Peter Kropotkin: his federalist ideas
by Camillo Berneri
Camillo Berneri, and comrade Barbieri,
were murdered by Stalinist agents on 5th May,1937,
during the May Days in Barcelona.
ONE OF THE MOST INTERESTING aspects of Kropotkin's political thought is the
federalist idea which constantly recurs in his writings and form one of the
basic factors in his anarchist ideology. Although Kropotkin's federalism is not
a systematic theory and cannot be very clearly differentiated from that of
Proudhon or Bakunin, it nevertheless presents various characteristics which
make its study of Interest.
For such a study a biographical excursus is needed in order to illuminate for
us the beginnings of Kropotkin's federalist thought in relation to the
surroundings in which it formed itself and developed. Tilgher, writing about
Kropotkin rightly remarks;
"It is impossible to understand the intimate spirit
of the anarchist movement if one does not consider it historically as a radical
and violent reaction against the profound transformation undergone during the
nineteenth century by the institutions of the State!'
Kropotkin, the anarchist, provides the best example of this assertion.
Kropotkin's clear and detailed biography enables us to follow the different
phases in the development of his federalist thought step by step.
At the age of nineteen, when he was an officer of the Cossacks, he went to
Transbaikalia where he took a passionate interest in the great reforms
undertaken by the government in 1862, and carried out by the Higher
Administration of Siberia. As secretary to government committees he was in
touch with the best of the civil servants and began to study the various
projects of local government administration. But he very soon saw that the
reforms proposed by the District Chiefs and protected by the Governors General,
were submitted to the orders and influence of the central government.
Administrative life revealed to him every day absurdities in system and method.
Seeing the impossibility of achieving any kind of reforms, be took part In 1863
in an expedition along the Amur.
During a storm forty barges were sunk with the loss of 2,000 tons of flour.
This catastrophe gave him an opportunity of getting to know the bureaucratic
system still better. The authorities refused to believe in the disaster, while
the civil servants concerned with
Siberian affairs
in Petrograd revealed a
complete ignorance of all that concerned their particular . . . speciality. A
high functionary said to him:
"But my dear fellow, how would it be possible for
40 barges to be destroyed on the Neva without someone jumping in to save them!"
When Kropotkin replied that the Amur is four times as big as the Neva, the
astonished functionary asked:
"But is it really as big as all that"
—and passed
on, annoyed, to talk of some frivolity.
Kropotkin went to Manchuria more than ever distrustful of the central
government. He probably thought of the Petrograd bureaucrats when at the
Chinese frontier an official of the Celestial Empire refused his passport
because it was only composed of a modest sheet of stamped paper, but showed the
greatest respect for an old copy of the bulky Moscow gazette which was shown to
him as a passport.
As an attaché of the "Governor General for Cossack affairs," Kropotkin made an
accurate enquirer into the economic conditions of the Cossacks of the Usuri. On
his return to Petrograd he was congratulated, promoted, and got special
rewards. But his proposals were not put into practice because of the officials
who stole money and continued to flog the peasants, instead of furnishing them
with cattle and, by prompt and suitable assistance, relieving the effects of
famine. "And thus it went on in all directions, beginning with the winter
palace at St. Petersburg and ending with the Usuri and Kamchátka. The higher
administration of Siberia was influenced by excellent intentions, and
I can only repeat that, everything considered, it was far better, far more
enlightened, and far more interested in the welfare of the people than the
administration of any other province in Russia. But it was an administration— a
branch of the tree which had its roots at St. Petersburg—and that was enough to
paralyse all its excellent intentions, enough to make it interfere with and
kill all the beginnings of local life and progress, Whatever was started for
the good of the country by local men was looked at with distrust, and was
immediately paralysed by hosts of difficulties which came, not so much from the
bad intentions of the administrators, but simply from the fact that these
officials belonged to a pyramidal, centralised administration. The very fact of
their belonging to a government which radiated from a distant capital caused
them to look upon everything from the point of view of functionaries of the
government, who think first of all about what their superiors will say, and how
this or that will appear in the administrative machinery. The interests of the
country are a secondary matter."
