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  • Anarchism in Turkey

    Anarkismo.net
    July 28 2005

    Anarchism in Turkey
    by Unknown Thursday, Jul 28 2005, 4:54am


    A short history of Anarchism in Turkey

    A short but good history of anarchism in Turkey involving
    revolutionaries form other nationalities as well.
    In 1876, Christo Botev, `the first Bulgarian anarchist and national
    hero... perished for the liberation of Bulgaria from Turkish power'.

    In 1878, after leaving Beirut, Errico Malatesta's ship docks in
    Smyrna (Izmir), where the local authorities demand that Malatesta be
    handed over to them. Fortunately, the Captain of `La Provence'
    refuses the order and the ship continues on to Italy, France and
    Switzerland.

    The earliest formations of socialist activity in Turkey come from the
    ethnic minorities of Bulgarians, Macedonians, Greeks and Jews. The
    focus of their activity is in Thessoloniki. In these early formations
    there is a split between the orthodox Marxists and a faction of
    Bulgarian and Jewish `anarcho-liberals'. The two factions try to form
    a mutual organization with the marxist Nicola Rusev as secretary. But
    a split soon occurs with the marxists decrying the activities of
    anarchist Pavel Deliradev whose associates include Angel Tomov and
    Nikola Harlakov as well as people from Abraham Benaroya's Sephardic
    Circle of Socialist Studies.

    The Bulgarian Macedonian Edirne Revolutionary Committee form in
    Thessaloniki 1893. This group is to evolve into the major Macedonian
    indepence group against the Ottoman Empire, IMRO (Internal Macedonian
    Revolutionary Organization). The spokeperson of IMRO's left wing is
    Goce Delcev. He favors sabotage and attentats rather than the
    nationalist's call for a general uprising, which, it is believed
    would be quickly crushed by the Ottoman authorities.

    Bulgarian and Macedonian students in Switzerland frequent Russian
    immigrant circles and discover the ideas of Bakunin. In 1898, these
    students form the Macedonian Secret Revolutionary Committee and
    publish `Otmustenie' (`Revenge'). `Otmustenie' declares war on the
    nationalisms of the individual ethnic minorities of Ottoman Turkey,
    but rather makes a call to unite with the Muslim people against the
    Sultan's government.

    In 1896 Abraham Frumkin, a young man, came from Constantinople
    (Istanbul) to London. He became a friend of Rudolf Rocker. He born in
    1872 in Jerusalem. He spent a year in Jaffa as a teacher of Arabic.
    In 1891 he went to Constantinople to study Law but he didn't manage
    it because of lack of money. In 1893 he went to New York and came in
    contact with anarchist ideas for the first time. In 1894 he returned
    to Constantinople with lots of anarchist books and propaganda
    material. In the house of Moses Schapiro from South Russia and his
    wife Nastia, which was at that time a place for young active people,
    he found open ears and minds.

    Schapiro, who had to flee from Russia because of his revolutionary
    activities, quickly was inflamed by the new ideas and went together
    with Frumkin to Paris and London. From there he took all books he
    could get about anarchism (Kropotkin, Reclus, Grave, Malato etc.)
    back home. From London the Yiddish anarchist paper `Arbeiterfraind'
    was sent to Constantinople where the Jewish community around Shapiro
    welcomed it happily. From now on Frumkin wrote for that paper. Then
    in 1896 they decided to go to London to open a print shop for Yiddish
    anarchist booklets. Many years later he wrote a book about this time
    `From the spring period of Jewish socialism'. Shapiro had to return
    to Constantinople in 1897. He left his print shop to Frumkin, who
    decided to publish an own little paper `Der Propagandist' (11
    issues). After a while in Liverpool and Leeds in 1998 Frumkin went to
    Paris to stay for a year. Then he went again to America in 1899.
    Shapiro was later engaged in the Russian Revolution and was a
    co-founder 1922-23 of the IWA in Berlin. He went to the US where he
    died in 1946.

    The Armenian, Alexandre Atabekian attempts on several occasions to
    distribute anarchist pamphlets in Istanbul and Izmir.

    The Italian anarchist, Amilcare Cipriani, much to the chagrin of
    Malatesta, volunteers to fight in Crete's 1897 revolt against Turkish
    occupation. He records his impressions in the `Almanach de la
    Questione Sociale' published in Paris by the Greek anarchist Paul
    Argyriades.

    In 1903, the anarchist group `Gemidzii' makes contact with Goce
    Delcev. In April of 1903, the group carry out bombings on their own
    initiative in Thessaloniki against a French Passenger liner and
    Banque Ottomane Imperiale.

    In May 1912, in London, Errico Malatesta is charged with being a
    Turkish spy. The accusation comes from the Italian patriot (and
    supposedly one-time anarchist) Bellelli who is offended by
    Malatesta's outspoken opposition to Italy's adventures in Libya.

    Albert Meltzer's pamphlet `International Revolutionary Solidarity
    Movement' includes documents by the Spanish anarchist `First of May
    Group'. This pamphlet makes numerous references to the activities of
    Turkish anarchists in the late 1960s. (However his remarks have been
    questioned).

    The contemporary Turkish anarchist movement begins in the 1980s with
    some former Marxists publishing in Turkish the pamphlet `Kronstadt
    1920' by Ida Mett.

    In the late 1980s, two anarchist journals appear in Istanbul, `Kara'
    and `Efendisiz'.

    http://www.anarkismo.net/newswire.php?story_id=1039
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