logo
#

Latest news with #AugustSpies

Workers Around World Celebrate May Day: Legacy of Struggle, Justice
Workers Around World Celebrate May Day: Legacy of Struggle, Justice

See - Sada Elbalad

time01-05-2025

  • Politics
  • See - Sada Elbalad

Workers Around World Celebrate May Day: Legacy of Struggle, Justice

Ahmed Emam Every year on May 1st, Egypt joins the world in celebrating "International Workers' Day" —a day that honors the dignity of labor and the historic struggles that won workers their rights. But behind the parades and speeches lies a powerful, often somber story—one born out of tragedy, courage, and the unwavering demand for justice. To understand why May Day matters, we must go back to Chicago, 1886. The city, then a booming hub of industry, was home to thousands of factory workers who endured long hours, meager wages, and dangerous conditions. Their demand was simple but revolutionary at the time: an eight-hour workday. On May 1, tens of thousands of workers across the United States began a peaceful strike. In Chicago, the movement gained traction, culminating in a mass rally on May 4 at Haymarket Square. The gathering was peaceful, even attended briefly by the city's mayor. Workers listened quietly as union leaders called for a fairer system—one that respected both employer and employee. But what began as a peaceful plea for reform quickly turned into a national scandal. After the mayor left, police moved in to disperse the crowd. Then, in the chaos, a bomb exploded —its origins a mystery. Gunfire erupted. The scene dissolved into panic. By the next morning, headlines screamed accusations. Workers were blamed. Newspapers, largely owned by industrialists, painted them as violent anarchists. The public narrative was set. Eight labor leaders were arrested and put on trial, not because there was clear evidence, but because they were the voices of a growing movement. The trial, widely condemned by historians, was marred by prejudice and political pressure. Despite the lack of proof, seven were sentenced to death, and one to 15 years in prison. Eventually, three had their sentences commuted, one committed suicide, and four were executed. Among them was August Spies, who left behind a letter to his young son: "My son, when you grow up, you will understand why I die. It is not for a crime, but for a cause. I am innocent—but I die with pride, for I stood for justice. One day, you will tell my story." That day came— eleven years later, when a former police official, on his deathbed, confessed: the bomb had been planted by the police. The charges were false. The trial had been rigged. The truth, long buried, shook the nation and vindicated the labor movement. The surviving men were pardoned, and in the years that followed, the world began to recognize what they had died for. May 1st was declared a day to honor workers everywhere—a global symbol of solidarity and resistance. Today, as Egyptian workers mark this occasion alongside millions worldwide, May Day stands not just as a holiday, but as a reminder. It is a tribute to those who gave their lives for the rights many now take for granted—fair hours, safe workplaces, and the dignity of labor. It reminds us that behind every right won, there was a fight—and behind every victory, a story worth remembering. read more Gold prices rise, 21 Karat at EGP 3685 NATO's Role in Israeli-Palestinian Conflict US Expresses 'Strong Opposition' to New Turkish Military Operation in Syria Shoukry Meets Director-General of FAO Lavrov: confrontation bet. nuclear powers must be avoided News Iran Summons French Ambassador over Foreign Minister Remarks News Aboul Gheit Condemns Israeli Escalation in West Bank News Greek PM: Athens Plays Key Role in Improving Energy Security in Region News One Person Injured in Explosion at Ukrainian Embassy in Madrid News Egypt confirms denial of airspace access to US B-52 bombers News Ayat Khaddoura's Final Video Captures Bombardment of Beit Lahia Lifestyle Pistachio and Raspberry Cheesecake Domes Recipe News Australia Fines Telegram $600,000 Over Terrorism, Child Abuse Content Arts & Culture Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban's $4.7M LA Home Burglarized Videos & Features Bouchra Dahlab Crowned Miss Arab World 2025 .. Reem Ganzoury Wins Miss Arab Africa Title (VIDEO) Sports Former Al Zamalek Player Ibrahim Shika Passes away after Long Battle with Cancer Sports Neymar Announced for Brazil's Preliminary List for 2026 FIFA World Cup Qualifiers News Prime Minister Moustafa Madbouly Inaugurates Two Indian Companies Arts & Culture New Archaeological Discovery from 26th Dynasty Uncovered in Karnak Temple

Workers' Day: have trade unions lost their way?
Workers' Day: have trade unions lost their way?

