Recently, the Sussex University
library dedicated part of its space for a small exhibition on the Paris
Commune. At first this came with some surprise: how was it that, in the midst
of the boredom of academic life and the total lack of interest in any issues of
importance, the library was willing to commemorate one of the most crucial
proletarian revolutions of the nineteenth century? Yet, our surprise quickly
vanished when we gave this exhibition a closer look. Not only is the exhibition
of a purely academic nature (looking at historical events as spectacles and
thus a-historically), but it is also taking the Commune out of context,
describing it by using some of the most common illusions found in the bourgeois
world. This article comes as a response to the exhibition. Our aim is not to
convince the people responsible to take into account another perspective, thus
falling into the liberal ideology of ‘all views should be heard’; rather, we
aim to remind them that, even in the Disneyland they construct, the distortion
of history does not go by unnoticed.
The Paris Commune emerged at the end of the war between Prussia and
France. The defeat of France in the battlefields brought the Prussian army
outside Paris, with the subsequent result of the formation of the National
Guard. “Paris could not[…] defend itself without arming the working class,
without transforming it into a military force and without training it
militarily for war. But when Paris is armed, that means that the revolution is
armed.” (K. Marx, Declaration of the
General Council of the International Association of Workers for the civil war
in France in 1871). When the chief general of France, Thiers, decided to
surrender to Prussia the armed people of Paris refused to give back their
weapons and declared the Paris Commune.
The library exhibition claims that this was a result of the
nationalistic ideas of the masses and the fact that “… many Parisians who had
borne the brunt of the recent German offensive on behalf of their country only
to have surrender forced on them, felt angry and betrayed” (quote from the
library exhibition). Yet, this presupposition clearly ignores a variety of
facts visible to anyone who looks at the Paris Commune: firstly, on the 30th
of March, the Commune declared that all foreigners could be elected in the
Commune because “… the flag of the Commune was the flag of international
democracy”. Secondly, this explanation fails to explain –or comprehend- the
fact that the Communards destroyed on the 12th of April the monument
of the victory of Vendome for being a symbol of nationalism and hatred among
the people. The crucial role played by
the foreigners in, and their treatment by, the Commune simply forbids the
allegation that the uprising was a result of national pride.
Contrary to the ideological utterances found in the library exhibition,
the Commune was to serve as the lever for uprooting the economical foundations
upon which rests the existence of classes, and it did so by establishing its
dominance over the organisation of social life on the basis of a rejection of
capitalist social relations and of the state apparatus.
The establishment of the Commune started with the formation of the
municipal councillors, chosen by universal suffrage, responsible and revocable
at all times, the majority of whom were workers. For the first time after 1848,
the streets of Paris were safe, and that with the absence of the police. “We,
said a member of the Commune, hear no longer of assassinations, theft and
personal assault; it seems indeed as if the police had dragged along with it to
Versailles all its conservative friends.”
At one point, the library exhibition claims that although “… from the
very outset the Commune was associated in the public mind to Marxism, [but],
beyond the similarity in name, the Commune had nothing to do with communism”
(quote from the library exhibition). But what is communism if not the conscious
decision of the workers themselves to take control of their lives through an
armed revolution? How can this claim be accepted when all the acts of the
Commune (abolition of private property; abolition of the military service;
abolition of the rents owed to the rich; the creation of workers’ councils by
giving all power over the factories to those who worked in them; the equation
of all salaries in the Commune to those of the workers; etc) point to the
direction of the destruction of the class based society and of class
dominance?
As soon as Thiers had realised what was going on, he begged the Prussians
to help him liberate Paris. The refusal of the Germans meant that Thiers was to
perform the task by himself. The army started gathering in Versailles, and the
battles with the Communards began. Although the Communards managed to hold
their positions for some time, the constant bombing of Paris and the lack of
co-ordination eventually led to the downfall of the Commune. In the aftermath,
more than 20,000 people were executed, whereas thousands were imprisoned or
exiled.
Surely, many mistakes were committed. The refusal, for example, to
seize the French National Bank at a time when money was desperately needed was
of vital importance. Or else, the existence of the armed artists who defended
the Notre Dame from the arsonists in the name of an eternal aesthetic value,
signified that the Communards were still indecisive in regards to their
objectives and aims.
The internal problem of coherence does fall upon the spectre of the
Commune, but “… it is time to examine the Commune not just as an outmoded example
of revolutionary primitivism, all of whose mistakes are easily overcome, but as
a positive experiment whose whole truth has not been rediscovered or fulfilled
to this day.”(Internationale Situationniste, Theses on the Paris Commune, 1962)
The attempt to present the Paris Commune as a nationalistic revolt,
mainly characterised by a senseless mob1 unable to even understand
its own powers, testifies for the desire to eradicate the historical memory of
any struggle for human liberation. Yet, what appears to have been one of the
failures of the workers’ movement, remains one of its most important successes
so far.
1At some point of the text accompanying the library exhibition, it is claimed that “… the generals were taken into custody by their own men and clumsily shot in front of the mob”. Surely, the geniuses who wrote this might have done a little more research before uttering such nonsense. What actually happened was that the two generals (Lekonte and Thomas) ordered their troops to open fire at an unarmed workers demonstration. When the soldiers refused, the generals started swearing at them with rage, something which resulted into the soldiers turning their guns against the generals themselves and shooting them instead. Clearly, this was an act of justified proletarian outrage and not one of a ruthless mob as they wish to present it.