Thursday, April 24, 2014

Jobs Not Jails Rally on Boston Common!

When: Saturday, April 26, 2014, 12:00 pm
Where: Boston Common • Boston
 

Let us ALL bring together 10,000 people from across Massachusetts to say NO to incarcerating our family, friends, neighbors, and loved ones. Let us say YES to good jobs that are meaningful and pay living wages.

We will listen to speakers. We will chant with one another. We will be motivated to act with loud voices.

This event is being organized by a statewide coalition. JOIN US!   www.jobsnotjails.org
Massachusetts taxpayers are expected to build 10,000 new prison unitsby 2023, costing $2 billion, unless dramatic reforms are made;
Reforms in other states have led to greater public safety while actuallyclosing prisons (e.g. New York, Texas);
Reducing long-term unemployment also improves public safety state-wide;
We call upon our legislators and Governor to:
  1. Enact criminal justice reforms that have been proven to work in other states, including: reducing barriers to employment; diversion to treatment; ending mandatory minimum drug sentences; and improving access to education.
  1. Halt the construction of new prison units until these reforms can take effect.
  1. Re-direct the $2 billion savings into a jobs program targeting communities with high rates of poverty and crime, further improving public safety for everyone.
See/download the flyer at http://justicewithpeace.org/files/Jobs%20Not%20Jails%20Rally-2014.pdf
Participating Organizations:

10-Point Coalition
Action fo Regional Equity
AIDS Project Worcester
American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts
American Friends Service Committee
Arise for Social Justice, Springfield
Arlington Street Church
Black and Pink
Blackstonian.com
Boston Feminist Liberation
Boston Living Center
Boston Workers’ Alliance
Children’s League of Massachusetts
Cleghorn Neighborhood Center, Fitchburg
Coalition for Effective Public Safety
Coalition for Social Justice, Fall River and New Bedford
Coalition to Fund our Communities
Committee for Public Counsel Services
Committee of Friends and Relatives of Prisoners
Community Labor United
Criminal Justice Policy Coalition
Dismas House
Dorchester People for Peace
EPOCA (Ex-prisoners and Prisoners Organizing for Community Advancment)
Families Against Mandatory Minimums
Families for Justice as Healing
First Parish Church of Arlington
First Parish Church of Northborough
Fitchburg Minority Coalition
Harvard Law Students PLAP
Lesley College – PAWS
Lynn Youth Street Outreach Advocacy (LYSOA)
Massachusetts CURE
Massachusetts Organization for Addiction Recovery
Massachusetts Women’s Justice Network
Mothers for Justice and Equality
Multicultural Wellness Center
NAACP Youth Council, Boston Chapter
National Association of Social Workers, SIG
National Lawyers’ Guild
Old Cambridge Baptist Church
Prison Policy Initiative
Prisoners’ Legal Services
Progressive Massachusetts
Real Cost of Prisons Project
Roxbury Youth Works
SPAN, Inc.
Spontaneous Celebrations – Beantown Society
St. John Missionary Baptist Church
Straight Ahead Ministries
Teen Empowerment
Teens Leading the Way
Timothy Baptist Church
Toastmasters Prison Volunteers
United Church of Christ, Innocence Commission Task Force
Worcester Branch, NAACP
Worcester Homeless Action Committee
Worcester Youth Center
Youth Against Mass Incarceration

 
From Northeastern Palestine Underground

 

Press Contacts:                 Tori Porell, toriporell@gmail.com 602-999-7312
                                                Max Geller, maxdotgeller@gmail.com 617-833-7469
For immediate release: April 22, 2014

Victory for Student Speech Rights: Northeastern SJP To Be Reinstated

Northeastern University Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) has announced that the University is backing off of its decision to suspend the student organization until January 2015.  “This is a victory for freedom of expression on campus,” said SJP leader Tori Porell who thanked SJP supporters.  “Weeks of protests, picket lines, petitions, phone calls, and emails appear to have paid off and SJP will be operational next semester,” Porell said.  “This is also a victory for the national student movement for justice in Palestine.”

Although the news came in a letter from university Vice President Laura Wankel, which nominally rejected SJP’s appeal of its suspension, the letter effectively stated the university’s agreement to abandon the suspension if SJP agreed to take certain mutually agreed steps. SJP leader Tori Porell said, “Of course, we disagree with the administration’s statement that the earlier decision to suspend SJP was appropriate and we believe this is largely a face-saving statement.”  She noted, “SJP is happy to work cooperatively with Associate Dean Bob Jose, one of the conditions the university is imposing – and, frankly, we were insisting upon – to plan our upcoming programs addressing important social justice issues.”

Porell also criticized the university’s decision to impose probation on SJP for the fall semester as a condition for lifting the suspension.  “We are willing to live with being on probation for one semester, although that is objectionable and most likely also a way to appease those groups calling on the university to censor SJP.”  “It is absolutely essential that SJP has a voice on campus and that our rights are not restricted by outside groups enforcing the status quo on Israel-Palestine,” she said.  Another SJP leader, Max Geller, commented, “I am glad that SJP can resume its educational mission. This is a victory for every SJP chapter in the country and one that will reverberate around the world, since people in many countries had criticized Northeastern for suspending SJP.”

SJP leaders are setting to work immediately to plan a new series of events and a renewed presence on campus, invigorated by the gains in membership and attention made during the suspension.

The lawyers from the ACLU, Center for Constitutional Rights, and the National Lawyers Guild who have been assisting SJP will continue to monitor the university’s treatment of SJP. “SJP’s reinstatement is a victory for freedom of expression which is a crucial aspect to any quality university,” said ACLU attorney Sarah Wunsch.

