In
Honor Of The 95th Anniversary Of The Founding Of The Communist
International-Take One -In The Time Of
His Time
From
The Pen Of Frank Jackman
Billy Casey woke up in a sweat that early March 1919
night, woke up in a once again sweat that he had earned from his experiences as
a doughboy, an American doughboy in France now furloughed home to New York
City, awaiting medical discharge from that mustard gas explosion that had harried
his breathe ever since. Yes, he had had it rough overseas, had seen some stuff
and done some stuff he didn’t want to repeat to anybody, stuff that frankly no
man should be forced to do, and which he believed, or he came to believe, no
man would do even to an animal. He had put some of that behind him but still a
little corner would flare up on nights when he was excited and he was excited
this night and had been for the past few nights about big doings in Moscow
coming up in a few days (or since he wasn’t sure of the dates of the
conference, except early March, maybe had already occurred), about creating a
new organization to right the wrongs of this wicked old world.
See, Bill Casey had gotten “religion,” no not catholic-protestant-jewish-muslim
religion but the good word-the socialist word , the word that all workingmen, and
Bill Casey was nothing if not a working man, were brothers and that the robbers
of the world were the only ones who had benefited from the damn war “to end all
wars” over in Europe. And Bill had the
destroyed lungs to prove it was not him who had benefited. This new language had
been taught to him by a fellow soldier, a fellow doughboy, who had belonged to
the American Socialist Party before the war, before he passed away from failed
lungs in that French convalescent home Bill was assigned before coming back to
America. So when Bill got back to New York the first thing, well maybe not the
first, the first being to roll the pillows with his long-suffering girlfriend,
Rosie, also nothing if not a daughter of the working class, he marched down to
the American Socialist Party office in Greenwich Village (that is where his
deceased comrade told him to go since that is where he had been a member) and
joined right up.
Now Bill Casey had never been much for the books,
and the materials that he received from the local secretary when he paid his
dues and received his membership card seemed a lot more convoluted that the way
his hospital pal explained it, but he plugged at it for a while, and that along
with the weekly lectures helped him along. And he was going to be in full need
of that knowledge because he had landed on his socialist arse (his expression)
right at a time when the whole socialist movement was in turmoil. And the big
event was the Russian Revolution of 1917 and the fall-out from that event. See
Bill’s pal had only known the American Socialist Party before that revolution,
and since most of the party had been anti-war before his pal joined up to fight
he didn’t know the stuff that was going on between the different
factions-basically to stick with the Socialist International or go with the new
one, the one that said that the old one was done for and a new Communist
International had to be formed to fight for revolutions everywhere. Heady stuff.
Stuff to make Bill sweat in anticipation.
And that is where the martyred James Connolly,
Bill’s hero from the Easter 1916 uprising in Dublin and a man who had been
executed by the bloody British for his part in it, came into it. Or kind of
came into it. See the fight over who were the real revolutionaries, the
Europeans or the Russians, basically was hard to figure. That is when he met a
guy, an Irish guy, a comrade, from one of the factions, Jim Cannon, who put him
straight, who told him that if he wanted to get back for that dirty deal he
received in France by his own government he had to go with the Russian Bolsheviks
and the new international they were trying to form. And Bill Casey respected
Jim Cannon, respected the big heavy-drinking Irishman from out in the sticks of
Kansas and so he cast his fate with Jim and his communist brethren. And you
know what else Jim said to him- he, Bill Casey, should say at meetings and out on the Union
Square and Village soapboxes to one and all what he saw and did in France so
people would know, know better the next time the government tried to stuff a
war down their throats. Bill Casey didn’t know if he could so that, could avoid
some tough night sweats thinking about doing it, but he thought if it stopped
some young guy from joining up maybe he would at that…
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