Parallel with his knowledge of the inefficiency of the central administration
bodies, his observations on the
free association of those engaged in common
interests
which he made throughout his long journeys in Siberia and Manchuria
also contributed to the formation of his anarchist personality. He saw clearly
the role played by the anonymous masses in great historic events and in the
development of civilisation, This realization, as we shall see later,
influenced the whole of his sociological criticism, and was fundamental to his
method of historical research.
When Kropotkin want to Switzerland, his libertarian and federalist tendencies
were greatly influenced by his contact with the Jura Federation, which in 1872
had assumed marked autonomist and anti-authoritarian tendencies. One should
note that the development of these tendencies was In great part due to the
strongly centralized, not to say tyrannical, domination of the International.
It is necessary to add that the militants of the Jura Federation were imbued
with the anarchism of Bakunin which was essentially federalist. Kropotkin, as
be himself states, was never in direct contact with Bakunin.
On his return to Russia, he got in touch with the groups of left-wing
intellectuals, and he realized anew the uselessness of the attempts made by
those who tried to regenerate the country through the zemstvos. Such work was
suspected of being separatist, of trying to form a State within the State, and
was persecuted to such a point that any attempt to improve the rural
administration with regard to health services or schools was a miserable
failure, and carried with it the ruin of entire groups of members elected to
the
zemstvos.
Notwithstanding the disappointments attendant on his administrative experience,
before he left Russia, Kropotkin set to work once more. Having inherited his
father's property at Tambov, he went to live there and devoted all his energies
to the local zemstvo. But he was compelled once more to realise the
impossibility of setting up schools, co-operatives, or model factories without
creating new victims of the central government,
From the articles that Kropotkin published between 1879 and 1882 in the
Révolté
of Geneva, it seems clear that the administrative system of the West only
provided him with new material for his criticisms against the State, and
confirmed him still further in his federalist and libertarian ideas. Wherever
centralism existed he found a powerful bureaucracy.
"It creates an army of office-holders, sitting like spiders in their webs, who
have never seen the world except through the dingy panes of their office
windows and only know it from their files and absurd formulae—a black band, who
have no other religion except money, and no other thought but of sticking to
any party, black, purple or white, so long as it guarantees a maximum salary
for a minimum of work." P. Kropotkin,
Paroles d'un revolté
Centralism, resulting in excessive bureaucracy, appeared to Kropotkin as one of
the characteristics of the representative system. He saw in the parliamentary
regime the triumph of incompetence, and he described with picturesque irony the
administrative and legislative activities of the M.P. who is not called upon to
judge and deal with matters for which he is specially fitted, but is asked to
vote on a series of questions, of an infinite variety, arising from those
elephantine machines that are the centralised State.
"He will have to vote taxes on dogs and the reform of university education,
without ever having set foot in a university or ever knowing a country dog. He
will have to give his opinion on the advantages of the Gras rifle and on the
site for the State stables. He will have to vote on the phylloxera, on grain,
tobacco, primary education and urban sanitation; on Cochin China and Guiana, on
chimneys and the Paris Observatory. He has never seen soldiers except on
rnanoeuvres, but he will dispose army corps; never having met an Arab, he will
make and re-make the Mussulman legal code in Algeria. He will vote for the
shako or the kepi according to the tastes of his wife. He will protect sugar
and sacrifice grain. Will destroy the vine under the impression that he is
protecting it. Will vote for afforestation against pasturage, and protect
pasturage against the forest. He will have to show his ability in banking. He
will sacrifice a canal or a railway without knowing in what part of France they
are situated. He will add new articles to the legal code without ever
consulting it. A veritable Proteus, omniscient and omnipotent, to-day a soldier
and to-morrow a pig-man, successively a banker, an academician, a
street-sweeper, doctor, astronomer, drug-manufacturer, tanner, or contractor
according to the orders of the day in Parliament, he never knows a moment's
hesitation. Accustomed in his capacity as lawyer, journalist or public orator,
to speak of things he knows nothing of, he votes for all these and other
questions as well with only this difference; while in the newspapers he merely
amused with his gossip, and In the court room his voice only awoke the sleeping
judges, in Parliament he will make laws for thirty or forty million
inhabitants." P Kropotkin,
Paroles d'un revolté.
