Working Class Calendar

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!workingclasscalendar@lemmy.world is a working class calendar inspired by the now (2023-06-25) closed reddit r/aPeoplesCalendar aPeoplesCalendar.org, where we can post daily events.

Rules

All the requirements of the code of conduct of the instance must be followed.

Community Rules

1. It's against the rules the apology for fascism, racism, chauvinism, imperialism, capitalism, sexism, ableism, ageism, and heterosexism and attitudes according to these isms.

2. The posts should be about past working class events or about the community.

3. Cross-posting is welcomed.

4. Be polite.

5. Any language is welcomed.

Lemmy

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
1
 
 

Annie Mae Aquash (1945 - 1975)

Tue Mar 27, 1945

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Annie Mae Aquash (Mi'kmaq name "Naguset Eask"), born on this day in 1945, was a First Nations activist and Mi'kmaq tribal member from Nova Scotia, Canada who played a prominent role in the American Indian Movement (AIM).

In the 1960s, she moved to Boston and joined other First Nations and indigenous Americans who were focused on education and organizing against police brutality against urban indigenous peoples. Aquash participated in several key events, including the 1973 occupation of Wounded Knee at the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, the 1972 Trail of Broken Treaties, and the occupation of the Department of Interior headquarters in Washington, DC.

On February 24th, Aquash's body was found in Wanblee on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota, murdered by an execution-style gunshot. In his book "In the Spirit of Crazy Horse", Peter Matthiessen writes that the FBI and CIA had previously disseminated rumours that she had been an informant and that Aquash had claimed an FBI agent threatened her life.

On the matter of Aquash's death, Leonard Peltier stated, "I know that [the FBI's] behavior hasn't changed just as I know that Anna Mae was not an informant."


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Sergei Kirov (1886 - 1934)

Sat Mar 27, 1886

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Image: A photo portrait of Sergei Kirov, unknown date and location [Spartacus-Educational]


Sergei Kirov, born on this day in 1886, was Bolshevik revolutionary and Soviet politician. In 1934, Kirov was assassinated by an ex-Party member, the catalyst for a series of purges and state repression led by Stalin, sometimes called the "Great Purge".

Sergei Kirov (1886 - 1934) began his career as an engineer, becoming after in politics after moving to the Siberian city Tomsk, where he became a Marxist and joined the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP) in 1904.

After the RSDLP split, Kirov followed the Bolshevik faction. During the Russian Civil War, he became commander of the Bolshevik military administration in Astrakhan, and fought for the Red Army until 1920.

In 1921, Kirov became First Secretary of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan, the Bolshevik party organization in Azerbaijan. Kirov was a loyal supporter of Joseph Stalin, the successor of Vladimir Lenin, and in 1926 he was rewarded with command of the Leningrad party organization.

On December 1st, 1934, Kirov was shot dead in his office by Leonid Nikolaev, a disaffected and expelled ex-Party member. Kirov was buried in the Kremlin Wall necropolis in a state funeral, with Stalin and other prominent members of the CPSU personally carrying his coffin.

Stalin called for swift punishment of the traitors and those found negligent in Kirov's death, announcing that Nikolaev had been put up to the job by "Zinovievites" (supporters of Grigorii Zinoviev, who had been ousted as Leningrad party boss in 1926).

Nikolayev was swiftly found guilty and executed on December 29th, 1934. Arrests of Zinoviev, Lev Kamenev and many of their associates followed, as did summary executions of alleged White conspirators.

The circumstances of Kirov's death have been the source of great speculation and conspiracy, particularly by Soviet dissidents. One conspiracy, alleged by Nikita Khrushchev and anti-Soviet defectors such as Alexander Orlov and Alexander Barmine, is that Stalin himself secretly ordered the assassination, fearing Kirov as a political rival and requiring a justification to begin mass purges.

Despite these claims, at least two official investigations, one in the 1960s and another in 1989, failed to establish Stalin's or the NKVD's complicity in Kirov's assassination.

Many cities, streets, and factories were named or renamed after Kirov in his honor, including the town of Kirov (formerly Vyatka).

"Whenever there is a conflict between precept and example, the latter wins because deeds speak louder than our words."

- Sergei Kirov


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Food Not Bombs Serves First Meal (1981)

Thu Mar 26, 1981

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Image: Food Not Bombs in Harvard Square, 1981 [foodnotbombs.net]


On this day in 1981, Food Not Bombs shared their first meals outside the Federal Reserve Bank during the stock holders meeting of the Bank of Boston to protest the exploitation of capitalism and investment in the nuclear industry.

Food Not Bombs is a loose-knit group of independent collectives, sharing free vegan and vegetarian food with others. Food Not Bombs' ideology is that corporate and government priorities are skewed to allow hunger to persist in the midst of abundance.

