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Title: Why We Are Anarchists Author: V. Henri Date: 28 September 1901 Language: en Topics: introductory, anarchist history, Libertarian Labyrinth Source: https://www.libertarian-labyrinth.org/working-translations/v-henri-why-we-are-anarchists-1901/ Notes: V. Henri, “Pourquoi nous sommes anarchists,” Les Temps Nouveaux 7 no. 22 (28 Septembre 1901): 2. Working Translation by Shawn P. Wilbur
Comrade, you have a brain, a heart, lungs, eyes, arms and legs; these
organs are necessary to your existence; so it is necessary for you to
use them: to each of these organs is linked a corresponding need. This
need can vary, depending on whether you temperament is more or less
nervous, more or less fiery, and according to whether the climate is
more or less hot and humid.
But, whatever these conditions may be, since the need exists, in the end
you feel a desire; and if, then, the material, moral or social
possibility exists for you, you decide to act and the act is
accomplished: the act is simply the function that is fulfilled, the
tendency to live that accommodates itself to certain conditions. In
other words, there are organic, climatological and social conditions
that determine each of your acts and, par suite, the exercise, the
activity of your organs.
When that exercise is normal and that activity not hampered, when your
blood can circulate, your lungs breathe, your brain think freely, when
you can use your hands, your eyes, your organs in a work consistent with
your desires and thus with your will, a work that pleases you, then you
are free, then you act according to your instincts, your needs, your
life; then you feel the joy of living. When, on the contrary, it is not
possible to exercise your organs normally, then you lose your liberty,
lose the possibility of acting in accordance with yourself, then you
suffer pain, suffering, misery. Now, there are very few minutes in your
life when you are free, when your activity is not hindered, either by
force or the necessity of assuring that you can feed yourself, either by
the opposition of your family or the opinions of society, by your fears,
your duties or your prejudices! That is why you are miserable! That is
why I am an anarchist!
An anarchist! For, on the one hand, I want to develop your faculties,
your heart, your brain, so that you can love, think, understand and
spread your activity more and more, so that you can live more and be
increasingly happy.—An anarchist! Because, on the other hand, I would
break the shackles that have hindered your activity, and that come from
society, morality and religion. Comrade, I want to achieve your liberty.
What limits your liberty, first of all, are the beliefs and prejudices
that have been imposed on you.
Are you free, I say, to obey your human desires at a given moment, if
you believe that hell is reserved for those who have not obtained divine
grace through the sacraments of the Church? Doubtless, and especially if
you are of a robust temperament, your desire could make you forget your
fear; but, the act once accomplished, the desire being satisfied, there
will remain for you the bitter taste of remorse. Another obstacle to
liberty is custom. Very often, already, you have been tempted to act;
but the fear of opinion has held you back; and you have had to choose
between your desire and your weakness. If you have obeyed your desire,
then, as in the previous case, that desire, once satisfied, has left
behind the regret and suffering of having acted; if you weakness has won
out, it has brought the suffering of unsatisfied desire. — The final
thing that limits your liberty is a social state based on law, on the
idea of duty and obedience; it is the principle if authority, an
invariable principle, which inevitably thwarts a thousand diverse
tendencies and causes a pain that is keener as the opposition between
the law and the tendency increases.
Since all these shackles make you suffer, am I not right to wish to
destroy them? in order to do that, I must first combat the prejudice and
say to all as I say to you: Neither accept nor impose any dubious idea,
any truth that you cannot demonstrate yourself, any habit for which you
cannot understand the reason; limit yourself to the obvious fact, to the
demonstrated truth, to the precise observation, to the rigorous
experiment. — Then it is necessary to combat the traditions that
accustom us to see a reason for servitude in weakness and a means of
enslavement in education. Finally, it is necessary to combat the
discipline, or whatever it is, that forces you to be a servant or master
in life, but always the slave of a recognized law. So I will combat
prejudice, custom and law, which is to say authority in its triple form:
intellectual, moral and legal. On these conditions, I could, slowly,
eliminate all the causes of your misery and achieve your liberty.
Ah! Comrade, you too love profoundly that liberty that would permit you
to live, to expend yourself, to be rich in action, happiness and life.
But you fear what is new; you remember past miseries and your heart
becomes wary. Ah! you could challenge me if I asked you for something, a
vote, a crown or a place, in exchange for my ideas. But I ask nothing of
you; what I want for myself, I want for you, I want for all; and this
proves to you that I do not want to return to the barbarous societies
where reigned, in all its horror, the right of the strongest.
If someone has insinuated it, they have lied. For if I have said: “Do
not be a servant, revolt against every authority, awaken your energy,” I
also say to you: “do not be a master; do not impose your own will on
anyone.” So you will always see me on the side of the weakest and the
oppressed. So you have been lied to; and yet, starting from that lie and
profiting from your ignorance, someone has frightened you, saying that I
was a man of rebellion, a man of disorder, a man of violence!!!
A man of revolt! Yes, comrade, I am revolted by all the miseries, all
the injustices, all the shames of society. Yes, I am revolted when I see
children who have no bread, women who cry, men who groan on their
miserable pallets! Tell me if you are not as revolted as I am.
A man of disorder! Ah! I do not know what I idea you have of order, but
you are mistaken if you believe that order today is consistent with
happiness, liberty and progress. Do you not hear daily of crimes, of
suicides?
Don’t you see the poverty-stricken around you? Don’t you read, from time
to time, tales of organized massacres en Chine or in Africa? Is it that
order that you wish to preserve eternally? As for me, I regard it as a
regime of force, of violence; and that is why I have condemned it!
A man of violence! When a being is oppressed, tell me then how he can be
rid of the tyranny, if not by his own effort?
Tell me what victim of oppression, weary of that oppression, has not
been forced to revolt? For “all the light of truth can do nothing to
stop the violence and only irritates it still more.” (Pascal.) Then
count, if you can, the victims of the Inquisition, of the crusades, of
the religious wars, of the red or white Terror, of the Holy Alliance, of
the colonial wars, of armed force. Would you be astonished, finally,
that among these victims, some, driven by persecution, had in the end
faced up to their aggressors.
A man of utopia, you have also been told! Yes, to put an end to the
iniquities, the disorder, the acts of violence; to lessen the heavy
burden of misery that weighs on you, that is regarded as a utopia at the
present time. That misery must be profound, alas! Look inside yourself,
comrade, and ask yourself if you believe it is possible for you to live
without being a slave or tyrant. If you do not believe it, they you
would be consistent to place yourself on the side of the oppressors. But
if you believe it is possible, if you believe that for one moment, one
single moment, you could live freely, how could you believe that what is
possible for you is impossible for others!
From that moment it is up to you to take the initiative, to combat your
prejudices and those of the people around you, so that the emancipation
each makes possible the emancipation of all. “If you want to live, be
strong, be great, be energetic. Sow the seeds of life and happiness
around you. Each time that you see an iniquity in life, a lie in the
world, a suffering imposed by one man upon another, rebel against the
lie, the injustice and the sorrow. Struggle for the truth; the struggle
is life. Each time that you have struggled, you have lived. And, for a
few hours of that magnificent life, wouldn’t you trade years of
vegetation in the corruption of the marsh? Struggle in order to permit
everyone to experience this rich and exuberant life, to wrest themselves
bit by bit from the misery and cowardice of our world, to allow every,
finally, to enjoy all the happiness that you demand for yourself. »
(Guyau.)