“What happened to SJP at Northeastern is just one part of the larger assault on speech supporting Palestinian rights in this country," said Radhika Sainath, staff attorney with Palestine Solidarity Legal Support and co-operating counsel with the Center for Constitutional Rights. "There is no 'Palestine Exception' to free speech rights and the First Amendment."

Regarding this victory for Northeastern SJP, and student, as well as Palestine speech rights in general, Attorney Lamis Deek of the National Lawyers Guild said: “We believe this is an unprecedented victory made by the Northeastern University students who, with meager resources, have faced down an internationally sponsored repression movement, The students of Northeastern must proudly own the progress they have made in protecting the rights to free speech and equal protection for all students and all Americans. Equally important, we must recognize students' role, through this victory, in protecting the rights of Palestinians in the US and globally from the violent narrative that vilifies them and criminalizes their basic demands to live in dignity and freedom.  It is no exaggeration to say this is a victory for all people, one for which we should all be grateful.”


 


 

Chelsea Manning - Reinstated as Grand Marshall of SF Pride Parade




 



Janice Josephine Carney posted on your timeline
"Pat please pass this on"
A small movement is trying to have her removed; please send an email to
info@sfpride.org thanking them for honoring Chelsea Manning
Chelsea Manning has been
Selected by the San Francisco Pride Board of Directors in January
Enlisting in the army in 2007, Chelsea Manning, became an intelligence analyst, and rose to the rank of Specialist, receiving a high level security clearance. Deployed to Iraq in 2008, living and working under “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” Manning experienced severe isolation and bullying from her fellow soldiers. In 2010, Manning began to share information with the website Wikileaks, ultimately releasing hundreds of thousands of files, pager messages, diplomatic cables and video.
Manning’s release of information had far-reaching consequences, exposing controversial excesses by the American military, including the video of a Baghdad airstrike killing civilians, known as “Collateral Murder,” the “Guantanamo Files,” containing secret documents relating to detainees at the Guantanamo Bay Detention Camp, detailing the detention of dozens of innocent Afghans and Pakistanis as well as the release of 251,287 State Department cables.
Arrested in May, 2010 and convicted in August 2013, Manning is currently confined at the military correctional facility at Fort Leavenworth in Kansas. Only history will inform us of the ultimate impact of her disclosures. The 2013 SF Pride Board’s controversial decision to revoke her status as Grand Marshal fueled an international controversy and created intense strife within the local LGBT and progressive communities. In January, in the spirit of community healing, and at the behest of SF Pride’s membership, the newly elected SF Pride Board of Directors reinstated Manning’s status as an honorary Grand Marshal for the 2014 Celebration and Parade."

Prepping for a Massacre in Ukraine? And Who are the Terrorists?

Speaking on Democracy Now! last week, professor Stephen Cohen of NYU & Princeton said, "we are not beginning a new Cold War. We are well Into it." The tremendous military resources of the U.S. and Europe are lining up in preparation for a a showdown — which as Cohen said, could lead to a shooting war — aimed at backing Russia out of Ukraine.

In U.S. media, we're hearing what we heard in 1990 and 2002, that American interests are being endangered by “terrorists.” Russia is taking advantage of the deep discontent and desperation in Ukraine among people increasingly impoverished. But are they terrorists seeking to attack the U.S., or people fearing the disaster that western IMF austerity measures represent?

Robert Parry, in Prepping for a Ukrainian Massacre, sharply questions the lies being told to justify NATO/US military moves:
“Between the anti-Russian propaganda pouring forth from the Obama administration and the deeply biased coverage from the U.S. news media, the American people are being prepared to accept and perhaps even cheer a massacre of eastern Ukrainians who have risen up against the coup regime in Kiev.”
In Revolution this week, Nicholas Kristof on Ukraine: Rationalizing "Our Side" in a Clash of Global Oppressors characterizes Kristoff, writing in The New York Times, as aiming his arguments at a war-weary and skeptical U.S. public:
“For years, the U.S. and the European Union (EU) have been moving steadily, if not in lockstep, to move Ukraine into their orbit—not just or even mainly to claim a lion's share of the rich agricultural and factory output of the country, but as part of geostrategic contention with the rival imperialists who rule Russia. This has included steps to integrate Ukraine and other countries in Eastern Europe into NATO, the U.S./Europe military alliance.”
Most of us will be skeptical of John McCain's sudden embrace of the Ukrainian peoples' right to self-determination.  But what about John Kerry, the one-time radical Vietnam veteran? Again, from Revolution:
“Behind the lies about the reasons for the conflict in Ukraine, and the utterly the self-serving U.S. government declarations of representing the interests of the people of Ukraine, are the interests of rival predatory powers.”
Don't believe the hype. Join or call protests, forums, and speak-outs against U.S. or NATO military involvement in Ukraine.

Three Weeks into Days of Action to Stop US Drone Wars & Surveillance: More than 90 Actions

CIA drone strikes over the last few days have taken the lives of “more than 3 dozen militants” according to US and Yemen government statements. They admit to kiling three civilians, and if patterns hold, may be forced to admit that people branded as “militants” may not have been armed combatants, and certainly may not have been part of al Queda, as the U.S. military has alleged.

Kevin Gosztola poses Questions That Should Be Asked About Recent Operations, Including Drone Strikes, in Yemen: “How much of it is targeting fighters, who are opposed to the current regime led by President Abdu Rabbu Mansour Hadi?” Given that there is no formal agreement between Yemen and the U.S. on the use of drone strikes, with each side allowed “plausible deniability,” who is to say who is being killed and why?

