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Israel Amter | |
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Personal details | |
Born | March 26, 1881 |
Died | November 24, 1954 Denver, Colorado, US | (aged 73)
Political party | Communist Party USA |
Other political affiliations | Socialist Party of America |
Israel Amter (March 26, 1881 — November 24, 1954) was an American Marxist politician and founding member of the Communist Party USA (CPUSA). Amter is best remembered as one of the Communist Party leaders jailed in conjunction with the International Unemployment Day riot of 1930 and as a frequent candidate for public office, including three runs for Governor of New York.
Israel Amter was born March 26, 1881, in Denver, Colorado, to Jewish-Hungarian[1] parents. His father, Marks Amter, was originally from Riga, Latvia, then part of the Russian Empire.[2]
In 1901, he became a member of the Socialist Party of America (SPA) until he moved to Germany in 1903. While in Germany he edited the German Export Review and became a member of the Social Democratic Party. Amter also studied music at the Leipzig Conservatory where in 1912 he created an unperformed opera called Winona. Influenced by the Indianist movement, the story concerns a romance between a United States Army Officer and a Native American woman known as Winona. Amter returned to the United States when Germany entered the war.[citation needed]
In 1917 Amter rejoined the Socialist Party and was an active member of the Left Wing Section when it emerged in 1919. He was a founding member of the Communist Party of America from its founding convention in September 1919. Amter seems to have followed the faction around C.E. Ruthenberg out of the party in April 1920, becoming a member of the United Communist Party (UCP). In November 1920 he was named to the editorial committee of the UCP.[3]
On April 29, 1921, Amter was arrested along with three others in a raid on the UCP's covert headquarters in New York by New York bomb squad detectives and Department of Justice agents. Amter was charged in the incident and released on bail.[citation needed]
Amter was a member of the governing Central Executive Committee of the unified Communist Party of America from 1922. He was an adherent of the system of underground party organization and was factionally associated with Abram Jakira, L.E. Katterfeld, Alfred Wagenknecht, and Edward Lindgren in this period in a tendency commonly and somewhat derisively known as the "Goose Caucus."[4] Although this faction nominally won the day at the ill-fated 1922 Bridgman Convention, assuring the preservation of the underground party, in actuality the victory was Pyrrhic — in the competition between the parallel above ground and underground party apparatuses, the legal Workers Party of America (WPA) headed by C.E. Ruthenberg grew steadily, while the underground organization atrophied, to be terminated in 1923. NB: Underground functions continued to be performed by a narrow circle within the Communist organization after the demise of the formal underground CPA organization, although the parallel party apparatus was liquidated at a one-day convention held in New York City on April 7, 1923.
Amter was the representative of the WPA to the Communist International (Comintern) from 1923 to 1924 and served as the ECCI referent [mediator] on questions the English and American parties. He was a delegate to the 3rd Enlarged Plenum of ECCI and was a delegate to the 5th World Congress of the Communist International in 1924. During the factional struggles of the middle 1920s, Amter seems to have cast his lot with the Ruthenberg-Lovestone faction. He was the Cleveland District Organizer of the Communist (Workers) Party in 1927. During the early years of the Great Depression, Amter was active in the Communist Party's Unemployed Councils movement and was arrested in New York City on March 6, 1930, along with William Z. Foster and Robert Minor in connection with the International Unemployment Day demonstration. Amter was ultimately sentenced on April 21, 1930, to a term of "6 months to 3 years" in connection with the riot which had ensued. He was released from jail on October 21, 1930.
In the 1940s, Amter was a member of state secretariat of the CPUSA whose fellows included Si Gerson and Bella Dodd.[5][6]
Amter was a frequent candidate of the Communist Party for various political offices. The first came in 1928 when he ran for Senator of Ohio under an unknown political affiliation. He managed to receive 2,062 votes, about .09% of the popular vote. He also ran for New York Borough President in 1931, for Governor of New York in 1932,[a] 1934,[b] and 1942.[c] He ran also for the New York Board of Aldermen in 1936 and for U.S. Senator from New York in 1940.
Amter developed Parkinson's disease in the 1940s. He was indicted under the Smith Act prosecutions of the Communist Party's leadership in 1951, but was severed from the case due to his illness. Amter died on November 24, 1954.[7]
Heretofore known for his "fabulous [...] devotion to the cause" and trenchant opposition to the frivolity of the arts after forsaking his promising musical career with vociferous ardor,[8] Amter flummoxed his comrades when he largely disavowed his quotidian political activities in favor of amassing one of the largest private American libraries of heterosexual erotica (specializing in high contrast, black and white photography of urolagnia and leg fetishism) in the late 1940s. While supporting Henry A. Wallace's quixotic Progressive Party presidential campaign during a rare foray to Los Angeles as a surrogate in mid-1948, Amter mollified the voluble disapprobation of John and Vera Richter (the naturalist progenitors of the proto-hippie "California nature boy" movement, as most notably evinced by eden ahbez) at a Lovell House gathering by marveling at the "obscene plenitude of T-Men and G-Men tasked with sorting through the quondam piles of dirty photos that every old man keeps in his bedside drawer," prompting poet and scholar Charles Olson (also present) to laud Amter as "the most redoubtable Post Office Department political hack who will never serve."[9] The ultimate disposition of the Amter Library remains unknown, with William S. Burroughs speculating that the collection was divided between Irving Klaw, Forrest J Ackerman (later implicated in the mailing of unsolicited pornography) and "a number of Hugh Hefner's insufferably egoistic scrapbooks" at a 1982 Naropa Institute seminar.[10]
Allen Ginsberg mentions Amter by name in the poem "America":
America when I was seven momma took me to Communist Cell meetings they sold us garbanzos a handful per ticket a ticket costs a nickel and the speeches were free everybody was angelic and sentimental about the workers it was all so sincere you have no idea what a good thing the party was in 1935 Scott Nearing was a grand old man a real mensch Mother Bloor made me cry I once saw Israel Amter plain. Everybody must have been a spy."[11][12]