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Introduction
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Tragically, the workers' democracy established in October 1917 became isolated and was later destroyed by the rise of Stalinist dictatorship. The way to genuine socialism has been barred by a new bureaucratic elite.
Nevertheless, the Russian Revolution itself remains a lighthouse to the black working class of South Africa and to struggling workers and youth everywhere. Seventy years on, its lessons are no less vital for us today.
Inqaba Ya Basebenzi, October 1987
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Anton Nilson | |
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His political commitment to the working class had begun 12 years earlier when, inspired by the 1905 revolution in Russia, he joined the Swedish Young Socialists. In 1908 he was sentenced to death in Sweden for blowing up a ship in which scabs, brought from England to break strikes in the textile industry and on the docks, were being housed.
Fury at the sentence among workers in Sweden and abroad forced this to be commuted to life imprisonment.
By 1917 the turmoil in Russia was reverberating amongst workers in Sweden and on May Day 10,000 workers demonstrated outside the prison demanding Anton's release. They threatened to storm the prison, and the government issued an order that if this happened he was to be shot. The workers were persuaded to remain outside the prison, and Anton kept his life. However, the demonstration precipitated the resignation of the rightwing government, and within a few months he was free again.
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Revolution
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In September 1918 he arrived in Russia gripped by the fervor of the revolution and arming itself against the counter-revolution. He became a pilot in the newly formed Red Army and organized the air defense of Moscow, later taking command of the air-force on the Baltic Front. For his services his comrades elected him to receive an award from Trotsky.
The scarcity of fuel during the civil war made flying hazardous: "We had to use wood alcohol ... this created a lot of black smoke, with flames belching out behind. Luckily the fuel was so bad, it could not burn clothes. Nevertheless it was somewhat disconcerting to be 3-4,000 feet up with flames all around you." After victory in the civil war Anton stayed in the Soviet Union until 1928 - witnessing the rise of the bureaucracy around Stalin: "Stalin took the state police, which had been formed against the counter-revolution, and turned it against socialists," he says. In contrast Trotsky "tried to follow the lines of the October Revolution." When he returned to Sweden, Anton opposed discussions held by the Communist Party with the Nazis: "If they came to power, I said, they will not discuss with the CP; they will hang us." The Stalinists responded by expelling him from the party. But despite the terrors of Stalinism, and the setbacks in the world revolution which followed, Anton maintained a commitment to Marxism and his belief in the inevitable victory of the working class:
"My Political life has been based on one belief: 'October is correct'". On November 11 Anton Nilson celebrates his 100th birthday. Inqaba Ya Basebenzi, the journal of the Marxist Workers' Tendency of the ANC, salutes him and his enduring role in the struggle of the working class of the world to complete the process begun by the October Revolution of 1917. Revolutionary Greetings to Comrades in South Africa From Anton Nilson, on the Seventieth Anniversary of the Russian Revolution | |
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Anton Nilson Sent This Message to Inqaba
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"To all freedom fighters in South Africa - |