Laura Marx Explained

Birth Date:26 September 1845
Birth Place:Brussels, Belgium
Death Place:Paris, France
Death Cause:Suicide
Resting Place:Père Lachaise Cemetery
Children:3; all died in infancy
Father:Karl Marx
Mother:Jenny von Westphalen
Relatives:Eleanor Marx (sister)
Henry Juta (cousin)
Louise Juta (aunt)
Heinrich Marx (grandfather)
Henriette Pressburg (grandmother)
Anton Philips (second cousin)
Gerard Philips (second cousin)

Jenny Laura Marx (26 September 1845 – 25 November 1911) was a socialist activist. The second daughter of Karl Marx and Jenny von Westphalen, she married revolutionary writer Paul Lafargue in 1868. The two committed suicide together in 1911.

Life

Laura Marx was born in Brussels and moved with her parents to France, then Prussia, before the family settled in London in June 1849. Paul Lafargue, born in Santiago De Cuba, was a young French socialist who came to London in 1866 to work for the First International. There he became a friend of Karl Marx and got to know Marx's family, especially Laura, who fell in love with him.

Lafargue and Laura married at St Pancras registry office in April 1868. During their first three-years of marriage they had three children, two boys and a girl, all of whom died in infancy. They had no other children. They spent several decades in political work together, translating Karl Marx's work into French, and spreading Marxism both in France and Spain. During most of their lives, they were financially supported by Friedrich Engels. They also inherited much of Engels' estate when he died in 1895.

On 25 November 1911, the couple ended their lives through suicide, having decided they had nothing left to give to the movement to which they had devoted their lives. Laura was 66 and Paul was 69. In their suicide letter, they explained why they committed suicide. Lafargue wrote:[1]

Healthy in body and mind, I end my life before pitiless old age which has taken from me my pleasures and joys one after another; and which has been stripping me of my physical and mental powers, can paralyse my energy and break my will, making me a burden to myself and to others.

For some years I had promised myself not to live beyond 70; and I fixed the exact year for my departure from life. I prepared the method for the execution of our resolution, it was a hypodermic of cyanide acid.

I die with the supreme joy of knowing that at some future time, the cause to which I have been devoted for forty-five years will triumph.

Long live Communism! Long Live the international socialism!

Vladimir Lenin, who had lived in Paris and other countries since his 1907 exile,[2] was one of the speakers at the funeral as representative of RSDLP.[3] He later told his wife Nadezhda Krupskaya, "If one cannot work for the Party any longer, one must be able to look truth in the face and die like the Lafargues."[4]

Works

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Mayeras . B. . L'Humanité : Journal socialiste quotidien . L'Humanité . 27 November 1911 . 2780 . 1 . 26 May 2020.
  2. Book: Bowman, John Stewart . Chronicle of 20th century history . 1992 . Bison Books . 978-0-86124-574-1 . Revised . London . 43 . registration.
  3. "Speech Delivered in the Name of the R.S.D.L.P. at The Funeral of Paul and Laura Lafargue November 20 (December 3), 1911". Lenin. in: Book: Lenin . Vladimir . Collected Works (Volume: 17), December 1910-April 1912 . 1974 . . Moscow . 304–305 . 1st. ; also for transcribed edition: Marxists
  4. Book: Krupskaya . Nadezhda K. . Memories Of Lenin . 1930 . India Publishers . 55 . 1st . 26 May 2020.