Professional Revolutionary
Professional Revolutionary: The Life of Saul Wellman | |
---|---|
Produced by | Judith Montell and Ronald Aronson |
Release dates | 2004 |
Running time | 65 mins. |
Country | USA |
Language | English |
Professional Revolutionary: The Life of Saul Wellman is a documentary about the life of Saul Wellman.
Summary
“I want things to change, where the playing field is leveled,” Wellman says, “where equality emerges as a reality...where the horrible things about inequality are eliminated.”
Under-educated, Wellman fought in the army, worked in a car factory for Ford and was employed at a printing company; Wellman fought against Fascism in both the Spanish Civil War and World War II. Wellman returned home at the start of the Cold War, to help organize and lead the Communist Party in America. Then when the 60s came along, Wellman latched onto the civil rights movement. The documentary deals with wheelchair-using Wellman, during the last years of his life, at an Iraq war protest. Throughout his life, Wellman was an organizer and passionate speaker.
Wellman's militant defiance and controversial ideologies began at a young age. “I sucked socialism at my mother's breast,” he jokes. His mother, a Russian immigrant, believed in socialism and took Wellman to hear Eugene Debs, the leading socialist at the time, deliver a speech. But Wellman's defining moment came in high school when he decided to cut school in order to attend a protest. He got expelled as a result. His parents were devastated, but Wellman felt liberated. His last day of formal education was his first day as a revolutionary.
But Wellman's activism was not without controversy. While some have praised him for being “infinitely inspiring” and working towards a communist country, others disagree.
When Fascism threatened Spain, he and his friends, still young, had a naïve understanding of world politics and social progress, but signed up to fight in the international brigades anyway. “We didn't know our asses from our elbows,” he admits. Later, Wellman became a leader among American Communists, but when the Soviet Union's corruption was exposed, he abandoned the movement to promote Civil Rights and protest the war in Vietnam.
But Wellman's pursuit of his political passions came with negatives for those close to him. While he was busy with social activism, his wife was left at home to work full-time and raise their children alone. Wellman acknowledges the fact that his career disadvantaged his family, but he felt that his work was necessary to change society.
Reception
The documentary met with mixed reviews. The subject of the film, Wellman, met with more praise than the film itself. Wellman was said to have been an, "infinitely inspiring model to many idealistic youths." [1] And by listing his achievements the flattery of his pupils, reviews establish him as a hero figure.
See also
Other films about American Jews:
- A Home on the Range
- Awake Zion
- From Swastika to Jim Crow
- My Yiddish Momme McCoy
- Song of a Jewish Cowboy
Other links relevant to Saul Wellman:
- American Communist Party
- Jewish volunteers in the Spanish Civil War
Notes
- ↑ Harvey, Dennis (October 17, 2004). "Professional Revolutionary: The Life of Saul Wellman". Variety. Retrieved August 6. Check date values in:
|accessdate=
(help)
References
- Waggoner, Eric (May 18, 2005). "Comrade in Arms". Metro Times Detroit. Retrieved August 6. Check date values in:
|accessdate=
(help)
- Harvey, Dennis (October 17, 2004). "Professional Revolutionary: The Life of Saul Wellman". Variety. Retrieved August 6. Check date values in:
|accessdate=
(help)
- "Professional Revolutionary: The Life of Saul Wellman". Wayne State University. Retrieved August 6. Check date values in:
|accessdate=
(help)