Amilcar Cabral: Brief Analysis of the Social Structure in Guinea
1968 May 1
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Amilcar Cabral: Brief Analysis of the Social Structure in Guinea @ Satoshi Nakamoto
- Author
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Amilcar Cabral
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satoshinakamotonetwork@proton.me
- Site
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https://satoshinakamoto.network
I should like to tell you something about the situation in our
country, ‘Portuguese' Guinea, beginning with an analysis of the social
situation, which has served as the basis for our struggle for national
liberation. I shall make a distinction between the rural areas and the
towns, or rather the urban centres, not that these are to be considered
mutually opposed.
In the rural areas we have found it necessary to distinguish between
two distinct groups: on the one hand, the group which we consider
semi-feudal, represented by the Fulas, and, on the other hand, the group
which we consider, so to speak, without any defined form of state
organisation, represented by the Balantes. There are a number of
intermediary positions between these two extreme ethnic groups (as
regards the social situation). I should like to point out straight away
that although in general the semi-feudal groups were Muslim and the
groups without any form of state organisations were animist, there was
one ethnic group among the animists, the Mandjacks, which had forms of
social relations which could be considered feudal at the time when the
Portuguese came to Guinea.
I should now like to give you a quick idea of the social
stratification among the Fulas. We consider that the chiefs, the nobles
and the religious figures form one group; after them come the artisans
and the Dyulas, who are itinerant traders, and then after that come the
peasants properly speaking. I don't want to give a very thorough
analysis of the economic situation of each of these groups now, but I
would like to say that although certain traditions concerning collective
ownership of the land have been preserved, the chiefs and their
entourages have retained considerable privileges as regards ownership of
land and the utilisation of other people's labour; this means that the
peasants who depend on the chiefs are obliged to work for these chiefs
for a certain period of each year. The artisans, whether blacksmiths
(which is the lowest occupation) or leather-workers or whatever, play an
extremely important role in the socio-economic life of the Fulas and
represent what you might call the embryo of industry. The Dyulas, whom
some people consider should be placed above the artisans, do not really
have such importance among the Fulas; they are the people who have the
potential - which they sometimes realise - of accumulating money. In
general the peasants have no rights and they are the really exploited
group in Fula society.
Apart from the question of ownership and property, there is another
element which it is extremely interesting to compare and that is the
position of women. Among the Fulas women have no rights; they take part
in production but they do not own what they produce. Besides, polygamy
is a highly respected institution and women are to a certain extent
considered the property of their husbands.
Among the Balantes, which are at the opposite extreme, we find a
society without any social stratification: there is just a council of
elders in each village or group of villages who decide on the day to day
problems. In the Balante group property and land are considered to
belong to the village but each family receives the amount of land needed
to ensure subsistence for itself, and the means of production, or rather
the instruments of production, are not collective but are owned by
families or individuals.
The position of women must also be mentioned when talking about the
Balantes. The Balantes still retain certain tendencies towards polygamy,
although it is mainly a monogamous society. Among the Balantes women
participate in production but they own what they produce and this gives
Balante women a position which we consider privileged, as they are
fairly free; the only point on which they are not free is that children
belong to the head of the family and the head of the family, the
husband, always claims any children his wife may have: this is obviously
to be explained by the actual economy of the group where a family's
strength is ultimately represented by the number of hands there are to
cultivate the land.
As I have said, there are a number of intermediate positions between
these two extremes. In the rural areas I should mention the small
African farm owners; this is a numerically small group but all the same
it has a certain importance and has proved to be highly active in the
national liberation struggle. In the towns (I shall not talk about the
presence of Europeans in the rural areas as there are none in Guinea) we
must first distinguish between the Europeans and the Africans. The
Europeans can easily be classified as they retain in Guinea the social
stratification of Portugal (obviously depending on the function they
exercise in Guinea). In the first place, there are the high officials
and the managers of enterprises who form a stratum with practically no
contact with the other European strata. After that there are the medium
officials, the small European traders, the people employed in commerce
and the members of the liberal professions. After that come the workers,
who are mainly skilled workers.
Among the Africans we find the higher officials, the middle officials
and the members of the liberal professions forming a group; then come
the petty officials, those employed in commerce with a contract, who are
to be distinguished from those employed in commerce without a contract,
who can be fired at any moment. The small farm owners also fall into
this group; by assimilation we call all these members of the African
petty bourgeoisie (obviously, if we were to make a more thorough
analysis the higher African officials a~ well as the middle officials
and the members of the liberal professions should also be included in
the petty bourgeoisie). Next come the wage-earners (whom we define as
those employed in commerce without any contract); among these there are
certain important sub-groups such as the dockworkers, the people
employed on the boats carrying goods and agricultural produce; there are
also the domestic servants, who are mostly men in Guinea; there are the
people working in repair shops and small factories and there are also
the people who work in shops as porters and suchlike - these all come
under the heading of wage-earners. You will notice that we are careful
not to call these groups the proletariat or working class.
There is another group of people whom we call
the déclassés, in which there are two sub-groups to be
distinguished: the first sub-group is easy to identify - it is what
would be called the lumpenproletariat if there was a real proletariat:
it consists of really déclassé people, such as beggars,
prostitutes and so on. The other group is not really made up
ofdéclassé people, but we have not yet found the exact term for
it; it is a group to which we have paid a lot of attention and it has
proved to be extremely important in the national liberation struggle. It
is mostly made up of young people who are connected to petty bourgeois
or workers' families, who have recently arrived from the rural areas and
generally do not work; they thus have close relations with the rural
areas, as well as with the towns (and even with the Europeans). They
sometimes live off one kind of work or another, but they generally live
at the expense of their families. Here I should just like to point out a
difference between Europe and Africa; in Africa there is a tradition
which requires that, for example, if I have an uncle living in the town,
I can come in and live in his house without working and he will feed me
and house me. This creates a certain stratum of people who experience
urban life and who can, as we shall see, play a very important role.
That is a very brief analysis of the general situation in Guinea, but
you will understand that this analysis has no value unless it is related
to the actual struggle. In outline, the methodological approach we have
used has been as follows: first, the position of each group must be
defined-to what extent and in what way does each group depend on the
colonial regime? Next we have to see what position they adopt towards
the national liberation struggle. Then we have to study their
nationalist capacity and lastly, envisaging the post-independence
period, their revolutionary capacity.
Among the Fulas the first group - the chiefs and their entourages -
are tied to colonialism; this is particularly the case with the Fulas as
in Guinea the Fulas were already conquerors (the Portuguese allied
themselves with the Fulas in order to dominate Guinea at the beginning
of the conquest). Thus the chiefs (and their authority as chiefs) are
very closely tied to the Portuguese authorities. The artisans are
extremely dependent on the chiefs; they live off what they make for the
chiefs who are the only ones that can acquire their products, so there
are some artisans who are simply content to follow the chiefs; then
there are other people who try to break away and are well-disposed
towards opposition to Portuguese colonialism. The main point about the
Dyulas is that their permanent preoccupation is to protect their own
personal interests; at least in Guinea, the Dyulas are not settled in
any one place, they are itinerant traders without any real roots
anywhere and their fundamental aim is to make bigger and bigger profits.
It is precisely the fact that they are almost permanently on the move
which provided us with a most valuable element in the struggle. It goes
without saying that there are some who have not supported our struggle
and there are some who have been used as agents against us by the
Portuguese, but there are some whom we have been able to use to mobilise
people, at least as far as spreading the initial ideas of the struggle
was concerned - all we had to do was give them some reward, as they
usually would not do anything without being paid.
Obviously, the group with the greatest interest in the struggle is
the peasantry, given the nature of the various different societies in
Guinea (feudal, semi-feudal, etc.) and the various degrees of
exploitation to which they are subjected; but the question is not simply
one of objective interest.
Given the general context of our traditions, or rather the
superstructure created by the economic conditions in Guinea, the Fula
peasants have a strong tendency to follow their chiefs. Thorough and
intensive work was therefore needed to mobilise them. Among the Balantes
and the groups without any defined form of state organisation the first
point to note is that there are still a lot of remnants of animist
traditions even among the Muslims in Guinea; the part of the population
which follows Islam is not really Islamic but rather Islamised: they are
animists who have adopted some Muslim practices, but are still
thoroughly impregnated with animist conceptions. What is more, these
groups without any defined organisation put up much more resistance
against the Portuguese than the others and they have maintained intact
their tradition of resistance to colonial penetration. This is the group
that we found most ready to accept the idea of national liberation.