Even New York Times coverage quoted Obama's claim last May that strikes were used “only against militants who posed a ‘continuing and imminent threat to the American people.’ He also said no strike could be authorized without ‘near certainty that no civilians will be killed or injured,’ a bar he described as ‘the highest standard we can set.’”

The coverage went on: “Given that the administration would not even confirm that American drones carried out the strikes over the weekend, it was unclear how the people targeted in the strike posed a threat to Americans.” Exactly.
This week, a federal Appellate Court ruled that the Obama administration must release its secret legal justification for targeted killing in response to demands for transparency.  Beyond transparency, we want justice, and an end to death by drone across national borders, and in violation of international law.

Nick Mottern of knowdrones.com reports: “Since mid-March, over 80 events are scheduled, from Hawaii to Maine, addressing drone warfare/robotic war/militarization,  including civil resistance, drone base protests, teach-ins, street and campus leafletting and film screenings of Unmanned: America's Drone War and Wounds of Waziristan."  More than 100 events are expected by the end of May.” Dozens of people have been arrested, or are awaiting trial, at Creech, Beale, and Hancock Air Force bases.

Photos of Victims of US Drone Wars in Pakistan and Yemen

Click to download 11" x 17" versions of the images below to hold at protests, and help bring to life the human stories behind the statistics. There are not many photos of the drone victims available for a number of reasons. Most of these drone attacks take place in remote locations. People living in these areas often don't have many photos of loved ones they can readily share after they have been killed. Maybe worst of all, journalists and rescuers are often deterred from visiting recent drone attack sites by the possibility of a second "double tap" drone strike.

Naeem Ullah was just 10 years old when he died of shrapnel wounds from a drone strike on October 18th 2010 in Datta Khel, North Waziristan. Noor Behram took this photo shortly before the boy died. Click the image above to download an 11"x17" poster of the image. Click here to view/download other images.
Naeem Ullah was just 10 years old when he died of shrapnel wounds from a drone strike on October 18th 2010 in Datta Khel, North Waziristan.
Spread the Word: Drones Mean Danger!

>> The U.S. military is killing and terrorizing people right now in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia with missiles fired from drones which may circle villages for weeks, piloted from distant bases, many in the U.S. by military operators and CIA contractors. Thousands of people have been incinerated, some by follow-up attacks aimed at rescuers and mourners in lands where the U.S. have designated all military-age males as combatants.

>> The U.S. war makers as using drones and secret operations for targeted killing, making war seem easy and cheap to politicians, attractive to a publis attuned to video games, while sowing fear, hatred and revenge among those unjustly targeted.

>>Vast surveillance by the NSA of billions of people has been used to kill drone targets. Domestic drone surveillance by police and the FBI not only threatens privacy but endangers peoples' rights to associate, assemble and speak out.

Continue reading text, download and place order for stack of palmcards to distribute at your next action.

List of Pakistanis and Yemenis Killed by Drone Strikes

This list was compiled for reading at anti-drone protests during the Spring Days of Action to End U.S. Drone Killing & Surveillance.

Find an event near you.Download this list as a printable PDF.

“Torture Professor” John Yoo Protested as UC Berkeley Promotes Him
firejohnyoo.org:

Friday April 18 about a dozen activists challenged the appointment of "Torture Professor" John Yoo to head a new imperialist think-tank at UC Berkeley.
Protesting John Yoo
The Korea Law Center launch comes on the heels of the U.S. - Korea Free Trade Agreement, which opens up the republic's legal market to U.S. law firms a press release informs, and will enable students to learn about issues vital to Korea's emergence as an economic powerhouse.

The continuing employment of war criminals at universities across the United States threatens to 'normalize' government programs of arbitrary detention, assassination and illegal surveillance, policies deemed necessary to maintain a system of global exploitation and domination.

Protest outside the research center's Inaugural Conference (photo, left) represented a reunion of sorts; participants have been working to 'fire, disbar, and prosecute' John Yoo for years, and are preparing for the annual Berkeley Law demonstration outside the graduation ceremony May 10.

A university that allows a war criminal to teach constitutional and international law courses to the next generation of lawyers and judges under prejudice of 'academic freedom' is protecting war crimes. Faced with the challenge of moral relativism popularized in today's schools, will students find the courage to speak out against the crimes of their government?

That question continues to be raised at Boalt Hall Commencements every year. By refusing to investigate charges of misconduct against John Yoo, Berkeley Law abdicates responsibility for ethical leadership of its students. And assumes complicity in advancing the usurpation of constitutional powers prescribed by the professor's 'Unitary Executive' theory ('if the President does it, it's legal').

End the silence. 
Say NO to the culture of violence that enables torture. 
Fire, Disbar, and Prosecute John Yoo and All the Torture Lawyers. The world can't wait.

Related: Do U C Hypocrisy?
firejohnyoo.org:

The U.S. [and, apparently the Human Rights Center at the UC Berkeley School of Law] upholds a series of double standards on international criminality. It is the number 1 advocate of international criminal justice for others, but refuses to subject its own officials to the jurisdiction of the ICC [International Criminal Court], even going so far to threaten the use of military force in the Hague if the ICC indicts any US citizens. Richard Falk argues that the rule of law must be implemented consistently for people to take it seriously, and not only when it's convenient.

