- Harry Haywood
Harry Haywood (
February 6 ,1898 - January 1985) was born inSouth Omaha ,Nebraska to former slaves, Harriet and Haywood Hall. He was the youngest of three children. Named after his father at birth, Haywood Hall, "Harry Haywood" is apseudonym adopted in 1925. Radicalized by theChicago Race Riot of 1919 , he was a leadingAfrican American member of both theCommunist Party of the United States (CPUSA) and theCommunist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU). He is best known for his significant theoretical contributions to theMarxist national question and as a founder of theMaoist New Communist Movement . In Richard Wright's autobiographical novel "Black Boy (American Hunger)", the character of Buddy Nealson represents Haywood.Career with the Communist Party USA
Harry Haywood began his revolutionary career by joining the
African Blood Brotherhood in 1922 followed by the Young Communist League in 1923. Shortly thereafter, in 1925 he joined the Communist Party, USA. After joining the CPUSA Haywood went toMoscow to study, first to theCommunist University of the Toilers of the East in 1925, then to theInternational Lenin School in 1927. He stayed until 1930 as a delegate to the Communist International (Comintern ). There he worked on commissions dealing with the question of African Americans in the United States as well as the development of the "Native Republic Thesis" for theSouth African Communist Party . Haywood worked to draft the "Comintern Resolutions on the Negro Question" of 1928 and 1930, which put forward the line that African Americans in the Black Belt of theUnited States made up an oppressed nation, with the right toself-determination up to and includingsecession . He would continue to fight for this line throughout his life.In the CPUSA, Haywood served on the
Central Committee from 1927 to 1938 and on thePolitburo from 1931 until 1938. He also participated in the major factional struggles internal to the CPUSA againstJay Lovestone andEarl Browder , regularly siding withWilliam Z. Foster .He was
General Secretary of theLeague of Struggle for Negro Rights . In the early 1930s while head of the CPUSA Negro Department, he was a leader in the movement to support theScottsboro Boys , organized miners in Pittsburgh with the National Miners Union, and was a leader in the struggles of the militant Sharecroppers Union in theDeep South . He also led the "Hands offEthiopia " campaign inChicago 's Black South Side to oppose theFascist invasion of Ethiopia in 1935. When eleven Communist leaders went on trial under theSmith Act in 1949, Haywood was assigned the task of research for the defense.Haywood's military career stretched through three wars, beginning with
World War I where he served with a Black regiment. He fought for the Popular Front in theSpanish Civil War with the Abraham Lincoln Battalion of theInternational Brigades . With theMerchant Marines , he served inWorld War II where he was active with National Maritime Union.The Comintern and the Black Belt Nation
During his four and half year stay in the
Soviet Union (1925-1930) Harry Haywood held dual membership in both the CPUSA and the CPSU. As a member of the CPSU, he travelled extensively through the Soviet Union's autonomous republics, and participated in the struggles against both theLeft Opposition headed byLeon Trotsky and theRight Opposition led byNikolai Bukharin . In these struggles and in others Haywood was on the side ofJoseph Stalin .With the Comintern, Haywood was assigned to work with the newly created Negro Commission. His major work regarding this, "Negro Liberation", argues that the root of the oppression of Blacks was the unsolved
agrarian question in the South. There he analyzed that the unfinished bourgeois democratic revolution of Reconstruction had been betrayed through the Hayes-TildenCompromise of 1877 and had thus left African Americans abandoned and thrust back on to theplantations from which they had been freed, now astenant farmers andsharecroppers faced with the Redeemer governments, the system of Jim Crow, and the terror of theKu Klux Klan . According to Haywood, the rise ofimperialism left Blacks frozen as "landless, semi-slaves in the South."Through all of this developed a distinct African American nation which fulfilled the criteria laid out by Stalin in his "Marxism and the National Question": a historically constituted, stable community of people, formed on the basis of a common language, territory, economic life, and psychological makeup manifested in a common culture.
