warsaw Uprising through bodies
like the 104^(th) Syndicalist company.[75]
It is also worth sketching briefly the trajectories of the two movements
who, more than most, would be tested in the fires of fascism: those of
the Italians and of the Germans. The Italian movement was born in the
nationalist Risorgimento, which united the scattered Italian
principalities in 1861, and a section of Bakuninâs Brotherhood was set
up three years later. The movement became involved in localised
insurrections in 1874 and 1877, which failed, and despite the popularity
of the creed, struggled to establish a national organisation: their
efforts in establishing the Italian Workersâ Party (POI) in 1882 and the
Revolutionary Anarchist Socialist Party (PSAR) in 1891 were wasted as
the organisations merged, expelled the anarchists and formed the Italian
Socialist Party (PSI); but the syndicalists came to dominate many of the
regional Chambers of Labour that were combined in 1906 under Marxist PSI
auspices into the General Confederation of Italian Workers (CGIL)âthe
syndicalists were later expelled, but had managed to form a
200,000âsupporter rank-and-file network within the unions. In 1912, this
network finally formed an anarcho-syndicalist federation, the Italian
Syndicalist Union (USI) with 80,000 members.
Having survived World War I, the syndicalist movement grew dramatically
during the Bienno Rosso, the âtwo red yearsâ of 1919 and 1920 when
perhaps 600,000 workers occupied their factories, with the USI growing
to a respectable 800,000âmember minority (the Marxist CGIL had 2.15
million members by 1919, while the conservative unions collectively
mustered 1.25âmillion members). In 1919, a hardline Union of Communist
Anarchists of Italy (UCAI) was founded, but was absorbed the following
year into the less ideologically rigorous Italian Anarchist Union (UAI),
which peaked at 20,000 members. In 1921, the UAI urged the creation of a
âUnited Revolutionary Front,â bringing together all leftist forces to
combat the rising threat of Fascism. But the Marxist PSI had refused to
throw the weight of their CGIL unions behind the factory occupations and
by the time of the Fascist âMarch on Romeâ in 1922, the left was
demoralised and the numbers of organised workers had fallen sharply; by
1927, with Fascism in full swing, veterans of the USI and UAI lived a
twilight life in the resistanceâbut the once-powerful Marxist CGIL
meekly dissolved itself when ordered to do so by the Fascists.[76]
The patchwork of German states had only united in 1871, and for the
first three decades, the left suffered under severe anti-socialist laws.
So it was only in 1901 that the German syndicalist movement had arisen,
when the âlocalistâ tendency within the dominant Marxist Social
Democratic Party (SPD) unions split from the SPD and organised as the
Free Association of German Trade Unions (FvDG). This soon developed in
an anarcho-syndicalist direction under the influence of the French CGT,
and of indigenous anarchist and anti-party, anti-state socialism. The
membership of the FvDG stood at 18,353 in 1901, compared to the 500,000
members of the Free Trade Unions (FG) linked to the SPD. In 1903, groups
across the country formed the German Anarchist Federation (AFD), which
worked closely with the FvDG; they were the only left-wing revolutionary
organisations in the country on the outbreak of World War I, when the
AFD transformed itself into the underground Federation of Communist
Anarchists of Germany (FKAD).
The FKAD and FvDG emerged from the war with unsullied reputations for
resistance to militarism, and in the heady revolutionary days after the
collapse of the German monarchy in 1918, the FvDG expanded to over
100,000 members, and was renamed the Free Workers Union of Germany
(FAUD), this time concentrated in the industrial Rhineland and
Westphalia and dominated by metalworkers and miners. But the FAUD lost
ground on the RĂŒhr to the nascent Bolshevik partyâand there were
significant revolutionary syndicalist movements to contend with too:
even though the FAUD rose to 200,000 members by 1922, it never managed
to merge with the 300,000 members of the IWW-styled General Workersâ
Union of Germany (AAUD), nor with the MTWIUâs 10,000 members on the
docks, nor even with the more radical anti-Bolshevik syndicalist
splinter of the AAUD, the General Labour UnionâUnity Organisation
(AAU-E) which reached 75,000 members by 1922. This endemic fragmentation
of the German left was to prove fatal when the Nazis rose to power in
1933âby which time the FAUD was a shadow of its former self.[77]
Yet it was also amidst this turmoil that, in 1928 and 1929, two huge
continental anarchist organisations were founded. Firstly, the East
Asian Anarchist Federation (EAAF), with member organisations in China,
Japan, Korea, Formosa (Taiwan), Vietnam, and India, was initiated by the
Korean Anarchist Federationâs Chinese exile section (KAF-C), which also
established the Korean Youth Federation in South China (KYFSC) in
Shanghai in 1930, with delegates from Korea, Manchuria, Japan, and all
over China.[78] Secondly, the American Continental Workingmenâs
Association (ACAT) was born, a Latin American IWA formation with member
organisations in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Costa Rica, Ecuador,
El Salvador, Guatemala, Mexico, Paraguay, Peru, and Uruguay, which held
a founding congress that drew about 100 unions from across the
continent.[79] Such ongoing anarchist resistance lead to the upsurge of
a Third Wave, with the sorely understudied Manchurian Revolution of
1929â1931, the extreme isolation of which limited its impact to Chinese,
Japanese, Manchurian, and especially Korean resistance. The Manchurian
Revolution was unusual in that it was initially inserted from above, but
quickly gained grassroots support because it was based on worker and
community self-organisation.[80] It demonstrated how the uplift of the
working class through economic autonomy and education could combine
seamlessly with a bottom-up system of decision-making and a militant
defensive programme. In 1925, Korean anarchists helped form a âPeopleâs
Governmentâ administration in the Shinmin Prefecture bordering on Korea,
which helped democratise the prefecture. Subsequently, the Korean
Anarchist Federation (KAF) militant Kim Jong-Jin, a close relative of
the anarchist-sympathetic Korean Independence Army general Kim Jao-Jin,
whose forces effectively controlled the Shinmin Prefecture, submitted an
anarchist plan to the military command. It advocated the formation of
voluntary rural co-operatives, self-managed by the peasantry, and a
comprehensive education system for all, including adults. After some
debate, and input from Yu Rim (the alias of Ko Baeck Seong), a founder
of the Korean Anarchist Communist Federation (KACF), the general and his
staff accepted the plan, and the anarchists were given the go-ahead for
their plan.
In 1929, anarchist delegates from Hailun, Shihtowotze in the Chang Kwan
Sai Ling Mountains, Sinanchen, Milshen, and other centres, also formed
the Korean Anarchist Federation in Manchuria (KAF-M) at Hailin. The
Shinmin Prefecture was transformed into the Korean Peopleâs Association
in Manchuria, a regional, libertarian socialist administrative
structure, also known as the General League of Koreans (Hanjok
Chongryong Haphoi) or HCH, which embraced a liberated territory of some
two million people. This self-managed structure was comprised of
delegates from each area and district, and organised around departments
dealing with warfare, agriculture, education, finance, propaganda,
youth, social health, and general affairs, the latter including public
relations. Delegates at all levels were ordinary workers and peasants
who earned a minimum wage, had no special privileges, and were subject
to decisions taken by the organs that mandated them, including the
co-operatives. Notwithstanding its bizarre origins from a meeting
between the Kims, Yu, and the Army command, the HCH was based on free
peasant collectives, mutual aid banks, an extensive primary and
secondary schooling system, and a peasant army. The militia was
initially drawn from the Army, but increasingly supplemented by fighters
trained at local guerrilla schools. Again, we see the Bakuninist
strategy of specific organisations, the KAF-M and the KAFC, operating
under the aegis of a delegated civilian mass organisation based on free
communes, the HCH, and defended by armed militia. In echo of the
Zapatistas in the Mexican Revolution, the âManchuriansâ operated almost
exclusively in rural areas and relatively small towns. In Fukien
province, southern China, which was under informal Japanese influence,
situated as it is across the Formosa Strait, KAF-C members participated
in the Chuan Yung Peopleâs Training Centre, an initiative aimed at
establishing an autonomous self-rule district in Fukien, emulating
Shinmin. They were subsequently involved in attempts to form a peasant
militia and rural communes in the area. But to the north, the Manchurian
Revolution was destroyed by the Japanese invasion of Manchuria in 1931,
and the KAF-M and KACF were forced to fight a rearguard retreat into
southern China, where they continued the armed struggle against Imperial
Japan alongside their Chinese comrades until Japanâs defeat in 1945.
However, it was the explosion of the running class war in Spain into
full-throated revolution, taking place when the Fascist-oriented
colonial military staged a coup dâĂ©tat in 1936, that captured the
attention of the whole world. Seen as a laboratory of virtually every
known competing political tendency from anarchism to Fascism, the
Spanish Revolution was in many ways the most compelling of the century.
Detail on the Spanish Revolution of 1936â1939 is largely unnecessary
because the events are so well known. For my purposes here, suffice it
to say that the loosely-structured Makhnovist model of free communes and
soviets, organically linked to revolutionary/anarcho-syndicalist unions
(IWW, etc.), overseen by a mass class organisation (Congress of
Peasants, Workers, and Insurgents), linked to specific anarchist
organisations (Nabat, GAK, etc), and defended by affiliated or
autonomous militia (RPAU and the Black Guards) was replicated. It was
done in a tighter formation and a more continuous fashion in the cities
of Catalonia, Aragon, and Valencia than had been the case in Ukraine,
where the constantly shifting front-line had meant that Makhnovist urban
administrations had few chances to establish themselves for long. The
Spanish Revolution saw free communes more closely linked to the
two-million-strong, anarcho-syndicalist National Confederation of Labour
(CNT), which had declared itself for libertarian communism at its 1936
Zaragoza Congress. The CNT, in turn, was in formal alliance with the
synthesist Iberian Anarchist Federation (FAI), the Libertarian Youth
Federation of Iberia (FIJL), and its Catalan-language corollary, the
Libertarian Youth (JJLL). The CNT-FAI-FIJL and the free communes were
defended by affiliated Confederal militia, such as the famous Durruti
Column.[81] Sadly, compromises and strategic blunders were made by
reformists and opportunists in the anarchist ranks, who betrayed the
class line by elevating the CNT-FAI to regional and then national office
in the Republican state, accepting minority posts on the Councils of
Aragon and Valencia when they were the overwhelming majority on the
ground, and failing to implement the Zaragoza resolution on establishing
a national Defence Council to federate all worker and peasant communes.
Equally destructive were the technocrats in the FAI who attempted to
turn it into a conventional political party, a seizure of the
organisation made possible precisely because of its synthesist lack of
internal coherence, and undermined the Revolution from within.[82] Along
with the earlier experiences of the handful of leading anarchists in
Czechoslovakia, China, and Korea who tried to use the vehicle of the
nation to achieve anarchist ends, the example of Spain clearly shows
that internationalist anarchism and the interests of the global working
class are totally at odds with nationalist government, however
ârevolutionary.â The outside support for the Francoist rebels of the
pro-Fascist imperial powers, the betrayals of the Bolsheviks, and the
extremely fragmented nature of the republican camp all led to Spain
being recalled, incorrectly, as the swan-song of anarchism, a song soon
drowned in the carnage of the Second World War. Still, the worker- and
peasant-run fields and factories of Spainâthe socialised tramways of
Barcelona carried eight million passengers annuallyâprovided the
best-studied methods for the successful operation of an egalitarian
society on a large scale, a lesson that humanity will not easily forget.
Although the defeat of the Manchurian and Spanish Revolutions was a
great blow for the class, the Third Wave did not break until the end of
the Second World War, when it peaked with armed anarchist resistance
movements in France, China, Korea, Poland, Italy, Bulgaria, Hungary, and
Francoist Spain, movements that were soon echoed in the anti-colonial
struggles to come. Not only that, but numerous anarchist federations
were formed in the closing phases of the World War II period and its
immediate aftermath, as anarchists attempted to rebuild their political
and trade union presence. According to Phillip Ruff, the Nabat was
re-established in the Ukraine and staged an armed uprising in 1943,
being commended by the 4^(th) Guard of the Soviet Army for holding a
bridgehead on the west bank of the Dnieper River. Its leader, school
headmaster V.I. Us, was, however, jailed by the Soviet authorities for
four years, though rehabilitated after Stalinâs death. Ukrainian
anarchist partisans reportedly continued fighting as late as 1945, while
within the Red Army occupying Germany and Austria immediately after the
war, a secret Makhnovist organisation called the Kronstadt Accords (ZK)
apparently operated.
In this period, along the lines of the Amsterdam model,
anarchist-specific organisations suppressed by the war emerged in
parallel to anarcho-/revolutionary syndicalist unions. For example, in
France, the clandestine International Revolutionary Syndicalist
Federation (FISR) emerged in 1943, leading to the establishment of the
National Confederation of Labour (CNT) in 1945, alongside and within
which operated the Francophone Anarchist Federation (FAF), which was
established the same year. It is possible that the 17,500 Senegalese who
defected in 1948 from the French Marxist CGT, joined the
anarcho-syndicalist CNT which had a far more progressive stance towards
national independence for the colonial worldâbut I am still researching
this. The Federation of Anarchist Communists of Bulgaria (FAKB) and its
unions resurfaced. In Italy, the Federation of Italian Anarchist
Communists (FdCAI) was founded in 1944 and had some influence on the
anarchist tendency in the new General Italian Workersâ Federation
(CGIL). The Anarchist Federation of Britain (AFB) was founded in 1945
and worked alongside the new Syndicalist Workersâ Federation (SWF). The
AFB did not survive the Third Wave, and another regional federation was
only rebuilt during the Fourth Wave in 1967, alongside an equally
short-lived Anarchist Communist Federation (ACF) the following year. The
ACF seeded a lineage in the 1970s, however, which resulted in the
refounding of the ACF in 1986.[83]
The Japanese Anarchist Federation (JAF) was founded clandestinely under
US military occupation in 1945 with about 200 members, followed the next
year by the syndicalist Federation of Free Labour Unions (FFLU) and
Conference of Labour Unions (CLU).[84] The JAF split in 1951, with the
âpureâ anarchists founding the Japanese Anarchist Club (JAC) and the
anarcho-syndicalists forming the Anarchist Federation which in 1955 was
renamed the JAF again. It affiliated to the IFA but collapsed in 1968,
being replaced by the Black Front Society (KSS) in 1970, followed by a
Libertarian Socialist Council (LSC). In 1983, the anarcho-syndicalist
Workersâ Solidarity Movement (RRU) was established, becoming for a while
the Japanese section of the IWA. In 1988, a new Anarchist Federation was
established in Japan. In 1992, the Workersâ Solidarity (RR)
anarcho-syndicalist network split from the RRU, which turned towards
ultra-left communism and left the IWA.
