A short biography of Vietnamese libertarian socialist and metal worker Ngo Van Xuyet.
Ngo Van Xuyet
Born 1913, Vietnam, died 2005, France
Ngo
Van Xuyet , author of The Saigon
Commune, started his political career as a Trotskyist but by the end of
his life had developed libertarian analyses.
“The so-called ‘workers’ parties’
(Leninist parties especially) are embryonic state regimes. Once in power,
these parties form the nucleus of a new ruling class, and can only give rise
to a new system of exploitation of man by man.”
He joined the Vietnamese Trotskyist movement in 1932 at
the age of 19. He left his village at the age of 14 to work in a metalworking
factory in Saigon. He became involved in the demonstrations and strikes against
French rule.
The hard life that the Vietnamese masses experienced under
the French yoke meant that his formal education had suffered. He began reading
Marx in the Saigon public library after work. He made contact and joined the
Trotskyist left opposition within the Communist Party of Indochina. Trotskyists
and Stalinists cooperated in Saigon for 3 years (1933-1936) around the weekly
magazine La Lutte. The Trotskyists then left to form the League of International
Communists for the Construction of the Fourth International. Van learnt to
set type for the group’s underground literature.
He organised a strike for better wages in his factory.
He was finally arrested in the factory storeroom at the age of 24. He was
put in the Maison Centrale in Saigon, where he was tortured. He joined a hunger
strike demanding political prisoner status equivalent to that in France. Van
and members of his group were constantly arrested, tortured and then freed
for a short length of time. He was eventually exiled to Travinh, an island
in the Mekong delta. A peasant uprising broke out in the surrounding area.
The French then executed 200, and killed thousands in bombing raids. Around
about this time Van realised he had contracted TB.
In March 1945 the Japanese occupied South Vietnam. The
Trotskyists called on the Vietnamese masses to rise up against all oppressors
whatever their nationality, unlike the Communist Party, which called for an
alliance with the Allies. 30,000 miners set up councils to run the mines public
services and transport and started a literacy campaign.
After the collapse of the Japanese occupation, a wave
of revolutionary action swept through the country. The Trotskyists called
for the arming of the people, and the setting up of workers’ and peasants’
councils. The Saigon Commune
was born. By October the uprising had waned. The Stalinists slaughtered hundreds
of Trotskyists. Van fled Vietnam in spring 1948. He later learned that some
of the comrades he had left behind had been horribly tortured to death by
the Stalinists.
Van ended up in Paris, where he joined the Union Ouvriere
Internationale.(UOI).This group included the Spaniard Grandizo Munis, the
leading Surrealist Benjamin
Peret who had fought with the Durruti Column (named after Spanish anarchist
Buenaventura Durruti)
in the Spanish Civil War
and Revolution, and Sophie Moen. This group had left the Trotskyist Parti
Communiste Internationale because they could not agree with its defence of
the USSR as a “degenerated workers’ state.”
Van and Moen became partners. The UOI collapsed in 1954 and Van and Moen joined
an informal discussion group around Maximilien
Rubel and the writer Jean
Malaquais. Most of the group were factory workers and they adopted many
council communist ideas. The group corresponded with Pannekoek and Paul
Mattick, among others. Readings of the council communists made Van break
completely with the need for a Leninist party elite. Van preferred the term
Marxian to Marxist, and like Rubel had an anti-authoritarian reading of Marx.
Van worked in the Mors factory making railway signals.
He founded a factory group there. In 1957, at the initiative of Trotskyists,
a Liaison Committee of metalworkers of the Paris region was set up, following
an assembly in October where activists from 11 factories, including Renault
and Mors met together. A bulletin started appearing. The last meeting of the
metalworkers decided to broaden the liaison to include activists in other
industries. The events of 13th May 1958 overtook this. The fascist and OAS
threat led to the convoking of an assembly attended by Trotskyists of different
persuasions, anarchosyndicalists, members of the syndicalist group around
the paper La Revolution Proletarienne, members of Socialisme ou Barbarie and
other groups attended.
The Trotskyists of Tribune Ouvriere Renault launched Voix
Ouvriere and various factory bulletins. Socialisme ou Barbarie saw the future
in their industrial newssheet Pouvoir Ouvrier. Van and others on the other
hand, advanced the concept of workers autonomy.
Following a split within Socialisme ou Barbarie, Information
Liasons Ouvrieres was set up. This advanced the need for liaison committees
between workers in different industries. A distinct nucleus , Regroupement
Interenterprises, was set up, and Van was one of those involved in this. The
assemblies organised by this grouping were small, usually between 10 to 20,
but they slowly began to grow in the run-up to 1968.
Both the ILO and the Regroupement collapsed, and the bulletin
produced by the various factory militants became the monthly Information Correspondence
Ouvriere (ICO) which ceased publication in 1973. Van often contributed to
its pages.
