Milt Neidenberg

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Template:TOCnestleft Milt Neidenberg was remembered by comrades, family and friends gathered in New York City on March 31 2018 to celebrate his life.

Neidenberg, a founding member of Workers World Party, who died on Feb. 4 at the age of 96, was a steelworker in Buffalo, N.Y., and later a unionized worker in New York City.

Tony Murphy recalled that Milt started every phone conversation with “What’s cooking?” “We marveled at his ability to break things down, to tell you what was underneath the phenomena you were seeing and dealing with,” Murphy said. “It wasn’t magic. It was Marxism. Marxism is knowing our society is built around the exploitation of labor and all these institutions are designed to protect that.”

First Secretary of Workers World Party Larry Holmes said Milt was a working-class Marxist intellectual. Like Party founders Sam Marcy and Vince Copeland, Milt acted as a working-class lawyer, said Holmes. “They may not have graduated from Harvard, but they graduated from the steel mills.”

Party members and friends shared accounts of union struggles in which Milt played a role, from the 1968 racist teachers’ strike against Black community control in Ocean Hill-Brownsville in Brooklyn to the Harvard University Dining Service workers’ strike in 2016.

Vondora Jordan spoke about Milt’s support of the Workfairness campaign of the mid-1990s.

Mary Kaessinger worked with Milt in the Center for United Labor Action, which WWP initiated in 1971 to further the class struggle. She did a “mic check” shout-out: “Comrade Milt, leader, mentor and friend. Comrade Milt, Presente!”

David Sole, a leader of the Detroit branch, recalled Milt’s help when the AP Parts Plant was on strike in 1984. “Milt found an article in the Wall Street Journal exposing that AP Parts sold almost all its products to General Motors, and GM was demanding that AP Parts and other suppliers lower wages and benefits.” Dave brought this information to the United Auto Worker Local president, who then took hundreds of AP workers right to the doors of the GM building, where they picketed during the opening day of UAW-GM contract talks. “Milt helped us see a tactic that transformed their struggle, and they eventually won,” Sole said.

Party Secretariat member Fred Goldstein described Milt’s ability to gain the confidence of the bus drivers, who are mainly Haitian. “He looks like he came out of the 1930s, and he walks right in and wins over the workers by his revolutionary optimism and his sagacity in the labor union struggle,” said Goldstein.

Steve Kirschbaum, founding member and vice president of Local 8751, noted Milt’s philosophy that “Marxism is as Marxism does” and pledged to pick up Milt’s picket sign and fight to liberate the workers and oppressed from this rotten, deadly capitalism system. “Milt Neidenberg. Live like him, dare to struggle, dare to win!” Kirschbaum declared.

Most recently, Milt conceived of and initiated the formation of the Labor Fraction in the ­Party following the bus drivers’ victory over Veolia/Transdev. Martha Grevatt read a statement from the ­fraction:

“Milt’s contributions to the development of the fraction as a ­revolutionary training ground included important theore­tical insights into organizing beyond formal union structures. This included his thinking and support for immigrant worker centers, day laborer networks, Black workers’ centers dealing with jobs for people who had been incarcerated, cooperative economic endeavors as that in Jackson, Miss., prisoner strikes, sex workers’ collectives, freelance writer and tech worker associations, small vendor cooperatives, workers’ defense guards, Fight for 15 groups and more.”

Others spoke of the impact Milt had on their lives. Bob McCubbin was a college student when he met Milt’s life partner, Rosemary Neidenberg, when they were co-workers in Buffalo. Rosemary invited him to dinner, where he met Milt. They took him to political events, including a picket against a car dealership in Buffalo that refused to hire Black workers. “I had finally walked the walk on racism where previously I’d only talked the talk,” McCubbin said.

Deirdre Griswold, a Party founder, longtime editor of Workers World newpaper and member of the Secretariat, said she was 14 when Milt came to Buffalo and got three pals from Brooklyn to join him. She said it was a pretty dreary place then as the Korean war was going on, McCarthyism was raging and many Reds were losing their jobs. “Milt and his buddies lifted everyone’s spirits. They were comrades in the truest sense, encouraging, not critical or competitive.”

She continued: “Their Jewish culture was proletarian. It was rooted in surviving oppression through solidarity and kindness and humor. It was just the opposite of reactionary, bourgeois Zionist culture which uses the Nazi oppression of Jews an an excuse to oppress Palestinian people and steal their land.”

John Catalinotto, a managing editor of WW, said Milt had set the bar high for older comrades who hoped to one day be able to retire. He quoted a poem German communist Bertolt Brecht wrote about revolutionaries with Lenin in mind: “Those who are stronger fight on for an hour. Those who are still stronger might fight on for many years. The strongest fight their whole lives. They are the indispensable ones.” With a break in his voice, Catalinotto said, “Milt was indispensable.”[1]

References

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  1. [https://www.workers.org/2018/04/06/memorial-for-milt-neidenberg-workers-pay-tribute-to-revolutionary-boldness/WW Memorial for Milt Neidenberg: Workers pay tribute to revolutionary boldness By Brenda Ryan posted on April 6, 2018]