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'''Anti-fascism''' is opposition to [[fascism]], and the fight against it. Notable anti-fascists include [[Georgi Dimitrov]], [[Vladimir Lenin]], and [[Joseph Stalin]], among others. The history of anti-fascism is a long one, and has existed as long as fascism has. While most bourgeois scholars date fascism to [[Fascist Italy|Italy]], this is untrue, as fascism (''the open terrorist dictatorship of the most reactionary, most chauvinistic and most imperialist elements of finance capital''<ref>[https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/dimitrov/works/1935/08_02.htm The Fascist Offensive and the Tasks of the Communist International in the Struggle of the Working Class against Fascism]</ref>) has existed long before Italian fascism.
[[File:Antifalogo alt2.svg|thumb|A logo utilized by German anti-fascists. ]]
'''Anti-fascism''' is opposition to [[fascism]]. Notable anti-fascists include [[Georgi Dimitrov]], [[Vladimir Lenin]], and [[Joseph Stalin]], among others. The history of anti-fascism is a long one, and has existed as long as fascism has.<ref>[https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/dimitrov/works/1935/08_02.htm The Fascist Offensive and the Tasks of the Communist International in the Struggle of the Working Class against Fascism]</ref>
==History of Anti-fascism==
The term anti-fascism was first officially employed in Italy in 1920, during the rise of Benito Mussolini’s fascist dictatorship. Throughout the 1920s, the concept was taken up by the [[Comintern]], which promoted it as part of the international struggle against reaction. By the early 1930s, anti-fascist politics had gained significant traction in the [[Weimar Republic]], particularly in the context of the electoral battles against the growing Nazi movement.


Marxism-Leninism is necessarily against fascism and, therefore, anti-fascist. The Marxist-Leninist vanguard party must lead a [[United Front]] against fascism. As Georgi Dimitrov wrote:
In June 1930, the [[KPD|Communist Party of Germany]] formally established Antifaschistische Aktion at a congress of its Central Committee. Conceived as a revolutionary front, Anti-Fascist Action sought to mobilize the working class against the advance of Hitlerite fascism within Germany. It was led by workers and peasants, organized under the guidance of the Communist Party, and stood as a militant expression of proletarian unity in defense of socialism and democracy.
===Anti-fascism during the Nazi-era===
When the Nazis seized power in 1933, one of their first targets was the organized working class. Both Social Democrats and Communists were subjected to brutal repression. The Hitlerite regime unleashed a systematic crackdown on the Communist Party of Germany (KPD), arresting and persecuting countless militants and revolutionaries, including its leader [[Ernst Thälmann]]. Anti-Fascist Action, along with the KPD itself, was outlawed and driven underground.


{{quote|Neither the repulsion of the offensive of capital, nor the elimination of savage fascism, nor the staving off of the new imperialist war, not, lastly, the triumph of the liberating proletarian revolution, ''would be possible'' without a ''united workers’ front'' and the joint action of all proletarians and working people in town and village.<ref>[https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/dimitrov/works/sw/swdimitrov1.pdf Selected Works of Georgi Dimitrov, Volume One] (p. 135)</ref>}}
By the 1940s, many of these anti-fascist militants carried their struggle beyond Germany’s borders. Veterans of Anti-Fascist Action joined international brigades fighting in Spain, most famously the Ernst Thälmann Battalion, which fought under the command of the Spanish Republicans. In this way, German communists continued the fight against fascism as part of the broader international struggle. The anti-fascists action was also involved in the Yugoslav Partisans, which was a armed resistance group that fought against the so-called Ustase regime which was lead by Ante Pavelic, a well known Croatian [[anti-communist]], [[fascist]].<ref>Loose, Ingo – "The Anti-Fascist Myth of the German Democratic Republic and Its Decline after 1989." Past in the Making, Central European University Press. [https://books.openedition.org/ceup/1589]</ref>