As evidence of this, a large amount of the food served by the group is surplus food from grocery stores, bakeries, and markets that would otherwise go to waste (or, occasionally, has already been thrown away).


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Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire (1911)

Sat Mar 25, 1911

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Image: A photo of the factory on fire, taken March 25th, 1911. First published on front page of The New York World 1911-03-26 [Wikipedia]


On this day in 1911, the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire took place in New York City. Managers had locked the exits to prevent theft and unauthorized breaks; the fire killed 146 garment workers, mostly young immigrant girls. It was the deadliest industrial disaster in the history of the city, and one of the deadliest in U.S. history.

The fire caused the deaths of 146 garment workers - 123 women and girls and 23 men - who either burned to death, choked on smoke, or jumped to their deaths from high windows. Most of the victims were recent Italian and Jewish immigrant women and girls aged 14 to 23.

The death toll was high in part because the doors to the stairwells and exits were locked (a then-common practice to prevent workers from taking unauthorized breaks and to reduce theft). The incident led to legislation requiring improved factory safety standards and helped spur the growth of the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union (ILGWU), which fought for better working conditions for sweatshop workers.

The owners (who survived the fire by fleeing to the roof when it began), were acquitted of manslaughter charges, but found liable for wrongful death. Although they had to pay out $75 per victim killed, their insurance provider paid them out $400 per casualty. Two years later, one of the owners was arrested and fined $20 for again locking his doors during factory hours.

A week later, on April 2nd, 1911, Rose Schneiderman, a prominent socialist, feminist, and union activist, spoke to workers, saying this about the incident: "I would be a traitor to these poor burned bodies if I came here to talk good fellowship. We have tried you good people of the public and we have found you wanting...I know from my experience it is up to the working people to save themselves. The only way they can save themselves is by a strong working-class movement."


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Rudolf Rocker (1873 - 1958)

Tue Mar 25, 1873

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Johann Rudolf Rocker, born on this day in 1873, was an anarchist theorist, historian, and activist, known for critical anarchist texts such as "Anarcho-Syndicalism: Theory and Practice" (1938) and "Pioneers of American Freedom" (1949).

Though often described as an anarcho-syndicalist, Rocker was a self-professed anarchist without adjectives, believing that anarchist schools of thought represented "only different methods of economy" and that the first objective for anarchists was "to secure the personal and social freedom of men".

Rocker was involved in helping organize a number of labor strikes and represented the federation at the International Anarchist Congress in Amsterdam in 1907. Rocker was well-read in his lifetime - his readers included figures Thomas Mann, Albert Einstein, Herbert Read, and Bertrand Russell.

"Anarchism is no patent solution for all human problems, no Utopia of a perfect social order, as it has so often been called, since on principle it rejects all absolute schemes and concepts."

- Rudolf Rocker


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Vine Deloria Jr (stahmaxffcqankienulh.supabase.co)
 
 

Vine Deloria Jr. (1933 - 2005)

Sun Mar 26, 1933

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Vine Deloria Jr., born on this day in 1933, was an indigenous theologian, historian, professor, and activist who authored "Custer Died for Your Sins: An Indian Manifesto" (1969). The book helped bring national attention to Native American issues, the same year as the Alcatraz-Red Power Movement.

Deloria also worked on the legal case that led to the historic "Boldt Decision" of the United States District Court for the Western District of Washington. This decision granted legal fishing rights to Native Americans in Washington state, and was used as legal precedent for other lawsuits that sought to restore rights granted in Native American treaties.

From 1964 to 1967, Deloria also served as executive director of the National Congress of American Indians, increasing tribal membership from 19 to 156. Beginning in 1977, Deloria was a board member of the National Museum of the American Indian, which now has buildings in both New York City and Washington, DC.

"Until America begins to build a moral record in her dealings with the Indian people she should not try to fool the rest of the world about her intentions on other continents."

- Vine Deloria Jr.


7
 
 

NATO Bombing of Yugoslavia Begins (1999)

Wed Mar 24, 1999

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Image: A man leads his daughter away from destroyed buildings after NATO air strikes hammered the center of Pristina, the Kosovo capital. Photo credit to Goran Tomasevic/Reuters. [rferl.org]


On this day in 1999, the first NATO airstrikes of Yugoslavia began, initiating a wave of violence that killed 1,500 people, damaging hospitals, schools, cultural monuments, and private businesses alongside military targets. The bombings lasted until June 10th of that year.

The North Atlantic Treaty Organization's (NATO) bombing campaign was its first military action taken without the endorsement of the U.N. Security Council. James Byron Bissett, former Canadian ambassador to Yugoslavia, called the campaign a "war crime", and Noam Chomsky referred to it as an act of "terrorism".