New formations also emerged in regions where organised anarchism had
been absent for some time: the Federation of Libertarian Socialists
(FFS) was established in Germany in 1947; built by the likes of veteran
anti-militarist, anarcho-syndicalist, and journalist Augustin Souchy
(1892â1984)âwho was active in Germany, then in exile in Revolutionary
Spain, jailed in France, then active in Mexico, and who wrote probably
the best first-hand critique of looming authoritarianism in
Revolutionary Cuba in 1960âthe FFS survived into the 1950s. In 1977, an
anarcho-syndicalist Free Workersâ Union (FAU) was established in Germany
in echo of the old FAUD; still active today, it is affiliated to the IWA
and is online at www.fau.org. The North African Libertarian Movement
(MLNA), which came to embrace Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia, was founded
in 1947.[85] The revolutionary syndicalist Independent League of Trade
Unions (OVB) was founded in the Netherlands in 1948; the OVB, which is
online at www.ovbvakbond.nl, was based among dock-workers and fishermen
at The Hague, Rotterdam, and Amsterdam; it split in 1988 with the
anarcho-syndicalists leaving to form the Free Union (VB), which is
online at www.vrijebond.nl. The collapse of Spain also sent an anarchist
diaspora out into the world, from North Africa to Chile. Its greatest
impact was felt in France, where militants fought in the resistance
against the Nazis, in Cuba, where the movement experienced a dramatic
growth-spurt, coming to dominate both the âofficialâ and the underground
union federations after World War II, and in Mexico and Venezuela where
the exile presence was large enough to form two significant autonomous
anarcho-syndicalist formations: the General Delegation of the CNT
(CNT-DG) in Mexico in 1942, which co-ordinated CNT exile Sub-Delegations
across Latin America, and the Venezuelan Regional Workersâ Federation
(FORV) in 1944.[86]
Another strongpoint of anarcho-syndicalist organising in the immediate
post-war period, usually overlooked, may have existed in China, where
the movement reportedly maintained a minority trade union presence of
only about 10,000âstrong in Guangzhou and Shanghai together, under the
difficult conditions of conflict between the nationalists and the
Bolsheviks, but this is hard to verify. In Korea, the defeat of Japan
lead to a rapid reorganisation of anarchist forces, as the KAF-C, its
youth wing, the KYFSC, affiliates in the Eastern Anarchist Federation,
as well as many other âblack societies,â combined to create the huge
Federation of Free Society Builders (FFSB).[87] A strong libertarian
reformist tendency also developed, with the entry of a few key members
of the KACF, such as Yu Rim, and of the Korean Revolutionist Federation
(KRF), into the five-party, left-wing Korean Provisional Government
(formed in exile in 1919) from 1940 until about 1946. American and
Russian occupational forces allowed this shadow government no access to
power and supplanted it with their own proxy governments in 1948.
In 1948, at a pan-European anarchist conference in Paris, the Anarchist
International Relations Commission (CRIA) was established with the aim
of maintaining ties between the dispersed, rather battered, but still
vibrant, post-war anarchist movement. CRIA established a sister
organisation in Latin America, the Montevideo-based Continental
Commission of Anarchist Relations (CCRA). The CRIA/CCRA saw itself as
continuing the work of the 1907â1915 Amsterdam International and
maintained a network of correspondence between anarchist organisations,
journals, and individual militants in Algeria, Argentina, Australia,
Bolivia, Brazil, Britain, Bulgaria, Canada, Chile, China, Colombia,
Cuba, Ecuador, France, Germany, Guatemala, India, Israel, Italy, Japan,
Korea, Mexico, Morocco, the Netherlands, Panama, Peru, Portugal, Spain,
Switzerland, Tunisia, Uruguay, the United States, Venezuela, and
Yugoslavia. The CRIA/CCRA held its first congress in Paris in 1949, and,
at its congress in London in 1958, it joined with the Provisional
Secretariat on International Relations (SPIRA) and was transformed into
the Anarchist International Commission (CIA), which survived until about
1960.[88]
PUSHES FOR A FRESH REVOLUTION
During the Spanish Revolution, at the height of the Third Wave,
anarchists faced the same question raised in the 1920s by the Platform:
how to organise in a free, yet effective, manner. Aware that the
communists and reformists within the trade unions were selling out the
revolution, a militant group of anarchists formed in 1937 to maintain
the revolutionary hard line. The Friends of Durruti (AD) were named
after the brilliant Spanish anarchist railway worker and guerrilla
fighter, Buenaventura Durruti, who died defending the capital of Madrid
against the Francoist forces in 1936. The AD was founded by
rank-and-file CNT militants, key anarchist hardliners, and anarchist
militia, in particular from the famous Durruti Column and the Iron
Column. They opposed the ârevolutionaryâ stateâs order to turn the
militia into an ordinary authoritarian army, with class divisions and a
murderous regime of punishment.
In 1938, encouraged by the Spanish Communist Party, the counter
revolution was in full swing, in the rear of and at the revolutionary
front. The AD published Towards a Fresh Revolution, a strategic document
that critiqued the reformist tendency within the CNT, one which had lead
to confederated collaboration with bourgeois, nationalist, conservative,
and Bolshevik forces in the Republican government. The document called
for a ârevolutionary juntaâ (meaning a âcouncilâ or âsovietâ) to
maintain the revolutionary character of the war by means of the
anarchist/syndicalist militia, and for the economy to be placed entirely
in the hands of the syndicatesâthe revolutionary anarcho-syndicalist
unions which made up the base of the CNT. It was, in effect, a call by
the organised revolutionary working class under arms to dissolve the
bourgeois Republican government and replace it with a decentralised
militant counter-power structure. In the document, the AD also demanded
the seizure of all arms and financial reserves by the workers; the total
socialisation of the economy and food distribution; a refusal to
collaborate with any bourgeois groups; the equalisation of all pay;
working class solidarity; and a refusal to sign for peace with foreign
bourgeois powers.
Like the Makhnovist Platform, the AD manifesto was also labelled
vanguardist and authoritarian, this time because of a misunderstanding,
mostly among English-speakers, of what was meant by the revolutionary
junta. In the ADâs usage, junta did not have the connotations of a
ruling military clique that the term carries in English. It was not to
be an âanarchist dictatorship,â supplanting the bourgeois government
with an anarchist one. Its task was merely to co-ordinate the war effort
and make sure that the war did not defer or dismantle revolutionary
gains. The rest of the revolution was to be left in civilian worker
hands. In 1945, the Bulgarian platformist FAKB, founded in 1919, called
a congress at Knegevo, in the capital city of Sofia, to discuss the
repression of the anarchist/syndicalist movement by the Fatherland Front
government. This government had been installed by the Red Army and
consisted of Communist Party and Agrarian Union members and fascist
Zveno officers, involved in the 1934 fascist putsch. However, all 90
delegates were arrested by Communist militia and put into forced labour
camps. Anarchist locals were forcibly shut down and the revived FAKB
newspaper Rabotnicheska Misal (Workersâ Thought) was forced to suspend
publication after only eight issues. It reappeared briefly during
Fatherland Front-rigged elections, held in 1945 under American and
British pressure, surging from a circulation of 7,000 to 60,000, before
being banned again. More than 1,000 FAKB militants were sent to
concentration camps and the next annual congress of the FAKB had to take
place clandestinely in 1946.
Despite the repression, in 1945, the FAKB was able to issue a key
platformist strategic document. The Platform of the Federation of
Anarchist Communists of Bulgaria argued for an anarchist/libertarian
communist future order. While rejecting the traditional political party
as âsterile and ineffective,â and âunable to respond to the goals and
the immediate tasks and to the interests of the workers,â it advocated
for anarcho-/revolutionary syndicalist unions, cooperatives, and
cultural and special organisations (like those for youth and women), as
well as a specifically anarchist political group along the lines of the
original 1927 Platform:
It is above all necessary for the partisans of anarchist communism to be
organised in an anarchist communist ideological organisation. The tasks
of these organisations are: to develop, realise and spread anarchist
communist ideas; to study the vital present-day questions affecting the
daily lives of the working masses and the problems of the social
reconstruction; the multifaceted struggle for the defence of our social
ideal and the cause of working people; to participate in the creation of
groups of workers on the level of production, profession, exchange and
consumption, culture and education, and all other organisations that can
be useful in the preparation for the social reconstruction; armed
participation in every revolutionary insurrection; the preparation for
and organisation of these events; the use of every means which can bring
on the social revolution. Anarchist communist ideological organisations
are absolutely indispensable in the full realisation of anarchist
communism both before the revolution and after.
According to this neo-Makhnovist manifesto, such anarchist
political/ideological organisations were to be federated across a given
territory, âco-ordinated by the federal secretariatââsimilar to the
Durrutist ârevolutionary juntaââbut the âlocal organisationâ was to
remain the basic policy-making unit, and both local and federal
secretariats to be âmerely liaison and executive bodies with no powerâ
beyond executing the decisions of the locals or federation of locals.
The FAKB Platform emphasised the ideological unity of such
organisations, stating that only committed anarchist communists could be
members, and that decision-making must be by consensus, achieved by both
persuasion and practical demonstration, rather than by majority vote
(the latter being the method applicable to anarcho-/revolutionary
syndicalist and other forms of organisation, with allowances made for
dissenting minorities). Anarchist militants, so organised, would
participate directly in both syndicalist unions and mainstream unions,
arguing their positions, defending the immediate interests of the class,
and learning how to control production in preparation for the social
revolution. Militants would also participate directly in co-operatives,
âbringing to them the spirit of solidarity and of mutual aid against the
spirit of the party and bureaucracyââand in cultural and
special-interest organisations which support the anarchist communist
idea and the syndicalist organisations. According to the FAKB Platform,
all such organisations would relate to each other on the basis of
âreciprocal dependenceâ and âideological communality.â
Cold War and Decolonisation in Africa and Asia
The anarchist movement is widely seen as being at its lowest ebb in the
1950s, when capitalism was in a post-war boom, and the Cold War between
the alternate capitalisms of the USA and USSR was at its height. To a
large extent this is true. In 1955, the IWW was at its weakest in 50
years of existence, neo-fascism was still ascending in most of Latin
America and the Mediterranean, Bolshevism was ascending in the Far East,
the revolution in China had largely been lost to âMaoistâ Marxist
totalitarianism in 1949, and Korea was permanently carved into red and
white totalitarian camps by 1953, closing the door on both revolutionary
anarchist and libertarian reformist options.
This view, however, ignores the key role played in Cuba by anarchists
within the Second Escambray Front, the Student Revolutionary Directorate
(DRE), the stateâs Cuban Labour Confederation (CTC), and even within
Fidel Castroâs 26^(th) of July Movement itself.[89] The anarchists had
their own organised presence, as well. The Federation of Anarchist
Groups of Cuba (FGAC) had been founded in 1924 and reorganised as the
Cuban Libertarian Alliance (ALC) in 1939; reconstituted in 1944, during
the Cuban Revolution, the ALC had sections in all Cuban provinces, with
wide influence in both the cities and in the rural areas, among
industrial workers and plantation workers, miners and craft workers,
fishermen and journalists, dockers and transport workers. The
clandestine anarcho-syndicalist General Confederation of Labour (CGT)
had been founded in 1931 under the US-backed Gerardo Machado
dictatorship as an underground union federation, taking with it many
sections of the formerly anarcho-syndicalist CNOC (founded in 1925)
which had been transformed under Marxist leadership into the âyellowâ
Cuban Labour Confederation (CTC), run by the Batista regime. By a twist
of fate, when Fulgencio Batista had been defeated at the polls in 1944
(before his dictatorial return in 1952) and his Marxist allies were
kicked out of the leadership of the CTC, the vacuum was filled by the
anarcho-syndicalists, meaning that at the time the Revolution erupted,
they ran both the underground CGT and the official CTC.
Given that the Cuban Revolution remains, to this day, the touchstone of
diverse tendencies arising from the New Left, the centrality of the
anarchist movement to the anti-Batista Revolution, and the fraudulent,
counter-revolutionary role played by the Castroites who militarised and
impoverished Cuban society, destroyed free labour, and corporatised the
unions along Fascist lines, building a traditional Latino strong-man
personality cult around Fidel Castro, a close friend of Nazi sympathiser
Juan PerĂłn of Argentina and of Francoâs interior minister Manuel Fraga
Iribarne (whose former bodyguard was the leader of the Argentine
Anti-Communist Alliance, âTriple-A,â death-squad), cannot be
overemphasisedâbut is beyond the scope of this book to detail.[90]
Suffice to say that from 1961, when Castro established a USSR-backed
populist dictatorship on PerĂłnist/corporatist lines, the CGT was
outlawed and many of its members either jailed or driven into exile
while the CTC was absorbed into the state.
So the common suggestion that the Swedish Workersâ Central Organisation
(SAC)[91] was the sole remaining lighthouse of large-scale
anarcho-syndicalism, until its withdrawal from the IWA in 1959, not only
occludes the experience of the Cuban CGT and CTC, but ignores the fact
that the Chilean IWW, the anarcho-syndicalist General Confederation of
Labour (CGT), and the anarcho-syndicalist National Workersâ Unity
Movement (MUNT) of Chile combined to establish the powerful Chilean
Workersâ Central (CUT) in 1953, along with the Marxist and socialist
unions. The CUTâs national leadership included nine socialists, four
anarchists, two Marxists, two Christian democrats, an independent
left-wing Christian, and even a right-wing Phalangist; its statement of
aims and principles was, in fact, drawn up by three anarchists. Within
the CUT, the anarchists controlled the maritime workers, shoemakers, and
printers. The CUT built up membership among students, manual labourers,
peasants, intellectuals, and professionals, and started making demands
that were political and social, as well as economic. As a result, in
1956, the CUT declared a general strike and shut down the entire country
for two days. The Paco Ibåñez regime offered to hand over power to the
CUT, but the Marxist and socialist parties agreed to back down and end
the strike, against the strong objections of the anarchists. The
meddling left-wing politicians had sabotaged the first real chance to
establish workersâ control in Chile and, in fact, Latin America.[92]
The view that this period saw the end of anarchist organisation also
ignores other evidence of anarchist/syndicalist presence: the massive
six-month strike by the FORA-led Ship-building Workersâ Federation (FTB)
in Argentina in 1956, the countryâs largest strike in the 20^(th)
Century; the five-month resistance by some 100,000
syndicalist-influenced workers on the docks, mines, and freezing plants
of New Zealand in 1951;[93] the guerrilla campaigns of the 1940s and
1950s in the southern Yunan province of China, near the border with
Burma and Vietnam, carried out by the anarchist guerrilla Chu Cha-pei
and modelled on those of the Makhnovists and RPAU;[94] the continued
anarchist domination of the FOLâs successor, the Bolivian Regional
Workersâ Confederation (CORB) and its powerful Feminine Workersâ
Federation (FOF) under the leadership of Petronila Infantes, which
lasted until 1964;[95] and the survival of the revolutionary
syndicalist-influenced Industrial and Commercial Union of Southern
Rhodesia (ICU yase Rhodesia) into the mid-1950s.[96] Still, it was
largely a period of hibernation, in which much of the syndicalism in
evidence was âspontaneousâ and divorced from its anarchist origins.
That started to change with developments like the founding of the hugely
influential Uruguayan Anarchist Federation (FAU) in 1956, an
organisation that despite possessing a mere 500 official members built a
10,000âperson Worker-Student Resistance (ROE) network and a syndicalist
National Convention of Workers (CNT) that was 400,000 strong by 1972,
and which set the scene for Latin American continental resistance in the
years to come.[97] Despite operating in the most difficult of
conditions, anarchist guerrillas plagued the authorities in âMaoistâ
China and Francoist Spain, while there were reformist libertarian
resistance organisations in Allied-occupied South Korea: the clandestine
Autonomous Workersâ League (AWL) and the Autonomous Village Movement
(AVM), both creations of the synthesist FFSB, the latter managing to
maintain a twilight existence into the mid-1970s.[98] Still, anarchism,
and the working class as a whole, with which it has always been closely
associated, was in dire straits. It was only resuscitated on a global
scale by the âjoltâ of 1968, which initiated a wave of working class
resistance to the various forms of capitalism, with youth revolts in
Czechoslovakia (bloodily repressed by a Warsaw Pact armed invasion),
France (where 10 million striking workers almost toppled the Charles de
Gaulle regime), Italy, Japan, Mexico (where the Institutional
Revolutionary Partyâs forces committed the Tlatelolco Massacre in Mexico
City against protesters), Pakistan, Poland, Yugoslavia, the US, West
Germany, and in the former French colony of Senegal where the National
Union of Senegalese Workers (UNTS) came close to seizing control of the
state. In the old anarcho-syndicalist stronghold of Hunan province,
China, a group called the Federation of the Provincial Proletariat
(Shengwulian) emerged from the âRed Guardsâ that broke with both sides
of the Chinese Communist Party, and upheld the grassroots, federalist
traditions of the Paris Commune of 1871 and the Petrograd Soviet of
1917. The jolt, spurred on by the neoliberal contraction of capital,
which started dismantling the Westâs welfare states and further eroded
working class conditions in the Soviet bloc, unleashed a Fourth Wave of
anarchist organisation and guerrilla warfare, centred primarily in the
southern cone of Latin America, but also in the Middle East, a new field
of anarchist operations.
