Friends of the Soviet Union
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Friends of the Soviet Union was an organization formed on the initiative of the Communist International in 1927, with the purpose of coordinating solidarity efforts with the Soviet Union around the world. It grew out of existing initiatives like Friends of Soviet Russia in the United States, the Association of Friends of the New Russia in Germany and the Hands Off Russia campaign that had emerged during the early 1920s.
The founding congress of FSU was held at the House of the Trade Unions in Moscow November 10-12 1927. 917 delegates from 40 countries assisted the conference.[1][2] Leading figures in the organization were Clara Zetkin and Henri Barbusse. National sections of FSU was formed in various countries.
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[edit] Australia
The Australian FSU was established in 1930. In the mid-1930s there was an attempt on behalf of the Commonwealth to ban the organization.[3] The organization was later reconstituted as the Australia-Soviet Friendship League.[4]
[edit] Mexico
In Mexico, the association Amigos de la Union Sovietica combatiente was founded in 1942.[5]
[edit] Norway
Sovjet-Unionens venner, the FSU branch in Norway, was founded in 1928.[6] Adam Egede-Nissen was chairman of the organization 1933-1935.[7] Later Nordahl Grieg became the chairman of the organization. The organization was banned under the German occupation, along with the Communist Party, on August 16, 1940.[8]
[edit] Romania
An organization following the international model was set up in Romania by the Romanian Communist Party activist Petre Constantinescu-Iaşi in the spring of 1934, at a time of relative détente between the Soviet and Romanian governments (see Greater Romania).[9] Centered in Chişinău and later in Bucharest, it reunited a sizable panel of communist and non-committed intellectuals, and favored Soviet-Romanian cultural ventures, raising controversy after a delegation led by Alexandru Sahia illegally crossed into Soviet territory to attend the anniversary of the October Revolution.[9] It was ultimately outlawed in November of the same year by the Gheorghe Tătărescu cabinet, and was succeeded by the Society for Maintaining Cultural Links between Romania and the Soviet Union, created in May 1935 and itself outlawed in 1938.[9] Various attempts to build on the Amicii URSS legacy during World War II remained unsuccessful, but after the start of Soviet occupation, in November 1944, the Romanian Society for Friendship with the Soviet Union (ARLUS) was founded.[9] It survied as an officially-endorsed cultural institution during the early stages of the Communist regime, but was disbanded in 1964, when the Romanian Communist leader Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej announced a "national path to communism" and proceeded to distance himself from the Soviet Union.[9]
[edit] South Africa
The FSU established a branch in South Africa, to which non-communist were invited to join. In March 1934, the FSU took part in the formation of the League against Fascism and War along with the Communist Party, Labour Party members, trade unionists, etc..[10] During the Second World War the FSU campaigned for support for the Soviet war effort. During the early the 1940s, the FSU made significant inroads amongst the Indian community.[11]
[edit] Sweden
A Swedish FSU branch, Sovjet-Unionens vänner, was founded in 1930.[12] In 1935 a Social Democrat from Mölndal, Edvin Trettondal, became the chairman of the organization, which resulted in his expulsion from the Social Democratic Party. He later joined the Communist Party. By the late 1930s the organization disintegrated. A section of its members, including Trettondal, formed the association Sovjet-Nytt.[13]
[edit] References
- ^ [1]
- ^ "I have seen the new Jerusalem"
- ^ http://www.law.mq.edu.au/html/MqLJ/volume5/vol5_robertson.pdf
- ^ The Red Army
- ^ Untitled Document
- ^ Lund-rapporten
- ^ Data om det politiske system
- ^ Friheten - NKUs historie i korte trekk
- ^ a b c d e Adrian Cioroianu, Pe umerii lui Marx. O introducere în istoria comunismului românesc, Editura Curtea Veche, Bucharest, 2005, p.107-148, 218-219
- ^ Class & Colour in South Africa - Chapter 20
- ^ CHAPTER IV: The Struggle for Power: The Triumph of the Radicals, 1939-1946
- ^ Övervakningen av "SKP-komplexet"
- ^ Mölndals stadsbibliotek - Mölndals tredje bibliotek