'역사의 길, 길의 역사/영국과 프랑스'에 해당되는 글 9건


영국과 프랑스 - 2010/01/05 22:46

 

맑스 무덤 뒤편에 살짝 숨어있는 어느 사회주의자의 소박한 무덤.

뉘신지 전혀 모르겠다.

아무리 인터넷을 뒤져봐도 전허 흔적을 찾을 수도 없다.

그렇지만 하이게이트에서 제일 마음에 들었던 무덤이다.

 

"진실한 말에는 꾸밈이 없고, 꾸미는 말에는 진실이 없다"던 옛말처럼

가장 사회주의자다운 묘비라는 느낌...

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크
2010/01/05 22:46 2010/01/05 22:46
TAG

영국과 프랑스 - 2010/01/05 20:43

 

이라크공산당의 지도자 SAAD SAADI ALI 의 무덤

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크
2010/01/05 20:43 2010/01/05 20:43
TAG

영국과 프랑스 - 2010/01/05 14:41

 

남아프리카공산당 서기장이었던 Yusuf Mohamed Dadoo의 묘

 

 

1960년 9월 모택동과 만난 Yusuf Dadoo (가운데)

 

일단 ANC 홈페이지에 있는 소개글

 

A PROUD HISTORY OF STRUGGLE

by Essop Pahad

From The African Communist, No.78, 3rd Quarter 1979

Yusuf Mohamed Dadoo - popularly known as "Mota"(1) or "Doc" - celebrates his 70th birthday on

 

September 5, 1979. The story of his life is inextricably bound up with the resistance to racial discrimination and apartheid, and the forging of ever closer links between the Indian and African and Coloured people in the struggle for national liberation.

Yusuf Dadoo was born in Krugersdorp on the West Rand in 1909. His father Mohamed Dadoo arrived in South Africa in the 1880s, in the wake of the first Indian immigrants who arrived in the 1860s as indentured labourers on the sugar fields. The working and living conditions of the Indians at that time can only be compared to slavery. However, on the expiry of their indentures many of them became market gardeners, railway and council workers and domestic servants. This was the origin of the Indian working class in South Africa .

Mohamed Dadoo the elder came to South Africa from Western India. The Indian immigrants were divided on lines of language, culture, tradition and religion. It was Gandhi who created the base for the unity of the Indian people through his passive resistance campaign in South Africa in 1906 and 1913.

As the majority of Indians were brought to South Africa to work as indentured labourers on the sugar plantations, most of them lived in Natal. By 1946 27.12 per cent of the economically active population were workers in industry. Today the Indians constitute nearly three per cent of the total South African population, the overwhelming majority of them members of the black working class. It was the active participation of the workers in the affairs of the Indian Congress which made possible its transformation into a radical instrument of struggle against apartheid and colour bars.

Whilst a schoolboy Yusuf Dadoo used to attend meetings held by former stalwarts of Gandhi and with some of his contemporaries such as Molvi A. I. Cachalia used to help mobilise support for the All-Indian National Congress in its struggle against British colonialism. At Aligarh, in India, where he completed his matriculation, his hatred for and opposition to British imperialism intensified.

As the eldest son, his father expected him to go into business on leaving school, but Dadoo adamantly refused and insisted on further study. In 1929 he arrived in London, friendless and without contacts, with the intention of studying medicine. Within a few months he was one of six persons arrested for participating in a demonstration against the imperialist Simons Commission. In an attempt to curb his political activities his father insisted that he transfer his studies to Edinburgh .

It was in Edinburgh that Dadoo's political horizons were widened and he gradually came closer to understanding the nature of colonialism and the capitalist system which gave birth to it. He became involved in a wide variety of political activities and began to read Marxist literature. The Communist Manifesto of Marx and Engels gave him a new outlook on the struggle against colonialism and imperialism and the place and role of the working class in the revolutionary movement. He became convinced that the South African Indian Congress could only advance their fight for freedom in close co-operation with the national organisations of the African and the Coloured peoples.

In 1936, when Dadoo returned to South Africa, the national liberation and working class movements were in some disarray. The racist regime had rushed through the white Parliament the 1936 Hertzog Bills which form the basis of the present Bantustan policy. The Communist Party of South Africa (CPSA) was still suffering from the effects of the sectarianism which had plagued it in the 1930s. The Indian Congresses were content to mouth rhetorical denunciations of racist legislation whilst pursuing a policy of compromise and of isolation from the African and Coloured people.

The struggle in South Africa was in need of sincere, courageous revolutionaries who could capture and fire the imagination of the toiling masses, who could speak the language the people understood and were prepared to make the personal sacrifices demanded by a life-and-death struggle. Dadoo was one such revolutionary. He illuminated the political landscape with the sudden clarity of a meteor - but fortunately in a less transitory manner. He grew in stature, political experience and maturity and developed a steel-like resolve never to rest until South Africa was free from the triple scourge of racism, colonialism and capitalism. He bent all his efforts towards building the unity of the national liberation and working class movements in South Africa.

Dadoo was not alone in this crusade. Amongst the Indians there were the veterans of Gandhi's resistance movement and contemporaries such as T. N. Naidoo, P. S. Joshi, Molvi A. I. Cachalia, Nana Sita, G.H.I. Pahad, J. Nanabhai and others who were equally determined to change the ideological and political positions of the Indian Congresses. With Dadoo as the acknowledged leader they formed the nationalist bloc of the Transvaal Indian Congress (TIC) in March 1939 to change its policies from the inside. The nationalist bloc attracted 5 to 6 thousand people to their meetings. This was impressive considering that the total population of the Indians in the Transvaal in 1936 was only 25,493. During this period Dadoo went on speaking tours throughout the whole province, and emerged as a powerful orator. People flocked to his meetings which gave them a renewed sense of pride and dignity. No longer did they have to crawl and plead with the white bosses. They could and did stand up for their legitimate rights as South Africans. Already at that time he had become a household name amongst the Indians in South Africa, many of whom proudly displayed his photograph in their homes.

Non-European United Front

Dadoo was also active in a wider political spectrum. In 1938 he was one of the founders of the Non-European United Front (NEUF) in Johannesburg. Acting in harmony and concert with other national leaders, some of whom were Communists, such as J. B. Marks, E. Mofutsanyana, Josie Mpama, G. Carr and Alpheus Maliba, the NEUF took up the vital problems agitating the African people. In his capacity as secretary Dadoo diligently attended to the daily organisational requirements of the NEUF. As one of the main speakers he constantly addressed mass meetings in African townships and locations in which he called for united mass action against living conditions. He became popular amongst the African people and not surprisingly a square in Orlando was named Dadoo Square. In the process of the struggle Dadoo and J. B. Marks became close friends and comrades-in-arms and remained so until Marks' death. In some respects they had similar personalities. They were ebullient, open-hearted, easy to get on with, and both had a lively sense of humour. Through their practical activities and personal relations they gave meaning and life to the concept of the unity of the oppressed working people .