During this wave, anarchism and the libertarian strains of autonomism
that sprang up in Western Europe in the 1970s usually played second
fiddle to Maoism and Trotskyism, with many Western anarchists influenced
by the insurgent doctrines of the authoritarian Marxist rural guerrilla
strategist Ché Guevara, rather than by the libertarian communist urban
guerrilla strategist Abraham Guillén, whose ideas dominated in the
Southern Cone of Latin America among the anarchists and
âTrotskyists.â[99] In Chile, the armed Movement of the Revolutionary
Left (MIR) had an anarchist faction which existed from its founding in
1965 until most of them left in 1967, and its military-political line
was laid down by libertarian communist Marcello Ferrada-Noli. Several
former MIR guerrillas were later involved in the post-Pinochet founding
of the Anarcho-Communist Unification Congress (CUAC), later renamed the
Libertarian Communist Organisation (OLC). Explicitly anarchist guerrilla
organisations of this period in the global south included the FAUâs
Revolutionary Popular Organisation 33 (OPR-33) of Uruguay, powerfully
influenced by GuillĂ©nâs theories, and which defended the FAU-founded
syndicalist National Convention of Workers (CNT), and other class
formations during the Juan Bordaberry dictatorship; and Libertarian
Resistance (RL) of Argentina, which defended the factories during the
murderous Rafael Videla dictatorship.[100]
In Iraq, in 1973, the 300âstrong Workersâ Liberation Group (Shagila)
split from the Iraqi Communist Party because of its rapprochement with
the quasi-fascist ruling Baâath Partyâadopted a self-described
âanarchist-communismâ and waged a bitter campaign against Baâathist
secret policemen. Shagilaâs entire membership illegally crossed into
Iran in 1978 to help the indigenous Iranian anarchist movement, The
Scream of The People (CHK), which had splintered off the âMaoistâ
splinter of the leftist Fedayeen, support the autonomous neighbourhood
shorahs and workerâs kommitehs of the genuine Iranian Revolution which
ousted the dictatorial Shah, the most recent revolution in which
anarchist guerrillas played a role. The outstanding Polish journalist
Ryszard KapuĆciĆskiâwho personally witnessed 27 revolutions and coups in
the âThird Worldââwas in Tehran in late 1979, and his book on the causes
of the revolution, Shah of Shahs, refers to âopposition combat groupsâ
including âanarchistsâ but in contradiction to his evidence, former
Iranian Fedayeen guerrilla turned anarchist exile âPayman Piedarâ
claimed in a 2005 interview with me that this description was probably
politically inaccurate. When the Ayatollah Khomeiniâs French-backed
counter-revolution rolled forward in mid-1979, most Shagila and CHK
members were massacred, yet both organisations remain important for our
understanding of anarchist praxis in that they developed a form of
anarchism virtually in total isolation from the rest of the anarchist
movement, giving an indication of the universal validity of
revolutionary anarchism.[101]
In the global north, anarchist guerrilla organisations included: the
Angry Brigade (AB) of Britain, which focused exclusively on sabotage;
Direct Action (AD) of France, members of which later took a âMaoistâ
Marxist turn; Direct Action (DA) of Canada; the Movement 2 June (M2J) of
Germany, several of whose members later joined the Red Army Faction
(RAF); and the Anti-capitalist Autonomous Commandos (KAA) of the Basque
country. Between 1979 and 1984, eight KAA militants were killed in
action, 14 were jailed and others fled into exile in Latin America.[102]
An important pole of revolt in Europe in this period was a trio of
guerrilla organisations that arose from the Spanish exile MLEâs Interior
Defence (DI) organisation established in 1961 to assassinate Franco: the
First of May Group (GPM) founded in 1965, the Iberian Liberation
MovementâAutonomous Combat Groups (MIL-GAC) founded in 1971, and the
Groups of International Revolutionary Action (GARI) founded in 1974,
which ended its actions only several months before Franco died in
1975.[103]
Other important developments during the Fourth Wave were the
re-establishment of the Anarchist Black Cross (ABC) in 1968, initially
to deal with the issue of anarchist political prisoners in Francoist
Spain, especially those condemned to death by garrotte, and the founding
of the synthesist International of Anarchist Federations (IAF) at a
congress in Italy the same year. The IAF built on the international
network of the CIA, which had become moribund in approximately 1960. It
drew in young militants and older groups, and played a key role in
breaking the pro-Castro sentiment of sectors of the anarchist movement,
though it was to lose its own Cuban section over this question. Its key
section at the time was the FAF in France, but the 1968 congress drew in
regional anarchist organisations from Argentina, Australia, Britain,
Bulgaria (the exile Bulgarian Libertarian Union), the Cuban Libertarian
Movement in Exile (MLCE),[104] Italy, Japan, Mexico,[105] Norway, the
Netherlands, Switzerland, and the underground Iberian Anarchist
Federation (FAI) of Spain and Portugalâas well as anarchist groups in
Greece and Germany. In 1971, the IAF held its second congress in Paris
under more difficult circumstances, but reaffirmed its libertarian
communist principles. Later, the Cuban MLCE withdrew in a dispute over
the IFAâs failure to adopt a hard line against the Castroist
counter-revolution. Of particular interest are evidence of links with
groups in regions where an anarchist presence would not normally be
expected: a Neutralist Tribune from Vietnam; and an Anarchist Federation
from China, which was perhaps based in Hong Kong. In the 1970s, in
addition to its member organisations, the IFA had contacts with
anarchist federations in Australia, Chile, Denmark, Baden (Germany),
Japan, New Zealand, Portugal, Québec (Canada), Scotland, Sweden, and the
underground Uruguayan Libertarian Alliance (ALU), the IWA affiliate that
split from the FAU in 1963.
This mushrooming of anarchist organisations across the world was matched
by the resurgence of anarcho- and revolutionary syndicalism, as well as
autonomous worker organising that paralleled syndicalism in many ways,
in varied circumstances. For example, there was the establishment of an
IWW Marine Transport Workersâ Industrial Union (MTWIU) section in
Sweden. One of the key spurs to the resurgence of anarchism was the end
of the quasi-fascist regimes in Portugal in 1974, and Spain in 1975,
which saw the dramatic re-emergence of the CNT, with a membership of
200,000. In this period, however, the real harbinger of things to come
was the re-emergence of anarchism and revolutionary syndicalism within
the Soviet Empire.[106] This was evidenced by the presence, in 1970, of
an anarchist pirate radio station in Russia; the anarchist Left
Opposition (LO) group in Leningrad between 1976 and 1978; and the
Movement of Revolutionary Communards (MRC) that sprang up in the same
city between 1979â1982 in the wake of the LOâs suppression. In 1979, the
Free General Workersâ Union (SMOT), the first Russian
syndicalist-influenced organisation to emerge in decades, was founded,
and the MRC affiliated to it. Also in 1979, anarchists at the State
University of Dnepropetrovsk in the Ukraine were arrested for attempting
to establish a Communist League of Anarchists. Meanwhile, changes were
afoot in other Soviet satellite regimes of Eastern Europe with the
foundation of the clandestine Polish Anarchist Federation (FA) in 1988,
and the Anarcho-Syndicalist Federation (ASF) in Czechoslovakia in 1989,
just before the Marxist regime there collapsed. This was followed by the
founding in 1991 of the Anarchist Federation (AF) which defiantly
renamed itself the Czech and Slovak Anarchist Federation (CSAF) after
the division of the country into the Czech Republic and Slovakia.
Undoubtedly, there were anarcho- and revolutionary syndicalist
influences on unions elsewhere in this time. For example, syndicalism
was an influence, although not predominant, on the Federation of South
African Trade Unions (FOSATU), founded in 1979.[107]
LIBERTARIAN COMMUNISM
The ideas of the Platform, which were expressed in essence again by the
Friends of Durruti, have maintained the anarchist hard line time and
again, especially when the movement has been in crisis. Following the
defeat of the Spanish Revolution in 1939, many anarchist militants were
disillusioned and a deathly anti-revolutionary liberalism that focused
on âpersonal liberation,â rather than class struggle, crept into the
movement. In 1953, just after the anarchists had played a key role in
initiating the Cuban Revolution, the French anarchist-communist militant
George Fontenis wrote the Manifeste du communisme libertaire (Manifesto
of Libertarian Communism) for the platformist Libertarian Communist
Federation (FCL). The FCLâs origins were clandestine, as the platformist
tendency had arisen within the FAF in 1950, as a secret caucus called
the Thought-Battle Organisation (OPB), of which Fontenis was the
secretary. Fontenis later regretted this clandestinity, even though the
synthesists had their own similar network within the FAF. The existence
of the OPB only became known two years after it dramatically captured
and overhauled the FAF at its 1952 Congress, transforming it into the
FCL, with a minority of dissident synthesists leaving to reform the FAF
the following year. The unaccountable secrecy of the OPB faction, which
was apparently designed to attract the left flank of the French
Communist Party, tarnished the debate over the Manifesto.
As with other platformist-style manifestos, the Manifesto caused an
uproar, attacking the âsynthesistâ form of anarchist organising that
included extreme individualism, alongside anarcho-syndicalism, and a
mish-mash of libertarian ideas. It also rejected the usual Bolshevik
theories of the dictatorship of the proletariat (actually the
dictatorship of the party) and the two-stage revolution (actually the
revolution put on hold forever). It affirmed anarchism as a
class-struggle, revolutionary theory, and practice, and called for a
disciplined âvanguardâ to push the revolution forward. By vanguard,
Fontenis did not mean the Marxist-styled, self-appointed âleadersâ of
the people, which he said âleads to a pessimistic evaluation of the role
of the masses, to an aristocratic contempt for their political ability,
to concealed direction of revolutionary activity, and so to defeat.â
Instead, the Manifestoâs âvanguardâ was defined as a revolutionary
organisation tasked with âdeveloping the direct political responsibility
of the masses; it must aim to increase the massesâ ability to organise
themselves.â As its final aim, this group of activists was âto disappear
in becoming identical with the masses when they reach their highest
level of consciousness in achieving the revolution.â It would work
within established mass organisations like unions, educational groups,
mutual aid societies, and others, and actively propagate its ideas. Its
basic principles would be ideological and tactical unity, collective
action and discipline, and a federal, rather than centralised,
structure.
In Italy, in the 1950s, hardline âorganisationalâ anarchists founded the
Proletarian Action Anarchist Groups (GAAP) within the synthesist Italian
Anarchist Federation (FAI), and were later expelled. The GAAP did not
survive for long on its own, but in its brief existence, the GAAP united
with Fontenisâ FCL and the North African Libertarian Movement (MLNA) of
Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia, to form a Libertarian Communist
International (ICL) that was more of a Western Mediterranean
organisation, and which collapsed with the simultaneous suppression of
the FCL in France and the MLNA in Algeria in 1957. Despite the
disappearance of a specific platformist tendency in Italy, veterans of
the GAAP and the memory of its practice formed the backbone of todayâs
Federation of Communist Anarchists (FdCA), founded in 1985.
Fontenis is a controversial character in France, but as an obituary
states, he was âone of the leading figures in the postwar revolutionary
movement in France. He played an important role in the reconstruction
and reform of the French anarchist movement, and in supporting those
fighting for Algerian independence in the 1950s and 60s; a prominent
activist in May 68, he would go on to help (re)create a libertarian
communist movement in the 1970s; he was also in later life one of the
pillars of the Libre Pensée (Free Thought) movement; having joined the
Union of Libertarian Communist Workers (UTCL) in 1980, he would
subsequently become a member of Alternative Libertaire, and would remain
a member until his death at the age of 90,â in 2010. While platformism
in France suffered from the suppression of the FCL in 1957âuntil its
ideas were revived in 1968 with the founding of the Anarchist
Revolutionary Organisation (ORA) tendency that split from the FAF in
1970âit remained a minority tendency within the Western anarchist
movement. Its strong anti-imperialist credentials, which had been proven
in the Algerian Liberation War, meant that it did find a powerful
resonance within the Latin American anarchist movement, where it would
again manage to establish mass organisations.
The ORA called itself âa federation of territorial or trades groups and
not a gathering of individualsâ and its Organisational Contract (1970)
stated that âanarchism repudiates all authoritarianism: that of pure
individualism with its repudiation of society, and that of pure
communism which seeks to ignore the individual. Anarchism is not a
synthesis of antagonistic principles, but a juxtaposition of concrete,
living realities, the convergence of which must be sought in an
equilibrium as elastic as life itself.â While hailing the platformist
principles of ideological and tactical unity, collective responsibility,
rank-and-file decision-making, and libertarian federalism, the
Organisational Contract stated that the ORA âhas no pretensions to a
rigid ideological unity generating dogmatism [or, what it named âstodgy
uniformityâ]. But on the other hand, it refuses also to be merely a
motley collection of divergent tendencies, the frictions between which
would inevitably lead to stagnation.â
An Addendum to the Organisational Contract stated that the ORA âis to be
the driving force behind mass movements against authoritarian systemsâ
and it appears, in part, to have achieved this. The ORA inspired the
creation of platformist organisations with the same acronym in Denmark
in 1973 (since dissolved), Britain in the mid-1970s (since dissolved),
and Italy in 1976, the last of which became the FdCA of today in 1985.
The French ORA became todayâs French/Belgian Libertarian Communist
Organisation (OCL) and its Libertarian Alternative (AL) splinter. The
longevity of the FdCA and ORA/OCL/AL lines help put paid to the idea
that platformism is a disguised intermediary stage in a rightward
capitulation towards Bolshevism.
In Latin America, as stated, platformism renewed its strength. Known as
especifismo (specifism), in the southern cone of the continent, it
developed the most powerful challenge to state-capitalist revolutionism,
especially after the 1956 founding of the Uruguayan Anarchist Federation
(FAU), which harkened back to an earlier federation of the same name,
between the years 1938 and 1941. In 1972, the FAU produced the seminal
text of especifismo, Huerta Grande (Large Orchard) which stressed the
need to avoid âvoluntarismâ driven merely by good will, in favour of a
political line informed by a sound analysis of the real conditions in
Uruguay. In rejecting the creation of a new theory of action from
scratch, Huerta Grande automatically rejected bourgeois and
âfashionableâ analyses out of hand, in favour of revolutionary socialist
analyses that were directly applicable to the situation in Uruguay.
