Jean Brust Tribute World
Socialist Web Site
"She was living proof of the genuine revolutionary
traditions of our movement"
Remarks of SEP Central Committee member Fred Mazelis,
who along with Jean Brust in 1966 was a founding member of the
Workers League, the forerunner of the SEP.
It has been almost exactly six months since Comrade Jean's
death, and we have all had time to reflect on the significance
of her life. There is much to say, because Jean's life is not
to be summed up merely in a few words, but takes on new and added
meaning with each passing day, in relation to the basic theme
of her life: the fight for social equality, for socialism.
A few months ago our party published the
crucially important work by Vadim Rogovin, entitled: 1937:
Stalin's Year of Terror. 1937 was the very year in which
Jean, as a 16-year-old schoolgirl, made the fateful decision
to dedicate her life to the struggle for socialism. This was
no mere coincidence. Jean might have joined in another year,
of course, but the fact is that she and others, including her
lifelong companion Bill Brust, joined the socialist movement
in response to great world events, including the Moscow Trials
and the fight against Stalin's counterrevolutionary terror, the
rise of fascism and world war. These were the struggles that
shaped the century.
The victory of the Stalinist bureaucracy had a devastating
impact on the struggles and the consciousness of the working
class, throwing the fight for socialism back by decades. The
struggle waged by Jean and others laid the foundation for the
inevitable renewal of this fight.
Jean was not the only person radicalized by the Depression
and the struggles of the 1930s. There were those who went to
Spain to fight Franco's fascism, but never understood how to
conduct that fight politically. In the end, they were used as
pawns by the Soviet bureaucracy. What set Jean apart was, first
of all, not simply a vague hope for a better world, but the perspective
and program of socialist internationalism. She had been won to
revolutionary Marxism, in opposition to both Social Democratic
reformism and Stalinism.
What further set her apart was the dedication and perseverance
with which she waged the struggle over the following decades.
She never doubted the correctness of her decision to join and
build the revolutionary party. To Jean, Marxism was not some
kind of unchanging doctrine or dogma. She continued to develop
Marxism as a guide to action because she was fighting as part
of the working class.
From her earliest understanding of politics and society, Jean
saw that capitalism was unjust, that it was producing war, poverty
and dictatorship. She recognized that the very development of
the productive forces under capitalism, including the expansion
of the working class itself, also made possible the construction
of a new society in which class antagonisms and inequality would
decline and eventually disappear. This new and higher form of
social organization, this rational organization of humanity's
relationship to nature, was articulated by Marx and Engels, and
the first step towards this new society was taken in the victorious
October 1917 revolution in Russia.
Jean knew that socialism could only be built on an international
basis and fought against the counterrevolutionary nationalist
reaction to the Russian Revolution led by Stalin. The struggles
of 60 years ago for internationalism against nationalism are
crucial today because the conditions of global economic crisis,
the danger of extreme chauvinism, the interimperialist rivalries
and threat of world war, are all returning.
More and more workers, young people and serious intellectuals
are repelled by social inequality, cultural decay and all the
social ills produced by the so-called magic of the marketplace.
But as yet they see no alternative. Even well-meaning people
equate socialism with the "state ownership" of the
former Soviet Union. Genuine socialism, based on a workers government
and democratic planning and participation far surpassing the
most "democratic" capitalism, has been buried under
an avalanche of falsification. The whole work of Jean, as well
as the significance of 1937 and the writings of Vadim
Rogovin, shows that there was and is an alternative to Stalinism
and the capitalism.
Jean's role in the founding of the Workers
League
In the decades when capitalism and its agencies such as Stalinism
had the upper hand, when it did appear that there were national
roads, that capitalism could be reformed by Social Democracy
or Stalinism or Castroism, Jean fought for the continuity of
Marxism and socialism. Because of that fight we are here today.
Jean was a fighter. She was not afraid to disagree with family
and friends when necessary. She waged a lifelong struggle, not
only against capitalist exploitation itself, but also against
the ideological and political defenders of the profit system
in the working class movement.
She fought not only Stalinism and reformism, but also the
worship of the spontaneous consciousness of the working class,
against pure and simple trade unionism, and against all the various
forms of opportunism, of nationalist and reformist "short
cuts" in opposition to the protracted struggle for revolutionary
leadership.
While the vast majority of her contemporary socialists, including
her teachers--James P. Cannon, Raymond Dunne, and Gerry Healy--later
grew discouraged and turned against this struggle, Jean continued
to fight.