Here I should like to broach one key problem, which is of enormous
importance for us, as we are a country of peasants, and that is the
problem of whether or not the peasantry represents the main
revolutionary force. I shall confine myself to my own country, Guinea,
where it must be said at once that the peasantry is not a revolutionary
force - which may seem strange, particularly as we have based the whole
of our armed liberation struggle on the peasantry. A distinction must be
drawn between a physical force and a revolutionary force; physically,
the peasantry is a great force in Guinea: it is almost the whole of the
population, it controls the nation's wealth, it is the peasantry which
produces; but we know from experience what trouble we had convincing the
peasantry to fight. This is a problem I shall come back to later; here I
should just like to refer to what the previous speaker said about China.
The conditions of the peasantry in China were very different: the
peasantry had a history of revolt, but this was not the case in Guinea,
and so it was not possible for our party militants and propaganda
workers to find the same kind of welcome among the peasantry in Guinea
for the idea of national liberation as the idea found in China. All the
same, in certain parts of the country and among certain groups we found
a very warm welcome, even right at the start. In other groups and in
other areas all this had to be won.
Then there are the positions vis-à-vis the struggle of the various
groups in the towns to be considered. The Europeans are, in general,
hostile to the idea of national liberation; they are the human
instruments of the colonial state in our country and they therefore
reject a priori any idea of national liberation there. It has to be said
that the Europeans most bitterly opposed to the idea of national
liberation are the workers, while we have sometimes found considerable
sympathy for our struggle among certain members of the European petty
bourgeoisie.
As for the Africans, the petty bourgeoisie can be divided into three
sub-groups as regards the national liberation struggle. First, there is
the petty bourgeoisie which is heavily committed, and compromised with
colonialism: this includes most of the higher officials and some members
of the liberal professions. Second, there is the group which we perhaps
incorrectly call the revolutionary petty bourgeoisie this is the part of
the petty bourgeoisie which is nationalist and which was the source of
the idea of the national liberation struggle in Guinea. In between lies
the part of the petty bourgeoisie which has never been able to make up
its mind between the national liberation struggle and the Portuguese.
Next come the wage-earners, which you can compare roughly with the
proletariat in European societies, although they are not exactly the
same thing: here, too, there is a majority committed to the struggle,
but, again, many members of this group were not easy to mobilise -
wage-earners who had an extremely petty bourgeois mentality and whose
only aim was to defend the little they had already acquired.
Next come the déclassés. The
really déclassé people, the permanent layabouts, the
prostitutes and so on have been a great help to the Portuguese police in
giving them information; this group has been outrightly against our
struggle, perhaps unconsciously so, but nonetheless against our
struggle. On the other hand, the particular group I mentioned earlier,
for which we have not yet found any precise classification (the group of
mainly young people recently arrived from the rural areas with contacts
in both the urban and the rural areas) gradually comes to make a
comparison between the standard of living of their own families and that
of the Portuguese; they begin to understand the sacrifices being borne
by the Africans. They have proved extremely dynamic in the struggle.
Many of these people joined the struggle right from the beginning and it
is among this group that we found many of the cadres whom we have since
trained.
The importance of this urban experience lies in the fact that it
allows comparison: this is the key stimulant required for the awakening
of consciousness. It is interesting to note that Algerian nationalism
largely sprang up among the émigré workers in France. As far as Guinea
is concerned, the idea of the national liberation struggle was born not
abroad but in our own country, in a milieu where people were subjected
to close and incessant exploitation. Many people say that it is the
peasants who carry the burden of exploitation: this may be true, but so
far as the struggle is concerned it must be realised that it is not the
degree of suffering and hardship involved as such that matters: even
extreme suffering in itself does not necessarily produce the prise
de conscience required for the national liberation struggle. In
Guinea the peasants are subjected to a kind of exploitation equivalent
to slavery; but even if you try and explain to them that they are being
exploited and robbed, it is difficult to convince them by means of an
inexperienced explanation of a technico-economic kind that they are the
most exploited people; whereas it is easier to convince the workers and
the people employed in the towns who earn, say, 10 escudos a day for a
job in which a European earns between 30 and 50 that they are being
subjected to massive exploitation and injustice, because they can see.
To take my own case as a member of the petty bourgeois group which
launched the struggle in Guinea, I was an agronomist working under a
European who everybody knew was one of the biggest idiots in Guinea; I
could have taught him his job with my eyes shut but he was the boss:
this is something which counts a lot, this is the confrontation which
really matters. This is of major importance when considering where the
initial idea of the struggle came from.
Another major task was to examine the material interests and the
aspirations of each group after the liberation, as ~vei1 as their
revolutionary capacities. As I have already said, we do not consider
that the peasantry in Guinea has a revolutionary capacity. First of all
we had to make an analysis of all these groups and of the contradictions
between them and within them so as to be able to locate them all
vis-à-vis the struggle and the revolution.
The first point is to decide what is the major contradiction at the
moment when the struggle begins. For us the main contradiction was that
between, on the one hand, the Portuguese and international bourgeoisie
which was exploiting our people and on the other hand, the interests of
our people. There are also major contradictions within the country
itself, i.e. in the internal life of our country. It is our opinion that
if we get rid of colonialism in Guinea the main contradiction remaining,
the one which will then become the principal contradiction, is that
between the ruling classes, the semi-feudal groups, and the members of
the groups without any defined form of organisation. The first thing to
note is that the conquest carried out first by the Mandingoes and then
by the Fulas was a struggle between two opposite poles which was blocked
by the very strong structure of the animist groups. There are other
contradictions, such as that between the various feudal groups and that
between the upper group and the lower. All this is extremely important
for the future, and even while the struggle is still going on we must
begin to exploit the contradiction between the Fula people and their
chiefs, who are very close to the Portuguese. There is a further
contradiction, particularly among the animists, between the collective
ownership of the land and the private ownership of the means of
production in agriculture. I am not trying to stretch alien concepts
here, this is an observation that can be made on the spot: the land
belongs to the village, but what is produced belongs to whoever produces
it - usually the family or the head of the family.
There are other contradictions which we consider secondary: you may
be surprised to know that we consider the contradictions between the
tribes a secondary one; we could discuss this at length, but we consider
that there are many more contradictions between what you might call the
economic tribes in the -capitalist countries than there are between the
ethnic tribes in Guinea. Our struggle for national liberation and the
work done by our Party have shown that this contradiction is really not
so important; the Portuguese counted on it a lot but as soon as we
organised the liberation struggle properly the contradiction between the
tribes proved to be a feeble, secondary contradiction. This does not
mean that we do not need to pay attention to this contradiction; we
reject both the positions which are to be found in Africa - one which
says: there are no tribes, we are all the same, we are all one people in
one terrible unity, our party comprises everybody; the other saying:
tribes exist, we must base parties on tribes. Our position lies between
the two, but at the same time we are fully conscious that this is a
problem which must constantly be kept in mind; structural,
organizational and other measures must be taken to ensure that this
contradiction does not explode and become a more important
contradiction.
As for contradictions between the urban and rural areas; 1 would say
that there is no conflict between the towns and the countryside, not
least because we are only town dwellers who have just moved from the
country; everybody in the towns in Guinea has close relatives in the
country and all town dwellers still engage in some peasant activity
(growing crops etc.); all the same, there is a potential contradiction
between the towns and the countryside which colonialism tries to
aggravate.
That, in brief, is the analysis we have made of the situation; this
has led us to the following conclusion: we must try to unite everybody
in the national liberation struggle against the Portuguese colonialists:
this is where our main contradiction lies, but it is also imperative to
organise things so that we always have an instrument available which can
solve all the other contradictions. This is what convinced us of the
absolute necessity of creating a party during the national liberation
struggle. There are some people who interpret our Party as a front;
perhaps our Party is a front at the moment, but within the frame-'work
of the front there is our Party which is directing the front, and there
are no other parties in the front. For the circumstances of the struggle
we maintain a general aspect. but within the framework of the struggle
we know what our Party is, we know where the Party finishes and where
the people who just rallied for the liberation struggle begin.