In fighting against fascism, the people often need to take up arms, which can result in proletarian revolution, and the advent of the democratic classes joining into a revolutionary [[Dictatorship of the Proletariat#People's democracy|people's democracy]]. To quote Dimitrov again:
In 1944, the Hitlerite regime seized [[Ernst Thälmann|Comrade Ernst Thälmann]], the steadfast leader of the Communist Party of Germany, and imprisoned him in the notorious Buchenwald concentration camp. For over a decade he had already endured Nazi captivity, yet even behind bars he remained a symbol of proletarian resistance. His transfer to Buchenwald marked the regime’s determination to silence one of the most uncompromising voices of German communism, a figure who embodied the unity of the working class against fascism.<ref>Jump, Jim – "Valiant and heroic were the Thälmanns." International Brigade Memorial Trust, 12 August 2024. [https://international-brigades.org.uk/news-and-blog/valiant-and-heroic-were-the-thalmanns/]</ref>
{{quote|It is not at all that the supporters of democracy and peace are in general advocates of armed struggle, but that fascism kindles the flames of civil war against the democratic regime of the country, brings about destruction and death, and compels the people to defend their lives, their freedom and independence by taking up arms.<ref>[https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/dimitrov/works/1936/12.htm The People's Front]</ref>}}
== References ==
 
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}
[[Category:Anti-fascism]]
[[Category:Anti-fascism]]

Latest revision as of 18:10, 16 November 2025

A logo utilized by German anti-fascists.

Anti-fascism is opposition to fascism. Notable anti-fascists include Georgi Dimitrov, Vladimir Lenin, and Joseph Stalin, among others. The history of anti-fascism is a long one, and has existed as long as fascism has.[1]

History of Anti-fascism

The term anti-fascism was first officially employed in Italy in 1920, during the rise of Benito Mussolini’s fascist dictatorship. Throughout the 1920s, the concept was taken up by the Comintern, which promoted it as part of the international struggle against reaction. By the early 1930s, anti-fascist politics had gained significant traction in the Weimar Republic, particularly in the context of the electoral battles against the growing Nazi movement.

In June 1930, the Communist Party of Germany formally established Antifaschistische Aktion at a congress of its Central Committee. Conceived as a revolutionary front, Anti-Fascist Action sought to mobilize the working class against the advance of Hitlerite fascism within Germany. It was led by workers and peasants, organized under the guidance of the Communist Party, and stood as a militant expression of proletarian unity in defense of socialism and democracy.

Anti-fascism during the Nazi-era

When the Nazis seized power in 1933, one of their first targets was the organized working class. Both Social Democrats and Communists were subjected to brutal repression. The Hitlerite regime unleashed a systematic crackdown on the Communist Party of Germany (KPD), arresting and persecuting countless militants and revolutionaries, including its leader Ernst Thälmann. Anti-Fascist Action, along with the KPD itself, was outlawed and driven underground.

By the 1940s, many of these anti-fascist militants carried their struggle beyond Germany’s borders. Veterans of Anti-Fascist Action joined international brigades fighting in Spain, most famously the Ernst Thälmann Battalion, which fought under the command of the Spanish Republicans. In this way, German communists continued the fight against fascism as part of the broader international struggle. The anti-fascists action was also involved in the Yugoslav Partisans, which was a armed resistance group that fought against the so-called Ustase regime which was lead by Ante Pavelic, a well known Croatian anti-communist, fascist.[2]

In 1944, the Hitlerite regime seized Comrade Ernst Thälmann, the steadfast leader of the Communist Party of Germany, and imprisoned him in the notorious Buchenwald concentration camp. For over a decade he had already endured Nazi captivity, yet even behind bars he remained a symbol of proletarian resistance. His transfer to Buchenwald marked the regime’s determination to silence one of the most uncompromising voices of German communism, a figure who embodied the unity of the working class against fascism.[3]

References

  1. The Fascist Offensive and the Tasks of the Communist International in the Struggle of the Working Class against Fascism
  2. Loose, Ingo – "The Anti-Fascist Myth of the German Democratic Republic and Its Decline after 1989." Past in the Making, Central European University Press. [1]
  3. Jump, Jim – "Valiant and heroic were the Thälmanns." International Brigade Memorial Trust, 12 August 2024. [2]