But the western countries, together with the ridiculous administrations of the
centralised parliamentary regimes, revealed to him the immense strength, vaster
and more complex, observed in the Russian Mir: that of the free associations
which,
"extend themselves and cover every branch of human activity;
and which
made him declare that
"the future is in the hands of free associations and not
of centralized governments."
Especially the years spent in England, a country
where the independence of the people and the enormous development of free
initiative could not fail to strike the foreigner coming from Slav or Latin
countries, made Kropotkin attach great, sometimes even excessive, importance to
associations.
From his direct knowledge of the Western world, Kropotkin added a new tendency
in his studies. A geographer in Russia, he became an ardent historian in
Britain. He wished to understand the State and knew that in order to do so
"there is only one way; that of studying it in its historic development."
He
discovered with enthusiasm that the general tendency of science is that
"of
studying nature not from its large results and great conclusions, but rather
through single phenomena, through separate elements."
History also ceases to be
the history of dynasties, and becomes the history of peoples. So much the
better for historical method, but also for the federalist conception, for it
will become obvious that great progressive changes have not taken place in
courts and parliaments, but in the city, in the countryside. Devoting himself
to historical studies, Kropotkin saw in the excessive centralization of the
Roman Empire the cause of its collapse, and in the epoch of the Communes the
renaissance of the western world. "It is in the enfranchisement of the Communes
and in the uprising of the people and the Communes against the State, that we
find the most beautiful pages of history. When we look at the past, it is not
to Louis XI or Louis XIV or to Catherine II that we turn our eyes, but rather
to the Communes or the Republics of Amalfi and Florence, of Toulouse and Laon,
Liege or Courtrai, Augsburg and Nuremburg, Pskov and Novgorod."
In trying to draw examples from mediaeval society, Kropotkin fell into various
errors of interpretation, due more than anything else to the fact that the
texts that he consulted (such as the writings of Sismondi) were not so advanced
as the historical studies of today. There is no need to think, however, like
certain superficial people, that Kropotkin envisaged the epoch of the communes
as a kind of golden age. "It will be said, no doubt, that I forgot the
conflicts and the internal struggles with which the history of the communes is
filled; the embittered battles against the nobles, the insurrections of the
"young arts" against the "old arts," the bloodshed and the reprisals which
always occurred during those Struggles. . . No, I forget nothing. But, like Leo
and Botta—the two historians of Southern Italy—like Sismondi, Ferrari, Gino
Capponi and so many others, I hold that these struggles were, in themselves the
proof of the freedom of life In the free cities." (see "Conquest of Bread") It
was these intestine struggles according to Kropotkin, that permitted of the
intervention of the king and the tendency of the Communes to enclose themselves
within their walls ("Paroles d'un Revolte")
Another historical field explored by Kropotkin was the French Revolution. He
was opposed to the bourgeoisie of 1789 whose "ideal was to abolish all the
local powers which at that time constituted so many autonomous units in the
state. They meant to concentrate all governmental power in the hands of a
central executive authority, strictly controlled by Parliament, but also
strictly obeyed in the State, and combining every department—taxes, law courts,
police, army, schools, civic control, general direction of commerce and
industry—everything." ("The Great French Revolution") He reproached the
Girondins for the attempt to dissolve the communes and demonstrated that their
federalism was merely an opposition slogan, and that in their actions they
showed themselves to be as much In favour of centralization as the Montagnards.
According to Kropotkin the communes were the soul of the French Revolution and
he gave extensive illustrations of the communalist movement, seeking to show
that one of the prime causes of the decadence of the cities was the abolition
of the plenary assemblies of citizens which held control of Justice and the
Administration.
