IALHI NewsIberian Anarchist FederationWe, the anarchists! A study of the Iberian Anarchist Federation (FAI) 1927-1937 by Stuart Christie. Since the official birth of organised anarchism at the Saint Imier Congress of 1872, no anarchist organisation has been held
up to greater opprobrium or subjected to such gross misrepresentation than the Federación Anarquista Ibérica, better known by its initials - the FAI. There are two dimensions to this book. The first is descriptive and historical: it outlines the evolution of the organised anarchist movement in Spain and its relationship with the wider labour movement. At the same time it provides some insight into the main ideas which made the Spanish labour movement one of the most revolutionary of modern times. The second is analytical and tries to address - from an anarchist perspective - the problem of understanding and coping with change in the contemporary world; how can ideals survive the process of institutionalisation? In tracing the history of the CNT and FAI it is clear that anarchist organisations, like all other organisations and civilisations before them, are subject to a process of rise and fall. Whether or not they achieve their short- or long-term objectives - unless they are that rarest of things, a genuinely ad hoc body whose members know when to hold and fold their cards - even the most committed libertarian and directly democratic organisations degenerate. From being social instruments set up to meet real social needs they become transformed into self-perpetuating institutions with lives and purposes of their own, distinct to and in tension with the objectives which called them into being in the first place. Chapter 1: 18721910: Roots The First International 1 The Meltzer Press. PO Box 35, Hastings, East Sussex, TN34 2UX Stuart Christie Posted: 22 November 2000 |