Monday, October 26, 2020

BANDIERA ROSSA COMMUNISTS IN OCCUPIED ROME, 1943–44
 DAVID BRODER 

Abstract

This study is a social history of communists in wartime Rome. It examines

a decisive change in Italian communist politics, as the Partito Comunista

Italiano (PCI) rose from a hounded fraternity of prisoners and exiles to a

party of government. Joining with other Resistance forces in the Comitato

di Liberazione Nazionale (CLN), this ‘new party’ recast itself as a mass,

patriotic force, committed to building a new democracy. This study

explains how such a party came into being. It argues that a PCI machine

could establish itself only by subduing other strands of communist

thought and organistion that had emerged independently of exiled Party

leaders. This was particularly true in Rome, where dissident communists

created the largest single Resistance formation, the Movimento Comunista

d’Italia (MCd’I). This movement was the product of the underground that

survived across the Mussolini period, expressing a ‘subversive’ politics

that took on a popular following through the disintegration of the Fascist

regime. Standing outside the CLN alliance and the postwar democratic

governments, it reflected the maximalism and eclecticism of a communist

milieu that had persisted on the margins of Fascist society. In the

Occupation period this dissident movement galvanised a social revolt in

the borgate slums, which would also trouble the new authorities even after

the Allies’ arrival. Studying the political writing of these dissidents, their

autodidact Marxism and the social conditions in which it emerged, this

study reconstructs a far-reaching battle to redefine communist politics.

Highlighting the erasure of the dissidents’ history in mainstream narration

of the Resistance, it argues that the repressed radicalism of this period

represented a lasting danger to the postwar PCI and the new Republic.


Table of contents

Preface

Chapter One

What remembrance forgets

1.1 Myths and martyrs

1.2 The PCI’s partisan legends

1.3 From underground to dissent

Chapter Two

‘You just wait till Stalin gets here…’

2.1. The writing on the wall

2.2. The long journey through Fascism

2.3. Scintilla

2.4. The British ‘bulldog’ spurned

2.5. ‘From the clandestine grouplet to mass work’

2.6. From Mussolini to Stalin

Chapter Three

Out of clandestinity – and back again

3.1. 19 July 1943: The war comes home

3.2. The overthrow of Mussolini

3.3. The PCI in Rome after 25 July

3.4. The foundation of the MCd’I

3.5. The united front

3.6. 8 September: the chaotic collapse

3.7. Toward a single communist movement?

Chapter Four

The borgate rise

4.1. A ‘Red Belt’

4.2. Motors to Resistance

4.3. The MCd’I in Rome and beyond

4.4. The ‘Banda Rossi’

4.5. Political directives

4.6. 7 November

Chapter Five

The Allies’ approach

5.1. Insurrectionary plans

5.2. Military contacts and POWs

5.3. Allied anti-communism

5.4. The CLN crisis

5.5. The ‘Committee of Public Safety’

Chapter Six

The forces of repression

6.1. The arsenal of repression

6.2. Raids and deportations

6.3. Via Rasella and the Fosse Ardeatine

6.4. A retreat

Chapter Seven

A Soviet foreign-policy move

7.1. The turn before Salerno

7.2. Togliatti’s return

7.3. A narrative of betrayal

7.4. Tito’s alternative

7.5. Doppiezza and Soviet foreign policy

Chapter Eight

The missing insurrection

8.1. A peaceful takeover

8.2 The moment of liberation

8.2. Open organisation

8.4. The ‘Red Army’

8.5. From Resistance to insurrection

Chapter Nine

The constitutional arch

9.1. The anger of crowds

9.2. Holdout partisans

9.3. Criminalisation

9.4. Unity projects

9.5. L’Idea Comunista

9.6. A Cold War Republic

Chapter Ten

The ‘Red Resistance’ and its myths

10.1. The ora X of insurrection

10.2. The new anti-fascism

10.3. The Years of Lead

10.4. The passing of an illusion


Preface

This study is a social history of communists in wartime Rome. It centres on the

period between the Wehrmacht invasion on 8 September 1943 and the Allies’

arrival in the capital on 4 June 1944. These nine months were a decisive turning

point in the development of Italian communism, as the Partito Comunista Italiano

(PCI), rose from a hounded fraternity of prisoners and exiles to a party of

government. The partito nuovo created through the Resistance was quite unlike

the Communist Party that had succumbed to Fascism two decades earlier.

