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
 
 

Rose Schneiderman (1882 - 1972)

Thu Apr 06, 1882

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Rose Schneiderman, born on this day in 1882, was a Polish-American socialist and feminist of Jewish heritage, and one of the most prominent female labor union leaders of her day.

As a member of the New York Women's Trade Union League, she drew attention to unsafe workplace conditions following the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire of 1911. As a suffragist she helped to pass the New York state referendum of 1917 that gave women the right to vote.

Schneiderman was also a founding member of the American Civil Liberties Union and served on the National Recovery Administration's Labor Advisory Board under President Franklin D. Roosevelt. She is credited with coining the phrase "Bread and Roses" to indicate a worker's right to something higher than subsistence living.

"What the woman who labors wants is the right to live, not simply exist — the right to life as the rich woman has the right to life, and the sun and music and art. You have nothing that the humblest worker has not a right to have also. The worker must have bread, but she must have roses, too. Help, you women of privilege, give her the ballot to fight with."

- Rose Schneiderman


2
 
 

Bavarian Soviet Republic Declared (1919)

Sun Apr 06, 1919

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On this day in 1919, socialists declared a new Bavarian Soviet Republic during the German Revolution of 1918-19. Revolutionaries formed a Red Army and expropriated factories for the workers and luxury apartments for the homeless.

The movement to create this Republic came after the assassination of left-wing revolutionary Kurt Eisner, who had led a "People's State of Bavaria", founded a few months earlier. Energized by news of the Hungarian Soviet Republic, Bavarian communists and anarchists declared their own soviet government, with left-wing playwright Ernst Toller as chief of state.

Toller was quickly ousted, however, by German Bolsheviks led by Eugen Leviné. These communists received a blessing from Lenin to make Bavaria a Bolshevik-aligned state (some leftists, such as Kurt Eisner, were deliberately distant from the Bolshevik movement).

The new communist leadership formed a Red Army from factory workers, seized cash, food supplies, and privately owned guns, expropriated luxurious apartments and gave them to the homeless, and arrested members of the aristocracy.

The Bavarian Soviet Republic was short-lived, however, as the German Freikorps succeeded in violently crushing the revolution by force on May 6th. 600 people were killed in the fighting, half of whom were civilians. More than 1,200 anarchists and communists were put on trial and several, including Eugen Leviné, were executed.

Leviné himself had opposed the declaration of the Republic initially, thinking that the action was premature and that the revolution would be betrayed by social democrats. Florian Keller, of In Defense of Marxism, quotes him explaining his vote to oppose declaring the Bavarian Soviet Republic:

"We Communists harbour the greatest mistrust against a Soviet Republic whose sponsors are the Social Democratic Ministers Schneppenhorst and Dürr, who at all times fought the idea of councils with every possible means. We can only explain this as an attempt by the bankrupt leaders to join the masses through apparently revolutionary action, or as a deliberate provocation.

We know from examples in northern Germany that the majority socialists [then common name for the SPD] often endeavoured to bring about premature action in order to stifle them all the more successfully. The whole of your approach calls for the greatest vigilance. A Soviet Republic is not being proclaimed by an armchair decision, it is the result of serious struggles by the proletariat and its victory.

...We are preparing for [the Soviet Republic] and we have time. At the present time, the proclamation of a Soviet Republic is extremely unfavourable...After the first rush, the following would happen: the majority socialists would withdraw under the first good pretext and consciously betray the proletariat. The USPD [Independent Social Democratic Party] would join in, then give way, begin to vacillate, negotiate, and thereby become unconscious traitors. And we Communists would pay for your deeds with the blood of our best."


3
 
 

Colonial Building Riot (1932)

Tue Apr 05, 1932

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The Colonial Building Riot began on this day in 1932, in St. John's, Newfoundland, when protests during the Great Depression turned violent, nearly causing the death of the Prime Minister, who promptly resigned and fled.

The protests were prompted by both the economic depression and corruption in the government of John Squires, the Newfoundland Prime Minister at that time.

The 10,000 protesters demanded a petition to investigate Squires for corruption, becoming unruly when no response was given. Some members of the crowd beat down the doors to the Colonial Building, and, when entering it, battled with police, both inside and outside the building.

In response, protesters began throwing objects through windows and attempted to set the Colonial Building on fire. Prime Minister Squires exited the building, but was found by the crowd, who assaulted him and forced him to take shelter at a private residence.