Dadoo's profound political understanding and wide variety of political activities logically led to his joining the Communist Party of South Africa (CPSA) in early 1939. By then the CPSA under the firm leadership of Moses Kotane, its general secretary, had largely overcome the drawbacks of sectarianism which affected the Party in the early thirties. Dadoo says that without a Party dedicated to realising the fundamental principles of Marxism-Leninism in south Africa he would have remained a half-developed revolutionary. It was in the CPSA that he matured theoretically and this in turn immensely improved his practical work and approach.

The South African situation was transformed with the outbreak of the second world war. Communist and non-communist progressives characterised the war as an imperialist war, and fought tooth and nail against the racist regime's attempts to recruit black soldiers. Dadoo and his comrades argued most vehemently and persuasively that as long as there was racist oppression and segregation in the armed forces, there could be no question of countenancing the recruitment of black soldiers.

In 1940 Dadoo was arrested for printing and distributing a leaflet published by the NEUF which said "Don't support this war, where the rich get richer and the poor get killed". 'When he appeared in court there were mass demonstrations outside and during an adjournment the people, Africans and Indians, carried him shoulder-high to his home - a distance of about 3 kilometres. Dadoo refused to pay his fine of 25, but was saved from imprisonment by a supporter who paid his fine because he could not bear to see "this wonderful person" going to prison.

In January 1941 Dadoo was arrested once more this time for allegedly inciting the African people in Benoni where he had spoken at a meeting Once more his trial was the occasion for a mass demonstration. He was sentenced to a fine of 40 or four months imprisonment, and once again elected to go to prison. His statement to court was a powerful indictment of racist and national oppression and a bold declaration of the NEUF's opposition to the war:

"The struggle of the non-European people for liberation is not an isolated struggle; it is merely a continuation of the struggle of the oppressed masses carried on in many lands . . . The Government may imprison me, it can fling hundreds and thousands into jail and concentration camps, but it cannot and shall not suppress the demand for freedom which arises from the crying hearts of the non-Europeans . . . The struggle goes on . . ., all non-Europeans unite! Create a fighting unity! . . . "

Dadoo vividly recalls his prison experience at the notorious "Blue Sky" prison in Boksburg: For the African prisoners it was "hell". The prison warders were horribly cruel, subjecting them to the most gruesome treatment. Some African prisoners died because even though they were ill they were sent out to work. When the other prisoners realised that Dadoo was in for politics they became very sympathetic and offered to do his share of the dirty chores such as cleaning out the latrine buckets. Dadoo politely refused.

Whilst Dadoo was in prison, protest meetings were held throughout the country, and the Guardian reported that in Durban his imprisonment was the chief topic of conversation and practically every street had a slogan demanding Dadoo's release.

People's War

In June 1941 Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union. In a flash the progressive forces everywhere marshalled their energies in support of the world's first socialist country. The CPSA, after a lengthy and thorough debate, came to the conclusion that the character of the war had changed. It was now a people's war in which the Soviet Union, the only socialist country in the world, had to be defended and assisted.

The burden of conveying this change of line to the people fell on the shoulders of Kotane and Dadoo. In the beginning they experienced great difficulties and at one meeting in Maritzburg Dadoo and other speakers were shouted down and had to make a hurried exit. But by explaining the issues honestly and simply, by analysing the qualitative change in the international situation and showing the role of the Soviet Union, "the land without colour bar", the CPSA gradually won the support of influential leaders and members of the national liberation movement and of the broad masses .

A later complicating factor was the entry of Japan into the war. Many black people regarded Japan as a "coloured nation" inflicting defeat on a "white enemy" and openly expressed the hope that Japan would attack South Africa and liberate them. Once more the CPSA with Kotane and Dadoo in the forefront had to meet the challenge head on. Meetings and propaganda campaigns were organised to expose the true nature of rapacious Japanese imperialism.

The heroic defence of their motherland by the Soviet people and the exploits of the Red Army won the admiration, respect and love of the oppressed people. At the sacrifice of 20 million lives, the Soviet Union played the major part in ensuring that the Nazi millennium did not even last five years. The war brought out the greatness of Soviet society and opened the eyes of millions to the true nature and achievements of socialism.

The influence of African workers, youth and progressive intelligentsia in the African National Congress was growing apace during these years. Leaders such as Lembede, Tloome, Sisulu, Tambo and Mandela were in the forefront demanding a more militant and revolutionary policy. Within the Transvaal and Natal Indian Congresses, too, great changes were taking place. By 1945 the militants, led by Drs. Dadoo and Naicker, had all but taken control. In the period 1941-43 the membership of the Communist Party rose fourfold - a clear indication that the Party and its policies were gaining support from the working masses.

The lives of the African people, then as now, were characterised by extreme poverty, total insecurity in employment and every other field of life, the hated Pass Laws and brutal pass raids. In the Transvaal the NEUF had organised a huge campaign against the Pass Laws which included meetings, rallies and demonstrations in the locations and townships and outside factory gates. Dadoo was one of the most prominent speakers. The campaign reached its peak at a representative conference in May 1945 attended by over 540 delegates at which a National Anti-Pass Council was elected with Dr. A. B. Xuma, President of the ANC, as Chairman and Dadoo as Vice-Chairman .

It was partly through the activities of the NEUF that the broad united militant front of the national organisations of the African, Coloured and Indian people and the CPSA was developed and strengthened .

A landmark in the struggle

1946, the year of the Indian Passive Resistance Campaign and the glorious African mine workers' strike, witnessed an unprecedented confrontation between the forces of national and social liberation and those of an obdurate vicious racist oppressor and exploiter.

By the time that Smuts - a thoroughbred racist had introduced the Ghetto Act, which sought to segregate the Indians residentially and commercially even further and to introduce a limited form of communal representation, the Indian Congresses, greatly strengthened by the active participation at all levels of the Indian working class, were ready for confrontation. The hard, grinding work carried out by Drs. Dadoo and Naicker, trade unionists such as H. A. Naidoo, G. Ponen, M. P. Naicker, D. Seedat, D. Singh, M. D. Naidoo, G. Singh and others had infused in the Indians a spirit of resistance.

During the two-year campaign Dadoo and the other Passive Resistance organisers worked with the purposeful energy of a hive of bees, and won a huge response from the people.

In the course of that campaign Dadoo went to prison twice. The first time was in July 1946. The second time was in March 1948 when he and Dr. Naicker were sentenced to six months' imprisonment for "inciting" Indian people to break the law which prohibited Indians from moving from one province to another without a permit. The imprisonment was received with wrath and indignation by the Indians who responded with slogans such as "Long Live Drs. Dadoo and Naicker!" and "We Shall Resist!".

The Passive Resistance Campaign, in which nearly 2,000 men and women voluntarily courted imprisonment, is a glorious page in the annals of the militant resistance of the Indian people. Moreover it had a far wider long-term impact in that it helped to lay the basis for the 1952 Defiance Campaign.

