By this time, the Italian anarchistGiuseppe Fanelli was travelling to Spain in order to establish a Spanish section of the International Workingmen's Association (IWA).[4] In the Catalan capital, Fanelli met Josep Lluís Pellicer, who organised a meeting with a number of his fellow federal republicans. One of the attendees was his nephew Rafael Farga i Pellicer, who was quickly won over to Fanelli's anarchist principles.[5] Together they set about organising a Catalan branch of the International,[6] with Josep Lluís Pellicer as its president and Rafael Farga as its secretary.[7] The internationalist nucleus soon came to include the physician Gaspar Sentiñon [ca], medical student José García Viñas and engineering student Trinidad Soriano.[8]
In May 1869, Farga's nucleus constituted itself as the official Barcelona section of the IWA, adding socialism to its federal republican platform.[9] Before long, Farga and Sentiñon were engaged in active correspondence with the International's leading figure Mikhail Bakunin.[10] In a letter to Bakunin, Farga elaborated the nucleus' strategy to defend socialism in La Federación and advocate for it at future workers' congresses, with the aim of increasing the influence of the international within the city's workers' societies.[2] The strategy was successful, with internationalists being elected to prominent positions within the workers' societies, which subsequently became affiliated officially with the IWA.[11]
In September 1869, Farga and Sentiñon were delegated to attend the IWA's Basel Congress,[12] where they first became aware of the divisions between the Marxists and the anarchists. Although Farga and Sentiñon aligned themselves with Bakunin's anti-political and decentralist program, they were cautious about applying it in Catalonia, where socialism had not yet fully developed and where they wished to "avoid future divisions" over these issues.[13] They joined Bakunin's International Alliance of Socialist Democracy before returning to Spain,[14] where they endeavoured to establish an official Spanish section of the International.[15]
Comrade delegates: those of you who gather here to affirm the great work of the International Workingmen's Association, which contains within itself the complete emancipation of the proletariat and the absolute extirpation of all injustices which have ruled and still rule over the face of the earth; those of you who come to fraternize with the millions of workers, white slaves and black slaves, under the red banner which covers us; dear brothers, in the name of the workers of Barcelona, peace and greetings!
As the congress continued, Farga continued to make explicitly anarchist speeches against capitalism, the state and the church, to the rapturous applause of the attending delegates. He declared that the FRE-AIT's aim to be "to end the rule of the capital, of the state and of the Church by constructing on their ruins Anarchy — the free federation of free associations of workers."[17] With its center in Barcelona, the FRE-AIT quickly extended its influence throughout the country,[18] gaining particular proinence in Andalusia.[19]
By 1883, Farga had largely lost interest in the activities of the FTRE. He instead began working on a series of literary works, including studies of Giuseppe Garibaldi and classical liberalism, while also working as editor of the journal La Asociación.[26]
Works and collaborations
Garibaldi. Historia Liberal del Siglo XIX. Ideas, Movimientos y Hombres Importantes. Estudios Filosofico-originales de escritores italianos, franceses y espanoles. Bajo la direccion de Justo Pastor de Pellico. Barcelona, La Academia of Evaristo Ullastres, 1882, 2 vols.
Prolegómenos de la composición tipográfica. Barcelona: La Academia, 188?
Biografía de Miguel Bakunin with Miguel Bakunin sus ideales y tácticas & Bakunin's La escuela en el porvenir (The School of the Future). La Coruña, Aurora, (published posthumously c. 1916).
With Josep Llunas, "La familia; Datos de estadística universal", "¿Qué es anarquía?" y "La cuestión política", in Josep Llunas, Estudios filosófico-sociales. Barcelona, La Academia, 1882.