| "In
this struggle, only the workers and peasants will go all the way
to the end"
TOWARDS
A HISTORY OF
ANARCHIST ANTI-IMPERIALISM
The
anarchist movement has a long tradition of fighting imperialism.
This reaches back into the 1860s, and continues to the present
day. From Cuba, to Egypt, to Ireland, to Macedonia, to Korea,
to Algeria and Morocco, the anarchist movement has paid in blood
for its opposition to imperial domination and control.
However,
whilst anarchists have actively participated in national liberation
struggles, they have argued that the destruction of national oppression
and imperialism can only be truly achieved through the destruction
of both capitalism and the state system, and the creation of an
international anarcho-communist society.
This
is not to argue that anarchists absent themselves from national
liberation struggles that do not have such goals. Instead, anarchists
stand in solidarity with struggles against imperialism on principle,
but seek to reshape national liberation movements into social
liberation movements.
Such
movements would be both anti-capitalist and anti-imperialist,
would be based on internationalism rather than narrow chauvinism,
would link struggles in the imperial centres directly to struggles
in the oppressed regions, and would be controlled by, and reflect
the interests of, the working class and peasantry.
In
other words, we stand in solidarity with anti-imperialist movements,
but condemn those who use such movements to advance reactionary
cultural agendas (for example, those who oppose women's rights
in the name of culture) and fight against attempts by local capitalists
and the middle class to hijack these movements. We oppose state
repression of anti-imperialist movements, as we reject the right
of the state to decide what is, and what is not, legitimate protest.
However, it is no liberation if all that changes is the colour
or the language of the capitalist class.
AGAINST
NATIONALISM
This
is where we differ from the political current that has dominated
national liberation movements since the 1940s: the ideology of
nationalism.
Nationalism
is a political strategy that argues that the key task of the anti-imperialist
struggle is to establish an independent nation-state. It is through
these independent states, nationalists argue, that the nation
as a whole will exercise its general will. In the words of Kwame
Nkrumah, who spearheaded the formation of the independent nation-state
of Ghana, the task was to "Seek ye first the political kingdom,
and all else shall be given unto you."
In
order to achieve this goal, nationalists argue that it is necessary
to unite all classes within the oppressed nation against the imperialist
oppressor. Nationalists tend to deny the importance of class differences
within the oppressed nation, arguing that the common experience
of national oppression makes class divisions unimportant, or that
class is a "foreign" concept that is irrelevant.
Thus
nationalists seek to hide class differences in a quest to found
an independent nation-state.
The
class interests that hide behind nationalism are obvious. Nationalism
has, historically, been an ideology developed and championed by
the bourgeoisie and middle class in the oppressed nation. It is
a form of anti-imperialism that wishes to remove imperialism but
retain capitalism, a bourgeois anti-imperialism that wishes, in
short, to create for the local bourgeoisie more space, more opportunities,
more avenues to exploit the local working class and develop local
capitalism.
Our
role as anarchists in relation to nationalists is thus clear:
we may fight alongside nationalists for limited reforms and victories
against imperialism but we fight against the statism and capitalism
of the nationalists.
Our
role is to win mass support for the anarchist approach to imperial
domination, to win workers and peasants away from nationalism
and to an internationalist working class programme: anarchism.
This requires active participation in national liberation struggles
but political independence from the nationalists. National liberation
must be differentiated from nationalism, which is the class programme
of the bourgeoisie: we are against imperialism, but also, against
nationalism.
BAKUNIN
AND THE FIRST INTERNATIONAL
Support
for national liberation follows directly from anarchism's opposition
to hierarchical political structures and economic inequality,
and advocacy of a freely constituted international confederation
of self-administrating communes and workers' associations. At
the same time, however, anarchism's commitment to a general social
and economic emancipation means that anarchism rejects statist
solutions to national oppression that leave capitalism and government
in place.