Despite his overburdened schedule in that campaign Dadoo did not neglect his other political duties and tasks. In 1946 he was a member of the Central Committee and Chairman of the Johannesburg District of the CPSA, vice-chairman of the National Anti-Pass Council, President of the TIC, chairman of the Transvaal . Passive Resistance Council and joint-chairman of the National Passive Resistance Council.

As chairman of the Johannesburg district of the CPSA Dadoo made his contribution to the strengthening and development of African trade unions, but it was above all the sterling work of his comrade J. B. Marks which welded the African Mineworkers' Union into a force capable of bringing out, in the week August 12 to 19, 1946, 100,000 African miners on strike for higher wages - one of the high points of African resistance in this century.

In 1947 Drs. Dadoo and Naicker made an extensive and triumphant tour of India where they met most of the national leaders including Gandhi, Nehru and Mohammed Ali Jinnah. They addressed a great number of meetings and also attended the first All-Asian Conference.

In March of the same year the historic Xuma-Naicker-Dadoo pact was signed, marking a significant development in the co-operation between the African and Indian peoples. The "Doctors' Pact" made a bold demand for full franchise and the removal of all discriminatory and oppressive legislation.

But before the co-operation could be consolidated riots broke out between Africans and Indians in Durban in January 1949. There is no doubt that the racist authorities encouraged, aided and abetted the carnage. Having stood aside in the beginning when prompt action could have averted the riots the army and police later opened fire indiscriminately and killed many Africans. The casualty figures were as follows: Dead - 142: 87 Africans, 50 Indians, 1 European and 4 who were not identified. Injured - 1,087: 541 Africans, 503 Indians, 11 Coloureds and 32 Europeans. Fifty-eight of the injured died later.

The response of the ANC and the South African Indian Congress (SAIC) was prompt and effective. Both organisations fully realised that firm action had to be taken to defeat the enemy's plot to divide the oppressed masses. The African and Indian Congresses submitted a joint memorandum to the Commission of Enquiry which was set up and with many other organisations withdrew from that commission when they were prevented from cross-examining witnesses. In February 1949 30 African and Indian leaders issued a joint statement in which they emphasised: "the fundamental and basic causes of the disturbances are traceable to the political, economic and social structure of this country."

At the time of the riots Dadoo was abroad. His view then as now was that the racist enemy would stop at nothing to provoke and incite violent divisions within and amongst the oppressed national groups. The most important lesson was that for unity to be really effective it had to permeate to the grass-roots and this process had to be speeded up. It was the unity in action of all the oppressed blacks and democratic whites initiated and organised by the Congress movement in the fifties which defeated all the enemy's nefarious schemes and conspiracies to provoke similar riots and disturbances.

A Glorious Decade

The Nationalist Party won the all-white election in 1948 on the basis of a virulent white chauvinist and anti-communist campaign. However, whilst the white electorate further entrenched the power and influence of the racists and fascists, the national liberation movements and the CPSA laid the basis for a common united mass militant resistance . Most significantly the adoption of the 1949 Programme of Action was a clear indication that the ANC was now getting ready to assume its historic role. An impressive demonstration of the unity and power of the national liberation and working class movements was the highly successful May 1, 1950 strike in Johannesburg and the Reef. But before this unity could be strengthened the racist regime introduced a Bill in the All-White Parliament to ban the CPSA. This was recognised by Communists and non-Communists alike as a prelude to the banning of all people's organisations which spoke out against apartheid and racially discriminatory laws and demanded justice and equal democratic rights for all.

Meeting before the ban came into effect, the Central Committee of the Party decided to dissolve itself with a view to frustrating the aims of the enemy. For Dadoo the decision to dissolve the Party was one of the most painful he had ever had to take part in, but he considered at the time that there was no alternative. However, there was never in his mind any doubt that the situation in South Africa demanded the active and vital presence of an independent party of the working class, fighting for national liberation and socialism. When Moses Kotane took the first steps towards reconstituting the Party in illegal conditions, Dadoo and others were with him from the outset. Units were established in the main centres of the country and by 1953 an underground conference was held in Johannesburg attended by Communists from all over the country. At this conference a new central committee was elected - Dadoo being one of them - with Moses Kotane as general secretary. A new name was adopted, the South African Communist Party (SACP), heir to the glorious traditions of the CPSA.

Dadoo steeled himself to the arduous task of working in an illegal Party whilst remaining a prominent figure in the public eye. He and other Communists studied the experiences of other underground parties and resistance movements and learned how to operate with a combination of caution and precision which enabled them to escape the attentions of the security police. Slowly the Party became more influential and recruited to its ranks some of the most dedicated and courageous freedom fighters in the national liberation and trade union movements. The composition of the membership and leadership since its reconstitution has reflected accurately the situation in South Africa where the African working class is the main force for social renewal. Commenting on the attacks of the enemy and sometimes even well-meaning friends that the Communists used a back-door approach to infiltrate the national liberation organisations Dadoo is emphatic that the SACP never entertained any idea of dominating any organisation. He points out that as Communists they were as patriotic as anyone else in fighting racism and white domination for the freedom of the black people.

But they were also fighting for socialism and for that it was absolutely necessary to have an independent vanguard party of the working class based on Marxism-Leninism - a party that understood that racist oppression and white supremacy is the creation of capitalism, colonialism and imperialism and that the national liberation of the African people is the precondition for the building of a socialist South Africa. This is what the Communists work for, fight for, go to prison for and die for. There never has been nor ever will be any attempt to dominate any organisation. The SACP is an indispensable part of the national liberation front headed by the ANC.

Defiance Campaign

In 1950, Dadoo was elected President of the South African Indian Congress in recognition of his contribution to the struggle. Nominating him for the post, Dr Naicker called him "one of the greatest sons of South Africa". Soon the SAIC was to join with the ANC to organise a Defiance Campaign against unjust laws in a bid to raise the struggle of the oppressed to new and higher levels. A planning Council was set up consisting of Dr. Moroka (Chairman), Walter Sisulu, J. B. Marks, Yusuf Dadoo and Yusuf Cachalia. The Council was instructed to prepare a report on the methods and forms of struggle to be adopted. That report, which was the basis for the organisation of the Defiance Campaign, was prepared mainly by Sisulu and Dadoo. Though he had met Sisulu some years previously, this was the first time that Dadoo had worked so closely with him. They had continuous discussions in which their common outlook and friendship blossomed. Dadoo was impressed by Sisulu's sharp analytical mind, his pragmatism and his common touch with the people.

Nelson Mandela was elected volunteer-in-chief with Molvi Cachalia his deputy. Already at that time Mandela's courage, devotion to duty, magnetic personality and dynamism had manifested themselves. Following Kotane's defiance of his banning orders, Dadoo and Bopape followed suit. Once more Dadoo found himself in prison. Unencumbered by the detail of daily work, he spent six very fruitful weeks discussing with Kotane and Bopape numerous problems that faced the revolutionary movements in South Africa. Dadoo says that Kotane was also very busy advising the ordinary prisoners on their legal rights and helping them to prepare their court cases.