Fernando Boter's Abu Ghraib 57 (photo, left) hangs outside the library of Berkeley Law School, home of 'Torture Professor' John Yoo.
Botero

Anti-Drone Outreach: Report from Hawai`i
World Can't Wait Honolulu:

Hawai`i is at the center of research and development for drone warfare and surveillance. Williams Aerospace in Ewa manufactures drones. UH-Manoa and HPU are both involved in drone research.  Drones are based at Kaneohe and are being tested at Pohakuloa. Yet many people don't know what they are — or that they are used to assassinate people and for surveillance. We're getting a battalion of 500 drone specialists coming to Kaneohe Marine Corps Air Station — and Hawai`i has been chosen by the FAA to be a drone “test bed” for research, testing and certification.

...We'll continue to concentrate on stopping drone warfare and drone surveillance through the months of April and May as part of the national Campaign (see the national website at www.worldcantwait.net).  Join us in leafleting outside of the talk by Bill McKibben on climate change on Thursday evening, April 24th.

Cheers for the Condoleeza Rice Protesters

From With creative ambiguity, Condoleezza Rice defends torture tactics(Minnesota Post 4/18):

Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice didn’t mention torture in her brief visit to the University of Minnesota Thursday, but a lot of other people did, and Rice did perhaps discuss the issue with creative ambiguity and defend her role.
Protesting Condi Rice

Place Your Order for Striking Painted Banners for May 23: Global Day of Action to Close Guantánamo and End Indefinite Detention

Ghaleb al Bihani has spent a third of his life at Guantanamo. See Pardiss Kebriaei discussing how he has been fighting to be charged, or released.
On Friday May 23, 2014 activists around the world will boldly communicate our aim of freeing our brothers held in bondage at Guantanamo. To this end, Deb Van Poolen will produce as many customized banners as possible to be used by any groups which request them at the May 23 actions.

For the May 23 actions around the world, Deb is hoping to paint several large portraits (size of a single bed sheet) of our brothers held in Guantanamo. When our brothers' faces are held up within a sea of orange jumpsuits they command public’s attention in a different way than words do.   As passersby gaze for even a few seconds into the eyes of those human faces, their core emotions might be directly accessed by the images. The men pictured on the banners plead to their viewers:  “I am a human being who wants to be free.”

The banners stating demands such as “Make Guantanamo History” and “Close Guantanamo Now” are also useful for communicating a very clear message and Deb will also paint these banners. Deb has painted several “Make Guantanamo History” banners with a powerful image as a backdrop. Barbed wire is intertwined into the words “Make Guantanamo”, whereas the barbed wire has disappeared from the word “History”.  Orange birds sit on the barbed wire and some take flight around the word "History."
Deb is asking for an $80 plus shipping per banner donation for each banner.

To order banners for your group, please contact Deb Van Poolen.
Shaker Aamer banner
Above, Shaker Aamer banner; photo by Witness Against Torture
banner
Share this message:
Tweet Facebook
Thanks to New & Continuing Sustainers

Over the last month, we heard from supporters, new and longer term, how much they depend on World Can't Wait for this newsletter; for worldcantwait.net, for organizing events and protests... and most of all, for pushing forward on the mission to stop the crimes of your government.

The goal we set for sustainers was met to 125%. We'll make good use of the funds, with your continued support. 

Donate Now
— CALENDAR —
Saturday April 26 New York City
Full Disclosure: An Honest Commemoration of the American War in Vietnam
Judson Memorial Church 55 Washington Square South from 5pm-9pm
With Camillo Mac Bica, Jeff Cohen, Patrick McCann, Michael McPhearson, George Packard, Susan Schnall, Margaret Stevens, Debra Sweet.
Music by Rebel Diaz

Sponsored by
Veterans For Peace and Iraq Veterans Against the War
Tuesday April 29 Berkeley CA
Ground the Drones
World Can't Wait will display a 1/5-scale replica of Obama's 'Reaper' drone outside Berkeley City Hall in support of Peace and Justice Commission provisions to outlaw
'extrajudicial targeted killings of foreign nationals and U.S. citizens, militarization of local police agencies,' and vast surveillance of billions of people.
'Old' City Hall
2134 Martin Luther King Jr. Way Berkeley, CA 5:00 pm

Tuesday May 6 New Brunswick NJ
Protest Condoleezza Rice at Rutgers
5:30 pm Teach-in protesting invite to Condoleezza Rice to give the Rutgers University Commencement on May 18.  Rutgers University Student Activities Center, New Brunswick, NJ, followed by a screening of the Academy Award winning documentary, "Taxi to The Dark Side." Details
here. Cheers to Rutgers University Faculty for opposing honors for Condoleezza Rice (more here).
Debra Sweet, Director, The World Can't Wait

On The 40th Anniversary Of The Start of Still-Born Portuguese Revolution

 

Peter Paul Markin comment:  

As every leftist militant knows, or should know, and knows to our sorrow deep-going revolutions, or potential revolutions, social revolutions in this epoch, occur rather less frequently than we would like. But they do occur, or conditions are such that they can occur. In my lifetime I have seen many such promising opportunities go by the wayside. Portugal in 1974 after the overthrown of the longtime dictator and when I will nothing but a neophyte Marxist is a strong case in point. Certainly conditions were ripe and fluid enough for a social revolution there and the army was split. But those conditions, as the great Russian revolutionary Leon Trotsky commented on in many of his works, most notably The History Of The Russian Revolution and Lessons of October, don’t last forever. Nor can the right revolutionary strategy be promulgated by plucking it from one’s thumb. So yes, forty years later we can attest to the fact of far and few revolutionary upheavals but we can also learn some lessons too. Be ready.
The Class Struggle Continues….On The First Anniversary Of the Murderous Bangladesh Factory Collapse Fire

 

Some events, some occurrences in the class struggle, should be etched deeply into the minds of every leftist pro-working militant and supporter. The events around the 2013 Bangladesh factory collapse like around the infamous Triangle Factory fire of 1913 in America cry out for vengeance. If the capitalists involved in making policy at either site were no less blood-thirsty for profits than the rest of their class they nevertheless stand in the forefront for that motive which had wreaked more lives than can be counted in capitalism’s now several hundred year tenure as the major mode of production on this good green earth. Time to put such a system into the dustbin of history-for good.        

