A fragment of the prison experiences of Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman
By Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman
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Emma Goldman
Emma Goldman (1869-1940) was born in Lithuania (then part of Russia) and emigrated to the U.S. in 1885. She worked at factories in New York before becoming one of the foremost advocates of radical political thought.
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A fragment of the prison experiences of Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman - Emma Goldman
Emma Goldman, Alexander Berkman
A fragment of the prison experiences of Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman
Published by Good Press, 2022
goodpress@okpublishing.info
EAN 4066338111708
Table of Contents
A FOREWORD
THE STATE PRISON AT JEFFERSON CITY, MO. EMMA GOLDMAN
THE ATLANTA FEDERAL PENITENTIARY Statement by Alexander Berkman
REPLY OF FRED G. ZERBST Warden of the U. S. Federal Penitentiary, Atlanta, Ga.
REPLY TO WARDEN FRED G. ZERBST
PERSECUTION OF POLITICALS
IN CONCLUSION
A FOREWORD
Table of Contents
There was a time—and that not so very long ago—when popular ignorance and superstition looked upon an insane person as one possessed of the devil or of some other evil spirit. They sought to drive the evil one
out by beating and torturing the insane, and often even by drowning, hanging, and burning.
We have fortunately passed that stage of stupid brutality. Today even the most ignorant man knows that insanity is a disease. But in regard to crime and criminals we are still in the stage of dark-age superstition. We look upon the criminal today as we did upon the insane fifty or seventy-five years ago. Most men still believe that by beating and punishing the criminal, by hanging and electrocution, we can drive the evil spirit
out of him. This process is called reforming the criminal.
Yet common sense and all human experience prove that the criminal is no more responsible for crime than the crazy man for his insanity. The pseudo-scientific theories of the Lombrosos in regard to crime and criminals have been thoroughly exploded and proven utterly fallacious. Even if the Lombroso myth that the criminal is born were true, what good would it do to punish him? There might be some social justification for his isolation, but how could the criminal, if born such, be held accountable for his criminality?
But as a matter of fact—as modern criminology has proven beyond all dispute—the criminal is made, not born. He is the product of his environment, a child of poverty and desperation, of misery, greed, and ambition. He is at the same time the symbol and the proof of a diseased social condition, the miscarriage of perverted economic arrangements. Fully 97 per cent. of all crime is due directly to our economic institutions. The other 3 per cent. are traceable to the artificiality and neurosis of modern life, to the anti-social tendencies cultivated among the weeds in the neglected and mistreated garden of human life.
I have been in close contact with so-called criminals for a great many years. Yet nowhere have I found the alleged criminal type,
nor have I ever discovered the real criminal.
He does not exist. Crime is simply misdirected energy, effort applied wrongly. The average criminal is just the average man, generally speaking. If in any sense he may be considered a variation,
it is only because of his frequently superior initiative, daring and intelligence. His often anti-social activity is conditioned by his unconventional vocation, not by any inherent criminal or anti-social tendencies. I am not speaking of congenital criminal degenerates whose number is infinitesimal, and who belong in