Supporters for the campaign claimed the bombing was necessary to stop a genocide of ethnic Albanians in Kosovo and to remove Slobodan Milošević from power, although claims made by the Clinton administration along these lines were later found to be highly exaggerated.

Approximately 500 of the people killed were civilians, and the bombs damaged many civilian structures alongside legitimate military targets. Chomsky has argued that the main objective of the NATO intervention was to integrate Yugoslavia into the Western neoliberal social and economic system.

In 2000, Michael Parenti authored "To Kill a Nation: The Attack on Yugoslavia", which argues that the bombing was predicated on capitalist rather than humanitarian interests.


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Dorothy Height (1912 - 2010)

Sun Mar 24, 1912

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Dorothy Irene Height, born on this day in 1912, was an activist part of the "Big Six" of civil rights leaders (including MLK and John Lewis) who focused on issues facing black women, including unemployment, education, and voting rights.

Height is credited as the first leader in the civil rights movement to recognize inequality for women and African Americans as problems that should be considered as a whole, and was the president of the National Council of Negro Women (NCNW) for forty years.

While working with both the Young Women's Christian Association and NCNW, Height participated in the civil rights movement and was considered a member of the "Civil Rights Six" (a group with up to nine members, including Martin Luther King, Jr., James Farmer, John Lewis, A. Philip Randolph, Roy Wilkins, and Whitney Young). In his autobiography, civil rights leader James Farmer noted that Height's role in the "Big Six" was frequently ignored by the press for sexist reasons.

"If the times aren't ripe, you have to ripen the times."

- Dorothy Height


9
 
 

Bhagat Singh Executed (1931)

Mon Mar 23, 1931

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Image: Photograph of Bhagat Singh taken in 1929, when he was 21 years old [Wikipedia]


On this day in 1931, Marxist Indian revolutionary Bhagat Singh was executed by the colonial British government at 29 years of age after assassinating a police officer and exploding two bombs in a government building.

Singh was an avid reader of Bakunin, Marx, Lenin, and Trotsky. He was also openly critical of Mahatma Gandhi, having become disillusioned with his non-violent tactics after Gandhi called off the non-cooperation movement.

In December 1928, Bhagat Singh and an associate fatally shot a 21-year-old British police officer, John Saunders, in retaliation for the death of Lala Lajpat Rai, a popular Indian nationalist leader who died after being attacked by police. On the run from the police, Singh was arrested when he, along with Batukeshwar Dutt, exploded two improvised bombs inside the Central Legislative Assembly in Delhi, showered leaflets onto the legislators below, and allowed the authorities to arrest them.

Awaiting trial, Singh gained public sympathy after he joined fellow defendant Jatin Das in a hunger strike, demanding better prison conditions for Indian prisoners. Das died from starvation in September 1929. Singh was convicted and hanged in March, 1931. Four days before his execution, Singh refused to sign a letter drafted for him that would appeal for clemency.

"Non-violence is backed by the theory of soul-force in which suffering is courted in the hope of ultimately winning over the opponent. But what happens when such an attempt fail to achieve the object? It is here that soul-force has to be combined with physical force so as not to remain at the mercy of tyrannical and ruthless enemy."

- Bhagat Singh


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Norris-La Guardia Act (1932)

Wed Mar 23, 1932

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Image: Photo collage of U.S. Congressman George W. Norris (left) and NYC Mayor Fiorello H. LaGuardia (right) [Wikipedia]


The Norris-La Guardia Act, passed on this day in 1932, is a U.S. labor law that bans yellow-dog contracts, federal injunctions against non-violent labor disputes, and employers from interfering in workers' attempts to form a union. Yellow-dog contracts are binding agreements where employers ban workers from unionizing as part of the hiring process.

The title comes from the names of the sponsors of the legislation: Senator George W. Norris of Nebraska (shown left) and Representative Fiorello H. La Guardia of New York (shown right). The law helped mitigate decades of anti-union activity, enabled in part by the precedent of court cases like In re Debs (1895), which affirmed the right of the federal government to end the Pullman Strike with an injunction.

The Norris-La Guardia Act was a precursor to the sweeping National Labor Relations Act of 1935, which established the National Labor Relations Board and is considered one of the most important pieces of labor legislation in the 20th century United States.


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American Protective League Founded (1917)

Thu Mar 22, 1917

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The American Protective League, founded on this day in 1917, was a volunteer organization of U.S. citizens that collaborated with the government to identify, raid, and spy on anarchist, anti-war, and other left-wing organizations.