Those analyses would then be linked to the ideological objectives of the
FAU, in transforming Uruguayan society by its political praxis, although
âonly through it [praxis], through its concrete existence, in the tested
conditions of its development, can we elaborate a useful theoretical
framework.â
the Era of Soviet Collapse and Neoliberal Hegemony
The Fourth Wave of anarchist insurgencies were crushed by neo-fascist
repression in Latin America in the mid-1970s, as the US continued to
fund death squads into the 1980s, and by the increasingly militarised
response of many anarchists in Western Europe and North America, due to
their isolation from the popular classes. This led many to embrace
terrorism, Maoism, Third Worldism, and other deviations, but anarcho-
and revolutionary syndicalism steadily rebuilt, as did anarchist
political organisation. A Fifth Wave, far broader than the Fourth, was
soon unleashed between 1989 and 1991, with the dramatic collapse of the
Soviet Union and the liberation of its Eastern European satellite
colonies, including the Marxist oddity that was Albania and the Titoist
dissident region of Yugoslavia. Immediately, the underground anarchist
movement in those countries surged forth, with the Polish AF and the
Czechoslovakian ASF, and with the Confederation of Anarcho-Syndicalists
(KAS) and Confederation of Revolutionary Anarcho-Syndicalists (KRAS),
both founded in Russia in 1989, leading the way. The explosion of new
anarchist organisations in the former Soviet empire has been remarkable:
from the Baltic states to the Balkan states, and Belarus to Kazakhstan,
there is barely a region of the ex-USSR and its satellites which has not
seen a newly emergent anarchist and anarcho-/revolutionary syndicalist
movement. Notable is the establishment of organisations like the
2,000âstrong Revolutionary Confederation of Anarcho-Syndicalists, Nestor
Makhno (RKAS-NM) in former anarchist strongholds like the Ukraine, and
the emergence of explicitly âMakhnovistâ groups in countries like Greece
and Turkey.
Geographically the broadest self-described âanarchist-communistâ network
in the world today, outside of the syndicalist union federations, is
Autonomous Action (AD), with branches in 20 Russian cities, as well as
in Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Ukraineâalthough by my definition,
AD is a synthesist organisation.[108] The ongoing development of
underground anarcho-syndicalist networks under Marxist dictatorships,
like that of Cuba, which are rapidly embracing liberal capitalism,
demonstrates that we can expect a further emergence in times to come,
especially as totalitarianism loses its grip in China, Vietnam, and
North Korea. Although no current anarchist underground is known in those
latter regions, in 1997, a Swedish SAC delegation to Cuba discovered
there was an active indigenous anarcho-syndicalist underground. By the
2000s, the exile MLC was rebuilding itself and established the Aid Group
for the Libertarians and Independent Syndicalists in Cuba (GALSIC),
which, as Fidel Castroâs health failed, began to publish the bulletin
Cuba Libertaria (Libertarian Cuba) in 2004. The collapse of right-wing
dictatorships in Latin America, left-wing dictatorships in Eastern
Europe and Central Asia, the reactionary South Korean state, South
African apartheid, and the emergence of militant new social movements,
as capital contracts ever more severely into a neo-corporatist crisis,
has spurred on the revival of especifista organisations in Argentina,
Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Chile, Ecuador, Mexico, Peru,
Venezuela, and Uruguay, and the emergence of a platformist organisation
in French Guiana. The primary organisation that helped initiate this
spurt of new growth was the revived FAU of Uruguay, which rebuilt in
1985, repudiated its earlier pro-Castroism, and developed an especifist
conception similar to the Platform. The result of its leading role in
regenerating anarchist praxis in the southern cone of Latin America is
that most of the regionâs most significant new organisations are
especifista/platformist organisations.[109]
The Zapatista Revolt in Chiapas in southern Mexico in 1994, with its
post-Soviet Makhnovist-like model of libertarian socialist, civilian,
decentralised administration, defended by a militia, and its explicit
references to the anarchist-influenced Zapatista Revolution of the
1910s, helped provide the impetus for the creation of neighbouring
anarchist-indigenist organisations such as the Indigenous Popular
Council of OaxacaâRicardo Flores MagĂłn (CIPO-RFM) and its splinter
MagĂłnista-Zapatista Alliance (AMZ). In Africa, the conditions of
neo-colonialism lead to the construction of anarchist organisations,
which often for the same reasons proved ephemeral; these include the
Anarchist Party for Individual Freedoms in the Republic (PALIR) in
Senegal in 1981, the fate of which is unknown to me, the Anarchist
Workersâ and Studentsâ Group (ASWG) of Zambia in 1998 which did not
survive the death of its founder, librarian Wilstar Choongo (1964â1999),
and the Wiyathi Collective within the Anti-Capitalist Convergence of
Kenya (ACCK) in the early 2000s. But the closing phases of resistance to
militarism and apartheid saw the (re-)emergence of larger or more
durable anarchist organisations where its heritage had been slender: the
3,240âstrong IWW section among diamond miners in Sierra Leone in the
early 1990s, which was sadly destroyed in 1997 by the civil war
precipitated by a military coup dâĂ©tat (the fate of members such as
local delegate Bright Chikezi who were transported to Guinea by US
Marines remaining unknown); the anarcho-syndicalist Awareness League
(AL) of Nigeria, which rose to about 1,000 members in the oil and other
industries during the General Sani Abacha dictatorship; and the
Anarchist Resistance Movement (ARM), and Durban Anarchist Federation
(DAF) of South Africa, the latter two being the forerunners of todayâs
Zabalaza Anarchist Communist Front (ZACF), an especifista organisation
founded in 2003 by myself and a multiracial group of anarchists, along
Brazilian lines, which is still active today as a tiny, but prolific,
ideologically influential core.[110]
Invigorated by the âBattle of Seattleâ and public disgust at the US-led
imperialist wars against Afghanistan and Iraq, the organised anarchist
movement in North Americaâlong plagued by individualism, primitivism,
and other anti-class-war ideologiesâhas rediscovered itself, notably
with the founding of the North-Eastern Federation of Anarcho-Communists
(NEFAC) of the USA/Canada in 2000, which sparked the creation of similar
regional organisations across the continent. NEFAC has since subdivided
into three separate anarchist organisations, called the Common Struggle
Libertarian Communist Federation in the US, Common Cause in Ontario,
Canada, and the Libertarian Communist Union (UCL) in Québec,
Canada.[111] The neoliberal crisis has seen the establishment of
anarchist organisations in regions where there was no historical
precedent or where the traditions were long-dead: from Lebanon to Sierra
Leone, Costa Rica to Kenya, El Salvador to Zambia, Tunisia to the
Dominican Republic, Jordan to Uganda.
A Fifth Wave of anarcho- and revolutionary syndicalism has arisen,
despite the fractious debates that have cost the IWA its Japanese,
Colombian, and factions of its French and Italian sections. This is
apparent not only in the continued existence of the veteran
anarcho-syndicalist organisations of Western Europe, such as the General
Confederation of Labour (CGT) of Spain, which at 60,000 members is now
the largest in the world (and the third-largest union federation in
Spain, representing two million workers through workplace elections),
the 6,000âstrong Siberian Confederation of Labour (SKT), and the
National Confederation of LabourâFrance (CNT-F), which claims 5,000
members. The Swedish Central Workersâ Organisation (SAC) currently
claims a membership of 9,000, a thousand fewer members than in the late
1990s, after it discontinued the practice of including members who had
retired from their employment, but has embarked on an ambitious
programme to re-invigourate the relevance of syndicalism in Sweden. In
addition, there is the rank-and-file factory councilist/syndicalist
tendency within a section of the union âbase committeeâ movement of
Italy (CIB-UNICOBAS), the alternative âstruggle syndicalismâ unions in
France centred on the trade unions Solidarity Unity Democracy (SUD), and
SUD in Switzerland which explicitly recognise revolutionary syndicalism
as one of their main influences. Equally promising are the growing
contacts being made between such formations, and a wide range of unions
in Africa and Asia, ranging from the Democratic Republic of Congo to
Malaysia, Burkina Faso to Bangladesh, which interact with the
syndicalist movement.
New and old anarcho- and revolutionary syndicalist unions are
collaborating continentally by sector (railways, communications,
education etc.), across neoliberal âFortress Europe,â through the
European Federation of Alternative SyndicalismâEducation (FESAL-E)
network of âgrassroots syndicalistâ teachersâ unions.[112] This
expansive Fifth Wave has seen numerous splinters, arguments, collapses,
and reformations, but this is a sign of rapid growth and the development
of a plethora of different libertarian, communist approaches to the
challenges posed to the working class by turbo-capitalism in the new
millennium.
Lastly, the current wave is also experiencing a period of intense
international organising, with the formation of three new networks:
International Libertarian Solidarity (ILS),[113] founded in 2001 (though
defunct within the decade); the holding of a series of international
anarcho-/revolutionary syndicalist conferences, in San Francisco in
1999, in Paris in 2000, in Essen in 2002, and in Paris in 2007âwhich
have notably drawn in many emergent rank-and-file unions from West
Africa; and perhaps of more significance from a Bakuninist
dual-organisationist perspective, the establishment of the anarkismo.net
news and analysis website in 2003.[114] The anarkismo project currently
represents 33 âanarchist-communist,â especifista, and
platformist-inspired organisations from Argentina, Australia, Brazil,
Canada, Colombia, Denmark, Ecuador, France/Belgium, Ireland, Italy,
Norway, Mexico, Peru, South Africa, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, the
United States of America, and Uruguay. The projectâs name is in the
universalist Esperantist patois and its website publishes in French,
Spanish, English, Portuguese, Turkish, German, Dutch, Norwegian, Arabic,
Chinese, Russian, Polish and other languages, making it probably the
most serious internationalist attempt to provide sound, multilingual
anarchist analysis of social, economic, and political developments
around the world today.
In countries such as France, where mass organisations were the rule,
self-described platformist organisations have remained an important
influence on the specific anarchist movement to the present day. In the
1970s, they spread across Europe, and, in the 1990s, to Latin America,
the ex-Soviet empire, the Middle East, and Southern Africa. In the new
millennium, the mainstream mass organisational tendency is again in
ascendance. The lead given both by new organisations, such as Common
Struggle and the Workersâ Solidarity Movement (WSM) of Ireland, and
older ones, such as the Uruguayan FAU and the Italian FdCA, have
inspired a tremendous growth-spurt of anarchist-communist organising,
marked by the Bakuninist/platformist/especifista-influenced coherence of
their critiques and practices. The new organisations have mushroomed,
despite the revival by their antagonists of the hoary old claim that the
tendency is crypto-Bolshevik.
There is no real platformist international because, as I have shown,
platformism is primarily an organisational tactic within anarchism,
dating back to the Bakuninist stress on dual organisationism, rather
than an ideological orientation in its own right. But the aforementioned
organisationsânetworked together loosely as the international editorial
collective of the anarkismo projectâwork alongside the unaligned (and
where possible, the IWA-aligned) anarcho-syndicalist and specific
anarchist organisations. It is also worth noting the rise of specific
anarchist political organisations in parts of the world where the
anarchist tradition is more slender historically or did not previously
exist: Costa Rica, Estonia, French Guyana, Israel/Palestine, Lebanon,
Iran and the Iranian Diaspora, Turkey, Slovakia, Swaziland (ZACF), and
Zimbabwe. Also, the âArab Springâ has resulted in the emergence of at
least one new anarchist specific organisation in the Arab world: the
Libertarian Socialist Movement (LSM) in Egypt.[115]
PEOPLEâS POWER TOWARDS REVOLUTIONARY RUPTURE
In 1991, following the collapse of Soviet state capitalism, the French
platformist Libertarian Alternative (AL) took up the pro-organisational
torch with Manifeste pour une Alternative Libertaire (Manifesto for a
Libertarian Alternative).[116] Its aim was not only to help inject a
hardline perspective into the growing anarchist movement, but to show
other true revolutionaries a way out of the dead end into which state
âsocialismâ had led the workers. It dealt with the issues faced by the
modern working class under neoliberalism: mass unemployment,
casualisation, neo-colonialism, the enclosure of the peopleâs âcommonsâ
down to the genetic level, the rise of the new technical middle class
(computer specialists, etc.), and so forth. It emphasised the need for a
worker-driven revolutionary project that would aim to dismantle
capitalism and all forms of oppression, including those directed against
women. Like the Platform, it also called for âstatutory rules,â in order
that the anarchist organisation might run efficiently and co-ordinate
its external activities. These rules would be based on âa common
identityâ and strategies would be worked out by free discussion among
all members.
In 1993, five years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, the FAU, which
had rebuilt itself a decade previously after the collapse of the
dictatorship, adopted the DeclaraciĂłn de Principios de FAU (Declaration
of Principles of the FAU) at its 10^(th) Congress in Montevideo. The
Declaration of the Congress opened by stating, âThe vision of anarchism
advocated by the FAU is built around a critique of relations of
domination in all spheres of social activity (political, economic,
legal, military, educational, cultural, etc.).â Despite capitalism
lurching from one crisis to the next, the Declaration stated, anarchism
had proven its resilience, so against a fatalistic doctrine of the
inevitability of capitalist collapse, the anarchists posed a doctrine of
human agency, the âmeaning of will, of action, of the individual and
collective consciousness of the oppressed.â The end of the Soviet Empire
and the rise of American hegemonyââthe Cold War served both the US and
the USSR to reassert its hegemony in their respective areas of
influence, and internally, to perpetuate a system of privilege and
coercionââhad ushered in an era of volatile financial capital
destabilising entire regions, driving âchronic hunger and social
catastrophes expressed in local warsââthe statist/capitalist responses
to which the writers of the Declaration referred included
a strengthening and automation of instruments of repression and control
are now moving towards what they call âlow intensity conflictsâ, a kind
of preventive repression to prevent the outbreak and spread of
conflicts, usually desperate corollaries of social situations.
Simultaneously, in other areas is the strengthening of authoritarian
forms in response to social instability. Similarly, diffuse conceptions
of society conceived as a vertical structure, ultra-hierarchical and
static. This is the case of some ideological responses that are based on
religious beliefs. Perhaps less tangible, but equally widespread is the
crisis afflicting the world in virtually all political parties, caste
politics and the instruments of political mediation. It is partly this
crisis that has fuelled the resurgence of authoritarian populist
movements⊠This feeling, perversely fed clearly fascist-inspired groups
and movements. Again flourish anti-Semitism, xenophobia and racism, and
the uncertainty of tomorrow takes refuge in an ultra aggressive
nationalism.
The depth and range of the discussion of interpenetrated issues in the
Declaration demonstrates the maturity reached by the FAUâwell beyond the
simplicity of the Huerta Grandeâafter being forged in the fires of
repression that murdered so many of its members. For the purpose of this
essay, I will only focus, however, on their view of their own role. The
Declaration states:
The FAU is intended as a political expression of the class interests of
the dominated, exploited and oppressed, and is located at their service
and aspires to be an engine of social struggles, an engine that neither
represents nor replaces [in other words, does not substitute itself for
the class]⊠For us, the political organisation is also the area where
the experience of popular struggle accumulates, both domestically and
internationally, an instance that prevents the dilution of the knowledge
that the exploited and oppressed acquire over time.
