Ngo Van | |
---|---|
Born | 1913 Tân Lộ near Saigon, French Indochina |
Died | 2005 Paris, France |
Notable work | Viêt-nam 1920-1945, révolution et contre-révolution sous la domination coloniale (1996). Au Pays de la cloche fêlée, tribulations d’un Cochinchinoisà l’époque coloniale (2000) |
Movement | La Lutte/Tranh Dau (The Struggle), Trang Cau De Tu Dang (International Communist League, Vietnam), Union Ouvrière Internationale (International Workers' Association, France) |
Ngô Văn Xuyết (1913 – 1 January 2005),[1] alias Ngô Văn was a Vietnamese revolutionary who chronicled labour and peasant insurrections caught "in the crossfire"[2] between the colonial French and the Indochinese Communist Party of Nguyễn Ái Quốc (Ho Chi Minh). As a Trotskyist militant in the 1930s, Ngô Văn helped organise Saigon's waterfront and factories in defiance of the Party's "Moscow line" which sought to engage indigenous employers and landowners in a nationalist front and the French in an international "anti-fascist" alliance. When, after 1945, further challenges to the Party met with a policy of targeted assassination, Ngô Văn went into exile. In Paris, experiences shared with anarchist and Poumista refugees from the Spanish Civil War suggested "new radical perspectives." Drawn into the Council Communist circles of Maximilien Rubel and Henri Simon, Ngô Văn "permanently distanced" himself from the model of "the so-called workers's party."
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