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
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1
 
 

Havana Presidential Palace Attack (1957)

Wed Mar 13, 1957

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Image: Two men, armed with rifles, participating in the palace attack in Havana on March 13th, 1957


On this day in 1957, the Directorio Revoluncionari Estudiantil, a group of anti-Batista, revolutionary Cuban students, attacked the Presidential Palace in Havana in a failed attempt to assassinate Fulgencio Batista and overthrow the government.

Participants of the attack successfully stormed the palace, making it to the third floor and killing many of Batista's personal guards, but failed to locate and kill Batista himself. The rebellion was successfully quelled, and two of the revolutionaries were put on trial; the rest were either killed or escaped.

A large pro-Batista rally, attended by ~250,000 people, took place on April 7th. Signs read "For Batista, in the Past, Now and Forever" and "Five Hundred American Residents of the Isle of Pines Have Faith in Batista."

On January 22nd, 1959, Fidel Castro stated to journalists that individual-focused acts such as the palace attack are "false concepts about the revolution" because "tyranny is not a man; tyranny is a system...We were never supporters of tyrannicide or military coups, [which tended] to inculcate the people a complex of impotence."


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New Jewel Revolution (1979)

Tue Mar 13, 1979

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Image: NJM supporters and NLA fighters gathered at Radio Free Grenada on the morning of March 13th, 1979. From the Grenada National Museum [nowgrenada.com]


On this day in 1979, the People's Revolutionary Government (PRG) was proclaimed in Grenada after the Marxist-Leninist New Jewel Movement overthrew the state in a socialist revolution, with Maurice Bishop serving as Prime Minister.

After coming into power, Bishop stated the goals of the NJM: "We definitely have a stake in seeking the creation of a new international economic order which would assist in ensuring economic justice for the oppressed and exploited peoples of the world, and in ensuring that the resources of the sea are used for the benefit of all the people of the world and not for a tiny minority of profiteers".

The new government developed an ambitious social program, initiating a literacy campaign, expanding education programs, worker protections, and establishing farmers' cooperatives.

During the PRG's reign, unemployment was reduced from 49% to 14%, the ratio of doctors per person increased from 1/4000 to 1/3,000, the infant mortality rate was reduced, and the literacy rate increased from 85% to 90%. In addition, laws guaranteeing equal pay for equal work for women were passed, and mothers were guaranteed three months' maternity leave.

The government suspended the constitution of the previous regime, ruling by decree until a factional conflict broke out, ultimately leading to Maurice Bishop's assassination. President Ronald Reagan launched an invasion of Grenada a few weeks later, on October 25th, 1983.

"We have attempted to show in this Manifesto what is possible. We have demonstrated beyond doubt that there is no reason why we should continue to live in such poverty, misery, suffering, dependence and exploitation...The new society must not only speak of Democracy, but must practise it in all its aspects. We must stress the policy of 'Self-Reliance' and 'Self-Sufficiency' undertaken co-operatively, and reject the easy approaches offered by aid and foreign assistance. We will have to recognise that our most important resource is our people."

- Manifesto of the New Jewel Movement (1973)


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Ala Gertner (1912 - 1945)

Tue Mar 12, 1912

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Ala Gertner, born on this day in 1912, was a Polish Jewish woman who helped facilitate the Sonderkommando revolt at Auschwitz, blowing up one of the crematoriums there. She was executed for this act of resistance in 1945.

Gertner was a member of the Sonderkommandos, slave laborers forced to aid with the disposal of gas chamber victims during the Holocaust. At Auschwitz, Gertner worked in the warehouses at first, sorting the possessions of Jews who had been gassed. There, she met Roza Robota, who was active in the underground resistance.

When Gertner was assigned to the munitions factory, she and Roza smuggled gunpowder to the Sonderkommando, who were building bombs and planning an escape. Gertner recruited other women to join the conspiracy and passed the stolen gunpowder to Roza.

On October 7th, 1944, the Sonderkommando blew up Crematorium IV, but the revolt was quickly quelled by armed SS guards. A lengthy investigation led the Nazis back to Gertner and Roza, and then to Estusia Wajcblum and Regina Safirsztajn, who were also implicated in the conspiracy. They were interrogated and tortured for weeks.

Gertner, along with three co-conspirators, were executed on January 5th or 6th (sources differ) in 1945. Their deaths were the last public hanging at Auschwitz.


