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Marx-Lenin-Luxemburg-Front Marx-Lenin-Luxemburg-front | |
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Abbreviation | MLL-front |
Leader | Henk Sneevliet |
Founded | 1940 |
Dissolved | April 12, 1942 |
Preceded by | Revolutionary Socialist Workers' Party |
Succeeded by | Committee of Revolutionary Marxists Communist League Spartacus |
Newspaper | Spartacus |
Membership (1941) | 500 |
Ideology | Left communism Anti-fascism |
Political position | Far-left |
Part of a series on |
Left communism |
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The Marx-Lenin-Luxemburg-Front was a resistance movement founded by Henk Sneevliet, Willem Dolleman and Abraham Menist, some months after the German invasion of the Netherlands on 10 May 1940. It lasted until April 1942, when the entire leadership was arrested by the Germans, who executed them on 12 April of the same year.
The Marx-Lenin-Luxemburg-Front, or MLL-Front, was the clandestine successor to Sneevliet's political party, the Revolutionair-Socialistische Arbeiderspartij (RSAP), which had been disbanded immediately after the German invasion, when Sneevliet had to go into hiding to avoid arrest.
The MLL-Front was largely active as a propaganda group and had its own magazine, Spartacus, which had a printrun of 5,000 copies and appeared bi-weekly. It was particularly active against the anti-Jewish measures taken by the Nazis and participated in the 1941 February strike against these measures.
With the arrest and execution of its leadership in April 1942, the MLL-front split into two on political differences, into the Comité van Revolutionaire Marxisten (Committee of Revolutionary Marxists) and the Communistenbond Spartacus (Communist League Spartacus). These were far less influential than the MLL-Front was.
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