If
anyone can be named the founder of revolutionary anarchism, it
is Mikhail Bakunin (1918-1876). Bakunin's political roots lay
within the national liberation movements of Eastern Europe, and
he retained a commitment to what would nowadays be called 'decolonisation'
throughout his life. When Bakunin moved from pan-Slavic nationalism
towards anarchism in the 1860s, following the disastrous 1863
Polish insurrection, he still argued in support of struggles for
national self-determination.
He
doubted whether "imperialist Europe" could keep the colonial
countries in bondage: "Two-thirds of humanity, 800 million
Asiatics asleep in their servitude will necessarily awaken and
begin to move."[1] Bakunin went on to declare his "strong
sympathy for any national uprising against any form of oppression",
stating that every people "has the right to be itself .... no
one is entitled to impose its costume, its customs, its languages
and its laws."[2]

EAST
EUROPE
The
crucial issue, however, "in what direction and to what end"
will the national liberation movement move? For Bakunin, national
liberation must be achieved "as much in the economic as in
the political interests of the masses": if the anti- colonial
struggle is carried out with "ambitious intent to set up a
powerful State" or if "it is carried out without the people"
and "must therefore depend for success on a privileged class,"
it will become a "retrogressive, disastrous, counter-revolutionary
movement."[3]
"Every
exclusively political revolution - be it in defence of national
independence or for internal change.... - that does not aim
at the immediate and real political and economic emancipation
of people will be a false revolution. Its objectives will be
unattainable and its consequences reactionary." [4]
So,
if national liberation is to achieve more than simply the replacement
of foreign oppressors by local oppressors, the national liberation
movement must thus be merged with the revolutionary struggle of
the working class and peasantry against both capitalism and the
State. Without social revolutionary goals, national liberation
will simply be a bourgeois revolution.
The
national liberation struggle of the working class and peasantry
must be resolutely anti-statist, for the State was necessarily
the preserve of a privileged class, and the state system would
continually recreate the problem of national oppression: "to
exist, a state must become an invader of other states .... it
must be ready to occupy a foreign country and hold millions of
people in subjection."
The
national liberation struggle of oppressed nationalities must be
internationalist in character as it must supplant obsessions with
cultural difference with universal ideals of human freedom, it
must align itself with the international class struggle for "political
and economic emancipation from the yoke of the State" and
the classes it represents, and it must take place, ultimately,
as part of an international revolution: "a social revolution
.... is by its very nature international in scope" and the
oppressed nationalities "must therefore link their aspirations
and forces with the aspirations and forces of all other countries."[5]
The "statist path involving the establishment of separate ....
States" is "entirely ruinous for the great masses of the
people" because it did not abolish class power but simply
changed the nationality of the ruling class.[6] Instead, the state
system must be abolished and replaced with a coalition of workplace
and community structures "directed from the bottom up ....
according to the principles of free federation."[7]
These
ideas were applied in East Europe from the 1870s onwards, as anarchists
played an active role in the in 1873 uprisings in Bosnia and Herzegovina
against Austro-Hungarian imperialism. Anarchists also took an
active part in the "National Revolutionary Movement" in
Macedonia against the Ottoman Empire. At least 60 gave their lives
in this struggle, particularly in the great 1903 revolt.
This
tradition of anarchist anti-imperialism was continued 15 years
later in the Ukraine as the Makhnovist movement organised a titanic
peasant revolt that not only smashed the German occupation of
the Ukraine, and held off the invading Red and White armies until
1921, but redistributed land, established worker- peasant self-management
in many areas, and created a Revolutionary Insurgent Army under
worker-peasant control.
EGYPT
AND ALGERIA
In
the 1870s, too, the anarchists began to organise Egypt, notably
in Alexandria, where a local anarchist journal appeared in 1877,[8]
and anarchist group from Egypt was represented at the September
1877 Congress of the "Saint-Imier International" (the anarchist
faction of the post-1872 First International).[9] An "Egyptian
Federation" was represented at the 1881 International Social Revolutionary
Congress by well-known Errico Malatesta, this time including "bodies
from Constantinople and Alexandria."[10] Malatesta, who lived
in Egypt as a political refugee Egypt in 1878 and 1882,[11] became
involved in the 1882 "Pasha Revolt" that followed the 1876 take-over
of Egyptian finances by an Anglo-French commission representing
international creditors. He arrived specifically to pursue "a
revolutionary purpose connected to the natives' revolt in the
days of Arabi Pasha," [12] and "fought with the Egyptians
against the British colonialists."[13]
In
Algeria, the anarchist movement emerged in the nineteenth century.
