Workers Vanguard No. 1017
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8 February 2013
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TROTSKY
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LENIN
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The Early Communist Party and the Fight for Black Liberation
(Quote of the Week)
In the face of the traditional indifference to black oppression
among American socialists, the Bolsheviks struggled to convince Communists in
the U.S. to recognize the special oppression of black people as a matter of
strategic importance. In 1920, at the Second Congress of the Communist
International held in Soviet Russia, Bolshevik leader V.I. Lenin personally
urged that American Communist John Reed speak on the “Negro Question.” Reed’s
speech and the Communist International’s fight against special oppression are
carried forward in the Spartacist League program.
If we consider Negroes an enslaved and oppressed people, we
confront two problems: on the one hand, that of a strong racial and social
movement; on the other, that of a powerful proletarian labor movement that is
rapidly gaining class consciousness. Negroes have no demands for national
independence. All movements among the Negroes aiming for separate national
existence fail, as did the Back to Africa movement of a few years ago. They
consider themselves first of all Americans at home in the United States. That
makes it very much simpler for Communists.
For American Communists the only correct policy toward the Negroes
should be to see them primarily as workers. Despite the Negroes’ backwardness,
the tasks posed for agricultural workers and tenant farmers in the South are the
same as those we must solve with respect to the white agricultural proletariat.
Communist propaganda work can be carried on among Negroes working in industry in
the North. In both sections of the country every effort must be made to organize
Negroes into common labor unions with the whites. That is the best and fastest
way to break down race prejudice and foster class solidarity.
But the Communists must not stand aloof from the Negro movement for
social and political equality, which is spreading quickly among the Negro masses
today as race consciousness grows rapidly. Communists must use this movement to
point out the futility of bourgeois equality and the necessity of social
revolution—not only to free all workers from servitude but also as the only
means of freeing the Negroes as an enslaved people.
—John Reed at Second Congress of the Communist International,
Session 4, 26 July 1920, reprinted in John Riddell (ed.), Workers of the
World and Oppressed Peoples, Unite! Volume One (1991)
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