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Title: Emma Goldman
Author: Patricia McCarthy
Date: 1996
Language: en
Topics: Emma Goldman, Workers Solidarity
Source: Retrieved on 11th December 2021 from http://struggle.ws/ws/gold49.html
Notes: Published in Workers Solidarity No. 49 — Autumn 1996.

Patricia McCarthy

Emma Goldman

Emma Goldman was a legend in her own lifetime. Born in Lithuania on

27^(th) June 1869, she emigrated to the United States with her sister

Helena in 1885. Like so many other East European immigrants, she found

work in a clothing factory. The following year four Chicago anarchists

were executed.

They had been prominent trade union activists leading the struggle for

an eight-hour day. Framed for a bombing, the authorities hoped that this

would scare off the emerging trade union movement, especially its

anarchist component. The international outcry which followed these

executions on trumped up charges helped to shape Emma’s radical and

anarchist ideals, which lasted throughout her long life.

Emma Goldman was a formidable public speaker and a prolific writer. Her

whole life was devoted to struggle and she was controversial even within

the radical and anarchist movement itself. She was one of the first

radicals to address the issue of homosexuality, she was a fighter for

women’s rights, and she advocated the virtues of free love. These ideas

were viewed with suspicion by those who placed their faith in the

cure-all solution of economic class warfare and they were denounced by

many of her contemporaries as “bourgeois inspired” at best.

To mainstream Americans, Emma was known as a demonic “dynamite eating

anarchist”. She toured the States, agitating and lecturing everywhere

she went. She was hounded for much of her life by FBI agents and was

imprisoned in 1893, 1901, 1916, 1918, 1919, and 1921 on charges ranging

from incitement to riot to advocating the use of birth control to

opposition to World War 1.

A self proclaimed anarchist, Leon Czolgosz, assassinated President

William McKinley in 1901 and this event unleashed a massive wave of

anti-anarchist hysteria throughout the States. Emma was blamed for his

action and was forced into hiding for a time. She was deported from the

United States, Holland, France, and was denied entry to many other

countries. None of this daunted her, she began publishing ‘Mother Earth’

magazine in 1906 and was very active in the No-Conscription League.

She shared a life long friendship with her political comrade Alexander

Berkman. Both of them were deported from the USA to Russia in 1919. At

first, Emma was excited to see at first hand the revolution she had

fought to bring about all her life. However, it did not take long for

her to realise that the Bolsheviks were not lovers of freedom nor

partisans of workers’ control. What had been created was a massive

dictatorship. The suppression of the Kronstadt rebellion by the

Bolsheviks In 1921 was too much for Emma and Berkman, and they left

Russia in a state of disillusionment.

She spent the next number of years moving from country to country and

writing a long series of articles and two books about her experiences

and struggles. She eventually lived in Britain for many years where she

wrote her autobiography and continued supporting workers’ struggles in

different parts of the world. Suffering from grave illness, Alexander

Berkman committed suicide in 1936. Just a week later an anarchist

inspired revolution erupted in Spain. Over the next three years Emma

committed herself to the support of the anarchists and their fight

against fascism and Stalinism.

Her long and incredible life came to an end in 1940. Only after her

death was she admitted back into America where she was buried in Chicago

near the Haymarket martyrs who had helped to shape her life.