Difference between revisions of "SEARCH Foundation"
Line 274: | Line 274: | ||
*[[Ken Coldicutt]] by [[John Hughes (Australia)|John Hughes]] | *[[Ken Coldicutt]] by [[John Hughes (Australia)|John Hughes]] | ||
*[[Noel Counihan]] by [[Peter Beilharz]] | *[[Noel Counihan]] by [[Peter Beilharz]] | ||
− | *[[Ruth Crow]] by [[David Nichols]] | + | *[[Ruth Crow]] by [[David Nichols (Australia)|David Nichols]] |
*[[Alan Finger]] by [[Ken Bridge]] | *[[Alan Finger]] by [[Ken Bridge]] | ||
*[[Bill Gollan]] by [[Scott Poynting]] | *[[Bill Gollan]] by [[Scott Poynting]] |
Revision as of 02:38, 17 February 2024
SEARCH Foundation was set up as a not-for-profit company in 1990 to preserve and draw on the resources of the Communist Party of Australia, and its archives.
The CPA was the most significant socialist party in Australia between its formation in 1920 and 1991, when it ceased operating.
Initially the Foundation supported the New Left Party, and the publications Australian Left Review, and Broadside Weekly. When these collapsed in 1993, the Foundation reassessed the situation and decided to initiate political activity itself, to encourage practical unity on the Left towards democracy, social justice and environmental sustainability, and to reach out to people coming from other traditions who share these goals.
Eric Aarons Influence
From a profile of Eric Aarons by Brian Aarons and David McKnight posted at the SEARCH Foundation website:[1]
- In the 1980s, Eric’s hopes that a renewed CPA would grow in numbers and influence were not realised. When the CPA decided to cease operating as a Party in 1991, Eric was the architect of the establishment of the SEARCH Foundation to safeguard the CPA’s assets and put them to good purposes. He managed the SEARCH finances for several years.
Initiatives
- the Chris Hani Memorial Tour of South African Communist Party leaders of 1994
- the ‘Community over Market Solutions’ tour with Beatrix Campbell in 1996
- creation of Political Education for Trade Unionists training modules in 1996-97
- financial support for progressive community radio programs, such as Public Radio News and Radio 3CR’s Stick Together Show
- financial support for organisations and individuals for a range of projects, publications, radio and video documentaries about *progressive movements in Australia and the history of the left and labour movements in Australia
- the Just Republic campaign of 1997-99,
- the Now We The People initiative and its national conferences and campaigns from 1999,
- the vibrant campaign against unfettered free trade which had high points in Australia with the Melbourne protest against the World Economic Forum in September 2000, the campaign against the US-Australia Free Trade Agreement in 2003-04, and the APEC Leaders Meeting in Sydney in September 2007.
- international solidarity with the East Timorese independence struggle, the national democratic organisation BAYAN in the Philippines, the democratic movement in Zimbabwe and more recently, the democratic opposition in Iran, led by the National Council of Resistance of Iran.
Following the terrorist attacks in the USA on September 11, 2001, and the Bush Administration’s invasion of Afghanistan, and then the ‘Axis of Evil’ speech in January 2002, the Foundation committed itself to the anti-war movement, which had its peak in February 2003, but continues on.
- support for the many movements against the reactionary policies of the Howard government, particularly the 1998 Maritime Dispute, *the Reconciliation movement, support for asylum-seekers, and against the anti-worker law WorkChoices.[2]
Leaders
SEARCH Foundation is governed by an elected Committee of members who are responsible for the administration and strategic direction of the organisation.
