March 28, 1871 – Paris Commune,
over 200,000 people turn out at the City Hall to see their newly
elected officials, whose names are read to great & festive acclaim,
making this day a revolutionary festival. The red flag, raised over all
public buildings, is emblematic of the Commune.
March 28, 1911: Part of the anarchist Bonnot Gang was caught & killed by cops after months of bank robbing & mayhem.
March 28, 1915: Emma Goldman was arrested for giving a lecture on contraceptives.
Goldman believed that knowledge of and access to contraceptives was key
to women’s ability to control their own bodies and thus their social
and material wellbeing.
March 28, 1918—2,000 Canadians protested against conscription and forced police to retreat.
March 28, 1968—Martin Luther King led a march of striking sanitation workers in Memphis, Tennessee. Police attacked the workers with mace and sticks. A 16-year old boy was shot.
280 workers were arrested. He was assassinated a few days later after
speaking to the striking workers. The sanitation workers were mostly
black. They worked for starvation wages under plantation like
conditions, generally under racist white bosses. Workers could be fired for being one minute late or for talking back and they got no breaks.
Organizing escalated in the early 1960s and reached its peak in
February, 1968, when two workers were crushed to death in the back of a
garbage truck.
March 28, 1972—A General Strike was called in Quebec to support workers locked out of La Presse
newspaper. The workers went out in early April and again in May,
however, some sources also give late March as the beginning of the
General Strike. (Also see here and here).
(Sources: AFSCME, Socialist Worker, Daily Bleed, and Workaday Minnesota).
No comments:
Post a Comment