German: Roter Frontkämpferbund | |
Other Name: | German: Rotfrontkämpferbund |
Leader: | Ernst Thälmann |
Dates: | – |
Country: | Germany |
Allegiance: | Communist Party of Germany |
Clans: | Rote Jungfront |
Position: | Far-left |
Newspaper: | German: Rote Front|italic=yes |
Status: | Dissolved |
Size: | 130,000 (1929) |
Opponents: |
The German: Roter Frontkämpferbund (pronounced as /de/, translated as "Alliance of Red Front-Fighters" or "Red Front Fighters' League"), usually called the German: Rotfrontkämpferbund (RFB), was a far-left paramilitary organization affiliated with the Communist Party of Germany (KPD) during the Weimar Republic.[1] A legally registered association,[2] the RFB was banned in 1929[3] but continued its work illegally.
The first local branches of the RFB were established in July 1924.[4] [5] [6] The group's inaugural nationwide meeting was held in February 1925 in Berlin, where German: [[Ernst Thälmann]]|italic=no was elected to lead the federal committee.[7] German: Die Rote Front ('The Red Front') was the newspaper of the RFB.[8] [9] The greeting of German: "Rot Front!" (English: Red Front!) while giving a clenched fist salute gave rise to the expression German: Rotfront, often used among friends and foes to refer to the organization instead of its full title. The clenched fist "protecting the friend, fighting off the enemy" (German: "schützend den Freund, abwehrend den Feind") was the symbol of the RFB,[10] [11] [12] [13] used on all its insignia, and its registered trademark from 1 March 1926.[14] In May 1926, during a flag parade, activists used it as a sign of rallying to the movement and as an oath to defend the Soviet Union.
The KPD depended on the Proletarian Hundreds (German: Proletarische Hundertschaften) to protect their meetings and demonstrations,[15] but this organization was banned in 1923.[16] This left the KPD's political activities exposed to attacks from the police and right-wing paramilitary organizations such as the nationalist German: [[Der Stahlhelm, Bund der Frontsoldaten|Der Stahlhelm]] and the Nazi German: [[Sturmabteilung]] (SA).[17] The ninth national conference of the KPD in April 1924 decided to form a new defense organization. It was given the name German: Roter Frontkämpfer-Bund,[11] [18] with the intent of attracting non-Communist workers as well.
Then in German: [[Halle (Saale)|Halle]]|italic=no on 11 May 1924, police fired on a demonstration; eight workers were killed and 16 seriously wounded. The KPD announced the formation of the RFB[19] [20] to all its local branches, and soon the first local RFB groups were formed. Most of these first RFB units were located in industrial cities, seaports, and other traditional strongholds of the working class.
Over the years the RFB engaged more and more in violent street fights with the police, the SA, and other political rivals. In 1929, the RFB participated in bloody protests after International Workers' Day was banned in Berlin during what became known as Blutmai (Bloody May). More than 30 people were shot and killed[21] [22] by the police.[23] The RFB was banned[24] and all its assets confiscated by the government.[25] At the time of the ban, the RFB had close to 130,000 members. Many of them continued their activities illegally or in local successor organizations such as the German: Kampfbund gegen den Faschismus. (English: Fighting-Alliance Against Fascism) Others retired from the political scene.[26]
After the Nazi takeover in 1933, former RFB members were among the first arrested and incarcerated in Nazi concentration camps. The Nazis sought revenge on their former rivals and many of the RFB died in the Nazi prisons.[27]
Of those who survived or avoided arrest, many followed the call of the Second Spanish Republic during the Spanish Civil War (1936–39).[28] They joined the Centuria Thälmann of the International Brigades to fight against the Nationalist rebels. During World War II former Red Front fighters fought in the Soviet Red Army against Nazi Germany.[29]
After World War II, former RFB members such as German: [[Erich Honecker]]|italic=no[30] and German: [[Erich Mielke]]|italic=no[31] were actively involved in the creation of the first police and military units of the German Democratic Republic (GDR; East Germany).[32] [33] [34] [35] The German: Arbeiterkampfgruppen (English: [[Combat Groups of the Working Class]]) and the German: [[Nationale Volksarmee]] (English: National People's Army) claimed to carry on the traditions of the RFB, while the Federal Republic of Germany in West Germany enforced the ban of 1929 and prosecuted former Red Front fighters who admitted to their RFB activities.
While many RFB groups were led by KPD members, most Red Front fighters were not party members. Some were even members of the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) or other political organizations.
98% of the RFB belonged to the working class and only 1% had received a higher education. A large part of the RFB were veterans of World War I and some had been actively involved in the November Revolution of 1918.
