Jean Brust Tribute World
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Meeting honors Jean Brust:
"Jean lives on in all of us"
The International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI)
and the Australian Socialist Equality Party held an international
school in Sydney from January 3-10, 1998 on the topic of Marxism
and the Fundamental Problems of the Twentieth Century. The
evening of Janaury 7 was devoted to a public meeting at which
leaders of the ICFI from around the world paid tribute to Jean
Brust, a life-long revolutionary who joined the American Trotskyist
movement in the 1930s.
Prior to the meeting, many in the audience viewed an extensive
photographic display depicting Jean Brust's life from early childhood
to her first involvement in the strike struggles of the 1930s
and her participation in many international meetings and discussions
in the 1980s and 1990s.
Chairing the meeting, Linda Tenenbaum, assistant national
secretary of the SEP of Australia, explained that Jean and her
husband Bill, who died in September 1991, occupied a unique place
within the world party.
"Assembled tonight on the platform are leaders of the
various sections of the international party to which Jean committed
her life. In a very profound sense, no one of us would be here
without the intransigent and principled struggle of Jean Brust
and a handful of others in whom the continuity of Trotskyism
resided in the difficult years of the postwar boom," she
said in opening the meeting.
Tenenbaum introduced the first speaker, Fred Mazelis,
who knew and worked with Jean Brust for over 35 years. Both were
founding members of the Workers League, the predecessor of the
SEP in the United States.
Mazelis described the tumultuous events that brought Jean
into politics in the 1930sómass struggles of the American
working class, in which the Trotskyists played a leading role;
the international fight against capitalist exploitation, fascism
and war; and the Stalinist betrayal of the Russian Revolution.
He explained that she had played a decisive role in educating
party members and workers in the critical experiences of these
earlier struggles. He emphasized her determination to continue
this task into her 70s, despite ill health.
Mazelis stressed the central lesson drawn by Jean Brust: the
necessity for socialist consciousness in the working class. "Jean
had the opportunity to participate in some important mass struggles
of workers. What she learned from all these experiences was that
spontaneous struggles by themselves were not sufficient and a
Marxist leadership had to be built."
The next speaker was Ulrich Rippert, national secretary
of the Socialist Equality Party of Germany. Rippert first met
Jean's husband Bill in the late 1960s, when Rippert was attracted
as a youth to the Trotskyist movement. In his conversations with
Bill Brust he began to understand the crucial difference between
revolutionary politics and the middle class radicalism and protest
politics that dominated the period.
"I think I know what Comrade Jean would say if she had
been able to participate in our discussion this week. She would
explain that this summer school opens up a new stage in the building
of our international party. Many people are searching for answers
to complex problems of this century, answers which they can find
only in our international movement."
Wije Dias, national secretary of the SEP of Sri Lanka,
said: "Jean Brust expressed the greatness of the character
and personality produced by our world Trotskyist movement. Even
though few were able to meet her personally, the SEP members
in Sri Lanka were always very keen to read and study what she
contributed to our movement in her many speeches in different
parts of the world. I must say all the comrades were very saddened
by her sudden illness and demise."
Dias explained that Jean had joined the party at the same
time as those who initiated the struggle for Trotskyism in Sri
Lanka. They had demonstrated considerable courage in conducting
a political fight against the British during World War II, and
opposing the independence settlement imposed on the Indian subcontinent
by imperialism. But while these leaders were later to capitulate
to the postwar pressures of nationalism and opportunism, the
opposite was the case with Jean Brust. She stood firmly with
the International Committee.
Chris Marsden, editor of International Worker, the
newspaper of the British SEP, described the impact that Jean
made on him as a relatively new member of the party in the aftermath
of the 1985-86 split with the British Workers Revolutionary Party.
"Here was living proof that a teenager could dedicate
her life to the struggle for human emancipation and actually
honor that pledge. What was revealed to me in that first lengthy
meeting was that her socialist convictions had given her life
a richness and purpose to which few others can lay claimÖ.
"The historical experiences through which she had passed,
the struggles within our movement in particular, were the political
capital which she brought to bear in addressing the crucial questions
facing the working class today. She told me that the future generations
would be educated in Marxism on the basis of the lessons derived
from the split through which we had just passed."
Keith Meadowcroft, national secretary of the SEP in
Canada, joined the party as a teenager and worked with Comrade
Jean throughout his adult life.
"Jean was certainly plain spoken. Indeed in some ways
she was a very hard woman. She had to have been to endure not
only the slanders of the Stalinists and the Cold War warriors,
but also the derision and laughter of former comrades who fell
prey to the easy inducements of the postwar boom and who only
wanted to forget the ideals and the commitment of their youth.
"But if Jean could be hard, her character also had another
sideóher sensitivity, her compassion, her concern for
comrades and family; her love of life complemented her political
toughness. Comrade Jean believed passionately in the socialist
future of mankind."
Nick Beams, national secretary of the SEP in Australia,
explained that even though he did not meet Jean and Bill until
after the 1985-86 split, they had a profound influence on himself
and other members of the Socialist Labour League, the forerunner
of the SEP, from its foundation in 1972.
"The life of Comrade Jean Brust does exemplify, particularly
for every young person, what it means to live your life by certain
principles.... I recall at the age of 23 or 24 hearing of comrades
in the Workers League, our American section, who traced their
continuity in the movement back to the 1930sóJean and
Bill Brust.
"Under the conditions which prevailed then in the International
Committeeóthe growing opportunism of the Workers Revolutionary
Partyówe did not have the opportunity to collaborate with
them. Nevertheless their presence had an impact, and certainly
made an impression on me."
The final speaker was David North, national secretary
of the SEP in the US. He said it was fitting that the first memorial
meeting for Comrade Jean held by the international party was
taking place in Australia, some 10,000 miles from where Jean
Brust began her political life. It showed how far the Fourth
International movement had developed.
"Jean and Bill showed us what it means to live life as
a whole. Her life unfolded logically, historically. There was
a beginning, there was a development, there was a conclusion.
It was like a musical work, and in each part of this life the
different elements and segments were interconnected. What strikes
one when one looks at the photographs outside, which show Jean
from a young girl to an elderly woman, is that the youth is present
throughout. In a certain sense it symbolizes that which was most
powerful in her life.
"I, like all the comrades of the Workers League, learned
an enormous amount from Jean. Of course we are very proud of
the work which is being done at the school this week, the reports
that we've prepared, the discussion which has been held. But
lectures, as important as they are, and as significant as they
are, only play, as a matter of fact, a small role in the education
of a cadre. In my own development I must confess that the hours
and hours of discussion I had with Jean and Bill, whether it
was in Detroit or around their dining room table in Minneapolis,
played an immense role."
He summed up the feelings of all those who knew and worked
with her by saying: "I think we are weathering this well
because such was the force of Jean's personality, so intimately
involved was she in every aspect of party life, and our lives.
She has left such a wealth of recollections and memories that
we feel that she is still with us.Ö
"I believe she will live very much in the recollections
of future generations because she summed up in her life, in her
own experience, so many powerful currents. We are all deeply
grateful for having known her. We feel an immense debt of gratitude
for all that she gave us, her selflessness, and the joy with
which she served this movement every day of her life until the
very last."
The meeting concluded with the first screening of a video
interview with Jean, in which she reviewed her youthful political
experiences, the great working class battles of the 1930s, and
her decision to join the Trotskyist movement. Her warmth, knowledge
and immense political experience were evident as she recounted
the early struggles of the Trotskyist movement, in which she
was a direct participant.
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