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NEWS & LETTERS, July 2002 

Iranian labor reborn on May Day

Toronto—During the last year, Iran has been the scene of hundreds of large-scale workers' demonstrations, of which nearly 250 were officially reported. Some of these demonstrations became battles with guards and government security forces. These actions underlay the conference of Iranian labor activists and scholars from within Iran and abroad who held a conference in Toronto, Canada on June 2 and 3.

In 2002 Iranian workers held the first independent May Day celebrations since the early 1980s. These celebrations in various cities were independent of both the government and its so-called workers' organizations.

Those at the conference who argued that the main obstacle to the creation of an independent labor movement was the lack of political freedom and the oppressive Islamic government included members of the Workers Socialist Unity, Iranian Worker-Communist Party and Labor Left Unity which has broken from them, International Alliance in Support of Workers in Iran and Left Block, as well as independents. Another group argued that the main obstacle was a backward economy, and therefore labor's main task for now is to work for the industrialization of the economy.

An Iranian woman worker in Canada spoke on women's working conditions in Iran's factories where she had worked. Women in the factory suffered not only from the division of labor but also from gender discrimination. When the Islamic regime tried to separate the women's section from men in the workplace, women workers rejected separation, but male workers in the factory backed it. Men commented that this separation was good for the honor of women workers.

She said women who wanted to live independent of parents would face problems even renting apartments. Many single women have to live on prostitution or as temporary wives. Women are under a microscope.

One speaker from the Iranian journal ANDISHAH-I JAMI’A (SOCIETY’A THOUGHT) spoke about the establishment of the first independent Iranian workers' unions (Itahadiah-i Kargari) this May Day as a turning point for workers’ independent organizations and the workers' movement. He spoke of a revolt of unemployed workers, now five million, against capital and against all moralities which limit personal relations.

Morteza Mohit, the translator of István Mészáros's BEYOND CAPITAL and the author of IN DEFENSE OF MARX, emphasized the importance of establishing bourgeois democracy. A leading theoretician of Workers’ Socialist Unity argued that Iranian reformists are trying to limit Iran's democratic movements to formal procedures of democracy. Both an oil worker and an ex-textile worker argued that Iran is "already an industrialized country," against advocates of more capitalist development.

I asked what kind of development we were talking about, development of capital or human development? One printshop worker argued that unions should only defend workers' economic demands. A labor scholar from Germany responded that unions are living phenomena that we cannot confine to economic demands.

Marx defended unions but also wrote of workers' struggles against this system and the abolition of the whole capitalist system. One speaker cited Marx’s letter to Arnold Ruge and his defense of the Silesian workers' strike in 1844, which showed that the historical role of workers was for political and human freedom.

Nasser Saidi, editor of PAZHUHASH-I KARGARI (LABOR RESEARCH), focused on the need for the independence of workers' organizations from the government as well as right or left political parties. He argued that political awareness comes from workers' own struggles and not from outside, but it is important that workers and intellectuals work together.

A heated debate followed on what kind of workers' independent organization there should be. What kinds of relations should there be between political parties and workers' organization? Is this a continuation of the past or does it mean new relations? One speaker argued that at a time when capitalist ideologues and even some who used to consider themselves leftists talk about "the death of Marxism," it is crucial to show Marxist views as key to the success of workers' movements.

I spoke about the perspectives of Marxist-Humanists and Anjoman Azadi on these issues. I discussed the publication THE REVOLUTIONARY JOURNALISM OF FELIX MARTIN (ISAAC WOODS): WORKER-THEORETICIAN and Felix Martin's emphasis on the distinction that Marx drew between forced labor, which is what capitalism is, and creative human labor.                  

—Ali Reza

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