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(en) Not forgotten, then or now. Review: book of [Russian anarchist] prisoner support bulletins keeps their memory alive
Date
Fri, 01 Nov 2013 09:00:35 +0200
The Kate Sharpley Library and Alexander Berkman Social Club collectives have recently
produced a beautiful book containing complete facsimile reprints of the Bulletin of the
Joint Committee for the Defense of Revolutionists Imprisoned in Russia, and the Bulletin
of the Relief Fund of the International Working Men’s Association for Anarchists and
Anarcho-Syndicalists Imprisoned or Exiled in Russia, which were originally published from
1923-1931. ---- These bulletins were produced and edited over the years by Alexander
Berkman, Mark Mratchny, Milly Witcop, Rudolf Rocker, and others. They were part of the
campaign to record and highlight the plight of a whole generation of anarchists and
revolutionists imprisoned, exiled, or executed by the Bolshevik regime in Russia.
The bulletins themselves have also come to illustrate the tireless efforts of those
outside Russia who, often living in very difficult circumstances of their own, struggled
to maintain contact and provide material aid with their imprisoned and exiled comrades
within Russia, and to publicise their fate.
As well as acting as an inspiring memorial to those many countless comrades who struggled
and became martyrs under Bolshevism, these reprints help serve as a warning today of the
potential dangers if, for example, contemporary “anti-capitalist” struggle and revolt were
to fall victim to un-libertarian tendencies.
As the Alexander Berkman Social Club put it in their introduction: “When we talk to any
Marxists, these dead should never be forgotten, never mind that the Bolshevik beast ate
its own children as well”
Writing together in January 1922 in the English-language anarchist paper Freedom,
Alexander Berkman and Emma Golden, probably with Alexander Schapiro, accused the
Bolsheviks of putting “the best revolutionary elements of the country” in their prisons.
Anarchists, Left Socialist revolutionaries, Maximalists, members of the workers’
opposition, were all rotting in the prisons formerly used by the old Tsarist regime.
In 1917 Berkman had been enthusiastic not just about the Russian Revolution but even about
the rise of the Bolsheviks. His deportation to Russia from the United States in 1919 gave
him a chance to see and experience the realities of the revolution at first hand. By
January 1922 he was in a state of disillusion and anguish at the repressive way the
revolution had gone, and he left Russia with Goldman and Schapiro. His pamphlets The
Russian Tragedy and The Kronstadt Rebellion were published later that year when he had
moved to Berlin.
Soon the focus of his work shifted to publicising the cases of those comrades in Russian
prisons or in Russian internal exile, as well as fundraising and material support for
those facing hardship as external exiles and refugees. Many international anarchist groups
sprang up at this time to support the Russian prisoners, and the Anarchist Black Cross
still operated as well as it could inside Russia up to 1925 before being suppressed. The
first Bulletin was produced by a joint committee of Anarchists, Anarcho-Syndicalists, and
Social Revolutionaries, and came out in Berlin in October 1923. Recording the names of
anarchists and revolutionists arrested and exiled in Russia, and their whereabouts, proved
to be a huge task.
The Bulletin was primarily the work of Berkman and Mratchny, with I.N. Steinberg
contributed material on imprisoned left Socialist Revolutionaries. Other contributors
included Rudolf Rocker, Augustin Souchy, and Fritz Kater. Kater published the Bulletin, as
well as Berkman’s pamphlets on Russia, through Der Syndicalist printing group. Berkman
replied to concerns expressed by some anarchists about the Bulletin’s support for
non-anarchists by stating: “Supplying bread to Maria Spiridonova (who is a Left Socialist
Revolutionist) is just as imperative as to aid Baron (who is an anarchist).”
The Bulletin was issued in English, French, German, Spanish, and Russian, and also,
sometimes in Dutch and Esperanto. It carried constant appeals for money, and printed
scrupulous detailed accounts. By the end of 1926 the Bulletin was taken under the wing of
the anarcho-syndicalist International Working Men’s Association and became the Bulletin of
the Relief Fund for Anarchists and Anarcho-Syndicalists Imprisoned or Exiled in Russia.
Prominent figures Mollie Steimer, Senya Fleshin, and Volin took on more prominent roles in
the Relief Fund.
As well as being exhausting, obsessive, and time-consuming, Russian Prisoner aid left its
activists isolated from the mainstream political movements, and reliant on a dwindling
anarchist support base. In a letter to her nephew in December 1924, Emma Goldman
complained that the leading English anarchist newspaper Freedom only had eighty-three
subscribers. By that time the situation in many countries was just as dire.