The epoch of the Communes and of the French Revolution were for Kropotkin, as
for Salvemini, the two historical fields In which be found the confirmation of
his own federalist ideas and the elements of the development of his libertarian
conception of life and politics. But there always remained alive In him the
record of his observations on the Russian mir and of the free associations
among primitive peoples, and these recollections confirmed in him his
federalism, which sometimes makes him err into a popular naivete as in the
Conquest of Bread.
When he studied the various socialist theories, Kropotkin adopted a negative
attitude towards the Saint-Simonians and the so-called Utopians, in particular
Cabet, because they founded their systems on an administrative hierarchy; but
he showed on the contrary great enthusiasm for the communalist theories of
Fourier (see "Modern Science and Anarchism"). He opposed State collectivization
because although it decidedly modified the capitalist regime "it does not
abolish the wage system," because "the State, that is to say the representative
government, national or communal, puts itself in the place of the boss," so
that Its representatives and bureaucrats, absorb, and render necessary, the
surplus value of production. (See "Conquest of Bread" and "Modern Science and
Anarchism") Also true of the socialist State is the following remark: "How much
Work do we yield to the State? No economist has ever tried to work out the
number of work-days that the worker in field or factory gives every year to
this Babylonian idol. It is in vain that one searches through books of
political economy in order to arrive at an approximate estimate of what man,
the producer of all wealth, gives to his labour to the State.
"A simple estimate based on the State budget, of a nation, of the provinces and
communes (which contribute to the expenses of the State) would have no
significance because one would have to work out not what goes every year into
the Treasury coffers, but what every shilling paid to the Treasury represents
in real value by the taxpayer. All we can say is that the amount of work given
every year by the producer to the State must be enormous. It must reach, and
for certain classes exceed, the three days work a week that the serf used to
give his lord." ("Modern Science and Anarchism") Even the socialists' State
would try to increase its exactions because "every party in power is obliged to
create new jobs for its supporters" and it not only would burden the economic
life of the country with administrative expenses, but also set up an oligarchy
of incompetents. "What is needed, on the contrary is the collective spirit of
the masses acting on concrete affairs."
The collective spirit, is a generic term which in the Conquest of Bread became
"the people," "the commune," "society" etc., which administers justice,
organizes everything, and resolves the most complex problems. It is a kind of
divinity which Saverio Merlino described with just irony as playing the part of
the chorus in Greek tragedy, and which the most profound anarchist
theoreticians are far from adoring. But If Kropotkin's federalism lacks
precision and puts excessive faith In the political capacities of the people,
it is nevertheless remarkable for its breadth of view. No federation can be
consistent if it is not integral. And It can only be such if it is socialist
and revolutionary.
The integral nature of Kropotkin's federalist ideas is proved by many passages
in his writings. The following declarations are the most explicit ones.
"Federation and Autonomy are not enough. They are only words which cover the
authority of the centralized state." "To-day, the State has succeeded in
controlling every aspect of our lives. From the cradle to the grave it holds us
in its grip. Sometimes under the guise of the centralized state, sometimes as a
provincial or cantonal government, sometimes as a State-Commune, it follows our
every step, appears at the street corner, holding and tormenting us." The free
commune is, according to Kropotkin, the "political form which the social
revolution should take." He exalts the Paris Commune because its communal
independence was a means, and the social revolution the aim. The Commune of the
twentieth century "will not only be communalist, but communist! revolutionary
in politics, it will also be so In the field of production and exchange. Either
the Commune will be absolutely "free to give itself the institutions it desires
and to make all the reforms and revolutions it finds necessary," or else "it
will remain merely a branch of the state, hampered in all its actions, always
on the verge of coming into conflict with the state, and certain to be defeated
in its struggle with it." For Kropotkin, then, the free communes were the
necessary channels through which the revolution could reach its maximum
development.
His federalism aspires to "the complete independence of the Communes, the
Federation of free communes and the social revolution in the communes, that is
to say the formation of associated productive groups in place of the state
organization."
