http://www.marxist.com/rifondazione-marxism-non-violence170304.htm


Italy: Debate in Rifondazione Comunista - Marxism, violence and non-violence
Written by Dario Salvetti Wednesday, 17 March 2004

Excerpts:*

[.....*A word about Gandhism*

"I will use all my influence and authority against the class struggle. If
anybody wishes to deprive you of your property, you will find me fighting at
your side".

*Gandhi*

In his theorising, Bertinotti has several times held up Gandhi as an example
of radical pacifism. In doing so he demonstrates just the opposite of what
he sets out to prove. Few personalities are surrounded by such an
unjustified saintly halo as Gandhi.

Gandhi's ideology did not flow from the thinking of a particularly
enlightened, tolerant mind but reflected clear class interests. It was a
reflection, at one and the same time, of the dreams and of the weaknesses of
the Indian bourgeoisie (of whom Gandhi was a leading representative). The
Indian bourgeois arose under the protective wing of British imperialism.
They longed for independence but feared the possibility of a proletarian
revolution far more. This contradiction was reflected in Gandhian asceticism
and passiveness, in the hope that independence could be achieved through
reforms without having to go through a people's uprising.

In 1920 a strike broke out in the Indian textile industry. The Congress
Party immediately approved a resolution of loyalty to the British Crown and
Gandhi railed against the strike as an episode of "red anarchy and
disruption". In 1928 the British arrested a young militant, Bagat Singh, and
put him on trial on a charge of subversion. There was a wave of protests and
mobilisations around the Bagat Singh trial. It was precisely at this time
that Gandhi decided to begin his civil disobedience march - shrewdly
tolerated by the British - to divert the movement from a potential uprising.

The march ended on March 19, 1931 with the signing of a pact between Gandhi
and the British Viceroy Irwin, with no mention of the possibility of
granting a pardon to Bagat Singh. Four days later, Singh was hanged.

Between 1942 and 1946 India was rocked by a revolutionary wave which forced
the British to grant formal independence. However, in order to derail
popular anger along religious lines the British, with the collaboration of
the Indian ruling class, decided to divide the sub-continent into two
countries: India, with a Hindu majority, and Pakistan with a Muslim
majority. In the end the peace-loving Gandhi accepted the creation of this
barbaric border in a subcontinent that had always seen Muslims and Hindus
living peacefully side by side. Partition between India and Pakistan led to
a million dead and about 10 million refugees. Today India and Pakistan are
two nations equipped with atomic bombs, with continuous tension along the
border. So much for the peace and serenity achieved by the prophets of
non-violence.

Bourgeois democracy and violence

"What is the actual function of bourgeois legality? If one free citizen is
forcibly detained by another in a cramped, uninhabitable room (...) anybody
can see that this is an act of violence. But if this operation is written
down, in a book called the criminal law code, and the room is a cell of the
Royal Prussian prisons, it is immediately transformed into an act of
peaceful legality (...). To put it briefly, what is presented as civil
legality is nothing but the violence of the ruling class, elevated to the
rank of a law (...). In reality, bourgeois legality (and parliamentarianism is
legality in all its force) is actually a given social manifestation of the
political violence of the bourgeoisie which has arisen on an economic
foundation".

Rosa Luxemburg ]....."



**
*Full Article:*

*Violent conflict is on the increase all over the world, both in terms of
wars between nations and violent clashes between the classes. While war is
waged in the Middle East we also see a growing tendency to use more brutal
measures against the workers in struggle, with many being killed around the
world. What should the position of Marxists be on this question? This has
been the subject of debate within the PRC in Italy with Bertinotti taking
the position that no form of violence is justifiable. Dario Salvetti gives a
different answer.

As society goes deeper into crisis, the ruling class has to turn more and
more to repressive methods to maintain control. A situation of economic
crisis will inevitably be accompanied by an increase in organized violence
by the ruling class. The war in Iraq is just the tip of this process. Over
220,000 US soldiers are now deployed abroad.

The USA is leading the way with an unprecedented increase in its military
spending, but every imperialist power is involved, looking to protect its
own interests and maintain its specific weight in the world.

