Mollie Steimer
Mollie Steimer | |
---|---|
מאלי שטיימער | |
Born | Marthe Alperine November 21, 1897 |
Died | July 23, 1980 | (aged 82)
Nationality | Ukrainian Jew |
Citizenship | Russian Empire (1897–1913) United States (1913–1921) Soviet Russia (1921–1923) Stateless (1923–1948) Mexico (1948–1980) |
Occupation(s) | Writer, photographer |
Years active | 1917–1963 |
Known for | Opposition to World War I, prisoner support |
Height | 1.42 m (4 ft 8 in) |
Movement | Anarchism |
Partner | Senya Fleshin |
Mollie Steimer (Template:Lang-uk; 1897–1980) was a Ukrainian Jewish anarchist activist. After settling in New York City, she quickly became involved in the local anarchist movement and was caught up in the case of Abrams v. United States. Charged with sedition, she was eventually deported to Soviet Russia, where she met her lifelong partner Senya Fleshin and agitated for the rights of anarchist political prisoners in the country. For her activities, she and Fleshin were again deported to western Europe, where they spent time organising aid for exiles and political prisoners, and took part in the debates of the international anarchist movement. Following the rise of the Nazis in Europe, she and Fleshin fled to Mexico, where they spent the rest of their lives working as photographers.
Biography
On November 21, 1897, Mollie Steimer was born in Dunaivtsi, a village in the south-west of the Russian Empire (modern-day Ukraine). At the age of 15, she and her family emigrated to the United States, settling in a ghetto of New York City and setting to work at a garment factory. At this time, she started to read radical political literature, such as Women and Socialism by August Bebel and Underground Russia by Sergey Stepnyak-Kravchinsky.[1]
Early activism
By the outbreak of the Russian Revolution, Steimer had gravitated towards anarchism, inspired by the works of Mikhail Bakunin, Peter Kropotkin and Emma Goldman. Together with other Jewish anarchists, Steimer helped form a clandestine collective called Der Shturm ("The Storm"), which published radical works in the Yiddish language. Following some internal conflict, in January 1918, the group reorganized and launched a new monthly journal titled Frayhayt ("Freedom"), which published articles by Jewish radicals such as Georg Brandes and Maria Goldsmith. The journal's motto was a Henry David Thoreau quote: "That government is best which governs not at all" (Template:Lang-yi).[2]
Several of the collective's members, including Steimer, lived and worked together in a six-room apartment on Harlem's East 104th Street. Due to the political repression brought by the Espionage Act of 1917 and the tense political climate that preceded the First Red Scare, the collective was forced to distribute Frayhayt in secret, as it had been among the papers banned by the federal government for its anti-war and far-left political stances.[3] By the summer of 1918, the group had drawn the attention of the authorities, after they had begun distributing leaflets denouncing the allied intervention in the Russian Civil War and calling for a social revolution in the United States by means of a general strike.[4]
Arrest, trial and imprisonment
Steimer herself distributed thousands of copies around New York, including at her own workplace. On August 23, she threw a handful of the leaflets out of a window, which alerted the police, who arrested Steimer after receiving information from an informant within the Frayhayt group. Their apartment was subsequently raided and a number of their other members were arrested, on charges of conspiracy, under the Sedition Act of 1918.[5] During their trial, which came to be known as the case of Abrams v. United States, Steimer gave a speech in which she declared:[6]
"By anarchism, I understand a new social order, where no group of people shall be governed by another group of people. Individual freedom shall prevail in the full sense of the word. Private ownership shall be abolished. Every person shall have an equal opportunity to develop himself well, both mentally and physically. We shall not have to struggle for our daily existence as we do now. No one shall live on the product of others. Every person shall produce as much as he can, and enjoy as much as he needs—receive according to his need. Instead of striving to get money, we shall strive towards education, towards knowledge. While at present the people of the world are divided into various groups, calling themselves nations, while one nation defies another — in most cases considers the others as competitive — we, the workers of the world, shall stretch out our hands towards each other with brotherly love. To the fulfillment of this idea I shall devote all my energy, and, if necessary, render my life for it."
