Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Abbreviations
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 The Fugitives: Anarchist Pathways Toward London
- Chapter 2 The Making of the Colony
- Chapter 3 The 1890s
- Chapter 4 The New Century
- Chapter 5 The Surveillance of Italian Anarchists in London
- Chapter 6 Politics and Sociability: The Anarchist Clubs
- Chapter 7 The First World War: The Crisis of the London Anarchist Community
- Conclusions
- Biographies
- Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 7 - The First World War: The Crisis of the London Anarchist Community
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Abbreviations
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 The Fugitives: Anarchist Pathways Toward London
- Chapter 2 The Making of the Colony
- Chapter 3 The 1890s
- Chapter 4 The New Century
- Chapter 5 The Surveillance of Italian Anarchists in London
- Chapter 6 Politics and Sociability: The Anarchist Clubs
- Chapter 7 The First World War: The Crisis of the London Anarchist Community
- Conclusions
- Biographies
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
After Malatesta's escape from Ancona, the Italian police frantically sought him for fomenting riots during the Red Week in June 1914. Malatesta safely returned to London on 28 June 1914. The same day, in Sarajevo, the Serb nationalist Gavrilo Princip killed the Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir to the throne of Austria-Hungary. The generalised response among people was a failure to foresee the devastating consequences of that event, and the anarchists did not differ. Like the socialists, in the days following the assassination, ‘after the first shock, they turned to the more pressing and interesting problems of domestic politics and scandals’. Thus, the Italian anarchists in London focused their attention on the aborted opportunity for revolutionary outbreak in Italy and on Malatesta's adventurous escape.
Just a few days after Malatesta's return to England, the correspondent for Giornale d'Italia arranged a meeting with the Italian anarchist leader. In his interview, there was no mention of the assassination in Sarajevo or any allusion to the possibility of war in Europe. Three days later, Malatesta and Rocker spoke at a conference organised by the Federation of Jewish Anarchists in the East End. Rocker remembered how ‘Malatesta referred in his speech to what had happened at Sarajevo, saying he feared there would be very serious consequences. But he did not think there would be war’. The same month, Malatesta contributed an article to Freedom giving an account of the events of the Red Week, without any comment about the international political situation. Malatesta concluded his article optimistically:
These events have proved that the mass of people hate the present order; that the workers are disposed to make use of all opportunities to overthrow the Government; and that when the fight is directed against the common enemy – this is to say the Government and the bourgeoisie – all are brothers, though the names of Socialist, Anarchist, Syndicalist, or Republican may seem to divide them.
Yet, in the following months, Malatesta's expectations crumbled: nationalist and militarist sentiments spread throughout Europe; harsh disagreements divided socialist, anarchist, syndicalist and republican parties against one another and affected militants belonging to the same political groups. The ideals of international unity and the solidarity of the working class were shattered. The belief that the war could be stopped by a general strike and by international workers’ solidarity proved to be an illusion.
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- The Knights Errant of AnarchyLondon and the Italian Anarchist Diaspora (1880–1917), pp. 184 - 201Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2013