PAUL FREEMAN, KILLED AT KURSK, JULY, 1921
I have known Paul Freeman since August, 1916. I had just come out of prison, and was 
on a propaganda trip to the famous desert mining camp of Broken Hill. Paul, was, like 
myself, a member of the Industrial Workers of the World, the most universal industrial 
organisation in the world. I have a lively recollection of a wild ride on the back of 
Paul's motor cycle from the Broken Hill prison-where we were visiting an I.W.W. 
prisoner-to the cemetery to attend the funeral of another member who had died from 
injuries received in a mining accident. I little thought as I stood side by side with 
Paul by the graveside in a howling desert blizzard that we should meet again in a far 
country where an old corrupt autocracy was about to crash, and where Paul himself 
would rest among, and as a worthy associate of, mighty heroes of a revolutionary 
epoch, and beneath the walls of a wonderful ancient city. But so it is! 

I do not know where Paul was born or when. In the I.W.W. we did not worry about these 
details. Only the Australian Government did that. In the cyclonic career of the 
Australian I.W.W. Paul played his part. After the savage sentences upon Glynn, Larkin, 
Reeve, and their other nine fellow workers came the outlawing of the organisation. 
Paul was then mining on his own claim in Queensland, but he was arrested in company 
with about seventy others. 

Most of these men, including myself, after nearly a year in prison were deported to 
all the corners of the earth. Paul was a problem to the Government, as there was a 
doubt about his nationality. They deported him to the United States, but the 
administration of President Wilson returned him with thanks. Once again he was sent 
across the Pacific, and once again he was returned. His mine was sequestrated in the 
meantime. 

The Australian Government was neither satisfied nor particular. They then decided that 
he was a German, although he did not speak a word of the language, and placed him 
aboard a prisoner transport and sent him to Germany as a war prisoner. On his arrival 
he spent some time there, and made many friends. He came on to Russia and attended the 
sessions of the Second Congress of the Third International. Here he modified his 
industrialist views and joined the Communist Party. Afterwards he returned illegally 
to Australia-a very long and dangerous journey over many countries-where he worked 
underground in the establishment of the Australian Communist Party. He then returned 
via Japan, Vladivostock, and Siberia to the Third Congress. 

I met him in Moscow after five long years, and he was the same ardent spirit that I 
had known in Broken Hill. He confided to me in the sessions at the Doma Sozouov that 
he intended to stay for the future in Russia. We never thought of the dreadful 
catastrophe that was about to happen at Kursk which was to put an end to the 
usefulness of a brave, unselfish and generous proletarian. 

Paul Freeman was one of that great army of the tireless, world-tramping, universal 
I.W.W. He passed from land to land and from continent to continent with as little care 
as some men cross the street. Down in the coal-bunkers of ships, passing frontiers 
secretly in the dead of night with the World Revolution ever foremost in his mind, 
ever guiding his footsteps. His death will be deplored in the deep levels of the mines 
of Broken Hill, and thousands of workers in the great Australian cities will stand in 
silence to honour his name. Out under the light of the constellation of the Southern 
cross, far out on the Western Plains, the lonely shepherd and the migratory worker 
will visualise the Kremlin Wall, the world-striding Freeman who sleeps beneath its 
shadow. 

Paul Freeman was one of an army who were ejected from one continent to bestride other 
continents and leave behind them a fiery trail of work for their class. He will rest 
well in goodly company, as true a man as ever stood in shoe leather, one of the old 
guard of the hated, outlawed, deported I.W.W.'s of the Southern Hemisphere. Men with 
greater names, of world celebrity, may sleep beside him under the -Kremlin Wall, but 
they will never honour it one iota more than all that is mortal of Paul Freeman. 

Tom Barker, Delegate Federation Obrera Regional Argentina (Communists). Federacion 
Obrera Regional Uruguaya. To Red Trade Union, Glasgow. Petrograd, 29th July, 1921, 
from The Worker, 27th August, 1921. 


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