2023 Committee members are:
- President: Matt Kunkel (Vic)
- Vice President: Jacqueline Widin (NSW)
- Treasurer: Adam Farrar (NSW)
- Brian Aarons (NSW)
- Matt Byrne (ACT/Belgium)
- Patricia Hovey (Qld)
- Louise Connor (Vic)
- Elliot D'Arcy (Qld)
- Iacovos Digenis (SA)
- Zac Gillies-Palmer (NSW)
- Cat Kutay (NT)
- Caitlin Perry (NT)
- Chris Warren (ACT)
- Company Secretary: David Pink (NSW)
- Executive Officer: Luke Whitington
- Administration and Projects Officer: Ineke Rapp[3]
As of 2021:
- President: Matt Kunkel
- Vice President: Jacqueline Widin
- Treasurer: Helen Hewett
- Committee Members:Brian Aarons, Zac Gillies-Palmer, Patricia Hovey, Nadia Montague, Peter Murphy, Ama Somaratna, Carmen Blanco, Chris Warren, Alex Cassie, Iacovos Digenis
Executive Officer: Luke Whitington[4]
As of 2018:
The new Committee for 2018 was welcomed at the AGM and the members are:
- President: Jacqueline Widin
- Vice President: Matt Kunkel
- Treasurer: Adrian Graves
- Company Secretary: Daren McDonald
- Committee members: Brian Aarons, Patricia Hovey, Carmen Blanco, Penny Sara, Ama Somaratna, Luke Whitington, Peter Murphy.[5]
As of 2016;
President: Jacqueline Widin Vice-President: Matt Kunkel Treasurer: Chris Elenor Committee members Tony Hawkins, Adrian Graves, Brian Aarons, David Pink Danae Bosler, Sally Trevena, Carmen Blanco.[6]
As of May 2016;
President: Jacqueline Widin Vice-President: Matt Kunkel Treasurer: Chris Elenor Committee members Brian Aarons, Leila Barreto, Vicki Findlay, Tony Hawkins, Cait Jones, Sally Trevena, John Wishart.
Secretary Adrian Graves.[7]
As of 2013;
- Rob Durbridge – President
- Chris Elenor – Treasurer
- Brian Aarons – Director
- Tony Hawkins – Director
- Jake Wishart
- Louise Connor
- Dr Clare Rudkin – Director
- Sally Trevena – Director
- Jacqueline Widin – Vice President
- Peter Murphy – Director[8]
As of 2004:
- President: Richard Walsham;
- Vice-President: Louise Connor;
- Treasurer: Adam Farrar;
- Members: Brian Aarons, Greg Giles, Judith Klepner, Sally McManus, Richard Archer, Leonie Short, John Wishart.
Appointed Secretary: Peter Murphy[9]
As of 2003:
- President: Richard Walsham;
- Vice-President: Louise Connor;
- Treasurer: Adam Farrar;
- Members: Brian Aarons, Greg Giles, Don Jarrett, Judith Klepner, Sally McManus, Richard Archer, Leonie Short, John Wishart.
Appointed Secretary: Peter Murphy[10]
Staff
As of 2013;
- Troy Henderson – Campaign Organiser
- Leila Barreto – Education Coordinator[11]
Voice Treaty Truth
SEARCH Foundation Voice Treaty Truth Working Group Convenors: Jacqueline Widin and Bob Boughton.[12]
SEARCH Forum: Voice Equality Peace
Please join us on Sunday 28 May 2023 at the Teachers Federation in Sydney, to hear from a great line-up of radical activists and thinkers as we discuss how we can work for a successful YES vote in the Voice Referendum; how we can help build popular movements to overcome inequality and build workers power; and why a strong peace movement will be critical to avoid the catastrophes of nuclear war and climate change.
Held close to the first anniversary of the election of the Albanese Labor government, we will explore how the left can join together to build popular movements that can liberate our politics from the control of corporations, oligarchs and vested interests who are leading our world down the path of war, authoritarianism and climate breakdown.
10 am – 12 noon: Voice – Building the YES vote for the Voice Referendum
In the morning session, we will hear from our keynote speaker, advocate and author Thomas Mayo on the journey from the Uluru Statement to the Voice Referendum, and then we will hold a workshop with Emily Holm (Yes23 Alliance National Lead Organiser) on the practical ways that members can help win the Referendum.
1 pm – 2:30 pm: Fighting Inequality – Radical Agendas for Equality and Justice
Progressive economist Prof. Frank Stilwell and John Falzon (Senior Fellow in Inequality and Social Justice at Per Capita), Mich-Elle Myers, MUA National Officer and ALP National V-P, will be speaking on how we can overcome growing economic and social inequality and build the power of movements for equality.
3 pm – 4:30 pm: Peace - Building movements for peace and an independent foreign policy
Arthur Rorris (Secretary, South Coast Labour Council), Casey Thompson (co-editor of recent Evatt Foundation Journal 90 Seconds to Midnight), Maurie Mulheron (Former President NSW Teachers Federation), and Gem Romuld (Director, ICAN Australia) will be speaking on campaigns and movements for peace, independence, and a nuclear-free world, against the dangers posed by wars, military build-ups, and the AUKUS alliance.[13]
The Party! Snapshots of Communists in Australian History
The Party! Snapshots of Communists in Australian Historyon 9am-5pm on Saturday 31st October, 2020.
