Norman Penner - A life for the struggle
by Paul Kellogg
PolyconAnalysis, May 7, 2009
May 3, close to 200 people crowded into Glendon Hall in Toronto to pay
tribute to the life and work of Norman Penner, who sadly passed away
April 16 at the age of 88.[1] There could not have been a more
appropriate month for such an event. May is after all, the month where
every year we celebrate May 1, International Workers' Day. It is also
the month where the great Winnipeg General Strike began, 90 years ago, a
strike that remains the defining moment of the Canadian working class
movement, and a strike which was brought back to life for a new
generation, in large part through the efforts of Norman Penner. For this
alone, Penner's life would be worthy of commemoration. We were reminded
May 3 that there was so much more - a life genuinely lived for the
struggle.
Penner's father, Jacob Penner, had been a leading socialist in his own
right, and as one of the founders of the Social Democratic Party of
Canada, an opponent of conscription during the slaughter of World War I.
When the Winnipeg General Strike erupted in 1919, Penner was one of the
strike leaders.[2]
Norman - born into a family of the left - carried on the tradition from
a very early age. We heard, at the memorial, of his 1930's activism as a
teenager — speaking to mass audiences,
campaigning in defence of among others, his father, when the city of
Winnipeg was trying to strip the now communist Jacob Penner, of his
elected seat on Winnipeg's city council.
Norman himself would become a leading member of the party. But he would
not let organizational loyalty trump principles. When the supposedly
"communist" Russian tanks moved in to crush the workers' uprising in
Hungary in 1956 — the same year that Russian
leader Nikita Khrushchev exposed the crimes of Joseph Stalin to a
stunned international left - Penner resigned the Communist Party, even
though that meant leaving behind his employer in a decade of intense
anti-communism.
He found a way to make a living as probably the only Marxist electric
heating salesman in Canada. In the mid-1960s, he set out on a university
career, acquiring his degrees, and from 1972 until his retirement 24
years later, teaching in the Political Science department at Glendon
College, part of York University in Toronto.
It was at Glendon as a professor, that Penner had his biggest impact. In
1973, he edited a riveting book on the Winnipeg General Strike, bringing
back to life, in the words of the strikers themselves, that defining
moment in Canadian labour history. In 1977 he wrote a careful and
balanced assessment of the Canadian Left, that remains indispensable
reading for any who aspire to fight for social change in this country.
Perhaps more important than his books, however, were his classes, where
with patience and intelligence — and humour
— he would genuinely engage with young people
from a new generation, tell them about the lessons from the past, and
most importantly, listen to the new insights that every new generation
brings to the social movements.
It is this latter quality that set Penner apart from many in his
generation - the capacity to listen. While many from the old left,
shaped by the Russian Revolution and the Great Depression, were too
often suspicious of the long-haired radicals of the 1960s and 1970s,
Penner found real joy in their company. He would have loved the fact
that in Toronto, the day before his memorial, young radicals of this
generation, members of No One Is Illegal, had led a spirited May Day
march through the streets of the city, taking over Yonge Street for a
period, draping banners off the Eaton Centre, and then joining up with
members of the Tamil Community, demonstrating against the terrible
genocide underway in their homeland. He would have known that today
— as in 1919, as in the 1930s, as in the 1960s
— the future of the social movements is in the
hands of the impatient youth, much more than it is in the tidy offices
of this or that union or party bureaucracy.
His grandson, Dylan Penner
— himself an
anti-war activist in the tradition of Norman and Jacob
— in one of many moving tributes given by
family and friends, gave us all the proper framework in which to
remember the life of this remarkable man. In the words of Industrial
Worker of the World activist and songwriter Joe Hill — "don't mourn, organize."[3]
Books by Norman Penner, available from online booksellers
- Winnipeg 1919: The Strikers' Own History of the Winnipeg General Strike
(1973)
- The Canadian Left: A critical analysis (1977)
- From Protest to
Power: Social Democracy in Canada 1900-Present(1992)
- Canadian communism:
The Stalin years and beyond (1988)
References
[1] See
Professor Emeritus Norman Penner was a Glendon mainstay, YFILE,
April 24, 2009 and "Norman Penner," The Toronto Star, April 25, 2009
[2] There is some information about Jacob Penner on wikipedia. His
story, and the story of his wife Rose Penner, has been documented on
video (Cathy Gulkin,
A
Glowing Dream: The Story of Jacob & Rose Penner, Episode 33, A
Scattering of Seeds: The Creation of Canada, Season III, White Pine
Pictures, 1999)
[3] See
Joe Hill, (1879-1915), AFL-CIO: America's Union Movement; and
The Joe Hill Project
© 2009 Paul Kellogg
Copyright South Branch Publishing. All
Rights Reserved.
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