On this day in 1917, the APL was granted formal approval to act a deputized, anti-communist agency from the Department of Justice, later receiving authorization from the Attorney General to carry on its letterhead the words "Organized with the Approval and Operating under the Direction of the United States Department of Justice, Bureau of Investigation."

Teams of APL members conducted numerous raids and surveillance activities aimed at those who failed to register for the draft and at German immigrants who were suspected of sympathies for Germany.

The APL was also accused of illegally detaining citizens associated with anarchist, labor, and pacifist movements. Thousands of APL members joined authorities in New York City for three days of checking registration cards, resulting in more than 75,000 arrests.

In 1918, the Attorney General gave a favorable statement about the APL, saying "it is safe to say that never in its history has the nation been so thoroughly policed as at the present time." The APL formally disbanded a few months after the conclusion of World War I.


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Emilio Aguinaldo (1869 - 1964)

Mon Mar 22, 1869

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Emilio Aguinaldo, born on this day in 1869, was a Filipino revolutionary, politician, and military leader who became the first President of the Philippines (1899 - 1901), and the first president of an Asian constitutional republic.

In his mid-20s, Aguinaldo joined the "Katipunan", a secret organization dedicated to ousting Spanish colonizers. His military career against the Spanish began in August 1896 with the Katipunan-led Philippine Revolution.

Aguinaldo would go on to lead Philippine forces against multiple colonizing forces - first against Spain in the Philippine Revolution (1896 - 1898), again in the Spanish-American War (1898), and finally against the United States during the Philippine-American War (1899-1901).

Aguinaldo was involved in multiple controversies as a government leader, most notably his role in the execution of Andrés Bonifacio (1863 - 1897), the leader of the Katipunan group. Bonifacio was a prominent revolutionary and political dissident to Aguinaldo's authority. The trial in which he was convicted is now seen as dubious.

Although Aguinaldo was the first president of an Asian constitutional republic, this government was dissolved by invading U.S. forces, and he was forced to swear an oath of allegiance to the U.S. Aguinaldo was 77 when the United States finally recognized Philippine independence in the Treaty of Manila on July 4th, 1946, in accordance with the Tydings–McDuffie Act of 1934.


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Pat Finucane (1949 - 1989)

Mon Mar 21, 1949

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Image: A photo of Pat Finucane on the phone, unknown year and author [irishecho.com]


Pat Finucane, born on this day in 1949, was an Irish criminal defense lawyer who defended prominent IRA activists such as Bobby Sands. Finucane was assassinated in 1989 by loyalist forces acting in collusion with the British state. No member of state security forces has been prosecuted for his murder.

Patrick Finucane was born on March 21st, 1949 to a prominent Republican family in Belfast. Three of his brothers were Irish Republican Army (IRA) members, two of whom would be imprisoned by the British government.

Finucane himself was a criminal defense lawyer. Although he had represented both Republicans and loyalists, Finucane's most notable client was likely Bobby Sands, a member of the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) who died on hunger strike while imprisoned at HM Prison Maze in Northern Ireland.

On February 12th, 1989, while eating a Sunday meal at home with his wife and three children, Finucane was shot fourteen times by two gunmen. Twelve shots were to his face. The loyalist paramilitary Ulster Defence Association took credit for his murder, alleging without evidence that Finucane was a high-ranking member of the IRA.

Following a 2001 peace agreement, the British government promised to consider opening an inquiry into Finucane's death, appointing an international judge to review his case. The government declined to open an inquiry, however, after the judge found evidence of state collusion.

In 2004, Ken Barrett, a member of the Ulster Defence Association, pled guilty to Finucane's murder. The identity of the second gunman remains unknown.

In 2011, British Prime Minister David Cameron met with Pat Finucane's family and admitted to state collusion in his assassination, but as of February 2022 no member of the British security services has been prosecuted.

On November 30th, 2020, Brandon Lewis, the Northern Ireland Secretary, rejected calls for a public inquiry into Finucane's killing.


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Slavoj Žižek (1949 - )

Mon Mar 21, 1949

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Image: Slovenian philosopher Slavoj Žižek 2015 at the Bookfair of Leipzig presenting his new book "Some Blasphemic Reflexions" in 2015. Photo by Amrei-Marie [Wikipedia]


Slavoj Žižek, born on this day in 1949, is a Slovenian communist philosopher and public intellectual.

Žižek grew up in Ljubljana, PR Slovenia, Yugoslavia, born into a middle-class family. His father was an economist and civil servant, while his mother was an accountant in a state enterprise.

As a youth, Žižek was influenced by Western cultural, in particular film, English detective novels, German Idealism, French structuralism, and the French psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan. He achieved a master's degree and Doctorate in philosophy in 1975 and 1981, respectively.