The Revolutionary Syndicalist General Confederation of Labour
(CGT-SR) had a section in Algeria. Like other anarchist organisations,
the CGT-SR opposed French colonialism, and in a joint statement
by the Anarchist Union, the CGT-SR, and the Association of Anarchist
Federations on the centenary of the French occupation of Algeria
in 1930, argued: "Civilisation? Progress? We say: murder!".[14]
A
prominent militant in the CGT-SR's Algerian section, as well as
in the Anarchist Union and the Anarchist Group of the Indigenous
Algerians, was Sail Mohamed (1894-1953), an Algerian anarchist
active in the anarchist movement from the 1910s until his death
in 1953. Sail Mohamed was a founder of organisations such as the
Association for the Rights of the Indigenous Algerians and the
Anarchist Group of the Indigenous Algerians. In 1929 he was secretary
of the "Committee for the Defence of the Algerians against the
Provocations of the Centenary." Sail Mohamed was also editor of
the North African edition of the anarchist periodical Terre Libre,
and a regular contributor to anarchist journals on the Algerian
question.[15]

EUROPE
AND MOROCCO
Opposition
to imperialism was a crucial part of anarchist anti-militarist
campaigns in the imperialist centres, which stressed that colonial
wars did not serve the interests of workers but rather the purposes
of capitalism.
The
General Confederation of Labour (CGT) in France, for example,
devoted a considerable part of its press to exposing the role
of French capitalists in North Africa. The first issue of La Bataille
Syndicaliste, which appeared on the 27 April 1911, exposed the
"Moroccan syndicate": the "veiled men" who dictated
to the ministers and diplomats and sought a war that would boost
demand for arms, lands, and rail and lead to the imposition of
tax on the indigenous people.[16]
In
Spain, the "Tragic Week" began on Monday 26 July 1909 when the
union, Solidarad Obrero, which was led by a committee of anarchists
and socialists, called a general strike against the call-up of
the mainly working class army reservists for the colonial war
in Morocco.[17] By Tuesday, workers were in control of Barcelona,
the "fiery rose of anarchism," troop trains had been halted,
trams overturned, communications cut and barricades erected. By
Thursday, fighting broke out with government forces, and over
150 workers were killed in the street fighting.
The
reservists were embittered by disastrous previous colonial campaigns
in Cuba, the Philippines, and Puerto Rico,[18] but the Tragic
Week must be understood as an anti-imperialist uprising situated
within a long tradition of anarchist anti-imperialism in Spain.
The "refusal of the Catalonian reservists to serve in the war
against the Riff mountaineers of Morocco," "one of the most significant"
events of modern times,[19] reflected the common perception that
the war was fought purely in the interests of the Riff mine-owners,[20]
and that conscription was "a deliberate act of class warfare
and exploitation from the centre."[21]
In
1911, the newly founded, anarcho-syndicalist, National Confederation
of Labour (CNT), successor to Solidarad Obrero, marked its birth
with a general strike on the 16 September in support of two demands:
defence of the strikers at Bilbao and opposition to the war in
Morocco.[22] Again, in 1922, following a disastrous battle against
the forces of Abd el-Krim in Morocco in August, a battle in which
at least 10,000 Spanish troops died, "the Spanish people were
full of indignation and demanded not only an end to the war but
also that those responsible for the massacre and the politicians
who favoured the operation in Africa be brought to trial",
expressing their anger in riots, and in strikes in the industrial
regions.[23]
CUBA
In
the Cuban colonial war (1895-1904), the Cuban anarchists and their
unions joined the separatist armed forces, and made propaganda
amongst the Spanish troops. The Spanish anarchists, likewise,
campaigned against the Cuban war amongst peasants, workers, and
soldiers in their own country.-[24] "All Spanish anarchists
disapproved of the war and called on workers to disobey military
authority and refuse to fight in Cuba," leading to several
mutinies amongst draftees.[25] Opposing bourgeois nationalism
and statism, the anarchists sought to give the colonial revolt
