Nazi Fifth Column Att
n Canada And United States

By TOM McEWEN

ork

°

AST week the U.S. Congress passed another substantial appropriation for the continuance
of the Dies committee, investigating un-American activities. The committee will carry

on for another two years. In its study of “un-American activities”

the Dies committee mani-

fests its ultra-reactionary character by red-baiting and direction of the bulk of its main ac-

tivities against communism.

Its latest discovery, given at a time when the heroic Red Army and the Russian people
are victoriously fighting the greatest battle of all time—for the entire civilized world, is that

there are twenty-nine high officials in the U.S. eovermment with

wards communism!”

Strangely enough the WDies
Gommittee sees no elements in
high or low places with fascist
or pro-fascist ‘leanings,’ in spite
of the fact that the Federal Bur-
eau of Investigation has uprooted
a whole number of nazi plotters
in recent weeks operating in the
USA and Latin-American coun-
tries.

Gonsidering the recent Church-
ill-Roosevelt Casablanca confer-
ence, and the ‘grave decisions
reached in that conference, suc-
cess of which depends upon
maintaining and strengthening
the unity of the Allied Nations,
particularly the unity of the
three major powers—the United
States, Britain and the USSR, it
would seem to the layman that
the greatest “un-American” activ-
ity of all is the Dies Committee
itself.

HE Dies committee and simi-

lar bodies constitute a bul-
wark of reaction and retrogres-
sion. To them the titanic strug-
gle against Nazi barbarism is just
another war, and their main con-
cern is that at its conclusion the
status quo of the old world—
their world—will remain.

They dare not openly attack the
Soviet Union because its smash-
ing blows against German fas-
cism have won the sympathy,
support and admiration of men
and women everywhere. So open-
ly attacking this sympathy and
admiration as being synonymous
with communism, they render
yeoman service to Hitler and un-
dermine the fabric of unity
among their own people.

We have pocket editions of the
‘Dies Committee” in our own
country. Only recently the CBC
banned Professor Watson Kirk-
connell’s address to the Toronto
Ganadian Club from the air, but
the Toronto Globe and Mail car-
ried an outline of this tlrade in
which ten language papers of
workers’ educational and cultural
organizations were condemned as
‘communist poison.’

These papers, sa-d the professor,
only support the war effort of
Canada and the Allied Nations be-
cause Russia is in it, but that
their support is like a hitchhiker
intending “to ride to the end of
the trip and then slug the driver
and steal the car.” The professor
championed the UNO (Ukrainian
Wationalist Organization) and
similar pro-fascist outfits, as be-
ing “loyal to Canada” and of be-
ing attacked by the alleged ‘com-
munist’ papers for their ‘loyalty.’
All of the activities of these lan-
guage papers according to Kirk-
connell are under the control of
“Gomintern and Pan-Slay move-
ments.”

It was a highly commendable
action of the Canadian networks
to bar this nazi filth from
the air-waves, but the matter
should not stop there. Professor
iirkeonnell and those who fi-
nance his pro-fascist activities
should be interned under Sec. 394
of the Defense of Canada Regula-
tions. If the RCMP who are en-
trusted with the enforcement of
the DOGR would demonstrate one
half of the assiduity they essay
when hounding and intimidating
workers with anti-fascist or com-
munist sympathies, the disruptive
pro-nazi work of the Kirkcon-
nelis and their ilk would be
brought to a speedy end. But
the cases of the Chaleaux, Car-
riere, Francescini, etc., shows that
in Canada also there are those
with a Dies complex who are al-
lowed to continue destroying na-
tional unity without let or hind-
rance.

f (ae eee in a transcon-
tinental train some weeks ago
I had a first-hand experience of
the spreading of nazi poison. My
fellow travellers were mostly
RCAF boys and a few WAAF’s
Splendid young men and women,
intelligent, eager and confident
of the power of the United Na-
tions and of Canada to smash
Hitler.

In our coach was a dapper
gentleman, well groomed, oily in
approach, anxious to converse,
and emphatic in his ‘revealed’
opinions. In the course of three
days’ travelling this sleek indiv-
idual buttonholed a good any of
the RCAF boys. Some listened
out of poliiteness, other left him
to himself as rapidly as good
breeding would allow.

His theme was religion, but
what a “religion!” Representing
himself to be some high mogul
in the British Israel movement,
he would give his listeners some
of the interpretative conclusions
of British Israel in their studies
of the Bible. That, of course, was
his right as a citizen of any
democracy, as it must be where
freedom of conscience and wor-
ship is the right of every individ-
ual.

Not being conversant with the

philosophical premises upon
which British Israel bases its
“prophesies,” or how they may de-

termine ‘that they are ‘‘the chosen
ones of the lost tribes of Israel,”
we cannot debate the astrological,
mathematical or other powers

they may possess in interpreting

Holy Scripture. But when these
occult powers are brought into
play to slander the USSR, to
weaken the confidence and
morale of our fighting forces, to

“sympathetic leanings to-

emphatically argue and repeat
again and again that “Stalin is
the beast,” that “Stalin will be-
tray the allies,” that “we will
have to fight Russia when we
finish with Hitler,” that the Book
proves that “we can never trust
Russia,” ete., ete., then it be-
comes obvious that this is a ‘re-
ligion’ of a new sort, which
should have the immediate at-
tention of the RCMP. Spreading
this insidious propaganda (in it-
self a mockery of every tenet of
Christian religion) to men and
women of the armed forces can
only do irreparable harm to the
morale and unity of the cause
of the Allied Nations.

This method of causing disaf-
fection among Canada’s active
forces is none the less subversive
because it is coated with the pious
veneer of a dubious ‘religion.’
And it constitutes a monstrous
Slander against the heroic Red
Army and the Soviet people who
are carrying the major share of
the battle for the survival of civ-
ilization.

