Comintern to Women of the World
The Third Congress of the Communist International (3CCI) took place
from 22 June to 12 July 1921 (see the great Communist International
archive on MIA).
We meet in the UJ Doornfontein Library. The next session will be as
follows: Date: 22 April (Thursday) Time: 17h00 sharp to 18h30 sharp
Venue: The Library, University of Johannesburg, 37 Nind Street,
Doornfontein, Johannesburg (former Technikon Witwatersrand). Cars enter
from the slip road to the left of the bridge on Siemert Road. Topic:
Comintern on Women.
The main part of the linked document is “Methods and Forms of Work
among Communist Party Women: Theses”. It begins by recalling that the
two previous CCIs (in 1919 and 1920), as well as two International
Conferences of Communist Women, had all deliberated on women, and
states that “it is in the interests of the working class that women are
drawn into the organised ranks of the proletariat as it fights for
Communism.”
In other words, and following also the words of Lenin quoted in the
previous post from the year of the Great October Revolution in Russia
in 1917, the question of women is present right at the start of
socialism, and with vigour and energy. It could not be otherwise.
Yet, the document quickly states:
“The Third Congress of the Communist International supports the basic
position of revolutionary Marxism that there is no ‘special’ women’s
question, nor should there be a special women’s movement, and that any
alliance between working women and bourgeois feminism or support for
the vacillating or clearly right-wing tactics of the social
compromisers and opportunists will lead to the weakening of the forces
of the proletariat, thereby delaying the great hour of the full
emancipation of women.”
That is clear: There is no separate women’s question that is distinct
from the revolutionary working-class interest. But later, the document
says:
“The III Congress of the Communist International therefore recognises
that a special apparatus for conducting work among women is necessary.
This apparatus must consist of departments or commissions for work
among women, attached to every Party committee at all levels, from the
CC of the Party right down to the urban, district or local Party
committee. This decision is binding on all Parties in the Communist
International.”
That is also clear: there must be women’s structures at all levels. So
why is the Comintern not contradicting itself?
Comrades, read the full document, but in the VC’s opinion the matter is
simple: Women are not a class, but women are a mass. Women have
problems in common, but they are not a separate class. Bourgeois women
are part of the bourgeois class, and working women are part of the
working class.
On the other hand, this document could be criticised for being
prescriptive, for preaching, and for ignoring revolutionary mass
democracy - faults which the Comintern exhibited again in 1930, during
in its intervention in South Africa's National Democratic Revolution
(see C19, from Class and Colour, Jack and Ray Simons).
Is this the beginning of the relative failure in the organisation of
women that characterised the following 90 years, up to the present time?
In the CU, we have discussed the possible formation of a new
organisation for working women, called for the sake of
discussion "Working Women of Africa". It appears that the Comintern
would have frowned upon such an initiative,
Asikhulume!
[Picture: workers in the USA]
Download:
Click here to download the text of Women, Principles, Declaration,
Resolution, 3CCI, 1921 (8032 words, 12 pages)


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Posted By DomzaNet to Communist University on 4/16/2010 02:46:00 PM

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