a social revolutionary character. At its 1892 congress in Cuba,
the anarchist Workers' Alliance recommended that the Cuban working
class join the ranks of "revolutionary socialism" and take
the path of independence, noting that
"....it
would be absurd for one who aspires to individual freedom to
oppose the collective freedom of the people...."[26]
When
the anarchist Michele Angiolillo assassinated the Spanish President
Canovas in 1897 he declared that his act both in revenge for the
repression of anarchists in Spain and retribution for Spain's
atrocities in its colonial wars.[27]
In
addition to its role in the anti-colonial struggle, the anarchist-led
Cuban labour movement played a central role in overcoming divisions
between black, white Cuban, and Spanish-born workers. The Cuban
anarchists "successfully incorporated many nonwhites into the
labour movement, and mixed Cubans and Spaniards in it", "fostering
class consciousness and helping to eradicate the cleavages of
race and ethnicity among workers."[28]
The
Workers Alliance "eroded racial barriers as no union had done
before in Cuba" in its efforts to mobilise the "whole popular
sector to sustain strikes and demonstrations."[29] Not only
did blacks join the union in "significant numbers," but
the union also undertook a fight against racial discrimination
in the workplace. The first strike of 1889, for example, included
the demand that "individuals of the coloured race able to work
there."[30] This demand reappeared in subsequent years, as
did the demand that blacks and whites have the right to "sit
in the same cafes," raised at the 1890 May Day rally in Havana.[31]
The
anarchist periodical El Producter, founded in 1887, denounced
"discrimination against Afro-Cubans by employers, shop owners
and the administration specifically." And through campaigns
and strikes involving the "mass mobilisation of people of diverse
race and ethnicity," anarchist labour in Cuba was able to
eliminate "most of the residual methods of disciplining labour
from the slavery era" such as "racial discrimination against
non-whites and the physical punishment of apprentices and dependientes."
[32]

MEXICO,
NICARAGUA AND AUGUSTINO SANDINO
In
Mexico, anarchists led Indian peasant risings such as the revolts
of Chavez Lopez in 1869 and Francisco Zalacosta in the 1870s.
Later manifestations of Mexican anarchism and anarcho-syndicalism,
such as the Mexican Liberal Party, the revolutionary syndicalist
"House of the Workers of the World" (COM) and the Mexican section
of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), Mexican anarchism
and revolutionary syndicalism continually challenged the political
and economic dominance of the United States, and opposed racial
discrimination against Mexican workers in foreign-owned enterprises,
as well as within the United States.[33]
In
the 1910s, the local IWW's focus on "'bread and butter' issues
combined with the promise of future workers' control struck a
responsive chord among workers caught up in a nationalist revolution
that sought to regain control from foreigners the nation's natural
resources, productive systems and economic infrastructure".[34]
In
Nicaragua, Augustino Cesar Sandino (1895-1934), the leader of
the Nicaraguan guerrilla war against the United States' occupation
between 1927-33, remains a national icon. Sandino's army's "red
and black flag had an anarcho-syndicalist origin, having been
introduced into Mexico by Spanish immigrants." [35]
Sandino's
eclectic politics were framed by a "peculiar brand of anarcho-communism,"[36]
a "radical anarchist communism"[37] "assimilated ....
in Mexico during the Mexican revolution" where he received
"a political education in syndicalist ideology, also known as
anarchosyndicalism, libertarian socialism, or rational communism."[38]
Despite
political weaknesses, Sandino's movement, the EDSNN, moved steadily
leftwards as Sandino realised that "only the workers and the
peasants will go all the way to the end" in the struggle.
There was thus increasing emphasis on organising peasant co-operatives
in the liberated territories. The US forces were withdrawn in
1933 and the EDSNN largely demobilised. In 1934 Sandino was murdered
and the collectives smashed on the orders of General Somoza, the
new, pro-US ruler.