In other words, the specific organisation is the repository of the
oppressed classesâ experience of struggle, struggle that in and of
itself constitutes the revolutionary gymnasium wherein the class tests
its strength for the overturning of the capitalist world order. The
Declaration averred that âThe political organisation⊠is well placed to
take on the different and complex levels of activity that may require
revolutionary work, the only body able to ensure all technical,
material, political, theoretical, and so on requirements which are sine
qua non of a strategy of rupture.â The rupture spoken of here lies at
the heart of especifismo. The specific organisationâs primary task is to
sever the ideological, political, social, and economic bonds that bind
the oppressed classes to the parasitic classes, and this rupture
constitutes the counter-cultural breach between the opposed forces,
creating the foundation on which revolutionary decentralist
anarchist-communist counter-power can be built. The Declaration
continues:
Our vision of the political organisation is contrary to the various
forms of âmodernismâ of âdepositors of consciousnessâ in short,
self-appointed groups who feel touched by the finger of god. The
organisation, maintaining and promoting the spirit of revolt, endorsing
all the present and future demands of a revolutionary process, hails
from militant organised labour and can only promote consistently and
with redoubled force the creation, strengthening and consolidation of
grassroots organisations, which form the core of a peopleâs power
revolution⊠And finally, in the strict domain of political action⊠the
FAU aspires to be the tool for realising our libertarian principles.
Going on to speak of âthe organisation as a school of life,â âof ethics,
in accordance with the values we espouse,â the Declaration states that
the âFAU is not a finished organisation, it is rather a project. In this
sense, it is also a life-plan that attracts the men and women of our
people willing to find ways of a better and more humane existence [it
is] a constant forge, which is not decreed once and for all, bur that is
produced in a constant revolutionary effort.â
In 2005, the Italian militant schoolteacher Saverio Crapraro, member of
the FdCA, produced Comunisti Anarchici: Una Questione di Classe
(Anarchist-Communists: A Question of Class),[117] which spelled out the
key theoretical bases of the idea, tracing a lineage from Bakunin to
Luigi Fabbri to Camillo Berneri. Luigi Fabbri (1877â1935), a prolific
anarchist writer and long-time associate of Malatesta died during the
Fascist era in exile in Uruguay where his daughter the anarchist writer
and publisher Luce Fabbri (1908â2000) was involved with the synthesist
ALU splinter off the FAU. Camillo Berneri (1897â1937), an anarchist
philosopher, theorist and activistâheld by many Italian anarchists to be
Malatestaâs ideological heirâfought in the resistance to the Fascists
until 1926 when he fled Italy. He was murdered by the Bolsheviks during
the Spanish Revolution. Crapraroâs A Question of Class tied this rather
Italianate lineage to the experiments of the Paris Commune, and the
Ukrainian and Spanish Revolutions. It argued for distinctions between
not only Bakuninism and the Left, but between it and other âanarchistâ
tendencies, using a method of historical materialism. A Question of
Class argued for organisational dualism of the specific organisation
working within the mass organisation, stating that
The relationship between the masses and their most conscious elements
(the vanguard) is one of the fundamental problems regarding the
formulation of a revolutionary strategy. The absence of a solution to
this problem, or incorrect solutions to it, lie behind every historical
failure of each revolutionary project or else are the basis of the
failures in those countries where revolutions enjoyed some initial
success. No school of Marxism has yet clarified that relationship in its
essence, and while on the part of Anarchists, the rejection a priori of
the concept of a vanguard (a word which evokes an unwarranted idea of
authority) has long impeded any detailed explanation. The only clear
thinking on the matter remains, even after over a century, Bakunin.
The FdCA position paper goes on to state that:
The capitalist system has perfected a series of instruments with which
it can recover what it loses to workersâ demands, so it is perfectly
utopian to claim that the material needs [of the proletariat] and their
satisfaction can automatically provoke the end of capitalism, ruined by
its internal contradictions. The struggle for material needs must also
be the seed for class consciousness and the basis on which a detailed
strategy for attacking the capitalist system can be grounded. It must
also be a revolutionary strategy, which can be a point of reference for
the political growth of the proletariat in the struggle and ensure an
increase in those struggles as part of a strategic process which will
direct them towards the goal of the revolution. An organisation is
therefore required for the development of strategy and this organisation
(the specific organisation) of revolutionary proletarians must be based
on a common theory. This is organisational dualism.
Crapraro goes on to say that the defining features of the mass
organisation, that which âthe masses build for their defence of their
interests are: heterogeneity, due to the fact that its goal,
independently of the political ideas of its members, is not to unite
people who are already members of this party or that but to unite all
workers who share the interests to be defended; [and] direct action, by
which we mean the first-hand running of the struggles and agreement on
demands, as a constant practice, in other words by the workers. The
labour union, as a mass organisation, is therefore a tool in the hands
of the working classes for the improvement of their economic conditions
and for their emancipation, through anti-capitalist struggle.â It is
neither the creation nor toy of the specific organisation, or the
exclusive preserve of revolutionaries, but an all-embracing organisation
of class. He goes on to describe the tasks of the specific organisation
âto be the depository for the class memoryâ and âto elaborate a common
strategy which can ensure the linking of all the struggles and which can
stimulate and guide.â But the specific organisation, for Crapraro and
the FdCA, is neither a Leninist party which sits above the masses, nor a
mere connector of struggles, lacking a strategy of its own; rather the
organisation is a âparty-guideâ that âestablishes a political line which
is then transmitted to the [mass] organisations, like a drive belt.â
âFront of Oppressed Classesâ
By involvement in everyday struggles, we build tomorrow today, a new
world in the shell of the old, and create a dual-power situation as
exists now in Argentina: popular power of the base undermines the
parasitic power of the bourgeoisie. History is not neutral. In school,
we are told that we need governments and bosses. We are told that
history is a struggle between different governments, armies, and ruling
elites. We are told that only the rich and powerful make history. What
we are not told is that ordinary people have fought the bosses and
rulers every step of the way and that this class war is the true engine
of civilisation and progress. We are not told that governments and
capitalism are not only unnecessary, but destructive of all that is
worthwhile. We, as anarchists, know that people, even the bourgeoisie,
are not inherently bad; we all merely conform to our class interests.
Given the right conditions, conditions of true equality and freedom, a
powerful spirit of mutual aid and co-operation has been demonstrated to
come to the fore in the popular masses.
How we act is related to the structure of society. When oppression and
exploitation are forcibly removed by directly-democratic,
horizontally-federated organisations operating under the guidance of the
popular will, then the âgoodnessâ that is in most of us comes through
and flourishes as it did when the workers held the reigns in Argentina,
Macedonia, Ukraine, Spain, Mexico, Manchuria, China, Iran, Cuba, France,
Nicaragua, Bolivia, Algeria, and elsewhere. I hope that I have shown
that what we anarchists are putting forward are not just pretty,
unrealistic ideas. I hope I have indicated with this brief introduction
to the broad anarchist movementâs rich history that these ideas can
work; a new society can be created with the workers, peasants, and the
poor in control.
But it wonât happen spontaneouslyâwe must organise for it. That is why
we need revolutionary organisations that draw together all those
fighting for workersâ control of the means of production and
directly-democratic community self-organisation, organisations that give
us the chance to exchange ideas and experiences and to learn from the
lessons of history. We do not need groups of pushy leaders and their
passive followers. As Rosa Luxemburg said in Organisational Questions of
the Russian Social Democracy: âLet us put it quite bluntly: the errors
committed by a truly revolutionary workersâ movement are historically
far more fruitful and valuable than the infallibility of even the best
central committee.â[118] We do not need elite political caucuses and
âvanguard partiesâ dictating to us from on high. What we need are
working class organisations under workersâ directly-democratic control,
with strictly-mandated delegates, subject to rank-and-file
decision-making, mobilising the mass of ordinary people, in the process
of making a truly social, grassroots revolution, with communes/soviets
and syndicalist unions federated horizontally across urban and rural
areas, defended by an armed militia, under the pluralistic civilian
control of mass organisations of the class. These, in turn, are
invigorated by specific organisations of anarchist tendency, on the
grounds laid out by Bakunin and his followers, along the lines of
platformism/especificismo.
A most important point is, however, that anarchists are not, and should
not, be the sole organisers of the working class in preparation for
revolution. To put it plainly, we anarchists are not fighting for an
anarchist world, but a free world, and we are not the only social force
moving in a libertarian direction. We need to be deeply and intimately
involved in the global, anti-neoliberal movement and in the practical
day-to-day struggles of the working class, demonstrating mutual aid,
solidarity, responsibility, federalism, and all the other principles of
revolutionary anarchism in action.
This point was made by the anarchist group Rebel Libertarian Socialism
(Auca-SL) of Argentina, in its Declaration of Principles (1998): âthe
model of the Single Revolutionary Party is exhausted. It has
demonstrated its lack of flexibility against the different political
manifestations of our class.â In opposition to this traditional,
narrow-minded political idea of the role of the revolutionary
organisation, Auca-SL promoted the idea of a âFront of Oppressed Classes
[FOC] where syndicalist, social and political models which, in general,
struggle for revolutionary change will converge. It is there, in the
heart of the FOC, where a healthy debate of political tendencies and
positions should be engaged in, so that the course the FOC takes is
representative of the existing correlation of popular forces.â The FOC
idea is totally different from the Popular Front idea, common to
Marxist-Leninists, in which they form a front organisation supposedly
for solidarity purposes, then insert their leaders to rule this
commandeered social force, which they then order about like an army.
Instead, the anarchist FOC concept represents the progressive, political
plurality, anti-authoritarian solidarity, and innovative diversity of a
united working class, in action against both capital and its Siamese
twin, the state. Auca-SL warned against any bureaucratisation of the
social struggle along Marxist-Leninist lines.
The FdCAâs A Question of Class echoes this point, defining the specific
organisation as âAn organisation which is an internal part of the mass
organisation and not external to it means that members of the specific
organisation must be class-struggle militants. It does not substitute
the masses in revolutionary action, but rather stimulates their
political growth, their desire for self-management and
self-organisation, leading to a revolutionary project. It is an
inspiring, energetic force within the mass organisation to which it
brings its strategy. For the very reason that members of the specific
organisation are also members of the mass organisation, as members of
the mass organisation, they bring to it their points of view in order
that the action of the masses can be strategically co-ordinated, with
the aim of reaching the revolutionary objective in the most efficient
way possible.â
Importantly, A Question of Class states: â[w]e defend other progressive
organisations that are involved in struggles from repression. Where
necessary, we will engage in United Front [similar to the FOC concept]
actions alongside them.â However, whilst we anarchists should defend
these groups unconditionally, we should not do so uncriticallyâwe must
maintain our independence and argue for Bakuninist ideas. The natural
skills, intelligence, innovation, and solidarity owned by the working
class are the only things that can produce both the social revolutionary
dynamite needed to destroy the neo-corporatist neoliberal systemâand the
fertiliser that will enrich the post-revolutionary soil, so that it
comes up roses: beautiful, but armed with thorns. The renewed energy,
potency, and practicality of the anarchist movement has seen new
organisations spreading like wildfire. As with the New Left of the
Fourth Wave, this is taking place so much more deliberately and clearly
today, through the contemporary Fifth Wave global anti-capitalist
movement.
The working class is re-opening the anarchist/syndicalist toolbox of
federated direct democracy, filled with tools carefully polished and
maintained over the decades by a dedicated militant minority, to
rediscover not only the most effective forms of directly-democratic
resistance, but the cultural forms that sustained a decentralised form
of popular power. Now that millions of people are excluded from the
globally uniform, pay-to-enjoy spectacle of capitalist culture, many are
turning to self-generated counter-culture, in all its locally-specific
diversity, to sustain their new vision of a self-empowered,
counter-power world. The realisability of this vision has become
tangible again, and so its message more commanding of attention. In
1848, Karl Marx and Friedrich Engelsâ Manifesto of the Communist Party
argued that a ânew spectre,â the âspectre of communism,â was âhauntingâ
Europe. Today, to judge from the mainstream press, a ânew spectre,â that
of revolutionary anarchism, haunts the halls of power across the world
of neoliberal capitalismâshowing its vaunted hegemony to be a lie. As an
issue of the New York Times a decade ago had it, anarchism remains âthe
idea that would not die.â
[1] The First International, the informal name of the International
Workingmenâs Association (IWMA) of 1864â1877, was the first significant
international socialist organisation to unite trade unions and militants
across national lines. It split in 1872 into an anarchist majority
organisation and a Marxist minority faction.
[2] Nancy Fraser, Rethinking the Public Sphere: A Contribution to the
Critique of Actually Existing Democracy, Duke University Press, Durham,
USA, 1990; her ideas are updated in Nancy Fraser, Transnationalizing the
Public Sphere: On the Legitimacy and Efficacy of Public Opinion in a
Post-Westphalian World, 2007, online at
.
[3] Buenaventura Durruti (1896â1936), interviewed by Pierre van Passen
of the Toronto Star on 5 August 1936.
[4] Steven Hirsch, Anarcho-Syndicalist Roots of a Multi-Class Alliance:
Organized Labor and the Peruvian Aprista Party 1900â1933, PhD thesis,
George Washington University Press, Washington DC, USA, 1997.
[5] On the theory of anarchism as some sort of timeless primordial
spirit of revolt, see Peter Marshall, Demanding the Impossible: A
History of Anarchism, HarperCollins, London, UK, 2008. While a very
valuable reference, Marshallâs book uses a broader and more vague
definition of anarchism than I do, drawing in many tendencies that,
while they may be libertarian, antedate the formation of the First
International, are often only linked by their common anti-statism, and
are totally incompatible on innumerable other issues.
[6] This quote is from his essay Statism and Anarchy, 1873, quoted in
Sam Dolgoff (ed), Bakunin on Anarchy, George Allen and Unwin, London,
UK, 1971. The best new study is Mark Leier, Bakunin: The Creative Urge;
A Biography, Publishers Group Canada, Toronto, 2006. Bakuninâs ideas on
anarchist organisation can be found specifically in the Rules and
Programme of the International Alliance of Socialist Democracy (1868),
and the Programme of the International Brotherhood (1869), both
available online at
anarchistplatform.wordpress.com
.
[7] Bakunin, quoted in Dolgoff, Bakunin on Anarchy.
[8] For a groundbreaking series of case studies of anarchist engagements
on the national question in Africa, Asia, colonial Europe (Ireland and
Ukraine), and Latin America, read Lucien van der Walt and Steven J.
Hirsch (eds), Anarchism and Syndicalism in the Colonial and Postcolonial
World: The Praxis of National Liberation, Internationalism and Social
Revolution, Brill, The Netherlands, 2010. A similarly broad series of
case studies is due to be published shortly on the roots and adaptations
of anarchism across the globe, José Antonio Guttiérez Dantón (ed), Las
Vertiente de la AnarquĂa, Libros de Anarres, Buenos Aires, Argentina,
(due in 2013).
[9] Giuseppe Fanelli (1827â1877), an Italian anarchist agitator and
member of Bakuninâs International Brotherhood who had fought with
Garibaldiâs forces, and in the Polish Revolt of 1862â1863.
[10] Harmut RĂŒbner, Occupational Culture, Conflict Patterns and
Organizational Behaviour: Perspectives of Syndicalism in 20^(th) Century
Shipping, revised version of paper presented at ââSyndicalism: Swedish
and Historical Experiences,ââ Department of Economic History, Stockholm
University, 13â14 March 1998.
[11]
F. N. Brill, in A Brief History of the IWW outside the US 1905â1999,
IWW, USA, 1999, online at
www.iww.org/en/history/library/misc/FNBrill1999, cites IWW
activities in sites such as Chile, China, Cuba, Ecuador, Fiji,
Germany, Japan, Peru, Siberia, and Sierra Leone. Brillâs list is
far from exhaustive: for a study of seaboard syndicalism in Cape
Town, South Africa, read Lucien van der Walt, Anarchism and
Syndicalism in an African Port City: the Revolutionary
Traditions of Cape Townâs Multiracial Working Class, 1904â1931,
Labour History, Routledge, UK, 2011.
