- Cedric Belfrage
Cedric Henning Belfrage (
November 8 ,1904 –June 21 ,1990 ) was asocialist , author, journalist, translator and co-founder of the radical US-weekly newspaper the "National Guardian ". [ [http://www.readinkbooks.com/home/cericold.jpgCericold] at readingbooks.com]Literary and political development
Born in
London , Belfrage was educated atGresham's School , Holt and started his writing career as a film critic at Cambridge University, where he published his first article in Kinematograph Weekly (1924). In 1927, Belfrage went toHollywood , where he was hired by the "New York Sun " and "Film Weekly" as a correspondent. Belfrage returned to London in 1930 asSam Goldwyn 's press agent. Returning to Hollywood, he became politically active, joining theHollywood Anti-Nazi League , co-editing a left literary magazine, "The Clipper". Belfrage joined theUS Communist Party in 1937, but withdrew his membership a few months later. Thereafter, he maintained a friendly but critical relationship. DuringWorld War II he worked in theBritish Security Coordination for the Western hemisphere.In 1948, he wrote for and helped co-found---along with
James Aronson andJohn McManus ---the National Guardian (renamed the Guardian in 1967) to which he would remain affiliated until the late 1960s.Questioned during McCarthy-era
At the height of
McCarthyism , Belfrage was summoned in 1953 to appear before theHouse Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC). In 1955, he was deported by the U.S. government back to his native England. Belfrage then travelled toCuba in 1961, and in 1962, travelled throughoutSouth America finally settling inCuernavaca , Mexico. In 1973, Belfrage returned to the US for the first time since 1955, touring around the country with his new book, "The American Inquisition" (Bobbs Merrill, 1973, Siglo XXI, Mexico, Thunder' Mouth Press, 1989).Exile years
Belfrage later debuted as a Spanish-English translator, notably for the Latin American author
Eduardo Galeano . Belfrage continued to write extensively until his last years. He died inMexico on June 21, 1990.Intelligence and counter-intelligence reputation
According to FBI files, Belfrage was questioned by the
FBI in 1947 about his involvement with theCommunist Party . The interview covered his relations withEarl Browder ,Jacob Golos ,V. J. Jerome , andsurveillance s and documents aboutScotland Yard and theVichy Government of France.In 1995, the decrypted
VENONA intercepts--a project between the U.S. and British intelligence services to decipher Soviet wires--were made public. US intelligence alleges that Un-named codename number 9 (UNC/9) was Belfrage. Venona also had a cover name “Charlie” that was not identified by theFBI . The 1948 "Gorsky Memo", found in Soviet Archives, identifies Belfrage as having a covert relationship with Soviet intelligence as a member of the “Sound” and “Myrna” groups. Seven Venona decrpyts reference UNC/9 in passing conversations between Belfrage's bureau chief and Winston Churchill on to theSoviets .Family
Belfrage has three children;
Sally Belfrage andNicolas Belfrage with wifeMolly Castle andAnne Belfrage-Hertz (Zribi) with partnerAnne-Marie Hertz . He also has six grandchildren: Alexander and Eve Pomerence, Isabelle and Tom Zribi-Hertz and Beatriz and Ixta Belfrage.He was the younger brother of theactor andBBC newsreader Bruce Belfrage (1900-1974).Bibliography
Books
* "Away From It All." Gollancz, London, 1937; Simon and Schuster, 1937; Literary Guild, 1937 Penguin (Britain).
* "Promised Land." Gollancz, London, 1937; Left Book Club, London, 1937; Republished by Garland, New York, Classics of Film Literature series, 1983.
* "Let My People Go." Gollancz, London, 1937.
* "South of God." Left Book Club, 1938.
* "A Faith to Free the People." Modern Age, New York, 1942; Dryden Press, New York, 1944; Book Find Club, 1944.
* "They All Hold Swords." Modern Age, New York, 1941.
* "Abide With Me." Sloane Associates, New York, 1948; Secker and Warburg, London, 1948.
* "Seeds of Destruction." Cameron and Kahn, New York, 1954.
* "The Frightened Giant." Secker and Warburg, London, 1956.
* "My Master Columbus." Secker and Warburg, 1961; Doubleday, New York, 1962; Editiones Contemporaneos, Mexico, (in Spanish).
* "The Man at the Door With the Gun." Monthly Review, New York, 1963.
* "The American Inquisition." Bobbs-Merrill, 1973; Siglo XXI, Mexico (in Spanish). Thunder's Mouth Press, 1989.
* "Something to Guard." Columbia University Press, 1978.References
*Cedric Belfrage interview, 8 June 1947, [http://foia.fbi.gov/silversm/silversm3b.pdf FBI Silvermaster file, serial 2522, pgs. 47-49] (pgs. 446, 447, 448 in original).
*Cedric Belfrage statement, 3 June 1947, [http://foia.fbi.gov/silversm/silversm3a.pdf FBI Silvermaster file, serial 2583, pgs. 50-56] (pgs. 318 - 324 in original).
*Elizabeth Bentley deposition, 30 November 1945, FBI file 65-14603
*
*
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.