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anti-fascism
While violent or militant anti-fascism does occur, the movement may also be non-violent; being an anti-fascist is not necessarily to "fight" fascism with violence, although violence did play an important role in the 1920s and the 1930s, when antifascists were confronted to aggressive far right leagues, such as the Action Française royalist movement in France, which dominated the Quartier latin students' neighborhood (although royalist, the Action Française counted members such as Georges Valois who would later found the Faisceau fascist movement, created on the model of the Italian Fascio). In Italy in the 1920s, antifascists had to struggle against the violent squadristi, while in Germany they were confronted to the Freikorps. The squadristi broke the general strikes using violence, and the only way for the workers' movement to defend itself was physically. Thus, pre-World War II history explains why anti-fascism has been associated with violence.
However, many antifa activists consider today that violence is not justified, since fascists don't represent, in most countries, a massive physical threat. They argue that they should be fought intellectually. However, others disagree, and point out that skinheads pose a real threat in some neighborhoods, and have sometimes killed people. These antifascists claim that self-defense is necessary, because they observe that the state doesn't defends equally the population of specific neighborhoods. In Russia, some neo-nazis have recently committed various hate crimes against foreigners. Some antifascists groups are: Anti-Racist Action, a US group created in the 1990s; the UK Anti-Nazi League, set up in 1977, and which merged in 2002 with Unite Against Fascism, whose chairman is London's mayor Ken Livingstone; the UK Anti-Fascist Action, which fights the National Front and the British National Party (BNP); Anarcho-skinheads (one must recall that the original skinhead movement was antifascist, and only latter became in majority neonazi).
Contents
Anti-fascists
- Mordechaj Anielewicz
- Tony Blackplait
- Jean de Boe
- Joseph Bonanno
- Willy Brandt (SAP/SPD)
- Menno ter Braak (Dutch author 1902 - 1940)
- Albert Camus
- Erich Mielke (German general, chairmen of th Sportvereinigung Dynamo and Minister of State Security)
- Emil Carlebach (1914 - 2001)
- Daniel Cohn-Bendit
- Benedetto Croce
- Buenaventura Durruti
- Albert Einstein
- Carl Einstein
- Georg Elser
- David Emory
- Walter Fisch
- David Frankfurter
- Jozef GabÄÃk
- Etty Gingold
- Peter Gingold
- Leone Ginzburg
- Kurt Goldstein
- Antonio Gramsci
- Wilhelm Hammann
- Alfred Hausser (1912 - 2003)
- Walter Hochmuth (1904 - 1979)
- Israel Holmgren
- Erich Honecker
- Ernst Kirchweger
- Jakob Kindinger
- Eugen Kogon
- Johann Koplenig
- Jan Kubiš
- Uno Laht
- Marinus van der Lubbe
- Georg Lukács
- Agustin Remiro Manero
- Herbert Marcuse
- Jean Moulin
- Oskar Müller
- Edvard Munch
- Ture Nerman
- George Orwell
- Adrien Perrissaguet
- Christian Pineau
- Jean-Paul Sartre
- Hannie Schaft
- Richard Scheringer
- Emil Schmidt
- Lotte Schmidt
- Willy Schmidt (1911 - 2003)
- Kurt Schumacher
- Fritz Selbmann
- Josip Broz Tito
- Leon Trotsky
- Walter Vielhauer
- Nancy Wake
- Simon Wiesenthal
- Eleonore Wolf
- Paul Wulf (1921 - 1999)
Anti-fascist organisations
Pre-World War II
World War II
- Albanian resistance movement
- Belarusian resistance movement
- Belgian resistance movement
- Burmese resistance movement (AFPFL - Anti-Fascist People's Freedom League)
- Czech resistance movement
- Danish resistance movement
- Dutch resistance movement
- English resistance movement
- The Auxiliary Units, organized by Colonel Colin Gubbins as a potential British resistance movement against a possible invasion of the British Isles by Nazi forces.
- Estonian resistance movement
- French resistance movement in World War II, including the
- German resistance movement
- Greek resistance movement
- Hong Kong resistance movement
- Gangjiu dadui (Hong Kong - Kowloon big army)
- Dongjiang Guerillas (East River Guerillas, Southern China and Hong Kong organisation)
- Italian resistance movement
- Jewish resistance movement
- Antyfaszystowska Organizacja Bojowa
- Fareinigte Partizaner Organizacje
- Żydowska Organizacja Bojowa (ZOB, the Jewish Fighting Organisation), Jewish resistance movement that led the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising and Wilno Ghetto Uprising in 1943
- Zydowski Zwiazek Walki (ZZW, the Jewish Fighting Union), Jewish resistance movement that led the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising and Wilno Ghetto Uprising in 1943
- Latvian resistance movement
- Malayan resistance movement
- Norwegian resistance movement
- Philippine resistance movement -- the anti-Japanese phase of the Huk movement
- Polish resistance movement
- Armia Krajowa (the Home Army), Polish underground army in World War II (400 000 sworn members)
- Gwardia Ludowa (the Peoples' Guard) and Armia Ludowa (the Peoples' Army)
- Slovak resistance movement
- Soviet resistance movement of Soviet partisans and underground which had Moscow-organized and spontaneously formed cells opposing German occupation.
- Yugoslav resistance movement
- People's Liberation Army - Partisans
Post-World War II
- Antifa
- Anti-Fascist Action
- Anti-Nazi League
- Anti Nazis
- Fight Dem Back
- KAFKA/KURF
- Pacifica Foundation
- Unite Against Fascism
Anti-fascist songs
- Chant des Partisans by Anna Marly
- Die Gedanken sind frei by anonymous writer
Anti-fascist bands
- Anarchus/Cacofonia (Mexico)
- Angelic Upstarts (U.K.)
- Anti-Flag (U.S.A.)
- Antiruggine (Italy)
- Atari Teenage Riot (Germany)
- Aus Rotten (USA)
- Blaggers ITA (U.K.)
- Bolchoi (France)
- Brigada Flores Magon (France)
- The Burial(U.K)
- The Class Assassins (Canada)
- Comrade
- Contravene
- the Dead Kennedys
- El Odio
- Fate2Hate (Quebec)
- Fighting Chance (USA)
- Final Four
- The Flowers of Romance (Sealand)
- Generacion Rebelde
- Guardia Negra
- Jeunesse Apatride (Quebec)
- Kaos Urbano (Spain)
- Komintern 43
- Kontratodo (Peru)
- Les Partisans (France)
- Los Fastidios (Italy)
- Molodoi (France)
- Magnus (Poland)
- Mors Aux Dents
- No Respect (Germany)
- Oi Polloi (Scotland)
- Opció k-95 (Catalonia)
- The Oppressed (Wales)
- Propagandhi (Canada)
- Puntas de Acero
- Rage Against The Machine (U.S.A.)
- Red Alert (U.K.)
- Red London (U.K.)
- The Redskins (U.K.)
- Scrapy
- Seein' Red
- Shots In The Dark
- Soziedad Alkoholika (Spain)
- Those Unknown (U.S.A.)
- Thy Wicked (Germany)
- Unholy Grave (Japan)
Anti-fascist books
- Anti-Oedipus by Giles Deleuze and Felix Guattari (labelled as such by Michel Foucault in the preface)