 

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

The Class Struggle Continues... May Day 2014 In Boston

 
 
 
The Class Struggle Continues... May Day 2014 In Boston

 
 
 
 
    
 
 
Boston May Day Committee
April 10
 

May 1st International Day of Workers' Right March and Rally

Thursday, May 1, 2014 - 4:30pm to 6:30pm

Marches meet in Everett, East Boston and Revere and end with a Rally at Chelsea City Hall 500 Broadway
From The Marxist Archives -The Revolutionary History Journal-Nicola Di Bartolomeo (1901–1946)
 
From The Pen Of Leon Trotsky- On The 70th Anniversary Of His Death- The Comintern and the GPU:The Attempted Assassination of May 24 (August 1940)

Markin comment:

The name Leon Trotsky hardly needs added comment from this writer. After Marx, Engels and Lenin, and in his case it is just slightly after, Trotsky is our heroic leader of the international communist movement. I would argue, and have in the past, that if one were looking for a model of what a human being would be like in our communist future Leon Trotsky, warts and all, is the closest approximation that the bourgeois age has produced. No bad, right?

Note: For this 70th anniversary memorial I have decided to post articles written by Trotsky in the 1930s, the period of great defeats for the international working class with the rise of fascism and the disorientations of Stalinism beating down on it. This was a time when political clarity, above all, was necessary. Trotsky, as a simple review of his biographical sketch will demonstrate, wore many hats in his forty years of conscious political life: political propagandist and theoretician; revolutionary working class parliamentary leader; razor-sharp journalist ( I, for one, would not have wanted to cross swords with him. I would still be bleeding); organizer of the great October Bolshevik revolution of 1917; organizer of the heroic and victorious Red Army in the civil war against the Whites in the aftermath of that revolution; seemingly tireless Soviet official; literary and culture critic: leader of the Russian Left Opposition in the 1920s; and, hounded and exiled leader of the International Left Opposition in the 1930s.

I have decided to concentrate on some of his writings from the 1930s for another reason as well. Why, with such a resume to choose from? Because, when the deal went down Leon Trotsky’s work in the 1930s, when he could have taken a political dive, I believe was the most important of his long career. He, virtually alone of the original Bolshevik leadership (at least of that part that still wanted to fight for international revolution), had the capacity to think and lead. He harnessed himself to the hard, uphill work of that period (step back, step way back, if you think we are “tilting at windmills” now). In that sense the vile Stalinist assassination in 1940, when Trotsky could still project years of political work ahead, is not among the least of Stalin’s crimes against the international working class. Had Trotsky lived another ten years or so, while he could not have “sucked” revolutions out of the ground, he could have stabilized a disoriented post-World War communist movement and we would probably have a far greater living communist movement today. Thanks for what you did do though, Comrade Trotsky.


Click below to link to the Revolutionary History Journal index.

http://www.marxists.org/history/etol/revhist/backissu.htm


Peter Paul Markin comment on this series:

This is an excellent documentary source for today’s leftist militants to “discover” the work of our forebears, particularly the bewildering myriad of tendencies which have historically flown under the flag of the great Russian revolutionary, Leon Trotsky and his Fourth International, whether one agrees with their programs or not. But also other laborite, semi-anarchist, ant-Stalinist and just plain garden-variety old school social democrat groupings and individual pro-socialist proponents.

Some, maybe most of the material presented here, cast as weak-kneed programs for struggle in many cases tend to be anti-Leninist as screened through the Stalinist monstrosities and/or support groups and individuals who have no intention of making a revolution. Or in the case of examining past revolutionary efforts either declare that no revolutionary possibilities existed (most notably Germany in 1923) or alibi, there is no other word for it, those who failed to make a revolution when it was possible.

The Spanish Civil War can serve as something of litmus test for this latter proposition, most infamously around attitudes toward the Party Of Marxist Unification's (POUM) role in not keeping step with revolutionary developments there, especially the Barcelona days in 1937 and by acting as political lawyers for every non-revolutionary impulse of those forebears. While we all honor the memory of the POUM militants, according to even Trotsky the most honest band of militants in Spain then, and decry the murder of their leader, Andreas Nin, by the bloody Stalinists they were rudderless in the storm of revolution. But those present political disagreements do not negate the value of researching the POUM’s (and others) work, work moreover done under the pressure of revolutionary times. Hopefully we will do better when our time comes.

Finally, I place some material in this space which may be of interest to the radical public that I do not necessarily agree with or support. Off hand, as I have mentioned before, I think it would be easier, infinitely easier, to fight for the socialist revolution straight up than some of the “remedies” provided by the commentators in these entries from the Revolutionary History journal in which they have post hoc attempted to rehabilitate some pretty hoary politics and politicians, most notably August Thalheimer and Paul Levy of the early post Liebknecht-Luxemburg German Communist Party. But part of that struggle for the socialist revolution is to sort out the “real” stuff from the fluff as we struggle for that more just world that animates our efforts. So read, learn, and try to figure out the
wheat from the chaff. 

