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Anarchist-Communist Federation of Occitania

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Anarchist-Communist Federation of Occitania
Federacion Anarquista Comunista d'Occitània
FounderGuy Malouvier
Founded1969
Dissolved1976
Split fromRevolutionary Anarchist Organisation
NewspaperOccitania Libertaria
Ideology
Political positionFar-left

The Anarchist-Communist Federation of Occitania (Occitan: Federacion Anarquista Comunista d'Occitània, FACO) was an Occitan anarchist communist organisation, founded by Guy Malouvier, which operated in Occitania from 1969 to 1976.

History

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Founding

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The FACO emerged in the wake of the May 68 events, as the question of France's minority nationalities became an increasing subject of debate within the French anarchist movement.[1] The FACO was established in 1969.[2] It was founded by Guy Malouvier, a member of the Revolutionary Anarchist Organisation (ORA), together with the Occitan language singer Joan Pau Verdier and Provençal journalist Gérard Bodinier.[3] Malouvier's defence of Occitan nationalism provoked an internal debate within the ORA, causing its group in Marseille, which favoured class struggle over national liberation, to break away from the FACO.[1] He ended up resigning from the ORA in 1971, in order to dedicate himself more fully to organising the FACO.[4]

The FACO was one of several Occitan political organisations that were active during the 1970s,[5] at a time when anti-colonialism was a popular theme among Occitan groups and in Occitan literature.[6] The FACO, which consisted of 15 groups and included almost 100 active members, formed links with other Occitan nationalist groups, including the Partit de la Nacion Occitana. Unlike other Occitan nationalists, such as François Fontan, who advocated for the standardisation of the Occitan language, the FACO defended linguistic pluralism, considering attempts to standardise the language a form of "Occitan Jacobinism."[1] It flew the anarchist red-and-black flag, with an Occitan cross emblazoned on the red section, and marched with other anarchist organisations at political demonstrations.[1]

In 1970, it began publishing its journal, Occitania libertaria.[7] Its headquarters were established at 33 Rue des Vignoles [fr], in Paris, which it was forced to share with the ORA.[3] The publication allowed its writers to print works in their own vernaculars and dialects, including Gascon, Lemosin and Provençau.[1] It published four issues between 1970 and 1972:[8] its first issue was published in 1970, its second in 1971, and its third and fourth in 1972.[9] It published its fifth issue in 1973 and its sixth issue in 1974.[10] It ceased publication in 1975,[11] with its eighth and final issue.[4][10][12]

The FACO sympathised with the Basque nationalist organisation Euskadi Ta Askatasuna (ETA), which was engaged in an armed conflict against Francoist Spain.[13] It also had relations with the Basque anarchist magazine Askatasuna [es], which reestablished the Confederación Nacional del Trabajo (CNT) in Euskadi during the Spanish transition to democracy.[1]

Throughout its existence, FACO was unable to build a sustainable permanent membership; shortly after Malouvier left in 1976, the organisation dissolved.[1] Malouvier himself ceased anarchist political activity soon after, due to the hostility expressed by the ORA towards Occitan national liberation.[4] Following the 1978 French legislative election, the writer Joan Ganhaire [oc] also decided to drop out of politics, as he had been offended by what he saw as extremist tendencies within the Occitan nationalist movement,[14] represented mainly by the FACO.[15]

Political ideology

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The FACO's stated aim was to bring together all the "colonised people" of Metropolitan France into a united front.[6] Its members advocated for a synthesis of libertarian communism with Occitan nationalism, calling for France to be transformed from a unitary state into a "socialist federation of regions", in contrast to the centralist aspirations of the French Jacobins.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Davranche & Mariman 2008.
  2. ^ Davranche & Mariman 2008; Evans & Williams 2021, p. 7; Pla-Lang 2008, p. 58.
  3. ^ a b Davranche & Mariman 2008; R.D. 2023.
  4. ^ a b c R.D. 2023.
  5. ^ Caerléon 1973; Evans & Williams 2021, p. 7; Pla-Lang 2008, p. 58; Priest 2008, p. 143; Turpin 1987, p. 21.
  6. ^ a b Evans & Williams 2021, p. 7.
  7. ^ Davranche & Mariman 2008; Maitron & Droguet 1973, p. 15; R.D. 2023.
  8. ^ Maitron & Droguet 1973, p. 15.
  9. ^ Maitron & Droguet 1973, pp. 18–19.
  10. ^ a b "Catalogue de la bibliothèque: Occitanie libertaire". Centre International de Recherches sur l'Anarchisme (in French). Retrieved 17 May 2024.
  11. ^ Bianco, René. "Occitanie libertaire". Bianco: Presse anarchiste (in French). Retrieved 17 May 2024.
  12. ^ "Notice de périodique: Occitania libertaria". BnF (in French). 4 June 1969. Retrieved 17 May 2024.
  13. ^ Davranche & Mariman 2008; Garnerin 2020, p. 24n30.
  14. ^ Garnerin 2023, p. 22.
  15. ^ Garnerin 2023, p. 22n2.

Bibliography

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Further reading

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