Hardial Bains

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Hardial Bains
File:Hardial Bains with Enver Hoxa, 1981.jpg
Hardial Bains (left) with Albanian leader Enver Hoxha.
Founder and leader of the CPC (ML)
In office
1970–1997
Preceded by None
Succeeded by Sandra Smith
Personal details
Born Mahilpur in Hoshiarpur district of Punjab state, India.
Died August 24, 1997
Quebec
Nationality Canadian
Political party Communist Party of Canada (Marxist-Leninist)
Other political
affiliations
CPI, Marxist–Leninist Party, USA, Communist Ghadar Party of India
Spouse(s) Sandra Smith
Alma mater University of British Columbia
Occupation Politician

Hardial Bains (Punjabi: ਹਰਦਿਆਲ ਬੈਂਸ) (15 August 1939 – 24 August 1997) was a microbiology student and teacher, primarily known as the founder of a series of left-wing movements and parties foremost of which was the Communist Party of Canada (Marxist–Leninist) (CPC (ML)). Presenting himself as staunchly anti-revisionist and pro-Stalinist, until his death, Bains acted the spokesperson and ideological leader of the CPC (ML) -- known in elections as the Marxist-Leninist Party of Canada. During span of his life, Bains' outlook swung from supporting the Soviet Union under Joseph Stalin, to Mao Zedong's China, then later to Enver Hoxa's Albania. Shortly before he died, and abandoning his previous sharp criticisms of the country, Bains turned to Fidel Castro's Cuba for inspiration. Spending most of his life in Canada, Bains was also politically active in England, Ireland and India.

Life

Born in India into a communist family in the Punjab, Bains became a member of the youth wing of the Communist Party of India (CPI). He was dismayed by what he saw as the revisionism of Nikita Khrushchev following the death of Joseph Stalin. He apparently broke with the party when CPI, during an underground period, supported Khrushchev's criticisms of Stalin.[1]Shortly after, Bains emigrated to Canada and enrolled as a student in Bacteriology at the University of British Columbia, where he was an elected student leader.

In 1963, he helped found the Internationalists,[2] which evolved from a UBC political discussion group into an anti-revisionist organization that supported Mao Zedong's Communist Party of China in the Sino-Soviet split. This organisation (in Canada) became the CPC (ML) with Bains as its founding leader.[2][3]

In 1965, Bains founded the Internationalists in Ireland, while he was working as a microbiologist at Trinity College, Dublin.[4] In 1970, they renamed themselves the Communist Party of Ireland (Marxist–Leninist).[5][6]

In 1967, Bains held a small conference of students in London with the express objective determining the future of the anti-revisionist movement, the "Necessity for Change" conference. While the Irish Communist Organisation disagreed with the other delegates and walked out of the meeting,[7] Bains became known as a leader of the anti-revisionist movement internationally,[8] and assisted in establishing Marxist-Leninist parties around the world.

In addition to founding the CPC (ML) and CPI(ML), Bains as regarded as a major influence on the Revolutionary Communist Party of Britain (Marxist-Leninist), the Communist Party of Trinidad and Tobago, and the Communist Ghadar Party of India.[9] Bains was also responsible for the founding of the Hindustani Ghadar Party (Organisation of Indian Marxist-Leninists Abroad). He held a leading influence in the Marxist-Leninist Party, USA in the 1970s, although it later split from the CPC (ML) and dissolved in 1993. Left publications such as Modern Communism have written articles on this legacy.[10]

Political affiliations

As a young man, Bains was a member of the Communist Party of India, but after the party accepted Nikita Khrushchev's speech, "On the Cult of Personality and Its Consequences", he apparently quit, adopting a pro-Stalinist viewpoint.

Later, following the Sino-Soviet split, Bains' groups and parties held a strident pro-China position from the 1960s and into the 1970s. Bains himself openly identified as Maoist. The CPC (ML) was the first significant Maoist formation in Canada, although it was joined by two other Maoist groups in the mid-1970s and Bains engaged in polemics against these groups as well.

With Mao Zedong's death in 1976 and the subsequent Sino-Albanian split, Bains renounced Maoism. Following the leadership of Enver Hoxha and the Party of Labour of Albania (PLA), he became a prominent spokesperson of the PLA's line internationally, agreeing with the conclusion that numerous communist parties had devolved into "social imperialism" (such as Leonid Brezhnev's USSR, Josip Broz Tito's Yugoslavia, Kim Il-sung's North Korea and Fidel Castro's Cuba), while condemning Chinese revisionism, and Eurocommunism.[11]

After the overturn of socialism in Albania, Bain's again re-appraised his ideological outlook. He visited Cuba and announced he had changed his outlook towards the country and now viewed it as a successful example of socialism. The CPC (ML) also re-appraised its view of North Korea into a positive light. By the end of his life, Bains' writings made fewer and fewer references to anti-revisionism and socialist revolution, and developed the theme of democratic renewal and the self-empowerment of the people.

Death and controversy

After his death, a memorial was erected in the honour of Bains and other CPC (ML) "fallen comrades" in Ottawa's Beechwood Cemetery which is also the national cemetery of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. Poet George Elliot Clarke published a poem titled "Homage to Hardial Bains" in 2000 in the Oyster Boy Review.[12] Bains' legacy is debated today, and he has been criticized posthumously by a number of writers such as Ben Seattle, a US leftist and former supporter (Seattle's article on Leninism.org is entitled In memory of a charlatan).[8]

Bains wrote several books, including Necessity for Change!, Modern Communism, Visiting Cuba, If You Love Your Class and Thinking About the Sixties, and many articles, pamphlets and speeches.

