5/21/2014

Rahajeng Galungan lan Kuningan

Om Swastyastu. Rahajeng Galungan lan Kuningan. Dumogi Ida Sang Hyang Widhi Wasa ngicenin karahayuan irage sareng sami. Om Shanti Shanti Shanti Om. :)
21 & 31 Mei 2014

5/01/2014

MAY DAY !

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Internationally the First of May is known and celebrated as the workers’ holiday. In America, on the other hand, the First Monday in September is officially set aside as Labor Day, and those who insist, in the international spirit, on celebrating May Day are obliged to do so in defiance of the country’s established custom for the sake of greater harmony with the prole- tariat of the world. 

May Day faces the relationship of capital and labor in the Marxian spirit of the class struggle; Labor Day sticks to the hollow pretense of a brotherhood between capital and labor instilled through Samuel Gompers into the American Federation of Labor. 

May Day Born in the United States

The First International ceased to exist as an international organization in 1872, when its headquarters were removed from London to New York, although it was not officially disbanded till 1876. It was at the first congress of the reconstituted International, through the initiative of the delegate of the Socialist Labor Party of America to the International Socialist Congress held in Paris, France, in July, 1889, that May First was set aside as a day upon which the workers of the world, organized in their political parties and trade unions, were to fight for the important political demand: the 8-hour day. The Paris decision was influenced by a decision made at Chicago five years earlier by delegates of a young American labor organization – the Federation of Organized Trades and Labor Unions of the United States and Canada, later known under the abbreviated name, American Federation of Labor.
The prime object of the resolution was a proclamation to the capitalist world of the international solidarity of the working class. On this one day in the year the workers of all countries and climes, despite differences in customs, traditions and languages, could unite to demonstrate to the world that as members of the same class, the ex- ploited, the world proletariat, their interests were the same, and that like members of one family they stand united for the overthrow of world capitalism, and the establishment of an International Socialist Republic, a world of harmony, peace and freedom to all men.
Traditional May Day celebrations
May Day is related to the Celtic festival of Beltane and the Germanic festival of Walpurgis Night. May Day falls half a year from November 1 – another cross-quarter day which is also associated with various northern European paganisms and the year in the Northern Hemisphere – and it has traditionally been an occasion for popular and often raucous celebrations.
As Europe became Christianized, the pagan holidays lost their religious character and either changed into popular secular celebrations, as with May Day, or were merged with or replaced by new Christian holidays as with Christmas, Easter, and All Saint's Day. In the 20th and continuing into the 21st century, many neopagans began reconstructing the old traditions and celebrating May Day as a pagan religious festival again. Note that the source noted does not support any of the changes claimed by the previous statement. The only significant Christianization of May day is essentially localized to Germany where it is one of many historic days that were used to celebrate St. Walburga (the saint credited with bringing Christianity to Germany).
The Future Belongs to Communism
For the May Day, 1923, edition of the Weekly Worker, C. E. Ruthenberg wrote: "May Day – the day which inspires fear in the hearts of the capitalists and hope in the workers – the workers the world over – will find the Communist movement this year stronger in the U. S. than at any time in its history.... The road is clear for greater achievements, and in the United States as elsewhere in the world the future belongs to Communism." In a Weekly Worker of a generation before, Eugene V. Debs wrote in a May Day edition of the paper, published on April 27, 1907: "This is the first and only International Labor Day. It belongs to the working class and is dedicated to the Revolution."

The world is nearer to Communism today. We are living in a more advanced period now. Capitalism has swung downward and is progressively moving in that direction. The sharpness of its own contradictions is making its ability to carry on more difficult. The workers are growing in political consciousness and are engaged in a counter-offensive which is gaining in scope and depth. The oppressed colonial and semi-colonial peoples are rising and challenging the rule of imperialism.

In the Soviet Union the workers will review on May Day the phenomenal achievements of the building of Socialism. In the capitalist countries May Day will be as always a day of struggle for the immediate political demands of the working class, with the slogans of proletarian dictatorship and a Soviet Republic kept not far in the background.

Source : 
https://www.marxists.org/subject/mayday/articles/tracht.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/May_Day
mayday_vs_ld_omj.pdf