Communism is Not a "European" Ideology--It Is the Ideology
of the International
Proletariat (Part Two)
by Bob Avakian
Marxism-Leninism-Maoism
It was in China, a Third
World country with 1/4 of the world's population, that this revolution reached
its highest peak, under the leadership of the Communist Party headed by Mao
Tsetung. In fact, under Mao's leadership the masses of Chinese people not only
liberated their country in 1949 and advanced into the socialist stage; they
then carried out a further revolution under socialism, The Great Proletarian
Cultural Revolution.
This revolution was
aimed at making further radical changes in the relations between people and in
people's thinking. At the same time it was aimed at preventing the rise to
power of new capitalist forces, disguising themselves as communists but seeking
to bring about capitalist restoration--to bring back the old system of exploitation
and oppression. Such a restoration of capitalism had taken place in the Soviet
Union in the mid-1950s. It was on the basis of deeply summing up this negative
experience in the Soviet Union, as well as carefully analyzing the world
situation, that Mao unleashed and led the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution
in China, beginning in the mid-1960s. For 10 years this great revolutionary
struggle beat back the attempts of the counterfeit communists to take China
back down the road of capitalism. But after Mao's death in 1976, these
"capitalist-roaders," led by Deng Xiaoping, finally succeeded in
seizing power from the proletariat and reversing the revolution in China.
Despite this setback, it
remains true that the revolution in China and in particular the Great
Proletarian Cultural Revolution is the highest pinnacle that the
proletariat--and indeed humanity as a whole--has yet achieved in the advance
toward classless communist society. In the course of leading this revolutionary
struggle, through many different stages, while at the same time paying close
attention to and making great contributions to the revolutionary struggle
worldwide, Mao Tsetung raised communist ideology to a new and still higher
stage: Marxism-Leninism has been developed into Marxism-Leninism-Maoism.
The Peoples of the World Are Bound Together
From all this it should
be very clear that today, more than ever, it is absurd to consider communism
some kind of "European ideology." Today communist ideology,
Marxism-Leninism-Maoism, is more than ever an international and
internationalist ideology--it is the ideology of the international proletariat
in its world-historic struggle to free itself, and all humanity, from the bonds
of exploitation, oppression and the very division of society into different
classes.
But more than that, it
would be impossible for Marxism to be some kind of "European
ideology" in any kind of "pure" sense. By this I mean that
Europe and peoples of European descent are themselves the product of different
mixtures and influences, both biologically and culturally. In fact, peoples
from Africa have played a significant role in this development, as many Black
intellectuals have helped to make clear, showing how civilizations and empires
from the ancient Egyptian to the more recent Moorish have influenced,
interacted with, and at times dominated Europe, or parts of it. It would be
very difficult, if not simply impossible, to identify any "European"
ideas which did not in some way share in these influences from Africa, as well
as from other parts of the world.
At the same time, there
is not, and there cannot be, any "pure African ideology." Africa,
too, has been influenced, directly and indirectly, by many different peoples
and cultures. Much of this, of course, has come through conquest and
domination--by the Islamic empire as well as various European colonizers and
others. Both the Christian and the Islamic religions were imposed on African
peoples at swordpoint (and gunpoint). Or, to take another example: some of the
foods which make up an important part of the diet of African peoples today
(such as peanuts, maize corn, and cassava) were actually brought to Africa from
the Americas--the European conquerors and colonizers took many foods from the
peoples they found in the Americas and carried them not only to Europe but to
many other parts of the world, including Asia and Africa. (In turn it seems
that those "native" peoples of the Americas are actually peoples
originally from Asia who migrated to the Americas thousands of years ago across
a stretch of land that has since been covered by ocean.)
What is the Source of Ideas?
Even if, in isolated
areas of Africa (or some other part of the world), peoples could be found who
had never encountered outsiders, parts of their way of thinking would be common
to all human beings-- reflecting human experience in general--and parts would
reflect only their local and particular experience. But these local and
particular parts, by definition, could not be the basis for some kind of
universal ideology--an ideology reflecting the experience of all the people of
Africa (or the world) as a whole. The source of all knowledge is experience,
direct or indirect--that is, experience a person (or group of people) has
themselves or the experience of others they learn about. The more narrow the
experience, the more limited the knowledge; and on the other hand, the broader
the experience, the richer the source of knowledge.
In today's world
especially, any ideology that exerts an influence on large groups of people cannot
be "purely" that of any one nation (or race). And if an ideology is
meant to reflect the particular experience of a nation (or race) of people,
then the fundamental question is: how does it reflect that
experience--how accurately and fullydoes it reflect that experience and how
correctly does it relate that experience to the experience of human
beings and their society overall, historically and internationally?