When we had made our analysis, there were still many theoretical and
practical problems left in front of us. We had some knowledge of other
experiences and we knew that a struggle of the kind we hoped to lead -
and win - had to be led by the working class; we looked for the working
class in Guinea and did not find it. Other examples showed us that
things were begun by some revolutionary intellectuals. What then were we
to do? We were just group of petty bourgeois who were driven by the
reality of life in Guinea, by the sufferings we had to endure, and also
by the influence events in Africa and elsewhere had on us, in particular
the experiences some of us acquired in Portugal and other countries in
Europe, to try and do something.
And so this little group began. We first thought of a general
movement of national liberation, but this immediately proved unfeasible.
We decided to extend our activity to the workers in the towns, and we
had some success with this; we launched moves for higher wages, better
working conditions and so on. I do not want to go into details here, the
only point I want to make is that we obviously did not have a
proletariat. We quite clearly lacked revolutionary intellectuals, so we
had to start searching, given that we - rightly - did not believe in the
revolutionary capacity of the peasantry.
One important group in the towns were the dockworkers; another
important group were the people working in the boats carrying
merchandise, who mostly live in Bissao itself and travel up and down the
rivers. These people proved highly conscious of their position and of
their economic importance and they took the initiative of launching
strikes without any trade union leadership at all. We therefore decided
to concentrate all our work on this group. This gave excellent results
and this group soon came to form a kind of nucleus which influenced the
attitudes of other wage-earning groups in the towns - workers proper and
drivers, who form two other important groups. Moreover, If I may put it
this way, we thus found our little proletariat.
We also looked for intellectuals, but there were none, because the
Portuguese did not educate people. In any case, what is an intellectual
in our country? It could probably be someone who knew the general
situation very well, who had some knowledge, not profound theoretical
knowledge, but concrete knowledge of the country itself and of its life;
as well as of our enemy. We, the people I have talked about, the
engineers, doctors, bank clerks and so on, joined together to form a
group of interlocuteurs valables.
There was also this other group of people in the towns, which we have
been unable to classify precisely, which was still closely connected to
the rural areas and contained people who spoke almost all the languages
that are used in Guinea. They knew all the customs of the rural areas
while at the same time possessing a solid knowledge of the European
urban centres. They also had a certain degree of self-confidence, they
knew how to read and write (which makes a person an intellectual in our
country) and so we concentrated our work on these people and immediately
started giving them some preparatory training.
We were faced with another difficult problem: we realised that we
needed to have people with a mentality which could transcend the context
of the national liberation struggle, and so we prepared a number of
cadres from the group I have just mentioned, some from the people
employed in commerce and other wage-earners, and even some peasants. so
that they could acquire what you might call a working class mentality.
You may think this is absurd - in any case it is very difficult; in
order for there to be a working class mentality the material conditions
of the working class should exist, a working class should exist. In fact
we managed to inculcate these ideas into a large number of people - the
kind of ideas, that it, which there would be if there were a working
class. We trained about 1,000 cadres at our party school in Conakry, in
fact for about two years this was about all we did outside the country.
When these cadres returned to the rural areas they inculcated a certain
mentality into the peasants and it is among these cadres that we have
chosen the people who are now leading the struggle; we are not a
Communist party or a Marxist-Leninist party but the people now leading
the peasants in the struggle in Guinea are mostly from the urban milieux
and connected with the urban wage-earning group. When I hear that only
the peasantry can lead the struggle, am I supposed to think we have made
a mistake? All I can say is that at the moment our struggle is going
well.
There are all sorts of other generalisations of a political nature,
like this generalisation about the peasantry, which keeps on cropping
up. There are a number of key words and concepts, there is a certain
conditioning in the reasoning of our European friends: for example, when
someone thinks, "revolution", he thinks of the bourgeoisie falling,
etc.; when someone thinks "party", he forgets many things. Yesterday a
friend asked me a number of questions about our party and several times
I had to say to him, "but it isn't a European party"; the concept of a
party and the creation of parties did not occur spontaneously in Europe.
they resulted from a long process of class struggle. When we in Africa
think of creating a party now we find ourselves in very different
conditions from those in which parties appeared as historico-social
phenomena in Europe. This has a number of consequences, so when you
think "party", "single party", etc. you must connect all these things up
with the history and conditions of Africa.
A rigorous historical approach is similarly needed when examining
another problem related to this - how can the underdeveloped countries
evolve towards revolution, towards socialism? There is a preconception
held by many people, even on the left, that imperialism made us enter
history at the moment when it began its adventure in our countries. This
preconception must be denounced: for somebody on the left, and for
Marxists in particular, history obviously means the class struggle. Our
opinion is exactly the contrary. We consider that when imperialism
arrived in Guinea it made us leave history - our history. We agree that
history in our country is the result of class struggle, but we have our
own class struggles in our own country; the moment imperialism arrived
and colonialism arrived, it made us leave our history and enter another
history. Obviously we agree that the class struggle has continued, but
it has continued in a very different way: our whole people is struggling
against the ruling class of the imperialist countries, and this gives a
completely different aspect to the historical evolution of our country.
Somebody has asked which class is the ‘agent' of history; here a
distinction must be drawn between colonial history and our history as
human societies; as a dominated people we only present an ensemble
vis-à-vis the oppressor. Each of our peoples or groups of peoples has
been subjected to different influences by the colonisers; when there is
a developed national consciousness one may ask which social stratum is
the agent of history, of colonial history; which is the stratum which
will be able to take power into its hands when it emerges from colonial
history? Our answer is that it is all the social strata, if the
people who have carried out the national revolution (ie the struggle
against colonialism) have worked well, since unity of all the social
strata is a prerequisite for the success of the national liberation
struggle. As we see it, in colonial conditions no one stratum can
succeed in the struggle for national liberation on its own, and
therefore it is all the strata of society which are the agents of
history. This brings us to what should be a void - but in fact it is
not. What commands history in colonial conditions is not the class
struggle. I do not mean that the class struggle in Guinea stopped
completely during the colonial period; it continued, but in a muted way.
In the colonial period it is the colonial state which commands
history.
Our problem is to see who is capable of taking control of the state
apparatus when the colonial power is destroyed. In Guinea the peasants
cannot read or write, they have almost no relations with the colonial
forces during the colonial period except for paying taxes, which is done
indirectly. The working class hardly exists as a defined class, it is
just an embryo. There is no economically viable bourgeoisie
because imperialism prevented it being created. What there is, is a
stratum of people in the service of imperialism who have learned how to
manipulate the apparatus of the state - the African petty bourgeoisie:
this is the only stratum capable of controlling or even utilising the
instruments which the colonial state used against our people. So we come
to the conclusion that in colonial conditions it is the petty
bourgeoisie which is the inheritor of state power (though I wish we
could be wrong). The moment national liberation comes and the petty
bourgeoisie takes power we enter, or rather return to history, and thus
the internal contradictions break out again.
When this happens, and particularly as things are now, there will be
powerful external contradictions conditioning the internal situation,
and not just internal contradictions as before. What attitude can the
petty bourgeoisie adopt? Obviously people on the left will call for the
revolution; the right will call for the ‘non-revolution', ie a
capitalist road or something like that. The petty bourgeoisie can either
ally itself with imperialism and the reactionary strata in its own
country to try and preserve itself as a petty bourgeoisie or ally itself
with the workers and peasants, who must themselves take power or control
to make the revolution. We must be very clear exactly what we are asking
the petty bourgeoisie to do. Are we asking it to commit suicide? Because
if there is a revolution, then the petty bourgeoisie will have to
abandon power to the workers and the peasants and cease to exist qua
petty bourgeoisie. For a revolution to take place depends on the nature
of the party (and its size), the character of the struggle which led up
to liberation, whether there was an armed struggle, what the nature of
this armed struggle was and how it developed and, of course, on the
nature of the state.