Dadoo has no doubt that the Defiance Campaign in which over 8,000 courted imprisonment was one of the great acts of resistance in our revolutionary history. It led to the strengthening of the ANC and SAIC, generated a new spirit of militancy and a conscious feeling of organised resistance, and brought about the formation of the South African Coloured People's Organisation (SACPO) and the Congress of Democrats (COD) of white allies of the liberation movements.

The question of political consciousness and enlightenment, Dadoo maintains, is a complex process which assumes new features as changes occur in the working and living conditions of the people. For him the strength, vigour and influence of the leaders, however formidable their personal capabilities may be, lies in the growing political consciousness and organisation of the toiling masses and in their ability to express and articulate the collective will. Thus diverse forms of mass struggle, demonstrations, strikes, rallies, mass meetings, group discussions and other actions are the principal and most distinct expression of the will of the oppressed and exploited people.

The intensified repression of the racist regime had brought about a new situation and the revolutionary forces had to find new forms of struggle to ensure that the mood and spirit of militancy did not flounder and ebb away. The Congress Alliance decided to hold a Congress of the People where a Freedom Charter could be adopted. At that time the Congress Alliance consisted of the ANC, SAIC, SACPO and SACOD. Later it was augmented and strengthened by the inclusion of the South African Congress of Trade Unions (SACTU), the only non-racial trade union centre in South Africa .

Dadoo was continuously under banning orders which prevented him from participating openly in the hectic activities of the Congress Alliance. But this did not prevent him from making his contribution at secret meetings and discussions with leaders of the Congress Alliance and the SACP. He was consulted on all major issues and his views and analyses greatly respected.

On the suggestion of the ANC it was decided to award the honour of Isitwalandwe to Chief Lutuli, Dadoo and Father Huddleston. Dadoo was deeply touched that he was considered for this honour and even twenty-four years later says with emotion "I am at a loss for words to describe my feelings." His great regret was that like Chief Lutuli he could not participate in that great assembly as they were both banned. He also feels honoured to be associated with Lutuli, as Dadoo has the greatest respect and appreciation for Lutuli's incalculable contribution to the deepening of the revolutionary process in South Africa.

Dadoo is unequivocal that the Freedom Charter is really a People's Charter, reflecting the deep-seated feelings, grievances and aspirations of the masses who were active participants in its formulation. He characterises the Freedom Charter as the embodiment of the demands of the national liberation movement at the stage of the national democratic revolution which can and does unite the most diverse forces. The inclusion of the clause on the nationalisation of monopoly industries and banks he says is a logical demand of the national liberation movement in the conditions obtaining in South Africa, since it is not possible to overthrow the racist system without a fundamental and irreversible shift in economic and political power.

The period 1950-60 was characterised by the most formidable acts of mass militant resistance. In the urban areas the African working class demonstrated its power and willingness to lead the struggle and to fulfil its historic mission. In the rural areas there were the heroic battles including armed uprisings of the people of Zeerust, Sekukuniland and Pondoland. The people's resistance in the rural areas was temporarily halted only because the enemy used the most barbarous and murderous methods of suppression. However these actions had a long-term impact on the will of the people to resist. In all of these activities the ANC was involved in one way or another.

For Dadoo the formation of the Congress Alliance was a highwater mark in the process of bringing about unity in action. From the very beginning Dadoo operated on the basis that the major role would have to be played by the African people and that the struggle for national liberation would have to be under the leadership and guidance of the ANC. The Congress Consultative Committee, which was the organisational expression of the Congress Alliance, was not a decision-making body. It discussed various issues, acted as a coordinating body and made recommendations which were not binding on any constituent part of the Alliance. In the conditions at that time the Congress Alliance under the leadership of the ANC was the most appropriate form for bringing about the unity of all those opposed to racism and apartheid.

Internationalism

A genuine patriot, Dadoo clearly understood the organic relationship between the struggle in South Africa and the world-wide struggle against capitalism, colonialism and imperialism, for national liberation, peace, democracy and socialism. With Dadoo there were many leaders including Kotane, Marks, Mandela, Tambo, Tloome, Sisulu, Nokwe, A. Nzo, G. Mbeki, Bram Fischer and M. Mabida who worked tirelessly to expose the aggressive nature and conspiracies of imperialism and the forces of reaction. While the ANC was still legal, the Congress Alliance organised protest meetings and demonstrations and produced an immense amount of analytical and propaganda materials on a wide variety of international problems. A few such issues were the Zionist-imperialist aggression against Egypt, the counter-revolutionary conspiracy in Hungary in 1956, the bloody French colonial wars against the people of Algeria and Indo-China, the imprisonment of Kenyatta, the ClA-inspired murder of Lumumba, the Portuguese colonial massacres in Mozambique and Angola and the fight for peace and disarmament.

Furthermore, fraternal links were developed with progressive continental and international organisations of the workers, youth, students, women and peace fighters. After 1960 the SACP developed and strengthened its relations with the international communist movement. Today the ANC has an internationalist outlook with a breadth and scope which make it one of the leading anti-imperialist national liberation forces. Our people, whom the racists tried to isolate from world developments, developed a fierce hatred for imperialism and a love and respect for progressive forces throughout the world.

In spite of the Treason Trial - 1956-1961 - which incarcerated so many of the leading activists, the struggle against the pass laws, Group Areas Act, Bantustans, forced removals, slave wages and inhuman exploitation went from strength to strength. To take the struggle against the pass laws to a new and higher level in 1960 the ANC planned a mass militant campaign. But the ANC plan was preempted by the Pan-African Congress (PAC) which was formed by some disgruntled, chauvinist and anti-communist elements within the ANC.

The PAC call for anti-pass demonstrations on March 21, 1960 was an ill-prepared adventurist action. In only two places, Cape Town and the Sharpeville- Evaton- Vereeniging complex, was there any kind of mass demonstration. The trigger-happy white police and army wantonly opened fire on the peaceful demonstration in Sharpeville, killing 69 people. "Sharpeville Massacre" was the message that flashed all round the world. The callous brutality of the killings in Sharpeville and Langa exposed the fact that the fascist regime in South Africa would stop at nothing to preserve the privileges and power of the white minority and monopolists.

The experience of Sharpeville, taken together with the massive use of armed force and intimidation, backed by the white mass media, to suppress all popular struggles made it inevitable that non-violent mass resistance should give way to other methods. The revolutionary forces had to find alternative forms of struggle to meet and defeat the fascist terror. Thus at the initiative of the ANC and SACP came into being Umkhonto-We-Sizwe (Spear of the Nation), the military wing of the ANC. Into the ranks of Umkhonto came the most dedicated and fearless revolutionaries from all the racial groups. On December 16 1961 the first acts of sabotage took place in all the major cities. Preparations were made for a concerted, well-organised, armed revolutionary struggle. But the enemy was not unprepared. It introduced the most draconian legislation which effectively legalised torture and the murder of detainees and substantially increased military expenditure.