[12] Bert Altena, Analysing Revolutionary Syndicalism: the Importance of
Community, conference paper, Anarchist Studies Network, UK, 1999, since
updated in New Perspectives on Anarchism, Labour and Syndicalism, David
Berry and Constance Bantam (eds), Cambridge Scholars Publishing,
Newcastle-on-Tyne, UK, 2010.
[13] The Haymarket Martyrs were seven Central Labor Union anarchist
militants framed and executed by the US state in 1887 (an eighth
committed suicide in jail). The international workersâ festival of May
Day commemorates their murders.
[14] The CGTâs Charter of Amiens, a famous position statement of
revolutionary syndicalism, helped spark the Second Wave explosion of
anarcho-syndicalism across Latin America, but had the notable weakness
of being hostile to politicking in the trade unionsâeven by
anarchistsâcreating an âapolitical syndicalismâ vulnerable to capture by
reformists.
[15] The uprising of the Kronstadt Soviet at the naval base near St.
Petersburg in 1921 is widely seen as the last-ditch attempt to
reinvigourate the proletarian Russian Revolution against the
dictatorship of the Bolsheviks. Its key position statement in favour of
pluralistic direct democracy exercised by free soviets, the
Petropavlovsk Resolution taken by the 1^(st) & 2^(nd) Squadrons of the
Baltic Fleet, is available in Daniel Guérin (ed), No Gods No Masters: An
Anthology of Anarchism, Book 2, AK Press, Oakland, USA, 1998.
[16] The Spanish Revolution is usually misrepresented in the literature
as the only historical example of the anarchist movement exercising
control over large tracts of territory (in particular, the cantons of
Catalonia, Aragon, and Andalucia), but as I shall demonstrate in this
essay, the thesis of âSpanish exceptionalismâ is belied by the mass
anarchist territorial control achieved in parts of Mexico, Manchuria,
and the Ukraine in particular. Also, the capitulation of the Spanish
mass movement to the machinations of their statist Republican allies, a
huge strategic error that led directly to the defeat of the Revolution,
remains insufficiently interrogated by anarchists themselves. Still, the
Spanish situation remains the best-studied example of the pragmatic
anarchist âadministration of thingsâ in running large industrial cities
such as Barcelona, in the implantation of communal land-ownership in
Aragon, and in the directly-democratic practices of its frontline
militia.
[17] The 1968 Revolt was far from limited to France: in many respects it
was a global uprising that marked the definitive entrance onto the stage
of history of youth as a distinct political force.
[18] The most powerful East European movements were the Bulgarian and
the Polishâmore on these laterâbut the other movements in the region
(and in Scandinavia) were minority tendencies at best, although they
fought an honourable battle against authoritarian regimes in Finland and
the Baltic states, Yugoslavia, Greece and the Balkan states, Austria,
Hungary, and Czechoslovakia. For example, the Swedish Central Workersâ
Organisation (SAC), founded in 1910 and still active today, peaked at
only 32,000 members in 1920, while the anarcho-syndicalist faction
within the General Workersâ Confederation of Greece (GSEE) represented
one in eight members in 1918.
[19] On Egypt, read Anthony Gorman, ââDiverse in race, religion and
nationality⊠but united in aspirations of civil progressâ: the anarchist
movement in Egypt 1860â1940,â and on South Africa, read Lucien van der
Walt, âRevolutionary syndicalism, communism and the national question in
South African socialism, 1886â1928,â both available in Hirsch and van
der Walt, 2010. And for a comparative analysis between North Africa and
Southern Africa, but which covers other parts of the continent too, read
Michael Schmidt and Lucien van der Walt, âRoots and Adaptations of
Anarchism and Syndicalism in Africa 1870âthe Present,â in GutiĂ©rrez
DantĂłn (ed), due in 2012.
[20] On the transnational linkages between Central America and the
Caribbean, read Kirk Shaffer, âTropical Libertarians: anarchist
movements and networks in the Caribbean, Southern United States, and
Mexico, 1890s-1920,â in Hirsch and Van der Walt, 2010.
[21] On Australia and New Zealand, read Verity Burgman, Revolutionary
Industrial Unionism: the Industrial Workers of the World in Australia,
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, 1995; and Erik Olsen, The Red
Feds: Revolutionary Industrial Unionism and the New Zealand Federation
of Labour 1908â14, Oxford University Press, Auckland, New Zealand, 1988;
and Francis Schor, âLeft Labor Agitators in the Pacific Rim of the Early
Twentieth Century,â International Labor and Working Class History, No.
67, USA, Spring 2005.
[22] On Vietnam, the most important work is Hue-Tam Ho Tai, Radicalism
and the Origins of the Vietnamese Revolution, Harvard University Press,
Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA, and London, UK, 1992. On the Philippines
and its environs, read Benedict Anderson, Under Three Flags: Anarchism
and the Anti-colonial Imagination, Verso, London, UK, and New York, USA,
2005. On Malaysia, read C.F. Yong, âOrigins and Development of the
Malaysian Communist Movement 1919â1930,â Modern Asian Studies, Vol.5,
No.4, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, October 1991.
[23] On South Asia, specifically Hindustan in India, read Maia Ramnath,
Haj to Utopia: How the Ghadar Movement Charted Global Radicalism and
Attempted to Overthrow the British Empire, California World History
Library, USA, 2011; and Maia Ramnath, Decolonizing Anarchism: an
Antiauthoritarian History of Indiaâs Liberation Struggle, AK Press and
Institute for Anarchist Studies, USA, 2011.
[24] On the Levant, specifically Lebanon/Syria and Egypt, read the
groundbreaking work of Ilham Khuri-Makdisi, Levantine Trajectories: the
Formulation and Dissemination of Radical Ideas in and between Beirut,
Cairo and Alexandria 1860â1914, Harvard University, 2003.
[25] Lucien van der Walt and Michael Schmidt, Black Flame: the
Revolutionary Class Politics of Anarchism and Syndicalism, AK Press,
Oakland, USA, 2009. The bookâs blog is at
black-flame-anarchism.blogspot.com
.
[26] Michael Schmidt and Lucien van der Walt, Global Fire: 150 Fighting
Years of International Anarchism and Syndicalism, AK Press, Oakland, USA
(forthcoming).
[27] The best online archive of materials by and about Makhno and the
Makhnovists is at www.nestormakhno.info. A selection of Makhnoâs
writings is to be found in Alexandre Skirda (ed) and Paul Sharkey
(trans), The Struggle Against the State and Other Essays, 1996, online
at www.ditext.com/makhno/struggle/struggle.html.
[28] On the emergence of a distinctly anarchist mass movement within the
First International read the Robert Graham chapter in Gutiérrez Dantón
(ed), due in 2013. On the claiming of either Proudhon or Bakunin as the
progenitor of the anarchist movement, read the David Berry chapter in
GutiĂ©rrez DantĂłn (ed)âand compare it to the arguments in Van der Walt
and Schmidt, 2009.
[29] On the birth of the organised anarchist movement in Spain, rooted
in traditions of communalism and associationism, read the Luis Baños
chapter in Gutiérrez Dantón (ed), due in 2013, and on the First Wave
Spanish anarchist movement, read M. MolnĂĄr and J. Pekmez, Rural
Anarchism in Spain and the 1873 Cantonalist Revolution, in Henry A
Landsburger (ed), Rural Protest: Peasant Movements and Social Change,
International Institute for Labour Studies, Macmillan, London, UK, 1974.
[30] On the First and Second Wave Mexican anarchist movement, the
premiere text is John M. Hart, Anarchism and the Mexican Working Class
1860â1931, University of Texas Press, Austin, USA, 1978, but a good
overview is provided in the early chapters of Norman Caulfield, Mexican
Workers and the State: From the Porfiriato to NAFTA, Texas Christian
University Press, USA, 1998.
[31] On the First Wave Uruguayan anarchist movement, Marshall writes:
âAs early as 1875 the Regional Federation of the Eastern Republic of
Uruguay affiliated with the Bakuninist anti-authoritarian International
which emerged from the split at the Hague Conference. From this time
anarchism in Uruguay held sway in the workersâ movement and
revolutionary circles until the end of the 1920s.â
[32] On the First Wave Cuban anarchist movement, read Joan Casanovas
Codina, Labor & Colonialism in Cuba, doctoral dissertation, State
University of New York, USA, 1994; Gerald E Poyo, âThe Anarchist
Challenge to the Cuban Independence Movement 1885â1890,â Cuban Studies,
15:1, Winter 1985; and Frank FernĂĄndez, Cuban Anarchism: The History of
Movement, See Sharp Press, USA, 2001, online at
.
[33] On the roots and distinct influence of the American movement, read
Kevin Saliger in Gutiérrez Dantón (ed), due in 2013, while on the First,
Second and Third Wave American anarchist movement, read Kenyon Zimmer,
The Whole World Is Our Country: Immigration and Anarchism in the United
States, 1885â1940, University of Pittsburgh, USA, 2005.
[34] Daniel De Leon (1852â1914), a Socialist Labor Party (SLP) leader
and union organiser whose version of revolutionary syndicalism combined
industrial unionist direct action with a socialist party electoral
take-over of political power. Splitting from the IWW in 1908 over its
rejection of political action, he formed what was nicknamed the âDetroit
IWW,â opposed to the majority âChicago IWW,â and the schism was
replicated in other parts of the IWW world. Although as a person, De
Leon himself was a staunch Marxist, in practice the Detroit IWW was
sufficiently revolutionary syndicalist to fall within van der Walt and
my definition of the âbroad anarchist tradition.â
[35] David Footman, Red PreludeâA Biography of Zhelyabov, Barrie &
Rockcliff, The Cresset Press, London, 1968, first published 1944. The
NWU was founded by the joiner Stepan Khalturin (1857â1882). The son of a
peasant, he became involved in subversive activities three years before
founding the union, which was, according to Footman, âthe first serious
attempt in Russia to form a trade union. [Khalturin] was a man of
intelligence and energy and secured some sixty members and a number of
sympathisers.â Footman asserts that it had a notable influence on the
attitude of the Narodnaya Volya to organised labour, with narodnik
leader Andrei Zhelyabov declaring that âin Russia, a strike is a
political act.â Khalturin was opposed to terrorism, and the NWU
purchased its own press, but before it could start printing, it was
betrayed by a double-agent and a police raid shut the NWU and its press
down in 1879, arresting all but Khalturin who later became a Narodnaya
Volya militant and was executed as such in 1882. On the transitional
politics of these early Russian initiatives during the First Wave, read
the Frank Mintz chapter in Gutiérrez Dantón (ed), due in 2013.
[36] The narodniks were social revolutionaries whose praxis was to
immerse themselves in the peasantry and to fight the state by terrorism.
The movement, which had many women members including the anarchist and
later Marxist Vera Zasulich (1852â1919), gave birth to Russian
anarchism, nihilism, and Marxism, a process detailed in Footman, 1968.
[37] Followers of Louis Auguste Blanqui (1805â1881), a French
revolutionary whose vision involved a small group of conspirators
seizing power by coup dâetat rather than through the action of the
masses, a strategy ridiculed by Marx but approximated in many respects
by V.I. Leninâs Bolsheviks.
[38] On the Cantonalist Revolt, read MolnĂĄr and Pekmez, 1974.
[39] The standard biography of Kropotkin remains Martin A. Miller,
Kropotkin, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, USA, 1976.
[40] On the Haymarket affair, read Paul Avrich, The Haymarket Tragedy,
Princeton University Press, Princeton, USA, 1986; and anonymous, The
Anarchists of Chicago: Haymarket 1886â1986, Freedom centennial pamphlet,
London, UK, 1986. For the radicalising influence of the hangings on
generations of the American labour movement, read the Kevin Saliger
chapter in Gutiérrez Dantón (ed), due in 2013.
[41] The Programme and Object of the Secret Revolutionary Organisation
of the International Brotherhood, is available online at
anarchistplatform.wordpress.com
.
[42] âInternational Revolutionary Society or Brotherhood,â in Daniel
Guérin (ed), No Gods, No Masters, Book One, AK Press, Oakland, USA,1998.
[43] In 1910, the Belgian colonial authorities established a Bourse du
Travail in the eastern Zairean mining province of Katanga in order to
try and control the labour force there, but it is suggested in Aldwin
Roes, The Bourse du Travail de Katanga: A Parastatal Recruitment
Organisation with Monopolistic Powers? State-capital relations in the
Mobilisation of Katangaâs Labour Power. 1910â1914, London School of
Economics, 2007, that this stratagem in fact enabled Kantangan labour to
organise itself against the employersâindicating possible syndicalist
influence.
[44] For a sound explanation of the tragic trajectory of the Second Wave
CGT from revolutionary syndicalism to reformism, read Wayne Thorpe,
âUneasy Family: Revolutionary Syndicalism in Europe from the Charte de
Amiens to World War I,â in in New Perspectives on Anarchism, Labour and
Syndicalism: the Individual, the National and the Transnational, Berry
and Bantman (eds), Newcastle upon Tyne, UK, 2010, online at:
. Picking up the story from there into the Third Wave is David Berry, A
History of the French Anarchist Movement, 1917â1945, AK Press, Oakland,
USA, 2009.
[45] The standard anarchist history of the Macedonian Revolt is Georges
Balkansky, nom de guerre of Georgi Grigoriev (1906â1996), Liberation
Nationale et Liberation Sociale: lâExample de la Revolution
Macedonienne, Collection Anarchiste, Federation Anarchiste, Paris,
France, undated.
[46] On the anarchists in the Russian Revolt, read Paul Avrich, The
Russian Anarchists, Princeton University Press, USA, 1967.
[47] For a narrative overview of the history of the ABC, read Matthew
Hart, Yelenskysâ Fable: A History of the ABC, Anarchist Black Cross
Federation, Los Angeles, USA, 2002.
[48] For a brief sketch of the Second and Third Wave IWW, read Michael
Hargis, IWW Chronology 1905â1939, IWW, USA, originally titled â95 Years
of Revolutionary Industrial Unionism,â reprinted in Anarcho-Syndicalist
Review #27, Champaign, Illinois, USA, probably 2000. For more detailed
accounts, read Fred W. Thompson and Patrick Murfin, The IWW: its First
70 Years, IWW, Chicago, 1976, and Philip S Foner, The Industrial Workers
of the World, 1905â17, International Publishers, New York, 1965. For a
comparative analysis of the IWWâs engagement with the national question
in the USA and South Africa, read Peter Cole and Lucien van der Walt,
âCrossing the Color Lines, Crossing the Continents: Comparing the Racial
Politics of the IWW in South Africa and the United States, 1905â1925,â
Safundi: The Journal of South African and American Studies, Vol. 12, No.
1, New Haven, USA, January 2011.
[49] On Japan, the key text is John Crump, The Anarchist Movement in
Japan, Anarchist-Communist Federation, London, UK, 1996, while detail is
added by Matthew Turner, Museifushugi: a Brief History of Anarchism in
pre-War Japan, Libertarian Press, New Zealand, undated.
[50] On China, the key text is Arif Dirlik, Anarchism in the Chinese
Revolution, University of California Press, Berkley, USA, 1991, who
explores the national question in âAnarchism and the Question of Place:
Thoughts from the Chinese experience,â in Hirsch and van der Walt, 2010.