Squires immediately resigned - while the riot was still going on - and called for new elections. His party, the Liberal Party, won only two seats, with the vast majority going to the United Newfoundland Party. Regardless, this government was dissolved in 1934 and replaced by the Commission of Government, a non-democratic body with representatives chosen directly by the British Government.


4
 
 

JVP Revolt (1971)

Mon Apr 05, 1971

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Image: Rohana Wijeweera with his daughter, unknown year [bbc.com]


The Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) Revolt began on this day in 1971, the first armed uprising by the communist JVP against the Government of Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), under Prime Minister Sirimavo Bandaranaike.

The JVP was initiated by Rohana Wijeweera (shown), a former medical student ex-functionary of the Maoist Ceylon Communist Party. The group was explicitly revolutionary, eschewing electoralism, and drew recruits from economically alienated youth. In 1970, Wijeweera was arrested following unruly anti-Vietnam War protests in front of the U.S. embassy, and JVP launched the 1971 armed rebellion shortly afterward, while its founder was still imprisoned.

The revolt began on April 5th, 1971 and lasted until June of that year. The insurgents were able to capture and hold several towns and rural areas for several weeks until they were recaptured by the armed forces.

The official death toll was listed as 1,200, however other accounts estimate the deaths to be around 4,000 - 5,000 people. The rebellion led to Ceylon severing ties with North Korea, which it accused of supporting the JVP.

In 1987, the JVP launched another armed rebellion, this one sustained for three years and involving guerrilla warfare and political assassinations.

According to Dr. Rohan Gunaratna's research, in this second rebellion, the JVP killed approximately 200 people, including politicians, academics, and military officers, between 1987 and 1990. In contrast, the total death toll of 35,000 - 60,000 is mostly due to violence perpetrated by state-sponsored death squads.


5
 
 

MLK Jr. Assassinated (1968)

Thu Apr 04, 1968

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On this day in 1968, Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated at the age of 39 while supporting striking sanitation workers in Memphis, Tennessee. Although James Earl Rey was convicted for the murder, but speculation of government involvement has persisted for decades after his death.

Although he is lionized today fo his activism, at the time he was was the target of multiple assassination attempts, arrested 23 times, and surveilled and harassed by the government.

In particular, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover harmed Dr. King by making him a target of COINTELPRO, a secret program where FBI agents spied on, infiltrated, attempted to discredit, and even assassinated members of "subversive" political movements, black liberation movements in particular.

King was killed just a month before the Poor People's Campaign of 1968, which he had been helping organize with the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC). The march was carried out in May and June, under the leadership of Ralph Abernathy.

"Well, I don't know what will happen now. We've got some difficult days ahead. But it really doesn't matter with me now, because I've been to the mountaintop. And I don't mind."

- MLK Jr., April 3rd, 1968


6
 
 

Rainbow Coalition Founded (1969)

Fri Apr 04, 1969

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The Rainbow Coalition was a multicultural movement of cross-racial class solidarity, founded on this day in 1969, in Chicago, Illinois with the coming together of the Black Panther Party, the Young Lords, and the Young Patriots.

These organizations were under the leadership of Fred Hampton, Jose Cha Cha Jiménez, and William "Preacherman" Fesperman, respectively. It was the first of several 20th century Black-led organizations to use the "rainbow coalition" concept.

The Rainbow Coalition expanded quickly, including various radical political groups like the Lincoln Park Poor People's Coalition, Students for a Democratic Society ("SDS"), the American Indian Movement (AIM), and the Red Guard Party.

The Coalition brokered treaties to end crime and gang violence and organized to establish class solidarity across racial lines. On December 3rd, Fred Hampton was assassinated by the Chicago Police Department and the FBI, and the Rainbow Coalition effectively dissolved.


7
 
 

"The Ballot or The Bullet" Speech (1964)

Fri Apr 03, 1964

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On this day in 1964, Malcolm X delivered a speech at Cory Methodist Church in Cleveland, Ohio, discussing the strategies of electoralism and armed defense, stating "In 1964, it's the ballot or the bullet".

The speech took place less than a month after Malcolm X announced his split with the Nation of Islam, and in it he signaled a willingness to cooperate with civil rights leaders. In the speech, Malcolm X did not abandon electoralism entirely, but stated "Don't be throwing out any ballots. A ballot is like a bullet. You don't throw your ballots until you see a target, and if that target is not within your reach, keep your ballot in your pocket".

