| I am not a fan of the Communist political system. But I
also admit that I not a dedicated fan of the philosophy of Capitalism
either.
Communism in Canada is a late 19th and early 20th century
thing. That is not to say that Communists do not still offer up
their ideas in Canada today, they are just not as influential as in the
early part of the 20th century.
Why, you may ask, were they influential in the early 20th
century. Welcome to the Depression Era of Canada.
Most people will tell you that the Depression started in Canada on
October 29, 1929 when the stock market collapsed under a credit
crunch. A day known now as Black Tuesday. However there was
no one event which precipitated this unprecedented period of squalor,
unemployment and untold hardship which lasted for a full decade.
During this decade, men were forced into concentration camps (referred
to by governments as "Relief Camps") where they worked for starvation
wages doing meaningless labour in conditions that would get you a call
from the Humane Society if you treated a dog the same way. It was
a decade when the sight of a policeman beating a man or woman with a
night stick would be commonplace. It was a time when, if you had
no money because you had no job or job prospect, you were in
contravention of the Criminal Code - you were a vagrant. It was
also a time when the governments, federal, provincial and municipal,
abrogated their responsibilities to Canadians by not leading with
compassion but rather reacting with malice.
Capitalism was breaking down and into that vacuum stepped Tim Buck,
Canada's Little Commie.
Tim Buck was born in 1891 in Beccles, England. He was described
in Pierre Burton's
book on the Depression as, "short, wiry, quiet spoken, clean shaven
and well read." "(He)... looked more like a shoe
salesman than the cartoon stereotype of a bearded, bomb-throwing Bolshevik."
He was working as a machinist's apprentice when he learned about and
became a devout socialist. In 1910 he emigrated to Canada because
the steamship fare was cheaper to here than to Australia.
In 1921, following a career of as a strong and activist union member,
he helped for the Communist Party of Canada (CPC), which he would lead
from 1930 until he died in 1973.
During the First World War the government of Canada enacted an
amendment to the Criminal Code which made it a crime to subvert the
government of Canada. It was known as Section 98. In 1929
they amended the section to make it illegal to belong to any group that
"may" subvert the will of the government. In other words
if you belonged to a group that is peaceable and not interested in
"taking over" the country, the Government of Canada, through
the amended Section 98, could declare that you may one day try that and
throw you in jail. All you had to do is say the wrong words, in
the opinion of the government, and it was off to the slammer for you.
I love democracy at work!
By the
summer of 1929 in Canada, police surveillance and harassment of
Communists was giving way to public beatings. A riot in Queen’s
Park in Toronto, provoked by the police, in the summer of 1929 was the
beginning. By 1931, as the Depression deepened, more and more Canadians
were beginning to listen to what Communists were saying.
Something
had to be done to help the millions who were suffering.
The CPC
offered a simple program: the establishment of non-contributory state
run unemployment insurance; a seven hour work day; and a national
minimum wage of $25 a week. Petitions in support of these proposals were
widely circulated.
In June
1931, five members of Montreal’s CPC were sentenced to a year of hard
labour following their conviction on a charge of sedition. They were
guilty of having urged 300 unemployed workers to organize and demand
that the authorities relieve their hardship. The meeting was broken up
by 150 police.
Two
months later, on August 11, 1931, the Communist Party’s offices in
Toronto were raided; Buck and seven colleagues were arrested. Although
Buck and the CPC had been operating in the open for years, they were now
seen as a threat that needed to be suppressed.
The
trial took place in November 1931. The crown’s chief witness was John
Leopold, a five foot tall RCMP officer, who’d been an undercover
member of the CPC from 1921 to 1928, when he’d been expelled. Leopold
testified that the Communists planned the overthrow of the existing
order through the use of force. Buck argued that there had never
been any violence as a result of the activities of the CPC. Whatever
violence there had been had been instigated by the authorities. In a
closing three-hour speech in his defense he said, “When we are charged
with teaching or advocating force or violence, we point out that if the
workers are learning anything about ‘force or violence’ these days,
they are not learning from us. We do not consider it necessary to teach
or advocate the use of ‘force or violence.’ We do not believe that
governments, systems of society, or states are overthrown by a
conspiracy — but rather by undeniable forces.”
Buck
and his companions were found guilty of a "crime" and
sentenced to hard labour at Kingston Penitentiary.
In
1932, a few months after Buck was incarcerated, a riot broke out at the
Penitentiary. Buck was not involved and he did not budge from his
cell during the riot. While he sat and listened to the maelstrom
that ensued outside, eight shots rang out and eight bullets entered his
cell via the window and barely missed Buck. Was it
collateral fire or was Buck being targeted?
The
authorities denied targeting Buck but I wonder...?
In
fact, in late 1933 an embarrassed Hugh Guthrie, Minister of Justice,
admitted in the House of Commons that shots had
in fact been fired into Buck’s cell — but just “to frighten
him.”
In 1934
Buck was freed from prison and took up his leadership of the CPC.
From
1929 to 1939, Canada was in the grips of the Depression. Over 3.5
million people were unemployed. Hundreds of thousands of people
moved about the country by riding the rails. Hundreds of thousands
more worked for peanuts in the Relief Camps. Farmers lost
everything including their homes and farms when a drought which began in
1928 deepened and no rain fell on the farms of southern Canada for
almost 11 years.
Canadians
needed leadership and its governments offered them nothing.
The
leadership vacuum was filled by people like Tim Buck and the CPC.
Other organizations that were spawned during this time were: the CCF
party which later became the New Democratic Party; and the Social Credit
governments of Aberhart and Manning which ruled Alberta for 36 years.
Tim
Buck was a pivotal person in the history of Canada. During the
Depression of the 1930's he saw injustice and tried to address it with
his communist ideals. The governments at the time saw Buck as a
subversive and, in their fear, tried to undermine his efforts.
Who is
to say that Buck was wrong.
I urge
readers of Mysteries of Canada to read more about Tim Buck and the
stories of the Depression Years.
30/10/2007
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