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Manol Vassev Assassinated (1958)

Wed Mar 12, 1958

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On this day in 1958, Bulgarian anarcho-syndicalist labor organizer Manol Vassev was assassinated by communist secret police, one day before his scheduled release from prison. This entry relies almost entirely on the work of anarchist historian Nick Heath:

A tobacco industry worker by trade, Vassev turned to anarchism while serving at the front in World War I, becoming a labor organizer and speaker. Vassev was persecuted for this work, serving time in prison and having to assume a fake identity (he was born Jordan Sotirov and adopted the name Manol Vassev to escape authorities). He was also active in anti-fascist resistance during World War II.

Vassev was arrested by the communist police for the first time on March 10th, 1945, along with all the delegates to the national conference of the Anarchist Communist Federation at Kniajevo, near Sofia. He was interned at the concentration camp of Dupnitsa and then at Kutzian.

After serving five years in prison, a trial was held for a second sentence. Held in public, Vassev was accused of being an "agent in the pay of the Anglo-Americans".

Vassev interrupted the accusation, retorting "It isn't me who signed the Teheran and Yalta treaties with the English and the Americans; it's not me who went to London to kiss the skirt of the Queen of England!"

Vassev died the day before his release was scheduled, poisoned by the Bulgarian secret police.


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Ralph Abernathy (1926 - 1990)

Thu Mar 11, 1926

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Ralph David Abernathy Sr. (shown left), born on this day in 1926, was a Baptist minister and civil rights activist who co-founded the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and helped lead the 1968 Poor People's Campaign.

Abernathy was a close friend and mentor of Martin Luther King Jr., collaborating with King to create the Montgomery Improvement Association (which led to the Montgomery Bus Boycott) and co-founding the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC).

Abernathy is noted for leading, among other demonstrations, the Poor People's Campaign in Washington, D.C., testifying in Congress in favor of the Voting Rights Act of 1982, and helping broker a deal between Native Americans and the U.S. government during the Wounded Knee Incident of 1973.

His tombstone reads "I tried".


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Wyndham Mortimer (1884 - 1966)

Tue Mar 11, 1884

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Wyndham Mortimer, born on this day in 1884, was an American communist union organizer active with the United Auto Workers union (UAW). After refusing to follow an anti-strike line from UAW leadership, he was ousted in 1941.

Wyndham Mortimer was born March on 11th, 1884 in Karthaus, Pennsylvania, the son of a coal miner who was organized with the Knights of Labor, an early American labor union. He later recalled that one of his earliest memories of life involved "walking behind parades of striking miners."

Mortimer left school at age 12 to work in the mines of Pennsylvania as a coal trapper. In 1900, still a teenager, he joined the United Mine Workers of America in 1900. In 1908, Mortimer joined the Socialist Party of America after hearing a campaign speech by the party's Presidential nominee, Eugene V. Debs.

Today, Mortimer is best remembered as a key figure in the 1937 Flint Sit-Down Strike, during which he was Vice President of the UAW. Also a member of the Communist Party USA, Mortimer was a vehement critic of the efforts of the conservative American Federation of Labor (AFL) to control the union.

In 1941, Mortimer's refusal to follow the anti-strike line of the UAW's governing Executive Board during a controversial work stoppage at a California aircraft factory led to his termination by the union, effectively bringing an end to his career.

"The [Walter] Reuther-Murray-Roman Catholic hierarchy has plans for us. They plan to make the American labor movement the staunch ally of monopoly capitalism in its war against the exploited and poverty stricken peoples of the world. And here at home, their witch hunting, disrupting, and raiding of other unions, is treason to the American working class."

- Wyndham Mortimer, in his autobiography "Organize! My Life as a Union Man"


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Leo Jogiches (1919)

Mon Mar 10, 1919

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Leon "Leo" Jogiches (1867 - 1919), also known by the party name Jan Tyszka, was a Marxist revolutionary and politician who was executed on this day in 1919 for investigating the recent murders of Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht.

Jogiches was active in both Germany and Poland, founding the political party "The Social Democracy of the Kingdom of Poland" in 1893 and becoming a key figure in the underground Spartacus League in Germany during World War I.

Jogiches was also a personal companion and a close political ally of Rosa Luxemburg. After Luxemburg and her political partner Karl Liebknecht were killed by the German Freikorps, Jogiches began investigating their deaths.

Jogiches was assassinated in Moabit prison on March 10th, 1919, in Berlin.