Kropotkin said to the peasants: "At one time, the land belonged to the
Communes, composed of those who themselves cultivated the land, with their own
hands," but thanks to fraud, molestation, and violence, the communal lands have
become private property. The peasants must therefore organise themselves in
communes and take back this land in order to put it at the disposal of those
who are willing to work it." And again, "Do you need a road? Then the
inhabitants of the neighbouring communes will reach an agreement between
themselves and will make one better than the Minister of Public Works. Do you
need a railway? The Communes concerned in a whole region will make one better
than the contractors who pile up millions building railways. You will need
schools? You can make them yourselves as well as these Paris gentlemen and make
them better than they. The State has nothing to do with all this; schools,
roads, canals could be built better by yourselves and at less expense." These
passages from 'Paroles d'un Revolte" make it clear that in those places in the
"Conquest of Bread," where he says that the Commune will distribute goods,
ration wood, regulate the pasture land, divide the land, etc., he does not mean
the Commune as a "branch of the State," but the free association of the members
concerned, which may be either a co-operative, or a corporate body, or simply a
provisional union of several people united by a common need.
Kropotkin, although he realizes the seriousness of them, is not too much
concerned with the dangers inherent in the autonomy of small groups. There is a
characteristic passage on the subject: "Even in our time parochial feelings may
give rise to much jealousy between two neighbouring communes, prevent their
direct alliance, and even give rise to fratricidal struggles. But even if these
jealousies can effectively prevent direct federation between two neighbouring
communes, It is by means of the great centres that this federation will
stabilize itself. To-day, two very small neighbouring boroughs have nothing
which unites them directly; the few relations they have between themselves will
serve more likely to cause conflict than to draw closer the bonds of
solidarity. But both of them have already a common centre with which they are
in constant touch and without which they could not exist; in spite of all
parochial jealousies they will be constrained towards union by means of the
great city, where they provision themselves and whither they bring their
products; each of them must take part in the same federation in order to
maintain their own relations with this centre of co-ordination, and unite
themselves within it."
Here again we have a simplification of the federalist problem. But in order to
judge Kropotkin fairly one must take account not only of what he has written
but also of what he has been unable to write. Some hasty statements, some
lacunae, some oversimplification of complex problems are not due only to his
habit of mind, but also to the material impossibility of developing his point
of view. Kropotkin almost always wrote for newspapers intended to be read by
workers. Being profoundly democratic he always voluntarily renounced the mantle
of the doctrinaire in order to roll up his shirt- sleeves. Malatesta, who was
also an original theoretician and a cultivated man, did the same. Even his
pamphlets do not represent the whole expression of his ideas, a complete
exposition of his researches. He himself explains the reason in his "Memoirs":
"I had to elaborate a completely new style for these pamphlets. I confess that
I often regarded with envy those writers who had as many pages as they liked at
their disposal for the development of their ideas, and those who could use
Talleyrand's excuse, 'I had no time to be brief.' When I had to condense the
work of several months, for example, on the origin of law, for a penny
pamphlet, I needed quite a lot of time for abbreviation."
Kropotkin met with those material difficulties only towards 1884; afterwards
for almost thirty years he was able to write considerable books. But In this
second period he was more a theoretician than an agitator, and his thoughts
were more occupied with historical researches and scientific studies, so that
"Lea Paroles d'un Revolte" remains his best anarchist work for freshness of
expression and ideological coherence.
Some have thought to see in Kropotkin's attitude in 1914 an analogy with that
of Bakunin in 1871, Bakunin was in favour of the revolutionary defence of
France after the Paris revolution had overthrown the monarchy; and he was also
opposed to the republican government of Paris and urged insurrection against it
in order to oppose the German army only with the revolution of the people.
With his pro-war attitude Kropotkin separated himself from anarchism, and he
even went so far as to sign the Manifesto of the Sixteen in 1916, a document
which marks the culmination of incoherence in the pro-war anarchists; he also
supported Kerensky in Russia on the question of prosecuting the war.
