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Leon Trotsky on Black Nationalism and Self-Determination. (1978)

by Leon Trotsky

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Drawing on lessons from the October 1917 Russian Revolution, Trotsky explains why uncompromising opposition to racial discrimination and support for the right to national self-determination for Blacks are essential to unite the working class to make a socialist revolution in the United States.
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The purpose of Leon Trotsky on Black Nationalism and Self-Determination was to reprint the great Russian revolutionary's major statements on the subject, made in the course of four discussions he held with American comrades during the last decade of his life, and two resolutions that were adopted, under the influence of these discussions, at the 1939 convention of the Socialist Workers Party.
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Drawing on lessons from the October 1917 Russian Revolution, Trotsky explains why uncompromising opposition to racial discrimination and support for the right to national self-determination for Blacks are essential to unite the working class to make a socialist revolution in the United States.

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This is a compendium of the following:

The discussion in Prinkipo (1933):
Between Trotsky and Arne Swabeck. Swabeck was the national secretary of the CLA (Communist League of America), which was then in the American Communist Party.

The discussions in Coyoacan (1939):
Between Trotsky, CLR James, Charles Curtiss (4th international's representative in Mexico) and some others.
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