Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Nicos Beloyannis - "Man with the Carnation" Nicos Beloyannis an inspiration in new struggle for the future of Greece and Europe



Democracy and Class Struggle says the court speech of Nikos Beloyannis resonates with the struggle in Greece today - watch the video and be inspired!

Nikos Beloyannis was a Greek communist and resistance leader born in 1915. He was jailed in the Akronauplia prison (Nauplion) by the Ioannis Metaxas nationalist regime in the 1930s and transferred to the Germans after the Nazi Occupation of the country (1941). He escaped in 1943 and joined the Ethnikos Laikos Apeleftherotikos Stratos (ELAS) in Peloponnese in the side of Aris Velouchiotis. After becoming Political Commissioner of the Democratic Army of Greece (DSE) during the Greek Civil War he was one of the last to leave the country (1949) after its defeat.

In June 1950 Beloyannis returned to Greece in order to re-establish the Athens organization of the Communist Party of Greece (KKE) that had been declared illegal. He was arrested on December 20, 1950 and was taken before a court-martial on charges of violating Compulsory Law 509/1947, which criminalized the Communist Party of Greece (KKE).He was also accused of being a traitor, transmitting information to the Soviet Union.

The Beloyannis trial started in Athens on October 19th 1951. In total, 94 people were accused. One of the three members of the court-martial was Georgios Papadopoulos who later (1967) became the leader of the military dictatorship of 1967-1974.

Beloyannis denied all accusations and stressed the patriotic nature of his actions during the anti-Nazi resistance (1941-1944), the British intervention (1944-1946) and the Greek Civil War (1946-1949). He became globally known as the "Man with the Carnation" and as such he was depicted in a famous Pablo Picasso sketch.

Despite national and international appeals for clemency, the court-martial sentenced Beloyannis and three of his fellows to death. They were taken from the prison of Kallithea early in the morning of Sunday March 30, 1952 and were executed in the Goudi camp.

Beloyannis became one of the great heroes of the Greek left. His name was given to the village of Beloiannisz built in Hungary to house the Greek political refugees who lived in exile from the end of the civil war (1949) until the fall of the Papadopoulos junta and the re-establishment of democracy in Greece (1974).

This is a scene from the movie "Man with the Carnation"




Austerity Suicides: Debt the Ripper stalks Europe

Red is the Colour of the New Republic : Colours by Men They Couldn't Hang

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Men They Couldn't Hang - The Ironmasters



Oh this is an old story that's rarely ever told 
the raping of the country, of the valley 
the men who came to reap with a musket and a bible 
they wanted to take the valley 
the valley! the valley! 
they wanted to take the valley 
and oh the ironmasters, they always get their way 

and so far a pittance all the people worked the land 
all the men and the women and the children 
and on sundays it was down to the chapel in the town 
the preacher said give generously! 
give generously! give generously! 
the people they gave generously 
and oh the ironmasters, they always get their way 

the union met in secret on the dark side of the hill 
by the light of a thousand candles 
their pay had been cut, all the people come on out 
and by scores they were joining Rebecca 
Rebecca! Rebecca! 
the people were joining Rebecca 
and oh the ironmasters, they always get their way 

riot! 

ironmaster, call the army 
call the hungry from the irish sea 
ironmaster, call the parliament 
it's no sin to fight to be free! 

from the smokey stacks of merthyr 
to the hills of Ebbw vale 
from Swansea docks to Merseyside and Liverpool 
with the union leaders crushed 
and the union quickly smashed 
they blackend the face of the country 
the country! the country! 
they blackend the face of the country 
and oh the ironmasters, they always get their way 

now on a hill in Brecon is Crawshay's ruined house 
and it blackens out the green of the valley 
and on the battered grave is the epitaph they gave 
it stands there, god forgive him! 
forgive him! forgive him! 
and all who rot in hell with him 
and oh the ironmasters, they always get their way 

riot! 

ironmaster, call the army 
call the hungry from the irish sea 
ironmaster, call the parliament 
it's no sin to fight to be free! 

and oh the ironmasters, they always get their way 
and oh the ironmasters, they still get their way!

Adrian Cousins on some Social Statistics and Owen Jones on Class in Britain from the Festival of Dangerous Ideas




Free Mumia Abu Jamal - March from Brixton Prison to Windrush Square on 21st April 2012 on Mumia's Birthday



On December 18, 2011, from his solitary cell at SCI Mahanoy, Mumia wrote a message to the men and women with whom he shared death row. 

We share it with you here: (courtesy of 'Greater Friends' the newsletter of Pennsylvania Prison Society)



TO MY BRETHREN & SISTAS ON THE 'ROW

It has been barely  a week since I departed Death Row, yet I cannot help but look back, for many of you are in my heart.