Joining with other Resistance forces in the Comitato di Liberazione Nazionale (CLN),

Palmiro Togliatti’s party cast itself as a mass, patriotic force, committed to

building a new democracy. So, too, was the PCI’s social profile radically altered,

as young Italians without past communist affiliation now flooded into its ranks.

This study focuses on the other side of the partito nuovo’s formation: the communists

who rejected Togliatti’s approach. For the PCI’s party machine to take form, its

cadres had to impose their leadership over a series of communist movements that

had emerged outside of their control. This was particularly true in the Italian capital,

where dissident communists created the largest single Resistance formation. Their

Movimento Comunista d’Italia (MCd’I) was the product of the underground that

survived across the Fascist period. Standing outside of the CLN alliance, it expressed

the maximalism and eclecticism of a subversive milieu that had long been detached

from Party leaders. In the Occupation period and after it galvanised an unruly social

revolt in the borgate slums, a proletarian rebellion that clashed with the PCI’s politics

of ‘national unity’.

Central to our research is the autodidact Marxism that flowered within this milieu,

expressed in papers and pamphlets, bulletins and handwritten polemics. A militant

minority used this worker-writing to endow its activity with a grand historic mission

and a global perspective, even despite its long isolation from the international Left.

This thinking drew on earlier Italian communist politics as well as a subculture that

had evolved across the Fascist period. As this study shows, these militants’ texts

often bore the mark of the conditions of repression in which they were produced. Yet

this autodidacticism also stood in defiance of the political illiteracy that Fascism had

sought to create. It embodied workers’ and artisans’ attempt to free themselves from\

 the condition of those consigned only to follow leaders and execute commands.

These Roman militants’ pursuit of a class-war and revolutionary agenda set them

in sometimes sharp opposition to other anti-fascists. In the Occupation period the

demands of self-preservation compelled a degree of cooperation among all

clandestine militants, whether resisting Nazi raids or sheltering the endangered.

Yet in rejecting the idea of a common national interest, the dissident-communists

strongly opposed both the CLN alliance and the democratic governments that

followed.1 After Liberation they like other dissident partisans continued to build

their armed bands, waging expropriations and blackmail, occupying public

buildings and even extorting Allied supplies. As Nazi-Fascist2 tyranny gave way

to a new government of ‘national unity’, this intransigence drew these militants

into open conflict with the new authorities.

The Roman dissident movement did not create any lasting political force.

Paralysed by Nazi repression and criminalised under the Allies, it represented a

Resistance that did not shape the new Republic. Yet even in defeat, its militants

left an enduring legacy. The repression of partisan radicalism and a botched

defascistisation process left behind bitter weeds of disappointed hope;

‘unfinished business’ that repeatedly returned to the centre of Italian public life.

Making their own turn to the underground, new generations of armed militants

continued to destabilise the Republic into the 1970s. A study of this history thus

sheds light on the tensions at the origin of the postwar PCI and the Republic

itself. It highlights the subversive culture that developed across the Fascist era

and then re-emerged in the war period and beyond.

Each chapter of our study focuses on this fight to shape the Italian communist

movement as it emerged from two decades of repression:

Chapter One frames this study historically, explaining the blinkers that both

official Resistance remembrance and PCI self-mythology have placed on existing

1 ‘Antifascismo’, Disposizioni Rivoluzionarie, 5, 30.4.1944.

2 Nazifascismo, the common Italian term for the overlapping rule of Benito Mussolini’s

Fascist régime (the formally independent Repubblica Sociale Italiano, widely called the Salò

Republic in reference to its de facto capital) and Adolf Hitler’s control of the country,

occupied by Nazi Germany from 8 September 1943 onward.

understandings of wartime communism. It outlines a research perspective

focused on worker-militants’ own strategies for transforming Italian society, and

not just the decisions of professional politicians. It emphasises the generational

divide between the traditions inherited from earlier working-class radicalism,

and the new model of Party organisation forged in the interwar Comintern.