I first met Jean and Bill in 1965. I had joined the Trotskyist
movement in 1958 as a teenager, just as Jean had joined two decades
earlier. We didn't meet until 1965, in part because the degeneration
of the Socialist Workers Party made serious political discussion
more difficult.
I will never forget the first meeting with these older comrades,
whom we understood represented the best of the older generation.
They were only in their early 40s, but to us at the time they
seemed like real "old-timers." They were living proof
that the genuine revolutionary traditions of Trotskyism remained
alive, in opposition to the SWP's frantic search for substitutes
in the petty-bourgeois national movements in Cuba, Algeria and
elsewhere; a search which soon led to its open repudiation of
Trotskyism.
Six months after I first met Jean the fate of our small group
of Trotskyists hung in the balance. The Third Congress of the
International Committee of the Fourth International had definitively
settled accounts with the middle class Spartacist group, the
same tendency which has now declared itself in "opposition"
to globalization! Among the young members of the American Committee
of the Fourth International at that time, there was some confusion
about the Spartacists. The then leader of our tendency, Tim Wohlforth,
was exhibiting the signs of political disorientation that led
him to break with Trotskyism some years later.
Bill and Jean, however, were absolutely rock solid against
both the nationalism of the Spartacists and the hesitations of
Wohlforth. When I visited them in Minnesota in May, 1966, I felt
that I had known them for years. We had extensive discussions
on the history of the movement. This was the first of dozens
of visits to the Twin Cities over the next decades, including
a seven-month stay with the Brusts during and after the Hormel
strike in 1986.
What I would like to emphasize, and what is so pertinent to
the work of Jean which we must continue today, is her essential
grasp of Marxism, of the materialist dialectic--not as an abstraction,
but as a method of analysis corresponding to the actual relation
between man and nature, between thinking and being, between the
working class and its vanguard organized in the revolutionary
party. For Jean it was equally unthinkable to treat the working
class with disdain because it did not meet up to our subjective
wishes, or to treat it as an object of idealized or romantic
contemplation.
On the contrary, Jean understood that what made the working
class revolutionary was not the present thinking of workers,
but the objective position of the working class in capitalist
society. The revolutionary potential of the working class was
not utopian; it had already been demonstrated in the Russian
Revolution, but it required the building of revolutionary leadership.
Jean spoke with such unshakable confidence to workers on the
picket lines and other struggles. She didn't give an inch, because
she understood this relationship. She fought as part of the working
class, but she fought against its spontaneous thinking shaped
by capitalism.
Jean's confidence in the future
Why did Bill and Jean, almost alone among their generation
in this country, resist the pressures of the postwar boom and
of Stalinism? It was because they took so seriously what they
learned in their youth, and they never stopped learning and fighting
for the scientific lessons they had assimilated in the 30s and
40s.
Thus Jean was not crushed or demoralized by the final collapse
of Stalinism, or by the transformed role of the trade unions.
Far from it. She was politically prepared for these developments,
despite the tragic consequences for the working class of the
monumental betrayals of its old organizations.
Jean's last years were full of sadness, with the loss of first
Bill and then their son Leo. At the same time, all three of these
comrades lived to see and participate in the rebirth of Marxist
theory over the past 12 years, out of and following the struggle
against the nationalist and opportunist leadership of the British
Workers Revolutionary Party.
Characteristic of Jean's revolutionary optimism, of her continuous
search for ways to understand and to change the world, was her
enthusiasm over the development of computer technology and the
internet. This 75-year-old woman busied herself on various chat
groups, and sending and receiving e-mail with her comrades. Middle
class radicals half her age are utterly indifferent to these
changes but she recognized their revolutionary implications.
Until the end Jean followed the work to develop the Socialist
Equality Party on the internet, and we know how excited she would
be by the development of the World Socialist Web Site in the
few short months since its launching in February.
We are fortunate that Jean leaves behind her own writings,
and also video recordings and her autobiographical memoir. She
will be remembered, not only by her loving children and grandchildren,
and not only by the supporters and members of the International
Committee of the Fourth International, but also by many thousands
of young people who will be entering politics in the years to
come and will turn to the theme of Jean's life. There is much
to celebrate today as we mark this 60 years of struggle for socialism.
A Tribute to Jean Brust
Speech by David North to the May 17, 1998 Memorial Meeting in
Minneapolis
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