📄 Extracted Text (1,074 words)
guardian May I. 2012
May Day is not about maypoles: the
history of international workers' day
.erect the Morris dancers May finv's rents arc in the finht ter '...,orkrrs' rirthts and it has
PI ute>ters Ill tire be>liile )1'Utile in ren> for the traditional May Day march in 2002.
Richard Seymour
If you see a history of May Day in the newspapers this year, it is most likely to recount the mystical,
medieval origins of a pagan fertility festival. And though you may never have seen a maypole in your life,
you will be assured that a ribboned piece of birchwood is the sign and sanction of May Day.
Yet this has little to do with the reason that 1 May is celebrated in Britain, or why it is an international
holiday, or why the Occupy movement is planning "global disruption" today. May Day is international
workers day. As such, it is — in the words of Eric Hobsbawm — "the only unquestionable dent made by a
secular movement in the Christian or any other official calendar". And its past is more rowdy than is
suggested by the imagery of Morris dancers serenely waving hankies and bells around.
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1889-90
Haymarket Martyrs—Origin of International Workers Day
Website: http://www.voutube.com/watch?feature=player embedded&v= OQxncb2ihQ#!
The origin of our present holiday lies in the fight for an eight-
hour working day, in which cause the leaders of the socialist
Second International called for an international day of protest
to be held at the beginning of May 1890. They did so just as
the American Federation of Labour was planning its own
demonstration on the same date. The UK protest actually
took place on a Sunday, and in London alone attracted
300,000 protesters to Hyde Park.
1e Haymarket Tragedy
1890-1900
May Day festivities at National Park Seminary in Maryland, 1907.
Initially, May Day was intended to be a one-off protest, and in some ways quite a solemn affair. But it
persisted amid a flourishing of trade unionism. The symbolism of the workers' Easter, of rebirth and
renewal, dramatised this experience of revival. And it developed a carnivalesque aspect. May Day did
not merely enact internationalism and working class solidarity; it celebrated these things with the
familiar paraphernalia of badges, flags, art, sporting events and heavy drinking.
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Scottish Labour leader Heir Hardie addresses a tailors' rally on May Day in Hyde Park in 1912
The leaderships of Europe's growing socialist parties were often worried by the threat of repression
coming from governments and businesses, and attempted to avoid excessively confrontational
demonstrations. But such domesticating tendencies were counteracted by the severity of the social
crisis sweeping Europe and the upheavals it produced. Even during the first world war, when protest
was punishable by imprisonment and hard labour, May Day demonstrations were often flashpoints of
anti-war struggle. It was at such a rally that Karl Liebnecht denounced the war before 10,000 striking
workers at the Potsdamer Platz on 1st May 1916. In Britain, following the arrest of the Scottish socialist
John MacLean for sedition in 1918, Glasgow workers embarked on a mass May Day strike and protest.
1918-45
European governments alternately preferred
repression or co-option of May Day after the first
world war. The traditional parties of the right
tended to prefer repression, or the threat of
repression. For them, regarding the jubilant May
Days in revolutionary Russia with unease, the
whole thing stank of treason. Fascist parties had a
more ambivalent attitude, largely because unlike
the traditional right they needed the support of a
Franco meets Adolf . parties had a layer of workers. The Third Reich declared 1 May a
more ambivalent attitude, largely because unlike the "national workers' day" in 1933. But the original
traditional right they needed the support of a layer of
workers.
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meaning of May Day reappeared at the darkest moments of the Nazi era, as when it was celebrated in
the Warsaw ghetto which launched an uprising against the regime. Fascist Italy abolished May Day,
expunging the radical working class traditions it embodied, but it also introduced a labour holiday on 21
April. Franco, who arguably waged the most vicious military struggle against the left in Spain, and who
wiped out 200,000 in executions and concentration camps in the five years after his victory, simply
outlawed May Day. It was not celebrated again until his downfall in 1975.
1945-2000
' 43 Defend
•t h e • In the postwar period, May Day was generally tolerated
NUM,? NUM and in some cases even recognised as a public holiday. In
the UK, 1 May was made a bank holiday by the Labour
government in 1978. In some cases, this was part of a
process in which organised labour was co-opted,
resulting in the holiday becoming an observed ritual and
little more. But it continued to inspire astonishing
upheavals — May Day protests played a significant role in
during the Portuguese revolution of 1974, as well as in the
periods of turbulence, such as during the miners*
uprisings against apartheid in the 1980s. And even in less
strike.
dramatic circumstances, it assumed greater importance during periods of turbulence, such as during the
miners' strike.
2000-2012
May Day returned as a militant, if convivial,
protest in the UK in 2000, due to the
convergence of a broad coalition of activists
under the rubric of anticapitalism. The
combination of seriousness with playful
exuberance was arguably in the best traditions
of May Day, even if some statues were briefly
defiled. The response of police, which was to
develop and refine the technique of "kettling"
over a number of years, was traditional in a
less august sense.
The May Day riots in 2000.
The Tories were reported last year to be
considering scrapping May Day. The associations with a moribund labourism — or worse with
anticapitalist tumult — are hardly obliging in the effort to cultivate a business-and-shopping facade for
Brit-town. Yet it would be a futile gesture on their part. This impression on the international calendar
was made by workers without the blessing of governments, and the evidence of history suggests that it
can survive far worse interdictions. The fact that Occupy has now selected 1 May as the moment for
another offensive attests to the enduring relevance of May Day as international workers' day.
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