It would take longer to list the conflicts in progress or the points of
tension around the world than to name the countries that are formally at
peace (a peace of hunger, unemployment and poverty). Every revolutionary
movement in South America has met with police violence. In the December 2001
upheavals in Argentina alone, 21 demonstrators were killed by the police.
150 demonstrators lost their lives during the revolutionary process in
Bolivia in 2003. As we write, the Venezuelan revolution is under threat from
gangs of thugs, systematically organized by the bourgeoisie.

These are just the most outstanding cases, but there are countries where the
murder of trade unionists is the norm. In Colombia, for example, 28,000
activists have been killed since the foundation of the CUT (the main
Colombian trade union federation).

It is in this context that PRC Secretary Fausto Bertinotti has decided to
launch a debate to eradicate violence... from the practice, the history and
the theory of the labour movement.

The terms of the debate

"This combination of war and terrorism, that monopolistically takes over
violence, this situation confronts us with an absolutely new problem. We
cannot expect to fight this monopolized violence by war. Violence, in all
its variants, whatever one's moral judgement, is ineffective because it is
re-absorbed by terrorism, putting politics on the sidelines".

Fausto Bertinotti

In Bertinotti's view, war and terrorism have an undefined origin and no
longer correspond with class, political and economic interests. Any violent
response to either would in turn become war or terrorism, so we have to be
non-violent. To complete the picture, Bertinotti points to the horror of
individual terrorism in Palestinian kamikaze attacks in response to the
barbarism of the Israeli army. Thus he shows at a stroke that whoever poses
the question of armed resistance to an invader will end up on the side of
terrorism.

If anyone dares to bring up historical examples such as the wars of national
liberation or resistance to Nazi-Fascism, Bertinotti is quick to point out
that his reasoning does not apply to the past, but is valid only "here and
now". Immediately afterwards, however, he extends it retrospectively to the
entire history of the labour movement throughout the whole of the 20th
century.

Thus the concentration camps, the gulags, are "the extreme manifestation of
a contradiction that communism bore in its womb and that arises from an idea
of power and an idea of violence". Bertinotti poses the question: "Shouldn't
we ask ourselves whether there is a relationship between Kronstadt, the
gulags and certain episodes connected with our own history, maybe the
Foibe?"*[See note]

The stew is now ready to be served up in the pages of the Corriere della
Sera or la Repubblica. Kronstadt, the gulags, the Foibe, bin Laden, Bush,
the Bolsheviks, the taking of power, all are conveniently lumped together
under the name of "violence".

There is nothing very original in all this. The basic idea is that the very
taking of power leads to the military degeneration of the revolution, to
Stalinism and thence to defeat.

But has Bertinotti ever read the writings of the Left Opposition and the
revolutionaries and communists who were eliminated in Stalin's concentration
camps? Instead of rushing to write off Trotsky (yet another loser in his
view) he might be better advised to consult The Revolution Betrayed and
other writings where the Russian revolutionary analyses the Stalinist
counterrevolution that wiped out the political gains of the October
Revolution. There is a river of blood separating Stalinism from Bolshevism.
Lumping all these things together will inevitably mean abandoning any idea
of social revolution.

War and pacifism

For Marxists, imperialist war does not come about through the intrinsic
brutality of human nature, or the madness of some government. Imperialist
war flows directly from the contradictions generated by capitalism. In its
development, capitalism has created an international economy. But in
developing the international market it has maintained private ownership of
the means of production and national borders. As a result,
internationalisation of the markets has been achieved not in conditions of
generalised harmony but of continuous tension between the different big
business groups and imperialist blocs for the defence and extension of their
market shares. Instead of peace internationally, the world has experienced
two world wars.

After 1945 capitalism was able to create the illusion among wide layers of
workers that a peaceful road of development had been found. Unprecedented
economic growth made it possible to regulate the different imperialist
tensions in "peaceful" terms. The naked law of the balance of forces was
hidden behind the smokescreen of international law. The capitalist powers
could follow a common line internationally, often under the blue veil of the
United Nations.

It should be said, by the way, that this did not change the imperialist
nature of their decisions in the least. In its class content, the war
against Iraq in 1991, which was waged under the flag of the UN and in common
agreement between the various imperialist powers, was no different from the
2003 war. However, given the present economic crisis, there is not now the
same margin for agreement between the various imperialist powers as there
was in 1991.