Haywood saw as the correct response to this nothing short of the demand for self-determination (up to and including the right to separate from the United States) of the African American people in their historically constituted national territory, the Black Belt South, and full equality everywhere else. Only with genuine political power, which from a Marxist point of view includes control of the
productive forces , including the land, could African American's obtain genuine equality. This was seen as a prerequisite for broaderworking class unity.Most of those in the CPUSA who disagreed with the analysis put forth by Harry Haywood and the Comintern considered the question of African American oppression in the United States simply a matter of
racial prejudice with moral roots rather than an economic and political question of national oppression. They saw it as a problem to be solved underSocialism and in no need of special attention until after the institution of the revolutionaryDictatorship of the Proletariat . To this charge Haywood countered that the category of "race" is a mystification and that such policy can only alienate African Americans and inhibit working class unity.Following
urbanization and major outmigrations from the South critics attempted to usestatistics to counter the Black Belt theory. Haywood, in his 1957 article, "For a Revolutionary Position on the Negro Question," responded that the question of an oppressed nation in the South was not one of "nose counting."Expulsion from the CPUSA
Following the death of Stalin in 1953 and
Nikita Krushchev 's rise to power, the CPUSA accompaniedMoscow in Krushchev's policy ofdestalinization and "peaceful coexistence ". Long an admirer ofMao Zedong , Harry Haywood was one of the pioneers of theanti-revisionist movement born out of the growingSino-Soviet split . He was driven out of the CPUSA in the late 1950s along with many others who took firm anti-revisionist or pro-Stalin positions.The CPUSA's decision to change its line on the African American national question was a central factor in Haywood's expulsion. Though it had not been a strong point for the CPUSA since the dissolution of the Sharcroppers Union, the demand for self-determination for African Americans in the South was officially dropped by the CPUSA in 1959 (it was also dropped briefly once before when Browder liquidated the party in 1944) in favor of a "
Melting Pot " position that as Americancapitalism developed, so too would Black-white unity. Haywood, no longer a functioning party member, attempted to intervene, writing "On the Negro Question" which was distributed at the Seventeenth National Convention in 1959 by and in the name of African Blood Brotherhood founder,Cyril Briggs . This was not effective, however, as most of Haywood's potential allies had already been removed in the name of combatting "left"-sectarianism anddogmatism .In Haywood's view, this change of line was based on longstanding "white
chauvanism " in the party. He also argued that the change prevented the CPUSA from giving correct leadership during the Civil Rights Movement and left the party to tail behind theNAACP andMartin Luther King . This further alienated the party from the militantBlack Power Movement that was to follow.With the New Communist Movement
After being isolated and driven from the ranks of the CPUSA, Harry Haywood became one of the initiators of the New Communist Movement, the goal of which was to found a new vanguard Communist Party on an anti-revisionist basis, believing the CPUSA to have deviated irrevocably from
Marxism-Leninism . He was one of the founders of theProvisional Organizing Committee for a Communist Party (POC), formed inNew York in August, 1958 by eighty-three mostly Black and Puerto Rican delegates from the CPUSA. According to Haywood, the POC rapidly degenerated into an isolated, dogmatic, ultraleft sect, completely removed from any political practice.He went from there to work in one of the newly formed Maoist groups of the New Communist Movement, the Communist Party (Marxist-Leninist). In the CP(M-L) Haywood served on the Central Committee and published, along with his other major works, his 700 page, critical
autobiography , "Black Bolshevik". This book became, because of its breadth and scope, an important document and through it and his other writings Haywood was able to provide ideological leadership to the New Communist Movement. Haywood's theoretical contributions had a substantial impact on the major groups of the movement well beyond his own CP(M-L), including, for example, the League of Revolutionary Struggle (Marxist-Leninist), the early Revolutionary Communist Party, theRevolutionary Workers Headquarters and the Communist Workers Party. Nonetheless, lack of experience,sectarianism , andvoluntarism played a major role in keeping the young Maoist groups from taking a strong leading role.Despite all of its changes, the Black Belt South is still considered relevant by many Marxists. The reason given by many revolutionary groups is because of the negative impact of conditions for African Americans in the South upon the US working class as a whole. Haywood's theoretical contributions to questions of African American national oppression and
national liberation thus remain highly valued by theRay O. Light Group , which developed out of an anti-revisionist split from the Communist Party USA in 1961,Freedom Road Socialist Organization , which was originally formed from the mergers of several New Communist Movement groups in the 1980s, and theMaoist Internationalist Movement .References
* William Eric Perkins, "Harry Haywood (1898-1985)", "Encyclopedia of the American Left". Mari Jo Buhle, Paul Buhle, Dan Georgakas, Eds. Garland, New York: 1990. 928 pages. ISBN 978-0195120882
* Harry Haywood, "Black Bolshevik: Autobiography of an Afro-American Communist". Liberator Press, Chicago: 1978. 700 pages. ISBN 0-930720-53-9
*Robin D.G. Kelley , "Hammer & Hoe: Alabama Communists During the Great Depression". University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill: 1990. 392 pages. ISBN 978-0-8078-4288-5
*William Z. Foster , "History of the Communist Party of the United States". International Publishers, 1952. 600 pages.
