Lucha Occitana

Lucha Occitana
Occitan Struggle
Founded 1971 (1971)
Dissolved 1974 (1974)
Newspaper Païs Occitan-Lucha Occitana and Occitània Passat e Present
Ideology Revolutionary Socialism
Occitan nationalism
Left-wing nationalism
Autonomism
Antiimperialism

Occitan Struggle (Occitan: Lucha Occitana, LO) was an Occitan political group, created in 1971 from the Comitat Occitans d'Estudis e d'Accion. It was a group mainly of intellectuals, students and agricultural unionists. The group had a revolutionary, autonomist, and Occitan nationalist ideology. LO was headquartered in Toulouse. The group primarily desired the complete decolonization of Occitania. The group wanted to lead the working class block, an action that the group thought would contribute to the destruction of the capitalist French state. In 1972 LO signed the Brest Charter.

Lucha Occitana published the newspapers Païs Occitan-Lucha Occitana in Toulouse and Occitània Passat e Present in Antibes. LO conducted an analysis of the Occitan situation. They opposed the separatist views of the Occitan Nationalist Party. LO advocated:

LO never had more than 500 militants. The group gained prominence thanks to demonstrations against the expropriations of Larzac. In 1974 Lucha Occitana underwent an internal crisis and fragmented into numerous factions.

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