On the cultural roots and disputes of the early Chinese anarchist
movement read Dirlikâs chapter in GutiĂ©rrez DantĂłn (ed), due in 2013.
Other texts include Robert Scalpino & George T. Yu, The Chinese
Anarchist Movement, Insurgency Culture Collective, Los Angeles, USA,
1999, first published 1961, and Peter Zarrow, Anarchism and Chinese
Political Culture, Columbia University Press, New York, USA, 1990.
[51] On Korea, read Dongyoun Hwang, âKorean Anarchism before 1945: A
regional and transnational approach,â in Hirsch and van der Walt, 2010,
while on the influence of the national liberation struggle on Korea,
read the Dongyoun Hwang chapter in Gutiérrez Dantón (ed), due in 2013.
[52] The most detailed account of the key debates of the Amsterdam
Congress is to be found in Nestor McNab (ed), The International
Anarchist Congress, Amsterdam, 1907, online at
www.fdca.it/fdcaen/press/pamphlets/sla-5/sla-5.pdf, a translated
selection of extracts from Maurizio Antonioli, Dibattito sul
Sindicalismo: Atti del Congresso Internazionale Anarchico di Amsterdam
(1907), Italy, 1978.
[53] The current organisation of the FA is online at
www.federation-anarchiste.org, the CGA is online at www.c-g-a.org the
OCL is online at oclibertaire.free.fr and AL is online at
www.alternativelibertaire.org.
[54] On the Second, Third, and Fourth Wave FORA in all its permutations,
read Antonio LĂłpez, La F.O.R.A. en el Movimiento Obrero, Tupac
Ediciones, Buenos Aires, Argentina, 1998, which covers 1903 to about
1968; and Ronaldo Munck, Ricardo Falcon and Bernardo Galitelli,
Argentina: from Anarchism to PerĂłnismâWorkers, Unions and Politics
1855â1985, Zed Books, London, UK, 1987. A study of dockyard syndicalism
is Geoffroy de Laforcade, âStraddling the Nation and the Working World:
anarchism and syndicalism on the docks and rivers of Argentina,â in
Hirsch and van der Walt, 2010. The classic work is Diego Abad de
SantillĂĄn, La FORA: IdeologĂca y Trayectoria del Movimiento Obrero
Revolucionario en la Argentina, Libros de Anarres, Buenos Aires,
Argentina, 2007, first published 1933, which covers 1903â1930. A brief
overview is provided by Peter Yerril and Leo Rosser, Revolutionary
Unionism: the FORA in Argentina, ASP, London, UK, 1987.
[55] On the Second Wave / early Third Wave FORU, read Astrid Wessels,
âFrom Theatre Groups to Bank Robberies: the Diverse Experience of
Uruguayan Anarchists,â Institute for Anarchist Studies, Canada, 2004,
online at: www.anarchist-studies.org/articleview/82/1/9.
[56] On the Second Wave FORB/COB, read Eric Arthur Gordon, Anarchism in
Brazil: Theory and Practice 1890â1920, doctoral dissertation, Tulane
University, USA, 1978. Brazil is an enormous country and its anarchist
movement was and remains very geographically dispersed and ethnically
diverse, so for the study of one anarchist citadel alone, read Edilene
Toledo and Luigi Biondi, âConstructing Syndicalism and Anarchism
Globally: the transnational making of the syndicalist movement in SĂŁo
Paulo, Brazil, 1895â1935,â in Hirsch and van der Walt, 2010, and J.
Wolfe, Working Women, Working Men: SĂŁo Paulo and the rise of Brazilâs
Industrial Working Class, 1900â1955, Duke University Press, Durham, USA,
1993. A brief country overview is given by Edgar Rodrigues, Renato
Ramos, and Alexandre Samis, Against all Tyranny! Essays on Anarchism in
Brazil, translated by Paul Sharkey, Kate Sharpley Library, London, UK,
2003.
[57] On the utopian, popular liberal, and socialist roots of the Chilean
anarchist movement, read the Sergio Grez chapter in Gutiérrez Dantón
(ed), due in 2013, while on the Second Wave FTCh/FORCh, read José
Antonio GutiĂ©rrez DantĂłn, âAnarchism in Chile 1872â1995,â a synopsis of
Hector Pavelicâs 1994 book Caliche: el Rostro Pampino (Saltpetre: the
Pampasâ Face), published in Black Flag, London, UK, 1995, online at:
www.libcom.org/articles/anarchism-in-chile/index.php while Oscar Ortiz,
Cronica Anarquista de la SubversiĂłn Olvidada, Ediciones EspĂritu
Libertario, Chile, 2002, covers the Second to Fourth Waves: the 1900s to
the 1960s.
[58] On the Second Wave FORPa/CORP, read the work of Paraguayâs premier
anarcho-syndicalist, the typographer Ciriaco Duarte (1908â1996), Hombres
y Obras del Sindicalismo Libre en Paraguay, AsunciĂłn, Paraguay, 1965;
and Rafael Peroni (ed), Ciriaco Duarte, El Sindicalismo Libre en
Paraguay, AsunciĂłn, Paraguay, 1987.
[59] On the Second Wave FOH/CTC, read FernĂĄndez, 2001; and on their
Second Wave forerunners and their interconnectivity with US anarchists
and the IWW, read Carlos D. PĂ©rez de Alejo, âBeyond the Island: a
Transnational History of Cuban Anarchism, 1880â1914,â MA thesis,
University of Texas, Austin, USA, 2008.
[60] On the roots of the Mexican movement, as a factor of indigenous
resistance in a peripheral country to global capital, read the Brenda
Aguilar chapter in Gutiérrez Dantón (ed), due in 2013; while on the
Second Wave / early Third Wave COM/FORM/CGT, read Hart, 1978.
[61] On the emergence of the Peruvian movement from within the radical
liberal tradition and its adaptation to peasant struggles, read the
Franz GarcĂa chapter in GutiĂ©rrez DantĂłn (ed), due in 2013; while on the
Second Wave FORPe/FOL, read Steven J. Hirsch, âPeruvian
Anarcho-Syndicalism: Adapting Transnational Influences and Forging
Counterhegemonic Practices, 1905â1930,â in Hirsch and Van der Walt,
2010.
[62] On the emergence of Colombian anarcho-syndicalism from radical
nationalism, read the Diego Paredes chapter on Colombia in Gutiérrez
DantĂłn (ed), due in 2013. On the Second Wave FOC, read Luis Alfredo
Burbano, Mauricio FlĂłrez PinzĂłn and Diego Paredes Goicochea, Presente y
pasado del anarquismo y del anarcosindicalismo en Colombia, Libro de
Anarres, Buenos Aires, Argentina, undated.
[63] The roots of the Bolivian movement will be discussed by Silvia
Rivera Cusicanqui in Las Vertiente de la AnarquĂa, Libros de Anarres,
Buenos Aires, Argentina, (due in 2013). On the rather unique
feminist-indigenist anarchism of Bolivia, read Marcia Stephenson, Gender
and Modernity in Andean Bolivia, University of Texas Press, Texas, USA,
1999, and listen to âIndigenous Anarchism in Bolivia: An interview with
Silvia Rivera Cusicanqui,â Rustbelt Radio, Pittsburgh, USA, 2007, online
at:
.
[64] On the Second and Third Wave Ecuadoran movement, read Alexei PĂĄez,
El anarquismo en el Ecuador, CorporaciĂłn Editora Nacional, Quito,
Ecuador, 1986.
[65] On the Second Wave CNT, the leading new account is Angel Smith,
Anarchism, Revolution and Reaction: Catalan Labour and the Crisis of the
Spanish State, 1898â1923, International Studies in Social History,
Volume 8, Berghahn Books, Oxford, UK, 2007.
[66] On the Second Wave UON/CGT, the best study is JoĂŁo Freire, Freedom
Fighters: Anarchist Intellectuals, Workers and Soldiers in Portugalâs
History, Black Rose Books, Montreal, Canada, 2001.
[67] His writings can be found in Chaz Bufe and Mitchell Cowen Verter
(eds), Dreams of Freedom: A Ricardo Flores MagĂłn Reader, AK Press,
Oakland, USA, 2005. A Spanish-language online archive of MagĂłnista
materials is at www.archivomagon.net/. On his influence, read Salvador
HernĂĄndez Padilla, El MagĂłnismo: historia de una passion libertaria
1900â1922, Ediciones Era, Mexico City, 1984.
[68] On the British movement, read Bob Holton, British Syndicalism
1900â1914: Myths and Realities, Pluto Press, London, UK, 1976. On
Ireland, read Emmet OâConnor, Syndicalism in Ireland 1917â1923, Cork
University Press, Cork, Ireland, 1988. The leading Irish nationalist and
syndicalist, James Connolly, was executed for his role in the 1916
anti-colonial Easter Rising.
[69] Eric Hobsbawm, Revolutionaries, Abacus, London, UK, 1999.
[70] On the RPAU, the best anarchist study is Alexandre Skirda, Nestor
Makhno, Anarchyâs Cossack: the Struggle for Free Soviets in the Ukraine
1917â1921, AK Press, Oakland, USA, 2004. The classic partisan study is
Peter Arshinov, History of the Makhnovist Movement 1918â1921, Freedom
Press, London, UK, 1987, first published 1923. The class nature of the
RPAU is examined in Colin Darch, The Makhnovschina, 1917â1921, Ideology,
Nationalism and Peasant Insurgency in Early 20^(th) Century Ukraine, PhD
thesis, University of Bradford, UK, 1994. Tackling the colonial issue is
Aleksandr Shubin, âThe Makhnovist Movement and the National Question in
the Ukraine, 1917â1921,â in Hirsch and van der Walt, 2010. The structure
of the RPAU is best described in Vyacheslov Azerov, Kontrazvedka: The
story of the Makhnovist Intelligence Service, Black Cat Press, Edmonton,
Canada, 2008, Makhnoâs own incomplete memoirs (up until only 1918) are
particularly instructive: The Russian Revolution in Ukraine, and Under
the Blows of the Counterrevolution, Black Cat Press, Edmonton, Canada,
2008, first published 1929. The survival of a sporadic Makhnovist
movement in Ukraine into the 1930s is described in Anatoly V. Dubrovik,
D.I. Rublyov, and Szarapow (trans.), After Makhno, Kate Sharpley
Library, London, UK, 2009.
[71] As in Ukraine, Noveselovâs detachments and those of the anarchist
G.F. Rogov were defeated by the Red Army after helping defeat Admiral
Aleksandr Kolchakâs White forces, both partisan leaders being killed in
action. For an account of the anarchist movement in Siberia, read Frank
Mintzâs âA Siberian âMaknovschinaâ,â a review of Anatoli Shtirbulâs
Russian-language study The Anarchist Movement in Siberia in the First
Quarter of the 20^(th) Century: Anti-statist Revolt and Non-statist
Self-organisation of the Workers (1996), Mintzâs English-language review
is online at www.katesharpleylibrary.net/dfn3rg.
[72] The IWA is today much-declined from its glory days, but still
represents sections in Argentina, Brazil, Britain, France, Germany,
Italy, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Serbia, Slovakia, and Spain,
with âFriends of the IWAâ branches in Australia, Chile, and Colombia,
and is online at www.iwa-ait.org. For the best overview of Second Wave
international syndicalism, read Wayne Thorpe, âThe Workers Themselvesâ:
Revolutionary Syndicalism and International Labour, 1913â23, Kluwer
Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, The Netherlands, 1989. For an IWA
version of the Internationalâs history, read Vadim Damier and Malcolm
Archibald (trans), Anarcho-syndicalism in the 20^(th) Century, Black Cat
Press, Edmonton, Canada, 2009, online at
.
[73] The Platform is available online in multiple languages, alongside
numerous antecedent proto-platformist documents and especifista texts,
at
anarchistplatform.wordpress.com
.
[74] Michael Schmidt and Jack Grancharoff, Bulgarian Anarchism Armed:
the Anarcho-Communist Mass Line Part 1, Zabalaza Books, Johannesburg,
South Africa, 2008, translated into Portuguese as Anarquismo BĂșlgaro em
Armas: a Linha de Massas Anarco-Comunista Parte 1, FaĂsca PublicaçiĂ”es
Libertarias, SĂŁo Paulo, Brazil, 2009.
[75] The best explanation of the often misrepresented Polish movement is
RafaĆ Chwedorukâs âPolish Anarchism and Anarcho-Syndicalism in the
20^(th) Century,â in New Perspectives on Anarchism, Labour and
Syndicalism: the Individual, the National and the Transnational, David
Berry & Constance Bantman (eds), 2010.
[76] On the roots of the Italian anarchist movementâthe influence of
which was globalâand its debates with republicanism during the
Risorgimento, read the Gino Caraffi chapter in Gutiérrez Dantón (ed),
due in 2013. On the Bienno Rosso, read âAnarchists in the Italian
Factory Occupations,â Ian McKay, Anarcho-Syndicalist Review No.46, USA,
Spring 2007. The Anarchist FAQ at
has greater detail. The influence of the libertarian Marxist Antonio
Gramsci on this period is vastly overinflated in many accounts: in
reality, his tiny groupâs journal LâOrdine Nuovo (The New Order) had a
fortnightly circulation of only 5,000 in 1920âcompared to the anarchist
UAI newspaper Umanita Nova (New Humanity) which circulated 50,000 copies
daily in 1920 (the leading liberal newspaper Corriere della sera
circulated 450,000 daily).
[77] On this crucial period in Germany, read: Syndicalism and
Anarcho-Syndicalism in Germany, Helge Döhring, FAU, Germany, translated
by John Carroll, Anarcho-Syndicalism 101, USA, 2006; and Wayne Thorpe,
âKeeping the Faith: the German Syndicalists in the First World War,â
Central European History, Vol.33, No.2, undated.
[78] John Crump, Anarchism and Nationalism in East Asia, York University
Press, York, UK, 1995; Dongyoun Hwang, âReflections on Radicalism in
âEastern Asia: Regional Perspective, Transnational Approach, and
âEastern Asiaâ as a Regional Concept,â The Journal of Korean Studies,
Vol. 145, March 2009, (in Korean).
[79] Strangely, there is no adequate overview of the
anarchist/syndicalist movement in Latin America, its primary stronghold.
The best sources are: Carlos M. Rama and Angel J. Cappelletti, El
Anarquismo en America Latina, Biblioteca Ayachucho, Caracas, Venezuela,
1990 (Spanish language); S. Fanny Simon, âAnarchism and
Anarcho-syndicalism in South America,â The Hispanic American Historical
Review, New York City, USA, 1946; Ian R. Mitchell, âThe Anarchist
Tradition in Latin America,â Anarchy, No.79, Express Printers, London,
UK, 1979. Luis Vitale, ContribuciĂłn a una historia del anarquismo en
America Latina, Editiones, Instituto de InvestigaciĂłn de Movimientos
Sociales âPedro Vuskovic,â Santiago, Chile, 1998, is available online at
has a strong focus on Chile.
[80] The only overarching insider account available in English is Ha
Ki-Rak, History of [the] Korean Anarchist Movement, Anarchist Publishing
Committee, Korean Anarchist Federation, Taegu, Korea, 1986, but it
suffers from poor structure and analysis; a more coherent account should
be Michael Schmidt, Korean Anarchism Armed: The Anarcho-communist Mass
Line Part 3 (forthcoming).
[81] The standard CNT history is José Peirats, The Anarchists in the
Spanish Revolution, Freedom Press, London, 1990, first published in
three volumes as La CNT en la revoluciĂłn española, 1951â1953.