Here I would like to say something about the position of our friends
on the left; if a petty bourgeoisie comes to power, they obviously
demand of it that it carry out a revolution. But the important thing is
whether they took the precaution of analysing the position of the petty
bourgeoisie during the struggle; did they examine its nature, see how it
worked, see what instruments it used and see whether this bourgeoisie
committed itself with the left to carrying out a revolution, before the
liberation? As you can see, it is the struggle in the underdeveloped
countries which endows the petty bourgeoisie with a function; in the
capitalist countries the petty bourgeoisie is only a stratum which
serves, it does not determine the historical orientation of the country;
it merely allies itself with one group or another. So that to hope that
the petty bourgeoisie will just carry out a revolution when it comes to
power in an underdeveloped country is to hope for a miracle, although it
is true that it could do this.
This connects with the problem of the true nature of the national
liberation struggle. In Guinea, as in other countries, the implantation
of imperialism by force and the presence of the colonial system
considerably altered the historical conditions and aroused a response -
the national liberation struggle - which is generally considered a
revolutionary trend; but this is something which I think needs further
examination. I should like to formulate this question: is the national
liberation movement something which has simply emerged from within our
country, is it a result of the internal contradictions created by the
presence of colonialism, or are there external factors which have
determined it? And here we have some reservations; in fact I would even
go so far as to ask whether, given the advance of socialism in the
world, the national liberation movement is not an imperialist
initiative. Is the judicial institution which serves as a reference for
the right of all peoples to struggle to free themselves a product of the
peoples who are trying to liberate themselves? Was it created by the
socialist countries who are our historical associates? It is signed by
the imperialist countries, it is the imperialist countries who have
recognised the right of all peoples to national independence, so I ask
myself whether we may not be considering as an initiative of our people
what is in fact an initiative of the enemy? Even Portugal, which is
using napalm bombs against our people in Guinea, signed the declaration
of the right of all peoples to independence. One may well ask oneself
why they were so mad as to do something which goes against their own
interests - and whether or not it was partly forced on them, the real
point is that they signed it. This is where we think there is something
wrong with the simple interpretation of the national liberation movement
as a revolutionary trend. The objective of the imperialist countries was
to prevent the enlargement of the socialist camp, to liberate the
reactionary forces in our countries which were being stifled by
colonialism and to enable these forces to ally themselves with the
international bourgeoisie. The fundamental objective was to create a
bourgeoisie where one did not exist, in order specifically to strengthen
the imperialist and the capitalist camp. This rise of the bourgeoisie in
the new countries, far from being at all surprising, should be
considered absolutely normal, it is something that has to be faced by
all those struggling against imperialism. We are therefore faced with
the problem of deciding whether to engage in an out and out struggle
against the bourgeoisie right from the start or whether to try and make
an alliance with the national bourgeoisie, to try to deepen the
absolutely necessary contradiction between the national bourgeoisie and
the international bourgeoisie which has promoted the national
bourgeoisie to the position it holds.
To return to the question of the nature of the petty bourgeoisie and
the role it can play after the liberation, I should like to put a
question to you. What would you have thought if Fidel Castro had come to
terms with the Americans? Is this possible or not? Is it possible or
impossible that the Cuban petty bourgeoisie, which set the Cuban people
marching towards revolution, might have come to terms with the
Americans? I think this helps to clarify the character of the
revolutionary petty bourgeoisie. If I may put it this way, I think one
thing that can be said is this: the revolutionary petty bourgeoisie is
honest; ie in spite of all the hostile conditions, it remains identified
with the fundamental interests of the popular masses. To do this it may
have to commit suicide, but it will not lose; by sacrificing itself it
can reincarnate itself, but in the condition of workers or peasants. In
speaking of honesty I am not trying to establish moral criteria for
judging the role of the petty bourgeoisie when it is in power; what I
mean by honesty, in a political context, is total commitment and total
identification with the toiling masses.
Again, the role of the petty bourgeoisie ties up with the possible
social and political transformations that can be effected after
liberation. We have heard a great deal about the state of national
democracy, but although we have made every effort we have thus far been
unable to understand what this means; even so, we should like to know
what it is all about, as we want to know what we are going to do when we
have driven out the Portuguese. Likewise, we have to face the question
whether or not socialism can be established immediately after the
liberation. This depends on the instruments used to effect the
transition to socialism; the essential factor is the nature of the
state, bearing in mind that after the liberation there will be people
controlling the police, the prisons, the army and so on, and a great
deal depends on who they are and what they try to do with these
instruments. Thus we return again to the problem of which class is the
agent of history and who are the inheritors of the colonial state in our
specific conditions.
I mentioned briefly earlier the question of the attitude of the
European left towards the underdeveloped countries, in which there is a
good deal of criticism and a good deal of optimism. The criticism
reminds me of a story about some lions: there is a group of lions who
are shown a picture ,of a lion lying on the ground and a man holding a
gun with his foot on the lion (as everybody knows the lion is proud of
being king of the jungle); one of the lions looks at the picture and
says, "if only we lions could paint". If one of the leaders of one of
the new African countries could take time off from the terrible problems
in his own country and become a critic of the European left and say all
he had to say about the retreat of the revolution in Europe, of a
certain apathy in some European countries and of the false hopes which
we have all had in certain European groups....
What really interests us here is neocolonialism. After the Second
World War, imperialism entered on a new phase: on the one hand, it
worked out the new policy of aid, ie granted independence to the
occupied countries plus ‘aid' and, on the other hand, concentrated on
preferential investment in the European countries; this was, above all,
an attempt at rationalising imperialism. Even if it has not yet provoked
reactions of a nationalist kind in the European countries, we are
convinced that it will soon do so. As we see it, neocolonialism (which
we may call rationalised imperialism) is more a defeat for the
international working class than for the colonised peoples.
Neocolonialism is at work on two fronts - in Europe as well as in the
underdeveloped countries. Its current framework in the underdeveloped
countries is the policy of aid, and one of the essential aims of this
policy is to create a false bourgeoisie to put a brake on the revolution
and to enlarge the possibilities of the petty bourgeoisie as a
neutraliser of the revolution; at the same time it invests capital in
France, Italy, Belgium, England and so on. In our opinion the aim of
this is to stimulate the growth of a workers' aristocracy, to enlarge
the field of action of the petty bourgeoisie so as to block the
revolution. In our opinion it is under this aspect that neocolonialism
and the relations between the international working class movement and
our movements must be analysed.
If there have ever been any doubts about the close relations between
our struggle and the struggle of the international working class
movement, neocolonialism has proved that there need not be any.
Obviously I don't think it is possible to forge closer relations between
the peasantry in Guinea and the working class movement in Europe; what
we must do first is try and forge closer links between the peasant
movement and the wage-earners' movement in our own country. The example
of Latin America gives you a good idea of the limits on closer
relations; in Latin America you have an old neocolonial situation and a
chance to see clearly the relations between the North American
proletariat and the Latin American masses. Other examples could be found
nearer home.
There is, however, another aspect I should like to raise and that is
that the European left has an intellectual responsibility to study the
concrete conditions in our country and help us in this way, as we have
very little documentation, very few intellectuals, very little chance to
do this kind of work ourselves, and yet it is of key importance: this is
a major contribution you can make. Another thing you can do is to
support the really revolutionary national liberation movements by all
possible means. You must analyse and study these movements and combat in
Europe, by all possible means, everything which can be used to further
the repression against our peoples. I refer especially to the sale of
arms. I should like to say to our Italian friends that we have captured
a lot of Italian arms from the Portuguese, not to mention French arms,
of course. Moreover, you must unmask courageously all the national
liberation movements which are under the thumb of imperialism. People
whisper that so-and-so is an American agent, but nobody in the European
left has taken a violent and open attitude against these people; it is
we ourselves who have to try and denounce these people, who are
sometimes even those accepted by the rest of Africa, and this creates a
lot of trouble for us.
I think that the left and the international working class movement
should confront those states which claim to be socialist with their
responsibilities; this does not of course, mean cutting off all their
possibilities of action, but it does mean denouncing all those states
which are neo-colonialist.