Here is a brief excerpt from the speech:

"I went to a white school over here in Mason, Michigan. The white man made the mistake of letting me read his history books. He made the mistake of teaching me that Patrick Henry was a patriot, and George Washington - wasn't nothing non-violent about ol' Pat, or George Washington. 'Liberty or death' is was what brought about the freedom of whites in this country from the English.

This is why I say it's the ballot or the bullet. It's liberty or it's death. It's freedom for everybody or freedom for nobody.

...

A revolution is bloody, but America is in a unique position. She's the only country in history in the position actually to become involved in a bloodless revolution. All she's got to do is give the Black man in this country everything that's due him. Everything."


8
 
 

Richmond Bread Riot (1863)

Thu Apr 02, 1863

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On this day in 1863, the Richmond Bread Riot, the largest of several bread riots that took place in the Confederacy, began when thousands of hungry people began attacking government warehouses and stores, chanting "Bread or Blood!"

During the Civil War, Richmond, Virginia had been suffering an economic crisis in which overcrowding, skyrocketing rent prices, and unaffordable food led to widespread suffering among the poor. Thousands of people, mostly poor women, protested and demanded a meeting with the governor of Virginia.

When this meeting was denied, the crowd took the streets, chanting "We celebrate our right to live! We are starving!" and "Bread or blood!" They then began attacking government warehouses, grocery stores, and various mercantile establishments, seizing food, clothing, and wagons, as well as jewelry and other luxury goods.

Over sixty rioters were arrested, and the Confederate government censored reporting of the event in the press, fearing that it would hurt the morale of the war effort.


9
 
 

Isaac Deutscher (1907 - 1967)

Wed Apr 03, 1907

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Image: A photograph of Isaac Deutscher, unknown location and date. [jacobin.org]


Isaac Deutscher, born on this day in 1907, was a Marxist author and activist who played an important role in the British New Left after being expelled from the Polish Communist Party (KPP) for "exaggerating the danger of Nazism" in 1932. Deutscher is perhaps best known as a biographer of Leon Trotsky and Joseph Stalin.

Deutscher was born to a Jewish family in Chrzanów, in modern day southern Poland, then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. He first came to prominence as a poet, publishing verse in both Yiddish and Polish, concerned Jewish and Polish mysticism, history and mythology.

Around 1927, Deutscher joined the outlawed Polish Communist Party and very soon became the chief editor of the clandestine and semi-clandestine communist press.

Deutscher co-founded the first anti-Stalin group in the KPP, protesting the party view that social democrats were "social fascists". In an article "The Danger of Barbarism over Europe", Deutscher urged the formation of a united front against Nazism.

Deutscher was expelled from the Party in 1932, officially for "exaggerating the danger of Nazism and spreading panic in the communist ranks." The Nazis would invade Poland on September 1st, 1939.

Isaac had left Poland for London in April earlier that year to serve as a correspondent for a Polish-Jewish paper. After war broke out, he joined the Polish Army in Scotland, but most of his time in the Army was spent in the punitive camps as a "dangerous and subversive element" for protesting against institutional anti-Semitism.

In 1949, Deutscher published his first major work, "Stalin, A Political Biography". Following this, Isaac published his magnum opus, a three-volume biography of Leon Trotsky: "The Prophet Armed" (1954), "The Prophet Unarmed" (1959) and "The Prophet Outcast" (1963).

"Socialism does not aim at the perpetuation of the national state; its aim is international society. It is based not on national self-centredness and self-sufficiency, but on international division of labour and on cooperation. This almost forgotten truth is the very ABC of Marxism."

- Isaac Deutscher, in a 1958 interview with KS Karol, linked below


10
 
 

Diggers Occupy St George's Hill (1649)

Thu Apr 01, 1649

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Image: A drawing of the Diggers digging in the commons, attacked by cavalry. Unknown author and year. A caption on the image quotes Gerrand Winstanley: "England is not a free people, till the poor that have no land, have a free allowance to dig and labour the commons..." [Spartacus-Educational]


On this day in 1649, a group of commoners began sowing vegetables on St George's Hill in Surrey, England. Their movement became known as the Diggers, agrarian proto-communist dissidents who opposed enclosure during the English Civil War.