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Batista Coup d'état (1952)

Mon Mar 10, 1952

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On this day in 1952, Fulgencio Batista led a military coup against outgoing Cuban president Carlos Prío Socarrás. With Batista's help, U.S. capital dominated the Cuban economy until he was ousted from power in 1959.

As part of the coup, Batista canceled national elections three months before they were scheduled to take place. Batista, himself a candidate, was not leading in the polls.

Claiming his actions were necessary to "save the Republic from chaos", Batista, with the backing of the army, stormed the Presidential Palace with squads of troops and police surrounding the building. President Prío had left the area 30 minutes before however, and the palace was seized without violence.

The United States recognized his government on March 27th, and Batista allowed U.S. financial interests to dominate Cuba's economy. By the late 1950s, U.S. capitalists owned 90% of Cuban mines, 80% of its public utilities, 50% of its railways, 40% of its sugar production and 25% of its bank deposits, approximately $1 billion in total assets.

When asked to analyze Batista's government, historian Arthur Schlesinger wrote "The corruption of the Government, the brutality of the police, the government's indifference to the needs of the people for education, medical care, housing, for social justice and economic justice...is an open invitation to revolution."

Accordingly, Batista's reign ended on January 1st, 1959 when he was ousted from power by communist revolutionaries. Early that morning, Batista fled with an estimated personal fortune of $300 million to the Dominican Republic, where strongman and previous military ally Rafael Trujillo held power. Batista eventually found political asylum in Oliveira Salazar's Portugal and Francisco Franco's Spain, dying in the latter in 1973.


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Bobby Sands (1954 - 1981)

Tue Mar 09, 1954

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Image: A mural depicting Bobby Sands, reading "Everyone, Republican or otherwise, has their particular role to play...our revenge will be the laughter of our children" [irishtimes.com]


Bobby Sands, born on this day in 1954, was an Irish revolutionary who served in the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA). Sands died from a hunger strike at age 27 while imprisoned, just one month after becoming the elected MP for Fermanagh and South Tyrone.

Sands grew up in North Belfast, a member of the Catholic minority and in a majority Protestant area. After being threatened at gunpoint and called "Fenian scum" by his co-workers at the age of 15, Sands became dedicated to revolutionary politics. In 1972, he attended his first Provisional IRA meeting.

Just a few months later, Sands was arrested and charged in October 1972 with possession of four handguns found in the house where he was living. After being released in 1976, he continued to be active in the IRA.

Later that year, Sands and five others were arrested following the bombing of the Balmoral Furniture Company in Dunmurry and a subsequent shootout with police. Sands and three others were sentenced to 14 years in prison for possession of a revolver.

Undeterred, Sands continued to protest in prison. He refused to wear a prison uniform and was kept in his cell naked without access to bedding for 13 hours a day. While incarcerated, Sands authored poems and songs, published by Republican magazines.

On March 1st, 1981, Sands initiated a hunger strike in collaboration with other inmates. The demands of the hunger strike included the right to not have to do prison work, the right to not wear a prison uniform, and full restoration of remission lost through protest.

Sands narrowly won a special election to serve as MP of Fermanagh and South Tyrone on April 9th, 1981, more than a month into the hunger strike. In response, the British government introduced the "Representation of the People Act", which prevents prisoners serving jail terms of more than one year in either the UK or the Republic of Ireland from being nominated as candidates in British elections.

Less than a month after winning this election, Sands died in prison at the age of 27. More than 100,000 people lined the route of Sands' funeral, and he was buried in the New Republican Plot, alongside 76 others.

"They have nothing in their whole imperial arsenal that can break the spirit of one Irishman who doesn't want to be broken."

- Bobby Sands


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Citizens' Commission Exposes COINTELPRO (1971)

Mon Mar 08, 1971

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Image: A photograph of the Washington Post news article that broke the story, with the headline "Stolen Documents Describe FBI Surveillance Activities", authored by Betty Medsger and Ken W. Clawson.


On this day in 1971, a group of activists known as the "Citizens' Commission" broke into an FBI field office and stole over 1,000 classified documents, exposing COINTELPRO, a widespread surveillance operation of left-wing activists.

The "Citizens' Commission to Investigate the FBI" was an activist group that operated in the U.S. during the early 1970s, of which this is their only known action. Members of the raid mailed these documents anonymously to several U.S. newspapers, most of which refused to publish the information. The Washington Post was the first newspaper willing to publish the story.

The documents detailed widespread illegal surveillance on civil rights activists and contained some of the FBI's most self-incriminating documents, including several that detailed the FBI's use of postal workers and switchboard operators to spy on black civil rights activists.