Žižek was politically active in Slovenia, co-founding the Slovenian Liberal Demorcratic Party and running for one of four seats that comprised the collective Slovenian presidency in 1990. He came in fifth.

Žižek is a public intellectual of international renown, famous for his political and cultural commentary. Among his works are "The Sublime Object of Ideology" (1989), "The Pervert's Guide to Cinema" (2006), and "The Pervert's Guide to Ideology" (2012). Žižek's idiosyncratic presentation style and fame have led some to call him "the Elvis of cultural theory".

Žižek was also a participant in the Occupy Wall Street protests, addressing other protesters in a speech in Zuccotti Park given on November 2011.

"I already am eating from the trash can all the time. The name of this trash can is ideology. The material force of ideology makes me not see what I am effectively eating."

- Slavoj Žižek, in "The Pervert's Guide to Ideology" (2012)


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Xiang Jingyu Arrested (1928)

Tue Mar 20, 1928

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On this day in 1928, Xiang Jingyu, an early feminist pioneer and revolutionary in the Communist Party of China, was arrested by French officials and turned over to the Nationalist government, which executed her on May 1st that year.

Xiang Jingyu (1895 - 1928) was politically radicalized when she attended the Montargis Women's University in France. While studying there, Jingyu read many of Marx's works and became a communist. In 1923, Xiang Jingyu was elected as a Central Committee member and became the first secretary of the "Women's Movement Committee".

In 1924, she led a strike involving about 10,000 female workers from silk factories and later founded the "Committee of Women's Liberation", which trained many female cadres to oppose feudalism and imperialism.

On March 20th, 1928, Xiang Jingyu was arrested in the French Concession Sandeli in Wuhan, possibly due to the betrayal of members of her group to the police. The French officials turned her over to Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalist government in April. On May 1st, 1928, Xiang Jingyu was executed by Guomindang police. After her death, she became a martyr for the communist revolution in China.


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Ota Benga Passes (1916)

Mon Mar 20, 1916

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Image: Photograph of Ota Benga at the St. Louis World's Fair in 1904 [Wikipedia]


Ota Benga was a Mbuti man brought from his African homeland as a teen and displayed like an animal at the Bronx Zoo. After World War I interfered with his plans to return to Central Africa, Benga shot himself on this day in 1916.

When Ota was a teenager, his entire village, including his wife and two children, was slaughtered by the Force Publique, a private army created by Belgian King Leopold to enforce rubber production quotas. Benga was then kidnapped by slave traders and put to work in an agricultural village.

In 1904, Benga was freed by an American businessman Samuel Verner, who was under contract from the St. Louis World Fair to bring back African pygmies to be part of a human exhibition. Verner found Benga and negotiated his release from the slave traders for a pound of salt and a bolt of cloth. Verner recruited other Africans for the exhibit as well, and the group, including Benga, was brought to St. Louis in June 1904.

Two years later, Benga was hired by the Bronx Zoo to help take care of animals. After noticing that some visitors paid more attention to Benga than the animals, zoo officials "exhibited" him in the organization's Monkey House.

A group of black New York clergymen, led by Rev. James H. Gordon, demanded that he be freed. By the end of 1906, 23-year-old Benga was released to the custody of Rev. Gordon, who placed him in the New York City’s Howard Colored Orphan Asylum.

Benga began working at a local tobacco factory in Lynchburg, Virginia to pay for his journey back to Central Africa. After the outbreak of World War I, however, passenger ship travel became severely limited and he was unable to make the journey.

On March 20th, 1916, Ota Benga built a ceremonial fire and shot himself in the heart with a borrowed pistol. He was approximately 33 years old.


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Harlem Riot (1935)

Tue Mar 19, 1935

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Image: Harlem Riot headline, New York Daily News, March 20th, 1935 [blackpast.org]


On this day in 1935, a riot in Harlem began, sparked by rumors that a black Puerto Rican teenager was beaten by employees at a "five and dime" store, leading to what historian Jeffrey Stewart called "the first modern race riot".

That evening, a demonstration organized by the Young Communist League and a black group called the Young Liberators was held outside the store and, after someone threw a rock through the window, police began arresting speakers and trying to disperse the crowd. More general destruction of the store and other white-owned properties ensued. In the subsequent violence, 3 black people were killed, 125 were arrested, and 100 more injured.

An estimated $2 million in damages was caused to properties throughout the district, although black-owned homes and businesses were spared the worst of the destruction.

Sociologist Allen D. Grimshaw identified the Harlem Riot of 1935 as "the first manifestation of a 'modern' form of racial rioting", which he characterized as having destruction directed almost entirely at property, and violent clashes taking place between black people and police, as opposed to racial groups fighting directly.


