Fredrik Ström

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Fredrik Ström (1880 - 1948) was a Swedish Socialist politician and a prolific writer. He held a seat in the Riksdag 1916 - 1921, and 1930 - 1938.

Fredrik Ström in his youth
Fredrik Ström in his youth

He joined the Swedish Social Democratic Party and in 1916 was elected to the Riksdag. But in 1917 Ström broke with Hjalmar Branting and sided with the far left wing of the party, headed by the communists Zeth Höglund and Ture Nerman. This group supported the Russian Bolsheviks and would soon become the (original) Swedish Communist Party.

Fredrik Ström was, together with Ture Nerman and Stockholm's mayor Carl Lindhagen, part of a small delegation of Swedish Communists who greeted Lenin during his short visit in Stockholm in April 1917. The Swedish Communists took Lenin to the PUB department store where they bought him a brand new suit so he would look good and clean coming back home to revolutionary Petrograd.

Fredrik Ström, a little older
Fredrik Ström, a little older

Ström was head of the Stockholm Comintern liaison with Western Europe 19191920, and he frequently visited the Soviet Union for meetings, including the third congress of the Communist International, held in Moscow 1921.

Ström supported Lenin, Trotsky and the October Revolution, but he disagreed with Stalinism and in 1926 he found his way back to the Swedish Social Democratic Party, although he still considered himself a Communist.

[edit] Works

  • Fredrik Ström wrote a five-volume history of the Russian Revolution, published in 1924, but it was soon condemned by the new Stalinist leadership in Russia.
  • Ström wrote a biography of Kata Dalström in 1930.
  • His two-volume autobiography is called Min ungdoms strider (The battles of my youth) and I stormig tid (In stormy times). More volumes were planned, but Ström died before he could write on his life past 1917.
  • Fredrik Ström's last book was a biography on Fabian Månsson.