Fanya Baron Explained

Fanya Baron
Native Name:פאַניאַ באַראָן
Native Name Lang:yi
Birth Name:Freida Anisimovna Greck
Birth Place:Vilnius, Russian Empire (now Lithuania)
Death Place:Moscow, Russian Soviet Republic (now Russia)
Death Cause:Execution by shooting
Years Active:1915–1921
Organization:Nabat
Credits:, which produces label "Notable credit(s)"; or by
Works:, which produces label "Works"; or by
Label Name:, which produces label "Label(s)" -->
Office:may be used as an alternative when the label is better rendered as "Office" (e.g. public office or appointments) -->
Movement:Anarchism
Criminal Charges:Anti-Soviet agitation
Criminal Penalty:Capital punishment
Spouse:Aron Baron
Children:1

Fanya Anisimovna Baron (1887 – 30 September 1921) was a Russian Jewish anarchist revolutionary. She spent her early life participating in the Chicago workers' movement, but following the Russian Revolution in 1917, she moved to Ukraine and participated in the Makhnovist movement. For her anarchist activities, she was arrested and executed by the Cheka.

Biography

Growing up in the US

Born in 1887 as Freida Anisimovna Greck, Fanya at a young age moved with her family from the Russian Empire to the United States, where they took the name "Grefenson". In Chicago, she began a relationship with the exiled Russian anarchist Aron Baron, with whom she participated in the local workers' movement led by the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW). There she spent most of her time and money distributing anarchist propaganda in the factory that she worked in. During a workers' demonstration on 17 January 1915, Fanya was physically assaulted by police and arrested, but was bailed out by the American activist Jane Addams.

Moving back to Europe

With the outbreak of the February Revolution, Aron and Fanya Baron returned from their North American exile. They moved to Kyiv, in Ukraine, where they participated in the local workers' movement. In the wake of the October Revolution, the couple then moved to Kharkiv, where they participated in the establishment of the Nabat, a confederation of Ukrainian anarchists. Spurred to action by the political repression against the anarchist movement, she travelled throughout Ukraine to organise workers and peasants, provide prisoner aid and spread the influence of the Nabat. Baron herself was also a delegate to every one of the Nabat's congresses and conferences, both when they were legal and when they were held clandestinely.

The Nabat went on to join the Makhnovshchina and officially backed Nestor Makhno's Revolutionary Insurgent Army of Ukraine. Following the defeat of the White movement at the siege of Perekop in November 1920, the Bolsheviks turned on their anarchist allies, launching a surprise attack against them on several fronts. On 25 November 1920, members of the Nabat, including Aron and Fanya Baron, were arrested in Kharkiv and transferred to Russian prisons. In prison, Fanya was beaten by the guards and kept in squalid conditions.

Prison break

On 10 July 1921, Fanya joined a prison break launched by a cell of the Underground Anarchists. She managed to escape from Ryazan prison and went to Moscow, where she lived on the streets until her discovery by Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman. With their aid, Fanya found refuge with her brother-in-law Semion Baron, a member of the Communist Party. She confided in Semion that she planned to break her husband out of prison, and he promised to help her, with Berkman reporting that she kept in high spirits as the preparations for the prison break went forward. But on 17 August 1921, she was discovered and arrested by the Cheka, before she was able to carry out her plans.

She joined her husband and a dozen other Russian anarchists in Taganka prison, at a time when the founding congress of the Profintern was underway. In an attempt to attract the attention of the foreign syndicalist delegates, the anarchists imprisoned at Taganka staged a hunger strike, which Fanya joined.

Persecution and execution

Despite formal protests made to the Bolshevik leadership, the accusations of political repression were repeatedly denied by the authorities, with Leon Trotsky declaring "We do not imprison the real anarchists, but criminals and bandits who cover themselves by claiming to be anarchists." Sustained international and domestic pressure forced the government to relent, with Lenin ordering the release of anarchist political prisoners, on the condition they leave the country. On 17 September 1921, most of the anarchist prisoners were released and scheduled for deportation, but Fanya Baron and Lev Chernyi were kept behind bars. Baron herself was accused of a number of criminal acts, including counterfeiting of the Soviet ruble, banditry and terrorism. The Russian anarchist historian Volin denied the charges against Baron and Chernyi, claiming that the alleged counterfeiting had actually been committed by agents of the Cheka.

On the night of 29–30 September 1921, Fanya Baron was executed by the Cheka. According to Emma Goldman, she had resisted her fate until the last moment, having to be carried by Cheka officers to the spot of her execution. Goldman attempted to protest the execution, but was dissuaded by her friends and eventually left the country, thoroughly disillusioned with the Russian Revolution. After 18 years in prison, Aron Baron himself was executed during the Great Purge.

Over the years, Baron's death became symbolic of the Russian anarchists who fell victim to Soviet political repression. Decades after her execution, the Sydney-based Jura Books named its library after Fanya Baron.

See also

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