“WHERE WE COME FROM AND WHERE WE ARE GOING”: A REFLECTION ON BRAZILIAN
ANARCHISM, THEN AND NOW
~ from O Amigo do Povo ~
Brazilian anarchism lost influence over the masses with the decline and later,
the end of revolutionary syndicalism in Brazil between the 1920s and 1930s. This
syndicalism already had certain limitations when compared to the model of the
historical AIT and its relationship with Mikhail Bakunin’s Alliance. The
limitations can be summarised as purism, a-politicism and lack of understanding
of the reality of Brazil, in addition to the centrality of anarchist
organisation. What remained of anarchism in Brazil for more than half a century
were small initiatives of propagandists, educationists and memorialists of
anarcho-communist groups, composed of a mix of the old generation of anarchists
in contact with young university students and punks, mostly from the petite
bourgeoisie.
Between 1995 and 1996, through contacts between anarchist activists in Brazil
and the Uruguayan Anarchist Federation (FAU), a new era emerged for anarchism in
Brazil, culminating in the creation of the Libertarian Socialist Organization
(OSL) in 1997 and, later, the Forum of Organised Anarchism in 2000. Despite the
limitations and lack of theoretical and strategic unity of some local groups, it
was in this context that Brazilian anarchism once again gained a small presence
in the class struggle. Of note were the actions of the Gaucho Anarchist
Federation (FAG) and, later, the Collective of Pro-organisation Anarchist of
Goiás (COPOAG), with its work among waste pickers in the National Movement of
Waste Pickers (MNCR), and the Libertarian Socialist Organization OSL-RJ (future
UNIPA), with its urban occupations and secondary school movements in the
outskirts.
Of the initiatives that stood out in the class struggle in the early 2000s,
FAG’s activities lost traction among waste pickers and other social movements,
adopting a shift towards post-structuralism. The Colective Anarchist
Pro-organisation of Goiás, which was Bakuninist, ended in 2008. The only
organisation that continued to advance, both in theory and in practice, was the
group from Rio de Janeiro, which became the Popular Anarchist Union. At that
time, the Popular Anarchist Union had already been debating the importance of
building a revolutionary theory through Bakunin’s thought, criticising
individualism and highlighting the importance of strategic action, as in the
debate between CONLUTAS and INTERSINDICAL that existed within the Forum of
Organised Anarchism. In this sense, the Popular Anarchist Union broke with Forum
of Organised Anarchism and launched itself as a national organisation,
criticising revisionism and eclecticism.
The Popular Anarchist Union, which was a local group in Rio de Janeiro until
2007, due to its more successful performance in the national context of
degeneration of the left with the Worker’s Party governments, such as in the
revolutionary bloc in Conlutas and in the promotion of a combative tendency in
the student movement with the Class-Based and Combative Student Network,
experienced relatively large quantitative and qualitative growth in the 2010s
building centres in the Federal District, Ceará, Center South, Goiás, Mato
Grosso, among others. Meanwhile the Forum of Organised Anarchism, which became
the Brazilian Anarchist Coordination (CAB), despite its growth, changed little
in terms of strategic unity and mass line, often acting as an auxiliary line of
reformism or practicing welfare in social movements, resulting in less influence
in the class struggle.
Garbage collector in Juazeiro, Bahia, 2007. Photo: Glauco Umbelino CC BY 2.0
In 2013, with the June uprising and the growth of its influence in several
cities, the Popular Anarchist Union contributed to the call for the National
Meeting of Popular, Student and Revolutionary Trade Union Organisations and the
national reconstruction of Federation of Revolutionary Syndicalist Organisations
of Brazil, becoming a reference for class-based tendencies in Brazil, mainly in
the student movement with the Class-Based and Combative Student Network and in
basic education with the Class Resistance Opposition group. There was a
significant increase in the participation of Bakuninists in the class struggle,
such as in the high school occupations of 2015 and in universities in 2016.
The Popular Anarchist Union, which established itself as the only bastion of
revolutionary class-based anarchism in Brazil during the Worker’s Party
governments (2003-2016), began to make its first mistakes after Dilma’s
impeachment, by adhering to the coup narrative and, consequently, favouring the
fight against the Worker’s Party “coup-mongering” and the defence of bourgeois
democracy. This can be explained, in part, by the contradiction of its growth
having occurred in intermediate sectors, such as the student movement of federal
universities and the civil service. Meanwhile, the Brazilian Anarchist
Coordination lost itself in social-democratic and identity-based narratives,
having little influence in the class struggle.
After losing its way in the conceptual dispute with the reformists following
Dilma’s impeachment, the only Bakuninist organisation in the world also failed
to fully understand the changing context and the decline in struggles after
2016. Even in a new context of right-wing governments and a decline in
struggles, it helped to convene the second National Meeting of Popular, Student
and Revolutionary Trade Union Organisations, with a proposal de-contextualised
from Western Europe by the anarcho-syndicalists of the International
Confederation of Labor (CIT) with the creation of the SIGAs, parallel unions,
breaking with the only model that was working: the class-based and disciplined
tendencies. Thus, they created free unions aimed mainly at libertarians and
doctrinaire revolutionaries, focusing only on agitation and propaganda, like the
outdated models of the factory-gate unions of the 20th century.
The Popular Anarchist Union/ Federation of Revolutionary Syndicalist
Organisations of Brazil continued to present errors in reading the context and
promoting hasty and misguided structural changes, and as a result, several
internal disagreements arose, mainly on issues such as the “Coup”, “Bolsonaro
Out”, “identitarianism” and the “stay at home” policy. In this context, between
2021-2023, there were many ruptures in The Popular Anarchist Union/ Federation
of Revolutionary Syndicalist Organisations of Brazil, some public, others not.
In the Brazilian Anarchist Coordination, there were also disagreements on two
main issues: the advancement of the national organisation with political and
strategic unity and the criticism of liberalism/identitarianism, which
culminated in a split, mainly of the southeastern organisations of the Brazilian
Anarchist Coordination, which formed the new Libertarian Socialist Organization
(OSL) in 2023.
With all these changes in the situation in recent years – right-wing
governments, the pandemic and the return of the Lula government, even more
bourgeois – splits were created that today divide militant anarchism in Brazil
into four main lines: Brazilian Anarchist Coordination, Libertarian Socialist
Organization, Popular Anarchist Union/ Federation of Revolutionary Syndicalist
Organisations of Brazil and its dissidents, such as GLP/Jornal Amigo do Povo,
Ofensiva Revolucionária, among others.
Our humble position, the result of these ruptures and more than 20 years of
activism even though we are not an anarchist group today, but rather a group of
class-based activists, is summarised in advancing where the historical Popular
Anarchist Union (2003-2016) was unable to do so. We want to make a quantitative
and qualitative leap not only with intermediate sectors, but mainly with
strategic sectors and the marginal proletariat, continuing with disciplined
activism and theoretical and strategic unity as a legacy of Bakunin and Makhno.
We must go to the people and continue fighting for the social revolution.
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