SESSIONS AND PARTICIPANTS
Each session runs for exactly one hour
The webinar runs continuously for the whole day, with short intervals between sessions
9:00am
Session 1: On Stolen Lands: First Nations struggles for rights and justice
Moderator: Bob Boughton
Panelists: Ann Curthoys, Thomas Mayo, Teela Reid
10:15am
Session 2: There is no Planet B: Movements to protect and save the environment
Moderator: Jacqueline Widin
Panelists: Bob Makinson, Rose Read, Geoff Evans, John Wishart, Gianni Sottile
11:30am
Session 3: The Class struggle: unions and workers’ movements
Moderator: Luke Whitington
Panelists: Tom McDonald, Louise Connor, Julius Roe, Linda Carruthers, Steve Murphy
12:30pm
Art and Culture: writing, songs of struggle, theatre, art. Short talk and song presentation by Maurie Mulheron
Screening of 1946 short film Indonesia Calling on support for the Indonesian independence struggle against Dutch colonial rule.
1:30pm
Session 4: 'Red Matildas’: The long struggle for women’s rights and equality
Moderator: Martina Nightingale
Panelists: Judy Mundey, Audrey McDonald, Judy Gillett, Danae Bosler
2:45pm
Session 5: ‘From all the lands on Earth we come’: Migrants and Multiculturalism
Moderator: Serge Zorino
Panelists: George Zangalis, Joe Caputo (replaced by Gaetano Greco), Pierina Pirisi, Matt Kunkel
4pm
Session 6: ‘A world to win’ – movements for peace and international solidarity
Moderator: Pat Ranald
Panelists: Bev Symons, Peter Murphy, Andrew Hewett, Kate Lee[14]
Communists
‘Don’t miss the biggest party in town!’, advised the publicity brochure for the Commemorative Dinner to mark the 75th anniversary of the founding of the Communist Party of Australia on October 30, 1920. And about 520 people made sure they didn’t miss it.
It was certainly a night to remember. As the crowd packed into the Trocadero Reception Centre in Marrickville, there was an air of excitement and nostalgia, as many ‘old comms’ and assorted lefties, including several labour historians, met up again with comrades they hadn’t seen for quite a while. It was in March 1991 that the final CPA National Congress decided to wind up the party that for seven decades had made a significant contribution to Australia’s political and social history. The 75th anniversary of its founding was an appropriate opportunity for many of its former members and ‘fellow travellers’ to celebrate its achievements in fine style.
The dinner was organised by the SEARCH Foundation, a body established by the former CPA to continue managing its assets and to assist in promoting educational-type activities concerning social justice and progressive issues. In the last week before the dinner, the organising committee was a bit overwhelmed by the response. Although we had expected it to be successful, we didn’t anticipate so many bookings and unfortunately, not everyone who wanted to come could be fitted into the venue.
But for those who were there, it was a great gathering of the left. The hundreds of former members included many who were actively involved from the 1930s and ‘ 40s, through to those who joined from the 1970s. One of the latter, Pat Ranald, was one of four speakers who gave brief’vignettes’ of some of their experiences in the Party. She was attracted to the CPA in 1971, she said, particularly because of its support for feminist ideas and practices, and for the other social movements then developing, as well as its more independent and open politics since ending its allegiance to the Soviet Union in 1968. Other memorable reminiscences were given by former general secretary, Laurie Aarons, long-time local government and community campaigner in Liverpool, Don Syme, and well-known local activist in the Sutherland area, Pat Elphinston. The main pre-dinner speakers were Judy Gillett, a former National Committee member from Adelaide, who joined the Party in 1957; and Tom McDonald, former Building Workers’ Union leader, who was in the CPA from the mid 1940s until 1971, when along with a group of others, he left to form the Socialist Party of Australia.[15]
Marxism 101 Workshop
USYD Labor Club is with Zac Gillies-Palmer, Ama Somaratna and Elea Zar, Masih Sadat Shafai at Trades Hall Auditorium. June 3, 2018 Sydney, NSW, Australia ·
Today USYD Labor Club and other lefties were privileged to attend a Marxism 101 Workshop with the SEARCH Foundation.
Always great to hear from Professor Frank Stilwell and Brian Aarons about the enduring relevance of socialist ideas in 21st century Australia.#forthemanynotthefew.
"Comrades! Lives of Australian Communists"
100 Biographies are available in print only in the new book "Comrades! Lives of Australian Communists" which is available for pre-order here from the New International Bookshop.
The biographies project has produced over 150 biographies of Australian communists - from Aarons to Zorino and plenty in between.