I may no longer be on Death Row, but because of you Death Row is still with me. How could that not be so, when I've spent more years of my life on Death Row, than in `Freedom?' Or, more time spent on Death Row, than with my family?

I write to tell you all—even those I've never met—that I love you, for we have shared something exceedingly rare. I have shared tears and laughter with you, that the world will neither know nor see. I have shared your anguish when some judge shattered your hopes and spit disappointment; or when some politician sought to use you to climb to higher office.

We have seen time and disease take some of our people off the Row. We have seen several choose their own date to die, cheating the hangman via suicide (William "Billy" Tilley, Jose "June" Pagan). But, Brothers and Sisters of the Row, I write not of death, but of life.

If I can walk off, so can you. Keep rumblin'; keep fightin'; keep rockin'. 

Check out your Mills issue.

But, there is more. Live each day, each hour, as if it is the only time there is. Love fiercely. Learn a new thing. A language. An art. A science. Keep your mind alive. Keep your heart alive. Laugh!

Look at each other not as competitors, but as fellow travelers on the same red road of life. No matter what the world says of you, see the best in each other, and radiate love to each other.

Be your best self. If you are blessed to have family, send your love to them all—no matter what. If you have a spiritual family or faith, practice it fully and deeply, for this links you to something greater than yourself. No matter what, Christian, Muslim, Judaism, Hindu, Krishna Consciousness, Buddhism, or Santería (or Move). 


This broadens you and deepens you.

I have been blessed to have many of you as my teachers, and my students. Some have been my sons; some have been my brothers. Yet I see all of you as part of my family.

Take heart, for the death penalty itself is dying. States and counties simply can't afford it, and politicians who run on it are finding fewer and fewer buyers. Juries (especially in places like Philly) are increasingly reluctant to vote for death, even in cases where it appears imminent.

Sisters on the Row, while we have never met, my heart has felt your tears as you are forcibly separated from your children, unable to hold or kiss them. In many ways, as women, your anguish has been the worst, as your loves and sensitivities are deepest. My words to my brothers are yours as well: keep mind alive. Keep hearts alive. Live. Love. Learn. Laugh!

I know you all as few outsiders do. I've met artists, musicians, mathematicians, managers, jailhouse lawyers, and stockbrokers. I've seen guys who couldn't draw a straight line, emerge as master painters (Cush, Young Buck); I've seen guys come from near illiteracy to become fluent in foreign languages; I've met teachers who've created works of surpassing beauty and craftsmanship (Big Tony).

You are all far more than others say of you, for the spark of the infinite glows within each of you. You are on Death Row, but what is finest in you is greater than Death Row.

So, care for each other. Not in words, but in the heart.
Think good vibes on each other.

Lastly, don't rat. (If ratting was so cool, they would've beat me off the Row).

Keep rumblin', `cause your day is coming.

—Mumia Abu-Jamal, M.A.

Death Row (1983–2011)

Remembering Edward Morgan of the Scotch Cattle executed 6th April 1835

Sunday, April 1, 2012

Idris Davies "When Greed Was Born In Monmouthshire" and "The Bells Of Rhymney"



Heres a virtual movie of the celebrated Welsh Coal miner poet Idris Davies reading"When Greed Was Born In Monmouthshire" 


This poem was first published in his 1938 collection of poems Gwalia Deserta (literally in English means "The Leaving of Wales" was addressed to the mining folk of Monmouthshire where Davies came from,but its message is universal in its protest at the corrosiveness of materialism,and how the unfettered pursuit of wealth destroys communities and the landscape where the plunder of natural resources is involved.


Idris Davies (born 6 January 1905 Rhymney, died 6 April 1953), was a Welsh poet, originally writing in Welsh, but later writing exclusively in English. He was the only poet to cover significant events in the early 20th century in the South Wales Valleys and the South Wales coalfield, and from a perspective literally at the coalface.

He is now best known for the poem Bells of Rhymney,



National Wealth Care replaces National Health Care in Britain

England's First Colony - Wales - A study in Colonialism and National Liberation War - The Land and Liberty Question in Wales in 2012
























See Also  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Bryn_Glas


The Land and Liberty Struggle in Wales in 2012

Nick Glais, the Editor of Democracy and Class Struggle calls for a struggle against Crown Estates in Wales and Estates like those of the Duke of Beaufort during Royal Jubilee Week has part of the Land and Liberty Campaign in Wales in 2012.


 http://www.radicalwales.org/2012/03/where-next-for-occupy-reclaim-land.html






http://democracyandclasstruggle.blogspot.co.uk/2012/03/glyndwr-heather-jones-wales-will-rise.html