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Gabriela Silang (1731 - 1763)

Mon Mar 19, 1731

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Image: A painting of Gabriela Silang by artist Carlito Rovira, showing her on horseback and wielding a saber [liberationnews.org]


Gabriela Silang, born on this day in 1731, was a Filipina revolutionary who led a revolt against Spanish colonizers after her husband's assassination, vowing to avenge his death. The Spanish captured Gabriela, executing her at age 32.

Gabriela married Diego Silang, an Ilocano resistance leader, in 1757. Diego was imprisoned after he suggested to the Spanish authorities that they abolish the tribute, colonialist tax, and replace Spanish functionaries with native people. Together, Diego and Gabriela resisted colonial rule, engaging in skirmishes with Spanish troops.

Gabriela took over the reins of her husband's revolutionary movement after his assassination on May 28th, 1763. She led Ilocano rebels for four months before being captured and executed on September 20th that year by the colonial government of the Spanish East Indies. Spanish forces executed her later that year, at age 32.

"Her undaunted determination, along with her skill and strength is what the people of the Philippines will never forget, and why she is regarded as the pioneering female Bayani. Today her courageous leadership became a symbol for the importance of women in Filipino society, and their struggle for liberation during colonization."

- Margarita Mansalay


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Unita Blackwell (1933 - 2019)

Sat Mar 18, 1933

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Unita Zelma Blackwell, born on this day in 1933, was an American civil rights activist who became the first black woman to be elected mayor in the state of Mississippi. Blackwell also served as a project director for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and helped organize voter drives for African Americans across Mississippi.

Blackwell was responsible for one of the first desegregation cases in Mississippi, filing a suit, Blackwell v. Issaquena County Board of Education, against the Issaquena County Board of Education after the principal suspended more than 300 black children - including her son - for wearing pins that depicted a black hand and a white hand clasped with the word "SNCC" below them.

Although the courts ruled that the students could not wear the pins, they also ruled that the school district in question must desegregate. Blackwell's son and approximately 50 other children boycotted the school because of its decision to not let the children wear the SNCC freedom pins.

As a result, Blackwell and some other activists in the community formed "Freedom Schools" in Issaquena County to resolve the issue. The Freedom Schools were popular and remained open until the school system finally integrated in 1970.

"Movements are not radical. Movements are the American way. A small group of abolitionists writing and speaking eventually led to the end of slavery. A few stirred-up women brought about women's voting. The Populist movement, the Progressive movement, the anti-Vietnam War movement, the women's movement - the examples go on and on of 'little people' getting together and telling the truth about their lives. They made our government act."

- Unita Blackwell


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Paris Refuses to Disarm (1871)

Sat Mar 18, 1871

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Image: A barricade in the Paris Commune, March 18th, 1871. [Wikipedia]


On this day in 1871, French soldiers refused orders from their superiors to disarm working class neighborhoods in Paris, arresting them and joining working class radicals in the revolution that would become the Paris Commune.

On the morning of March 18th, French soldiers members began attempting to remove cannons from working class neighborhoods in Paris, left there following the end of the Franco-Prussian War. As soldiers became surrounded by members of the National Guard, a popular Parisian militia with radical tendencies, the soldiers' superior officer, General Lecomte, ordered them to fire on the crowd.

This order was refused. Many soldiers mutinied, joining the National Guard. Some of the military officers were disarmed and escorted away, while others, including General Lecomte, were arrested. Lecomte himself was executed later that day. This incident marked the beginning of a working class revolution in Paris, one anticipated by the conservative national government of Adolphe Theirs.

On March 26th, elections were held to establish a Paris Commune council, consisting of 92 members, one for every 20,000 residents. Out of 485,000 registered voters, more than 230,000 voted. Participation was significantly higher in working class neighborhoods than bourgeois ones.

On March 27th, the Commune was formally declared. Prosper-Olivier Lissagaray, a participant of the Commune and author of "History of the Paris Commune of 1871", describes the celebration:

"The next day 200,000 'wretches' came to the Hôtel-de-Ville there to install their chosen representatives, the battalion drums beating, the banners surmounted by the Phrygian cap and with red fringe round the muskets; their ranks, swelled by soldiers of the line, artillerymen, and marines faithful to Paris, came down from all the streets to the Place de Greve like the thousand streams of a great river...

A member of the Committee announced the names of those elected. The drums beat a salute, the bands and two hundred thousand voices chimed in with the Marseillaise. [Gabriel] Ranvier, in an interval of silence, cried out, 'In the name of the People the Commune is proclaimed.'

A thousandfold echo answered, 'Vive la Commune!' Caps were flung up on the ends of bayonets, flags fluttered in the air. From the windows, on the roofs, thousands of hands waved handkerchiefs...The quick reports of the cannon, the bands, the drums, blended in one formidable vibration. All hearts leaped with joy, all eyes filled with tears."

