image A cattle dealer once drove some bulls to the slaughterhouse. And the butcher came nigh with his sharp knife.

"Let us close ranks and jack up this executioner on our horns," suggested one of the bulls.

"If you please, in what way is the butcher any worse than the dealer who drove us hither with his cudgel?" replied the bulls, who had received their political education in Manuilsky’s institute. [The Comintern.]

"But we shall be able to attend to the dealer as well afterwards!"

"Nothing doing," replied the bulls firm in their principles, to the counsellor. "You are trying, from the left, to shield our enemies — you are a social-butcher yourself."

And they refused to close ranks.

A packet of sweets for everyone who recognised that this is taken from Trotsky’s What Next? Vital Questions for the German Proletariat written in 1932.

Sitting through some of the discussions about the demonstration against the English Defence League (EDL) this little story kept buzzing round my head with the persistence of a  track from the new Stornoway album.

The EDL’s ostensible target was a conference called ‘The Book that Shook the World’ organised by a group called UK Islamic Conferences (UKIC). I am as bereft of information about them as they are of the United Secretariat of the Fourth International. Apparently however some of the headline acts hold pretty nasty views about women’s rights, LGBT issues and what should happen to atheists. In this regard they resemble the wilder shores of most religions. The weird thing was that no one had thought of getting cross about their event until the EDL hit on the idea first.

The upshot of all this was that a huge amount of time and energy was squandered at a couple of the planning meetings while several speakers made the point that UKIC is just as bad as the EDL. From this came the demand that United East End put out a statement condemning them as well as the hard right street fighters. The idiosyncratic claim was made more than once that the EDL were being allowed to seize the moral high ground by their uncompromising defence of LGBT rights. Their rallying point was outside a gay bar which they were going to “protect” from the fundamentalists. Just who would be stupid enough to confuse a bunch of racist thugs with Stonewall’s self defence squads was a question left unanswered.

Now of course the people arguing this point of view felt that the two most important things that had to be done in the event of the EDL coming into the area were first to make clear to anyone who was interested just how much they disliked UKIC and secondly to make arrangements for their own variety of mobilisation. This would have no connection with the broader community and trade union mobilisation on the day. A funny sort of principle and a pretty daft practice.

My own experience of the radical Islamists is that they receive the same rapt attention from most Muslims that the Spartacist League can expect on a bus drivers’ picket line. The best way to marginalise groups like that is to demonstrate broad unity on principled anti-racist politics. That was the big achievement of Sunday’s meeting in the London Muslim Centre. No one sitting in that audience could have been left in any doubt that the people involved  in building Sunday’s event were supporters of LGBT rights. And even if anyone in the audience was equivocal on the subject the display of fighting unity would have opened the door to persuading them.

They wouldn’t even have to go to the trouble of reading Bakunin or Trotsky to work it out.

8 responses to “A relevant fable”

  1. daveinstokenewington Avatar
    daveinstokenewington

    On a bookstall run by an organisation called Socialist Resistance, I bought a pamphlet on Islamic fundamentalism written by a comrade of the Labour Party Pakistan.

    It clearly sets out the line that the far left should not forge alliances with currents such as the Muslim Brotherhood or Jamaat-i-Islami, and argues that socialists are bloodily repressed where organisations of this type win state power.

    I sometimes thing some British Trotskyists could learn a thing or to from their international co-thinkers.

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  2. tamworthalternative Avatar
    tamworthalternative

    Thanks for that Dave. Just out of interest, I wonder if you could express, in percentage terms, what you think the chances of the Muslim Brotherhood or Jamaat-i-Islami coming to power in Britain over the next few years?

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  3. daveinstokenewington Avatar
    daveinstokenewington

    0%

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  4. daveinstokenewington Avatar
    daveinstokenewington

    BTW, how do you assess the likelihood of the EDL, the BNP or NF coming to power in Britain over the next few years?

    In percentage terms, of course, just for the sake of comparison purposes.

    What is your estimate of the chances of the Muslim Brotherhood taking over in Egypt, or an Islamist regime in Pakistan?

    Do you believe such governments would allow independent trade unionism? Revolutionary socialist organisation?

    Do you think the LPP are right to be worried at the prospect?

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  5. There is a very good video of Farooq Tariq of the Labour Party Pakistan speaking in London at
    http://blip.tv/file/3717830

    Tower Hamlets does not share a border with Afghanistan and the British left is not being attacked by Islamist killers. In terms of practical politics radical Islamism requires quite different approaches in the two countries.

    In one it is mounting a serious challenge to the state and is an ovewhelmingly reaction force.

    In the other it is a marginal network with a limited audience in some of the most oppressed sections of society. Giving the majority of the Muslim community a powerful demonstration that the secular left will not be carried along by the prevailing Islamophobia is the best way to keep the people at the fringes just where they belong.

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  6. About 20 members of the racist and fascist-linked EDL came to Whitechapel this evening. They came out of the tube station, seemingly looking for a pub to drink in. Local people quickly recognised who they were and word went out. After about ten minutes the EDL yobs went back into the station, pursued by local youth and with police protection. There were no arrests.

    There are reports (unconfirmed) that one Asian/Bengali man was attacked. Locals checked near-by stations and pubs to ensure theyr was no further sign of the EDL.

    About 100-200 peoploe assembled back at East London Mosque where Glyn Robbins, Fr Alan Green, Councillor Abdal Ullah, Abjol Miah and the Imam encouraged everyone to take this evening as a reminder of the true nature and threat of the EDL, and the importance of Saturday’s demonstration.

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  7. Tamworthalternative, since you may well live in Tamworth you may not know about the relevance of Jamaat i Islami in Tower Hamlets. Fortunately its well documented, (for example on the Bangladesh Genocide Archive) and its not hard to find people here who will tell you about the deep splits in the community that date back to the ’71 war. As I understand it it was Bangladesh JI activists who formed the IFE in London. Liam, please correct me if I’m wrong (or call Carter-Ruck ).This is one of the reasons why some progressive people have concerns about the relationship between Respect and now the United East End group and the IFE. Obviously a lot of time has passed and maybe there was a point when the modern IFE made a clean break from its origins in a clerical fascist movement but since I don’t know about it I still think its a fair point.

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  8. Rachel – I am as clueless about the IFE and its origins as I am about UKIC.

    All I know is that the people involved in organising Sunday’s event have shown pretty good instincts and those with Islamist roots are perfectly happy working with the secular left. In fact they’ve prevented it from lapsing into the worst of its bureaucratic habis.

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