LIBYA
AND ERITREA
In
Italy in the 1880s and 1890s "anarchists and former anarchists"
"were some of the most outspoken opponents of Italian military
adventures in Eritrea and Abyssinia."[39] The Italian anarchist
movement followed these struggles with a significant anti-militarist
campaign in the early twentieth century, which soon focussed on
the Italian invasion of Libya on 19 September 1911.
Augusto
Masetti, an anarchist soldier who shot a colonel addressing troops
departing for Libya whilst shouting "Down with the War! Long
Live Anarchy!" became a popular symbol of the campaign;
a special issue of the anarchist journal L'Agitatore supporting
his action, and proclaiming, "Anarchist revolt shines through
the violence of war," led to a roundup of anarchists. Whilst
the majority of Socialist Party deputies voted for annexation,[40]
the anarchists helped organise demonstrations against the war
and a partial general strike and "tried to prevent troop trains
leaving the Marches and Liguria for their embarkation points."[41]
The
campaign was immensely popular amongst the peasantry and working
class[42] and by 1914, the anarchist-dominated front of anti-militarist
groups - open to all revolutionaries - had 20,000 members, and
worked closely with the Socialist Youth.[43]
When
Prime Minister Antonio Salandra sent troops against anarchist-led
demonstrations against militarism, against special punishment
battalions in the army, and for the release of Masetti on the
7 June 1914,44 he sparked off the "Red Week" of June 1914,45 a
mass uprising ushered in by a general strike led by anarchists
and the Italian Syndicalist Union (USI). Ancona was held by rebels
for ten days, barricades went up in all the big cities, small
towns in the Marches declared themselves self-governing communes,
and everywhere the revolt took place "red flags were raised,
churches attacked, railways torn up, villas sacked, taxes abolished
and prices reduced."[46] The movement collapsed after the
Italian Socialist Party's union wing called off the strike, but
it took ten thousand troops to regain control of Ancona.[47] After
Italy entered the First World War in May 1915, the USI and the
anarchists maintained a consistently anti-war, anti-imperialist
position, continuing into 1920, when they launched a mass campaign
against the Italian invasion of Albania and against imperialist
intervention against the Russian Revolution.[48]
IRELAND
AND JAMES CONNOLLY
In
Ireland, to cite another case, the revolutionary syndicalists
James Connolly and Jim Larkin sought to unite workers across sectarian
religious divides in the 1910s, aiming at transforming the Irish
Transport and General Workers' Union, which they led, into a revolutionary
"One Big Union."[49] Socialism was to be brought about
through a revolutionary general strike: "they who are building
up industrial organisations for the practical purposes of to-day
are at the same time preparing the framework of the society of
the future .... the principle of democratic control will operate
through the workers correctly organised in .... Industrial Unions,
and the .... the political, territorial state of capitalist society
will have no place or function...."[50]
A
firm anti-imperialist, Connolly opposed the nationalist dictum
that "labour must wait," and that independent Ireland must
be capitalist: what would be the difference in practice, he wrote,
if the unemployed were rounded up for the "to the tune of 'St.
Patrick's Day'" whilst the bailiffs wore wear "green uniforms
and the Harp without the Crown, and the warrant turning you out
on the road will be stamped with the arms of the Irish Republic"?[51]
In the end, he insisted, "the Irish question is a social question,
the whole age-long fight of the Irish people against their oppressors
resolves itself, in the final analysis into a fight for the mastery
of the means of life, the sources of production, in Ireland."[52]
Connolly
was sceptical of the very ability of the national bourgeoisie
to consistently fight against imperialism, writing it off as a
sentimental, cowardly, and anti-labour bloc, and he opposed any
alliance with this layer: the once-radical middle class have "bowed
the knee to Baal, and have a thousand economic strings .... binding
them to English capitalism as against every sentimental or historic
attachment drawing them toward Irish patriotism," and so,
"only the Irish working class remain as the incorruptible inheritors
of the fight for freedom in Ireland."[53] Connolly was executed
in 1916 following his involvement in the Easter Rising, which
helped spark the Irish War of Independence of 1919-1922, one of
the first successful secessions from the British Empire.