The government of the Paris Commune developed a set of policies that tended towards a progressive, secular, and highly democratic social democracy, although its existence was too brief to implement them with much permanence. Among these policies were the separation of church and state, abolition of child labor, abolishment of interest on some forms of debt, as well as the right of employees to take over and run an enterprise if it was deserted by its original owner.

The national French Army suppressed the Commune at the end of May during La semaine sanglante ("The Bloody Week"), beginning on May 21st, 1871. Even after the Commune was defeated, the Army continued their campaign of slaughter.

In an 1886 account of the Paris Commune, The Socialist League wrote "Thus was extinguished the despair of Paris; but though the fighting was over, the killing went on merrily; for instance, in the prison of La Roquette alone nine hundred prisoners were slain in cold blood, and without any pretence of form of trial. The courts martial disposed of others. 'Have you taken arms, or served the Commune? Show your hands.' If the judge thought the man looked likely, 'classé' was the word; if anyone was spared, “ordinaire” was pronounced, and he was kept for Versailles. None were released — sex or age made no difference. Those who were 'classés' were shot at once; perhaps they were not the unluckiest."

A watershed moment in revolutionary working class history, the Paris Commune was analyzed by many communist thinkers, including Karl Marx, who identified it as a "dictatorship of the proletariat." Vladimir Lenin danced in the snow in celebration when the newly formed Bolshevik government lasted longer than the Paris Commune.

"It is time people understood the true meaning of this Revolution; and this can be summed up in a few words…It was the first attempt of the proletariat to govern itself. The workers of Paris expressed this when in their first manifesto they declared they 'understood it was their imperious duty and their absolute right to render themselves masters of their own destinies by seizing upon the governmental power.'"

- Eleanor Marx


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Santa Rita Massacre (1982)

Wed Mar 17, 1982

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Image: A memorial for those killed during the Salvadoran Civil War, located at the Museumplein in Amsterdam. Five crosses have been placed - four for the killed Dutch journalists in El Salvador, and a central, elevated one for 40,000 murdered Salvadorans. [Wikipedia]


On this day in 1982, the Salvadoran army assassinated a group of Dutch journalists and FMLN soldiers in violation of international law. The murders caused international outrage, and the colonel who ordered the attack fled to the U.S.

The four journalists had arrived in El Salvador on February 24th, 1982 to report on the ongoing Salvadoran Civil War, fought between the right-wing military junta ruling the country with U.S. support, and the left-wing Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (FMLN).

As part of their work, the journalists visited Mariona prison in San Salvador to interview and film prisoners accused of belonging to the guerrilla forces. The videos filmed by the journalists included shots of prisoners' scars, which the prisoners said were the result of torture.

This work earned the ire of the military, and the journalists were interrogated by the Director-General of the Treasury Police on March 11th. Despite being advised to leave by Jan Pierre Lucien Schmeitz, another Dutch journalist, as well as their FMLN contacts, the group decided to stay to complete their work.

On March 17th, 1982, soldiers from the Atonal Battalion, acting on orders from Colonel Reyes Mena, assassinated the journalists while they were traveling with a group of five FMLN soldiers. All but one of the FMLN guerillas survived.

The deaths caused international outrage, including mass protests in the Netherlands. The Dutch government conducted an investigation which uncovered the fact that U.S. soldiers were present at the base the day of the massacre.

The 1993 Report of the UN Truth Commission on El Salvador concluded that the murders were a targeted assassination by the state (not an "accident", as the Salvadoran President claimed), and were in violation of international law. The report was aided by the testimony of "Martin", the lone survivor of the attack.

Salvadoran Col. Reyes Mena, whom the U.N. concluded ordered the massacre, fled to the United States after the incident. Reyes Mena was discovered in Virginia and confronted at his home by the Dutch organization ZEMBLA in 2018.


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Makhno Released From Prison (1917)

Sat Mar 17, 1917

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On this day in 1917, Ukrainian anarchist revolutionary Nestor Makhno was released from prison as a result of the February Revolution, going on to play a leading role in the revolutionary anarchist movement in Ukraine.

In 1908, due to a police spy within the anarchist group Hulyai Pole, Makhno was arrested and put in jail. Makhno and thirteen others were sentenced to death by hanging, however Makhno's sentence was commuted to life in prison due to his prior military service.

After returning to Ukraine, he became a key figure in the organization of the Revolutionary Insurrectionary Army of Ukraine (also known as the Black Army), which helped organize and protect an anarcho-communist movement in Ukraine known as the Free Territory or Makhnovschina. This movement was established in the context of the Russian Civil War a complex power struggle following the Bolshevik-led October Revolution of 1917.