Dadoo Abroad

Following the Sharpeville massacre the racist regime declared a state of emergency. Thousands were arrested including most of the leading members of the national liberation and working class movements. Dadoo with Kotane, Harmel and others evaded the fascist net and went into hiding. For some months they operated underground moving from one place to another and continuously keeping abreast of the developing situation. It was then decided that the time was ripe to make public the existence of the illegal SACP. Leaflets were distributed throughout the country and according to Dadoo the declaration was widely acclaimed by the working people. The SACP in consultation with the SAIC decided that Dadoo should go abroad to give the Party an external presence and to help in organising all-round international support for the internal struggle. In the discussions Dadoo vigorously argued that his place was in the underground, but he was overruled and as a disciplined Communist and revolutionary he submerged his own wishes and feelings and fulfilled the collective decision.

From London he travelled to different parts of the world to put the case of the oppressed, but maintained the closest contact with the movement at home and was able to make his contribution to the new programme of the Communist Party which was adopted at an illegal conference in Johannesburg in 1962. This programme has made a tremendous contribution to the theoretical elaboration of the nature and character of the racist socio-economic system in our country and to the creative development of Marxist-Leninist thought in our continent.

Following the Rivonia and subsequent trials of our brave freedom fighters, the revolutionary movements were compelled to retreat, take stock of the changed conditions and map out new plans for the revolutionary struggle. However, despite the most sustained reign of terror over nearly twenty years the ANC and SACP were never cowed into submission. Time after time the fascists boasted that they had "broken the back" of the ANC and SACP, but this was never to be. The ANC with its clear programme of action and demands became the heart and the mind of the oppressed. The fascists may torture, maim, imprison and kill our revolutionary cadres and leaders but they will never destroy the ANC, SACP and SACTU.

A cardinal test of an organisation claiming to lead the people in struggle is its ability to analyse and discuss its achievements and shortcomings in an objective manner permeated by the principle of criticism and self-criticism. The ANC manifested this essential quality at the Morogoro Conference of 1969. That conference was a historical milestone. After a careful and searching analysis and an open discussion decisions were taken which have had a positive impact on the course of the revolutionary struggle. One such decision was to set up a Revolutionary Council which was entrusted with the task of improving the underground structures of the ANC, strengthening the capacity of Umkhonto-We-Sizwe to meet the firepower of the enemy with the fire-power and superior tactics of the guerillas, and relating the armed struggle to the mass actions of the working people. Oliver Tambo was unanimously and enthusiastically elected chairman and Dadoo vice-chairman of the Revolutionary Council. Since its formation in 1969 the Revolutionary Council has considerably heightened the activities of the ANC underground and Umkhonto-We-Sizwe. In his post Dadoo has worked tirelessly and selflessly, never sparing himself.

As a leading member of the SACP Dadoo was also occupied by his Party duties and functions. In August 1972 J. B. Marks, then chairman of the SACP, died and was buried (in his own words) "in the land of the proletariat". At a CC meeting soon after Marks' death, Dadoo was unanimously elected chairman. He says that his election was a great honour and a heavy responsibility; more so since he had to follow the high standard of leadership set by Marks. However, once he took on this responsibility he made and continues to make valuable contributions to the extension of the Party's influence and position inside and outside the country.

In the continuing work to heighten the political and revolutionary consciousness of the people, underground literature plays a preeminent role. It acts as a mobiliser, organiser, stimulator, and catalyst. Both the ANC and SACP have produced a vast quantity of underground resistance literature. Even the enemy has been compelled to admit that the consistent production and distribution of illegal propaganda material by various means, including bucket bombs, has made an impact on the country. Our brave underground fighters take great risks to prepare and distribute this material. A number of them have been arrested, tortured, imprisoned and killed, but the work continues.

The national liberation front, headed by the ANC and of which the SACP is an integral part, has played its rightful role in the rapidly developing situation in racist South Africa, despite deep illegality and certain shortcomings and weaknesses. Whether in the massive strikes of the black working class, the ferment of revolt amongst the youth and students, or the resistance in the rural areas, the contribution of members of the national liberation, trade union and working class movements has been significant. A large number of young people who have left South Africa to acquire political and military skills have testified to the influence of the ANC.

Soweto Explosion

The uprisings in Soweto and other parts of the country In June 1976 shattered for all time the propaganda of the racists that South Africa is an ocean of peace. The oppressed, down-trodden youth and students demonstrated not only their utter rejection of racism and apartheid but most significantly their readiness to make the supreme sacrifice. Workers, youth, students, professionals and small traders came out in united mass action.

In the recent period militant actions on a wide variety of issues, by black working people in the urban and rural areas, youth and students and other strata of the population have intensified. Moreover, the underground structures of the ANC, SACP and SACTU have been strengthened and the fighting qualities of Umkhonto-We-Sizwe have been displayed in action. Even the enemy has been compelled to admit that South Africa is in a "state of war". Numerous armed clashes have occurred between the freedom fighters and the forces of racism, repression and murder. In some of the clashes units of Umkhonto have inflicted wounding blows on the enemy troops and eliminated traitors and informers such as Abel Mtembu and L. Nkosi.

Dadoo's political life, like that of so many outstanding revolutionaries throughout the world, proves irrefutably that one can only be a true patriot if one is an internationalist. Dadoo emphasises that class unity is essential both on the national and international scale. Imperialism and the national forces of reaction will do their utmost - including the use of terroristic violence - to protect their interests. Thus it is not possible to dispense with the most potent weapon of the international working class, proletarian internationalism.

In the course of his political duties Dadoo has represented the SACP at various congresses, conferences and seminars in the socialist countries. He went to the Soviet Union for the first time in 1960. When his plane landed at the airport in Moscow his heart beat faster. He was tremendously excited and overjoyed that at long last he was in the motherland of Lenin, where the material base for socialism had been established. His love for the Soviet people and the CPSU had grown steadily stronger over the years. For Dadoo, as for millions of people, the Soviet Union is the main bulwark of all those fighting for a new and better life free from capitalism, imperialism, neocolonialism, racism and fascism.

In contrast to the principled class positions of the socialist community headed by the Soviet Union, the Chinese leaders in Peking have betrayed the most sacred principles of socialism and proletarian internationalism. Dadoo represented the ANC at the representative conference held in Helsinki in March 1979 in support of Vietnam after the criminal aggression and brazen banditry of the Chinese invaders. In his speech he said: "By their actions the Chinese leadership have entered into an unholy alliance with the most reactionary and warmongering forces of imperialism. In Chile, Angola, Ethiopia, wherever the people are fighting against imperialism and reaction, they find ranged against them the Peking leadership".

Dadoo led a delegation of the SACP to Congo (Brazzaville) in November 1975. During this highly successful visit they met leading officials of the Congolese Party of Labour and the government. In a joint communique after the visit both parties agreed to develop contacts and to help each other in the struggle for socialism. In 1977 Dadoo had the honour and pleasure to be part of the world Peace delegation which presented the Julio-Curie Medal to Agostinho Neto in Luanda.