ANARCHIST
REVOLUTION IN KOREA
A
final example bears mentioning. The anarchist movement emerged
in East Asia in the early twentieth century, where it exerted
a significant influence in China, Japan and Korea. With the Japanese
annexation of Korea in 1910, opposition to the occupation developed
in both Japan and in Korea, and spilled over into China. In Japan,
the prominent anarchist Kotoku Shusui was framed and executed
in July 1910, in part because his Commoner's Newspaper campaigned
against Japanese expansionism.[54]
For
the Korean anarchists, the struggle for decolonisation assumed
centre-stage in their political activity: they played a prominent
part in the 1919 rising against Japanese occupation, and in 1924
formed the Korean Anarchist Federation on the basis of the "Korean
Revolution Manifesto" which stated that
"we
declare that the burglar politics of Japan is the enemy for
our nation's existence and that it is our proper right to overthrow
the imperialist Japan by a revolutionary means".[55]
The
Manifesto made it clear that the solution to this national question
was not the creation of a "sovereign national State" but
in a social revolution by the peasants and the poor against both
the colonial government and the local bourgeoisie.
Further,
the struggle was seen in internationalist terms by the Korean
Anarchist Federation, which went on to found an Eastern Anarchist
Federation in 1928, spanning China, Japan, Taiwan, Vietnam and
other countries, and which called upon "the proletariat of
the world, especially the eastern colonies" to unite against
"international capitalistic imperialism". Within Korea
itself, the anarchists organised an underground network, the Korean
Anarcho-Communist Federation, to engage in guerrilla activity,
propaganda work and trade union organising.[56]
In
1929, the Korean anarchists founded an armed liberated zone, the
Korean People's Association in Manchuria, which brought together
two million guerrillas and Korean peasants on the basis of voluntary
farming co-operatives. The Korean People's Association in Manchuria
was able to withstand several years of attacks by Japanese forces
and Korean Stalinists backed by the Soviet Union before being
forced underground.[57] Resistance continued throughout the 1930s
despite intense repression, and a number of joint Sino-Korean
operations were organised after the Japanese invasion of China
in 1937.[58]
IN
CONCLUSION: TOWARDS THE DESTRUCTION OF IMPERIALISM
Anarchists
cannot be 'neutral' in any fight against imperialism. Whether
it is the struggle against the third world debt, the struggle
against the Israeli occupation of Palestine, or opposition to
US military attacks on the Middle East, we are not neutral, we
can never be neutral. We are against imperialism.
But
we are not nationalists. We recognise that imperialism is itself
rooted in capitalism, and we recognise that simply replacing foreign
elites with local elites will not solve the problem in a way that
is fundamentally beneficial for the working class and peasantry.
Establishing
new nation-states means, in effect, establishing new capitalist
states that, in turn, serve the interests of the local elite at
the expense of the working class and peasantry. Thus, most nationalist
movements that have achieved their goals have turned on the working
class once in power, crushing leftists and trade unionists with
vigour. In other words, internal oppression continues in new forms.
At
the same time, imperialism cannot be destroyed by the formation
of new nation-states. Even independent nation-states are part
of the international state system, and the international capitalist
system, a system in which the power of imperialist states continues
to set the rules of the game. In other words, external repression
continues in new forms.
This
means that the new states - and the local capitalists that control
them- soon find themselves unable to fundamentally challenge imperialist
control and instead set about trying to advance their interests
within the overall framework of imperialism. This means that they
maintain close economic ties with the western centres, whilst
using their own state power to build up their own strength, hoping,
eventually, to graduate to imperialist status themselves. In practice,
the most effective way for the local ruling classes to develop
local capitalism is to crush labour and small farmers in order
to be able to sell cheap raw materials and manufactured goods
on the world market.