To end up with, I should just like to make one last point about
solidarity between the international working class movement and our
national liberation struggle. There are two alternatives: either we
admit that there really is a struggle against imperialism which
interests everybody, or we deny it. If, as would seem from all the
evidence, imperialism exists and is trying simultaneously to dominate
the working class in all the advanced countries and smother the national
liberation movements in all the underdeveloped countries, then there is
only one enemy against whom we are fighting. If we are fighting
together, then I think the main aspect of our solidarity is extremely
simple: it is to fight - I don't think there is any need to discuss this
very much. We are struggling in Guinea with guns in our hands, you must
struggle in your countries as well - I don't say with guns in your
hands, I'm not going to tell you how to struggle, that's your business;
but you must find the best means and the best forms of fighting against
our common enemy: this is the best form of solidarity.
There are, of course, other secondary forms of solidarity: publishing
material, sending medicine, etc; I can guarantee you that if tomorrow we
make a breakthrough and you are engaged in an armed struggle against
imperialism in Europe we will send you some medicine too.
Condensed text of a seminar held in the Frantz Fanon Centre
in Treviglio, Milan, from May 1 to 3, 1964
Amilcar Cabral: Brief Analysis of the Social Structure in Guinea
1968 May 1 See all postsAmilcar Cabral
satoshinakamotonetwork@proton.me
https://satoshinakamoto.network
I should like to tell you something about the situation in our country, ‘Portuguese' Guinea, beginning with an analysis of the social situation, which has served as the basis for our struggle for national liberation. I shall make a distinction between the rural areas and the towns, or rather the urban centres, not that these are to be considered mutually opposed.
In the rural areas we have found it necessary to distinguish between two distinct groups: on the one hand, the group which we consider semi-feudal, represented by the Fulas, and, on the other hand, the group which we consider, so to speak, without any defined form of state organisation, represented by the Balantes. There are a number of intermediary positions between these two extreme ethnic groups (as regards the social situation). I should like to point out straight away that although in general the semi-feudal groups were Muslim and the groups without any form of state organisations were animist, there was one ethnic group among the animists, the Mandjacks, which had forms of social relations which could be considered feudal at the time when the Portuguese came to Guinea.
I should now like to give you a quick idea of the social stratification among the Fulas. We consider that the chiefs, the nobles and the religious figures form one group; after them come the artisans and the Dyulas, who are itinerant traders, and then after that come the peasants properly speaking. I don't want to give a very thorough analysis of the economic situation of each of these groups now, but I would like to say that although certain traditions concerning collective ownership of the land have been preserved, the chiefs and their entourages have retained considerable privileges as regards ownership of land and the utilisation of other people's labour; this means that the peasants who depend on the chiefs are obliged to work for these chiefs for a certain period of each year. The artisans, whether blacksmiths (which is the lowest occupation) or leather-workers or whatever, play an extremely important role in the socio-economic life of the Fulas and represent what you might call the embryo of industry. The Dyulas, whom some people consider should be placed above the artisans, do not really have such importance among the Fulas; they are the people who have the potential - which they sometimes realise - of accumulating money. In general the peasants have no rights and they are the really exploited group in Fula society.
Apart from the question of ownership and property, there is another element which it is extremely interesting to compare and that is the position of women. Among the Fulas women have no rights; they take part in production but they do not own what they produce. Besides, polygamy is a highly respected institution and women are to a certain extent considered the property of their husbands.
Among the Balantes, which are at the opposite extreme, we find a society without any social stratification: there is just a council of elders in each village or group of villages who decide on the day to day problems. In the Balante group property and land are considered to belong to the village but each family receives the amount of land needed to ensure subsistence for itself, and the means of production, or rather the instruments of production, are not collective but are owned by families or individuals.
The position of women must also be mentioned when talking about the Balantes. The Balantes still retain certain tendencies towards polygamy, although it is mainly a monogamous society. Among the Balantes women participate in production but they own what they produce and this gives Balante women a position which we consider privileged, as they are fairly free; the only point on which they are not free is that children belong to the head of the family and the head of the family, the husband, always claims any children his wife may have: this is obviously to be explained by the actual economy of the group where a family's strength is ultimately represented by the number of hands there are to cultivate the land.
As I have said, there are a number of intermediate positions between these two extremes. In the rural areas I should mention the small African farm owners; this is a numerically small group but all the same it has a certain importance and has proved to be highly active in the national liberation struggle. In the towns (I shall not talk about the presence of Europeans in the rural areas as there are none in Guinea) we must first distinguish between the Europeans and the Africans. The Europeans can easily be classified as they retain in Guinea the social stratification of Portugal (obviously depending on the function they exercise in Guinea). In the first place, there are the high officials and the managers of enterprises who form a stratum with practically no contact with the other European strata. After that there are the medium officials, the small European traders, the people employed in commerce and the members of the liberal professions. After that come the workers, who are mainly skilled workers.
Among the Africans we find the higher officials, the middle officials and the members of the liberal professions forming a group; then come the petty officials, those employed in commerce with a contract, who are to be distinguished from those employed in commerce without a contract, who can be fired at any moment. The small farm owners also fall into this group; by assimilation we call all these members of the African petty bourgeoisie (obviously, if we were to make a more thorough analysis the higher African officials a~ well as the middle officials and the members of the liberal professions should also be included in the petty bourgeoisie). Next come the wage-earners (whom we define as those employed in commerce without any contract); among these there are certain important sub-groups such as the dockworkers, the people employed on the boats carrying goods and agricultural produce; there are also the domestic servants, who are mostly men in Guinea; there are the people working in repair shops and small factories and there are also the people who work in shops as porters and suchlike - these all come under the heading of wage-earners. You will notice that we are careful not to call these groups the proletariat or working class.
There is another group of people whom we call the déclassés, in which there are two sub-groups to be distinguished: the first sub-group is easy to identify - it is what would be called the lumpenproletariat if there was a real proletariat: it consists of really déclassé people, such as beggars, prostitutes and so on. The other group is not really made up ofdéclassé people, but we have not yet found the exact term for it; it is a group to which we have paid a lot of attention and it has proved to be extremely important in the national liberation struggle. It is mostly made up of young people who are connected to petty bourgeois or workers' families, who have recently arrived from the rural areas and generally do not work; they thus have close relations with the rural areas, as well as with the towns (and even with the Europeans). They sometimes live off one kind of work or another, but they generally live at the expense of their families. Here I should just like to point out a difference between Europe and Africa; in Africa there is a tradition which requires that, for example, if I have an uncle living in the town, I can come in and live in his house without working and he will feed me and house me. This creates a certain stratum of people who experience urban life and who can, as we shall see, play a very important role.
That is a very brief analysis of the general situation in Guinea, but you will understand that this analysis has no value unless it is related to the actual struggle. In outline, the methodological approach we have used has been as follows: first, the position of each group must be defined-to what extent and in what way does each group depend on the colonial regime? Next we have to see what position they adopt towards the national liberation struggle. Then we have to study their nationalist capacity and lastly, envisaging the post-independence period, their revolutionary capacity.
Among the Fulas the first group - the chiefs and their entourages - are tied to colonialism; this is particularly the case with the Fulas as in Guinea the Fulas were already conquerors (the Portuguese allied themselves with the Fulas in order to dominate Guinea at the beginning of the conquest). Thus the chiefs (and their authority as chiefs) are very closely tied to the Portuguese authorities. The artisans are extremely dependent on the chiefs; they live off what they make for the chiefs who are the only ones that can acquire their products, so there are some artisans who are simply content to follow the chiefs; then there are other people who try to break away and are well-disposed towards opposition to Portuguese colonialism. The main point about the Dyulas is that their permanent preoccupation is to protect their own personal interests; at least in Guinea, the Dyulas are not settled in any one place, they are itinerant traders without any real roots anywhere and their fundamental aim is to make bigger and bigger profits. It is precisely the fact that they are almost permanently on the move which provided us with a most valuable element in the struggle. It goes without saying that there are some who have not supported our struggle and there are some who have been used as agents against us by the Portuguese, but there are some whom we have been able to use to mobilise people, at least as far as spreading the initial ideas of the struggle was concerned - all we had to do was give them some reward, as they usually would not do anything without being paid.
Obviously, the group with the greatest interest in the struggle is the peasantry, given the nature of the various different societies in Guinea (feudal, semi-feudal, etc.) and the various degrees of exploitation to which they are subjected; but the question is not simply one of objective interest.
