Anarchy 66/This is Provo
This is Provo
Provo is a monthly for anarchists, provos, beatniks, layabouts, tinkers, jailbirds, saints, sorcerers, pacifists, charlatans, philosophers, germ carriers, major domos, happeners, vegetarians, syndicalists, hustlers, incendiaries, marionettes, infant teachers, and of course we must not forget the men of the Internal Security Service.
provo opposes capitalism, communism, fascism, bureaucracy, militarism, snobbism, professionalism, dogmatism and authoritarianism.
provo feels it is faced with two choices: either desperate resistance or passive withering away. provo calls for resistance wherever it is possible. provo realises that in the end it will be the loser. However, it will not forfeit the chance to thoroughly provoke this society once more.
provo regards anarchism as the inspirational source for resistance. provo wants to renew anarchism and spread it among the young.
Why is provo called provo? Are we negative or positive? What is our norm? What are our ways?
provo = provo because provo-behaviour is for us the one and only acceptable way in this society. To climb the social ladder and serve in a job means contributing towards coming nuclear destructions, towards capitalism and militarism. It means collaboration with the authorities and their cunning carrot-
The asocial provo is the only ray of hope. Its activity is a spoke in the wheel of “progress” which thunders ahead at such speed that the bomb under the rails is not spotted.
We know that the attitude of the provo, a beatnik type we are told in Dr. Buikhuizen’s doctoral thesis, is not yet perfect.[1] Buikhuizen says: “Provo-
Today the provo is not uselessly occupied in provoking the police, rioting on the Dam, throwing crackers in letter boxes.
Tomorrow he has to face the police consciously as an enemy, making an assault on the palace on the Dam, and finally placing bombs in the letter box of the Interior Security Service.
Because only the young, idling and provoking masses in the streets can still be set in motion, they are open to resistance, not the so-
We denounce capitalism, bureaucracy, militarism, and the inevitable political-
We cannot convince the masses. We hardly want to. How one can put one’s trust in this apathetic, dependent, spiritless horde of cockroaches, beetles and ladybirds, is incomprehensible. However, our late Domela Nieuwenhuis, De Ligt, and others have tried, and their posterity still try. It was not successful, it is still not successful, and it won’t be in the future. We are turning the emergency into a virtue by provoking these masses. Our ways will not be prophetic or idealistic, but simply provocative. We are fully aware of the ultimate uselessness of our activities, we willingly believe that neither Johnson nor Kosygin will listen to us, and this is precisely the reason why we are free in what we do. We realise that a demonstration is senseless in the end. Therefore it is vital to make the best of a demonstration, for otherwise the demonstration would be useless, not only objectively, not only absolutely, but also relatively. We dare to say: demonstrate for demonstration’s sake, provoke for provocation’s sake. Resist for resistance’s sake![2]
editor’s notes
- ↑ “The movement had its origin in a group of anarchists, prominent among whom was a young man Roel van Duyn. A Dr. Buikhuizen wrote an article on the discontented and sometimes violent youngsters. He called them provocateurs or ‘provos’ who were pinpricking authority to find out its real faith. When a year ago another group of anarchists emerged, among them van Duyn, they took the name ‘Provos’ for themselves and their magazine.”—
Manchester Guardian, 18.6.66. - ↑ This first issue of provo (which was seized by the police because of its article on explosives) included a report on police violence when Provos placed a bunch of flowers at the foot of the National Commemoration Monument in protest at Claus von Amsberg’s visit to Amsterdam before his marriage to Princess Beatrix.