Anyone who opposes imperialist war today is commonly defined as a
"pacifist". Of course, it is perfectly understandable for thousands of
workers and students to declare themselves to be "pacifists".

And yet pacifism is a well-defined ideology with its own premises and
conclusions. It claims to defend peace at all times and in all
circumstances, but its limitations come to the fore precisely when faced
with actual conflicts.

Pacifism limits itself to preaching peace and brotherhood among men, almost
religiously. On the international arena this ideology calls for a peaceful,
just world, but inside any country it preaches social peace and class
collaboration. By refusing any form of violence, it rejects not only the
wars caused by the capitalist class but also the class struggle against the
capitalists.

A word about Gandhism

"I will use all my influence and authority against the class struggle. If
anybody wishes to deprive you of your property, you will find me fighting at
your side".

Gandhi

In his theorising, Bertinotti has several times held up Gandhi as an example
of radical pacifism. In doing so he demonstrates just the opposite of what
he sets out to prove. Few personalities are surrounded by such an
unjustified saintly halo as Gandhi.

Gandhi's ideology did not flow from the thinking of a particularly
enlightened, tolerant mind but reflected clear class interests. It was a
reflection, at one and the same time, of the dreams and of the weaknesses of
the Indian bourgeoisie (of whom Gandhi was a leading representative). The
Indian bourgeois arose under the protective wing of British imperialism.
They longed for independence but feared the possibility of a proletarian
revolution far more. This contradiction was reflected in Gandhian asceticism
and passiveness, in the hope that independence could be achieved through
reforms without having to go through a people's uprising.

In 1920 a strike broke out in the Indian textile industry. The Congress
Party immediately approved a resolution of loyalty to the British Crown and
Gandhi railed against the strike as an episode of "red anarchy and
disruption". In 1928 the British arrested a young militant, Bagat Singh, and
put him on trial on a charge of subversion. There was a wave of protests and
mobilisations around the Bagat Singh trial. It was precisely at this time
that Gandhi decided to begin his civil disobedience march - shrewdly
tolerated by the British - to divert the movement from a potential uprising.

The march ended on March 19, 1931 with the signing of a pact between Gandhi
and the British Viceroy Irwin, with no mention of the possibility of
granting a pardon to Bagat Singh. Four days later, Singh was hanged.

Between 1942 and 1946 India was rocked by a revolutionary wave which forced
the British to grant formal independence. However, in order to derail
popular anger along religious lines the British, with the collaboration of
the Indian ruling class, decided to divide the sub-continent into two
countries: India, with a Hindu majority, and Pakistan with a Muslim
majority. In the end the peace-loving Gandhi accepted the creation of this
barbaric border in a subcontinent that had always seen Muslims and Hindus
living peacefully side by side. Partition between India and Pakistan led to
a million dead and about 10 million refugees. Today India and Pakistan are
two nations equipped with atomic bombs, with continuous tension along the
border. So much for the peace and serenity achieved by the prophets of
non-violence.

Bourgeois democracy and violence

"What is the actual function of bourgeois legality? If one free citizen is
forcibly detained by another in a cramped, uninhabitable room (...) anybody
can see that this is an act of violence. But if this operation is written
down, in a book called the criminal law code, and the room is a cell of the
Royal Prussian prisons, it is immediately transformed into an act of
peaceful legality (...). To put it briefly, what is presented as civil
legality is nothing but the violence of the ruling class, elevated to the
rank of a law (...). In reality, bourgeois legality (and parliamentarianism is
legality in all its force) is actually a given social manifestation of the
political violence of the bourgeoisie which has arisen on an economic
foundation".

Rosa Luxemburg

What is considered as "peace" under capitalism is nothing but a "peaceful"
system of exploitation, poverty and forced unemployment, maintained by the
organized violence of the state and imperialist war. The daily violence
which impregnates this system goes on behind the mask of a commonly accepted
legality and morality. But legality and morality too are not eternal but
historical constructions. Just as slavery was thought to be morally
acceptable in ancient times, under the capitalist system it is considered
morally right for a clique of capitalists to enslave millions of men and
women and run the economy on the basis of their thirst for profit.

