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Catholic communism, also known as Left-Catholicism or White Bolshevism, [1] is a form of Christian communism that combines Catholicism with communism. Known as cattocomunismo in Italian, Catholic communism first emerged in Italy in the 1930s amongst the members of Catholic Action. [2] Catholic communists embraced communism as the realization of Catholic social teaching and accepted historical materialism, but also rejected the dialectical materialism and atheism of Marxist-Leninism. [3]
In a historiographical sense, Catholic communism developed within the Party of the Christian Left, a significant component of the Catholic groups that carried out the Italian resistance to Nazism and which had among their exponents Franco Rodano, Felice Balbo, and Adriano Ossicini. [4] [5]
Catholic dialogue with communism started in the end of the 19th century in Italy and other Catholic countries in Europe. Socialist trade unions successfully improved the living conditions of the workers by forcing concessions and better labour contracts from employers via strikes. Catholic workers recognized that the socialist aim of improving the living conditions of the poor overlapped with Catholicism, but were concerned about the anti-clericalism and anti-theism of socialism. Catholics responded with creating their own political associations and trade unions; the labor movement became divided between "red" (socialist) and "white" (Catholic) trade unions. [6]
After World War I, there developed a left-wing Catholic tendency in white trade unions, such as those in Italy. Regionally, left-wing Catholic unions became powerful - in Verona, land strikes organized by left-wing Catholic movement gathered over 150,000 ‘white’ workers. These trade unions explored the concept of "inter-classism", where both socialist and Catholic trade unions could unite in order to combat not only economic exploitation, but also the looming fascist threat in Italy. However, these alliances failed to materialize as socialist trade unions were unwilling to break with their anti-clericalism - left-wing Catholics were branded as "idiotic" and "a grotesque deformation of workers’ trade unionism". The Italian Socialist Party went as far as argue that socialist should fight left-wing Catholics "with greater force than those on the right." However, other socialists, such as Antonio Gramsci were supportive of left-wing Catholicism. [1]
The left-wing Catholicism that developed in Italy in the 1910s and 1920s was described as "White Bolshevism". It embraced the religious rituals and traditions of the Italian peasantry, while also embracing the economic demands of socialism. [6] One of the theoreticians of this current, Catholic socialist, Cesare Seassaro, wrote that anticlericalism was part of bourgeois ideology and that many priests should be seen as workers. [1] In emerging Catholic communism, the Gospel was "interpreted as a sublime Labour Charter". It gained the attention of numerous prominent socialists - Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, for example, praised the movement, and argued tha the Acts of the Apostles "showed perfectly how communism was practised among ancient Christian communities". Claudia Baldoli noted that "the Christian spirit that permeated the speeches of some well-known socialist leaders proved powerful enough to prompt conversions to the priesthood". [6]
Catholic communism developed further in the 1930s and 1940s, and connected the resurrection of Christ to the Russian Revolution. A leader of a "white Bolshevik" trade union in Italy, Guido Miglioli, travelled to Soviet Union and promoted a "Christian vision of Bolshevism". Miglioli argued that the Catholic demands of social justice and charity could only be obtained through a revolution; he noted that a policy that did not accept class struggle would be stillborn as no collaboration or solidarity could be expected from the landowners. Miglioli also wrote that the message of Russian Bolshevik was ultimately Christian, and that the Bolsheviks "were welcomed by the masses as apostles and bearers of a message of social justice and brotherhood". He stressed that peasants who made the Russian Revolution possible were "extraordinarily religious" and that "they adore God who had created him; they love the man who had redeemed Him". [6]
Arthur Koestler, Hungarian communist who later became disillusioned with it, wrote that both Catholicism and communism provided viable "theoretical blueprints of the future". He saw Catholicism as an important complement to Communism, as it "combined the spiritual realm with the promise of social revolution". Koestler argued that the communist and Catholic utopia were highly compatible, although he would abandon Marxism's because of Marx's claim about religion that "in the brightness of day the lamp would become superfluous". [6]
Miglioli and his Catholic communists circles insisted that their views merely represent the Catholic social teaching. When asked why he was a Catholic rather than a communist if he was willing to praise the Soviet revolution, he replied that "Christianity brought communism beyond the limits of earthly life". He praised the Constitution of the Soviet Union as an "evangelical document" and argued that Bolsheviks spoke to peasantry in biblical language: "The peasants received the land they needed for their work, and no one would be allowed to exploit them or to become rich at the expense of their efforts. In the same way, God had told Moses that he would provide manna for his people; however, if stored, it would have perished, so no accumulation was allowed, and everyone would receive according to their own needs." [6]
The expression Catholic communism also appears in the writings of Augusto Del Noce (see Il cattolico comunista , 1981) and Gianni Baget Bozzo.