The anarchist revolution was defeated by the Bolsheviks in 1921, who would go on to win the civil war and establish the Soviet Union. Makhno fled, living the rest of his life exiled in Western Europe. After settling in Paris, Makhno contributed writings to anarchist journals and met anarchists of note, including Buenaventura Durruti and Francisco Ascaso.

"I would still call on you, reader and brother, to take up the struggle for the ideal anarchism, for only if you fight for this ideal and uphold it will you understand it properly."

- Nestor Makhno


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Davide "Dax" Cesare Murdered (2003)

Sun Mar 16, 2003

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Image: Graffiti reading "Dax odia ancora" (Dax still hates) in the Kreuzberg district, Berlin (2010)


On this day in 2003, Italian anti-fascist Davide "Dax" Cesare was stabbed to death by two fascist brothers in Milan.

Cesare was brought to the hospital, but died in the ambulance. Immediately after Cesare's death, his comrades tried to enter the hospital but were blocked by the police, leading to riots that left several injured.

Despite the Italian media initially portraying the violence as a "riot between young dissidents" and the murder as "a consequence of anti-globalization violence", the trial uncovered that the fascist brothers, Federico Morbi and Mattia Morbi, had killed him with premeditation. Federico was sentenced to 16 years in jail, while Mattia (who was a minor at the time) was sentenced to 3 years.

A plaque has been placed in Via Brioschi, the street of Milan where he was killed. Graffiti in memory of Dax have become common in Milan and elsewhere, often reading "Dax vive" (English: "Dax lives") or "Dax odia ancora" (English: "Dax still hates").


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Nikolai Bukharin Executed (1938)

Tue Mar 15, 1938

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Nikolai Bukharin was a prominent Bolshevik revolutionary and Marxist theorist who was executed by the Soviet Union on this day in 1938, following a controversial trial and international pleas for clemency.

As a young man, Bukharin joined the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party in 1906, becoming a member of the Bolshevik faction. He served on a committee that was infiltrated by the Tsarist secret police, the Okhrana, and was imprisoned and exiled in 1911.

In 1911, Bukharin escaped exile, fleeing to Germany. During this period, he met Vladimir Lenin for the first time and authored "Imperialism and World Economy", a work that predated and influenced Lenin's "Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism".

After Lenin's death in 1924, Bukharin became a full member of the Politburo, allying himself with Stalin in the power struggles of that period. Bukharin formulated the thesis of "Socialism in One Country" put forth by Stalin in 1924, which argued that socialism could be developed in a single country, even one as underdeveloped as Russia.

Bukharin was aligned with the forces that defeated Leon Trotsky, Lev Kamenev, and Grigory Zinoviev in various power struggles within the Communist Party. A supporter of the market-based New Economic Policy (NEP), Bukharin opposed Stalin's support of collectivization policies in the late 1920s. On this basis, he was criticized and began politically conspiring against Stalin.

After the trial and execution of Zinoviev, Kamenev, and other leftist Old Bolsheviks in 1936, Bukharin was arrested in 1937 and charged with conspiring to overthrow the Soviet state. The following trial was controversial and drew international criticism, alienating some communist sympathizers abroad.

French author Romain Rolland wrote to Stalin directly, arguing that "an intellect like that of Bukharin is a treasure for his country", drawing comparisons to the execution of chemist Antoine Lavoisier, guillotined during the French Revolution: "We in France, the most ardent revolutionaries...still profoundly grieve and regret what we did...I beg you to show clemency." Bukharin was executed by gunshot on March 15th, 1938, at the Kommunarka shooting ground.

"We see now that infringement of freedom is necessary with regard to the opponents of the revolution. At a time of revolution we cannot allow freedom for the enemies of the people and of the revolution. That is a surely clear, irrefutable conclusion."

- Nikolai Bukharin


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Anna Campbell Dies for Rojava (2018)

Thu Mar 15, 2018

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Image: Anna Campbell, 26, posing with a rifle in uniform, unknown date [bristolpost.co.uk]


Anna Campbell, also known as Hêlîn Qereçox, was a British feminist, anarchist, and prison abolitionist who died on this day in 2018, fighting with the Women's Protection Units (YPJ) of Rojava during the Syrian civil war.

She was killed by a Turkish Armed Forces missile strike during the Turkish military operation in the Afrin Canton, Operation Olive Branch.

On her decision to join the Kurdish forces, Campbell said "I wanted to participate in the revolution of women that is being built up here and fight, and join also the weaponized fight against the forces of fascism and the enemies of the revolution. And so now I'm very happy and proud to be going to Afrin to be able to do this."


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