Communist League of West Germany


The Communist League of West Germany was a Maoist organization in West Germany which existed from 1973 until 1985. The KBW contested the general elections in 1976 and 1980 in West Germany and was rated as the strongest of the German Maoist parties from 1974 until 1981. After 1982 the KBW was virtually inactive and was finally dissolved completely in 1985.

History

The KBW was formed at a conference held in Bremen in June 1973 as a fusion of various local communist groups from Heidelberg, Bremen, Göttingen, Freiburg etc. At its inaugural conference the KBW adopted a programme advocating the revolutionary overthrow of capitalism and the bourgeois state and the establishment of the dictatorship of the proletariat in order to achieve a classless society and communism. In its programme the KBW demanded the arming of the people.
One of the main efforts of the KBW was the struggle against the Bundeswehr. It organized youth camps dedicated to ideological and practical training for the revolutionary struggle. Members of the KBW participated in violent demonstrations against nuclear power plants in West Germany.
On September 21, 1975 the KBW and his Committees against § 218 organized a demonstration of 25,000 people in Bonn against the German law prohibiting abortion.
The KBW contested the general elections in 1976 and 1980 and several state and local elections. The organization obtained 20,018 votes or 0,1% in the 1976 elections. It won one seat in the Heidelberg city council in 1975 which was lost later. Strongholds of the KBW were university towns.
The KBW headquarters moved from Mannheim to Frankfurt am Main in April 1977. When the Minister-President of Lower Saxony, Ernst Albrecht, proposed a ban on three maoist groups in 1977, KBW, the maoist Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands and the Communist Party of Germany/Marxist-Leninist demonstrated together in Bonn with about 16,000 supporters.
The Zimbabwe African National Union was supported in its armed struggle by contributions from the KBW. ZANU politicians Ndabaningi Sithole, Robert Mugabe and Edgar Tekere visited West Germany several times at invitation of the KBW.
The organization split in the summer of 1980 when about a quarter of the membership formed the League of West German Communists , which continued to work on the basis of the KBW programme of 1973.
In 1982 the KBW abandoned its objective of establishing the dictatorship of the proletariat and started to infiltrate The Greens.
The official weekly
KVZ and the theoretical organ KuK ceased publication at the end of 1982. Their successor, the monthly Kommune'' was not a KBW magazine anymore.

Structure

The organizational principle of the KBW was democratic centralism.
Since 1977 the organization was divided into three regional and 40 district units. It had in the beginning a 13-member Central Committee and a five-member Standing Committee.
The KBW had 900 members in 1973 and about 5,000 in 1977. Membership declined later due to the high demands the party made on their members, lack of success and the dramatic changes in the politics of the People's Republic of China.
Secretary of the Central Committee's Standing Committee from 1973 until 1982 was Joscha Schmierer.

Activity

For a KBW activist a normal week looked as follows: Monday from 5.30am-7.30am the selling of the weekly Communist Peoples Newspaper in front of a factory gate or at the railway station, followed by a branch meeting on Monday evening. Tuesday started early again with KVZ sales, as did Wednesday. On Wednesday evening there was usually a training course based on an article from the theoretical organ "Communism and Class Struggle". On Saturday there was various public activity, and the whole of Sunday was devoted to the study of Marxist-Leninist classics. On free afternoons leaflets were distributed and more extensive training courses took place.

Electoral work

The KBW also took part in elections. In general elections, the KBW only got around 0.1 percent of the votes. More important was the actual number of people voting for the KBW. This gave a relative good indication of how many people of the time actually approved of the violent overthrow of the capitalist system. Other smaller revolutionary parties also got about 25,000 votes at this time.
The KBW had its biggest success in the communal elections of Baden-Württemberg in April 1975, when Helga Rosenbaum was voted onto the Heidelberg city council and used this as a platform to call for the violent overthrow of the Federal Republic. On September 16, 1976 she was expelled from this body by a vote of the majority parties.

Finances

Contrary to most political parties, KBW had no major financial problems, with KVZ and other publications giving the party a healthy income. Another important factor was financial contributions from party members. There were no set party dues as such, rather, in each cell it was specified, what the individual member had to pay. Members in employment generally contributed one-third of their income. Added to that were the various donations that came in. Individual members brought in entire fortunes and inheritances. In the mid-1970s annual contributions and donations amounted to around 5 million DM and the income from the sales of the various publications was a further 2 million DM.

Orientation

The KBW subscribed to the ideas of Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, Vladimir Lenin, Joseph Stalin and Mao Zedong, whose writings were distributed through KBW bookshops. It sided with the politics of the Communist Party of China until 1980. Condolences and greetings of KBW secretary Hans-Gerhart "Joscha" Schmierer were published frequently since 1976 in the Peking Review.'' It sent delegations to China several times and to the Democratic Kampuchea of Pol Pot in late 1978.

Party slogan

Vorwärts im Kampf für die Rechte der Arbeiterklasse und des Volkes - Vorwärts im Kampf für den Sieg des Sozialismus

Affiliated organizations