afoa.cy

Uncategorized

The Forgotten Trotskyists of Cyprus

✍🏾 Antonis PastellopoulosOriginally published in Greek on 04/10/23 In the late 1940s, a small left-wing party called the Trotskyist Party of Cyprus (TPC) appeared in Cyprus. The party published its own newspaper, ‘The Worker (Ergatis)’, from 1947 to 1949, seems to have been influential among some workers, was openly opposed to the Union of Cyprus with Greece (Enosis), supported the independence of the island, and took part in the 1949 municipal elections in Limassol. It was fiercely critical of AKEL, which it saw as a political and ideological enemy that dominated the Cypriot working class, rather than expressing and representing it. The first circles of Cypriot Trotskyists existed as early as the mid-1940s, as in 1945 Prolatis, a monthly sociological magazine of Giorgos Himarides, a left-wing poet and later editor of the Worker newspaper, was published. Trotskyist activity at the end of the decade seems to have been intense, leading to reactions from AKEL, with the promotion of propaganda against the TPC, public denunciations of the new party by AKEL’s leading figures, and an attempt to remove the Worker newspaper from workers’ associations and trade unions. The TPC disappeared after 1949 – my interpretation, which at this time remains at the level of speculation, is that this must be due to both the collapse of the Diaskeptiki conference and the party’s failure in the 1949 elections, events which probably brought about an internal crisis within the party, leading to its inactivity and dissolution. In 1949, articles appeared in the pages of the Worker criticising the party’s positions on the national question, suggesting that an ideological split had developed within the small Cypriot Trotskyist movement. AKEL’s hostility towards the TPC should not come as a surprise, given that the AKEL leadership was often strongly criticised by the TPC, accusing it of being Stalinist. More interesting is the fact that AKEL was forced to publicly disavow the party, a practice which suggests that, at least for its leadership, the TPC was seen as a potential threat to the hegemony AKEL enjoyed within the wider workers’ movement. However, the extent to which the TPC was a real threat to this hegemony does not seem to be able to be clarified at this time, due to the limited archival material available to us. The TPC can be placed ideologically to the left of AKEL in the 1940s, consciously opposing the shift of the workers’ movement towards Enosis, promoting working class internationalism and remaining ideologically, at least in relation to the Cyprus problem, closer to the original line of the Communist Party of Cyprus (1926-1944) than AKEL itself. It is worth mentioning that despite all the public confrontations, recriminations and exchanges of views between members of AKEL and the TPC in the 1940s, the TPC has disappeared from the historical record of the Cypriot workers’ movement until today, with references to the party remaining scarce. Excerpts from two texts of the TPC were published in the 1980s in the left-wing magazine ‘Within the Walls (Entos ton Teihon)’, one of which was included in the Anthology of cyprocentric texts published in 2022. Short references to the party were also made by Costis Ahniotis, an important figure of the rapprochement movement, in a speech on Cypriot consciousness in 1988, while the TPC is referred to in a study by sociologist Andreas Panayiotou on Cypriot poetry of the colonial period, in which he deals with the poetry of Himarides. Apart from these few references, the TPC has been effectively erased from historical and collective memory. It is not even mentioned in footnotes of academic papers dealing with the period, no political group or party seems to have claimed it as its political heritage, while its material remained until recently in dusty state and private archives, until the digitization of its newspaper by the Press and Information Office’s archive, and its subsequent inclusion in the Cyprus Movement Archive (movementsarchive.org). The existence and activity of the TPC in the 1940s contradicts a number of interpretations of Cypriot history. For example, in Cypriot historiography and wider political culture, the dominant interpretation remains that the only political party during the colonial period that openly opposed Enosis, proposing some form of independence as an alternative, was the Communist Party of Cyprus, a position that was abandoned with the establishment of AKEL in 1941. The existence of the TPC evidently contradicts this so widespread interpretation, while pushing the existence of anti-enosis public discourse until at least 1949. Another quite widespread interpretation, which appears in both left-wing and right-wing readings of Cypriot history, presents Enosis as the only anti-colonial goal ever proposed within the Greek Cypriot community after 1941, with the Greek Cypriot political forces of the period being presented as unable to imagine or conceptualise any alternative political vision beyond that of Enosis. Such an approach naturalizes the demand of enosis, turning our attention away from the political processes and decisions that elevated it by the end of the decade to the level of a self-referential truth. The systematic promotion of TPC’s positions through its newspaper, as well as the public confrontations with AKEL, also challenge this interpretation, as they demonstrate that both the demand for independence and the opposition to Enosis were part of the public discourse in the 1940s, with TPC’s positions being known within AKEL, and possibly even within nationalist circles. The Enosis line, though dominant, was not the only political perspective that had been expressed and proposed within the Greek Cypriot community as a response to colonialism. The adoption of Enosis, both by the right-wing nationalists and by AKEL, was therefore not made in ignorance of alternatives, but was a conscious decision between two alternative anti-colonial objectives, Enosis and independence, which were in conflict with each other in public political discourse in the 1940s, with Enosis obviously enjoying a much more advantageous position. There is also an alternative historical interpretation of the 1940s, which reads in the events of Diaskeptiki an ‘underground’ demand for independence. This interpretation is based

The Forgotten Trotskyists of Cyprus Read More »