Noam Chomsky stated that analysis of the stolen documents show that 40% of them were devoted to political surveillance, including two cases involving right-wing groups, ten concerning immigrants, and over two hundred on left or liberal groups. Notably, Muhammed Ali, whose 1971 fight with Joe Frazier provided cover for the burglary, was himself a target of this surveillance.

The perpetrators were never caught. Over 40 years after the break-in, some participants decided to go public with their story. In 2014, Betty Medsger's book "The Burglary: The Discovery of J. Edgar Hoover's Secret F.B.I." was released, which details the burglary and revealed the identities of five of the eight participants. In 2014, filmmaker Johanna Hamilton made a documentary about the event, titled "1971".


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Jeremy Brecher (1938 - )

Tue Mar 08, 1938

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Jeremy Brecher, born on this day in 1938, is an American historian, filmmaker, activist, and author of essential books on labor and social movements, including "Strike!" and "Root & Branch: The Rise of the Workers' Movements".

In 1969, Brecher and other collaborators, including Paul Mattick, Jr., Stanley Aronowitz, and Peter Rachleff, began publishing a magazine and pamphlet series called "Root & Branch", drawing on the tradition of workers councils and adapting them to contemporary America. In 1975, they published the collection "Root & Branch: The Rise of the Workers' Movements."

In 1972, Brecher published "Strike!", which chronicles the story of "repeated, massive, and sometimes violent revolts by ordinary working people in America", in the author's own words. The text, which has been updated as recently as 2020, is published in full at libcom.org.

Brecher's career as a historian was described by fellow historian James R. Green as "history from below", pioneering "shared authority" between history professionals and the communities they study and write about, with an emphasis on oral history and the historical interpretations formed by the communities in question.


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Bill Frank Jr (stahmaxffcqankienulh.supabase.co)
 
 

Bill Frank Jr. (1931 - 2014)

Mon Mar 09, 1931

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William Frank Jr., born on this day in 1931, was an indigenous environmental leader and treaty rights activist known for his use of the "fish-in", a civil disobedience tactic used to win indigenous rights to natural resources.

A Nisqually tribal member, Frank is particularly known for his grassroots campaign for fishing rights on the tribe's Nisqually River. Frank was arrested more than 50 times in the "Fish Wars" of the 1960s and 1970s because of his intense dedication to the treaty fishing rights cause.

The tribal struggle was taken to the courts in "U.S. v. Washington", with federal judge George Hugo Boldt issuing a ruling in favor of the native tribes in 1974. The "Boldt Decision" established the 20 treaty Indian tribes in western Washington as co-managers of the salmon resource with the State of Washington, and re-affirmed tribal rights to half of the harvestable salmon returning to western Washington.


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Lucy Parsons Passes (1942)

Sat Mar 07, 1942

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Image: Lucy E. Parsons, arrested for rioting during an unemployment protest in 1915 at Hull House in Chicago, Ill. Courtesy of the Chicago Historical Society. [zinnedproject.org]


Lucy Parsons was an American labor organizer and anarcho-communist who died on this day in 1942. She co-founded the IWW and was described by the Chicago Police Department as "more dangerous than a thousand rioters".

Parsons entered the radical movement with her husband and fellow anarchist Albert Parsons, contributing to "The Alarm", a radical newspaper Albert edited. Lucy also edited the "Liberator", an anarchist newspaper that supported the IWW, and worked with the International Labor Defense, a communist legal advocacy group that defended the Scottsboro Boys and Angelo Herndon.

Following her husband's 1887 infamous execution in relation to the Haymarket affair, Parsons remained committed to radical labor organizing. One of her last appearances was a speech to striking workers at International Harvester in February 1941, at approximately 90 years old.

Parsons was prescient on the nature of labor conflict, stating "My conception of the strike of the future is not to strike and go out and starve, but to strike and remain in, and take possession of the necessary property of production", anticipating the labor tactics of sit-down strikes and worker occupations.

"Never be deceived that the rich will allow you to vote away their wealth."

- Lucy Parsons


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Rudi Dutschke (1940 - 1979)

Thu Mar 07, 1940

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Image: Rudi Dutschke in 1976 [Wikipedia]


Rudi Dutschke, born on this day in 1940, was a socialist German sociologist and anti-war activist. In 1967, he advocated for radicals to take a "long march through the institutions" as a non-violent way to seek revolutionary change.