The Diggers arose during a time of social upheaval - England was in the midst of a civil war between the Parliament, led by Oliver Cromwell, and the Crown. While the Parliamentarians conflicted with royalist aristocracy, it did not represent commoners; only property owners could vote.

During the civil war, other dissenting groups came into prominence. Among them were the Levellers, often seen as proto-liberal, which supported extending suffrage to all male heads of households, regardless of property ownership. The Diggers (who called themselves the "True Levellers"), meanwhile, opposed the seizure of land by private individuals, and sought to preserve and utilize common land for the benefit of the common people.

According to British historian J.F.C. Harrison, on April 1st, 1649 a small group of about thirty to forty people began to dig and plant the common land on St George's Hill in Surrey. Over the first few days, their numbers on the hill quickly swelled as they attracted sympathizers.

Soon, however, the protesters found themselves under violent assaults from mobs coordinated by local landowners. The leaders of the Levellers attempted to distance themselves from the "True Levellers", making a statement in opposition to the expropriation of estates.

Two leaders of the Diggers, Gerard Winstanley and William Everard, were ordered to appear before the Council of State in London, where they argued that the land had been granted by God to the common people, and that they were simply claiming the commons in the name of the poor. They further expressed hope that more people would follow their example.

On the same day, the group published a pamphlet outlining their beliefs, entitled "The True Levellers Standard". The pamphlet described private property as the original sin and war as a means which was used to defend the system of property. New Model Army commander Thomas Fairfax considered the men harmless, declining to persecute them further.

While St. George's Hill would face regular evictions, the Diggers would persistently return as rebellions appeared in other areas during 1649-50. The Diggers would eventually be defeated and driven from the lands via military force in April 1650. Many surviving Diggers, such as Winstanley, continued to advocate for land redistribution.

The continuing process of enclosure was a major part of the transition from feudalism towards capitalism. However, the legacy of the Diggers would not be forgotten, as ownership of land remained an important issue for the poor.

The Diggers would later come to be recognized as proto-socialist, proto-communist or proto-anarchist, and served as an inspiration for radicals in the centuries that followed. The "Diggers' Song", a folk ballad commemorating them, is still sung to this day, and was covered by anarcho-punk band Chumbawumba in 1988.

During the 1960s, an influential radical theatre collective in San Francisco named themselves after the Diggers. In 1975, a film entitled "Winstanley" was released about the movement.

In 1999, 300 people, organized under the banner "The Land is Ours", reoccupied St Georges Hill on the 350th anniversary of the Diggers' commune.


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Ruth Wilson Gilmore (1950 - )

Sun Apr 02, 1950

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Ruth Wilson Gilmore, born on this day in 1950, is a prison abolitionist and scholar who founded the field of "carceral geography", the study of the relationships across space and political economy that define modern incarceration.

Gilmore serves as the Director of the Center for Place, Culture, and Politics and professor of geography in Earth and Environmental Sciences at The City University of New York. She has also co-founded several social justice organizations, such as the California Prison Moratorium Project.

In 1998, Gilmore was one of the co-founders of Critical Resistance, alongside Angela Davis. In 2003, she co-founded Californians United for a Responsible Budget (CURB) to fight jail and prison construction and currently serves on its board.

In 2007, Gilmore published her work Golden Gulag, which provides the first detailed explanation for the dramatic increase of U.S. carceral rates since 1980, described by a California state analyst as the "biggest prison building project in the history of the world", according to University of California Press.

"In the United States, where organized abandonment has happened throughout the country, in urban and rural contexts, for more than 40 years, we see that as people have lost the ability to keep their individual selves, their households, and their communities together with adequate income, clean water, reasonable air, reliable shelter, and transportation and communication infrastructure, as those things have gone away, what's risen up in the crevices of this cracked foundation of security has been policing and prison."

- Ruth Wilson Gilmore


12
 
 

Poll Tax Riots (1990)

Sat Mar 31, 1990

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Image: A couple kiss during the poll tax riots in 1990. Photograph: David Hoffman Photo Library


On this day in 1990, 180k-250k people gathered in Kennington Park, London to protest an unpopular poll tax imposed by the Conservative government of Margaret Thatcher, leading to widespread police brutality and rioting. By 1991, the government promised to replace the tax, and the poll tax was repealed in 1993.

