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Title: A disappointed revolutionary Date: 1963 Source: Retrieved 07/06/2022 from [[https://archive.org/details/AnarchyNo.33][archive.org]] Notes: Published in <em>Anarchy</em> 33 (Vol. 3 No. 11) November 1963. Freedom Press UK. Authors: Sidney E Parker Topics: Review, Individualism, Anarchy, Freedom press, Victor serge
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<strong>MEMOIRS OF A REVOLUTIONARY, by Victor Serge. Translated by Peter Sedgwick. (Oxford University Press, 42s.).</strong>
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These memoirs trace the life of Victor Lvovich Kibalchichâalias Victor Sergeâârevolutionary, novelist and poetâ, who began his political life as a young socialist in Belgium, became active in individualist anarchist circles in Paris, worked with the syndicalists in Barcelona, joined the Russian Communist Party just after the 1917 Revolution, was expelled for belonging to the Left Opposition, left Russia after a period of exile in Central Asia, and died a revisionist Marxist in Mexico in 1947. Serge writes well and the poet is present in many passages (particularly in his evocations of Paris), but the book left me with a sense of emptiness, a feeling of sadness that so much talent should have been wasted in useless politicking.
The chapter I found the most interestingâand the most disappointingâwas the first, the bulk of which is devoted to Sergeâs anarchist activity before World War I. Repelled by the academic anarchism preached by Jean Grave, Serge became prominentâunder the name of Le RĂ©tifâamong the individualists inspired by Albert Libertad (1875â1908) and was a close friend of two of the so-called âBonnot Gangâ who, despairing of peaceful propaganda, waged their war against society by means of armed bank robberies. Serge gives only the sketchiest of descriptions of the ideas he held at this time and the merest hints of his activities. Reviewing the first French edition of the âMemoirsâ, E. Armand remarked that Serge was
â... a memoir-writer with a short memory who forgets the rĂŽle he played in regard to âlâanarchieâ (an individualist weeklyâS.P.) with which he collaborated from September, 1909 to January, 1912. If he tells us in detail of the private life of Libertad ... he guards himself from saying that he (Serge) was the man who searched for ârare sensationsâ, the man of the unbounded âI denyâ, the glorifier of the âBanditsâ on the morrow of the rue Ordener affair (âlâanarchieâ, January 3, 1912), the exalter of âthe unsubmissive, deserters, thieves, because they are not adapted to slavery ... for us (he wrote) they are the only men who dare to revindicate life.â Kibalchich has forgotten the endless Stirnerian, Nietzschean and Ibsenian litanies that he gladly reeled off. As he forgets rather indelicately that Rirette MaĂźtrejean was his companion and that he did not stop writing to her for a long time ... â (This last omission is made good by a note by the translator in the English editionâS.P.)
In addition, Serge makes the almost traditional misrepresentation of Stirner and attempts, in usual Marxist style, to link conscious egoism with âthe most brutal bourgeois individualism.â He also tries to give yet another death sentence to anarchism : âBetween the copious theorizing of Peter Kropotkin and ElisĂ©e RĂ©clus, and the rage of Albert Libertad, the collapse of anarchism in the bourgeois jungle was now obvious.â Unfortunately this rather contradicts what he had written earlier about Libertad being âthe heart and soul of a movement of such exceptional dynamism that it is not entirely dead even at this day (**i.e.** 30 years later.âS.P.)â. A case of âheâs dead, but he wonât lie downâ?
The remainder of the book retells the now well-known and wearying tale of the fate of enthusiastic idealists who supported the Bolshevik seizure of power in 1917. Once more the tragic farce of the biters being bit is unfolded and the ghosts of persecutors who fell victims to the machine they helped to create are paraded before us. Serge sees these men as the iron cohort of the Revolution. Actually they appear to be more possessed men who drove themselves and others to pointless destruction. He quotes âcertain French individualistsâ who said to him: âRevolutions are useless. They will not change human nature. Afterwards reaction sets in and everything starts all over again. Iâve only got my own skin; Iâm not marching for wars or for revolutions, thank you.â These words he dismisses as âcynical stock phrasesâ, but in view of the evidence he himself provides one is led to the conclusion that âcertain French individualistsâ were not all that wrong.
In spite of his earlier individualist associations and his youthful enthusiasm for Stirner, Nietzsche and Ibsen, Serge seems always to have wanted to serve something greater than himself. He claims that even in his individualist days âother influences were at work on me and there were other values which I neither could nor would abandon: basically, the revolutionary idealism of the Russians.â Outlining his conception of the purpose of writing, he states that âIndividual existences were of no interest to meâparticularly my ownâexcept by virtue of the great ensemble whose particles ... are all that we ever are.â Even when, in his final summing-up, he says that âI view human personality as a supreme valueâ, it is so âonly integrated in society and history.â And while disclaiming âany yearning for self-effacementâ he nonetheless concludes ânothing of us is truly our own unless it be our sincere desire to share in the common life of mankind.â
From all of this his abandonment of anarchism for Bolshevism becomes understandable. Russian ârevolutionary idealismâ, like other idealism, was founded on the idea that the individual should give âall for the Cause.â If âindividual existencesâ are only of interest insofar as they are particles of the âgreat ensemble of lifeâ, and the âsupreme valueâ of human personality is dependent on being âintegral in society and historyâ and desirous of sharing âthe common life of mankindâ, then individual uniqueness is at a discount and the forces that really matter are abstractions like âsocietyâ, âhistoryâ, and âmankindâ. Enraptured by these spooks Serge left the clear-eyed shown by Libertad and other âcynicsâ and stuck his head into the Marxist-Leninist noose. He paid the price with his suffering, his despair at the betrayal of his hopes, his agony at the deaths of his friends. So did thousands of others. The pity of it is that the lesson taught by his life will only be learned by those who have tasted at least a few of the bitter ashes which are all that remains of a once searing fire.
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SID PARKER.
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