The book includes 100 biographies of Australian communists, listed below. Some people featured are more prominent than others. Some would otherwise be lost to history if this book wasn’t produced. Each one gives a fascinating insight into the activism of the 20th century, their passions, the struggles, the splits and the successes. Quite deliberately, half of the bios in the book are of women.
The launch of the book took place at 6pm AEDT on Friday 30 October, 2020 at the online CPA Centenary celebration event.
The launch event featured a keynote by Reds author Stuart MacIntyre, a toast by a former CPA member, Meredith Burgmann to launch the book and co-editor Bob Boughton in reply, all MC’d by Brian Aarons.
About the book:
This collection of biographies of 100 Australian communists celebrates the foundation of the Communist Party of Australia (CPA) a century ago.
- The CPA started small on 30 October 1920 but its members’ dedication and the course of world events made it a national, even international force.
- They worked on the wharves, building sites, railways, factories, mines, shops and hospitals. Others were novelists, playwrights, filmmakers, and lawyers. Many were union officials. One was Australia’s only Communist Member of Parliament. Some were seared by World War, Depression, or the Cold War. Others were propelled by the social movements of the sixties and seventies and the struggles for peace, women’s liberation and gay rights.
- What drew them together was their passion for a world without war, without divisions of race and class, for a society based on cooperation and shared wealth. They believed that ordinary people working together could change the world. The CPA was the first party to oppose the White Australia policy, to stand up against fascism, and to fight for Aboriginal rights. It was the first communist party in the world to condemn the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968. Its members imposed the world’s first Green Bans.
To mark the centenary of the Communist Party of Australia, the SEARCH Foundation, in association with the Australian Society for the Study of Labour History, is compiling short biographies of Australian communists. This selection of 100 will be supplemented by many more on the SEARCH website.
Edited by Bob Boughton, Danny Blackman, Mike Donaldson, Carmel Shute and Bev Symons, (Sydney: SEARCH Foundation and the Australian Society for the Study of Labour History).
Here is the full list of the biographies and their authors which appear in the book.
1920s
- Bill Earsman by Bob Boughton
- Christian Jollie Smith by Bob Boughton
- Jack Morrison by Ken Norling
- Adela Pankhurst Walsh and Tom Walsh by Susan Hogan
- Fred Paterson by Ross Fitzgerald
- Nelle Rickie by Cathy Brigden
- Topsy Small by Danny Blackman
- Hettie Weitzel (Ross) by Danny Blackman
- Idris Williams by Phillip Deery
- Mary Wright (Lamm) by Danny Blackman
- Tom Wright by Bob Boughton
- Paul Yolkin by Mike Donaldson
1930s
- Jean Blackburn by Craig Campbell
- Betty Bloch by Cathy Bloch
- Max Bound by Mike Donaldson
- Neil Byron by Daren McDonald
- Joe Carter and Jim McNeil by Mike Donaldson
- Flo Davis (Cluff) by Danny Blackman
- Ken Coldicutt by John Hughes
- Noel Counihan by Peter Beilharz
- Ruth Crow by David Nichols
- Alan Finger by Ken Bridge
- Bill Gollan by Scott Poynting
- Joan Goodwin (Finger) by Carmel Shute
- Oriel Gray by Michelle Arrow
- Sylvia Harding by Daren McDonald
- Phyl Harnett (Ophel) by Charlie Fox
- Charlie Jarrett by Don Jarrett
- Rupert Lockwood by Rowan Cahill
- Dick Makinson by Bob Makinson
- Aileen Palmer by Sylvia Martin
- Ted Roach by Mike Donaldson
- Olga Silver by Carmel Shute
- Pete Thomas by Meredith Burgmann
- Paddy Troy by Hazel Butorac
- Joan Williams by Bobbie Oliver
- Kath Williams by Danny Blackman
1940s
- Hal Alexander by Bob Boughton
- Kay Alexiou by George Zangalis
- Shirley Andrews by Bob Boughton
- Eva Bacon by Deborah Jordan
- Jean Bailey by Margaret Penson
- Jean Bowden by Therese Collie
- Sally Bowen by Mike Donaldson
- Mona Brand by Michelle Arrow
- Jack Cambourn by Daren McDonald
- Laurie Carmichael by Don Sutherland
- Marie Crisp by Paddy McCorry
- Barbara Curthoys by Ann Curthoys
- Vera Deacon by Rod Noble
- Lloyd Edmonds by Julie Kimber & Peter Love
- Della Elliott by Rowan Cahill
- Rivo Gandini by Pat Gandini