Rudi Dutschke grew up in post-war East Germany. As a youth, he became involved with the Evangelical Church in East Germany and would later claim religious inspiration for his socialism, tying the idea of spiritual transcendence with societal transcendence.

Dutschke's views on socialism, influenced by worker councils during the Hungarian Uprising of 1956, put him in conflict with GDR authorities, and he defected to West Germany shortly before construction of the Berlin Wall began in 1961.

Dutschke became influenced by ideas of social provocation proposed by the Situationist International, and joined the Situationist group Subversive Action in 1963. He edited their newspaper and wrote about revolutionary developments in the Third World.

Subversive Action would later join the German Socialist Students' Union, which had formerly been the student wing of the social democratic SPD before being expelled due to being well to the left of its parent organization. After being elected to the political council of the West Berlin SDS in 1965, Dutschke became a major leader calling for student resistance in West Germany, focusing on the Vietnam War in particular.

As the movement grew, Dutschke's visibility made him a figure of attack from right-wing politicians and press, such as those owned by Axel Springer, which controlled around 67% of West Germany's press market at the time. His family was forced to leave their apartment after it was attacked with smoke bombs, excrement, and threatening graffiti.

In 1967, Dutschke famously advocated for a "long march through the institutions", to join political and media establishments to build power for leftist movements from within.

On April 11th, 1968, while attempting to collect a prescription for his infant son, Dutschke was shot by Josef Bachmann, a young laborer with ties to neo-Nazi groups. Bachmann shouted "you dirty, communist pig!" and shot him three times.

Bachman claimed to have been inspired by the assassination of MLK Jr., which had taken place just a week prior. The assassination attempt spawned another wave of attacks on Springer Press facilities by protestors, and the shooting was viewed as a major factor in the rise of the militant Red Army Faction (RAF).

While Dutschke survived, he suffered from significant memory and speech issues along with epileptic seizures, and was soon forced to step down from his political roles. He moved with his family to England in 1969, only to be accused by the Conservative Party-controlled UK Home Office of engaging in political activity in 1971 and expelled, before taking up a teaching role at the University of Aarhus in Denmark.

Dutschke would later maintain limited political involvement during the 1970s, supporting East German dissidents. His thoughts on the Red Army Faction during this time remain controversial; when RAF member Holger Meins died on hunger strike, he commented at his grave; "the struggle continues". However, he grew critical of their actions which risked harm to civilians and people rather than infrastructure and objects.

In December 1978, Dutschke wrote, "Every small citizens' initiative, every political and social youth, women, unemployed, pensioner and class struggle movement is a hundred times more valuable and qualitatively different than the most spectacular action of individual terror".

Dutschke died on December 24th, 1979 after suffering an epileptic seizure while taking a bath at his home in Denmark, causing him to drown. Thousands gathered at his funeral, where Protestant theologian Helmut Gollwitzer described him as someone "fought passionately, but not fanatically, for a more humane world".


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UK Miners' Strike (1984 - 85)

Tue Mar 06, 1984

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Image: One of seven miners who were arrested near Llanwern Steelworks being led away by the police [https://www.southwalesargus.co.uk/]


On this day in 1984, the UK Miners' Strike of 1984-85 began, leading to more than 26 million lost workdays in what the BBC termed "the most bitter industrial dispute in British history".

The strike action was led by Arthur Scargill of the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM), which sought to oppose colliery closures, using the possibility of energy shortages as leverage (a tactic used in 1972). Opposition to the strike was led by the Conservative government of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, who wanted to reduce the power of the trade unions.

The strike was ruled illegal in September 1984, as no national ballot of NUM members had been held, and the labor action failed on March 3rd, 1985. It was a defining moment in British industrial relations, with NUM's defeat significantly weakening the trade union movement and providing a major victory for Thatcher and the Conservative Party.

The number of strikes fell sharply in 1985, and all of Britain's working pits were closed in the following three decades. Poverty significantly increased in former coal mining areas; in 1994, Grimethorpe in South Yorkshire was the poorest settlement in the country.


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Mariya Kislyak (1925 - 1943)

Fri Mar 06, 1925

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Mariya Kislyak, born on this day in 1925, was a Soviet partisan and the leader of a Kharkov underground Komsomol cell where she seduced and killed Nazi officers, actions for which she was executed by the Gestapo at the age of seventeen.

Kislyak was born to a Ukrainian peasant family in the village of Lednoe. She graduated from medical training for paramedics and housewives the day before the German invasion of the Soviet Union. During fighting in her hometown, a wounded Soviet soldier she had been taking care of asked her why the city didn't have a strong partisan movement.