In Today's World, All Ideologies Are Class Ideologies
Today, overwhelmingly,
the societies African people live in are societies divided into different
classes. (And certainly this was also true of the great civilizations in Africa
in the past, such as the ancient Egyptian civilization, which existed on a
foundation of slavery.) As Mao Tsetung clearly summarized it, "In class
society everyone lives as a member of a particular class, and every kind of
thinking, without exception, is stamped with the brand of a class." (The
"Red Book," Quotations from Chairman Mao Tsetung, p. 8)
And Mao also made clear that, because the proletariat is the only class in
history that can free itself only by emancipating all mankind--because the
historic goal of the proletariat is to put an end to the division of society
into different classes--for this reason the ideology of the proletariat is the
only ideology that both has a definite class stand and at the same time
is scientifically truthful.
Let's go back to this
idea that Black people "have to follow an ideology we create
ourselves." This way of thinking is clearly "stamped with the brand
of class," but it is not that of the proletariat. It bears the stamp of
the middle class (or petty bourgeoisie), and it also bears the stamp of the
Black bourgeoisie--which is the bourgeoisie of an oppressed nation.
The middle class
precisely stands in the middle between the two major contending classes in
today's society--the bourgeoisie and the proletariat. The petty bourgeoisie
wants to avoid coming under the sway of either of these classes--it tries to
carve out an "independent" position between the two. But in reality
it ends up swinging back and forth between the bourgeois and the proletarian
camp, and it tends to split, with some parts of it ending up in one camp while
others end up in the other camp. And, especially in times of the revolutionary
rising of the basic masses, some among the petty bourgeoisie actually come over
to the side of the proletariat, firmly and wholeheartedly, and are transformed
into proletarian revolutionaries.
As a class, the petty
bourgeoisie is incapable of ruling society and making its ideas the dominant
ideas in society. But it is a common tendency of this class to confuse its own,
limited, class position and interests with the general interests of society.
Thus, intellectuals from this class repeatedly come up with attempts at
creating some kind of "original" or "independent"
ideology--which, however, only reflects the same-old, same-old ideology of the
petty bourgeoisie, or in some cases the big-time bourgeoisie. This takes
different forms among different peoples, depending on their actual situation
and role in society.
Among oppressed peoples,
such as African-Americans, it often takes the form of some kind of nationalism
which is militantly opposed to the ruling structures and ideas but which resists
taking up the stand and viewpoint of the group in society that is most
fundamentally opposed to these ruling structures and ideas--the proletariat.
The notion of creating some kind of "Black" or "African"
ideology that is different from and opposed to the ideology of the
proletariat--this is an example of such nationalism reflecting the position and
outlook of the petty bourgeoisie among Black people.
But, as noted before,
this kind of thinking also reflects the position and outlook of the Black bourgeoisie.
One of the main concerns of any bourgeoisie is that it have control over the
affairs of "its" nation. Fundamentally this means control of
economics but it also means control of politics, culture and ideology. When the
bourgeoisie of an oppressed nation raises the demand for the independence of
its nation, it means independence under the leadership of the
bourgeoisie and serving its class interests. The idea of creating a kind of
"independent national ideology"--including the idea that "Black
people have to follow an ideology that we create ourselves"--this is in
line with the interests and viewpoint of the Black bourgeoisie as the
bourgeoisie of an oppressed nation.
Of course, thinking such
as this, which bears the stamp of the petty bourgeoisie and of the Black
bourgeoisie, can and does exert an influence on people of other classes,
including among the proletarians. Nationalism of this kind exerts an influence
on African-American proletarians, especially because they are subjected to
oppression as Black people and are up against the rampant reactionary
nationalism of the dominating European-American nation in the U.S. This
reactionary white chauvinism (racism) exerts a significant influence on white
people, including white proletarians, in the U.S., and it is by far the greater
problem that must be struggled against. And it is necessary to unite with the
Black petty bourgeoisie and as far as possible with the Black bourgeoisie in
the fight against the common oppressor--the imperialist ruling class. But at
the same time it is necessary to struggle against all forms of nationalist
ideology and firmly uphold proletarian internationalist ideology.
This is an important
part of the all-around ideological struggle that must be waged at the same time
as waging the struggle against the ruling class in the practical sphere. It is
crucial to win the masses to the ideology of the proletariat, in opposition to
the ideology of the ruling class and in opposition to the ideology of all other
classes as well. It is only in this way that the proletariat and the masses of
people can wage a revolutionary struggle in their own highest interests and
finally win their own emancipation.
The conclusion is this:
The most basic thing to ask about any way of thinking, any ideology, is which
class does it represent? There is only one ideology that can lead to
all-the-way liberation. Only one ideology that is both partisan--openly
standing for one side in the struggle--and true--capable of
correctly reflecting reality and summing up experience in the broadest and
deepest way. It is the ideology that represents the most revolutionary class in
the world--the class whose interests lie in radically remaking society to get
rid of all forms of exploitation and oppression, and all backward ways of
thinking, worldwide. That class is the international proletariat, and its
ideology is Marxism-Leninism- Maoism.
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