FOR THE GREAT ANARCHIST GEOGRAPHER, ANARCHY WAS AT PLAY IN EVERY NATURAL
RELATIONSHIP GROUNDED IN SOLIDARITY
~ Fabio Carnevali ~
Reclus was the anarchist who “never commanded anyone, and never will”, as his
younger friend Kropotkin said of him, as well as the geographer for whom many
important scientists—including Charles Darwin—mobilised when he risked being
deported to New Caledonia after the Paris Commune.
In Reclus’ works, anarchy and the study of nature were tied together in a strict
bond. Both his political and geographical studies date back to his youth, and he
soon came to connect the two. After Louis Buonaparte’s coup d’état in 1851,
Élisée and his brother Élie both went into exile. In these years Élisée lived in
Ireland at first, then in Louisiana, and lastly in Colombia. This allowed him to
gather material for his first geographical works while developing his critique
of slavery in the United States.
Reclus did not think of anarchy as a utopia for the future; instead, it is the
form of all those relationships that put into practice mutual aid, the
“illuminated factor of evolution”, showing his affinity with Peter Kropotkin.
For both, an adequate understanding of nature and the relationship between human
and nonhuman would foster solidarity and help demystify the ideologies that
conceal the truth of humanity’s role in nature.
In a speech given to a masonic lodge in Brussels in 1894, Reclus defined the
anarchist idea of freedom as a peaceful coexistence that does not stem from
obedience to law and/or fear of punishments, but rather “from mutual respect for
the interest of all, and from the scientific study of natural laws”. For him,
anarchy was at play in every natural relationship grounded in solidarity.
Promoting social change meant creating groups of people that practice solidarity
and choose to live according to this principle. In this sense, ‘education’ means
forming people and communities that are free and willing to fight for their
freedom.
“NATURE BECOMING SELF-CONSCIOUS”
Reclus thought of anarchy as the most natural form of relationship, and
certainly the only one that allows for real freedom. When back to France after
his exile in the Americas, Reclus wrote a letter to the director of the Revue
Germanique to propose a collaboration. In the letter he stated: “philosophically
I attach myself to the school of Spinoza”. Indeed, this thinker’s ideas about
nature, knowledge and liberation strongly echo in the background of Reclus’s
thought.
One of his major writings, L’Homme et la Terre, opens with a picture of the
Earth held up by human hands. Under the picture there is a sentence that reads:
“Humanity is Nature becoming self-conscious”. For humanity, to understand its
role in nature would imply rethinking the very basis of its ethics, taking into
account the interconnectedness that binds it to the entire non-human world.
This ethical perspective led Reclus to embrace anti-speciesist positions,
advocating for an ethical vegetarianism that refuses to see animals as mere food
sources. He thought that humanity’s moral growth depends on the growth of the
understanding of our union with the whole of life and on the strengthening of
this union.
On the 120th anniversary of Élisée Reclus’s death, talking about his life and
thought gives us the opportunity to think of his contribution and relevance both
from a theoretical and a militant perspective. Many of his ideas are still
relevant today, especially those concerning the relations between societies and
nature. With regard to some ecological concepts that would later become central
for other anarchists such as Murray Bookchin and Jphn Clark, he was a pioneer
and a source of inspiration for many.
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