Kropotkin saw the federalist problem as a technical one and he declares in his
last book Modern Science and Anarchism that man will be compelled to find new
forms of organisation for the social functions which the State fulfils through
the bureaucracy and that "as long as this is not done nothing will be done."
But in his life, partly adventurous, partly strictly scientific, he was not
able systematically to develop his federalist conception, and his own
conception of anarchism in which the vital spirit of the people constitutes the
essence of evolution, was opposed to the development of his federalist Ideas
for the future.
What was Kropotkin's attitude towards the European war and the Russian
revolution? I think It is interesting to consider it because his federalist
thought contributed in forming his attitude. In his Memoirs Kropotkin wrote:
"The conflict between the Marxists and the Bakuninists was not a personal
issue. It was the inevitable conflict between the principle of federalism and
that of centralization, between the free communes and government by the State,
between the free action of the masses of the people advancing towards their
emancipation and the legal perfection of existing capitalism—a conflict between
the Latin spirit and the German spirit." At the outbreak of the war Kropotkin
regarded France as the repository of the Latin spirit that Is to say of the
revolution and Germany as the triumph of State worship that is to say of
reaction. His attitude was that of the "defenders of democracy." At the
beginning he joined with the chauvinists of the Entente and fell like Guillaume
(Author of the unfortunate pamphlet
Karl 'Marx Pangermaniste
) into exaggeration.
But in the one-sidedness of his position one can see the conviction of his
federalist faith. He opposed Germany because he saw in her a danger to the
autonomy of peoples and the principle of decentralization. In his letter to the
Swedish professor G. Steffen (
Freedom
October 1914) he declared:
"For the States of Eastern Europe, and especially for Russia, Germany was the
chief support and protection for reaction. Prussian militarism, the mock
institution of popular representation offered by the German Reichstag, and the
feudal Landtags of the separate portions of the German Empire, and the
ill-treatment of the subdued nationalities in Alsace, and especially in
Prussian Poland, where the Poles were treated as badly as in Russia—without
protest from the advanced political parties—these fruits of German imperialism
were the lessons that the modern Germany, the Germany of Bismarck, taught her
neighbours, and, above all, Russian absolutism. Would absolutism have
maintained itself so long in Russia, and would that absolutism ever have dared
to ill-treat Poland and Finland as it had treated them, if it could not produce
the example of "cultured Germany," and if it were not sure of Germany's
protection ?"
And foreseeing the criticism: Are you forgetting the Russian autocracy? he
wrote:
"No one imagines that after the present war, in which all the Russian parties
have unanimously risen against the common enemy, it will be possible to return
once more to the old autocracy; that is physically impossible. Those who have
made a serious study of the revolutionary movement in Russia in 1905 know what
were the dominating ideas during the first and second Dumas which were elected
under comparatively free conditions. They surely know that home rule for all
the sections which make up the Empire was the fundamental policy of all liberal
and radical parties. But there is more than that. Finland has achieved her
revolution in the shape of a democratic autonomy, and the Duma has endorsed it.
Furthermore, those who know Russia and the latest tendencies there, certainly
understand that the
old autocracy will never be re-established in the pre-1905
form, and that a Russian Constitution will never be able to take on an
imperialist form, and assume the spirit which parliamentarism has in Germany.
In our opinion, and knowing Russia as we do, we are convinced that Russia will
never become aggressive and bellicose like Germany. Not only does the whole of
Russian history show this, but the way in which the Russian Federation is
constituted precludes the development of the militarist spirit in the very near
future."
For Kropotkin, Russia was the country of the Mir, the country which had offered
him a wide field for observation of the results and possibilities of initiative
on the part of the people.
The European War drew him away from his political family; the anarchist
movement. The October Revolution in Russia drew him back to it once more.