Chapter Two examines the culture of the Roman communist underground in the

early phases of the Second World War. It highlights the culture clash between the

intellectual fellow-travellers drawn into the orbit of Togliatti’s party during the

Popular Front era, and the proletarian underground that had survived across

Fascism. This chapter highlights the effects of the Fascist experience on this

clandestine milieu, including the spread of a millenarian cult of Stalin, outside of

and in tendency opposed to the PCI’s new strategy.

The clashes among the Roman communists become more sharply defined in

Chapter Three, which spans the 45 Days between the palace coup against

Mussolini and the German invasion. The liberalisation period following Marshal

Badoglio’s appointment allowed the formation of the political movements that

would go on to shape the Resistance. This chapter explains how the PCI’s

‘national unity’ policy hardened it against the dissident MCd’I.

The German invasion marked the beginning of a harsh Occupation regime, and

Chapter Four turns our focus to the social conditions in which armed bands now

emerged. Exploring the differences between the slum proletariat in Rome’s

peripheral borgate and the industrial working class of the North, we explain how

their respective forms of mobilisation related to communists’ differing

conceptions of ‘class struggle’. This focus on the particular forms of social revolt

on Rome’s periphery allows us to explain the relative strength of the dissident

communists in these areas compared to all other Resistance forces.

Chapter Five takes on a more international dimension, with the Anglo-Americans’

January 1944 arrival at Anzio, 35 miles south of the capital. For many anti-fascists

these landings offered hope that Liberation was close at hand. This chapter explains

how this prospect drove tensions within the anti-fascist coalition, as the parties

advanced their rival visions of the next government. This is also informed

by a study of the Allies’ efforts to impose order on the democratisation process in

the ‘laboratory’ of the liberated South.

Chapter Six focuses on the effect of repression on the Roman Resistance,

focusing on the counter-insurgency that struck in February-March 1944 as the

Allies’ march toward the city was halted. In particular, it highlights the contested

place of terrorist tactics in communist strategy, and the increased opposition to

their use in the face of devastating Nazi reprisals. It argues that this wave of

repression succeeded in demobilising the Roman Resistance.

Chapter Seven revolves around Togliatti’s ‘Salerno Turn’, as he led his party and

its allies into government. It argues that the Turn embodied the overlapping of

the PCI’s new democratic approach with its ongoing Soviet inspiration, allowing

the Party to unite widely varying political sensibilities. It highlights how

communists both within and outside the Party sought to reconcile Moscow’s

diplomatic moves with their understanding of their own strategic possibilities.

The controversy over the ‘Salerno Turn’ again poses the question of what

potential communists really had to transform an Italy liberated thanks to AngloAmerican invasion, and Chapter Eight explains why Rome did not see a popular

insurrection upon the Allies’ arrival. It explains that the weakness of Resistance

movements in the capital was compounded by the new institutional deal and the

Allies’ own efforts to prevent social unrest.

Chapter Nine proceeds into the post-Liberation period, with the disarming of the

partisans and the formation of Ivanoe Bonomi’s Allied-backed ‘government of

national unity’. It highlights the tensions between the CLN parties in

government, the state machine inherited from Fascism, and the armed bands

continuing to operate on the Roman city periphery. This allows us to see how a

new Republic built itself on the pacification of social unrest.

Finally, the concluding Chapter Ten explores the echoes of the so-called ‘Red

Resistance’ in the culture of the postwar Italian Left. Tracing the continual

remergence of militant anti-fascism and the politics of insurrection, it points to

the disappointed hopes of the Resistance period that continued to fuel political

violence. It thus presents repressed partisan radicalism as an enduring factor for

instability in Togliatti’s new party, as in the new Republic.

This study begins, however, by examining the role of Resistance commemoration

in Italian public life

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