When the soldier recovered, Kislyak contacted several partisans hiding out in a nearby forest and asked if she could join their cause, recruiting several acquaintances into the movement. With this organization, she helped kill Nazi officers, sometimes flirting with them to lure them into an isolated area where they could be killed out of sight.

When she received word that a Gestapo agent nicknamed "the Butcher" would be coming to Kharkiv, she and her partisan unit spent two days planning his capture. Kislyak rented a room right next to his at the farm he was staying at.

After courting him for a few days, Mariya lured him to a riverbank, where her conspirators captured him. After interrogating the officer, the group summarily executed him with a crowbar.

In response, more than one hundred villagers, including Mariya, were collectively arrested by the Gestapo and told they would be killed by a firing squad if the SS man wasn't found alive soon. After the plot became known, Mariya and two others were brutally tortured and interrogated for weeks.

On June 18th, the group of three was hanged and their bodies put on public display. On May 8th, 1965, she was posthumously awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union.


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Rosa Luxemburg (1871 - 1919)

Sun Mar 05, 1871

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Rosa Luxemburg, born on this day in 1871, was a revolutionary Polish Marxist philosopher and economist who was assassinated by the right-wing Freikorps paramilitary alongside her collaborator, Karl Liebknecht.

Luxemburg was born to a Jewish family living in the Russian sector of Poland after the country was partitioned a century earlier. While enrolled in an all-girls' gymnasium in Warsaw, Rosa studied banned Polish texts and was a member of the illegal, leftist Proletariat Party.

Luxemburg was very politically active, and an influential member of many political parties. In succession, she served as a member of the Social Democracy of the Kingdom of Poland and Lithuania (SDKPiL), the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD), the Independent Social Democratic Party (USPD) and, finally, the Communist Party of Germany (KPD), which she co-founded with Liebknecht.

Among Luxemburg's noted works are "Social Reform or Revolution?" (1900), "The Mass Strike, the Political Party and the Trade Unions" (1906), and "The Accumulation of Capital" (1913).

In 1918-19, Luxemberg publicly supported a violent rebellion against the German state, organizing through the KPD and the Spartacist League. She was captured and summarily executed by the Freikorps, government-sponsored paramilitary groups consisting mostly of World War I veterans. Her body was thrown in the Landwehr Canal in Berlin.

Due to her pointed criticism of both Leninist and more moderate social democratic schools of socialism, Luxemburg's legacy is a revolutionary school of socialist thought that exists outside of either tradition.

"Without general elections, without freedom of the press, freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, without the free battle of opinions, life in every public institution withers away, becomes a caricature of itself, and bureaucracy rises as the only deciding factor."

- Rosa Luxemburg


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Zhou Enlai (1898 - 1976)

Sat Mar 05, 1898

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Image: Zhou Enlai on February 21st, 1972, at the Great Hall of the People's Banquet Hall [Wikipedia]


Zhou Enlai, born on this day in 1898, was a communist revolutionary, statesman, and military officer who served as the 1st Premier of the People's Republic of China from 1949 to 1976. "All diplomacy is a continuation of war by other means."

Zhou was educated in a missionary college in Tianjin before studying at a Japanese university. In Tianjin, he met his future wife, Deng Yingchao while participating in a radical political group known as the "Awakening Society". In 1920, Zhou moved to France, where he helped form the overseas branch of the Chinese Communist Party. He also lived in Britain and Germany before returning to China in 1924.

While working in the Political Department of the Whampoa Military Academy, Zhou was also made the secretary of the Communist Party of Guangdong-Guangxi, and served as the CCP representative with the rank of major-general.

After the Chinese Civil War broke out in 1927, Zhou served in the communist forces, helping establish and oversee a network of underground cells of communist resistance. Zhou played a leading role in the Long March of 1934-35, an arduous military retreat of communist forces over 8,000 miles.

Following the Zunyi Conference in 1935, Mao Zedong became Zhou's assistant. After the conclusion of the Long March, Mao officially took over Zhou Enlai's leading position in the CCP, while Zhou took a secondary position as vice-chairman. Both would hold their leadership positions until their deaths in 1976.

Zhou was a prominent participant in the 1955 Asian–African Conference, held in Indonesia. The conference produced a declaration in strongly in favor of peace, the abolition of nuclear arms, general arms reduction, and the principle of universal representation at the United Nations. Zhou was critical of American imperial aggression and stated "the population of Asia will never forget that the first atom bomb was exploded on Asian soil."