Given the general context of our traditions, or rather the superstructure created by the economic conditions in Guinea, the Fula peasants have a strong tendency to follow their chiefs. Thorough and intensive work was therefore needed to mobilise them. Among the Balantes and the groups without any defined form of state organisation the first point to note is that there are still a lot of remnants of animist traditions even among the Muslims in Guinea; the part of the population which follows Islam is not really Islamic but rather Islamised: they are animists who have adopted some Muslim practices, but are still thoroughly impregnated with animist conceptions. What is more, these groups without any defined organisation put up much more resistance against the Portuguese than the others and they have maintained intact their tradition of resistance to colonial penetration. This is the group that we found most ready to accept the idea of national liberation.
Here I should like to broach one key problem, which is of enormous importance for us, as we are a country of peasants, and that is the problem of whether or not the peasantry represents the main revolutionary force. I shall confine myself to my own country, Guinea, where it must be said at once that the peasantry is not a revolutionary force - which may seem strange, particularly as we have based the whole of our armed liberation struggle on the peasantry. A distinction must be drawn between a physical force and a revolutionary force; physically, the peasantry is a great force in Guinea: it is almost the whole of the population, it controls the nation's wealth, it is the peasantry which produces; but we know from experience what trouble we had convincing the peasantry to fight. This is a problem I shall come back to later; here I should just like to refer to what the previous speaker said about China. The conditions of the peasantry in China were very different: the peasantry had a history of revolt, but this was not the case in Guinea, and so it was not possible for our party militants and propaganda workers to find the same kind of welcome among the peasantry in Guinea for the idea of national liberation as the idea found in China. All the same, in certain parts of the country and among certain groups we found a very warm welcome, even right at the start. In other groups and in other areas all this had to be won.
Then there are the positions vis-à-vis the struggle of the various groups in the towns to be considered. The Europeans are, in general, hostile to the idea of national liberation; they are the human instruments of the colonial state in our country and they therefore reject a priori any idea of national liberation there. It has to be said that the Europeans most bitterly opposed to the idea of national liberation are the workers, while we have sometimes found considerable sympathy for our struggle among certain members of the European petty bourgeoisie.
As for the Africans, the petty bourgeoisie can be divided into three sub-groups as regards the national liberation struggle. First, there is the petty bourgeoisie which is heavily committed, and compromised with colonialism: this includes most of the higher officials and some members of the liberal professions. Second, there is the group which we perhaps incorrectly call the revolutionary petty bourgeoisie this is the part of the petty bourgeoisie which is nationalist and which was the source of the idea of the national liberation struggle in Guinea. In between lies the part of the petty bourgeoisie which has never been able to make up its mind between the national liberation struggle and the Portuguese. Next come the wage-earners, which you can compare roughly with the proletariat in European societies, although they are not exactly the same thing: here, too, there is a majority committed to the struggle, but, again, many members of this group were not easy to mobilise - wage-earners who had an extremely petty bourgeois mentality and whose only aim was to defend the little they had already acquired.
Next come the déclassés. The really déclassé people, the permanent layabouts, the prostitutes and so on have been a great help to the Portuguese police in giving them information; this group has been outrightly against our struggle, perhaps unconsciously so, but nonetheless against our struggle. On the other hand, the particular group I mentioned earlier, for which we have not yet found any precise classification (the group of mainly young people recently arrived from the rural areas with contacts in both the urban and the rural areas) gradually comes to make a comparison between the standard of living of their own families and that of the Portuguese; they begin to understand the sacrifices being borne by the Africans. They have proved extremely dynamic in the struggle. Many of these people joined the struggle right from the beginning and it is among this group that we found many of the cadres whom we have since trained.
The importance of this urban experience lies in the fact that it allows comparison: this is the key stimulant required for the awakening of consciousness. It is interesting to note that Algerian nationalism largely sprang up among the émigré workers in France. As far as Guinea is concerned, the idea of the national liberation struggle was born not abroad but in our own country, in a milieu where people were subjected to close and incessant exploitation. Many people say that it is the peasants who carry the burden of exploitation: this may be true, but so far as the struggle is concerned it must be realised that it is not the degree of suffering and hardship involved as such that matters: even extreme suffering in itself does not necessarily produce the prise de conscience required for the national liberation struggle. In Guinea the peasants are subjected to a kind of exploitation equivalent to slavery; but even if you try and explain to them that they are being exploited and robbed, it is difficult to convince them by means of an inexperienced explanation of a technico-economic kind that they are the most exploited people; whereas it is easier to convince the workers and the people employed in the towns who earn, say, 10 escudos a day for a job in which a European earns between 30 and 50 that they are being subjected to massive exploitation and injustice, because they can see. To take my own case as a member of the petty bourgeois group which launched the struggle in Guinea, I was an agronomist working under a European who everybody knew was one of the biggest idiots in Guinea; I could have taught him his job with my eyes shut but he was the boss: this is something which counts a lot, this is the confrontation which really matters. This is of major importance when considering where the initial idea of the struggle came from.
Another major task was to examine the material interests and the aspirations of each group after the liberation, as ~vei1 as their revolutionary capacities. As I have already said, we do not consider that the peasantry in Guinea has a revolutionary capacity. First of all we had to make an analysis of all these groups and of the contradictions between them and within them so as to be able to locate them all vis-à-vis the struggle and the revolution.
The first point is to decide what is the major contradiction at the moment when the struggle begins. For us the main contradiction was that between, on the one hand, the Portuguese and international bourgeoisie which was exploiting our people and on the other hand, the interests of our people. There are also major contradictions within the country itself, i.e. in the internal life of our country. It is our opinion that if we get rid of colonialism in Guinea the main contradiction remaining, the one which will then become the principal contradiction, is that between the ruling classes, the semi-feudal groups, and the members of the groups without any defined form of organisation. The first thing to note is that the conquest carried out first by the Mandingoes and then by the Fulas was a struggle between two opposite poles which was blocked by the very strong structure of the animist groups. There are other contradictions, such as that between the various feudal groups and that between the upper group and the lower. All this is extremely important for the future, and even while the struggle is still going on we must begin to exploit the contradiction between the Fula people and their chiefs, who are very close to the Portuguese. There is a further contradiction, particularly among the animists, between the collective ownership of the land and the private ownership of the means of production in agriculture. I am not trying to stretch alien concepts here, this is an observation that can be made on the spot: the land belongs to the village, but what is produced belongs to whoever produces it - usually the family or the head of the family.
There are other contradictions which we consider secondary: you may be surprised to know that we consider the contradictions between the tribes a secondary one; we could discuss this at length, but we consider that there are many more contradictions between what you might call the economic tribes in the -capitalist countries than there are between the ethnic tribes in Guinea. Our struggle for national liberation and the work done by our Party have shown that this contradiction is really not so important; the Portuguese counted on it a lot but as soon as we organised the liberation struggle properly the contradiction between the tribes proved to be a feeble, secondary contradiction. This does not mean that we do not need to pay attention to this contradiction; we reject both the positions which are to be found in Africa - one which says: there are no tribes, we are all the same, we are all one people in one terrible unity, our party comprises everybody; the other saying: tribes exist, we must base parties on tribes. Our position lies between the two, but at the same time we are fully conscious that this is a problem which must constantly be kept in mind; structural, organizational and other measures must be taken to ensure that this contradiction does not explode and become a more important contradiction.
As for contradictions between the urban and rural areas; 1 would say that there is no conflict between the towns and the countryside, not least because we are only town dwellers who have just moved from the country; everybody in the towns in Guinea has close relatives in the country and all town dwellers still engage in some peasant activity (growing crops etc.); all the same, there is a potential contradiction between the towns and the countryside which colonialism tries to aggravate.
That, in brief, is the analysis we have made of the situation; this has led us to the following conclusion: we must try to unite everybody in the national liberation struggle against the Portuguese colonialists: this is where our main contradiction lies, but it is also imperative to organise things so that we always have an instrument available which can solve all the other contradictions. This is what convinced us of the absolute necessity of creating a party during the national liberation struggle. There are some people who interpret our Party as a front; perhaps our Party is a front at the moment, but within the frame-'work of the front there is our Party which is directing the front, and there are no other parties in the front. For the circumstances of the struggle we maintain a general aspect. but within the framework of the struggle we know what our Party is, we know where the Party finishes and where the people who just rallied for the liberation struggle begin.