On October 25, 1918, Steimer and her co-defendants were gound guilty, with Steimer herself being sentenced to 15 years in prison and a 10128 fine.[7] With support from a wide range of society, notably including Zechariah Chafee and the entire staff of Harvard Law School, the sentence was appealed and the defendents were released on bail.[8] Steimer returned to activism, for which she was arrested multiple times over the following year. On March 11, 1919, during a police raid against the Russian People's House on New York's East 15th Street, Steimer was arrested on charges of incitement and subsequently transferred to Ellis Island.[9] Following a hunger strike against the conditions of her solitary confinement, Steimer was released before she could be deported, although the government kept her under surveillance. Back in New York, she met Emma Goldman, with whom she developed a lifelong friendship.[10]
On October 30, 1919, Steimer was arrested again and imprisoned on Blackwell's Island. For six months, she was again held in solitary confinement, which she likewise protested with another hunger strike and by loudly singing revolutionary songs. When the Supreme Court upheld her conviction, her co-defendants informed her of a plan to flee the country into exile, but Steimer herself refused to cooperate, as she didn't want to dishonor the workers that had paid her 702956 in bail.[11] In April 1920, Steimer was transferred to Jefferson City, Missouri, where she was held for a year and a half. By this time, she had learnt of the death of her brother from influenza and her father from shock.[12] Her lawyer managed to secure her release, on the condition of her deportation. But she initially refused to accept this, due to her staunch opposition to state borders and her concern for fellow political prisoners of the Untied States.[13] Nevertheless, after some convincing, she arrived back at Ellis Island, where she eagerly awaited her chance to participate in the Russian Revolution.[14]
Deportation and exile
On November 24, 1921, Steimer and her co-defendants were deported to the Russian Soviet Republic on the Estonia. By the time they arrived in Moscow, on December 15, 1921, there were no anarchists left to greet them. Emma Goldman had left for exile, Peter Kropotkin had died of old age and any left-wing uprisings against the Bolsheviks had been suppressed by the Red Army, while hundreds more anarchists were still held in the prisons of the Cheka.[15] Despite the climate of political repression, Steimer made a new home in Petrograd, where she met and fell in love with Senya Fleshin, a veteran of the Makhnovist movement.[16] Together they established an organization to aid political prisoners in Russia, for which they were arrested on November 1, 1922 and sentenced to exile in Siberia. But after they carried out a hunger strike, they were released on November 18, on the condition that they remain in Petrograd and report regularly to the authorities. Despite these conditions, they continued their activities, and were again arrested on July 9, 1923. Following another hunger strike and protests made to Leon Trotsky by anarcho-syndicalist delegates of the Profintern, they were again released, although this time they were to be deported.[17]
On September 27, 1923, Steimer and Fleshin were deported to Germany, where they were reunited with Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman in Berlin. From the German capital, Steimer wrote articles about her experiences in Russia for the British anarchist newspaper Freedom, to which she denounced the authoritarianism of the Communist Party.[18] The couple also continued their activities in aiding Soviet political prisoners, now as members of the International Workers' Association. In 1924, they joined their fellow exile Volin to Paris, where they established a mutual aid society for anarchist exiles from all countries and participated in the debate around the Platform, which Steimer criticised as authoritarian.[19] During this period, Steimer also met a number of other anarchsts, including Harry Kelly, Rose Pesotta, Rudolf Rocker and Milly Witkop, and was briefly reunited with her co-defendants Jack and Mary Abrams, who had also left Russia out of disillusionment with the Revolution.[20]
In 1929, the couple briefly returned to Berlin, where Fleshin worked as a photographer, but following the ascent to power of Adolf Hitler's Nazi Party, they returned to Paris in order to escape rising antisemitism.[21] In the wake of the invasion of France by Nazi Germany, on May 18, 1940, Steimer was sent to a concentration camp, on account of her Jewish heritage and her anarchist political beliefs.[22] She remained at Camp Gurs for seven weeks, before escaping with the aid of May Picqueray and other friends[23] during the chaotic transfer of power to the collaborationist French State.[24] Once she was reunited with Fleshin in Marseilles, the couple escaped across the Atlantic to Mexico.[22]
Later life
In Mexico City, the couple operated a photographic studio, became close with a group of Spanish anarchist exiles and were once again reunited with Jack and Mary Abrams. In 1963, Steimer and Fleshin retired to Cuernavaca, where they kept up with the development of the international anarchist movement and received visitors from the United States. In the late 1970s, Steimer was interviewed by a number of film crews about Emma Goldman and her anarchist convictions, to which she remained a stalwart into her old age.[25]
Mollie Steimer died of heart failure in her Cuernavaca home on July 23, 1980, aged 82.[1] Senya Fleshin died less than a year later.[25]
See also
References
- ^ a b Avrich 1988, p. 214.
