May 1, 2001 A May Day Meditation

by Peter Linebaugh

Comrades and Friends, May Day Greetings!

Here is 'the day.' The day we long to become a "journee'," those days of
the French Revolution when a throne would topple, the powerful would
tumble, slavery be abolished, or the commons restored.

Meanwhile, we search for a demo for the day, or we gather daffodils and
some "may" for our loved ones and the kitchen table. We greet strangers
with a smile and "Happy May Day!" We think of comrades around the world, in
Africa, India, Russia, Indonesia, Mexico, Hong Kong. With our comrades we
remember recent victories, and we mutter against, and curse our rulers. We
take a few minutes to freshen up our knowledge of what happened there in
Chicago in 1886 and 1887 before striding out into the fight of the day.

So during this moment of studying the day, I'm going to take a text from
Frederick Engels, Socialism: Utopian and Scientific, and I'll ask you to
take it down from the top shelf of the spare room where you stuck it when
Reagan came to power, or to go down into the basement and dig it out of a
mildewed carton whence you might have disdainfully put it during the
Clinton years. No where does Engels mention the slave trade. No where does
Engels mention the witch burnings. No where does Engels mention the
genocide of the indigenous peoples. He writes, "A durable reign of the
bourgeoisie has been possible only in countries like America, where
feudalism was unknown, and society at the very beginning started from a
bourgeois basis."

Dearie me. Dear, dear, dear!

He has forgotten everything, it seems. He has swallowed hook, line, and
sinker the whole schemata of: Savagery leads to Barbarism leads to
Feudalism leads to Capitalism which, in turn, with a bit of luck, &c., &c.,
will be transformed, down the line, in the future, when the times are ripe,
&c. &c. into socialism and communism. He has overlooked the struggle of the
Indians, or the indigenous people, of the red, white, and black Indians.
The fact is that commonism preceded capitalism on the north American
continent, not feudalism. The genocide was so complete, the racism so
effective, that there is not even a trace or relic of memory of the prior
societies. So we fling him away as another Victorian European Imperialist
and white male, to boot.

But, wait. Look again. Check out the essay at the back. He called it "The
Mark." It's only a few pages. Perhaps you are misled by its German localism
- its Gehferschaften and its Loosgter. The former term is the way the
commoners of the Moselle valley practiced the jubilee and the latter term
is a land distribution system based on periodical assignments by lot.
Engels is describing the Commons of his neighborhoods. It is as substantial
as Maria Mies in The Subsistence Perspective. You can smell the barnyard as
you walk down the lane arm in arm to pick berries in the commons. Engels
becomes a scholar of that "feudalism" which we thought he was discarding.
But, no, in describing the pigs, the mushrooms, the turf, the wood, the
unwritten customs, the mark regulations, the berries, the heaths, the
forests, lakes, ponds, hunting grounds, fishing pools, he has quite
forgotten his polemic against the economics professors (which is what
inspired his tract) and he is relishing, shall we say? his very own
indigenous self. I dare say he has had a few encuentros himself among the
Germans. And we'll never forget that it was the criminalization of
customary access to the commons which first drove Karl Marx to the study of
political economy.

No, Engels is full of contradictions. I say get him back from the mildew
and air our your copy. He has a political purpose. Engels is not that
theorist we tossed off as hopelessly politcally incorrect, and, taking all
in all, a bad case for tenure. Part of his book he wrote for the professors
of the SPD, but another part he wrote for the commoners and indigenous
people - the peasants - who fled to the industrial towns. Moreover, he
listened to them. They had lost their commons. Engels records the "traces,"
the "relics". These survive because of the French Revolution and the German
one which once again produced a free peasantry. "But how inferior is the
position of our free peasant of today compared with the free member of the
mark of the olden time! His homestead is generally much small, and the
unpartitioned mark is reduced to a few very small and poor bits of communal
forest. But, without the use of the mark, there can be no cattle for the
small peasant; without cattle, no manure; without manure, no agriculture."
That is the living commons. Engels knew of it. Engels is a free man; he
knows that communism is possible. Engels is a revolutionary; he knows that
it is not scheduled.

I say this not to rehabilitate Engels. I personally am less interested in
him that I am in Tecumseh who refused to enter the house of Governor W. H.
Harrison in August 1810, insisting on meeting in the open air. "The earth
was the most proper place for the Indians, as they liked to repose upon the
bosom of their mother." Having thus reposed himself, he asserted the
society of the commons: "The way, the only way to stop this evil is for the
red men to unite in claiming a common and equal right in the land, as it
was at first, and should be now - for it was never divided, but belongs to
all. No tribe has the right to sell, even to each other, much less to
strangers ... Sell a country! Why not sell the air, the great sea, as well
as the earth? Did not the Great Spirit make them all for the use of his
children?"

But Engels had a global class politics, that is why we are interested in
him again. What destroys the commons in Europe is what destroyed the
commons of Tecumseh. Engels writes in 1880 "the whole of European
agriculture, as carried on at the present time, is threatened by an
overpowering rival, viz., the production of corn on a gigantic scale by
America ... The whole of the European agricultural system is being beaten
by American competition." It is true that Engels recognizes the commons in
Germany but not in America. However, having said that, Engels also
recognizes that the preservation of the commons depends on an international
struggle.

Now, we return to May Day. What was responsible for that productivity of
American corn? First, it was the fertility provided by a millennium of
native American corn culture on the common land (remember the mound-makers
who made thousands of tumuli, learn about the Hopewell people who brought
corn from the Maya one thousand years ago, visit the fabulous serpent mound
of Ohio during your summer travels). Second, it was the members of the
Moulders Local 23 at the McCormick mechanical reapers' works of Chicago who
went on strike for the eight hour day in 1867 and whose struggle directly
resulted in the Haymarket demo of 1886. And then the hangings.

So, now as they gather in Seattle and Windsor and Prague and Brazil and
Quebec, precisely to sell the air, the water, the earth, we pose the common
alternative, under many names, untheorized and common, oh! how so, very,
very common, common to the slaves, common to the indigenous peoples, common
to the women, common to the workers. Here is the light and the heat of the
day.

I shall miss you, dearest comrades, at the launchings in New York and
Boston of the Auroras of the Zapatistas.

Peter Linebaugh is the author (with Marcus Rediker) of The Many-Headed
Hydra: Sailors, Slaves, Commoners, and the Hidden History of the
Revolutionary Atlantic.

from CounterPunch (www.counterpunch.org ) 


Louis Proyect
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