Kropotkin, even in his earliest writings, fought against the illusion that
secret revolutionary societies would be able, once the Tsarist tyranny had been
destroyed, to substitute for the defeated bureaucratic machine a new
administration made up of honest and intransigent revolutionaries; "others—the
careful ones who work to make a name for themselves whilst the revolutionaries
work in the dark or perish in Siberia; others—the intriguers, the demagogues,
the lawyers, the men of letters who occasionally shed a soon-dried tear over
the tomb of the heroes, and pass for friends of the people—these are the people
who will occupy the vacant seats in the government and will cry "Back!" to the
nameless ones who have brought about the revolution." Kropotkin's prophecy has
been amply borne out in Russia, and our comrade was in the opposition, an
opposition which would have had important repercussions if his unqualified
support for the war had not destroyed his political prestige.
In an interview with Augustin Souchy published in
Erkenntnis Befreiung
of
Vienna, Kropotkin said:
"We should have communal councils. These should work independently. They should
for Instance see to it that, in the event of a poor harvest, the population did
not lack the bare necessities of life. Centralized government is, in this case,
an extremely cumbersome machine (Kropotkin expressed his own hostility towards
the coercive economy of the Bolshevik government in an Interview with the
Daily News
correspondent, W. Meakin. See also the interesting Interviews with
Alexander Berkman, in the
Libertaire
of 22nd February 1922.), whereas, on the
other hand, a federation of the councils would create a vital centre." In his
interview with Armando Borghi Kropotkin placed great stress on the role of the
syndicates as the cells of the autonomous and anti-authoritarian social
revolution. In some of his last letters (23rd December 1920) addressed to the
Dutch anarchist De Rejger, which was published In the
Vrije Socialist,
Kropotkin wrote: "The Social Revolution in Russia has unfortunately assumed a
centralized and authoritarian character."
Kropotkin's views on the Russian Revolution are expressed in his message to
the Western Workers, handed to Miss Bonfield on 10th June, 1920, when she and
other delegates of the Labour Party came to greet him in his retreat at
Dimitrov. This message Is a notable document In the history of the Russian
Revolution.
Kropotkin pointed out that if one admitted that the attempt to establish a new
society through the Dictatorship of the Proletariat is doomed to failure, one
cannot nevertheless deny that the revolution introduced new conceptions into
Russian life on the social function and on the rights of the worker, as well as
on the duties of the individual citizen, and he expressed his idea with a clear
but intransigent criticism of Bolshevism as a party dictatorship and
centralized government. The first general problem concerns the different
nationalities that make up Russia. On this question Kropotkin writes:
"A re-establishment of relations between the American and European nations and
Russia must not mean an admission of the superiority of the Russian nation over
the nations of
which the Empire of the Russian Tsar was composed.
"Imperial Russia is dead and will never be revived. The future of the various
provinces which composed the Empire will be directed towards a large
federation. The natural territories of the different sections of this
federation are in no wise distinct from those with which we are familiar in the
history of Russia, of its ethnography and economic life. All the attempts to
bring together the constituent parts of the Russia Empire, such as Finland, the
Baltic provinces, Lithuania, Ukraine, Georgia, Armenia, Siberia and others,
under a central authority are doomed to certain failure. The future of what was
the Russian Empire is directed towards a federation of independent units.
Consequently it would be In the interests of all the western nations that they
should declare first of all their recognition of the right of each portion of
the former Russian Empire to govern itself."
But Kropotkin's federalism goes beyond this proposal for ethnographic autonomy.
He points out the necessity to anticipate, in a not distant future, "a time
when each component of the federation will itself be a federation, a free
federation of rural communes and free cities, and I believe too that Western
Europe will also move in this direction."
And then follows an outline of the revolutionary tactics of the autonomous
federalists and a criticism of the centralized state-worship of the Bolsheviks:
"The Russian Revolution—the continuation of the two great English and French
revolutions—is struggling to progress beyond the point where the French
Revolution stopped when it had reached the idea of
real equality,
that is to
say, of economic equality.
