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TheManifesto of the 101 was a document expressing strong dissent from theSoviets following theSoviet invasion of Hungary in October 1956. It was signed by 101 prominent Italiancommunists.
After theBudapest uprising and its repression by theRed Army, the manifesto was signed by 101 Italian communist intellectuals.[1] The document, known as "Il Manifesto dei 101", was conceived and initially drafted by philosopherLucio Colletti and historiansLuciano Cafagna andFrancesco Sirugo, all three members of theItalian Communist Party (PCI).[2] It was co-signed by 98 more intellectuals, among whom were historiansRenzo De Felice and Alberto Caracciolo, and strongly endorsed byAntonio Giolitti, a leading personality and member of theItalian Parliament.
The manifesto was submitted to the Direction Bureau of the PCI with the intent of initiating an internal debate on the Budapest events. It was leaked to the press and provoked a brutal reaction by the party's leadership and the Direction Bureau; any debate attempt was rejected while the document's authors, labelled as "traitors", were threatened with heavy political consequences. First worried by the public diffusion of the manifesto, then more seriously intimidated by the party leadership's reaction, a few of the signatories retracted their adhesion while others, who refused to do so, resigned. Giolitti left the party the following year. This episode of dissent was followed by a more general re-thinking on the legitimacy of communism and its compatibility with democracy and intellectual freedom. Among the manifesto's promoters, some (Cafagna, De Felice, Sirugo, and Colletti) ended up, although at different stages, cutting ideological ties with communism.