Zhou passed away from bladder cancer on January 8th, 1976, just nine months before Mao Zedong's death in September that year. Frederick C. Teiwes and Warren Sun, two Australian historians, have claimed that Mao was worried that public expressions of mourning would be directed against him and his policies, as Zhou's later years had been closely associated with reversing and moderating its excesses. Out of this concern, Mao thus suppressed public expressions of mourning in the period following his death.

"Today the first unification of the Chinese people has emerged. The people themselves have become the masters of Chinese soil, and the rule of the reactionaries in China has been irrevocably overthrown."

- Zhou Enlai, from "Chinese People Will not Tolerate Aggression" (October 1950)


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Kimmel Park Mutiny (1919)

Tue Mar 04, 1919

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Image: Damage to 'tin town', a collection of shops and pubs set up to cater for the thousands of troops stationed in the camp [westernfrontassociation.com]


On this day in 1919, on the signal of "Come on the Bolsheviks!", 15,000 Canadian soldiers in Bodelwyddan, Wales began rioting following delays in their return home and being used as forced labor by British officers.

The uprising began when the camp commander, Colonel Colquhoun, left the base for a social outing on March 4th. In his absence, several leaders were appointed by the men and, on the signal of "Come on the Bolsheviks!", the soldiers began raiding the Quartermaster's Stores, looting sergeant's messes, and setting fires.

When 20 of the mutineers were seized, the rest simply charged the guardroom and set them free. Throughout the mutiny, rifle shots were exchanged - 3 rioters and 2 guards were killed, and around 23 were wounded. Of the 78 Canadians arrested, 25 were convicted of mutiny, with sentences between 90 days detention and 10 years' penal servitude handed out by military courts.

Following the riots, priority was given to repatriating the Canadian troops. The affair was "hushed up", and, by March 25th, over 15,000 Canadians had been transported home.


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Baum Group Nine Executed (1943)

Thu Mar 04, 1943

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Image: Monument to the Baum Gruppe in the Weissensee cemetery, East Berlin. The text reads (top): "To the members of the Herbert Baum group executed in 1942/43"; (bottom): "They fell in the battle for peace and freedom." [jwa.org]


On this day in 1943, nine members of the German anti-Nazi resistance Baum Group were executed by the state following an arson attack on an anti-Semitic and anti-Communist event prepared by Joseph Goebbels at the Berliner Lustgarten.

The Baum Group ("Baum Gruppe" in German) was formed by Jewish anti-fascists Herbert and Marianne Baum and their friends Martin and Sala Kochmann after the seizure of power by the National Socialists. Together, they organized meetings dealing with the threat of Nazism, meeting in the residences of various members. Up to 100 youths attended these meetings at various times, engaging in political debates and cultural discussions. The group openly distributed leaflets arguing against National Socialism.

On May 18th, 1942, the Baum Group set fire to the anti-Soviet exhibit "Das Sowjetparadies" (The Soviet Paradise), held in the Lustgarten in Berlin. The attempted arson was not successful and the exhibition was re-opened the following day. Nine days later, the Gestapo arrested an unspecified number of Jews and incarcerated them in the internment camp at the Lewetzowstrasse Synagogue.

On March 6th, 1943, nine captured members were executed: Heinz Rotholz (1922–1943), Heinz Birnbaum (1920–1943), Hella Hirsch (1921–1943), Hanni Meyer (1921–1943), Marianne Joachim (1922–1943), Lothar Salinger (1920–1943), Helmut Neumann (1922–1943), Hildegard Löwy, and Siegbert Rotholz (1922–1943).

Both Herbert and Marianne Baum were executed by the state separately in 1942.


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Enrollment Act of 1863

Tue Mar 03, 1863

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Image: Recruiting poster from New York City printed by Baker & Godwin, June 23rd, 1863 [Wikipedia]


The Enrollment Act of 1863, passed on this day, was the first national conscription law in the United States, explicitly allowing people to avoid service by paying $300 or hiring a substitute to take their place.

The Enrollment Act was passed by the U.S. Congress during the Civil War to provide fresh manpower for the Union Army. It required the enrollment of every male citizen and those immigrants who had filed for citizenship, between 20 and 45 years of age, unless exempted by the Act.