This
is no solution. We need to abolish imperialism, so creating conditions
for the self-government of all people around the world. But this
requires the destruction of capitalism and the state system. At
the same time, our struggle is a struggle against the ruling classes
within the third world: local oppression is no solution. The local
elites are an enemy both within national liberation movements
and even more so after the formation of new nation-states. It
is only the working class and peasantry who can destroy imperialism
and capitalism, replacing domination by both local and foreign
elites with self-management and social and economic equality.
Hence,
we are for working class autonomy and unity and solidarity across
countries, across continents, and for the establishment of an
international anarcho-communist system through the self-activity
of the global working class and peasantry. As Sandino said, "In
this struggle, only the workers and peasants will go all the way
to the end."

Lucien van der Walt is an anarchist activist based in Johannesburg,
and involved in struggles and movements against privatisation,
neo-liberalism and racism. Contact him through the bikisha(at)mail.com
(Bikisha Media Collective, South Africa) address if you are interested
in reprinting this text.
This
article was translated into French as Pour
une histoire de l'anti-impérialisme anarchiste
Dans cette lutte, seuls les ouvriers et les paysans iront jusqu'au
bout.
Footnotes
- Cited
in D. Guerin, 1970, Anarchism, Monthly Review, p. 68
- ibid.
- Guerin,
1970, op cit., p. 68
- M.
Bakunin, [1866] "National Catechism," in S. Dolgoff (editor),
1971, Bakunin on Anarchy, George Allen and Unwin, London, p.
99.
- Bakunin,
[1873], "Statism and Anarchy," in S. Dolgoff (editor), 1971,
op cit., pp. 341-3
- ibid.
- Cited
in S. Cipko, 1990, "Mikhail Bakunin and the National Question,"
in The Raven, 9, (1990), p. 3 p. 11.
- http://members.tripod.com/~stiobhard/east.html
- G.
Woodcock, 1975, Anarchism: a History of Libertarian Ideas and
Movements. Penguin, pp. 236-8
- H.
Oliver, 1983, The International Anarchist Movement in Late Victorian
London, Croom Helm, London/ Rowman and Littlefield, New Jersey,
p. 15
- V.
Richards, 1993, Malatesta: Life and Ideas, Freedom Press, London,
p. 229
- Ibid.;
P. Marshall, 1994, Demanding the Impossible: a history of anarchism,
Fontana, p. 347
- D.
Poole, 1981, "Appendix: About Malatesta", in E. Malatesta, Fra
Contadini: a Dialogue on Anarchy, Bratach Dubh Editions, Anarchist
Pamphlets no. 6, London, p. 42
- From
Sail Mahomed, 1994, Appels Aux Travailleurs Algeriens, Volonte
Anarchiste/ Edition Du Groupe Fresnes Antony, Paris (Edited
by Sylvain Boulouque).
- From
Sylvain Boulouque, 1994, "Sail Mohamed: ou la vie et la revolte
d'un anarchiste Algerien" in Mahomed, 1994, op cit.
- F.D.,
27 April 1911, "Le Syndicait Marocain," in Le Bataille Syndicaliste,
number 1
- R.
Kedward, 1972, The Anarchists: the men who shocked an era, Library
of the Twentieth Century, p. 67
- Kedward
1971, op cit., p. 67
- Nevinson
was an English critic of imperialism; the quote is from 1909.
Cited in P. Trewhela, 1988, "George Padmore: a critique, "in
Searchlight South Africa, volume 1, number 1, p. 50
- B,
Tuchman, cited in Trewhela, 1988, op cit., p. 50.
- Kedward
1971, op cit., p. 67
- M.
Bookchin, 1977, The Spanish Anarchists: the heroic years 1868-1936
(Harper Colophon Books: New York, Hagerstown, San Francisco,
London, 1977, p. 163
- A.
Paz, 1987, Durruti: the People Armed, Black Rose, Montreal,
p.39
- J.
Casanovas, 1994, Labour and Colonialism in Cuba in the Second
Half of the Nineteenth Century, Ph.D. thesis, State University
of New York at Stony Brook
- ibid.,
p. 436.
- F.
Fernandez, 1989, Cuba: the anarchists and liberty, ASP, London,
p. 2.