The proposed poll tax was a "Community Charge", a head tax that saw every adult pay a fixed rate amount set by their local authority according to Daily Telegraph correspondent Nick Collins.

The Charge proved extremely unpopular; while students and the registered unemployed had to pay 20%, some large families occupying relatively small houses saw their charges go up considerably, and the tax was thus accused of saving the rich money and moving the expenses onto the poor.

On March 31st, 1990, between 180,000 and 250,000 people gathered in Kennington Park. A police report completed a year after the riot estimated the crowd at 200,000.

The rally was met with a large police presence, and rioting broke out around 4pm. By midnight, around 113 people were injured, mostly members of the public and 339 people had been arrested.

Radical left-wing groups in the protest, anarchists and the UK Socialist Workers' Party (SWP) in particular, were blamed by various media and political figures for the violence and property destruction. A member of the SWP Central Committee told The Times: "We did not go on the demonstration with any intention of fighting with the police, but we understand why people are angry and we will not condemn that anger." A 1991 police report concluded there was "no evidence that the trouble was orchestrated by left-wing anarchist groups".

The large scale of opposition and resistance would facilitate Thatcher's fall from power as Prime Minister and Conservative leader later that year, and the poll tax itself would later be abolished entirely, replaced with a "Council Tax" in 1993.


13
 
 

Richard Wolff (1942 - )

Wed Apr 01, 1942

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Image: Richard Wolff giving a speech, unknown location and year. [speakoutnow.org]


Richard D. Wolff, born on this day in 1942, is a Marxist economist and author who co-founded Democracy at Work and hosts Economic Update, a weekly series which discusses political and economic issues from a Marxist perspective.

Wolff is also Professor Emeritus of Economics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and currently a Visiting Professor in the Graduate Program in International Affairs of the New School University in New York.

In 1988, Wolff co-founded "Rethinking Marxism", a still running academic journal dedicated to Marxist analyses of economics, culture, and society. Among his other works are "Capitalism Hits the Fan" (2009) and "Democracy at Work: A Cure for Capitalism".

The New York Times dubbed Wolff "America's most prominent Marxist economist", and he is featured regularly in television, print, and internet media.

"If you lived with a roommate as unstable as this economic system, you would've moved out or demanded that your roommate get professional help."

- Dr. Richard Wolff


14
 
 

Alexandra Kollontai (1872 - 1952)

Sun Mar 31, 1872

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Image: A photo portrait of Alexandra Kollontai, unknown location and date. [Wikipedia]


Alexandra Kollontai, born on this day in 1872, was a Marxist feminist revolutionary who served as People's Commissar for Social Welfare in the Soviet Union and, later in life, as a diplomat for the USSR abroad.

Alexandra was born into a wealthy family of Ukrainian, Russian, and Finnish background, acquiring a fluency in both Russian and Finnish early on. This experience would later assist her in her career as a Soviet diplomat.

In 1895, Kollontai read August Bebel's "Woman and Socialism", which was a major influence on her thinking. In 1896, she helped fundraise in support of a mass textile strike in St. Petersburg, retaining connections with the women textile workers of St. Petersburg for the rest of her career.

In the years leading up to 1917, Kollontai was active as a Marxist theoretician, educator, and anti-war activist (opposing World War I, specifically). During this time, she established contact with Vladimir Lenin and gave a lengthy speaking tour in the U.S., sharing a stage with Eugene V. Debs and giving 123 speeches in 4 languages.

Following the 1917 February Revolution, Kollontai returned to Russia. Later that year, she voted in favor of the decision to launch an armed uprising against the government, also participating in the revolt. At the Second All-Russian Congress of Soviets, she was elected Commissar of Social Welfare in the new Soviet government.

The Encyclopedia of Women's Autobiography describes her efforts within the Soviet government: "The changes that Kollontai tried to bring about were enormous, involving the complete destruction of the old system and the creation of a new one...Kollontai authorized decrees that committed the Soviet State to full funding of maternity care from conception through the first year of a child's life - an unheard of measure for the beginning of the 20th century. She attempted to establish full legal, political, and sexual equality for women and to redress the entire marriage code."

In 1920, Kollontai joined the left "Workers' Opposition", an opposition tendency in the Bolshevik Party opposed to what they saw as the increasing bureaucratization of the Soviet state. In March 1921, the Workers' Opposition was banned, along with all other factions.