In the early 1920s maintaining contact with prisoners in Russia and sending them aid was
difficult but still possible. But problems grew with the increasing numbers of those being
arrested, and obtaining information became more difficult. Contact with prisoners began to
seriously deteriorate around 1935, and by 1939 had ceased altogether.
Political activists today who are concerned by police “kettling” tactics, FIT team
harassment, and so on, should consider that nothing is new. The first Bulletin in October
1923 reports that: “On July 9, 1923, 41 anarchists were arrested in Petrograd, and 16
“Zassadas” took place in the city. A “Zassada” means that police surround a house, permit
no-one to leave it, for hours or for days, as the case might be, and arrest everyone who
visits the place.
Fascinating detailed lists of names of many comrades arrested are accompanied by
illuminating brief descriptions of their work or trade, and their political histories,
together with reports on their sentences or exiles.
Prison overcrowding is nothing new either. Correspondence reports: “All the prisons and
concentration camps in the North are so overfilled that new arrivals are refused
admission. In August 1923, the left S.R. Lida Surkova was sent by the Petrograd GPU to the
Petcherski Krai for three years. Owing to the overcrowding she failed to be accepted.”
Later, in March 1928, the commentary in Bulletin no.5 reports on the growing irony of
Bolshevik repression, as the juggernaut of the dictatorship ends up rolling over its own
creators, including the purging of Trotsky and Zinoviev; crushed by their own paranoid
Marxist theory.
The November 1927 Bulletin summarises the “achievements” of the first ten years of
Bolshevism in comparison to the desires of the Russian Revolution: “The workers wanted the
opportunity to use the tools and machinery they had themselves made; they wanted to use
them to create more wealth and to enjoy that wealth. The peasant wanted free access to the
land and a chance to cultivate it without being robbed of the products of his hard toil.
But “under the cover of the motto, ‘the dictatorship of the proletariat’, it [the party]
began to build a centralised, bureaucratic state.” And “freedom of thought, of the press,
of public assembly, self-determination of the worker and of his unions, the initiative and
freedom of labour, all this was declared old rubbish, ‘bourgeois prejudices’. The
‘dictatorship of the proletariat’ became the absolutism of a handful of Bolsheviki in the
Kremlin.”
This same Bulletin gives a long list, with brief details about them, of just a small part
of the known imprisoned and exiled anarchists amongst the thousands of political
prisoners. This selected list in small type, almost requiring a magnifying glass to read,
already contains nearly a hundred entries. You begin to realise that what you are seeing
here is not just the convulsion and wrenching and fragmenting and dispersing of
individuals, but of partners, relationships, extended families, friendship networks, and
whole communities. The process begins to approach a cultural genocide.
By the way, for today’s romantic ultra-communists, it should be pointed out that the
disappearance of the value of all money is not in all circumstances something to be welcomed.
And here we see evidence of a deliberate imposed starvation policy, as a correspondent
exiled in Russia’s far north describes (p40): “In the Spring I was transferred to a little
hamlet that contains only 60 huts. The hamlet is about 200 versts from the nearest village
and more than 1,000 miles from any railroad station. The poverty here is incredible. You
can’t buy anything.
“With my woman companion I go every day to the woods to search for any berries left from
last year, such as vakcinio and oksikoko (red whortleberry and mossberry). This is our
food. Unfortunately, there will soon be none even of that.”
And they continue: “In the novels of Jack London I have read of the gold-seekers in the
Canadian primitive forests who some time lose their way and have to subsist on berries,
mushrooms and similar things. But I can tell you that it sounds much better in the novel
than it is in real life.” Exiles such as these were also often stripped of their
Party-controlled union card, depriving them of access to work and income.
For anyone interested in radical history and social history, this book is a mine of many
gems, helping tell the story of unfolding political events, struggle, and tragedy, in the
1920s and early 1930s, both in relation to Russia, and to the wider international scene.
But this book isn’t just for the historians. It proclaims loudly for today that we should
not forget our martyrs, and we must always stand by our imprisoned comrades around the
world, however difficult the circumstances. And it proclaims that the lesson of past
revolutions and their sacrifices is that the masses should never again trust their fate to
any hands but their own. Only the self-organisation of the workers and their communities,
and their organised libertarian solidarity can carry struggle and social revolt to a
liberating outcome.
By Paul Petard
From: Black Flag issue 235, mid 2012 p32-33.
http://www.katesharpleylibrary.net/9p8f2n
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