- Casanovas,
1994, op cit., p. 436
- Casanovas,
1994, op cit., p. 8
- ibid.,
p. 366.
- ibid.,
p. 367.
- ibid.,
pp. 381, 393-4.
- J.
Casanovas, 1995, "Slavery, the Labour Movement and Spanish Colonialism
in Cuba, 1850-1890", International Review of Social History,
number 40, pp. 381-2. These struggles are detailed in Casanovas,
1994, op cit., chapters 8 and 9.
- See,
inter alia, N. Caulfield, 1995, "Wobblies and Mexican Workers
in Petroleum, 1905-1924", International Review of Social History,
number 40, p. 52, and N. Caulfield, "Syndicalism and the Trade
Union Culture of Mexico" (paper presented at Syndicalism: Swedish
and International Historical Experiences, Stockholm University:
Sweden, March 13-4, 1998); J. Hart, 1978, Anarchism and the
Mexican Working Class, 1860-1931, Texas University Press
- Caulfield,
1995, op cit.; Caulfield, 1998, op cit.
- D.C.
Hodges, The Intellectual Foundations of the Nicaraguan Revolution,
cited in Appendix, "The Symbols of Anarchy", The Anarchist FAQ,
http://flag.blackened.net/intanark/faq/.
- ibid.
- See
Navarro-Genie, Sin Sandino No Hay Sandinismo: lo que Bendana
pretende (unpublished mimeo: n.d.).
- A.
Bendana, 1995, A Sandinista Commemoration of the Sandino Centennial
(speech given on the 61 anniversary of the death of General
Sandino, held in Managua's Olaf Palme Convention Centre, distributed
by Centre for International Studies, Managua)
- C.
Levy, 1989, "Italian Anarchism, 1870-1926", in D. Goodway (editor),
For Anarchism: history, theory and practice, Routledge, London/
New York, p. 56.
- G.
Williams, 1975, A Proletarian Order: Antonio Gramsci, factory
councils and the origins of Italian communism 1911-21, Pluto
Press, pp. 36-7
- Levy,
1989, op cit., p. 56; Williams, 1975, op cit., p. 37
- ibid.
p. 35
- Levy,
1989, op cit., p. 56
- Levy,
1989, op cit., pp. 56-7
- ibid.,
pp. 56-7
- ibid.,
pp. 56-7; Williams, 1975, op cit., pp. 51-2. The quote is from
Williams.
- ibid.,
p. 36
- See,
inter alia, Levy, 1989, op cit., pp. 64, 71; Williams, 1975,
op cit.
- On
Connolly and Larkin, see E. O'Connor, 1988, Syndicalism in Ireland,
1917-23, Cork University Press, Ireland. I do not intend to
enter into a detailed debate over Connolly in this paper, except
to state that the recurrent attempts to appropriate Connolly
for Stalinism, Trotskyism and/ or the Marxist tradition, more
generally - not to mention Irish nationalism and/or Catholicism
- are confounded by Connolly's own unambiguous views on revolutionary
unionism after 1904: see the materials in collections such as
O. B. Edwards and B. Ransom (editors), 1973, James Connolly:
selected political writings, Jonathan Cape: London
- J.
Connolly, 1909, "Socialism Made Easy," Edwards and Ransom (editors),
op cit., pp. 271, 274
- Connolly,
[1909], op cit., p. 262
-
J. Connolly, Labour in Irish History (Corpus of Electronic Texts:
University College, Cork, Ireland [1903-1910]), p. 183
-
Connolly, [1903-1910], op cit., p. 25
-
Ha Ki-Rak, 1986, A History of Korean Anarchist Movement, Anarchist
Publishing Committee: Korea, pp. 27-9
-
Ha, 1986, op cit., pp. 19-28
-
Ha, 1986, op cit., pp. 35-69
-
Ha, 1986, op cit., pp. 71-93.
-
Ha, 1986, op cit., pp. 96-11358 Cited in D. Guerin, 1970, Anarchism,
Monthly Review, p. 68
This
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The
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