“The Brown Plague”by Daniel Guerin, 1932-1933 / 1994 republished
This is a
wonderful political travelogue tracking the last year of the
Guérin also wrote
“Fascism and Big Business,” a classic analysis of the German
capitalist class’s support for Hitler (also available at May Day). On
the political side Guerin agrees with Trotsky and the rank-and-file German
Communists (CP) and Social Democrats (SD) he met who nearly all were for an
anti-fascist block between the CP and the SD. This was against Stalin’s “3rd
period” policy, while the SDs vacillated.
Stalin preferred the fascists to the ‘social-fascists’ of the SD,
fantasizing that the CP would take power after Hitler. This 3rd period ‘mistake’ led to the
victory of the Nazi Party and later WWII.
1932
In his first visit in 1932 Guérin travels through the small towns of
In the small towns of
In Dresden Guérin visits a grand Social-Democratic union hall ‘People’s House' full of chandeliers and waiters in white shirts – like a gentlemen’s smoke lounge. Guérin could see how the bureaucratic SD leadership was disengaged from what was happening on the ground just by looking at this building and meeting the fat, complacent men inside. The SDs led the majority of the German union movement at the time.
Guérin, being gay, notes the many muscular and tanned unemployed youth –
‘Wanderers’ - hiking the highways like him, dressed in boots and lederhosen. He comes on groups of young ‘wild gangs’ dressed in
varied costumes, alienated from society – some of whom later end up in the
fascist movement and some in opposition.
He visits a youth camp on a lake run by the CP’s militant Rotfront (Red Front) near
But everywhere on his first visit he sees signs of low-level political struggle between the camps – fist-fights, insults, yelling, newspaper and poster destruction, marches … and fear.
Brownshirt Leadership before the Fall |
1933
Guérin returns in 1933 after the rightist Hindenburg appoints Hitler
Chancellor. This starts a domino effect
of anti-Socialist and dictatorial laws, especially after the burning of the
Reichstag 4 weeks later, which is blamed on the CP. (The head of the
Guérin visits youth hostels that were once calm or Socialist and are now
all occupied by angry Nazi youth. They
show no interest in him as a Frenchman unlike before when they crowded around
with questions. He watches a Nazi ‘Sunday” of spectacles in
Guérin comments on the ‘socialism of fools’ - anti-Semitism - as Jews
comprised less than 1% of the German population, owning some department stores
and were present in some professions like law.
He notes Hitler’s pacifist speeches, but knew behind them
NATIONAL BOLSHEVISM
Guérin writes of the Brownshirt goal of “National Bolshevism” - a contradiction
in terms. He reveals what it is – a yearning for social revolution but on the
terms of the national German bourgeoisie.
I.E. impossible. The
dissatisfaction with the failures of the bureaucratic SD and of
the ultra-left CP led to this third position. Hitler’s
liquidation of Strasser, Rohm and the Brownshirts in 1934 by the 'Blackshirts' put an end to that movement as a semi-independent entity. This cemented the Nazi bloc with German capital.
The youth, as usual, are the most radical on both sides. He talks with rank and file workers who explain how the Social Democracy rotted from the inside, failing to deal adequately with the Depression or fascism. Signs of resistance to the Nazis – strikes and protests - don’t dissuade them from trying to win the whole proletariat to their ‘yellow’ Labor Front. The Nazi Labor Front signs a ‘no strike’ pact with the capitalists which irritates even the SA. Musicians and wanderers are to be thrown into forced labor camps. Employed workers will be forced to join the new Nazi labor organization.
In the dock at Nuremberg - Goring, Von Papen, Hess, Von Ribbentrop - ELG |
The intention of the Nazis is to cow and frighten everyone into silence
and fear. This is after both left parties
failed to take drastic action against the Nazis, who banned them and dissolved their organizations. Guerin visits a socialist
bookshop in
In reaction to the wave of arrests and detentions, Guèrin talks to various isolated groups of young people functioning in illegality, attempting to unite CP and SD workers to make propaganda and to revive some kind of organization and opposition. The SD & CP leaderships are in disarray and impotence, still repeating cliches. The small group of Trotskyists seem to be the most prepared. But ultimately he is pessimistic as to the left's ability to recover what was lost.
THE POINT
It should be obvious at this point in Guèrin’s narration that the main
and immediate target of fascism are socialists, communists, the labor movement
and the working class. Even a quick look at the Trumpist movement's hysteria over 'socialism' tells you that it is one of its main targets - although you wouldn't know if from the liberal press. The press hates socialism after all, so they don't want to reveal this ideological similarity with Trump. In
Prior blog reviews on this subject, use blog search box, upper left: Fascism Today; Proud Boys and the White Ethnostate; Against the Fascist Creep; Fighting Fascism (Zetkin); The Real Red Pill; No Fascist USA; The Ultra-Right; It Can’t Happen Here (Lewis); Anti-Fascism, Sports, Sobriety; The Coming Storm; A Fascist Edge; Clandestine Occupations; Charlottesville, Virginia; What is the Matter With the Rural U.S.?; Angry White Men.
Red Frog
April 4, 2021
Don't you mean Daniel Guerin, who's name appears on the cover you posted, not Michael? If so, he was well known as an anarchist, which you seem to have omitted.
ReplyDeleteDuh! Thanks. Not sure how that happened. Guerin has an interesting history. He was a member of the Social Democrats, then the Communist Party, fought against the Nazis with the Trotskyist underground in WWII, then moved towards anarchism and joined a 'libertarian communist' group in his last years.
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