127 lines
6.7 KiB
Plaintext
127 lines
6.7 KiB
Plaintext
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The Collectives in Aragon
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by Gaston Leval
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Gaston Leval: Social Reconstruction in Spain (London 1938);
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quoted in Vernon Richards: Lessons of the Spanish Revolution (London 1983)
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The mechanism of the formation of the Aragonese collectives has been
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generally the same. After having overcome the local authorities when
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they were fascist, or having replaced them by Anti-fascist or
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Revolutionary committees when they were not, an assembly was summoned
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of all the inhabitants of the locality to decide on their line of
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action.
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One of the first steps was to gather in the crop not only in the
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fields of the small landowners who still remained, but, what was even
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more important, also on the estates of the large landowners all of
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whom were conservatives and rural `caciques' or chiefs. Groups were
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organized to reap and thresh the wheat which belonged to these large
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landowners. Collective work began spontaneously. Then, as this wheat
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could not be given to anyone in particular without being unfair to
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all, it was put under the control of a local committee, for the use of
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all the inhabitants, either for consumption or for the purpose of
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exchange for manufactured goods, such as clothes, boots, etc., {\it
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for those who were most in need.}
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It was necessary, afterwards, to work the lands of the large
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landowners. They were generally the most extensive and fertile in
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the region. The question was again raised before the village
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assembly. It was then that the `collectivity' if not already
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definitely constituted---often this had been done at the first
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meeting---was definitely established.
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A delegate for agriculture and stock breeding was nominated (or one
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for each of these activities when breeding was extensively carried
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on), one delegate each for local distribution, exchanges, public
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works, hygiene and education and revolutionary defense. Sometimes
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there were more; on other occasions less.
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Workers' groups were then formed. These groups generally were
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divided into the number of zones into which the municipal territory
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had been divided, so as more easily to include all kinds of work.
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Each group of workers names its delegates. The delegates meet every
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two days or every week with the councillor of agriculture and stock
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breeding, so as to co-ordinate all the different activities.
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In this new organization, small property has almost completely
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disappeared. In Aragon 75 per cent of small proprietors have
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voluntarily adhered to the new order of things. {\it Those who
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refused have been respected.} It is untrue to say that those who
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took part in the collectives were forced to do so. One cannot stress
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this point too strongly in face of the calumnies which have been
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directed against the collectives on this point. It is so far from
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the truth that the agrarian collectivity has brought into force,
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everywhere, a special account for small proprietors and has printed
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consumers tickets especially for them, so as to ensure for them the
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industrial products they require, in the same way as they do for the
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`collectivists.'
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In this transformation of property, one must put special stress on
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the practical sense and psychological finesse of the organizers who
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in almost all the villages have conceded or given to each family a
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bit of ground on which each peasant cultivates for his own use, the
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vegetables which he prefers in the way he prefers. Their individual
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initiative can thereby be developed and satisfied.
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Collective work has made it possible to achieve in agriculture as
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well as in industry, a rationalization which was impossible under the
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regime of small land ownership and even under that of big landed
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properties....
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On the other hand, better quality seeds are used. This was rendered
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possible by being able to buy up large stocks, which the small
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peasant could not afford to do in the past. Potato seeds come from
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Ireland and selected wheat seeds only are used. Chemical fertilizers
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have also been used. As modern machinery properly used---tractors
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and modern plows were obtained by exchange or bought directly from
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abroad---permits the soil to be more deeply worked, these seeds have
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produced a yield per acre far superior to that which would have been
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obtained under the conditions which existed during previous years.
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These new methods have also made it possible to increase the acreage
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sown. In Aragon my research on the spot permits me to affirm that
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generally speaking {\it the increase in wheat crop has reached an
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average of 30 per cent.} An increase in yield, though in a smaller
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proportion, has been obtained for other cereals, potatoes, sugar
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beet, lucerne, etc.
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In these agricultural regions the economic condition of the peasants
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has generally improved. It has only suffered a setback in those
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localities which had specialized in production for export, and which
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were consequently unable to place their products and obtain
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foodstuffs in exchange. This happened in certain regions in Levante
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whose produce consisted almost entirely of oranges. But this state
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of affairs lasted only a few months.
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This latter fact is of utmost importance. It is the first time in
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modern society that the anarchist principle `to each according to his
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needs' has been practiced. It has been applied in two ways; without
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money in many villages in Aragon and by a local money in others, and
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in the greater part of collectives established in other regions. The
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{\it family wage} is paid with this money and it varies according to
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the number of members in each family. A household in which the man
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and his wife both work because they have no children receives, for
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the sake of argument, say 5 pesetas a day. Another household in
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which only the man works, as his wife has to care for two, three or
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four children, receives six, seven or eight pesetas respectively. It
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is the `needs' and not only the `production' taken in the strictly
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economic sense which controls the wage scale or that of the
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distribution of products where wages do not exist.
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This principle of justice is continually extended. It does away with
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charity and begging and the special budgets for the indigent. There
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are no more destitutes. Those who work do so for others in the same
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way as others will work to help them and their children later on.
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But this mutual aid extends beyond the village. Before the fascist
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invaders destroyed the Aragon collectives, the cantonal federations
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did all in their power to counteract the injustices of nature by
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obtaining for the less favored villages the machinery, mules, seed,
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etc....which were to help them increase the yield of their land.
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These implements were obtained through the intermediary of the
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Federation, which undertook the delivery of the produce of twenty,
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thirty, forty or even fifty localities and asked in their name, from
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the industrial and stock-breeding centers, for the products which
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they required.
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