* Cedric J. Robinson, "Black Marxism: The Making of the Black Radical Tradition". University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill: 480 pages. ISBN 0-8078-4829-8
* Max Elbaum, "Revolution in the Air: Sixties Radicals Turn to Lenin, Mao, and Che". Verso, New York: 320 pages. ISBN 978-1-84467-563-0ee also
*
Communists in the U.S. Labor Movement (1919-1937)
*Communists in the U.S. Labor Movement (1937-1950)
*The Communist Party and African-Americans
*American Civil Rights Movement (1896-1954)
*Timeline of Racial Tension in Omaha, Nebraska
*Black Belt (U.S. region)
*Black nationalism
*Black separatism Further reading
General
*Foster, William Z. "History of the Communist Party of the United States". International Publishers, New York: 1952. 600 pages.
*Foster, William Z. "The Negro People in American History". International Publishers, New York: 1954. 608 pages.
*Kelly, Robin D. G. "Hammer and Hoe: Alabama Communists During the Great Depression". University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill: 1990. 369 pages.
elected writings by Harry Haywood
* Harry Haywood, "Black Bolshevik: Autobiography of an Afro-American Communist". Liberator Press, Chicago: 1978. 700 pages.
* Harry Haywood, "Negro Liberation". International Publishers, New York: 1948. 245 pages. (later edition from Liberator Press, Chicago: 1976. 245 pages)
* Harry Haywood, "For a Revolutionary Position on the Negro Question". Liberator Press, Chicago: 1975. 38 pages. (Written in 1957)
* Harry Haywood, "On the Negro Question". 1959 (Under the name of Cyril Briggs). Available in: "Towards Victorious Afro-American National Liberation: A Collection of Pamphlets, Leaflets and Essays Which Dealt In a Timely Way With the Concrete Ongoing Struggle for Black Liberation Over the Past Decade and More." A Ray O. Light Publication, Bronx: 1982. pp. 383-403External links
* [http://www.marx2mao.com/Other/CR75.html "The 1928 and 1930 Comintern Resolutions on the Black National Question in the United States"] . The two major resolutions of the Comintern on the African American National Question. Harry Haywood worked on both.
* [http://marxistleninist.wordpress.com/2008/09/04/harry-haywood-on-the-african-american-national-question/ "The Struggle for the Leninist Position on the Negro Question in the United States"] A short 1933 article outlining Harry Haywood's position on the African American National Question.
* [http://marx2mao.com/Other/NL48.pdf "Negro Liberation"] Harry Haywood's main theoretical work on the African American National Question, 1948. (PDF )
* [http://comradezero.blogspot.com/2008/07/harry-haywood-for-revolutionary.html "For a Revolutionary Position on the Negro Question"] Selections from Harry Haywood's 1957 article defending his line on the national question from attacks from within the CPUSA.
* [http://comradezero.blogspot.com/2008/07/harry-haywood-on-trotskyism.html Harry Haywood on Trotskyism] Selections from "Black Bolshevik" onTrotskyism .
* [http://archive.lib.msu.edu/AFS/dmc/radicalism/public/all/southcomesnorth/AAK.pdf?CFID=5171542&CFTOKEN=34331723 "The South Comes North in Detroits Own Scottsboro Case"] by Harry Haywood (with the LSNR). (PDF )
* [http://www.leftspot.com/blog/?q=node/324 "China and its Supporters Were Wrong About USSR"] . An article written by Haywood for the "Guardian Newspaper" in 1984.
* [http://www.mltranslations.org/US/Rpo/aan/aan.htm "Documents from School on Afro-American National Question"] . Important texts from New Communist Movement groups based on theories put forward by Haywood.
* [http://www.frso.org/docs/2006/2006nq.htm "The Third International and the Struggle for a Correct Line on the African American National Question"] . May 2006 text presented by Freedom Road Socialist Organization to theWorkers Party of Belgium 'sInternational Communist Seminar demonstrating Harry Haywood's continuing relevance to American Marxist-Leninists.
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