Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Foreword: Plotting the Anti-Colonial Transnational
- 1 The League Against Imperialism: Lives and Afterlives
- 2 Forging a Proto-Third World? Latin America and the League Against Imperialism
- 3 An Independent Path: Algerian Nationalists and the League Against Imperialism
- 4 “Long Live the Revolutionary Alliance Against Imperialism”: Interwar Anti-Imperialism and the Arab Levant
- 5 China, Anti-imperialist Leagues, and the Comintern: Visions, Networks and Cadres
- 6 “We will fight with our lives for the equal rights of all peoples”: Willi Münzenberg, the League Against Imperialism, and the Comintern
- 7 British Passport Restrictions, the League Against Imperialism, and the Problem of Liberal Democracy
- 8 No More Slaves! Lamine Senghor, Black Internationalism and the League Against Imperialism
- 9 Unfreedom and Its Opposite: Towards an Intellectual History of the League Against Imperialism
- 10 An Anti-Imperialist “Echo” in India
- 11 Two Leagues, One Front? The India League and the League Against Imperialism in the British Left, 1927–1937
- 12 Herald of a Failed Revolt: Mohammad Hatta in Brussels, 1927
- 13 The Leninist Moment in South Africa
- 14 Towards Afro-Asia? Continuities and Change in Indian Anti-Imperialist Regionalism, 1927–1957
- 15 Institutionalizing Postcolonial Internationalism: The Apparatus of the Third World Project
- Afterword: the Zigzag of the Global in the Histories of the League Against Imperialism
- Index
3 - An Independent Path: Algerian Nationalists and the League Against Imperialism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 January 2025
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Foreword: Plotting the Anti-Colonial Transnational
- 1 The League Against Imperialism: Lives and Afterlives
- 2 Forging a Proto-Third World? Latin America and the League Against Imperialism
- 3 An Independent Path: Algerian Nationalists and the League Against Imperialism
- 4 “Long Live the Revolutionary Alliance Against Imperialism”: Interwar Anti-Imperialism and the Arab Levant
- 5 China, Anti-imperialist Leagues, and the Comintern: Visions, Networks and Cadres
- 6 “We will fight with our lives for the equal rights of all peoples”: Willi Münzenberg, the League Against Imperialism, and the Comintern
- 7 British Passport Restrictions, the League Against Imperialism, and the Problem of Liberal Democracy
- 8 No More Slaves! Lamine Senghor, Black Internationalism and the League Against Imperialism
- 9 Unfreedom and Its Opposite: Towards an Intellectual History of the League Against Imperialism
- 10 An Anti-Imperialist “Echo” in India
- 11 Two Leagues, One Front? The India League and the League Against Imperialism in the British Left, 1927–1937
- 12 Herald of a Failed Revolt: Mohammad Hatta in Brussels, 1927
- 13 The Leninist Moment in South Africa
- 14 Towards Afro-Asia? Continuities and Change in Indian Anti-Imperialist Regionalism, 1927–1957
- 15 Institutionalizing Postcolonial Internationalism: The Apparatus of the Third World Project
- Afterword: the Zigzag of the Global in the Histories of the League Against Imperialism
- Index
Summary
From the very outset, Algerian nationalists’ enthusiasm for global antiimperialism was tempered with a healthy scepticism. On his arrival at the 1927 Anti-Imperialist Congress, the young Algerian nationalist Messali Hadj expressed consternation at the opulent surroundings in which the leading lights of anticolonialism would be debating the deprivation and oppression of their peoples. For Messali, a committed street activist deeply embedded in the proletarian Algerian migrant community of Paris, the “beautiful, monumental” Palais d’Egmont, with its “multi-coloured marble,” “did not fit with the modesty of Communists and revolutionaries.” Messali and the movement he would come to lead may have been ardent partisans of the message of global anticolonial revolution, but their embrace of the Communist-sponsored organizations of anti-imperialist struggle, including the League Against Imperialism (LAI), would take place only on their terms. In their struggle for the independence of their homeland, they would also seek to forge an independent international anti-imperialism whose relationship to “sympathising organisations” such as the LAI2 was neither subservient nor openly hostile, but rather completely dependent on the political interests and strategy of the Algerian nationalist movement. Contrary to the ambitions of the Comintern and the wildest fears of the French security services, the LAI did not become the vehicle for Communist control of Algerian nationalism and the broader anticolonial movement in Paris in which it was the dominant force. Rather, this article contends that the often contentious relationship between Algerian nationalists and the Comintern-supported anti-imperialist movement in Paris explains, in part, both the relative weakness of the French branch of the LAI and the emergence of a kind of “homegrown” anti-imperial solidarity within Algerian nationalism. It further argues that the complex blend of conflict and cooperation between the nascent Algerian nationalism and the early organizations of international anti-imperialism shaped the evolution of both movements in the longue durée.
A Movement Born of International Anti-Imperialism
While historians of Algeria have vigorously debated the intellectual origins of modern nationalism in the country, they are united in the belief that the political impetus for the first mass nationalist movement emerged from radicals among the migrant population in metropolitan France. These men, and they were almost always men, would be the driving force behind this new form of political contestation, but they lacked the experience, the resources, and the knowledge to mobilize and organize their compatriots under the flag of Algerian nationalism.
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- The League Against ImperialismLives and Afterlives, pp. 79 - 106Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2020