News24

time01-05-2025

  • Politics
  • News24

Workers' Day: have trade unions lost their way?

Terry Bell remembers the heritage of the Haymarket Martyrs. For more financial news, go to the News24 Business front page. For most trade unions and worker movements around the world, May Day 2025 will be celebrated more with a whimper than a bang. The widespread jubilation, pride and determined optimism of the fairly recent past will be missing as a largely weakened and fragmented labour movement struggles to grapple with 21st Century reality. Times have changed — and are certainly changing ever more rapidly as the proclaimed Fourth Industrial Revolution gathers pace. The future of work and, therefore, the future of trade unions is now uncertain. The gains of recent years — even, in some regions, the gains of many decades — are threatened or are being clawed back. There are also echoes now from over the past century of the rise of authoritarianism fuelled by racist, religious and even linguistic nationalisms, which have morphed in some regions into ethnic cleansing and mass slaughter. The prime sufferers, once again, are the working people, employed and unemployed. And it is the resilience and fortitude of often brutalised and exploited workers who organised to become a bulwark against greater deprivations visited upon the poor and dispossessed that May Day traditionally celebrates. Theirs was a long, hard, and often bloody road that, especially given the present economic and social context, needs to be studied and understood by anyone hoping for a better and more democratic world. In Chicago, in May 1886, a peaceful mass rally of workers who dared to dream of a truly democratic future was attacked by police. That gave us May Day as a celebration of courage and fortitude. And like the "Durban Moment" strikes of February and March 1973, which gave rise to the modern South African union movement, that single event had a history that echoes across the years. In Chicago, four activists, two of them journalists, one a printer and the other a carpenter, became the victims of what is widely described as a legal lynching. They were among the organisers of a rally calling for an eight-hour working day to be introduced. They were arrested and sentenced to be hanged. Seconds before they died together on the gallows, journalist August Spies shouted: "The time will come when our silence will be more powerful than the voices you strangle today." That statement reverberated around the world and, in 1890, the "Haymarket martyrs" were honoured by naming 1 May as the day of labour solidarity. There are many echoes from quite recent local history of that travesty in the United States and the events leading up to it. In our part of the world village, it was a largely democratic, worker-led and militant trade union movement that fought against incredible odds to help bring about the transition that we celebrated this week as Freedom Day. Yet the union movement is weaker today and more fragmented, at a time when the reality of a greedy and exploitative minority dominating and profiting from the labour of the majority is, if anything, clearer than a century ago: the overall social and economic circumstances that gave rise to unity among sellers of labour the world are still present. But what has happened over the past century has been the gradual absorption of much of the labour movement into the profit-driven system. With few exceptions, trade unions have, to varying degrees, lost their way; they have become bureaucratic replicants of the very system they were founded to oppose. At the same time, there is the constant call to "go back to basics". Yet the most basic principle — unity of all workers — is still not widely acted on. This principle was summed up in a poem written in 1820 by Percy Bysshe Shelley after troops killed peaceful worker protesters in England in 1819. The pertinent stanza reads: "Rise, like lions after slumber/ In unvanquishable number!/ Shake your chains to earth like dew/ Which in sleep had fallen on you: Ye are many—they are few!" This idea of the democratic unity of the majority of exploited humanity was even more clearly spelled out 28 years later by Karl Marx and Frederich Engels when they provided the slogan: "Workers of all countries unite!" They added: "You have nothing to lose but your chains." Those chains are still very much still in place and May Day is a time to review this reality. For trade unions, it is not a matter of adapt or die, but rather how organised labour can, may or will adapt as finite resources are plundered, mass murders are sanctioned and the planet becomes increasingly polluted in the cause of private profit. It is a grim outlook. But workers are still organised and there are small, but quite strong signs that new, highly democratic, unions are emerging, often from previously unorganised workers. A return to the basic principles of the labour movement is possible, and it is essential for the sake of the future.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store