Socialist Workers' Sport International

Socialist Workers' Sport International (German: Sozialistische Arbeitersport Internationale, SASI) was an international socialist sporting organisation, based in Lucerne. It was founded in 1920, and consisted of six national federations (with a combined membership of about one million) at the time of its foundation. Initially it was known as International Association for Sports and Physical Culture. Informally it was known as the Lucerne Sport International. It adopted the name SASI in 1926.[1] The Austro-Marxist Julius Deutsch was the president of SASI.[2]

1925 Poster for the Workers' Olympiad in Frankfurt

International Labour Sports Federation (CSIT) was established in 1946 as the successor of SASI.[3]

Foundation

An international meeting of workers sports associations had been held in Ghent, Belgium, in 1913. However, the First World War put the build-up of an international workers' sport organisation on hold. After the war two Belgians, Gaston Bridoux and Jules Devlieger, took initiative to revive the cooperation. Preparatory meetings were held in Seraing, Belgium in 1919 and in Paris, France, during Easter 1920. The founding congress of the international took place in Lucerne September 13-September 14, 1920. During the foundation, the French and Belgian delegations urged that the word 'Socialist' be omitted from the name of the organisation, in order to attract a broader following.[4]

Politics

The organisation upheld a policy of neutrality towards party organisations, a policy inherited from the German workers' sports movement (which tried to steer away from the fractional conflicts between the German socialists). This policy was however challenged by the communists, which claimed that the workers' sport movement could not abstain from taking part in revolutionary struggle. In 1921, the third congress of the Communist International decided to form a parallel sport international. In August 1921, the Sportintern was founded. Sportintern launched fierce political attacks against the Lucerne international. Its Czechoslovak section had suffered a split in July 1921, as the communists deserted it.[4]

At the second congress of the Lucerne International, held in Leipzig 1922, the French delegation argued in favour of unification between the two Internationals. This policy was not supported by the congress. The following year, the French affiliate FST decided to shift its membership to Sportintern.[4]

Ahead of the 1925 Workers Olympiad, the Sportintern appealed to the Lucerne International that four Sportintern delegations (France, Soviet Union, Norway, Czechoslovakia) should be allowed to participate. Discussions lingered on within the Lucerne International, but after communist sportsmen had made a public protest at a German Workers Sports Festival in Karlsbad in 1924, it was decided that the Sportintern would be barred from the Workers Olympiad. Likewise SASI barred its affiliates for participating in the 1928 Spartakiad organised by Sportintern.[4]

Politically, SASI was supported by the International Federation of Trade Unions and the Labour and Socialist International.[5]

Workers' Olympiads

The main activity of SASI was the organizing of the International Workers' Olympiads, portrayed as a socialist alternative to the 'bourgeois' Olympics. At the Workers Olympiads only the red flag was used, rather than national flags.

Affiliates

Membership

As of 1931, SASI claimed the following membership figures:[14]

Country Membership
Germany 1,211,468
Austria 293,700
Czechoslovakia

136,977
70,730

Finland 30,257
Switzerland 21,624
Denmark 20,000
Netherlands 16,795
Belgium 12,909
France 6,000
Alsace-Lorraine 5,000
Poland
  • Polish federation
  • Jewish federation
  • German federation
  • Ukrainian federation

7,000
4,369
938
1,925

Norway 10,000
Lithuania 5,171
United Kingdom 5,000
Palestine 4,250
USA 697
Romania 2,500
Yugoslavia 1,800
Hungary 1,750
Estonia 1,600
Total: 1,872,460

See also

References

  1. Kidd, Bruce. The Struggle for Canadian Sport. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1996. p. 153
  2. Wheeler, Robert F.. Organized Sport and Organized Labour: The Workers' Sports Movement, in Journal of Contemporary History, Vol. 13, No. 2, Special Issue: Workers' Culture (Apr., 1978), pp. 191210
  3. Arnd Krüger & James Riordan (eds.) (1996). The Story of Worker Sport. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics. ISBN 978-0873228749; Halevi Olin (ed.) (2013). Sport, Peace and Development. International Worker Sport. 1913 - 2013. Wien: CSIT ISBN 978-3-9503593-1-2
  4. Steinberg, David A.. The Workers' Sport Internationals 192028, in Journal of Contemporary History, Vol. 13, No. 2, Special Issue: Workers' Culture (Apr., 1978), pp. 233251
  5. http://ci.nii.ac.jp/naid/110001136801/
  6. http://www.vcn.bc.ca/outlook/library/articles/jewsontheleft/p05SocialistSports.htm
  7. Eric de Ruijter (2008). "A Dozen Pictures of the Labour Olympiads". International Institute of Social History. Retrieved 2008-09-29.
  8. http://www.archiveshub.ac.uk/news/brwsa.html
  9. Kugelmass, Jack. Jews, Sports, and the Rites of Citizenship. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2007. pp. 119120
  10. http://www.ymaman.com/powerpoint/01_sub2006_09.pps
  11. http://www.tyovaenperinne.fi/tyovaentutkimus/2001/2_itkonen.htm
  12. http://www.dhm.de/lemo/html/weimar/alltag/atsb/index.html
  13. Gounot, André. Die Rote Sportinternationale, 1921-1937: kommunistische Massenpolitik im europäischen Arbeitersport. Schriften zur Körperkultur, Bd. 38. Münster: Lit, 2002. p. 55-57
  14. http://www.la84foundation.org/SportsLibrary/JSH/JSH2001/JSH2801/JSH2801d.pdf
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