Sandra L. Smith, his widow, also served as leader of the CPC (ML).[13]

NFC thought

Hardial Bains identified his main line of thinking as "Necessity for Change" or NFC thought. Formulated in the early 1960s, NFC thought brought together a variety of Marxist phraseology and addressed some existentialist ideas popular during that time. His primary concern was how to bring about social revolution and the relationship of this process with the individual. "A successful revolution can transform the world in some very definite direction, but whether it will happen, in the final analysis, is still dependent on the world," Bains wrote, arguing that "Unless it is profoundly appreciated that there is a Necessity for Change at each point [in history and the struggle], and theoretical and practical measures are taken to bring about the change, there is no possibility of creating the subjective conditions for revolution."[14]

The recognition of the Necessity for Change, which created those subjective conditions for revolution, would create a new level of consciousness which broke with the anti-consciousness of bourgeois thought. "The [human] brain reflects the sharpening class contradictions in the society and other developments. Either the individual transforms this reflection into social consciousness and becomes part of the human factor/social consciousness or remains part of the anti-human factor/anti-consciousness,"[15] he said, writing that:

The battle cry of The Internationalists was "Change the World," while the battle cry of the capitalist class was "change the individual." The NFC analysis of the "I", of the existence of this "relate or relationship" placed the task of changing the world on a profound social basis. A "relate" or "relationship," if it is to be true to itself, must be objective, independent of everyone and dependent on the world. This relate or relationship must be continuously discovered and rediscovered in the course of struggle. It constitutes the centre around which all other consciousness is placed. [16]

But for Bains individual consciousness alone was not sufficient and needed to be joined with a political party. "The crucial ingredient for victory is the human factor/social consciousness, but this factor cannot exist in a vacuum. This factor finds its highest expression in an organisation, which is strengthened on an on-going basis with the sound foundation of a new, modern and revolutionary culture in ideological and social forms,"[17] he wrote, adding that "A Communist Party, if it is to realise its tasks in a mature, professional and on-going manner, must develop revolutionary culture in ideological form, on the one hand, and the revolutionisation of culture in social form, on the other." [18]

Bains strongly decried what her termed revisionist parties. "Revisionists and opportunists of various kinds," he wrote, "present the bourgeois social forms as the ideal motivating humanity [...] Besides fighting for "a bigger slice of the pie" and for job security which this system can never provide, these people, as dogmatists and fanatics, oppose everyone fighting for social revolution."[19] Instead, "The act of joining CPC(M-L) will itself be a great leap forward for the creation of a new and affirmed humanity, in which every act of human beings becomes another act for that affirmation, the measure of what is truly human."[20] During his time as leader, the CPC (ML) swung from actively supporting Maoist China, to denouncing Maoism and embracing Enver Hoxha's Albania and later, after the over-turn of socialism in that country, a more muted support of North Korea and Cuba.

Bains remained true, however, to his pro-Stalinist orientation, asserting in the late 1980s that "They say that Stalin had a plan to conquer the world. Stalin was alive until 1953. There is not one single country in the world which was occupied by the Soviet Union while Stalin was alive.[21]"

Publications

  • Hardial Bains. The Question is Really One of Word and Deed (pamphlet), Progressive Cultural Association, 1997. ISBN 978-0-9530083-0-8.
  • Hardial Bains. The Call of the Martyrs: On the Crisis in India and the Present Situation in the Punjab. National Publications Centre, 1985. ISBN 978-0-88803-133-4.
  • Hardial Bains. Modern Communism (pamphlet), Communist Party of Canada (Marxist-Leninist), reprinted 1996. ISBN 0-920410-03-0, ISBN 978-0-920410-03-5.
  • Hardial Bains. Communism 1989-1991, Ideological Studies Centre, 1991.
  • Hardial Bains. Necessity for Change! The Dialectic Lives! (pamphlet), The Internationalists, 1967. Reprinted by Communist Party of Canada (Marxist-Leninist), 1998.

References

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  3. Isitt, Benjamin. Militant minority: British Columbia workers and the rise of a New Left, 1948-1972 University of Toronto Press, 2011 ISBN 1-4426-1105-7, (p.123).
  4. Trinity Tales: Trinity College Dublin in the Sixties edited by Sebastian Balfour, Laurie Howes, Michael De Larrabeiti and Anthony Weale. Lilliput Press,2009. (p. 265-66)
  5. Maoism in the Developed World by Robert Jackson Alexander. Greenwood Publishing Group, 2001, ISBN 0-275-96148-6, (p.103)
  6. Red Patriot, Vol.2, no.9, 6 July 1970
  7. Red Patriot magazine (Ireland), July 19th, 1975.
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  14. http://cpcml.ca/Tmlw2012/W42033.HTM#4
  15. http://cpcml.ca/Tmlw2012/W42033.HTM#4
  16. http://cpcml.ca/Tmlw2012/W42033.HTM#4
  17. http://cpcml.ca/Tmlw2012/W42033.HTM#4
  18. http://cpcml.ca/Tmlw2012/W42033.HTM#4
  19. http://cpcml.ca/Tmlw2012/W42033.HTM#4
  20. http://www.cpcml.ca/Leaders/HardialBains.html
  21. http://www.anti-imperialist.org/causes-and-lessons-of-second-world-war-tw_7-8-11.htm

External links

Preceded by
none
Communist Party of Canada (Marxist-Leninist) leader
1970-1997
Succeeded by
Sandra L. Smith