[82] The most detailed and devastating anarchist critique of the
CNT-FAIâs failure is Stuart Christie, We! The Anarchists: A Study of the
Iberian Anarchist Federation (FAI)1927â1937, The Meltzer Press & Jura
Media, Hastings, UK & Petersham North, Australia, 2000.
[83] Today it is known today simply as the Anarchist Federation (AF) and
is online at www.afed.org.uk.
[84] A summary of the JAFâs history can be found at
libcom.org/library/wot-organization; on the FFLU and CLU. read Marshall,
2008.
[85] Documentary film by Daniel Goude and Guillaume Lenormant, Une
rĂ©sistance oubliĂ©e (1954â1957), des libertaires dans la guerre
dâAlgĂ©rie, Alternative Libertaire, Paris, France, 2001, available for
purchase online at
boutique.alternativelibertaire.org/produit.php?ref=DVD_Algerie&id_rubrique=5;
Schmidt and Van der Walt, 2011.
[86] José Peirats, Appendix to his The Anarchists in the Spanish
Revolution, Black & Red, Detroit, Michigan, 1993; Peirats, âSpanish
Anarchism in Exile,â in The Raven Anarchist Quarterly No.23, Freedom
Press, London, UK, 1993.
[87] Ha, 1986.
[88] Archives of the Centre International de Recherches sur lâAnarchisme
(CIRA), Lausanne, Switzerland.
[89] Sam Dolgoff, The Cuban Revolution: a Critical Perspective, Black
Rose Books, Montreal, Canada, 1996, online at
.
[90] On Castroâs youthful enthusiasm for Benito Mussolini and his adult
fascination for and friendship with Juan PerĂłn, for whom he declared
three days of national mourning on his death, read The Boys from
Dolores: Fidel Castro and His GenerationâFrom Revolution to Exile,
Patrick Symmes, Robinson, London, UK, 2007. For an account of Castroâs
friendship with Manuel Fraga Iribarne, read Ghosts of Spain: Travels
Through a Countryâs Hidden Past, Giles Tremlett, Faber & Faber, London,
UK, 2006.
[91] A potted history of the Swedish syndicalist movement can be found
in English here: Ingemar Sjöö, SAC and Syndicalism, Stockholm-Gotland
SAC, Sweden, undated, online at www.sac.se.
[92] Interview in 2010 by Michael Schmidt with Chilean anarchist
historian and activist José Antonio Gutierrez Dantón, author of
Anarchism in Chile 1872â1995, a synopsis of Hector Pavelicâs 1994 book
Caliche: el Rostro Pampino, (Saltpetre: the Pampasâ Face), published in
Black Flag, London, UK, 1995, online at:
www.libcom.org/articles/anarchism-in-chile/index.php.
[93] On Argentina, read Abad de SantillĂĄn, 2005. On New Zealand, read
Dick Scott, 151 Days: The Great Waterfront Lockout and Supporting
Strikes, February 15âJuly 15, 1951, Reed Books, Auckland, New Zealand,
2001.
[94] Interview with Chinese anarchist H.L. Wei, a comrade of Chu
Cha-Peiâs, in Paul Avrich, Anarchist Voices: an Oral History of
Anarchism in America, AK Press, Oakland, USA, 2005.
[95] Ineke Dibits, Elizabeth Paredo, Ruth Volgger, and Ana Cecilia
Wadsworth, Polleras Libertarias: FederaciĂłn Obrera Femenina, 1927â1964,
Taller de Historia y ParticipaciĂłn de la Mujer, La Paz, Bolivia, 1986.
[96] Lucien van der Walt, âThe First Globalisation and Transnational
Labour Activism in Southern Africa: White Labourism, the IWW and the
ICU, 1904â1934,â African Studies, Johannesburg, South Africa, 2007,
online at
.
[97] Michael Schmidt, âUruguayan Anarchism Armed: the Anarcho-communist
Mass Line Part 2â (forthcoming); the primary insider account is by
FAU/OPR-33 veteran Juan Carlos Mechoso, AcciĂłn Directa Anarquista: Una
Historia de FAU Tomo II La FundaciĂłn, 2005; AcciĂłn Directa Anarquista:
Una Historia de FAU Tomo III Los Primeros Años, 2006; Acción Directa
Anarquista: Una Historia de FAU, undated but probably 2002; all Recortes
Editorial, Montevideo, Uruguay; I interviewed Mechoso in Porto Alegre,
Brazil, in 2003.
[98] Ha, 1984.
[99] The best introduction to Guillén is Donald C. Hodges (ed & trans),
Philosophy of the Urban Guerrilla: The Revolutionary Writings of Abraham
Guillén, William Morrow, New York, USA, 1973, originally published as
Estragegias de la guerrilla urbana, Manuales del Pueblo, Montevideo,
Uruguay, 1966.
[100] On the MIR of Chile, read Ferrada-Noli, Notas Sobre la Historia
del MIR, online in Spanish with an English summary at
ferradanoli.files.wordpress.com
. See also Ortiz, 2002, who draws on Luis Vitale, ContribuciĂłn a la
Historia del MIR (1965â1970), Ediciones Instituto de Investigaciones de
Movimientes Sociales, Chile, 1999. An interview with the CUAC is online
at www.fdca.it/fdcaen/international/cuac.htm. On the fate of the FAU and
OPR-33 of Uruguay, read Juan Carlos Mechoso, Jaime Prieto, Hugo Cores,
and others, The FederaciĂłn Anarquista Uruguaya (FAU): Crisis, Armed
Struggle and Dictatorship, 1967â1985, Paul Sharkey (ed & trans), Kate
Sharpley Library, London, UK, 2009; J. Patrice McSherry, âDeath Squads
as Parallel Forces: Uruguay, Operation Condor, and the United States,â
Journal of Third World Studies, USA, 2007. On Libertarian Resistance of
Argentina, read VerĂłnica Diz and Fernando LĂłpez Trujillo, Resistencia
Libertaria, Editorial Madreselva, Buenos Aires, Argentina, 2007; their
account is challenged, however, by RL veterans such as Maria Ester
Tello. Also, RL veteran Fernando LĂłpez interviewed by Chuck Morse,
âResistencia Libertaria: Anarchist Opposition to the Last Argentine
Dictatorship,â New Formulation, USA, 2003, online at
www.newformulation.org/3morselopez.htm.
[101] In 2004, in Johannesburg, South Africa, I interviewed SB, a
Shagila veteran who fought in the Iranian Revolution, who also spoke
about the Iranian CHK. The true importance of the Iraqi and Iranian
anarchist movements, both of which came into being totally without
outside influence, has yet to be properly estimated.
[102] On the Angry Brigade in the UK, read Jean Weir, The Angry Brigade,
1967â1984: Documents and Chronology, Elephant Editions, London, UK,
1978. On Direct Action of France, the best memoir is Jean-Marc Rouillan,
De Memoria (I) Los comienzos: otoño de 1970 en Toulouse and De Memoria
(II) El duelo de la innocencia: un dĂa de septiembre de 1973 en
Barcelona, Virus Editorial, Barcelona, Spain, undated; while the best
analysis is Michael York Dartnell, Mirror of Violence: The Revolutionary
Terrorism of Action Directe as an Element in the Evolution of French
Political Culture, 1979â1987, PhD thesis, York University, North York,
Canada, 1993. On Direct Action of Canada, the insider account is Ann
Hansen, Direct Action: Memoirs of an Urban Guerrilla, AK Press, Oakland,
USA, 2002; plus Eryk Martin, Burn It Down!: A History of Anarchism,
Activism, and the Politics of âDirect Action,â 1972â1988, dissertation
(forthcoming). On the German M2J, the insider account is Ralf Reinders
and Ronald Fritsch, El Movimiento 2 de Junio: Conversaciones sobre los
Rebeldes del HachĂs, el secuestro de Lorenz y la cĂĄrcel, Virus
Editorial, Barcelona, Spain, undated; plus Inge Viett, Nie war ich
furchtloser: Autobiographie, Editions Nautilus, Hamburg, Germany, 1997.
On the Basque KAA, read Buzz Burrell, Insurrection in Euskadi: Political
Struggles in the Basque Country, Partisan Press, Glasgow, UK, 1993.
[103] On the pan-European resistance to Franco, the best English sources
include: Antonio TĂ©llez and Stuart Christie, Anarchist International
Action Against Francoism From Genoa 1949 to The First Of May Group, Kate
Sharpley Library, UK, 2010; also Octavio Alberola, Alvaro MilĂĄn, and
Juan Zambrana, Revolutionary Activism: The Spanish Resistance in
Context, Kate Sharpley Library, UK, 2000; and André Cortade, 1000:
histoire dĂ©sordonnĂ©e du M.I.L., Barcelone 1967â1974, DĂ©rive 17, Paris,
1985; in 2011, I interviewed sole surviving DI Council member Octavio
Alberola Suriñach, Perpignan, France, for the book The People Armed:
Anarchist Guerrillas Verbatim, AK Press, Oakland, USA (forthcoming).
[104] The MLCE, its name today shortened to MLC, was founded in 1961,
and today has a presence in Mexico, Venezuela, France and Spain, with
underground contacts in Cuba itself. Not to be confused with a
lasses-faire capitalist organisation of the same name founded by Cuban
exile businessmen in Miami, USA, in 1981, its website is at
www.mlc.acultura.org.ve.
[105] On anarchism during the âDirty Warâ period in Mexico in the 1960s
and 1970s and how it shaped indigenous struggles for autonomy in Chiapas
and Oaxaca today, read the Brenda Aguilar chapter in Gutiérrez Dantón
(ed), due in 2013.
[106] Phillip Ruff, Anarchy in the USSR: A New Beginning, ASP, London,
UK, 1991; Mikhail Tsovma, âRemembering Natalia Pirumova,â Centre
International de Recherches sur lâAnarchisme, Bulletin 63, Lausanne,
Switzerland, September 2007.
[107] The Polish FA is still operational, and is online at
www.federacja-anarchistyczna.pl. The CSAF is online at www.csaf.cz. In
1997, the Federation of Social Anarchists (FSA) split from the CSAF and
affiliated to the IWA and now appears to be defunct. The ASF split in
1996, into the platformist Organisation of Revolutionary
AnarchistsâSolidarity (ORA-S) and the purist Czechoslovak Federation of
Revolutionary Anarchists (SFRA); in 2003, a platformist minority in
ORA-S broke away and founded Anarcho-Communist Alternative (AKA),
aka.anarchokomunismus.org while the remainder of ORA-S turned towards
ultra-leftist Marxism. On FOSATU, read Sian Byrne, ââBuilding Tomorrow
Todayâ: a re-examination of the character of the controversial
âworkeristâ tendency associated with the Federation of South African
Trade Unions (FOSATU) in South Africa, 1979â1985,â MA research report,
University of the Witwatesrrand, Johannesburg, (in process).
[108] Autonomous Actionâs English website is online at: avtonom.org/en
[109] For my analysis of the tactics and strategies of especifismo in
Latin America, read Michael Schmidt, âFire-ants and Flowers:
Revolutionary Anarchism in Latin America,â ZACF, Johannesburg, South
Africa, 2004, online at nefac.net/node/38. The most detailed exposition
of especifismo, however, is âSocial Anarchism and Organisation,â
Anarchist Federation of Rio de Janeiro (FARJ), 2008, online in English
at www.anarkismo.net/article/22150.
[110] The founding statement of PALIR of Senegal was given to me
courtesy of Mitch Miller of the Workersâ Solidarity Alliance, USA.
According to a 1981 report in the Vancouver, Canada, libertarian
socialist journal The Open Road, the Senegalese anarchists originally
published their manifesto in the Senegalese journal Le Politicien. A few
brief reports on the IWW Sierra Leone are available at
flag.blackened.net/revolt/africa/sierra/sl_iww_update.html. My obituary
of Choongo is online at: libcom.org/history/choongo-wilstar-1964-1999.
On the Awareness League of Nigeria, read Sam Mbah (b. 1963) & I.E.
Igariwey, African Anarchism: The History of a Movement, See Sharp Press,
Tucson, USA, 1997, online at
www.adnauseam.fr/african-anarchism-the-history-of-a,012.html?lang=fr.
Several documents from the Awareness League are available online at
flag.blackened.net/revolt/africa/aware.html. Mbah is still active and
has a blog at sammbah.wordpress.com/. On the revived Southern African
movement, read the NEFAC interview with myself, online at
zabnew.wordpress.com/2010/12/02/nefac-interviews-the-bmc. The ZACF of
South Africa is online at www.zabalaza.net.
[111] Common Struggle (USA) is online at www.nefac.net, Common Cause
(Ontario) is online at linchpin.ca and UCL (Québec) is online at
www.causecommune.net.
[112] The CGT of Spain is online at www.cgt.es. The SKT of Siberia is
online at syndikalist.narod.ru. The CNT-France is online at
www.cnt-f.org. The SAC of Sweden is online at www.sac.se. The Italian
Confederation of the BaseâUnited Committees of the Base (CIB-UNICOBAS)
Italy is online at www.cib-unicobas.it. The French SUD Education Unionâs
website is at www.sudeducation.org. FESAL-Eâs Italian website is at
www.fesal.it, but does not seem to have been active since 2009.
[113] The old ILS webpage on its projects in Latin America is mirrored
at www.fdca.it/fdcaen/ILS/ils_projects.htm.
[114] The multilingual anarkismo project is online at www.anarkismo.net.
[115] On the Alternative Libertaire section in French Guyana, read
âInterview with Alternative Libertaire in French Guyana,â online at
www.nefac.net/node/1734. The Eastern Mediterranean Libertarian
Collective (EMLC) of Israel/Palestine is online at
www.shalif.com/anarchy. The Libertarian Communist Alternative (al-Badil
al-Chouyouii al-Taharoui) of Lebanon can be found online at
albadilaltaharrouri.wordpress.com; also read Michael Schmidt,
âEyewitness Lebanon: In the Land of the Blind: Hezbollah Worship,
Slavish Anti-imperialism and the Need for a Real Alternative,â 2006,
online at www.anarkismo.net/newswire.php?story_id=3651. On Iran, read
âInterview with an Iranian Anarchist,â interview with âPayman Piedar,â
editor of the No God/State/Master (Nakhdar) Iranian exile network in the
USA 2005, online at www.anarkismo.net/article/584. The Swaziland section
of the ZACF was shut down in 2007, but the Zimbabwean Uhuru Networkâs
blog is online at www.toyitoyi.blogspot.com. âEgypt: Birth of the
Libertarian Socialist Movement, Egypt,â 2011, with an analysis of this
minimum-position manifesto by Michael Schmidt, online at
www.anarkismo.net/article/19666.
[116] Manifest pour une Alternative Libertaire is online at
www.alternativelibertaire.org/spip.php?rubrique23.
[117] The English version of Saverio Crapraroâs Anarchist-Communists: A
Question of Class, FdCA, Italy, 2005, is online at
www.fdca.it/fdcaen/organization/theory/acqoc/index.htm. The ZACF of
South Africa later produced a critique, âTangled Threads of Revolution:
Reflections on A Question of Class,â James Pendlebury, South Africa,
online at
theanarchistlibrary.org/HTML/James_Pendlebury__Tangled_Threads_of_Revolution.html.
[118] Rosa Luxemburg (1871â1919) was a Polish anti-Bolshevik âleft
communistâ economist. âOrganisational Questions of the Russian Social
Democracyâ is online at
www.marxists.org/archive/luxemburg/1904/questions-rsd/index.htm.