I. Introduction: The Enigma of Ignazio Silone
Ignazio Silone occupies a distinctive place in 20th-century
political and cultural history. His novels, Fontamara and Bread and Wine, are
acclaimed for their strong critique of fascist brutality and rural struggles.
He is recognized among prominent “dissident” writers whose moral stance was
influential among Cold War liberals. Nonetheless, evidence from the 1990s and
2000s suggests a need for a more cautious and realistic assessment.
Silone was not a fascist ideologically, but from a Marxist
point of view, his political path is still very concerning. The problem isn't
that he embraced fascism as a belief system, but that, under conditions of
repression, confusion, and political decline, he seems to have secretly
informed for Mussolini’s OVRA and later became a prominent anti-communist
intellectual aligned with Western interests.
Silone’s life reflects more than personal experience; it
embodies the broader pressures faced by militants due to the Stalinist decline
of the Communist International, the failure of revolutionary strategy in the
1920s–30s, and the ideological shifts during the Cold War. His story highlights
the human toll of bureaucratic betrayal, the political void left by the
suppression of Trotskyism, and how easily disillusioned revolutionaries could
be absorbed into bourgeois liberalism.
This article traces Silone’s political development within
the wider crisis of the workers’ movement. It asserts that Silone’s tragedy is
closely linked to the tragedy of Stalinism: the dismantling of revolutionary
cadres, the rejection of internationalism, and the transformation of the
Comintern into a tool for Soviet state interests. Silone’s personal
downfall—his act of informing, exile, and later anti-communist stance—must be
understood within this broader framework.
II. The Making of a Communist: Silone and the Early PCI
Born Secondino Tranquilli in 1900, Silone came from the poor
rural areas of Abruzzi. His initial political development occurred during the
rapid expansion of the Italian socialist movement around and after World War I.
The Biennio Rosso (1919–20) radicalized many workers and intellectuals, and
Silone joined those who leaned toward the PSI's revolutionary faction.
In 1921, he helped establish the Italian Communist Party
(PCI), aligning with the Bolshevik-inspired faction that aimed to firmly reject
reformism. The early period of the PCI was characterized by severe repression,
internal conflicts, and the swift emergence of Mussolini’s fascist movement.
Silone stood out as an organizer and journalist, working on the party’s secret
presses and involved in its underground networks.
Even in this early stage, signs of subsequent
disillusionment were evident. The PCI emerged in a world already influenced by
bureaucratic power within the Soviet Union. The Comintern’s tightening
discipline, its dependence on Moscow’s factional conflicts, and its
inconsistent tactics caused confusion and discouragement among activists.
Silone, like many others, was torn between revolutionary hopes and the
oppressive structure of Stalinist communism.
III. Repression, Isolation, and the OVRA Connection
The most shocking revelations about Silone involve his
connections to the OVRA, Mussolini’s secret police. Historian Dario Biocca
uncovered evidence that Silone acted as a paid informant for the fascist regime
during the 1920s, reporting on fellow Communist Party members, including his
own brother, Romolo. This constitutes the core of the political scandal.
Silone’s supporters have tried to downplay or dismiss the evidence, citing
coercion, manipulation, or the ambiguous nature of police archives. However, the
documentation is compelling. The OVRA files show regular contact, payments, and
actionable intelligence. Romolo Tranquilli’s death in a fascist prison only
heightens the tragedy.
How should Marxists interpret this? The provided document
gives the essential starting point: Stalinism’s “bureaucratic, conspiratorial
organisational methods” fostered an environment where militants became
isolated, unsupported, and vulnerable. The PCI leadership, increasingly
subordinate to Moscow, failed to offer political clarity or material
solidarity. Arrested militants were often left to fend for themselves. The
internal purges and factional paranoia within the Comintern further damaged
trust. Under these harsh conditions, some individuals broke down—some gave in
politically, while others, like Silone, succumbed morally.
This does not exempt Silone from blame, but it
contextualizes his betrayal as part of a broader systemic crisis. The decline
of the Comintern not only warped revolutionary strategy but also eroded the
psychological and organizational resilience of its members. Silone’s act of
informing reflects a deeper political sickness.
IV. Exile, Literature, and the Anti‑Stalinist Turn
This literary shift reflected Silone’s evolving political
views. By 1930, he parted ways with the PCI, mainly due to Stalinist control of
the Comintern. Unlike Trotskyists, Silone did not have a theoretical
understanding of Stalinism as a bureaucratic decline of the workers’ state.
While he rejected Stalinism, his opposition was rooted in an ethical,
Christian-influenced humanism rather than revolutionary Marxism, leaving him
without a solid ideological stance. Later, this gap would be filled by Cold War
liberalism.
V. The Cold War and the Uses of Silone
Silone’s contribution to *The God That Failed* (1949)
signified his full acceptance into the anti-communist intellectual circle. The
collection of essays by former Communists became a key work of Cold War
ideology, portraying Stalinism not as a result of historical decline but as an
inevitable consequence of Marxism itself. As the document highlights, Silone’s
critique “collapsed into the bourgeois narrative that communism itself was the
problem.” This failure was deliberate, reflecting the lack of a revolutionary
alternative in Silone’s political outlook. Having rejected Stalinism but not
supporting Trotskyism, he was carried along by the dominant ideological
currents of his era.
The CIA-supported Congress for Cultural Freedom championed
Silone’s work. His novels were translated, circulated, and praised as symbols
of “democratic” dissent. The West regarded Silone as a morally impactful
witness whose personal tragedy could be used as a weapon against socialism.
This marked the end of Silone’s political evolution: shifting from a Communist
militant to an OVRA informant, and from an anti-Stalinist exile to a Cold War
liberal icon.
VI. The Marxist Assessment: Tragedy, Betrayal, and
Historical Lessons
How should Marxists today evaluate Silone? "Silone was
not an ideologically fascist. He was probably a secret police informant who
later gained prominence as a Cold War anti-communist.” This contradiction—being
non-fascist yet involved, anti-Stalinist yet anti-communist—encapsulates the
tragedy of his life.
Three lessons emerge:
1. Stalinism created the conditions for collapse.
The Comintern's bureaucratic degeneration destroyed the
political and moral foundations of revolutionary militancy. Silone’s betrayal
is inseparable from this context.
2. Anti‑Stalinism without Marxism leads to liberalism.
Silone’s failure to grasp the Trotskyist analysis of
Stalinism left him ideologically adrift. His later anti‑communism was the
predictable outcome.
3. The Fourth International alone preserved revolutionary
continuity.
The Trotskyist movement was the only one to uphold the
political clarity and international solidarity needed to resist repression.
Silone’s tragedy highlights the importance of such an organization.
VII. Conclusion: Silone and the Crisis of the Twentieth
Century Left
Ignazio Silone’s life exemplifies the broader crisis of the
20th-century workers’ movement. His initial revolutionary zeal, his breakdown
under repression, his literary humanism, and his Cold War liberal views mirror
the collapse of the Comintern and the resulting ideological void. While Silone
was not a fascist, he was a man wounded by the combined pressures of fascist
terror and Stalinist betrayal. His act of informing was a moral tragedy; his
subsequent anti-communism was political. His tragedy is not only personal but
also historical. Marxists should aim not to label Silone as a villain or
justify him as a victim, but to understand the forces that influenced his
life—and to learn lessons to prevent similar tragedies in the future.
