Black Guards

For other uses, see Blackguard.
Black Guards
Чёрная Гвардия
Chjornaya Gvardiya

Participant in the Russian Revolution of 1917 and Russian Civil War

Black flags were used by guards in several modifications and variations.
Active Summer 1917-Spring 1919
(Became core units of the Revolutionary Insurrectionary Army of Ukraine by mid 1919.)
Ideology Anarchism (primarily anarchist communism)
Leaders Various militia leaders, including Maria Nikiforova, Lev Chernyi and Nestor Makhno.
Area of operations  Russia,  Russian SFSR, and  Ukraine
Part of Revolutionary Insurrectionary Army of Ukraine (after 1918)
Allies Various anarchist organizations
Opponents  Russian SFSR
Russia Russian Provisional Government
Russia White Movement
Entente
Pro-independence movements in Russian Civil War
Battles and wars October Revolution
Russian Civil War

Black Guards (Russian: Чёрная Гвардия, Chjornaya Gvardiya) were armed groups of workers formed after the February Revolution and before the final Bolshevik suppression of other leftwing groups. They were the main strike force of the anarchists. They were created in the Summer of 1917 in Ukraine by Maria Nikiforova, and expanded in January 1918 to Moscow, under the control of anarchists at industrial enterprises by Factory and Plant Committees and by Moscow Federation of Anarchist Groups cells.

Nomenclature

Like most anarchists' collectives since the 1880s, the Black Guards had the word "black" in their name as a reference to the black flag. On a more basic level, some theorists simply think of black as "the color of negation" and see it as fitting for groups attempting to negate state authority.[1]

Origin

Maria Nikiforova organized the Black Guards’ first unit. Nikiforova, often known by her nickname Marusya, was a Ukrainian anarchist organiser who put together the first Black Guards cell in the city of Alexandrovsk in the Ukraine. Nikiforova, who is often compared to Joan of Arc, due to her important role in a male dominated conflict from a young age, started the first Black Guards cell in an attempt to bring the land reform and wealth redistribution called for by the peasants to fruition. Nikiforova, a self-proclaimed terrorist, directed her unit of Black Guards to terrorize the Alexandrovsk local government in order to achieve the political change she desired. Later similar cells were established by Nestor Makhno throughout other portions of the Ukraine. Makhno led a "Robin Hood-like existence" during the revolution, seizing land and distributing wealth among the peasants.[2] Soon after the establishment of some of the first Black Guards cells, it became apparent that this small terrorist cell structure of organization was ideal for the anarchist political and military organisers to utilize to attempt to violently bring about the ideological changes their members desired. The Black Guards were eventually organized into a more structured set of cells by the Moscow Federation of Anarchist Groups under Lev Cherny's organising.

Goals

The Black Guards formed in order to give the anarchist movement military backing. While some anarchists joined the Bolsheviks in an attempt to moderate their policies to fit more congruously with the anarchist agenda, more extreme factions of the movement decided that this would not suffice and formed military units, the Black Guards. The anarchist ideology behind the movement called for small localized councils to be democratically elected and oversee that goods and property were being evenly distributed throughout the communities. The councils would ideally on have to exist for the interim transitional period from their current political set up to absolute self-rule and anarchism.

Moscow Federation of Anarchist Groups

The Moscow Federation of Anarchist Groups, which assisted in the organization of the Black Guards was formed in March 1917. The Moscow Federation of Anarchist Groups had many important anarchist thinkers as political and military organizers for the group. Lev Chernyi served as the secretary for the organization. The group’s foremost goal was the organizing of underground anarchist groups as well as the dissemination of pro-anarchist propaganda to Moscow’s working class, following the abdication of Tsar Nicholas the II. It was suggested by anarchist associated critic, Victor Serge, that far too much of the Black Guards money and effort was focused on wasted military conflicts and more resources should have been directed towards the largely failed political propaganda campaign. The Black Guards and the Moscow Federation of Anarchist Groups never gained the political or even popular support that they desired.

Militarization in Ukraine and suppression in Russia

On the night April 11 to 12 1918 Dzerzhinsky, president of the Cheka, had a force of approximately 5,000 soviet troops attack anarchist group headquarters in Moscow.[3] The headquarters Moscow Federation for Anarchist Groups was raided, known as the, “House of Anarchy” and all present members were arrested. These raids were prompted by a series of armed aggressions against Cheka officials that were believed to be carried out by Moscow Federation for Anarchist Group supported Black Guard units. The credit for the murders of the two Cheka officials was later taken by a Black Guards unit, solidifying the state”s justification for aggression against the Moscow Federation of Anarchist Groups.

There was no need to mount a negative political campaign as part of the suppression of the Black Guards because the Black Guards had no political power or support, their power was simply derived from their military strength. Russian revolutionary writer, Victor Serge, who was initially part of anarchist movement believed that much of the Black Guards real capacities was, “wasted on small and chaotic struggles.”[4]

Ultimately the legacy of the Black Guards is most important due to its contribution in serving as a model for the Revolutionary Insurrectionary Army of Ukraine, otherwise known as the Black Army. Following the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk Nestor Makhno formed a Black Guards unit in Ukraine that would later grow into what was formally known as the Revolutionary Insurrectionary Army of Ukraine (RIAU). The RIAU may have simply been referred to as a continuation of the Black Guards if it were not on a far larger and more organized and unified scale.[5]

See also

References

References:

  1. Bullock, David (2008). "The Black Guards". The Russian Civil War, 1918-22. Essential histories 69. Osprey Publishing. p. 89. ISBN 9781846032714. Retrieved 2014-02-04.
  2. Edward R. Kantowicz (1999). The Rage of Nations. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. p. 173. ISBN 0802844553.
  3. Richard Polenberg, Fighting Faiths: The Abrams Case, the Supreme Court, and Free Speech (New York: Cornell University Press, 1987), 348.
  4. Victor Serge, Year One of the Russian Revolution (Chicago: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1970)
  5. Victor Serge, Year One of the Russian Revolution (Chicago: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1970),158.

External links

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