- League against Imperialism
The League against Imperialism (French: "Ligue contre l'impérialisme et l'oppression coloniale") was founded in the Egmont Palace in
Brussels ,Belgium , onFebruary 10 ,1927 , in presence of 175 delegates, among which 107 came from 37 countries under colonial rule. The Congress aimed at creating a "massanti-imperialist movement" at a world scale, and was supported by theComintern . Since 1924, the Comintern advocated support of colonial and semi-colonial countries and tried, with difficulties, to find convergences with the left-wing of theSecond International .1927 Brussels Conference
The League's headquarters were based first in
Berlin , thenLondon . Its creation was related to the revolutionary surge inChina since 1926 and the Komintern's openings towards the nationalistKuomintang which spearheaded the fight, along with Mao's Communist Party, against the Japanese in China. The initiative itself of the creation of this anti-imperialist league came from various personalities and movements, including theAfrican National Congress (ANC) of South Africa,Messali Hadj 'sNorth-African Star , pacifistsHenri Barbusse andGabrielle Duchêne ,Jawaharlal Nehru , accompanied byVirendranath Chattopadhyaya , socialists such asAlbert Einstein ,Fenner Brockway ,Arthur MacManus , members of theLigue des droits de l'homme (LDH, Human Rights League) such asVictor Basch , etc.Willy Münzenberg , who benefitted from the Komintern's trust, was in charge of its organization.Reginald Bridgeman was head of the British delegation sent by the House of Commons to the Conference, and became the League's general secretary in 1933.Three main points were made in Brussels: the anti-imperialist struggle in China, interventions of the United States in Latin America and the "
Negro revendications." The latter were presented at the tribune by the South AfricanGumene , the AntilleseBloncour of theIntercolonial Union , andLamine Senghor . The president of the "Defense Committee of the Negro Race" denounced the crimes committed by the colonial administration in Congo, concluding that:"Imperialist exploitation has as result the gradual extinction of African races. Their culture is going to be lost... For us, the anti-imperialist struggle is identical as anti-capitalist struggle." [ French: " L'exploltation impérialiste a pour résultat l'extinction graduelle de races africaines. Leur culture va se perdre (...). Pour nous, la lutte contre l'impérialisme est identique à la lutte contre le capitalisme." ]
Messali Hadj , leader of the Algerian North-African Star, requested the independence of all of North Africa. Amanifesto was addressed "to all colonial peoples, workers and peasants of the world" calling them to organize themselves to struggle "against imperialistideology ."1926-1931: difficulties
The League against Imperialism was first ignored then boycotted by the
Socialist International .Jean Longuet , a member of the FrenchSFIO socialist party, criticized it, calling it "vague Sovietic chitchat" ("vague parlotte soviétique"). On April 12, 1927, the Kuomintang enteredShanghai and carried out a massacre of Communist forces which had opened Shanghai's doors for it. In December, it crushed the Commune ofGuangzhou ("Commune de Canton"). The alliance betweenChiang Kai-shek 's nationalists and theCommunist Party of China was terminated, sparking theChinese Civil War between both sides, also struggling against the Japanese. The League Against Imperialism's alliance strategy thus failed.Henceforth, the VIth Congress of the Comintern, in 1928, changed policy directions, denouncing "
social-fascism " in what it called the "third period of thelabour movement " (reconstruction on new bases of post-imperialist warcapitalism ). The new "social-fascist" line weighted on the IInd Congress of the League, gathered in Frankfurt end of July 1929. 84 delegates of "oppressed countries" were present, and the Congress saw a bitter struggle between Communists and "reformist-nationalistbourgeois ." Divided, the League was basically inoperative until 1935, when the VIIth Congress of the Comintern decided to allow itself dissolve. Nehru had already been excluded, and Einstein, honorary president, had resigned because of "disagreements with the pro-Arab policy of the League inPalestine ." In any cases, the League remained composed mainly of intellectuals, and did not succeed in finding popular support.1932-1936: failure
The French section never had more than 400 members (in 1932). In 1933, the League published the first issue (out of 13) of the "Oppressed People's Newspaper", calls in favour of
Tunisia in 1934 and ofEthiopia during the Abyssinian War (1935), which had few effects. The League was basically abandoned by the Communists. Despite these failures, it remained the first attempt at an international anti-imperialist organization, later carried out by theNon-Aligned Movement and theTricontinental headed by Moroccan leaderMehdi Ben Barka . Initially planned by the Comintern and its French branch in order to get out of their isolation, the project finally led to the myth of aBolshevik conspiracy organized from Moscow.References
External links
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