******** 

 

Paolo Casciola

Nicola Di Bartolomeo (1901–1946)

This article first appeared under the title of 40 anni fa moriva un rivoluzionario: Nicola Di Bartolomeo (Fosco) (1901–1946), Il Comunista, Volume 7, nos. 20–21–22 (new series), February 1986, pp. 68–71, and was reproduced in a slightly altered form in the pamphlet Appunti di storia del trotskysmo italiano (1930–1945), pp. 35–43, published by the Centro Studi Pietro Tresso later in the year to commemorate the fortieth anniversary of his death. It has been translated by the author and edited by Revolutionary History. We have already published an English translation of Di Bartolomeo’s report from Barcelona to the French PCI, The Activity of the Bolshevik-Leninists in Spain and its Lessons in The Spanish Civil War: The View from the Left, Revolutionary History, Volume 4, nos. 1–2, Winter 1991–92, pp. 225–41. An obituary composed by the Political Bureau of the POC appeared at the time in Socialist Appeal, February 1946.


THE JANUARY of this year [1986] marks the fortieth anniversary of the death of Nicola Di Bartolomeo, one of the leading figures in the first 15 years of Italian Trotskyism. Known in the Trotskyist movement under the pseudonyms of Emiliano Vigo, Salino, Venturini, Roland and, in particular, Fosco, he was born in Resina (Naples) on 12 March 1901. At 14 he joined the Federazione Giovanile Socialista (Socialist Youth Federation). Later, at the time of the split of the Partito Socialista Italiano (Socialist Party of Italy) during January 1921 in Leghorn, he became a member of the Partito Comunista d’Italia (PCd’I). An engineering worker, he was sentenced to five years imprisonment in 1922 because of his anti-militarist activity. Released after serving four and a half years, in June 1926 he resumed his party activity, but was forced to flee abroad. After being convicted in his absence, the party helped to him to escape illegally to France in 1927. In Marseilles he led the Communist groups in the Mediterranean area until, after being arrested by the French police and threatened with expulsion from that country – which would have meant handing him over to the Italian Fascist police – the party moved him to Paris.
After the Third National Congress of the PCd’I (held in Lyons on 20–26 January 1926), which confirmed the victory of Gramsci’s ‘centrist-bureaucratic’ tendency, Fosco supported the positions of the Bordigist left wing, strongly criticised the Menshevik policy carried out in China by the bureaucratised Communist International, and a short while after his move to Paris, was eventually expelled from the party in 1928. A member of the Frazione di Sinistra (Left Faction) of the PCd’I, he moved closer to Trotskyism after making contact with the Nuova Opposizione Italiana (NOI), the International Secretariat of the International Left Opposition (ILO) and Trotsky himself. From 1930 he led a pro-Trotskyist tendency within the Bordigist faction arguing for the necessity of defending the USSR as a degenerated workers’ state, and championing the relevance of the Leninist tactic of the proletarian united front. In 1931, after six months of debate and political struggle, Fosco was expelled from the faction, and, in the August of that year, joined the NOI, the Italian Trotskyist organisation.
Whilst taking part in the life of the NOI, Fosco worked in several engineering factories of the Paris region, and threw himself deeply into the activities and struggles of the French working class movement both on the political level – he joined the Ligue Communiste, the French section of the ILO – and at a trade union level. So in March 1933 he was a delegate at the Eighth Congress of the twentieth Regional Federation of the CGTU. Within the NOI Fosco opposed the centrist leadership of Alfonso Leonetti, Paolo Ravazzoli and Mario Bavassano, going as far as to suggest the dissolution of the Italian Trotskyist organisation in February 1933. In his struggle against the Gramscite-ordinovista opportunism of the NOI leaders, he found himself ranged alongside Pietro Tresso (Blasco), though probably on rather different positions, to such an extent that the NOI expelled both him and Blasco at a meeting held on 9 April 1933. The intervention of Trotsky and the International Secretariat resulted in the ILO rescinding this in a plenum held at the end of May 1933. But the crisis in the NOI, which had been going on since its inception, only worsened in the following months.
The final act of the crisis began simultaneously with the abandonment of the old policy of reforming the Stalinist Comintern and the adoption of the perspective of a new international, a perspective developed by Trotsky in June–July 1933. About half of the NOI’s leaders opposed this turn. Two of them, Bavassano and Gaetana Teresa Recchia, broke in October 1933 with both the NOI and Trotskyism, and went over to a semi-Trotskyist, semi-Bordigist group, the Union Communiste. This event coincided with the de facto dissolution of the NOI which from June onwards ceased to have a bulletin of its own. In the spring of 1934 there was a rapprochement between Blasco and Leonetti, probably because of the fight that they both waged against the liquidationist positions of Ravazzoli. Strengthened by an influx of new forces – a group of oppositionists from within the PCd’I led by Angiolino Luchi (Metallo) and the long-time member of the PCd’I Veniero Spinelli (Spartaco Travagli), all of whom had been expelled from the party because of their opposition to the line of the Stalinist Comintern on Germany during the past few years – the Italian Trotskyists sought to reorganise their ranks. In March 1934 the first issue of La Verità (The Truth) appeared, the ‘Organ of the Italian Section of the International Communist League (Bolshevik-Leninist)’. But that episode, too, was short-lived, for after its second issue, dated April 1934, La Verità ceased publication.
