Jane Addams and the Imprisoned Anarchists
When Jane Addams, of Hull House fame,
heard that the publishers of “Free Society” were arrested and held
without warrant and denied communication with friends or attorneys,
she visited police headquarters and asked to see Mr. Isaak, and
did all that she could toward obtaining for the imprisoned men and
women a fair hearing.
“This action on the part of Miss Addams,”
says a writer in the “Record-Herald,” “has been the subject of some
comment and even of adverse criticism, and it may be well to inquire
why she was thus engaged at the very same hour when the ministers
of the gospel all over the country were condemning the Anarchists
and when a Chicago divine of some note was declaring ‘that all Anarchists
should be driven to hell.’
“Anyone who has listened to Miss Addams’
public lectures has gained several distinct impressions which may
be able to throw some light upon this action. She is inclined to
the extreme doctrine of non-resistance, to a belief that evil cannot
be successfully resisted, but must in the end be overcome by good.
She is not even an adherent of the school of scientific Anarchy,
to which the suspect Isaak and his comrades belong, according to
which school all law and government are not only unnecessary, but
represent the repressive and retrogade [sic] tendency in social
evolution.
“Disagreeing with the philosophy of
the arrested men, she nevertheless knew several of them personally,
having met them through that neighborly hospitality which Hull House
extends to all who care to come to it, regardless of class, nationality
or either social or religious creed.
“Charles Lamb says you cannot hate
a man when you know him, and apparently Miss Addams has verified
this in experience. During the time of the first public excitement
she was able to judge these men whom she knew by her previous knowledge
of their characters, and was not frightened by the fact that they
were labeled Anarchists even at the moment when that word was associated
with a dastardly crime. She was able to recollect that Mr. Isaak
and his friends are merely members of a school, who, following the
direction indicated by the orthodox Democrat, that the least government
is the best government, add [sic] that the entire absence of government
is better than the best government.
“They contend that the statutory and
judge-made law of the past has been largely class legislation, enacted
and enforced for the benefit of the few, and that the most hateful
aspect of human life is continually found in connection with the
army, the police and the courts. This being the Anarchist position,
Miss Addams quite logically contends that, society having laid down
a general rule of law that the right of counsel shall not be denied
and that bail shall not be refused except in capital cases, and
then only when there is some proof of the guilt of the accused it
is especially unfortunate to seem to deny these rights to any class
of persons on account of their published beliefs—and particularly
so when such a denial of legal right illustrates the position they
constantly take in regard to the system of law and order. So far
from tending to suppress Anarchy or even to dissuade the Anarchist,
such a course inevitably and directly strengthens him in his position.
She believes that no person should override the law, be he judge,
policeman or Anarchist.
“Referring again to one of Miss Addams’
lectures, she maintained that there was a certain corrective power
in the position of the anarchist in respect to the present-day tendency
toward special legislation. She points out that it is well to have
the rights of the individual proclaimed in this time of much lawmaking
for the protection of favored classes and of property rights.
“Doubtless there are many persons
who sympathize with this position, and, while they did not have
the opportunity to express it in prompt action as Miss Addams did,
they are grateful for at least this small demonstration in favor
of the integrity of legal guaranties.”
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