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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The United Front Against Fascism (UFAF) was an anti-fascist conference organized by the Black Panther Party and held in Oakland, California, from July 18 to 21, 1969.[1]
The May 31, 1969 issue of The Black Panther called for a "Revolutionary Conference for a United Front Against Fascism," to be held in Oakland in July of that year.[2] The announcement drew links between the killing of James Rector and the imprisonment of Huey Newton, and outlined the purpose of the conference: it would develop a political program representing the "poor, black, oppressed workers and people of America", involving strategies for community control of policing, the release of political prisoners, the expulsion of the military from college and university campuses, and community self-defense.[2]
Around 5,000 people responded to the call, including members of the Communist Party USA,[3] the Peace and Freedom Party,[4] the Progressive Labor Party,[3][4] the Red Guard Party,[4] the Southern Christian Leadership Conference,[3] Students for a Democratic Society (SDS),[3][4][5] the Third World Liberation Front,[3][4] the Young Lords,[3][4] the Young Patriots Organization,[3][4] the Young Socialist Alliance[4] and various groups associated with the women's liberation movement.[4] Events took place in the Oakland Auditorium and DeFremery Park.[4] Delegates included Asian Americans, Latinos and other people of color, but the majority in attendance were white.[4] Some members of the factionalized Students for a Democratic Society were ejected from the auditorium for "disruptive behavior," and the following day distributed pamphlets which accused organizers of excluding them.[5]
Speeches were given on the first day of the congress. The second day was devoted to workshops on issues around fascism, gender, workers and students, political prisoners, health, religion, state repression of political dissent and policing.[3] Speakers included Bob Avakian[5] and Jeff Jones[6] of SDS; Elaine Brown, who presented a letter from Ericka Huggins who was at that time incarcerated;[6] the politician Ron Dellums;[6] and the lawyers Charles Garry[7] and William Kunstler,[6] the latter of whom discussed the 1967 Plainfield, New Jersey riots and argued for the legality and necessity of defensive violence.[8] Following the congress the National Committees to Combat Fascism, a national network that sought community control of police forces, was established.[3][9]
In 2017 the historian Robyn C. Spencer connected the UFAF to contemporary antifascism in the United States, and argued that
The history of the UFAF demonstrates that discussions about fascism in the US are nothing new. It shifts the discussion of fascism away from an American exceptionalist terrain where the US is compared with Europe and government structures or despotic leaders are analyzed and instead demonstrates the value of unearthing manifestations of fascism in the lived experiences of Black people in the US.[3]
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