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7 Mar 2014 Young Communist League of Britain

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LATEST NEWS

  • International Women’s Day 2019: Nguyễn Thị Định 22 Feb 2019
  • International Women’s Day 2019: Celia Sánchez 21 Feb 2019
  • International Women’s Day 2019: Melita Norwood 20 Feb 2019

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Our number 1️⃣4️⃣ is Celia Sánchez, revolutionary fighter, Communist, researcher and politician 🇨🇺📇 Celia Sánchez (1920 – 1980) was born in Cuba following the First World War, when the island was impoverished and fully in the grip of US imperialism. Sanchez was born and grew up in a small town in Oriente province. She was the daughter of a rural doctor and saw first hand the condition of the Cuban peasantry. Her experiences formed the basis for the development of the revolutionary ideals that led her to join the 26th of July movement. Sanchez is best known as a revolutionary and guerrilla fighter. She was the first woman to assemble a combat group of the 26th of July Movement in Mazanillo. Sanchez went on to become an important organiser and leader in the revolutionary army. Our number 1️⃣5️⃣ is Nguyễn Thị Định, Communist, anti-colonial guerrilla and the first serving woman General of the People’s Army of Vietnam 🇻🇳🎖️ Nguyễn Thị Định (1920 – 1992) was born in Ben Tre Province, Mekong Delta, South Vietnam, an area with a strong tradition of anti-colonial struggle. Her peasant family were supporters of the Communist led movement against the French colonial rule. Định was introduced to the Communist and anti-colonialist movement by her family and her early experience shaped her outlook for the rest of her life. Định was recruited by the Viet Minh to organise women in the Chau Thanh district. She led the uprising which then took place in Ben Tre province and the people staged a takeover against the local French authority in the region in August 1945. After the uprising was successful, Định was assigned to the province Women’s National Salvation Association and was elected to the executive committee of the province. She worked at the village and district levels to build up the women’s network, and at the end of 1945 she was elected to the executive committee of the Women’s Association. Read more about both Sanchez and Định at the links below Sanchez 🇨🇺https://ycl.org.uk/2019/02/21/international-womens-day-2019-celia-sanchez Định 🇻🇳 www.ycl.org.uk/2019/02/22/international-womens-day-2019-nguyen-thi-dinh
In this instalment the YCL celebrates the life of little known Communist Party veteran and Soviet agent, Melita Norwood #️⃣1️⃣3️⃣ 🕵️‍♀️🚩 Melita Norwood (1912 – 2005) Britain’s humblest and highly important Soviet spy, was born to socialist parents, in Bournemouth in 1912. She spent her early political life as an active member of Independent Labour Party until the party split in 1936, pushing her to become, an atypically low profile and unbeknownst to intelligence authorities, member of the Communist Party of Great Britain. Her employment as a secretary at the British Non-Ferrous Metals Research Association flagged her, to prominent CPGB member Andrew Rothstein, as someone with potential value to the NKVD intelligence service of the USSR. Her double life as an intelligence agent began as a member of the so-called Woolwich Spy Ring, which gathered valuable intelligence throughout the 1930s. While other members of the ring were caught and arrested, Norwood remained undetected for most of her long life. The information she was able to provide as “Agent Hola” allowed the USSR to catch up with the UK’s nuclear programme within two years. The importance of this heroic act cannot be overstated in terms of guaranteeing peace and the security of the socialist countries in the 20th Century. It weakened the scope for the imperialist NATO alliance to implement its genocidal "First Strike" policy. However despite the USSR's ability to defend itself and the socialist camp, nuclear war and the first strike policy would remain an obsession for the US, UK and the NATO powers. Norwood lived into old age without being outed as a spy, until 1999 when the testimony of a Soviet archivist sent journalists from across the country to her front door. At the door the media found a unassuming old woman making them all cups of tea and wondering what all the fuss was about. Norwood never made a penny as an intelligence source for the USSR. Read more about her at the link below ➡️➡️➡️ www.ycl.org.uk/2019/02/20/ international-womens-day-2019-melita-norwood/
Subscribe to the Morning Star from £4.99 a month and help us keep giving voice to those who would otherwise be ignored and covering the stories that would otherwise be buried #Media #Journalism #Peace #Socialism http://ow.ly/W3fY30noBeB