In 1922, Kollontai was one of the signers of the "Letter of the 22" to the Communist International, protesting the banning of factions in Russia. The appeal failed, and a three-man commission, Stalin, Zinoviev and Dzerzhinsky, recommended her be expelled from the party, however she was ultimately allowed to remain.

Following this incident, Kollontai began to serve as a Soviet diplomat, becoming one of the first women to work in international diplomacy. Although she initially intended this venture to be temporary, she soon began to regard her work abroad as a kind of political exile, and would spend the rest of her political career in this role.

"Class instinct...always shows itself to be more powerful than the noble enthusiasms of 'above-class' politics. So long as the bourgeois women and their [proletarian] 'younger sisters' are equal in their inequality, the former can, with complete sincerity, make great efforts to defend the general interests of women.

But once the barrier is down and the bourgeois women have received access to political activity, the recent defenders of the 'rights of all women' become enthusiastic defenders of the privileges of their class, content to leave the younger sisters with no rights at all. Thus, when the feminists talk to working women about the need for a common struggle to realise some 'general women's' principle, women of the working class are naturally distrustful."

  • Alexandra Kollontai

15
 
 

Loray Mill Strike (1929)

Sat Mar 30, 1929

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Image: Two women struggling with a state militia trooper during the textile workers' strike in Gastonia, North Carolina. From the article "Battle Songs of the Southern Class Struggle: Songs of the Gastonia Textile Strike of 1929", by Patrick Huber.


On this day in 1929, mill workers in Gastonia, North Carolina, led by communist labor organizer Fred Beal, voted in favor of striking to demand a 40 hour work week, higher wages, and union recognition, beginning the Loray Mill Strike.

On April 1st, 1,800 mill workers walked out on the job and formally made their demands. Workers lived in company homes and the mill owners promptly had them evicted. Workers created a tent city on the outskirts of town, guarded by armed strikers.

On June 7th, an altercation between strikers and police led to the police chief being shot to death, and several strikers and police were wounded. In the aftermath, 71 strikers were arrested, and mobs of anti-strike community members harassed and shot at striking workers, killing a young woman. Fred Beal and Clarence Miller, another leader of the strike, were indicted and convicted for the murder of the police chief. Both skipped bail and fled to the Soviet Union.

Though largely unsuccessful in attaining its goals of better working conditions and wages, the strike was considered very successful in a lasting way - it caused an immense controversy which gave the labor movement momentum, propelling the movement in its national development.


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Land Day (1976)

Tue Mar 30, 1976

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Image: Land Day, 1978 (Photo: Gidon Gitai)


On this day in 1976, Palestinians initiated a campaign of resistance, including a general strike, occupations, and violent confrontation with police, in opposition to Israeli settlement plans. The uprising is commemorated annually as Land Day.

Land Day was not a spontaneous uprising, but the result of months of planning. On May 21st, 1975, activists and Arab intellectuals held a meeting in Haifa to discuss a strategic response to Israel stepping up its campaign to appropriate Palestinian-owned land. This began a series of meetings over which the campaign was conceptualized, including a general congress that was the largest public gathering of Palestinians in Israel since 1948.

On February 14th, 1976, more than 5,000 residents rallied in the village of Sakhnin, calling for a general strike in response to Israeli repression. To prepare for the strike, local land defense committees and branches of the Communist Party distributed leaflets, organized demonstrations, and held meetings in several Arab towns and villages.

The first confrontations began on the eve of Land Day, March 29th as demonstrators in Arraba demanded the release of a local activist, closing the streets and setting fire to tires. Israeli soldiers fired on demonstrators with live ammunition, injuring many of them.

The following day, the general strike was initiated in Arab towns and villages, including the West Bank, Gaza Strip, and refugee camps in Lebanon. Israeli troops and border guards in military trucks and tanks raided Arab communities to arrest activist politicians and disperse demonstrators.

In total, six people were killed, approximately fifty were injured, and three hundred were arrested. When some of the injured applied for compensation, the Israeli Ministry of Defense categorized the Land Day confrontations as "combat activity".

The Interactive Encyclopedia of the Palestine Question describes Land Day's legacy this way: "Land Day was a turning point in the orientations and tools adopted for Palestinian struggle inside Israel. After Land Day the Palestinians in Israel gradually structured their presence as a national group inside Israel in a way that went beyond their local struggles."