Van worked in the same factory up until 1978 and his retirement. His partner
Sophie Moen died in 1995.
Van continued to collaborate with the magazine set up
by Henri Simon after the collapse of ICO, and continued to do so up until
his death in January 2005.
He was deeply interested in Asian peasants movements and
wrote several articles on that subject. He wrote an autobiography In the Land
of the Cracked Bell starting with his arrival in France and published two
volumes on recent Vietnamese history. He also brought out a collection of
Vietnamese folk tales for children. Some of Van’s writing circulates
within Vietnam.
In 1968, Van predicted on the Vietnam situation in an
article that he wrote for Cahiers de Discussion pour le Socialisme des Conseils
that “One day the massacres of America; will end…the survivors
will return to the factories, offices and farm; busted faces, armless and
legless, dragging on through the remainder of their decorated existence. Back
there, the 'heroes of the resistance' - peasants and workers of Vietnam, will
return in the ricefields or will be thrown into the factories of the new industrialisation...
neither the capitalist system American-style or the state capitalism of Ho
Chi Minh will put an end to their situation as the exploited submitted to
a police dictatorship, and if the bourgeois and the big landowners are chased
off, it is the bureaucracy that will perpetuate exploitation, with more efficiency.”
Nick Heath
Comments
Ngo Van's autobiography will
Ngo Van's autobiography will be published by AK Press in English very soon. Already translated by Ken Knabb and others.
I am Vietnamese, culturally
I am Vietnamese, culturally and linguistically speaking. Eithnically, I am three fourths Vietnamese, one fourth Chinese.
It is rather sad that I am no more the First Vietnamese Anarchist :cry: as I have proudly claimed
Ngo Van is not exactly an
Ngo Van is not exactly an anarchist in the truest sense of the word! In fact, he was a libertarian marxist, even better than normal "classical" anarcho-communists...
He was an independent radical more or less in the council-communist tradition.
One of the reasons that Ngo Van appreciated Maximilien Rubel was that he convincingly showed how Leninism and Trotskyism (to say nothing of Stalinism) diverge significantly from Marx’s actual views. While Marx had well-known differences with some of the anarchists of his time, his perspective was in reality much closer to anarchism than to any of the varieties of state socialism. The prevalence of statist “Marxism” during the last century has tended to drown out other currents of Marxism that are closer to Marx (and to the more coherent strands of anarchism), such as Rosa Luxemburg, Anton Pannekoek, Karl Korsch, Socialisme ou Barbarie, and the Situationist International.
Some Web sources give the misleading impression that there was a significant anarchist influence in early Vietnamese struggles. Closer examination usually reveals that the supposed connection is extremely flimsy. The pioneering anticolonial leader Phan Boi Chau, for example, is sometimes referred to as “a proponent of anarchism” merely because “his thinking reflected certain distinctly anarchist themes, notably anti-imperialism and direct action,” and because he was on good terms with a few anarchists he met in Japan and China — though he was on equally good terms with monarchists, nationalists, socialists and militarists, and the organizations he founded advocated nothing more radical than a constitutional monarchy or a democratic republic. His overriding goal was to drive out the French; political groups and ideologies interested him only insofar as they might contribute to that goal. Until late in his life he scarcely manifested any interest even in socialism, let alone anarchism.
Nguyen An Ninh is a different matter. His eclectic and romantic perspective did indeed reflect some anarchist influence (picked up from his years in Paris). This anarchism was blended with a variety of other European philosophical and cultural currents from Rousseau to Nietzsche, and since Ninh was a very popular and charismatic figure, those themes undoubtedly had some influence during the 1920s, particularly among the more educated urban youth. Hue-Tam Ho Tai’s Radicalism and the Origins of the Vietnamese Revolution gives a good account of the cultural ferment of that period, which served as a prelude to the more directly social and political struggles of the 1930s.
The only explicit Vietnamese anarchist mentioned in Ngo Van's book is Trinh Hung Ngau. (Other sources describe him as a “nationalist with anarchist leanings.”) According to Ngo Van, he participated in the Jeune Annam movement (1926) and in the newspaper L’Annam (1926-1928) and was one of the founders of La Lutte (1933); but he withdrew from the latter after the third issue “because he was unable to express his anarchist ideal within it” (Vietnam 1920-1945, p. 212). He later took part in the Indochinese Congress movement (1936-1937).
Just to say, looking at Ngo
Just to say, looking at Ngo Van's autobiography again, it says he was born in 1912 not 1913. Do we need to change this article?
Ed wrote: Just to say,
Ed
yes please do. If there are any particular dates, like birth, or events or whatever please add them to the working class history calendar!
You've spelt his name wrong.
You've spelt his name wrong. It's 'Ngo Van Xuyet', not Xuhat.