- Gwen George by Bronwen Campbell
- Helen Hambly by Heather Goodall
- Joan Harrison by Paula Rix
- Connie Healy by Therese Collie
- Noreen Hewett by Rex Hewett
- Alice Hughes by Therese Collie
- Jack Hutson by Peter Love
- Stan Irvine by Annette Brownlie
- Elliott Johnston by Don Sutherland
- Stanley Wei and the Chinese Branch of the A.C.P. by Drew Cottle
- Tom McDonald by Bev Symons
- Don McLeod by Jan Richardson
- Bernice Morris by Carmel Shute
- Sonny Myles by Patricia Hovey
- Ailsa O'Connor by Julie Copeland
- Jeannie O'Connor by Therese Collie
- Thelma Prior by Carmel Shute
- Joyce Stevens by Judy Mundey
- Wal Stubbings by Lesley Synge
- Louise West by Bev Symons
- Roger Wilson by Alex Ettling & Diane Kirkby
1950s
- Ralph de Boissiere by Li Jianjun
- Norma Disher by Margot Nash
- Brian Dunnett by Roger Jowett
- Judy Gillett-Ferguson by Pat Ranald
- Don Jarrett by Ken Bridge
- Brian Manning by Julie Kimber
- Audrey McDonald by Bev Symons
- Jack Mundey by Greg Mallory
- Rex Munn by Don Jarrett
- Ray Peckham by Mike Donaldson
- Mavis Robertson by Bob Makinson
- Yvonne Smith by Judy McVey
- Bill Sutton by Phillip Edmonds
- George Zangalis by Jock Collins
1960s and 1970s
- Peter Barrack by Greg Giles
- Rob Durbridge by Don Sutherland
- Lance Gowland by Peter Murphy
- Denis Kevans by Peter Earley
- Marilyn (McCormack) Pittman by Jacqueline Widin & Geoff Evans
- Brian McGahen by Peter Murphy
- Judy Mundey by Pam Hawkins
- Merv Nixon by Peter Cockcroft
- Joe Owens by Verity Burgmann and Mike Donaldson
- Pierina Pirisi by Simone Battiston
- Nadine Williams by Deborah Durnan
- Serge Zorino by Frank Panucci[16]
Venezuelan connection
Venezuelan trade unionist and community educator Alexis Adarfio Marin visited Australia May 2010, , informing many audiences of the radical changes being carried out by Venezuela’s Bolivarian revolution.
Adarfio was a guest of the SEARCH Foundation, which hosted a range of international guest speakers at its Australian Left Renewal Conference, 2010 in Sydney over May 29-30.
Adarfio, a member of the Worker Control Collective, a bloc of unionists from 11 basic industries, is a leader in Venezuela’s movement to develop state-owned, socialist industries. He took part in the drafting of the Socialist Guyana Plan to transform Venezuela’s basic industries into less energy-intensive, worker-controlled enterprises directed towards meeting domestic needs rather than export.
In Melbourne, Adarfio addressed a public forum on May 27, organised by the SEARCH Foundation and the Australia-Venezuela Solidarity Network (AVSN). He was joined on the platform by Victor Jose from the Australian Manufacturing Workers Union (AMWU) and Kevin Bracken, Victorian state secretary of the Maritime Union of Australia, both of whom recently took part in the AVSN May Day solidarity brigade to Venezuela.
At an AMWU training meeting in Melbourne, Adarfio told 70 union organisers and staff about the steps being taken towards workers’ control in the heavy industrial area of Bolivar state. The movement for workers’ control began with experiments in co-gestion (worker-government co-management) in different factories, he said.
In Melbourne, Adarfio also addressed the Victorian Trades Hall executive and met activists from the Latrobe Valley to discuss cooperation on their project to establish a worker-run social enterprise to produce solar-powered hot water systems.
In Brisbane, Adarfio told a forum on June 1 organised by the SEARCH Foundation and supported by the AVSN and AMWU: “The revolutionary government in Venezuela is in the process of creating solutions to the crisis of capitalism in our country, including in the areas of health, environment, food security and technological sovereignty.
“Our revolutionary government has made tremendous gains. We now have a university inside the steel industry. I am both a teacher and a student within that process.
“Ten years ago, around 85% of the population was in extreme poverty. This has been radically reduced. But still much more is needed.”
He described how the workers in Bolivar state have for the past year been developing a plan for workers’ control. He explained that Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has insisted all projects have an environmental impact statement conducted by the workers themselves. “It is a big cultural change”, Adarfio said.[17]