In protest of the law, a "Song of the Conscripts" was written, distributed later at the 1863 New York City Draft Riots. One verse reads:

"We are coming, Father Abraham, three hundred thousand more,

We leave our homes and firesides with bleeding hearts and sore,

Since poverty has been our crime, we bow to thy decree,

We are the poor who have no wealth to purchase liberty"


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Schenk v. United States (1919)

Mon Mar 03, 1919

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Schenck v. United States, decided on this day in 1919, was a Supreme Court case that upheld the conviction of socialist Charles Schenck for encouraging draft resistance, establishing the "clear and present" danger limitation of speech.

In this specific case, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that encouraging would-be soldiers to resist the draft was not protected by the First Amendment.

The Court made this ruling unanimously, upholding socialist activist Charles Schenck's conviction under the Espionage Act of 1917, after he distributed leaflets urging young men to resist the draft during World War I.


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Berta Cáceres Assassinated (2016)

Wed Mar 02, 2016

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Image: A photo of Berta Cáceres, unknown year [Wikipedia]


Berta Cáceres was a Honduran environmental and indigenous activist who was assassinated on this day in 2016 by a squad of hitmen with ties to the Honduran military, an energy company she campaigned against, and the U.S. government.

Cáceres was a co-founder and leader of the Council of Popular and Indigenous Organizations of Honduras (COPINH), coordinating protests on a wide variety of issues, including protesting illegal logging, plantation owners, and the presence of U.S. military bases on Lenca land. She won the Goldman Environmental Prize in 2015, for "a grassroots campaign that successfully pressured the world's largest dam builder to pull out of the Agua Zarca Dam" at the Río Gualcarque.

As of 2018, nine people have been arrested for Cáceres' murder. Of these nine, one was the executive president of the company building the dam which Cáceres campaigned against, accused of masterminding the plot; four had ties to the Honduran Military; two had received military training at the former "School of the Americas" in Fort Benning, Georgia, linked to thousands of murders and human rights violations throughout Latin America.

"Nature and justice at some point must be interwoven."

- Berta Cáceres


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Puyallup Fish-in (1964)

Mon Mar 02, 1964

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Image: Actor Marlon Brando and Puyallup tribal leader Bob Satiacum just before Brando's arrest during a fish-in, March 2nd, 1964 [historylink.org]


On this day in 1964, a group of indigenous rights activists, among them actor Marlon Brando and Puyallup tribal leader Bob Satiacum, illegally fished in the Puyallup River to protest the denial of treaty rights to Native Americans. This form of civil disobedience is known as a "fish-in", and in this specific incident both Brando and an Episcopal clergyman were arrested.

The fish-in was staged by the National Indian Youth Council, a Native American civil rights organization formed in Gallup, New Mexico in 1961. It became part of the so-called "Fish Wars", a set of protests spanning decades in which Native American tribes around the Puget Sound pressured the U.S. government to recognize fishing rights granted by the Point No Point Treaty.

The protests eventually won indigenous people in the area the right to fish without state permits - in the 1974 case "United States v. Washington", U.S. District Court Judge George Hugo Boldt stated that treaty right fishermen must be allowed to take up to 50% of all potential fishing harvests and required that they have an equal voice in the management of the fishery.

The so-called "Boldt Decision" was reaffirmed by the Supreme Court in 1979 and has been used as a precedent for handling other, similar treaties.


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Great Southwest Railroad Strike (1886)

Mon Mar 01, 1886

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Image: An illustration from Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper. The caption reads "The great railway strike--attempt to start a freight train, under a guard of United States marshals, at East St. Louis, Illinois." [Wikipedia]


On this day in 1886, the Great Southwest Railroad Strike began, involving 200,000 workers throughout the U.S. After months of protest in which six were killed by police, the strike failed, leading to the collapse of the Knights of Labor.

The strike began when an agreement between the Knights of Labor and Union Pacific to give notice and investigate all firings was violated - a Knight named Charles A. Hall in Marshall, Texas was fired for attending a union meeting on company time. In response, District Assembly #101 of the Knights called a strike.

Within a week, more than 200,000 workers were on strike throughout Arkansas, Illinois, Kansas, Missouri and Texas, paralyzing railway lines with both inaction and sabotage.

At least nine people were killed in conflicts between police and crowds of striking workers. On April 9th in East St. Louis, eight deputies guarding a freight train shot into a crowd of strikers, killing six bystanders. The crowd responded by setting the rail yards on fire.

After two months of protest, the strike was called off on May 4th without the workers winning their demands. The failure of the strike led directly to the collapse of the Knights of Labor and the rise of the American Federation of Labor (AFL).


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