Today we pay tribute to Ruth First, South African Communist, journalist and anti-apartheid fighter 1️⃣2️⃣🇿🇦 Ruth First (1925 1982) was a South African activist, scholar and journalist born on the 4th of May 1925 in Johannesburg, South Africa. She was a central force within the anti-apartheid movement of South Africa using both direct action through her affiliations with the South African Communist Paty (SACP) and the African National Congress (ANC), and her many journalistic articles and books published openly challenging the oppressive apartheid regime. First's parents were founding members of the Communist Party of South Africa (CPSA), which would later be outlawed by the apartheid government. She graduated with a bachelors degree in Social Studies at the University of Witwatersrand. While a student there, she was extremely politically active, helping to found the Federation of Progressive Students (a multiracial student organisation opposing apartheid) along with notable political names within the anti-apartheid movement such as Yusuf Dadoo and Joe Slovo, Firsť's future husband. She also served as a secretary to the Young Communist League of South Africa (YCLSA) and, for a brief time the Johannesburg branch of the CPSA. First also used her journalistic talent to promote Communist politics, the class struggle and radical reform in South Africa. She was editor-in-chief of the progressive newspaper The Guardian' before it was banned by the apartheid government. In 1955, she became chief editor of 'Fighting Talk which supported the Congress Alliance. Ruth First remains a celebrated militant and hero of the growing SACP and YCLSA. Through her life and her struggle, she demonstrated the fundamental connection between the fight for socialism and the struggle for racial equality. Despite the constant threats to her life and freedom she was unwavering in her commitment to the anti-apartheid struggle, Ruth First is a true inspiration to working people the world over. ➡️➡️➡️YCL.org.uk/2019/02/19/international-womens-day-ruth-first
Our the legend of the international Communist movement is Alexandra Kollontai, Bolshevik, theorist and Soviet diplomat. Alexandra Kollontai (1872-1952) was a revolutionary, an author, a diplomat, an agitator and an organiser whose ideals still hold true today. Although Kollontai herself was born into the aristocracy, she was raised at time where she was surrounded by people who lived in harsh and unfair conditions. A flame was lit inside her at an early age which yearned to fight against injustice Kollontai was pivotal in the creation of universal maternity care, ensuring women had the same equal access to educational opportunities as men and ensuring that women were treated as equals in the paid labour force. From its inception the Soviet Union sought to liberate women and had one of the most advanced agendas of its time and Kollontai played a vital role in the shaping of Communist policies. Kollontai remains a key figure for all of those who consider themselvess Marxist-feminists and her writings on prostitution, sexual liberation, family and organising inform our world outlook today. Read more about her here: ➡️➡️➡️www.ycl.org.uk/international-womens-day-2019-alexandra-kollontai/
As part of a month long build up to International Women's Day Celebrations on the 8th of March, the YCL will be publishing daily articles highlighting the exemplary role played by women in the international communist & working class movement. ✊🌍 In today’s post, we discuss the life and work of Mariella Castro Espin, Cuban LGBT rights campaigner and daughter of Raul Castro and Vilma Espin- heroes of the Cuban Revolution. #️⃣🔟 🇨🇺🏳️‍🌈 Mariella Castro (1962) was born when the Cuban Revolution was in its infancy, as she grew up she witnessed, first hand, the successes of the Revolution. When she was born in 1962, her mother was President of the Federation of Cuban Women- an organisation whose principal aim is to further develop equality between men and women and to encourage the mobilization of women into political work and into the wider economy. Cuba has acknowledged failures of the past to acknowledge and develop the rights of the LGBT community. Fidel Castro, in 2013 personally took responsibility for this and said that the persecution of the LGBT Community was “a great injustice”. Mariella Castro has been influential in advancing the rights of those in modern day Cuba. As director of The National Centre for Sex Education (CENESEX) Castro has worked tirelessly to advocate for tolerance of the LGBT community on the island. In 2013, Castro was elected deputy to the National Assembly of People's Power of Cuba, where she has again used her position to influence the politics of the chamber in support of greater LGBT rights. Under the current constitutional reform process, same-sex marriage is being considered. The National Assembly and Mariela Castro have stated that same-sex marriage will be legalised through a Family Code amendment which expected soon. The work of Castro over the last few decades reminds us that the struggle for socialism must always go hand in hand with the advance of LGBT rights and liberation. ➡️➡️➡️ YCL.org.uk/2019/02/17/international-womens-day-2019-mariella-castro
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