Israel as a global model for 21st century fascism

Panayiotis Achniotis Far-right parties and governments from all over the world support the genocidal policy of the State of Israel. From Georgia Meloni, Javier Millay, the far-right Trumpists, to the German AfD and ELAM; social democratic governments or otherwise right-wing, from the US, to the UK, Germany and France, everybody contributes to Israel’s political/commercial/military operations. The unconditional support for Israel from the vast majority of governments and the political spectrum creates a two-way political relationship: while Israel receives money, weapons, legitimacy, diplomatic support from its allies, it gives back – among other things – an entire model of governance and power. This model is not, of course, applied in the same way, but it de facto leads a large part of the political spectrum to fascism, as it is now the dominant paradigm of what political governance looks like. As in the past, the tendency towards fascism is carrying the entire liberal order along. Israel is not just an authoritarian regime, a corrupt government, an undemocratic political administration like many other states on the planet, including of course the Republic of Cyprus. In the context of a world in constant crisis and on the brink of a generalised war, the far right everywhere sees in the State of Israel both the ideological paradigm and the practical model for managing unwanted populations and building the industrial-militarist state. The foothold that Zionism now has on the global far right does not only lie in an opportunistic Western alliance against Arabs/Muslims. What turns Zionism into a mold of fascism is the combining of the following elements and practices in a totally systematic and organized manner: The fact that these are organised and systematic practices is very important. They promise a comprehensive and final solution, they promote a political governance supposedly based on scientific data and technocratic analysis, they govern the social fabric from top to bottom. Despite the confusion attempted from above, fascism is not a vague patchwork of regressive values, conservative tendencies or abusive attitudes by a government or some individuals. Fascism is a very specific social formation with a real political purpose within the modern social world. The identification of the far right with Israel lies in the fact that the latter has become a social formation that sums together all of the above elements and has the potential to be exported and consumed as such. In the context of the general and chronic collapse of the post-war condition at a global level (financial crisis of capitalism and disintegration of the welfare state, collapse of the so-called “international community” and the security system through the UN, climate change and disasters, refugee crisis), Israel appears as the example to follow by those who seek an authoritarian national management of all the symptoms of this collapse. Coupled with the generalised turn against the Arab and Muslim world initiated by the war on terror and anti-immigration policies, the anti-Semitism that historically characterised some tendencies of the far right – whether overt or subliminal – can now be carefully hidden under the support for the State of Israel, which appears as the universal representative of all the Jews of the world. The external and internal enemy now wears a hijab and speaks Arabic. It is in this context that the State of Israel becomes a project of white supremacy and even ideologically can speak to far-right audiences. The anti-fascism of our time or why the keffiyeh has become the global symbol of anti-fascism The above demonstrates that the Palestinian issue is not simply a case of an anti-colonial liberation struggle, or a case of a political conflict for sovereignty and control where one ethnic group oppresses another, a civil war, or a war between two or more nation-states. The fact that in the last year the Palestine solidarity movement has become a multifaceted intersectional node – bringing together decolonialism, feminism, anti-fascism, anti-capitalism, ecology – is indicative of the fact that the issue really goes far beyond Palestinian national self-determination and the genocide carried out against them. Surely the supporters of genocide are uncomfortable that the Palestinians manage to still exist, and for decades have resisted assimilation and exile from their land. They are also uncomfortable that a growing portion of the world’s Jews manage to articulate anti-Zionist discourse and separate themselves from the state of Israel. Finally, they are uncomfortable that Palestine manages to function as a vector of political consciousness on a global level and a messenger of a wider collapse that goes far beyond the Middle East. Gaza is a picture from the future. What has been happening over the last year sketches the geographies of domination and power, in their most brutal form, that we will have to face in the next several years. The fact that a genocide has occurred in live broadcast without anyone having been able to stop it has irrevocably changed the terms on which any political struggle for social emancipation at the local and global level will be fought in the immediate and medium term. When I say paradigm, I do not necessarily mean that what is happening in Gaza will be repeated in the same way everywhere. But it does set the bar and the horizon for both the choices of power and governments, and also the framework in which social movements will have to exist and mobilise. In Cyprus, and given its rapid transformation into Israel’s backyard, these new terms appear even more voluminous. When we shout in the streets that Gaza is too close to us, it is necessarily implied that Tel Aviv’s power is also above our heads and in our neighbourhoods. The genocidal situation seems to encapsulate the total perversion of totalitarian and belligerent neoliberalism: technological death machines, global supply chains of apartheid and war, multinationals’ super-profits, a constant drift to authoritarianism within society and the political system, the criminalisation of solidarity, fake news and the control of information by old and new methods. It will certainly take a new Nuremberg

Israel as a global model for 21st century fascism Read More »

Teddy Jury raises its voice for Palestine at the Berlinale

Our friend Diego Armando Aparicio, organiser of Queer Wave in Cyprus, was part of this year’s jury for the Teddy Awards at the 74th edition of the Berlinale. Following the unwillingness of the German state and great part of the country’s cultural sector to take a clear and an unequivocal stance against the ongoing genocide in Gaza, this year’s edition was marked by a series of brave acts of resistance in support of a free Palestine, against occupation and apartheid. When Diego climbed up the stage to announce the awards on Friday night, he gave the following speech on behalf of the jury as a whole. We are extremely grateful for the speech, and have huge respect for the entire Teddy Jury: Cerise Howard, Diego Armando Aparicio, Kami Sid, Luís Fernando Moura and Vic Carmen Sonne. Diego, ignore those few heartless people that booed you. We take strength from your bravery and from the many more people that applauded and supported you and your fellow jury members. We bear witness, Palestine shall be free.

Teddy Jury raises its voice for Palestine at the Berlinale Read More »

EN