When we had made our analysis, there were still many theoretical and practical problems left in front of us. We had some knowledge of other experiences and we knew that a struggle of the kind we hoped to lead - and win - had to be led by the working class; we looked for the working class in Guinea and did not find it. Other examples showed us that things were begun by some revolutionary intellectuals. What then were we to do? We were just group of petty bourgeois who were driven by the reality of life in Guinea, by the sufferings we had to endure, and also by the influence events in Africa and elsewhere had on us, in particular the experiences some of us acquired in Portugal and other countries in Europe, to try and do something.
And so this little group began. We first thought of a general movement of national liberation, but this immediately proved unfeasible. We decided to extend our activity to the workers in the towns, and we had some success with this; we launched moves for higher wages, better working conditions and so on. I do not want to go into details here, the only point I want to make is that we obviously did not have a proletariat. We quite clearly lacked revolutionary intellectuals, so we had to start searching, given that we - rightly - did not believe in the revolutionary capacity of the peasantry.
One important group in the towns were the dockworkers; another important group were the people working in the boats carrying merchandise, who mostly live in Bissao itself and travel up and down the rivers. These people proved highly conscious of their position and of their economic importance and they took the initiative of launching strikes without any trade union leadership at all. We therefore decided to concentrate all our work on this group. This gave excellent results and this group soon came to form a kind of nucleus which influenced the attitudes of other wage-earning groups in the towns - workers proper and drivers, who form two other important groups. Moreover, If I may put it this way, we thus found our little proletariat.
We also looked for intellectuals, but there were none, because the Portuguese did not educate people. In any case, what is an intellectual in our country? It could probably be someone who knew the general situation very well, who had some knowledge, not profound theoretical knowledge, but concrete knowledge of the country itself and of its life; as well as of our enemy. We, the people I have talked about, the engineers, doctors, bank clerks and so on, joined together to form a group of interlocuteurs valables.
There was also this other group of people in the towns, which we have been unable to classify precisely, which was still closely connected to the rural areas and contained people who spoke almost all the languages that are used in Guinea. They knew all the customs of the rural areas while at the same time possessing a solid knowledge of the European urban centres. They also had a certain degree of self-confidence, they knew how to read and write (which makes a person an intellectual in our country) and so we concentrated our work on these people and immediately started giving them some preparatory training.
We were faced with another difficult problem: we realised that we needed to have people with a mentality which could transcend the context of the national liberation struggle, and so we prepared a number of cadres from the group I have just mentioned, some from the people employed in commerce and other wage-earners, and even some peasants. so that they could acquire what you might call a working class mentality. You may think this is absurd - in any case it is very difficult; in order for there to be a working class mentality the material conditions of the working class should exist, a working class should exist. In fact we managed to inculcate these ideas into a large number of people - the kind of ideas, that it, which there would be if there were a working class. We trained about 1,000 cadres at our party school in Conakry, in fact for about two years this was about all we did outside the country. When these cadres returned to the rural areas they inculcated a certain mentality into the peasants and it is among these cadres that we have chosen the people who are now leading the struggle; we are not a Communist party or a Marxist-Leninist party but the people now leading the peasants in the struggle in Guinea are mostly from the urban milieux and connected with the urban wage-earning group. When I hear that only the peasantry can lead the struggle, am I supposed to think we have made a mistake? All I can say is that at the moment our struggle is going well.
There are all sorts of other generalisations of a political nature, like this generalisation about the peasantry, which keeps on cropping up. There are a number of key words and concepts, there is a certain conditioning in the reasoning of our European friends: for example, when someone thinks, "revolution", he thinks of the bourgeoisie falling, etc.; when someone thinks "party", he forgets many things. Yesterday a friend asked me a number of questions about our party and several times I had to say to him, "but it isn't a European party"; the concept of a party and the creation of parties did not occur spontaneously in Europe. they resulted from a long process of class struggle. When we in Africa think of creating a party now we find ourselves in very different conditions from those in which parties appeared as historico-social phenomena in Europe. This has a number of consequences, so when you think "party", "single party", etc. you must connect all these things up with the history and conditions of Africa.
A rigorous historical approach is similarly needed when examining another problem related to this - how can the underdeveloped countries evolve towards revolution, towards socialism? There is a preconception held by many people, even on the left, that imperialism made us enter history at the moment when it began its adventure in our countries. This preconception must be denounced: for somebody on the left, and for Marxists in particular, history obviously means the class struggle. Our opinion is exactly the contrary. We consider that when imperialism arrived in Guinea it made us leave history - our history. We agree that history in our country is the result of class struggle, but we have our own class struggles in our own country; the moment imperialism arrived and colonialism arrived, it made us leave our history and enter another history. Obviously we agree that the class struggle has continued, but it has continued in a very different way: our whole people is struggling against the ruling class of the imperialist countries, and this gives a completely different aspect to the historical evolution of our country. Somebody has asked which class is the ‘agent' of history; here a distinction must be drawn between colonial history and our history as human societies; as a dominated people we only present an ensemble vis-à-vis the oppressor. Each of our peoples or groups of peoples has been subjected to different influences by the colonisers; when there is a developed national consciousness one may ask which social stratum is the agent of history, of colonial history; which is the stratum which will be able to take power into its hands when it emerges from colonial history? Our answer is that it is all the social strata, if the people who have carried out the national revolution (ie the struggle against colonialism) have worked well, since unity of all the social strata is a prerequisite for the success of the national liberation struggle. As we see it, in colonial conditions no one stratum can succeed in the struggle for national liberation on its own, and therefore it is all the strata of society which are the agents of history. This brings us to what should be a void - but in fact it is not. What commands history in colonial conditions is not the class struggle. I do not mean that the class struggle in Guinea stopped completely during the colonial period; it continued, but in a muted way. In the colonial period it is the colonial state which commands history.
Our problem is to see who is capable of taking control of the state apparatus when the colonial power is destroyed. In Guinea the peasants cannot read or write, they have almost no relations with the colonial forces during the colonial period except for paying taxes, which is done indirectly. The working class hardly exists as a defined class, it is just an embryo. There is no economically viable bourgeoisie because imperialism prevented it being created. What there is, is a stratum of people in the service of imperialism who have learned how to manipulate the apparatus of the state - the African petty bourgeoisie: this is the only stratum capable of controlling or even utilising the instruments which the colonial state used against our people. So we come to the conclusion that in colonial conditions it is the petty bourgeoisie which is the inheritor of state power (though I wish we could be wrong). The moment national liberation comes and the petty bourgeoisie takes power we enter, or rather return to history, and thus the internal contradictions break out again.
When this happens, and particularly as things are now, there will be powerful external contradictions conditioning the internal situation, and not just internal contradictions as before. What attitude can the petty bourgeoisie adopt? Obviously people on the left will call for the revolution; the right will call for the ‘non-revolution', ie a capitalist road or something like that. The petty bourgeoisie can either ally itself with imperialism and the reactionary strata in its own country to try and preserve itself as a petty bourgeoisie or ally itself with the workers and peasants, who must themselves take power or control to make the revolution. We must be very clear exactly what we are asking the petty bourgeoisie to do. Are we asking it to commit suicide? Because if there is a revolution, then the petty bourgeoisie will have to abandon power to the workers and the peasants and cease to exist qua petty bourgeoisie. For a revolution to take place depends on the nature of the party (and its size), the character of the struggle which led up to liberation, whether there was an armed struggle, what the nature of this armed struggle was and how it developed and, of course, on the nature of the state.
Here I would like to say something about the position of our friends on the left; if a petty bourgeoisie comes to power, they obviously demand of it that it carry out a revolution. But the important thing is whether they took the precaution of analysing the position of the petty bourgeoisie during the struggle; did they examine its nature, see how it worked, see what instruments it used and see whether this bourgeoisie committed itself with the left to carrying out a revolution, before the liberation? As you can see, it is the struggle in the underdeveloped countries which endows the petty bourgeoisie with a function; in the capitalist countries the petty bourgeoisie is only a stratum which serves, it does not determine the historical orientation of the country; it merely allies itself with one group or another. So that to hope that the petty bourgeoisie will just carry out a revolution when it comes to power in an underdeveloped country is to hope for a miracle, although it is true that it could do this.