The factor sparking off the new crisis was probably the end of the stage when the activity of the International Communist League (ICL) (the new name adopted by the ILO in September 1933 in accordance with its turn towards a Fourth International), which had been mainly oriented to left centrist groupings, shifted to an entrist tactic in the Social Democratic parties, a policy which had been put forward by Trotsky since February 1934. Faced with the failure of this attempt to reorganise the Italian Bolshevik-Leninists, Fosco started up a ‘unofficial’ Trotskyist group round the paper La Nostra Parola (Our Word), the first issue of which appeared in August 1934. In April 1935, carrying out the entry tactic called for by Trotsky, he led a majority of the members of the Gruppo La Nostra Parola into the Partito Socialista Italiano (the Italian Socialist Party led by Pietro Nenni, not to be confused with the Maximalist PSI led by Angelica Balabanova). Inside that party they found the Gruppo Bolscevico-Leninista (GBL) led by Blasco. But the two groups were unable to reach political agreement and so unite, which would have given them greater opportunities in their entrist work. The move to closer relations between the GBL and the Gruppo La Nostra Parola only started in early 1936, but had no result, as both groups were expelled from the PSI in January 1937 charged with carrying out Trotskyist faction work – an accusation that was probably the result of Stalinist pressure on the PSI.
After this the Gruppo La Nostra Parola practically ceased to exist. In fact, most of its members decided to go to Spain, where it seemed that a revolution was taking place. Fosco, who was living in France without papers and under false names, and who had already been arrested for this reason during the 1929 Red May Day in St Denis, was detected by the French police, and in April 1936 he had to flee to Spain, together with his companion, Virginia Gervasini. Upon his arrival in Barcelona, he was arrested on 5 May because he had no identity papers, but some time later he was released because of a campaign launched by the Anarcho-Syndicalist CNT and the centrist POUM.
From the autumn of 1935 the ICL had no section in Spain. The old Izquierda Comunista Española had merged with the Catalan Bloque Obrer i Camperol to form the POUM. However, the break by the old Spanish oppositionists from the Trotskyist movement did not occur until January 1936, when the POUM supported the electoral programme of the Popular Front. But after the fighting in Barcelona on 19 July – in which Fosco, side by side with POUM members, took part – and after the Conference for the Fourth International held at the end of July, there was a certain rapprochement between the Trotskyists and the POUM. On 5 August 1936 a delegation of the Trotskyist International Secretariat and the French Parti Ouvrier Internationaliste, led by Jean Rous, arrived in Barcelona. Their mission was to establish direct contact with the POUM and to offer it international aid. Rous soon got in touch with Fosco, whom the POUM Executive Committee had put in charge of the foreign volunteers who had come to fight in the POUM militias. During the same period the Gruppo Bolchevique-Leninista was formed in Barcelona, which declared its adherence to the Fourth International. It was mainly composed of foreign Trotskyists, and Fosco played a leading rôle within it over the whole period. He was also in touch with the dissident tendency created in France by Raymond Molinier.
From the first days after the arrival of the Trotskyist delegation, serious differences began to emerge between Rous and Fosco over the policy to be adopted towards the POUM. Discussions on the question only deepened the differences until Fosco, whom Rous accused of wanting to liquidate the Spanish group into the POUM, broke with the official Trotskyist movement, and was then expelled by the Spanish Bolshevik-Leninist organisation. Subsequently he strengthened his relations with Molinier, and worked at building an alternative Trotskyist group to the ‘official’ one. The Le Soviet group, or cell, the result of his efforts, was probably founded in the final months of 1936 or the following January. It produced a very modest French-language typewritten paper, Le Soviet, which was published until the end of 1937. The members of this group, though not joining the POUM, collaborated closely with it, and sharply polemicised against the Sección Bolshevique-Leninista of Spain, the new name of the Barcelona GBL.
In January 1938 Fosco returned to France, where he joined and was active in the Parti Communiste Internationaliste led by Molinier and Pierre Frank. He wrote a long series of articles on the events in Spain for the PCI’s paper, La Commune. After the founding conference of the Fourth International (held on 3 September in Périgny) he was a member of the ‘Molinierist’ delegation which started negotiations with the representatives of the US Trotskyist party, James P. Cannon and Max Shachtman, with the aim of unifying the two French groups. In December of that year Fosco, together with his comrades in Molinier’s PCI, entered the Parti Socialiste Ouvrier et Paysan (PSOP), a left-centrist grouping which came out of the crisis of French Social Democracy in June 1938. The new entrist experience was even shorter than the previous one, for on 3 June 1939 Fosco and his comrades were expelled from the PSOP at the request of Marceau Pivert, the undisputed leader of the party.
In view of the coming war, the PCI had decided to move some of its leadership abroad, including Molinier, Frank and Fosco. In July 1939 Fosco went to Brussels with a false passport, and subsequently reached England in order to arrange the move to London of the delegation of the French PCI with the British Molinierists. Back in Paris for a short stay, he was taken by surprise by the declaration of war. Fosco was then arrested whilst trying to get over the Franco-Belgian border, and was imprisoned at Lille. Following this, he was interned at the French concentration camp at Vernet in the Pyrenees. He was released after the armistice between Italy and France in June 1940. His freedom, however, was short-lived, as a little later he was arrested again and handed over by the French authorities to the Italian Fascist police. On 30 September 1940 Fosco was tried and sentenced to five years confino (deportation) on the Tremiti islands off Apulia in the Adriatic.
At the confino in the Tremiti islands, the prisoners were organised in collectives according to their political persuasion. When Fosco arrived there on 10 October 1940, he met Cristoforo Salvini (Tosca) who had been a member of both the Gruppo La Parola Nostra and the Le Soviet group, and who had fought in the POUM’s Lenin Column of international volunteers in Spain. With his help Fosco began to organise a Trotskyist nucleus of deportees. Later on this nucleus was strengthened by the arrival of a young revolutionary, Bruno Nardini, who had been active in the ranks of Molinier’s PCI, and who had been arrested in February 1940 in France, tried in May, and handed over to the Italian authorities in June. He arrived at the Tremiti Islands on 7 May 1942. Among the other comrades who belonged to the Fosco-led group, the Venetians Giuseppe Bortoluzzi and his companion Maria De Fanti deserve a mention.