In that year the journalist Enzo Bettiza published the essay European Communism in which he uses the term. [7]
The Bolsheviks, led by Vladimir Lenin, were a far-left faction of the Marxist Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP) which split with the Mensheviks at the Second Party Congress in 1903. The Bolshevik party, formally established in 1912, seized power in Russia in the October Revolution of 1917, and was later renamed the Russian Communist Party, All-Union Communist Party, and Communist Party of the Soviet Union. The party's ideology, based on Leninist and later Marxist–Leninist principles, is known as Bolshevism.
Leninism is a political ideology developed by Russian Marxist revolutionary Vladimir Lenin that proposes the establishment of the dictatorship of the proletariat led by a revolutionary vanguard party as the political prelude to the establishment of communism. Lenin's ideological contributions to the Marxist ideology relate to his theories on the party, imperialism, the state, and revolution. The function of the Leninist vanguard party is to provide the working classes with the political consciousness and revolutionary leadership necessary to depose capitalism.
Marxism–Leninism is a communist ideology that became the largest faction of the communist movement in the world in the years following the October Revolution. It was the predominant ideology of most communist governments throughout the 20th century. It was developed in Russia by Joseph Stalin and drew on elements of Bolshevism, Leninism, Marxism, and the works of Karl Kautsky. It was the state ideology of the Soviet Union, Soviet satellite states in the Eastern Bloc, and various countries in the Non-Aligned Movement and Third World during the Cold War, as well as the Communist International after Bolshevization.
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Bolshevism is a revolutionary socialist current of Soviet Leninist and later Marxist–Leninist political thought and political regime associated with the formation of a rigidly centralized, cohesive and disciplined party of social revolution, focused on overthrowing the existing capitalist state system, seizing power and establishing the "dictatorship of the proletariat".
Amadeo Bordiga was an Italian Marxist theorist. A revolutionary socialist, Bordiga was the founder of the Communist Party of Italy (PCdI), member of the Communist International (Comintern), and later a leading figure of the Internationalist Communist Party (PCInt). He was originally associated with the PCdI but was expelled in 1930 after being accused of Trotskyism. Bordiga is viewed as one of the most notable representatives of left communism in Europe.
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"Left-Wing" Communism: An Infantile Disorder is a work by Vladimir Lenin attacking assorted critics of the Bolsheviks who claimed positions to their left. Most of these critics were proponents of ideologies later described as left communism. The book was written in 1920 and published in Russian, German, English and French later in the year. A copy was then distributed to each delegate at the 2nd World Congress of the Comintern, several of whom were mentioned by Lenin in the work. The book is divided into ten chapters and an appendix.
The Revolutions of 1917–1923 were a revolutionary wave that included political unrest and armed revolts around the world inspired by the success of the Russian Revolution and the disorder created by the aftermath of World War I. The uprisings were mainly socialist or anti-colonial in nature. Most socialist revolts failed to create lasting socialist states. The revolutions had lasting effects in shaping the future European political landscape, with, for example, the collapse of the German Empire and the dissolution of Austria-Hungary.
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Left communism, or the communist left, is a position held by the left wing of communism, which criticises the political ideas and practices espoused by Marxist–Leninists and social democrats. Left communists assert positions which they regard as more authentically Marxist than the views of Marxism–Leninism espoused by the Communist International after its Bolshevization by Joseph Stalin and during its second congress.
Revolutionary socialism is a political philosophy, doctrine, and tradition within socialism that stresses the idea that a social revolution is necessary to bring about structural changes in society. More specifically, it is the view that revolution is a necessary precondition for transitioning from a capitalist to a socialist mode of production. Revolution is not necessarily defined as a violent insurrection; it is defined as a seizure of political power by mass movements of the working class so that the state is directly controlled or abolished by the working class as opposed to the capitalist class and its interests.
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