Unfortunately this attempt has been made in Russia under the highly centralized
dictatorship of the Bolshevik Party. The same attempt had been made by Baboeuf
and his followers, a centralized and Jacobin attempt. I must frankly confess
that, as I see it, this attempt to build a communist republic on a highly
centralized state foundation, under the stringent laws of a party, is proving
itself a colossal failure. The Russian experiment teaches us
how communism
should not be imposed,
even on a people who are tired of the old regime and
impotent to offer active resistance to the experiment of the new rulers. The
idea of the Soviets, or of the workers' and peasants' councils, already
foreshadowed during the revolutionary experiment of 1905 and completely
achieved in February 1917, was a wonderful idea. The very fact that these
councils must control the political and economic life of the country assumes
that they must be composed of all who personally take part in the production of
the national wealth.
But so long as a country is submitted to the dictatorship of a party, the
councils of workers and peasants must obviously lose all meaning. Their role is
reduced to the passive one, represented in the past by the States-General or
the parliaments, convoked by the monarch and obliged to keep up with an
all-powerful Royal Council.
A workers' council cannot be a free and effective consultative body when it
lacks freedom of the press, a situation existing in Russia for the past two
years, on the grounds that a state of war exists. And when elections are held
under the autocratic pressure of a party, the workers' and peasants' councils
lose their representative strength. Attempts are made to justify this state of
affairs by saying that in order to combat the old regime dictatorial law is
necessary. But it constitutes a retrogressive step when it concerns the
building up of a new society on a new economic basis. It Is equivalent to the
death sentence on reconstruction.
The methods used to overthrow, and take over from, a Government which Is
already weak, is known from ancient and modern history. But when it Is
required to reconstruct on new conceptions of life, particularly in regard to
production and exchange of commodities, without having any previous examples as
a guide; when each problem must be solved in a short time, then an all-powerful
and highly centralized government which deals with every small detail will
itself be absolutely incapable of doing this through its functionaries. However
numerous they may be, they become an obstacle. The outcome is a vast
bureaucratic machine compared with which the French system, which requires the
intervention of forty functionaries to sell a tree which has been blown down in
the roadway in a gale, pales into insignificance. And you, workers of the west,
can and must avoid this happening with all the means at your disposal, since
all of you must be concerned with the success of the social revolution.
The enormous reconstruction work needed in a social revolution cannot be
acieved by a central government, even if as a guide in this work it had
something more substantial than a few socialist and anarchist pamphlets.
What Is needed is that the mass of local forces should have the knowledge, the
intelligence, the will to co-operate which alone can overcome the difficulties
arising from the various local problems.
To set aside co-operation and to trust instead to the genius of party dictators
is synonymous with destroying the independent groups such as the syndicates
called professional unions in Russia, and the local consumers' co-operatives
and transforming them Into bureaucratic organs of the party as is happening at
the present time. This is not the way to achieve the revolution, but the way to
render its achievement impossible. For this reason I consider it my duty to
advise you never to adopt such a line of action."
These are the opinions of Kropotkin on the Russian Revolution, and the basis of
all his propaganda. And these are the ideas which animated and still Inspire
the Anarchist opposition In Russia.
The aged Kropotkin sick and destitute, died during a period of inactivity after
having attempted to set in motion a federalist movement but without being able
to achieve anything on account of his lack of liberty and because his
unqualified support of the world war had destroyed all his political prestige.
But the federalist problem, both In the field of nationalities and in that of
political and economic organization is the vital problem in Russia. When
experience and the opposition have led the Russian communists definitely away
from their doctrinaire schemes and the union of the Russian organisations take
the first steps on the road to the new revolution, the personality of Peter
Kropotkin will rise to its full height and his thought will inspire the new
reconstruction. In Kropotkin's Federalism there is excessive optimism, there
are simplifications and contradictions, but there is also a great truth: that
freedom is a condition of life and development for all people: that only where
a people governs itself and for itself is it safe from the scourge of tyranny
and certain of Its progress.
Published by – Blackberry Anarchists: Sheffield, date unknown.
Photo and caption added by SWS.
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