Rudolf Rocker
Rudolf Rocker (
March 25,
1873 -
September 19,
1958), writer, historian and prominent figure in the international
Anarchist movement.
Born in
Mainz,
Germany, he became a
socialist in his youth joining the
Social Democratic Party but was expelled in 1890 for his support of the
left wing group
Die Jungen (The Young). His political views would soon move towards anarchism.
As a bookbinder by trade, he worked as a travelling journeyman for several years. His travels would bring him to many parts of Western
Europe. Observing the second congress of the
Second International in
Brussels in
1891, Rocker began contributing to the anarchist press in
1892 and left Germany the same year to escape police harassment, settling in
Britain in
1895.
Rocker, a
Gentile, became deeply involved in the Jewish anarchist movement while living in Stepney Green [
1], East
London, the Jewish Anarchist movement being larger than the native anarchist movement in England. Learning
Yiddish, then quickly becoming a prominent speaker and writer in the movement, Rocker became the editor for several Jewish newspapers, including
Dos Fraye Vort (
The Free Word),
Arbayter Fraynd (
Workers' Friend) and
Germinal. In
1902, a federation of Jewish anarchist groups was formed, Rocker represented the federation at the International Anarchist Congress in
Amsterdam in
1907.
Rocker was interned as an enemy alien during the First World War and Arbeiter Fraynd was suppressed. The Jewish anarchist movement in Britain never fully recovered from these blows.
In
1918 Rocker was deported from Britain to the
Netherlands and eventually returned to Germany. He became a major figure in the German and international
anarcho-syndicalist movement, helping to organize the International Congress in
Berlin in
1922 leading to the formation of the
International Workers Association (IWA). Rocker was opposed to anarchist support for the
Bolshevik Revolution after
1917 and led the
libertarian socialist opposition to the growing
Nazi movement in Germany.
In
1933 Rocker left Germany again to escape persecution by the new Nazi regime. Settling in the
United States, he continued to work as a speaker and writer, directing his efforts against "the twin evils of
Fascism and
Communism". He spent the last 20 years of his life as a leading figure in the Mohegan community at
Crompond,
New York, and was the best-known anarchist in the country until his death. He supported the Allies in the
Second World War, which caused a breach with some old comrades, but he continued to receive more admiration and affection than any veteran of the movement since
Kropotkin or
Malatesta.
Rocker was a very prolific speaker and writer in both Yiddish and German, and he produced a great many articles and pamphlets and several books. Many of his writings were translated into
Spanish and widely circulated in
Latin America, but not many appeared in English. Apart from a few pamphlets, three books were published in the United States -
Nationalism and Culture (
1937), an essay in literary criticism called
The Six (
1938), and a popular survey of
Pioneers of American Freedom (
1949). Two more were published in Britain,
Anarcho-Syndicalism (
1938), and the section of his autobiography entitled
The London Years (
1956). In 2004 and 2005, both books were re-published by
AK Press. Some others were translated into English but not published like
Behind Barbed Wire and Bars, an account of his
internment during the First World War.
* "I am an Anarchist not because I believe Anarchism is the final goal, but because there is no such thing as a final goal." -
The London Years* "Anarchism is no patent solution for all human problems, no Utopia of a perfect social order, as it has so often been called, since on principle it rejects all absolute schemes and concepts. It does not believe in any absolute truth, or in definite final goals for human development, but in an unlimited perfectibility of social arrangements and human living conditions, which are always straining after higher forms of expression, and to which for this reason one can assign no definite terminus nor set any fixed goal". -
Anarchism: Its aims and purposes*
Rudolf Rocker Page at the Anarchist Encyclopedia*
Rudolf Rocker Archive at libcom.org*
Anarcho-Syndicalism (full text), by Rudolf Rocker