In
Honor Of The 96th Anniversary Of The Founding Of The Communist
International-Take Four-For Rosa
Luxemburg And Karl Liebknecht
The cops, the hated Federals, and their allies the
Freikorps, were hunting down every Red, hell every leftist or trade union
militant that would not bow his head they could find in all of stinking Bavaria
after they crushed the Commune. It was awful, savage, something out of what
Otto Schmidt thought it must have been like when Thiers and his hatchet men
pulled the hammer down on the Paris Commune. He had read plenty, plenty as a
schoolboy, as a proud member of the Socialist Youth, about those heroic events
back in 1871 so he knew that if they, they the working people did not win, then
the blood would flow in the streets. And it had after some bloody street
fighting. Worse those Whites (every counter-revolutionary force in the world
since the Bolshevik Revolution and the damn civil war there was now called
White, and rightly so since they were all kindred of the Russian Whites) they
had grabbed their leader, Eugene Levine, and who knows what had happened to him
(executed). Hell, Otto had just barely gotten out of Munich himself and had
been hiding in a small apartment of a sympathizer in the outer suburbs of
Munich now had a chance to think about the events of the past several months
since the damn Kaiser had abdicated, the war had come to a crashing halt, and
working people like him, honest socialists trying to figure out a way to change
this rotten old world, had unbowed their heads for once and taken some action.
Otto knew, although he was not theoretician, not even really
a leader, not a big leader anyway, although he was respected among the youth
for his militancy and his willingness to stick his neck out, that they, the
revolutionaries, the real revolutionaries had made mistakes, made bad mistakes
about what to do, and with whom. Sure they were young, mostly, hot-headed, mad
and hell had never before, unlike the Russians they were trying to emulate,
ever had a part in a revolution. Their leaders, their Social-Democratic leaders
mostly, had told them organize, organize, organize and vote, vote, vote, and
when they had done enough of both then they would just ease into the socialist
republic of their dreams, his dreams.
Then when the chance actually came those leaders, those
august bootblack leaders, just filled the governmental seats and left everybody
else standing high and dry. Worse those bastards had done the bosses’ work for them;
they had suppressed everything, every armed attempt to get some worker justice.
Those damn leaders were just as bad as Thiers and his French companions in
suppressing the Commune. Otto burned with an inner rage when he thought about
what they, Ebert, that fat pig, and Noske, that goddam hangman, had done, done
with glee from what he had heard, to Rosa, Rosa Luxemburg, the rose of the
revolution, and courageous Karl Liebknecht, bright shining Karl who had in the
flames of war stood up and called down every kind of damnation on the German
war aims (and the other side too but he aimed at his own fellow Germans first).
And had paid the price. Poor Levine, poor beautiful Levine with the soul of a
poet probably was slated for that same fate, a martyr’s fate.
Yes, Otto could see where the big mistakes lie, trusting
those parlor socialists gotten fat and lazy off of hard-earned workingmen’ dues
once they took over the bourgeois government. Somebody, he forgot who it was
and some of the details but a comrade who had been to Russia or had talked to a
Russian Bolshevik while he was in Germany, one night in Munich when it looked like
they would win, had said when the revolution was at its hottest then the
struggle against the reform socialists (in Russia the Mensheviks and Social
Revolutionaries and here the Social-Democrats) has to most merciless. They had
forgotten that, forgotten that to their regret.
He had heard that same night that in Moscow earlier in the spring the
Bolsheviks and their international allies had formed a new International, a
Communist International to fight against the Social –Democrats tooth and nail
for the allegiance of the working masses. He had had not had time to
investigate that more since all hell had broken out a week or so after that, to
sign up or anything but he knew this, knew it deep in his young bones, that he
wished the effort well. He also wished that they, and he, could find some way,
some righteous way to avenge those deaths of Luxemburg and Liebknecht. And now probably Levine too.
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