Dadoo as always remains a firm champion of the might and strength of the international communist movement. Within the ranks of the Party and internationally he is a tireless fighter for the unity and cohesiveness of the world communist movement. On behalf of the SACP he attended the 1960 and 1969 international meetings of the Communist and Workers' Parties and the recent historic first meeting of the Communist and Workers' Parties of Tropical and Southern Africa. He reads extensively and is well informed about developments in Africa, the socialist world, Middle East, Asia and Latin America. In many ways Dadoo is a symbol of the internationalism of the oppressed people of South Africa.

Dadoo draws his political strength and dynamism above all from the black working class which is the main social force for national liberation and socialism. In his political life he has always attempted to draw the widest possible sections of the oppressed blacks and democratic whites into the mainstream of the struggle. An implacable foe of sectarianism and exclusivism Dadoo has made an immeasurable contribution to the significant role played by the Indians in the revolutionary struggle.

Dadoo's political life is indeed A Proud Record of Struggle. Notwithstanding the drawbacks, weaknesses and retreats of the revolutionary forces, Dadoo on the basis of a scientific evaluation of the scope, depth and potential of the national liberation and working class movements and the fierce opposition of the oppressed to racism and apartheid is supremely confident that as surely as spring follows winter the popular Congress slogan "Freedom In Our Lifetime" will become a reality.

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크
2010/01/05 14:41 2010/01/05 14:41
TAG

영국과 프랑스 - 2010/01/05 13:46

 

저널리스트이자 영국 사회주의노동자당(SWP)의 당원이었던 Paul Foot 의 무덤

 

19세기 초반의 영국시인 Percy B. Shelley의 시 "The Call to Freedom"의 마지막 구절이 적혀있다.

 

Rise like Lions after slumber
In unvanquishable number -
Shake your chains to earth like dew
Which in sleep had fallen on you -
Ye are many - they are few.
(잠에서 깨어난 사자들처럼 일어나라

감히 정복할 수 없을 무리로

너희를 묶고 있는 사슬을 이슬처럼 털어내라

잠든 사이 네게 채워진

너희는 다수이고, 저들은 한줌뿐이다)

 

 

 

Paul Mackintosh Foot 은 영국이 지배하선 팔레스타인과 Cyprus의 마지막 총독이었던 Hugh Foot의 아들로서 1937년 11월 8일 팔레스타인에서 태어났다.

특권층 출신으로 옥스퍼드 대학시절 민주당에 가입했던 Paul Foot은 1960년대 초 글래스고(Glasgow)에서 노동계급의 삶과 운동을 접하면서 사회주의자가 되었고, 《영국 정치의 이민과 인종 Immigration and Race in British Politics》, 《해럴드 윌슨의 정치학 The Politics of Harold Wilson》, 《에노크 포웰의 부상 The Rise of Enoch Powell》등의 책을 저술했다.

《Why you should be a socialist (1977)》에서 "일하는 사람들만이 세상을 바꿀수 있다. 그러나 그것을 위해서 사회주의정당이 필요하다. 그러한 당은 어느날 갑자기 나타나는 것이 아니라, 매일매일의 민중의 투쟁으로 건설되는 것이다"라고 역설했던 그는 평생을 SWP의 당원으로서 노동자들의 투쟁에 적극 결합하며 살았다.

어느 집회에서 그가 연설하고 있을때 스킨헤드 한사람이 뛰어올라와 그의 출신성분을 비난했을때 그는 “나는 지배 계급입니다. …… 나는 나의 계급이 넌더리가 나기 때문에 그들을 배반하기로 마음먹었습니다.”라고 응수했다고 한다.

심장발작을 일으켜 쓰러진뒤에도 휠체어를 타고다니며 집회에 참석하던 그는 2004년 7월 14일 가족과 함께 휴가를 떠나기 위해 Stansted Airport에서 비행기를 기다리던중 사망, 맑스무덤 인근에 묻혀있다.

 

자세한 내용은 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Foot 참조.

 

* 셸리의 싯귀가 묘비에 새겨진 이유는 잘 모르겠다. 폴 풋이 평소에 좋아했던 구절이었을까?

자료를 찾다보니 셸리의 다른 시가 더 어울렸을 수도 있겠단 생각이 들었다.

 

Drive my dead thoughts over the universe
Like withered leaves to quicken a new birth!
And, by the incantation of this verse,
 
Scatter, as from an unextinguished hearth
Ashes and sparks, my words among mankind!
Be through my lips to unawakened earth
 
The trumpet of a prophecy! O Wind,
If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크
2010/01/05 13:46 2010/01/05 13:46
TAG

영국과 프랑스 - 2010/01/04 22:43

 

맑스 무덤 인근의 'SELLO MOETI'라는 사람의 묘비명이다.

"적과 싸울 준비가 되어 있는 사람은 행복하다!"는 말을 자주 했던 사람이란다.

 

 

일단 ANC 홈페이지에 있는 그에관한 자료다.

 

SELLO MOETI (MICHAEL LEBESE)
1953-1988

Obituary in Sechaba, December 1988

Sello Moeti was born on December 1, 1953, in Waggendrif (Cullinan), about 45 km east of Pretoria, the seventh child in a family of nine children.

The family moved to Mamelodi in 1961. Sello began school at Morotele Lower Primary, moved to Mogale Higher Primary, and then to Mamelodi High School, where he obtained a first class pass in the Junior Certificate in 1974.

Even in Form One of high school, his resistance to the hated Bantu Education was evident. Sello loved debate, and engaged in intense discussions with family and friends. Highly perceptive and politicised from his early years, he had a strong awareness of oppression and degradation.

He was in one of the earliest groups to join the ANC following the victory of FRELIMO in Mozambique. A few months before the 1976 Soweto uprising, he left South Africa and went to Mozambique, where, through FRELIMO officials, he sought contact with the ANC. Talking to a friend about this experience, he said that he had been inspired by the victory of the Mozambican revolutionary war, and greatly influenced by the political programmes from Radio Mozambique which he used to monitor regularly with his close friends in Mamelodi.

He arrived in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, while the Soweto uprising was still at its height.

Reflecting the impatience of that generation, Sello demanded that he, together with others, should quickly be given military training in order to go back and meet the challenge of the fascist apartheid regime. This group was undeniably motivated by the most militant of revolutionary spirits, but they also reflected the immaturity of their generation at that time. They had a limited perception of the problems then confronting the ANC. Anger against the Boers had to be reinforced by the analytical ability to situate the Soweto uprising in the context of the overall struggle, and not only the armed struggle.

Sensing this analytical deficiency in the Soweto generation, the ANC leadership organised political classes to be conducted for them. It was in those political classes that Sello distinguished himself in his grasp of the political problems in South Africa. His ability to make objective assessments increased, and his contributions in the class tended to be less emotional, and more calm and reasoned.

Here, Sello developed his own personality, and developed a partisanship to the ANC that reflected his depth of understanding of the problems that made it impossible for the armed struggle to grow at the rate he demanded. Observing his political qualities, the ANC leadership selected him to join a small group sent to the Soviet Union to study political propaganda. What had inspired Sello in Radio Mozambique was now to be expected from him when he came back from his training to broadcast on Radio Freedom.