- ^ Avrich 1988, pp. 214–215.
- ^ Avrich 1988, p. 215.
- ^ Avrich 1988, pp. 215–216.
- ^ Avrich 1988, p. 216.
- ^ Avrich 1988, pp. 216–218.
- ^ Avrich 1988, p. 218.
- ^ Avrich 1988, pp. 218–219.
- ^ Avrich 1988, p. 219.
- ^ Avrich 1988, pp. 219–220.
- ^ Avrich 1988, p. 220.
- ^ Avrich 1988, pp. 220–221.
- ^ Avrich 1988, p. 221.
- ^ Avrich 1988, pp. 221–222.
- ^ Avrich 1988, p. 222.
- ^ Avrich 1988, pp. 222–223.
- ^ Avrich 1988, p. 223.
- ^ Avrich 1988, pp. 223–224.
- ^ Avrich 1988, p. 224.
- ^ Avrich 1988, p. 225.
- ^ Avrich 1988, pp. 224–225.
- ^ a b Avrich 1988, pp. 225–226.
- ^ Magnone 1998.
- ^ Magnone 1998; Polenberg 1999, p. 361.
- ^ a b Avrich 1988, p. 226.
Bibliography
- Avrich, Paul (1988). "Mollie Steimer: An Anarchist Life". Anarchist Portraits. Princeton University Press. pp. 214–226. ISBN 0-691-00609-1.
- Bluestein, Abe, ed. (1983). Fighters for Anarchism: Mollie Steimer and Senya Fleshin. Libertarian Publications Group. OCLC 11972287.
- Magnone, Fabrice (1998). "La Seconde Guerre Mondial". Le Libertaire (1919-1956): De la Révolution espagnole à la Seconde Guerre mondiale (Thesis). University of Nice. Archived from the original on May 11, 2008.
- Marsh, Margaret S. (1981). "True Freedom: Anarchist Womanhood". Anarchist Women, 1870-1920. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. pp. 19–45. ISBN 978-0-87722-202-6. OCLC 708544972.
- Polenberg, Richard (1999) [1987]. Fighting Faiths: The Abrams Case, the Supreme Court, and Free Speech. Cornell University Press. ISBN 0-8014-8618-1. OCLC 42275046.
- Stone, Geoffrey R. (2004). Perilous Times: Free Speech in Wartime from the Sedition Act of 1798 to the War on Terrorism. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0-393-05880-2.
Further reading
- Goldstein, Eric L. (December 31, 1999). "Mollie Steimer". Shalvi/Hyman Encyclopedia of Jewish Women. Jewish Women's Archive. Retrieved November 8, 2022.
- Simkin, John (September 1997). "Mollie Steimer". Spartacus Educational. Retrieved November 8, 2022.
External links
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