NLY recently Fred Rose, au-

thor of “Fascism Over Can-
ada,’ wrote another pamphlet,
“Hitler’s Fifth Column in Que-
bec.’ This pamphlet is a brilliant
exposure of the ramifications of
Nazi activities in French-Canada.
Individuals, organizations, and a
powerful French-Canadian press
are cited in Rose’s pamphlet as
the centre of Hitler's fifth col-
umn base in Canada, It is a book
of hard, revealing, disturbing
facts.

Yet, to date, we haven’t heard
of a single Nazi or pro-nazi or-
ganization, or any section of the
French-Canadian press engaged
in the spreading of nazi propa-
ganda even being chided by the
RCMP, let alone being effectively
eurbed.

Naturally

enough, the main

_smoke-sereen of these individu-

als and papers in carrying on
their Nazi activities is redbaiting,
opposition to Canada’s war effort,
and slander of the USSR. That of
course is also Hitler’s excuse and
that of his axis allies for the
devastation of Europe — ‘saving
Europe from Bolshevism.’

There may be a wide ideologi-
cal division between a Kirkcon-
nell, the “Knights of Jacques Car-
tier,’ a mogul of British Israel, or
others who utilize redbaiting to
cover up their nefarious work.

Despite the differences from
which their ideas stem, the sum-
total of their pro-Hitler work is
Subversive of Canada’s best in-
terests and serves only the ene-
mies of Canada. They are Can-
ada’s fifth column.

Chinese Set
Print Reeor

[yes workers in the Eighth Route Army printshc
Yenan, capital of the Shensi-Kansu+Ningshia Be
Region, recognizing the importance of education in the
against Japanese fascism, have established a new reco

typesetting in China.
According to a report from the
Yenan Printing Workers Union,
appearing in Sin Hua Jih Pao,
Bighth Route Army newspaper in
Chungking, they set 3,000,000
characters last month, 900,000
more than the record established
last year by the Commercial

Press in Shanghai, largest print-
ing plant in the country.

About 10,000 characters are re-
quired to print an average Chin-
ese newspaper.

This record was possible “only
because of the determination of
the workers, the recent improve-
ment in their living conditions,
and their system of inter-depart-
mental production competitions,”
the secretary of the Printing
Workers said.

Over thirty members of the
union last month were awarded
the title of “labor hero” by the
Border Government. The Border
Region, by agreement with the
central government in Chungking,
is under the administrative con-
trol of the Eighth Route Army.

There can be no comparison be-
tween the advanced tools and
technique of the Commercial
Press and those in our primitive
shop,” the union secretary said.
“In the type foundry attached to
the shop the elderly worker Pei
Ming-fu, observing the lack of
work in his own section, mobilized
his fellow workers Wang Shushi-

CHUNGKIN |

ung, Feng Liaosen and Yan; ||
hshou to switch over to c™
melting. For days on end ~
worked in the midst of ch
smoke and hot vapor. In an.
they had melted close to
hundred catties of copper. T
by they gained their titles ¢.
bor heroes.

“Workers in the enue
shop have many other acl.
ments to their credit. WN
paper has been made a sul
substitute for the unavailabir
ported product. Cardboard ij
ing made to substitute for
slugs. These are all the re
of hard-thinking and experi
ing by our heroes of labor”

Similar production gains
being made by workers in pri
ly-owned plants in the B
Region. Lin Peich’u, chairm::
the Border government, rec”
outlined the following labor
icy as a basis for pcre
duction:

“Workers must carry out
contracts with private empl
and uphold labor discipline; ]j
conditions must be improved
eight-hour day must be rele;
as an ideal for the future.
present war circumstances 7
the ten-hour day necessary; /
union organization must
strengthened; popular edue
must be developed so labor
become the base for anti-Je
ese democratic government!

British Workers
Reply To Bridges

LONDOD

4 [ee open letter addressed to “Mr. and Mrs. England

Harry Bridges, president of the International Longst
men’s and Warehousemen’s Union (CIO), has aroused |
interest among British workers. In this letter, publishe
the Jan. 29 issue of the ILWU Dispatcher, Bridges ass
that “so far as we know the British workers and pe
haven’t expressed themselves on whether or not they i

freedom for India now, as against
some vague time in the future’;
that “many British ships calling
at U.S. ports for lend-lease sup-
plies are manned by non-union
crews”; that British trade unions
have a ‘stuck-up attitude in re-
fusing to deal with anyone but
-the AFI on international trade
union problems.”

Replying to the first charge,
Harry Adams, president of the
powerful Amalgamated Union of
Building Trades Workers, told
Allied Labor News: “I would like
Brother Bridges to know that I
and thousands of other British
workers feel that our Indian
comrades are entitled to the
same measure of freedom as we
demand for ourselves.

“We are continually pressing
for action on this.

“As evidence, I would refer
Brother Bridges to the mass
meetings held all over England
last month to demand freedom
for India. I wish he could have

seen the huge rally a few
ago at the London Gol
which climaxed India Week,

Qn the question of Britis
bor's “‘stuck-up attitude,” A
declared: “As one who re
unity of allied labor abovy
else as an essential basis fo
tory over fascism and the
ing of a new world order in °
there will be economic ant
itical fredom for all, I can
indicate that large masses 0
tish workers favor dealing
the CIO and all other Unite
tions trade union groups,
put exception, on an equal
of friendship.”

Adams expressed concel
Bridges’ statement that
British crews carrying
lease supplies are non-unii
suggest that the Interna
Longshoremen’s Union off
communicate with the Ef
Seamen’s Union in order *
in elimating qQon-unionism
said.