The strategic thinking in the leadership at that time was that the ANC needed to develop cadres who would be responsible for the Radio Freedom stations all over southern Africa, since that phase of our struggle depended, almost exclusively, on the successful conduct of political education and propaganda among the oppressed people. Sello's group was the first-ever group after the Soweto uprising to leave Dar es Salaam to acquire training and skills, and also the first from the Soweto generation to train in skills of that kind.

Sello found a particular interest in political propaganda. Political training did not change, but only developed, his personality. He liked argument, but not for its own sake. Highly principled and incorruptible, he demanded from others what he demanded from himself. He judged people by their innermost qualities. When he detested people, it was for their lack of principle, sloppiness and inattentiveness to the problems of the people. It mattered little to him what position a person held in the ANC; as long as there was a point to challenge, he did it with the tenacity that did not augur well with those few who always expected praises in the assessment of their work. This characteristic was with him throughout the period of his work in the ANC.

In Luanda, he was made deputy head of the Radio Freedom unit, working closely with a group of comrades who subsequently became his close friends. Careful in selecting his friends, and also difficult to make friends with, Sello carved for himself a unique and at times controversial character. For those who were far from him, he was simply an arrogant young man, but for those who were happy enough to have his confidence and be close to him, he was a sensitive and highly cultured human person. He was forthright and straightforward almost to a fault. His hatred for corruption was not only directed against others, but was an important index of his own moral standing in the organisation.

If anybody thought that Sello would abandon these qualities over the years, they were proved wrong. Fortunately, the ANC was able to read in them the potential for an uncompromising young revolutionary, who was soon made head of the Radio Freedom unit in Dar es Salaam.

Dar es Salaam, however, was to be a place where Sello's health would seriously deteriorate, as he got repeated malaria attacks which inevitably contributed to the lowering of his general resistance and immunity to disease.

So frequent and devastatingly severe were these attacks that, when he arrived in London from Dar es Salaam, the doctors told him his white blood count was very low and that therefore his resistance to infection was also low.

Sello's health was never to be the same again; where others would normally take the full stress and strain of work, Sello's response became that of a nervously wrecked, and at times highly explosive, personality. And this ate up the very intellectual engine that nature had endowed with extraordinary reasoning powers, and a uniquely solid and forthright personality.

One of Sello's closest interests was the development of armed struggle in South Africa. His skills, however, took him to a battlefield of a different type, and required him to employ a different weapon in the same fight - his pen. He wrote skilfully, using the sharp language that derived partly from his political anger, but also partly from his own cultural background among the militant BaPedi people of King Sekhukhune, whose reputation at one time was to rout the Boer invaders so mercilessly that they fled to Pretoria.

Sello left unfinished work. He was working on a book on the struggle of the women of South Africa, having selected as his focus of study Lilian Ngoyi and Elizabeth Mafekeng. He also left the unfinished manuscript of a novel which he began in Dar es Salaam, but could not complete because, according to him, people would "expect a perfect work from a mind as critical as myself."

Towards the end of his life, he was studying the counter-revolutionary strategy of the Pretoria regime.

Sello strongly suspected that he might die, but faced this possibility with extraordinary courage. Those who went to see him in either Homerton Hospital or St. Mary's, intending to give him inspiration, came back themselves inspired by him. He died in the early hours of October 27, 1988, and was buried in Highgate Cemetery. Sello's mother was there during her son's last days, and was also present at the funeral, which was conducted in a fitting, political manner.

As Sello liked to say: Uyadela Wena Osulapho! (Happy are you, who are already grappling with the enemy!)

Lala Ngoxolo, ndoda Yama doda!
 

 

 

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크
2010/01/04 22:43 2010/01/04 22:43
TAG

영국과 프랑스 - 2010/01/04 20:51

 

맑스 무덤 바로 옆의 Claudia Vera Jones 무덤.

 

인종차별과 제국주의에 맞서

사회주의와 흑인해방을 위해

평생을 헌신한 영웅적인 전사

 

라고 적혀있다.

 

 뉘신지 궁금해서 인터넷을 뒤져봤다.

 

 

Carole Boyce Davies가 클라우디아에 대해서 쓴 "Left of Karl Marx: The Political Life of Black Communist Claudia Jones (Paperback)"라는 책이다.

'Left of Karl Marx'라는 책제목이 무척 의미심장하다. 실제 그녀의 무덤이 맑스묘의 왼쪽에 있기도 하지만, 맑스가 풍부하게 다루지 못했던 인종과 여성이라는 문제를 걸고 싸웠던 사람이라는 의미도 있을듯 하다.

 

 

 

 

영국의 식민지인 서인도제도의 Trinidad에서 1915년 태어났다.

1922년 가족들이 미국의 뉴욕으로 이주, 거기서 자랐는데 청년기부터 미국공산당(CPAUSA)과 청년공산주의자동맹(YCL)에 참여했다. 

21살에 공청의 할렘가 조직가로 활동을 시작, 흑인과 여성의 권리를 위해 싸웠으며, American Daily Worker 의 기자와 공청의 Weekly Review 편집자로 일했다.

 

미국 각주를 돌아다니며 시민과 여성의 권리, 평화를 외쳤고 이로인해 1940년대 미국 매카시즘의 타겟이 되었다. 1948년 미국정부 전복을 주장했다는 이유로 수감되었고, 1951년 다시 구속됐다. 대법원에 항소했으나 결국 1955년 미국시민권자가 아니라는 이유로 국외추방되었다.

어릴때부터 건강이 좋지않았던 그녀는 Trinidad 대신 영국을 선택했고, 영국공산당(CPGB)에 가입한뒤, 카리브인 공동체에서 West Indian Gazette지를 발행하기 시작했다.

1958년 노팅힐의 인종폭동이후 클라우디아는 인종통합과 카리브문화의 발전을 위해 Mardi Gras festival 을 시작했는데 이것은 유럽에서 가장 큰 거리축제의 하나인 Notting Hill Carnival 로 발전하였다.

1964년 심장병과 폐결핵으로 사망했고, 하이게이트의 맑스 무덤 옆에 묻혔다.

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크
2010/01/04 20:51 2010/01/04 20:51
TAG

영국과 프랑스 - 2010/01/04 19:37

 

하이게이트에 있는 맑스의 묘.

맑스보다 먼저 죽은 아내 예니등 가족들과 함께 묻혀있다.

상단에는 "만국의 노동자여 단결하라!"는 공산당선언의 마지막 구절이,

하단에는 "지금까지 철학자들은 세상을 단지 여러 가지로 해석해 왔을 뿐이다. 중요한 것은 세상을 변혁하는 것이다"는 포이에르바하에 관한 11번 테제가 씌여있다.

 

맑스는 1883년 3월 14일 사망했다.  그의 장례식은 며칠 뒤인 17일 이곳 하이게이트 묘지에서 열렸다.

20여명 정도가 참석했고, 맑스의 관에 붉은 리본과 함께 두 개의 화환이 있었다하니 지금의 기준으로 본다면 무척 조촐한 장례식이었던것 같다.

