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Reading with Bill Onasch: A People’s Collection at ESFL
By John McKenzie
I first heard of Bill Onasch when I was asked to help catalog his books, which had been donated to the East Side Freedom Library after his death in 2021. ESFL has been blessed with donations of books from a number of individuals, many of them academics. Unlike many of the collection donors to the library, Bill Onasch was not an academic. He was a working man, a labor organizer, and a union official at various times. He was also a socialist political organizer.
Andrew Shils, in an article published shortly after his death, called him “a long term socialist and trade unionist.” He worked as an electrical worker, union organizer, and a bus driver, among other things. His collection of books fills five shelves on the lower level of ESFL. What an interesting collection! It includes Charles and Mary Beard’s The Rise of American Civilization, Franz Mehring’s Karl Marx, Leon Trotsky’s The History of the Russian Revolution, and Tariq Ali’s The Coming British Revolution. It includes works of history, political thought, and biography. It includes a number of books by Leon Trotsky– not surprising because Bill was a Trotskyist. In addition to the books, Bill’s collection includes a large number of pamphlets, many of them, I suspect, not easily available.
What really got me interested in who Bill Onasch was is a slim pamphlet he published in 1987, Organizing for Socialism: The Fourth Internationalist Tendency – Who We Are, What We Stand For. Bill writes simply and understandably. He makes the case for why socialism should replace capitalism. His definition of socialism is brief and to the point. “To revolutionary Marxists, socialism is a society where a democratically-managed planned economy, designed to meet human needs, has replaced production for profit.” He lays out the situation as he saw it in the United States. He discusses the Russian Revolution, and where it went wrong. He sets out the history of socialist organizations in the United States. Finally, he makes the case for why socialists should organize through the mechanism of the Fourth Internationalist Tendency (a Trotskyist organization) to begin the process of transforming to socialism.
The United States has never been one of the countries where socialism has the greatest influence. It probably reached its zenith in the U.S. in the first decades of the 20th century, when Eugene Debs was the five-time presidential candidate of the Socialist Party. In 1912, he won 6% of the vote, when other candidates included incumbent president William Howard Taft, former president Theodore Roosevelt, and Woodrow Wilson, who won the election. Beginning at the time of the Bolshevik revolution in Russia, the federal government and the leading capitalists have fought tooth and nail against anything that might be considered “socialist.” It only became more difficult for American socialists of any type with the start of the Cold War after World War II. All socialists were equated with the “atheistic communists” of Stalin’s Soviet Union and Mao’s Red China. The Socialist movement in the U.S. splintered and each piece had less and less influence.
In recent years, Socialism has made a comeback. Polls show that many young people either identify as socialists or at least are not afraid of the word. A number of people who identify as democratic socialists have been elected to public office, most famously Senator Bernie Sanders and Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. My own county commissioner, Mai Chong Xiong, is a democratic socialist. I don’t know how their socialism compares to Bill Onasch’s Trotskyist revolutionary socialism, but I think he must have been pleased to see people willing to be identified as socialists again. I wish I could ask him.
The East Side Freedom Library would love to share your story about what it means to live during this pandemic. Please click 'Submit a Blog or Book Geek Shelf Talker' above to send your story.
Sources of Resources
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We Are Meant To Rise: Book Review
By Mary Turck In We Are Meant to Rise, Minnesota indigenous writers and writers of color reflect on and react to the year 2020: the year that began the COVID pandemic, a year ripped apart by the brutal police murder of George Floyd, a year of...
Inspiring Solidarity
Sisters, Brothers, and Kin, ESFL's mission is to "inspire solidarity, work for justice, and advocate for equity for all." As we have investigated the past, assessed the present, and envisioned the future, we have tried to shed light on solidarity among workers,...
Book Geek Shelf Talker: Eddie S. Glaude, Jr.’s Begin Again
Reviewed Mary Turck
Begin Again: James Baldwin’s America and Its Urgent Lessons for Our Own by Eddie S. Glaude, Jr. focuses on James Baldwin, and I have not read enough of Baldwin, or recently enough, to appreciate it as well as I would wish. I read Baldwin (and Richard Wright) long ago, sitting in high school classes that bored me, reading these writers because they did not. From Wright and Baldwin and Malcolm X and Piri Thomas, I learned of race and a world beyond my small, white home town. They opened doors to the world for me.
While I read only the early Baldwin, Glaude introduces the long sweep of his thought and career, illuminating crucial moments of crisis and failure in our national history:
“Throughout this country’s history, from the Revolutionary period to Reconstruction to the black freedom movement of the mid-twentieth century, the United States has faced moments of crisis in which the country might emerge otherwise, moments when the idea of white America itself could finally be put aside. In each instance the country chose to remain exactly what it was: a racist nation that claimed to be democratic. These were and are moments of national betrayal, in which the commitments of democracy are shunted off to the side to make way for, and to safely secure, a more fundamental commitment to race.”
This moment is another such inflection point, he says:
“The future isn’t set, but we can say, based on our current condition, that the future will damn sure be hard. Trump has revealed the ugly underside of America. And the work that needs to be done to defeat the forces that strangle American democracy will be painful and will require, as Baldwin said, “an overhauling of all that gave us our identity.” We have to muster the moral strength to reimagine America. We have to risk everything now, or a choice will be made that will plunge another generation into that unique American darkness caused by the lie.”
Reading Begin Again in the wake of insurrection and darkness was not easy. The need for reimagining America, the task of reclaiming America, the risks and dangers that face us have never seemed greater than now.
[Also published on Fragments and as a Goodreads review.]
Mary Turck is a freelance writer and editor and teaches writing and journalism at Metropolitan State University and Macalester College. She pens the News Day, Immigration News and Community Journalism blogs. She is also the former editor of the TC Daily Planet and of the award-winning Connection to the Americas and AMERICAS.ORG, a recovering attorney, and the author of many books for young people (and a few for adults), mostly focusing on historical and social issues.
Find Your Book!
Need to get your hands on a good book while doing your work to shelter in place? The library is closed in a response of solidarity amid the COVID-19 crisis, but here are some places where you can get your hands on all the great titles. Shop independent bookstores!
Black Garnet Books: https://www.blackgarnetbooks.com
Boneshaker Books: https://www.boneshakerbooks.com/
Dream Haven Books and Comics: http://dreamhavenbooks.com/
Eat My Words: http://www.eatmywordsbooks.com/
Irreverent Bookworm: https://irrevbooks.com/
Magers & Quinn: https://www.magersandquinn.com/
Mayday Books: http://maydaybookstore.org/
Moon Palace Books: https://www.moonpalacebooks.com/
Next Chapter Booksellers: https://www.nextchapterbooksellers.com/
SubText Books: https://subtextbooks.com/books
The Red Balloon Bookshop: https://www.redballoonbookshop.com/
Wild Rumpus: https://www.wildrumpusbooks.com/
Or you could even consider the amazing Powell's in Portland: https://www.powells.com/; Book Shop, https://bookshop.org/; AbeBooks https://www.abebooks.com/; or Indie Bound, https://www.indiebound.org/
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Please email your blogs or Book Geek Shelf Talkers to Clarence White at [email protected].
Book Geek Shelf Talkers: Provide two or three paragraphs about the book and why the thoughts inside are important for you. How might they be important for us, especially in these days when we need to inspire more solidarity than ever?