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Title: Tribute to Alexander Berkman
Author: Mollie Steimer
Date: 1966
Language: en
Topics: Alexander Berkman; obituary
Source: Retrieved on 8th November 2022 from https://archive.org/details/fighters-for-freedom/
Notes: Translated from Yiddish by Esther Dolgoff.

Mollie Steimer

Tribute to Alexander Berkman

Alexander Berkman, “Sasha” to his friends, was a rebel from early

childhood. He protested against injustice wherever he saw it. He paid

for his militant revolutionary activities with fourteen years in prison

for his attempt to kill Henry Clay Frick, chairman and general manager

of the Carnegie Steel Company, during the Homestead Steel Strike.

After Berkman was released from prison he continued to devote his life

to the revolutionary cause, a convinced anarchist. He worked with all

his energies and dedication for the movement, for freedom, and wound up

a political refugee in the various countries where he was permitted to

live. He was one of the finest, most generous people I ever knew.

Although he had very few material possessions, he was always ready to

give everything away to others and had to be reminded not to deny

himself his urgent personal needs. Berkman made every possible effort to

understand and help people...He radiated warmth and comfort, like the

rays of the sun.

I first met Berkman in New York City in the late Fall, 1919, at the home

of Stella Ballantine, Emma Goldman’s niece. We discussed the Russian

Revolution and the need to expose the atrocities of the Bolsheviks

against the anarchists, socialists and all who dared to criticize their

new dictatorial regime in Moscow. Emma said that we should not come out

against the Bolsheviks at this time when they are fighting so many

enemies of the revolution. She supported her position with cogent,

forceful arguments.

Sasha also argued that the Bolsheviks should be given a chance, that it

was too early to start an organized opposition because the revolution

was surrounded by enemies.

When he was deported to Russia, we felt that he did not really oppose

our position, that his warm personal greeting indicated that he

supported our right to criticize the actions of the Bolsheviks from our

viewpoint.

Our second meeting with Sasha and Emma took place in Berlin four years

later, November, 1923, where they had been living for two years, since

January, 1922. They had left Soviet Russia greatly disillusioned with

the Bolshevik regime. Sasha and Emma were each writing about their

experiences in Russia. In addition, Sasha was active organizing help for

the anarchists, anarcho-syndicalists and other political Opponents held

in prison by the Bolsheviks. He appealed for funds, issued a bulletin in

English, translated the letters from men and women prisoners in Russia.

He assembled and translated all the material that was published in the

book, Letters From Russian Prisons. The book was published in New York

in 1925 by the International Committee to Aid Political Prisoners. Roger

Baldwin was chairman of the Committee and its members were people of

world renown, including, among others, Clarence Darrow, Eugene V. Debs,

Norman Thomas, B. Charney Vladeck, and Felix Frankfurter (later a

Justice of the United States Supreme Court). Isaac Don Levine did some

of the work in preparing the book, including translations and obtaining

letters of support from prominent individuals around the world such as

Albert Einstein, Knut Hamsun, Gerhard Hauptmann, Sinclair Lewis, Maurice

Maeterlinck, Thomas Mann, Romain Rolland, Upton Sinclair, H. G. Wells

and Israel Zangwill.

The letters in Letters From Russian Prisons were obtained by a committee

that included Mark Mratchny, forced out of Russia by the Bolsheviks and

subsequently editor of the Freie Arbeiter Stimme, a Jewish Anarchist

weekly published in New York City for 87 years, and I. N. Steinberg, a

member of the Socialist Revolutionary Party and the only non-Bolshevik

Minister of Justice in Lenin’s cabinet. When Steinberg was forced to

leave the government and Russia he became one of the founders of the

Jewish Territorialist Movement, Freeland, which sought. to establish

agricultural settlements in various countries.

During this period, Berkman had written three pamphlets, The Russian

Tragedy, The Russian Revolution and The Communist Party, and The

Kronstadt Rebellion. He had also assembled all the data for his

excellent book, The Bolshevik Myth.

Life was difficult for everyone in Germany after World War I and

particularly so for the political refugees. Many of us felt that we had

to leave Germany. A number of us went to France, including Sasha and

Emma. Sasha wrote his book, ABC of Commmist—Anarchism in France and it

was published by Vanguard Press in New York City in 1929.

While he was in St. Cloud, a town near Paris, Sasha was in close contact

with a number of groups in the anarchist movement. He worked

particularly with the Jewish anarchists in the area. He gave lectures

frequently, whenever the opportunity offered. “No audience is too small

for me to talk to,” Sasha used to say.

When Emma found a tiny house in St. Tropez in the south of France, she

offered one room to Sasha for his residence. Sasha preferred a small

shanty in the garden. He worked there and for relaxation took care of

the small garden. Emma wrote her memoirs, Living My Life, at that time.

She would work late into the night and Sasha would serenade her early in

the morning with the sound of the handmill grinding coffee for

breakfast. This was the signal for Emma to wake up. Music to her ears.

The morning would start with the greeting, “Bon Esprit” (“lively

spirit”, “good cheer”) and Emma named her little hut “Bon Esprit”.

The day’s work started immediately after breakfast. Emma and Sasha

carried on an intensive correspondence with comrades all over the world.

There were requests for articles and above all, work on Living My Life.

Emma and Sasha worked together harmoniously. When guests and reporters

came to the house, or even friends of friends, Sasha would welcome them

in a warm, friendly manner. He filled the house with a joyful spirit and

his discussions were marked with authoritative facts and information.

My beloved life-long companion, Senya, became associated with the Stone

Photographic studio in Berlin in 1929. We left France and went to Berlin

where we remained for four years until the Nazis came to power. We

returned to France. Sasha was living in Nice, at this time. He had

become a changed person, altogether different from the man we had known.

He was being harassed by the French police regarding his status as a

political refugee. His economic situation was very bad. Although he did

a lot of translation work he earned very little, not enough for a decent

living. His health was very poor. He needed a serious operation but he

kept on delaying it because he did not have enough money to go to Paris

where he would have been able to get good care by surgical specialists.

He finally had to go to a small local hospital and underwent an

unsuccessful operation. The acute physical pain of his prostate gland,

his economic difficulties, his precarious status as a political refugee,

all combined to cause our warm, genial comrade, who had always been so

full of life, to end his sufferings and commit suicide.

He did not die immediately. He wrestled with death for sixteen hours.

Emma was at his bedside, hiding her sorrow with superhuman control of

her heartbreak.

This happened June 28, 1936, three weeks before the start of the Spanish

Revolution.

Everyone who knew or talked about Emma and Sasha could not speak of one

without mentioning the other. Although they lived their own separate

lives, they were inseparable emotionally and spiritually. Neither of

them ever wrote a major article or a book without consulting the other.

They knew and shared every event in their lives; there were no secrets

between them. Their friendship and companionship were the finest. Those

of us who were privileged to know them will never forget them.

Emma died four years later in Toronto, Canada, May, 1940. A great part

of Emma’s life was lost to her with Sasha’s death. His name will live as

long as there are and will continue to be rebels who struggle for

genuine, true liberty.