 

처음의 무덤은 맑스의 소망에 따라 작은 비석하나만 세워져 있었는데, 1954년 좀더 나은 장소로 이장하면서 Laurence Bradshaw 가 제작한 현재의 기념비가 세워졌다.

 

이날 장례식에서 엥겔스는 "살아 있는 가장 위대한 사상가가 생각하기를 멈추었습니다.  이 사람의 죽음으로 인하여 유럽과 미국의 전투적인 프롤레타리아 계급과 역사 과학 모두에게 있어 헤아릴 수 없는 손실을 입게 되었습니다. 이러한 위대한 정신의 사망으로 남겨진 빈틈은 곧바로 느낄 수 있을 것입니다."라며 슬픔을 표한뒤, "모든 것에 앞서 맑스는 혁명가입니다. 인생에서 맑스의 진정한 임무는 하나의 방법으로든 다른 방법으로든 자본주의 사회와 그것이 가져다 준 국가 기구를 타도하는 것에 기여하고, 맑스가 최초로 그들의 처지와 빈곤함을 자각하게 하고, 해방의 조건들을 자각하게 한, 근대 프롤레타리아 계급의 해방에 기여하는 것이었습니다. 투쟁은 맑스를 구성하는 요소였습니다."라고 맑스의 삶을 평가했다.  이어 엥겔스는 "그 필연적인 귀결로서 맑스는 그의 시대에서 가장 증오를 받고 가장 중상모략에 시달린 사람이 되었습니다. "며 안타까워하면서도 "감히 단언하건대 맑스는 많은 반대자가 있었지만 그들 중 어느 누구도 개인적인 적수로 삼지 않았습니다. 맑스의 이름은 시대를 넘어 그의 업적이 이뤄질 때까지 지속될 것입니다!”라고 선언했다 한다.

 

이어 리프크네히트도 "그는 가장 증오받는 사람이지만 또한 가장 사랑받는 사람. 그가 증오받았던 것은 그가 사랑받는 원천"이었다며 "과학에서의 혁명과 과학을 통한 혁명에서 맑스는 사람들에게 전달하고 공공의 이익으로 만들기 위하여 과학의 가장 높은 봉우리로 올라갔습니다. 맑스의 인생은 만국의 프롤레타리아 계급에 헌정되었습니다. 맑스의 기억은 사라지지 않을 것이며, 그의 가르침은 광범위하게 영향력을 미칠 것"이라고 얘기했다. 그리고 "추모하는 대신에, 고인이 된 그 위대한 사람의 정신으로 행동하고 그의 가르침을 실현하기 위해 전력을 다해 싸우고, 그가 싸워왔던 것들이 가능한 한 빨리 실천되도록 합시다. 이것이야 말로 맑스의 기억을 명예롭게 하는 가장 좋은 방법"이라면서 "고인이 되었지만, 동시에 살아 있는 동지여, 우리는 당신이 알려준 최종 목표를 향해 계속 갈 것입니다. 우리는 이를 당신의 무덤 앞에서 맹세"한다고 다짐했다.

 

 

그의 무덤 앞에 쭈그리고 앉아서 담배를 한대 피우는데

맑스가 17살에 김나지움을 졸업하며 썼다던 <직업 선택을 앞둔 한 젊은이의 성찰>이란 글이 떠올랐다.

 

"직업을 선택할 때 주요한 기준은 인류의 행복과 자기완성이다.

  두 가지는 서로 엇갈리거나 적대적이어서 한쪽이 다른 쪽을 배제한다는 식으로 생각해서는 안 된다.

  사람은 자신과 같은 시대를 살아가는 사람들의 삶을 향상시키고 그들의 행복을 위해 일해야 비로소 자기완성을 이룰 수 있다.

  그것이 사람의 본성이다.  

  만일 사람이 자신만을 위해 일한다면 설령 저명한 학자나 훌륭한 현자 혹은 뛰어난 시인이 되 수 있을지는 모른다.

  하지만 결코 진정으로 완성된 위대한 인간이 될 수는 없을 터이다.

  역사는 이 세상 전체를 위해 일하면서 동시에 자기 자신을 높여가는 사람을 위인으로 인정한다.

  최대다수의 사람들에게 행복을 가져다준 사람을 가장 행복한 사람으로 기린다.

  종교도 가르쳐준다.

  모든 사람이 지향하는 이상적인 인물은 인류를 위해 자신을 희생했다.

  이런 생각을 섬멸할 용기가 있는 사람이 있을까?  

  만일 우리가 많은 사람을 위해 헌신적으로 살아가기로 삶의 방향을 설정한다면, 어떠한 시련도 우리를 굴복시킬 수 없을 것이다.

  시련이란 그저 다른 사람들을 위한 잠시 동안의 희생에 지나지 않기 때문이다.

  시련에도 굴하지 않고 많은 사람들을 위해 헌신적으로 살아간다면, 우리는 사소하고 한정적이며 이기적인 기쁨을 향유하는 데에서 그치지 않고 많은 사람들이 함께 공유하는 행복을 누리게 될 것이다.

  그리하여 우리가 죽어도 우리의 삶의 자취는 조용히, 그러나 영원히 살아남을 것이며, 타고 남은 재는 고귀한 인간들의 반짝이는 눈물로 젹셔질 것이다."

 

17살 그 어린 나이에 스스로 다짐했던 삶을 평생 실천했던 사람.

그의 무덤 앞에서 나는

맑스가 위대한 것은 자본론을 썼기 때문이 아니라

다른 이들의 행복을 위해 헌신하겠다는 자기와의 약속을 지켜냈기 때문이 아닐까 생각했다.

 

[하이게이트 지도]

 

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크
2010/01/04 19:37 2010/01/04 19:37
TAG

영국과 프랑스 - 2010/01/04 02:01

 

 

영국박물관 바로 맞은편에 위치한 Pub 'Museum Tavern'

영국박물관에서 자본론을 집필하던 맑스가 가끔 이용했다고 한다.

 

 

 

술집 내부.

이 집에서 fish and chips 를 먹어볼까 했는데

시간이 없어서 구경만 하고 그냥 나왔다.

J.B. Priestley, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and Karl Marx. 등이 고객(?)이었단다.

18세기 초에 'Dog & Duck'라는 이름으로 장사를 시작,

1760년에 지금의 이름으로 바꾸었다는 유서깊은 Pub.

월요일에서 토요일까지는 오전 11시에 문을 열어 밤 11시~12까지, 일요일은 12시부터 밤 10:30까지 영업을 한다.

식사는 낮 12시부터 저녁 9시까지만.

주소는 49 Great Russell Street, Bloomsbury, London WC1B 3BA 이고, 전화번호는 020 7242 8987 이다.

 

[약도]

 

 

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크
2010/01/04 02:01 2010/01/04 02:01
TAG

영국과 프랑스 - 2010/01/04 01:52

- 소개

- 사진

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크
2010/01/04 01:52 2010/01/04 01:52
TAG