Pioneer movement
A pioneer movement is an organization for children operated by a communist party. Typically children enter into the organization in elementary school and continue until adolescence. The adolescents then typically joined the Young Communist League. Prior to the 1990s there was a wide cooperation between pioneer and similar movements of about 30 countries, coordinated by the international organization, International Committee of Children's and Adolescents' Movements (French: Comité international des mouvements d'enfants et d'adolescents, CIMEA), founded in 1958, with headquarters in Budapest.
Overview
In most communist countries, membership of the pioneer movement is officially optional. Many features of the pioneer movement made it essentially different from Scout movement, particularly as the Scout movement is independent of government control and political parties. For example, there were no separate organizations for boys and girls. During the existence of the USSR, thousands of Young Pioneer camps and Young Pioneer Palaces were built exclusively for Young Pioneers, which were free of charge, sponsored by the government and Trade Unions . There were many newspapers and magazines published for Young Pioneers in millions of copies.
Some features, however, are reminiscent of the Scout movement. The two movements share some principles like preparedness and promotion of sports and outdoor skills. The pioneer movement also includes teaching of communist principles. Opponents of Communist states claim that this is a form of indoctrination.
A member of the movement is known as a pioneer, and a scarf—typically red, but sometimes light blue—is the traditional item of clothing worn by a pioneer. The pioneer organization is often named after a famous party member that is considered a suitable role model for young communists. In the Soviet Union it was Lenin; in East Germany, it was Ernst Thälmann. The Thälmann pioneers were taught the slogan "Ernst Thälmann is my role model. We wear our red scarf with pride." Albania, which severed diplomatic relations with the USSR in 1961, also had a variant of Pioneer organization, called Pioneers of Enver, named after the communist ruler of Albania, Enver Hoxha.
Countries with Pioneer movements
The Pioneer Movement currently exists in these countries:
Older children could continue in other communist organizations, but that would typically be done only by a limited number of people.
The communist parties in Russia and other countries continue to run a pioneer organization, but membership tends to be quite limited.
Pioneer movements of the past
- Socialist People's Republic of Albania – Pionieret e Enverit – Pioneers of Enver Hoxha
- People's Republic of Bulgaria – Dimitrovist Pioneer Organization "Septemberists". There were also an organization called chavdarcheta – these were the youngest children, which later became pioneers. The difference between the two was the distinctive scarf, which was sky-blue in the chavdarcheta movement and red in the pioneri movement.
- Socialist Republic of the Union of Burma - Lansin Lu-nge (lit. Programme Youth) - it was an organisation for smart high school students and university students to enter and learn about friendship, useful skills and of the socialist politics of the Burma Socialist Programme Party.
- Czechoslovak Socialist Republic – Pionýr, part of the Socialist Union of Youth.
- German Democratic Republic – Ernst Thälmann Pioneer Organisation
- People's Republic of Hungary – Úttörőszövetség
- Indonesia - Fadjar Harapan
- Republic of Malawi – Malawi Youth Pioneers – this is atypical as Malawi was not a communist country. Its Pioneers were linked to the Malawi Congress Party, the only political party allowed in what was at the time a one-party state.
- Republic of Mali – Young Pioneers (Mali)/Jeunes Pionniers (1960-?), Socialist youth brigades established by the US-RDA of Modibo Keïta.
- Republic of Niger – Young Pioneers (Niger)/Jeunes Pionniers (1961–1974) non-communist youth paramilitary group, one of several set up in post independence Africa, funded by and modeled on the Israeli Nahal ("Fighting Pioneer Youth").[4]
- Kingdom of Norway – Young Pioneers
- People's Republic of Poland – 1950-1956, later Związek Harcerstwa Polskiego, a mixture of Scouting and pioneering
- Socialist Republic of Romania – Pioneer Organization
- Union of Soviet Socialist Republics – Young Pioneer organization of the Soviet Union
- Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia – Union of Pioneers of Yugoslavia (Pioniri)
See also
- Organizations for older youth:
References
- ^ "THE JOSE MARTI PIONEER ORGANIZATION OF CUBA, ONE OF 18 INDIVIDUALS AND ORGANIZATIONS, TO RECEIVE UNITED NATIONS ENVIRONMENT AWARD". United Nations Environment Programme. http://www.unep.org/Documents.multilingual/Default.asp?DocumentID=201&ArticleID=2858&l=en. Retrieved June 29, 2006.
- ^ IFM-SEI list of members, retrieved 2009-02-22
- ^ a b "Anarchism in America". http://alexpeak.com/art/films/aia/. Retrieved January 29, 2010.
- ^ Decalo, Samuel (1997). Historical Dictionary of the Niger (3rd ed.). Boston & Folkestone: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 0810831368. :173-4, 171-2
External links