If a group of workers occupies a factory to run it democratically on the
basis of need, they are committing an illegal, immoral act. If a detachment
of men, dressed in blue and called policemen, are sent in to expel the
occupiers and re-establish the owners' control over the company, they are
carrying out a moral, legal act and their violence is justified. And this
violence appears all the more justified if the policemen are acting with a
warrant under the laws of a democratically elected parliament, the natural
home of national sovereignty.

All men are equal in the rarefied air of bourgeois democracy. Umberto
Agnelli has a single vote, as does a laid-off Fiat worker. But back on
earth, in the world of real social and economic relationships, the laid-off
worker has to think about how to make ends meet, while Agnelli holds the
fundamental economic levers of the country. While parliament creates the
impression of a democratic debate between the classes, a place where
democratically elected representatives discuss and determine the fate of the
country, in reality it is the bourgeoisie that controls the economy (and
with it all the fundamental decisions), the press, television and
publishing.

The taking of the Winter Palace

"This revolution," a fellow comrade said to me "was carried out with good
proletarian manners: with organization. That's why it won - in Petrograd -
so easily and completely".

>From Year One of the Russian Revolution by Victor Serge

In his speeches, Bertinotti refers again and again to the "taking of the
Winter Palace". This is not by chance. The episode of the taking of the
Winter Palace by the Russian workers during the October 1917 revolution is
held up as a symbol of the Bolsheviks' mistaken idea that the revolution
could be won "in prevalently military terms", that power resided in a
particular physical place and that an insurrectionary coup was all that was
needed for the taking of power. Such ideas are indeed incorrect, but in no
way do they correspond to the ideas of Bolshevism. As usual, Bertinotti's
examples show the exact opposite of what he intends.

The October 1917 revolution was actually the second stage of the revolution
that broke out in February that year. The February revolution had created
the soviets - workers' and peasants' councils - and the October Revolution
transferred all power to them. The old state apparatus, an instrument of
oppression at the service of the big capitalists and landowners, was
overthrown and replaced by a new state apparatus made up of thousands of
workers' and peasants' councils. Of course the elimination of the bourgeois
state apparatus was not an end in itself, but was the essential condition to
begin transforming the economy from a system ruled on the basis of the
capitalists' profits into a system democratically planned by the soviets on
the basis of the population's needs.

The participation of the proletariat in the October days was so great that
the state simply melted away. The awe-inspiring Peter and Paul fortress was
conquered in a soldiers' meeting inside the fortress, where Trotsky won the
garrison over to the side of the revolution. The Winter Palace was
surrounded peacefully, a cruiser fired a few blank shots and the Palace
surrendered. The tsarist generals were released if they gave their word that
they would not organize resistance against the revolution. Within a few
weeks these same generals were at the head of the white troops as they tried
to crush the Revolution by massacres and devastation. And, even more
important, while the Winter Palace was being taken, the national council of
soviets, with delegates elected by millions of workers, peasants and
soldiers, approved the distribution of the land to the peasants, the
beginning of the building of the socialist economy and the immediate
cessation of hostilities at the front, with the demand for peace without
annexations.

As for the question of violence and non-violence, the alleged bloodbath of
the October Revolution actually put an end to the real bloodbath caused by
capitalism: the slaughter of the First World War.

The question of self-defence

Pietro Ingrao [a leader of the old PCI, Italian Communist Party, regarded as
belonging to its left-wing and now held up as a kind of "old father" of the
movement. Editor's note] was one of the first to respond to Bertinotti's
appeal, declaring his enthusiasm for his innovations. However, after
praising every word of it, he notes in passing: "There is a question that
Fausto [Berttinotti] does not clarify (...). What is to be done against the
armed violence of the aggressor? (...) What road can millions take, the
peoples of the world, to repulse U.S. violence? Is there or not an
obligation to resist also with arms? Is there not a right of self-defence
which must not or cannot renounce the use of arms?"

We have tried to answer this question, even if in general terms. As Marxists
we reject this system, a system containing the kernel of all violence in the
exploitation of man by man.