The deportees were released on 22 August 1943, on the eve of the arrival of the Anglo-American forces. The tiny Fosco-led Trotskyist grouping adopted the name Centro Nazionale Provvisorio per la Costruzione del Partito Comunista Internazionalista (IV Internazionale) (Provisional National Centre for the Building of the International Communist Party [Fourth International]), and on 15 December 1943 they put up a poster in Bari bearing the title ‘To the Workers of the Whole World’. Despite the political weaknesses of that document, the Italian Trotskyists started intense propaganda activity in conditions that were extremely favourable for the polarisation of a left opposition outside the traditional reformist parties. But the comrades led by Fosco, who were concentrated in Naples, were unable to assess correctly and take advantage of the huge political opportunities they had. Instead of putting themselves forward as an independent political force able to attract to a revolutionary perspective the left centrist formations which opposed the opportunism and class collaborationism of Togliatti’s party, they chose to enter the Partito Socialista di Unità Proletaria (PSIUP) (Italian Socialist Party of Proletarian Unity), the new name adopted by the PSI in August 1943.
In October 1943 the Naples branch of the Italian Communist Party suffered the so-called ‘Montesanto split’, and one month later the left wing splitters started the reconstruction of the trade union movement by founding the ‘red’ Confederazione Generale del Lavoro which was led by the long-serving supporter of the Bordigists, Enrico Russo. Fosco, who officially represented the PSIUP inside the red CGL, became one of its leaders and put forward left positions within its ranks. On 29 December 1943, at the first congress of the rebuilt trade union leagues, he was appointed as a member of the Executive Committee of the Neapolitan Chamber of Labour. In January 1944 Fosco went to Bari to attend the second National Council of the PSIUP as the delegate of the Socialist exiles. At about the same time he also took part in a trade union congress at Bari organised by the Stalinists in order to liquidate the red CGL, and there he moved a motion of his own in favour of trade union unity, which was carried, thus thwarting the efforts of the bureaucrats. At the Salerno Congress of the ‘red’ CGL in February 1944, Fosco, as a delegate from the Torre Annunziata Chamber of Labour, denounced the anti-working class economic policy pursued by Badoglio’s government, and argued for the necessity of a ‘reconstruction’ which would be to the advantage of the toilers and not of capitalism, adding that trade union unity should only be reached on a class struggle platform. The motion that he moved (which was carried unanimously) called for a radical transformation of society through the socialisation of the major means of production and exchange. Immediately after the ‘Rome Pact’ and the founding of the Confederazione Generale Italiana del Lavoro (CGIL), despite the PCI’s manoeuvres against the ‘red’ CGL, Fosco supported the latter joining the CGIL, arguing for the necessity not to hinder trade union unity. In the same period he was expelled from the PSIUP.
After his release from the confino, Fosco had tried to establish contact with the Fourth International. In the first months of 1944 he got in touch with an American sailor who was close to the Workers Party, the organisation created by Shachtman after his expulsion from the Fourth International. Subsequently Fosco contacted other Trotskyists in uniform, Charles Curtiss, a leader of the US Socialist Workers Party, and Charles Van Gelderen, a member of the British Revolutionary Communist Party. It was the latter who helped Fosco most. In about the middle of 1944, after he heard that posters had appeared in Foggia supporting the Fourth International, Van Gelderen obtained false passes to cross the Anglo-American zone of occupation to Foggia, and went there with Fosco in July 1944. There they met Romeo Mangano, the leader of the old Apulian Federation of the PCd’I which had remained on left Bordigist positions. The Federation, which had put up the posters for a Fourth International, was completely ignorant of the existence of the Trotskyist Fourth International which had been founded six years before.
Fosco immediately forged a political alliance with the Apulian Federation, and in February 1945 the Trotskyist group that he led merged with the Federation to form the Partito Operaio Comunista (Bolscevico-Leninista) (POC[B-L]). The agreement with the Apulians was not preceded by any preliminary deep-going discussions, and the resulting fusion was carried out on an essentially formal organisational basis. From its beginnings such an initial misunderstanding was deeply felt by the new party, and kept it in permanent crisis. The POC(B-L), which had been recognised as the Italian Section of the Fourth International towards the middle of 1945, was eventually expelled at the International’s Second World Congress (held in April 1948 in Paris) because of the triumph within its ranks of the Bordigist positions of the old Mangano-led Apulian Federation.
Fosco, however, did not take part in the political struggle that counterposed the Trotskyist minority of the POC(B-L) to the ultra-left positions of the Apulians. Death overtook him suddenly on 10 January 1946 owing to a trivial illness which could not be dealt with because of lack of medicine. The symbol of the Fourth International was engraved on his headstone.
Fosco’s passing was an irretrievable loss for the Trotskyist movement as a whole. Whatever his political mistakes, he was one of the very few experienced comrades of the Trotskyist ‘Old Guard’ who remained faithful to revolutionary ideas, after having survived unbelievable privations and difficulties, and the joint persecution of Stalinism, Fascism and the ‘democratic’ regimes. Fosco was part and parcel of that handful of men and women who swam against the stream – that revolutionary minority who sought to tear aside the darkness of the ‘midnight in the century’ with the torch of Bolshevism-Leninism. Comrades like him put fear into all the powerful, since their struggle was indissolubly linked to the cause of the exploited and the oppressed of the world. It is for working class youth of today to take up the banner for which he struggled and suffered, and make his memory live again in the hearts of all those who work and fight for a better world.