During Land Day protests in 2018, seventeen Palestinians were killed, including five Hamas members, and more than 1,400 were injured in shootings by the Israeli Army during a march calling for the Palestinian right of return at the borders with Gaza.


17
 
 

Wellington Trades Hall Bombing (1984)

Thu Mar 29, 1984

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Image: Two investigators poring over the wreckage from the bombing


On this day in 1984, the Trades Hall in Wellington, New Zealand was bombed, killing the building's caretaker and badly injuring his dog. To this day, the perpetrator has not been identified.

The Trades Hall was the headquarters of a number of trade unions, and it is most commonly assumed that unions were the target of the bombing. Ernie Abbott, the building's caretaker, was killed when he attempted to move the suitcase, which is believed to have contained three sticks of gelignite triggered by a mercury switch.

To this day, the perpetrator has never been identified. It was revealed in a 2019 episode of Cold Case that police had a prime suspect, a retired marine engineer with explosives expertise and anti-union attitudes, however the evidence was considered circumstantial and insufficient to lay charges.


18
 
 

Storming of Connolly House (1933)

Wed Mar 29, 1933

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Image: Connolly House, during an occupation by housing activists in 2022 [via @StreetlinkBAC on Twitter]


On this day in 1933, a crowd of 5,000-6,000 Catholic anti-communists stormed and burned the Connolly House in Dublin, the headquarters of the Communist Party. Attempts were also made to attack the Workers' College in Eccles Street and the Workers Union of Ireland office in Marlborough Street.

The Connolly House had been under siege for multiple days, and the incident was part of a larger series of events where anti-communist crowds attacked Dublin buildings associated with the far left.

The Catholic Church played a key role in fostering this anti-communist sentiment. In October 1931, the Church stated "You cannot be a Catholic and a Communist. One stands for Christ, the other for Anti-Christ". In his Lenten pastoral for 1933, the Bishop of Kildare warned his congregation "be prepared to fight...There is no reason why anyone who undertakes to propagate Communism should be allowed do so".


19
 
 

Arkansas Bans Anarchy and "Bolshevism" (1919)

Fri Mar 28, 1919

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Image: Charles Brough, the Arkansas Governor who signed Act 512 into law, in 1919


On this day in 1919, Arkansas, joining the majority of U.S. states at the time, passed a law to explicitly "punish anarchy and to prevent the introduction and spread of Bolshevism and kindred doctrines" within its borders.

The law, known as Act 512, also banned advocating for the overthrow of the state of Arkansas or federal government, as well as any flag "which is calculated to overthrow present form of government".

Act 512 categorized these behaviors as a misdemeanor crime, punishable by a fine of between $10 and a $1,000, and the perpetrator could be imprisoned in the county jail for up to six months. On March 28th, 1919, the Act was signed into law by Governor Charles Brough (shown).

These anti-Bolshevik laws were used against socialist, communist, and union organizers in Arkansas a number of times in the 1930s, approximately the same time that the Communist Party of Arkansas reached its zenith. Examples of repression enabled by this law include the 1934 arrest of George Cruz, associated with the Original Independent Benevolent Afro-Pacific Movement of the World (OIBAPMW) and the 1935 arrest of Ward Rodgers, a member of the Southern Tenant Farmers' Union (STFU).


20
 
 

Clara Lemlich (1886 - 1982)

Sun Mar 28, 1886

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Clara Lemlich Shavelson, born on this day in 1886, was a Jewish communist and labor leader of the "Uprising of 20,000", a massive strike of shirtwaist workers in New York's garment industry in 1909. Later blacklisted from the industry for her labor union work, she became a member of the Communist Party USA and a consumer activist.

Before the shirtwaist strike began, Clara had been listening to men speak at a union meeting about the disadvantages and cautions about the shirtwaist workers going on a general strike. After four hours of this, she rose and declared in Yiddish that she wanted to say a few words of her own.

She declared that the shirtwaist workers would go on a general strike, which received a standing ovation from the audience. Clara then took an oath swearing that if she became a traitor to the cause she now voted for, then that the hand she now held high wither from her arm.

The strike was successful - under a "Protocol of Peace", factory owners and the union agreed to end the strike under improved wages, working conditions, and hours.


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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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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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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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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.


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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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