We also reject terrorism, a tactic that is as counterproductive as it is
barbaric and infantile. The power of capitalism does not reside in this or
that minister, in this or that bank, and cannot be eliminated by
assassinating a capitalist or blowing up a bank. The power of capitalism
resides in private ownership of the means of production and this is what we
aim to eliminate. But no ruling class has ever given up its privileges
without a struggle. This will apply as much to the capitalist class as to
any other; they will be ready to unleash all kinds of violence against the
revolution. For Marxists, any consideration of violence starts from the
simple, straightforward need for self-defence.

Of course, this does not justify the use of force in all cases, but only
when it comes from the masses in the context of a perspective of
transformation of society. This is why Marxists oppose the criminal
terrorist acts of the Red Brigades or ETA, but intransigently defend all the
great Revolutions of the past. And this is not only a historical debate.
Marxists today defend the workers' and peasants' militias that are being
formed in Bolivia or Venezuela to defend the revolutionary process against
the violent aggression of the ruling class and imperialism.

March, 2004

Note:

*Foibe: the name of some rock cavities on the North-eastern Italian border
area. There are about 1,700 on the Istrian peninsula.

At the end of the First World War, Italy, as a victorious power, extended
its territory into the Istrian peninsula and Dalmatia on the pretext that
these were "historically" Italian areas. International treaties about the
"self-determination of nations" simply did not consider the half a million
Slovenes and Croats who lived there. A process of Italianisation took place,
particularly under the fascist regime, with the forcible suppression of the
Slav languages and the Italianisation of names of people and places, along
with the repression of the workers' movement as in the rest of Italy.

After the fall of the Italian fascist regime in April and the surrender of
the new government in September 1943 the Yugoslav National Liberation Army
took control of a part of Istria and maintained power there for 3-4 weeks.
They held these positions until the Nazi-Fascists were able to re-establish
control, massacring 13,000 Istrians and destroying entire villages.

At the end of World War II it emerged that during that interval of partisan
rule a number of people had been killed and their bodies thrown into the
foibe. They numbered about three hundred; they were mainly fascist leaders,
fascist police and others who had collaborated with the Italian (and Nazi)
occupation.

Undoubtedly there was some summary justice, often carried out by the local
population who went beyond the orders of the partisans. But this was the
reaction of ordinary people enraged by the terrible killings and suffering
inflicted on them by the fascists. However, the whole episode has been blown
up out of all proportion by the Italian Right, who periodically bring it up
as an example of "communist violence", especially when there is discussion
about Nazi atrocities or the brutality of Mussolini's regime. They claim
that these people were killed just because they were Italians, in an ethnic
cleansing operation. To give an idea of the exaggerations, no more than 20
bodies were recovered from the foiba of Basovizza, and yet they talk of 500
cubic metres of bodies, i.e. about 2,500 people.

The real number of people who disappeared as a result of arrests and
deportations in 1943 and at the end of the war totalled 2-3 thousand, again
mainly agents and collaborators of the fascist regime, those people who had
been responsible for the terrible massacre of Slovenes and Croatians. Only a
part of these ended up in the "foibe", while the Right continue to talk of
tens of thousands massacred there by the Communists. They do this to cover
up their own crimes, which involved the killings of thousands of Italian
workers and also the deportation of the Italian Jews to the Nazi death
camps.

The leaders of the Italian left should put such episodes in their correct
context, and defend the right of a population to resist invasion and
occupation and they should denounce the hypocrisy and exaggerations of the
right. It should be pointed out that Italian fascist military operations in
Yugoslavia from April 1941 to September 1943 cost the lives of over 250,000
people in concentration camps and prisons or in reprisals for partisan
operations. Instead there has been a tendency on the part of the leaders of
the left in Italy to back down in the face of right-wing propaganda, in
their desperate search for a respectable, non-violent image. Bertinotti's
latest speeches on the question are another example of this.*

See the original in Italian:

   * Dibattito in Rifondazione comunista - Marxismo, violenza e non violenza
di Dario Salvetti



-- 
*


You cannot build anything on the foundations of caste. You cannot build up a
nation, you cannot build up a morality. Anything that you will build on the
foundations of caste will crack and will never be a whole.
-AMBEDKAR



http://venukm.blogspot.com

http://www.shelfari.com/kmvenuannur

http://kmvenuannur.livejournal.com

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