Marcel Bleibtroy ( French: Marcel Bleibtreu ; August 26, 1918 - December 25, 2001 ) - French Trotskyist, Marxist theorist.
| Blybtroy, Marseille | |
|---|---|
| Marcel bleibtreu | |
| Date of Birth | August 26, 1918 |
| Place of Birth | Marseilles |
| Date of death | December 25, 2001 ( 83) |
| Citizenship | France |
| Occupation | |
| Education | |
| The consignment | MCI , then INC , then INC Pierre Lambert , then OSB |
| Main ideas | Marxism , Trotskyism |
Short Biography
Blybtroy was born in Marseille at the end of the First World War. After graduating from Lyceum Condorcet, he began to study medicine in Paris . In 1936, Marcel joined the International Workers' Party , which in 1944 merged with several other Trotskyist groups into the International Communist Party (ITUC), which became the French section of the Fourth International . Under the pseudonym Pierre Favre, Blaibtroy directs political work in the suburbs of Paris - Puto, Suren and Nanterre .
In November 1944, Blybtroy became editor of the party newspaper La Vérité . Together with Pierre Lambert was the leader of the split in the 1952 INC and in the 1953 Fourth International.
During the Algerian War of Independence in the ITUC, differences began between Lambert and Blythebroi to support the national liberation organizations that existed in Algeria. Lamber believed that it was necessary to focus on the Movement for the Triumph of Democratic Freedoms (MTLD) led by Messali Hajj , and Blaibtra on the Revolutionary Committee of Unity and Action (KRUA, the forerunner of the National Liberation Front ).
In 1955, Lambert, using the support of the majority of the organization, expelled Blaibtroy and his supporters from the ITUC. The excluded took the name of the Group of Bolshevik-Leninists and began to publish the journal Trotskyism. Subsequently, the group teamed up with representatives of the " new left ", with whom it created the revolutionary socialist tendency. The PCT at the end of the 1950s was one of the organizations that participated in the creation of the Union of Left Socialists , and in 1960 the United Socialist Party (OSP). Blaibtroy was a member of the UCP political committee before leaving the party in 1964 . In 1968, supported the so-called. "Comités de base", trying to reconcile various Trotskyist groups.
Blybtroy was a participant in actions of solidarity with Vietnam . In 1967, in Paris, he was the organizer of the exhibition "Art for Peace in Vietnam." In 1993, Blybtroy repeated this experiment by holding an exhibition in Athens criticizing the imposition of an embargo on Iraq .