Founded | 1931 2022 (officially reconstituted) | (originally)
---|---|
Type | Student political society |
Location | |
Website | https://theoctober.club/ |
The October Club is an independent communist organisation made up of students at University of Oxford, founded in December 1931. [1] [2]
Its stated aim is to 'be a political home for radical students at the university and channel enthusiasm into building a long-term base of student-worker-community power at Oxford'. Alongside communism, it also stresses its commitment to abolition, trans-liberatory feminism, and anti-imperialism.
Founded with the object of ‘the study of communism in its world social, economic and cultural aspects’, [1] within its first year it gained some 300 members [1] out of a total population of approximately 5000 [3] [4] undergraduates.
Amongst its founders were Noel Carritt, [5] Frank Meyer [6] and Dick Freeman. [7] Key early members were drawn from the university's small population of Indian students such as Sajjad Zaheer, [8] B.P.L. Bedi [6] and C.S. Subramanyam, [9] who would go onto play notable roles in Indian radical politics (along with fellow Club member Freda Bedi). [6]
Initially, the Club was highly critical of the British Communist Party, but by the Spring of 1932, the Club's core activists (approximately ten) had joined the party. [6]
According to some contemporaries, it was largely a discussion group, attracting speakers such as H. G. Wells, Bernard Shaw, Ivor Montagu, and Shapurji Saklatvala. [1] However, the Club did take part in a number of political actions including organising a delegation to meet hunger marchers passing through Oxford on their journey from Lancashire to London, and participating in violent protests in 1933 against the rise of fascism in Oxford, both in the university and the city. [1] [10]
Such was the violence of this period, that, in 1933, communist and socialist students from Ruskin College founded the anti-fascist Red Shirts and volunteered to act as stewards to defend events held by the October Club. [11] Nonetheless, by the autumn of 1993, the Club was the largest student organisation at the university. [10]
Later in 1933, the Club was banned by the university, ostensibly for its criticism of the Officers' Training Corps, leading to student protests against the decision. [12] The Club remained independently active until 1935, when it was officially dissolved itself into the Labour Club, forming a 'popular front'. [3] [4]
In Trinity Term 2022, the Club officially re-formed and was recognised by the Student Union with the stated aim to 'be a political home for radical students at the university and channel enthusiasm into building a long-term base of student-worker-community power at Oxford'. [2]
Upon its refounding, it had no affiliation with any national communist or socialist organisation. [2]
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Noel Carritt (1910–1992) was a British communist activist, teacher, and volunteer for the International Brigades. He was born into the Carritt family, known for their Marxist and anti-fascist politics which heavily influenced him. As a young man, he saved German Jewish activist Liesel Carritt from being deported to Nazi Germany by agreeing to enter into a marriage of convenience.
Liesel Carritt was a German teacher, translator, refugee, and later a communist revolutionary who fought against fascism alongside the International Brigades during the Spanish Civil War. As a teenager, Liesel and her German-Jewish family fled the Nazis and came to Oxford, England, where local people rescued them by providing them with the necessary financial security to ensure that the British government would not deport them back into the hands of the Nazis. Her father was the former senior editor of Weimar Germany's main liberal newspaper, the Frankfurter Zeitung.
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