The number of members grew constantly, peaking with close to 130,000 members at the time of the ban in 1929.
At the time of the ban in 1929, only 30% of the RFB were actually KPD members. 70% were non-party or members of other parties.
For its younger members (between the ages of 16 and 21), the RFB formed the German: Roter Jungsturm (English: Red Young Storm). It was renamed German: Rote Jungfront (RJ) (English: Red Young Front)[36] in 1925 to avoid similarities with the Nazi German: [[Jungsturm Adolf Hitler|Jungsturm]] and to underline their goal of a united front. 40% of local RFB groups had a section of the RJ.
Sailors of the Imperial German Navy had a major role in the November Revolution of 1918. To commemorate this, in May 1925 the RFB founded the German: Rote Marine (RM) (English: Red Navy) with sections in all major port cities. The RM was also considered an elite unit.
From 1925 the female members were organized in the German: Roter Frauen und Mädchen Bund (RFMB) (English: Alliance of Red Women and Girls).[37] [38] The federal leaders were German: [[Clara Zetkin]]|italic=no[39] and Helene Overlach.[40] At the 1929 ban, the RFMB had about 4,000 members.
The RFB's structure was a bottom to top organization. The local groups elected the regional leadership and the regional leaders elected the federal committee.
3.1. German: Abteilung (X German: Kameradschaften, English: Battalion made up of X "Comradeships")
3.2. German: Kameradschaft (3 German: Züge, men, English: Comradeship made up of 3 Platoons, approx. 100 men)
3.3. German: Zug (4 German: Gruppen, men + 1 German: Zugführer, English: Platoon made up of 4 Groups, approx. 35 men plus 1 platoon leader)
3.4. German: Gruppe (8 men + 1 German: Gruppenführer, English: Group made up of 8 men plus 1 group leader)
The German: Bundesführung or "Federal Committee" included:
The German: RFB-Gaue or Regional sections of the RFB included:
Plans to form local RFB groups in the cities of Nuremberg and Munich in 1925 were banned by the state of Bavaria. Until 1928 there were no official RFB groups in Bavaria. Only after the end of the ban of the local group Dortmund by the Reichsgericht on April 2, 1928, RFB groups could at least formally be founded also in Bavaria. But there was a constant threat of a ban on events, especially since Bavaria had been pressing for a nationwide ban of RFB since the decision of the Reichsgericht. On April 13, 1928, after the formation of the Bund on Reich level, Jakob Boulanger founded an RFB-Gau Nordbayern with subsequent local groups in Nuremberg, Würzburg, Aschaffenburg, Sulzbach, Bamberg, Hof and Bayreuth. In the summer of 1928, 14 local groups with 800 members, 350 of them in Nuremberg were registered.[50]
A large part of the RFB activities were directed at supporting the political propaganda work of the KPD, the German: [[Rote Hilfe]] (English: Red Help), and other "proletarian" organizations such as workers unions. In most cases they provided security services for the various events but also participated in active agitation. Hardened by their harsh work and living conditions, the RFB men engaged in acts of violence against the police and the political rivals who tried to disrupt rallies.
Numerous events ended in mass brawls between the police and the RFB, leaving injured on both sides and in some cases dead.
Arrested RFB members could depend on the German: Rote Hilf for legal support and also, in case of sentencing to prison, for financial support of their families while they were unable to work.
Until the RFB was banned, its rivalry with hostile organizations such as the SA, the German: Stahlhelm, and the German: [[Reichsbanner Schwarz-Rot-Gold|Reichsbanner]] grew constantly and violence intensified. Since the strategy of the SA was to fight and provoke, violent encounters between the RFB and SA soon became a part of everyday life. The SA achieved some strength in working-class districts, although these areas supported either the SPD or the KPD but not the "brown" Nazi Party the SA stood for.
The RFB members also fought to stop landlords from evicting tenants.
Its statutes defined the RFB as anti-militarist, and therefore it opposed German re-armament. For instance, the RFB and other organizations protested against the spending of billions of Reichsmarks on "pocket battleships", and demanded the money go instead to relieve poverty.
Most RFB public actions were directed against the Weimar government and its involvement with powerful German industrialists. The RFB demanded the preservation of peace and denounced plans for a new war. Most of the RFB also supported the KPD's program of Soviet-style Communism. The RFB therefore was soon considered an "enemy of the state", leading to several temporary bans of its announced parades and meetings.
Other RFB events included propaganda marches in rural areas to get poor farmers and agricultural workers to join their cause.