117 lines
6.7 KiB
Plaintext
117 lines
6.7 KiB
Plaintext
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"The CNT as I Saw It"
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by Fenner Brockway.
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Before I visited Spain I appreciated highly the part played by the
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CNT (the Anarcho Syndicalist Trade Union Confederation) in the fight against
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Fascism and for the Social Revolution; but that appreciation has been
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enormously increased by actual contact with the organisation and first-hand
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knowledge of its work.
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I went to Spain to do what I could to assist the POUM, following the arrest
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of its leaders and the attempted suppression of the organisation. I expected
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sympathy from the C.N.T., but I did not feel I had the right to expect more than
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a general assistance.
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After all, the C.N.T. and the POUM have a difference of social philosophy which
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has been historically divisive. The CNT is anarchist. The POUM is Marxist.
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This has led to differences in policy and even to a certain rivalry in agitation
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and organisation. The POUM has frequently criticised anarchist tactics and
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leadership. It has not refrained from seeking to enrol members within the CNT.
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Under such circumstances it would have been understandable if the CNT had not
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exerted itself overmuch in the defence of the POUM.
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But I found no such reservations. To the CNT it was a matter of principle and
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in the presence of the principle other considerations were forgotten. The
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POUM had proved the genuineness of its devotion to the anti-Fascist struggle. It
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had proved its sincerity in defence of the rights of the workers and in preparing
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the way for the social revolution. It was being unjustly persecuted. That was
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enough. The CNT did not hesitate for a moment in standing by its side and
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demanding justice for it.
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There was a fineness about this attitude which commanded admiration. It was
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expressed not only in words but in deeds. The Barcelona regional committee
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at once placed Comrade Augustin Souchy, secretary of the International Department,
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at my service as interpreter and adviser. It placed cars at my disposal and I
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travelled over 2,000 kilometres in them. The National Committee in Valencia
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was equally wholehearted in its support. It sent a courageous protest against
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the suppression of the POUM to the Government. Comrade Vasquez, the National
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Secretary, delivered an outspoken speech to a vast meeting at Valencia demanding
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justice for the POUM. The CNT instructed one of its leading members, Comrade
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Pabon, to act as defending lawyer for the POUM.
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This was all done from a sense of proletarian duty to stand for just treatment
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of another working-class organisation. There were no heroics about this
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gesture. It was done as a matter of course, as a matter of principle. I could
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not be other than moved by this evidence of the moral integrity of the CNT.
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But I learned to appreciate it more than that.
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I was impressed by the strength of the CNT. It was unnecessary to tell me that
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it is the largest and most vital of the working-class organisations in Spain.
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That was evident on all sides. The large industries were clearly, in the main,
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in the hands of the CNT - railways, road, engineering, textiles, electricity,
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building, agriculture. At Valencia the UGT had a greater share of control than
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the CNT than in Barcelona; but generally speaking the mass of manual workers
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belonged to the CNT. The UGT membership was more of the type of 'white collar'
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worker.
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I was impressed by the outward signs of the power of the CNT. At Barcelona it
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has taken over the premises of the largest capitalist concern of the pre-July
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days. It is a monumental building, comparable with the vast structure which
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is the headquarters of the London Passenger Transport Board at St. James' Park.
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At Valencia the CNT occupies the palace of a Marquis of the old regime. Both
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headquarters are hives of well-organised activities - secretarial, transport,
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defence, propaganda, organisation, publication, international departments, etc.
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And these are only the co-ordinating headquarters. Scattered about both cities
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one saw large buildings occupied by the various Unions - building workers,
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electrical workers, transport workers, federated in the CNT.
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I was impressed by the organisation of the CNT membership for full participation
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in the war against the Fascists - the appeal to its members to join the fighting
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forces, the response to the appeal to join the Column of Death to replace a
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regiment which had been wiped out, the literature and posters issued to
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stimulate the workers to give their all in the struggle against Franco.
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I was immensely impressed by the constructive revolutionary work which is
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being done by the CNT. Their achievement of workers' control in industry
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is an inspiration. One could take the examples of the railways or engineering
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or textiles. There linger in my mind less spectacular examples, but equally
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significant.
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I think of the film institute in Barcelona. An Italian capitalist concern
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had decided to erect a technical centre for developing and copying films. July
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19th came and the capitalists fled. The workers carried on. They completed
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the building and now it is working in perfect order. It is one of the most
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beautiful buildings I have ever entered. The technique of its staff - all
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CNT comrades - is the equal of that to be found anywhere.
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I think of a very different example. A small town. There were seventeen
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separate barber shops. They have united to form a CNT collective. They have
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taken over a Fascists club. I visited it on a Sunday morning. In a finely
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panelled hall sat workmen awaiting their turn. In a large club room the
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seventeen barbers worked, with an equipment as efficient as you would find in
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a West London or New York establishment. It was wonderful to see this example
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of co-operation.
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Most of all I enjoyed my visit to the Agricultural Collective at Segorbe.
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I must not delay to describe it in detail; but the spirit of the peasants,
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their enthusiasm, the way they had contributed their stock to the common
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effort, their pride in it - all was an inspiration.
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There are still some Britishers and Americans who regard the anarchists of
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Spain as impossible. undisciplined uncontrollables. This is poles away from the
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truth. The anarchists of Spain, through the CNT, are doing one of the biggest
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constructive jobs ever done by the working class.
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At the Front they are fighting Fascism. Behind the Front they are actually
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constructing the new Workers' Society. They see that the war against Fascism
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and the carrying through of the Social Revolution are inseparable. Those who
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have seen and understood what they are doing must honour them and be grateful
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to them. They are resisting Fascism. They are at the same time creating the
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New Workers' Order which is the only alternative to Fascism. This is surely
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the biggest thing now being done by the workers in any part of the world.
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19th July 1937.
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