This connects with the problem of the true nature of the national liberation struggle. In Guinea, as in other countries, the implantation of imperialism by force and the presence of the colonial system considerably altered the historical conditions and aroused a response - the national liberation struggle - which is generally considered a revolutionary trend; but this is something which I think needs further examination. I should like to formulate this question: is the national liberation movement something which has simply emerged from within our country, is it a result of the internal contradictions created by the presence of colonialism, or are there external factors which have determined it? And here we have some reservations; in fact I would even go so far as to ask whether, given the advance of socialism in the world, the national liberation movement is not an imperialist initiative. Is the judicial institution which serves as a reference for the right of all peoples to struggle to free themselves a product of the peoples who are trying to liberate themselves? Was it created by the socialist countries who are our historical associates? It is signed by the imperialist countries, it is the imperialist countries who have recognised the right of all peoples to national independence, so I ask myself whether we may not be considering as an initiative of our people what is in fact an initiative of the enemy? Even Portugal, which is using napalm bombs against our people in Guinea, signed the declaration of the right of all peoples to independence. One may well ask oneself why they were so mad as to do something which goes against their own interests - and whether or not it was partly forced on them, the real point is that they signed it. This is where we think there is something wrong with the simple interpretation of the national liberation movement as a revolutionary trend. The objective of the imperialist countries was to prevent the enlargement of the socialist camp, to liberate the reactionary forces in our countries which were being stifled by colonialism and to enable these forces to ally themselves with the international bourgeoisie. The fundamental objective was to create a bourgeoisie where one did not exist, in order specifically to strengthen the imperialist and the capitalist camp. This rise of the bourgeoisie in the new countries, far from being at all surprising, should be considered absolutely normal, it is something that has to be faced by all those struggling against imperialism. We are therefore faced with the problem of deciding whether to engage in an out and out struggle against the bourgeoisie right from the start or whether to try and make an alliance with the national bourgeoisie, to try to deepen the absolutely necessary contradiction between the national bourgeoisie and the international bourgeoisie which has promoted the national bourgeoisie to the position it holds.
To return to the question of the nature of the petty bourgeoisie and the role it can play after the liberation, I should like to put a question to you. What would you have thought if Fidel Castro had come to terms with the Americans? Is this possible or not? Is it possible or impossible that the Cuban petty bourgeoisie, which set the Cuban people marching towards revolution, might have come to terms with the Americans? I think this helps to clarify the character of the revolutionary petty bourgeoisie. If I may put it this way, I think one thing that can be said is this: the revolutionary petty bourgeoisie is honest; ie in spite of all the hostile conditions, it remains identified with the fundamental interests of the popular masses. To do this it may have to commit suicide, but it will not lose; by sacrificing itself it can reincarnate itself, but in the condition of workers or peasants. In speaking of honesty I am not trying to establish moral criteria for judging the role of the petty bourgeoisie when it is in power; what I mean by honesty, in a political context, is total commitment and total identification with the toiling masses.
Again, the role of the petty bourgeoisie ties up with the possible social and political transformations that can be effected after liberation. We have heard a great deal about the state of national democracy, but although we have made every effort we have thus far been unable to understand what this means; even so, we should like to know what it is all about, as we want to know what we are going to do when we have driven out the Portuguese. Likewise, we have to face the question whether or not socialism can be established immediately after the liberation. This depends on the instruments used to effect the transition to socialism; the essential factor is the nature of the state, bearing in mind that after the liberation there will be people controlling the police, the prisons, the army and so on, and a great deal depends on who they are and what they try to do with these instruments. Thus we return again to the problem of which class is the agent of history and who are the inheritors of the colonial state in our specific conditions.
I mentioned briefly earlier the question of the attitude of the European left towards the underdeveloped countries, in which there is a good deal of criticism and a good deal of optimism. The criticism reminds me of a story about some lions: there is a group of lions who are shown a picture ,of a lion lying on the ground and a man holding a gun with his foot on the lion (as everybody knows the lion is proud of being king of the jungle); one of the lions looks at the picture and says, "if only we lions could paint". If one of the leaders of one of the new African countries could take time off from the terrible problems in his own country and become a critic of the European left and say all he had to say about the retreat of the revolution in Europe, of a certain apathy in some European countries and of the false hopes which we have all had in certain European groups....
What really interests us here is neocolonialism. After the Second World War, imperialism entered on a new phase: on the one hand, it worked out the new policy of aid, ie granted independence to the occupied countries plus ‘aid' and, on the other hand, concentrated on preferential investment in the European countries; this was, above all, an attempt at rationalising imperialism. Even if it has not yet provoked reactions of a nationalist kind in the European countries, we are convinced that it will soon do so. As we see it, neocolonialism (which we may call rationalised imperialism) is more a defeat for the international working class than for the colonised peoples. Neocolonialism is at work on two fronts - in Europe as well as in the underdeveloped countries. Its current framework in the underdeveloped countries is the policy of aid, and one of the essential aims of this policy is to create a false bourgeoisie to put a brake on the revolution and to enlarge the possibilities of the petty bourgeoisie as a neutraliser of the revolution; at the same time it invests capital in France, Italy, Belgium, England and so on. In our opinion the aim of this is to stimulate the growth of a workers' aristocracy, to enlarge the field of action of the petty bourgeoisie so as to block the revolution. In our opinion it is under this aspect that neocolonialism and the relations between the international working class movement and our movements must be analysed.
If there have ever been any doubts about the close relations between our struggle and the struggle of the international working class movement, neocolonialism has proved that there need not be any. Obviously I don't think it is possible to forge closer relations between the peasantry in Guinea and the working class movement in Europe; what we must do first is try and forge closer links between the peasant movement and the wage-earners' movement in our own country. The example of Latin America gives you a good idea of the limits on closer relations; in Latin America you have an old neocolonial situation and a chance to see clearly the relations between the North American proletariat and the Latin American masses. Other examples could be found nearer home.
There is, however, another aspect I should like to raise and that is that the European left has an intellectual responsibility to study the concrete conditions in our country and help us in this way, as we have very little documentation, very few intellectuals, very little chance to do this kind of work ourselves, and yet it is of key importance: this is a major contribution you can make. Another thing you can do is to support the really revolutionary national liberation movements by all possible means. You must analyse and study these movements and combat in Europe, by all possible means, everything which can be used to further the repression against our peoples. I refer especially to the sale of arms. I should like to say to our Italian friends that we have captured a lot of Italian arms from the Portuguese, not to mention French arms, of course. Moreover, you must unmask courageously all the national liberation movements which are under the thumb of imperialism. People whisper that so-and-so is an American agent, but nobody in the European left has taken a violent and open attitude against these people; it is we ourselves who have to try and denounce these people, who are sometimes even those accepted by the rest of Africa, and this creates a lot of trouble for us.
I think that the left and the international working class movement should confront those states which claim to be socialist with their responsibilities; this does not of course, mean cutting off all their possibilities of action, but it does mean denouncing all those states which are neo-colonialist.
To end up with, I should just like to make one last point about solidarity between the international working class movement and our national liberation struggle. There are two alternatives: either we admit that there really is a struggle against imperialism which interests everybody, or we deny it. If, as would seem from all the evidence, imperialism exists and is trying simultaneously to dominate the working class in all the advanced countries and smother the national liberation movements in all the underdeveloped countries, then there is only one enemy against whom we are fighting. If we are fighting together, then I think the main aspect of our solidarity is extremely simple: it is to fight - I don't think there is any need to discuss this very much. We are struggling in Guinea with guns in our hands, you must struggle in your countries as well - I don't say with guns in your hands, I'm not going to tell you how to struggle, that's your business; but you must find the best means and the best forms of fighting against our common enemy: this is the best form of solidarity.
There are, of course, other secondary forms of solidarity: publishing material, sending medicine, etc; I can guarantee you that if tomorrow we make a breakthrough and you are engaged in an armed struggle against imperialism in Europe we will send you some medicine too.
Condensed text of a seminar held in the Frantz Fanon Centre in Treviglio, Milan, from May 1 to 3, 1964