Nguyễn An Ninh (6 September 1900 – 14 August 1943) was a radical Vietnamese political journalist and publicist in French colonial Cochinchina (southern Vietnam). An independent and charismatic figure, Nguyen An Ninh was able to conciliate between different anti-colonial factions including, for a period in the 1930s, between the Communist Party of Nguyen Ai Quoc (aka "Ho Chi Minh", then in exile) and its left, Trotskyist, opposition. Nguyen An Ninh died in the French penal colony of Pulo Condore, age 42. He is recognised by the Socialist Republic of Vietnam as a Revolutionary Martyr.

Nguyễn An Ninh
Born(1900-09-06)6 September 1900
Died14 August 1943(1943-08-14) (aged 42)
NationalityVietnamese
Occupation(s)writer, activist, revolutionary

Early political celebrity edit

Nguyễn An Ninh was born on 6 September 1900, in Chợ Lớn, Saigon, Cochinchina (a direct rule colony incorporated with four protectorates in the French Indochinese Union). His father Nguyen An Khuong, "a middling landowner, who preferred to think of himself as a country scholar",[1] was a supporter of the Duy Tân hội or Đông Du (Association for Modernization, 1904–1912) reform movement.[2] As a result, in 1908, he was excluded from Saigon and banned from journalism.[3] Nguyen An Ninh received a French education. In 1918, this took him to Paris. He graduated from the Sorbonne with a degree in Law age 20.

While in Paris, Nguyễn An Ninh joined the Groupe des Patriotes Annamites (The Group of Vietnamese Patriots)[4] that included Phan Chu Trinh, Phan Van Trưong, Nguyen Thế Truyen and the future Ho Chi Minh (then under the name Nguyen Tat Thanh). Together the "Five Dragons" (Ngu Long) indicted French colonial policy in the socialist press (an indictment that, on a return to France in 1923, Ninh developed and published as La France en Indochine).[5] In 1919 the group tried to present delegates to the Versailles Peace conference with an eight-point programme for colonial self-determination.[6]

Within months of a final return from France, Nguyễn An Ninh was arrested in a suppression of La Cloche Fêlée. As the editor-in-chief, reporter, type-setter and even street seller, he had been producing the paper intermittently in Saigon since December 1923. Its appeals had drawn thousands of young workers and students to protest debt peonage and deportations, and to demand freedom of press, education and assembly.

Ninh was summoned before the governor, Maurice Cognacq, who told him:

This country has no need for intellectuals. This country is very simple. If you want to be intellectual, get the hell out of here, go to Moscow, you'll know that the seeds you want to sow in this country can never sprout.[7]

Ninh's arrest on 21 March 1926, coincided with the return from France of Bui Quang Chieu, the leader of the moderate-nationalist Constitutionalist Party. Crowds accompanying Chieu through the streets of Saigon chanted "Free Nguyễn An Ninh". It was also the day news was received of the death of Phan Chau Trinh. One of the Five Dragons, Phan Chau Trinh was a celebrated political convict. The result, on 4 April, was an unprecedented demonstration against the government. Seventy thousand paraded with Phan Chau Trinh's cortege. When Ninh's 18-month sentence was announced on 24 April 1926, students and school children in Saigon and the region deserted their classes en masse. More than a thousand of them were expelled.[8]

La Cloche Fêlée and the "Nguyen An Ninh Secret Society" edit

Nguyễn An Ninh published La Cloche Fêlée (the title from the poem by Baudelaire, The Cracked Bell) as a "Journal for the Propagation of French Ideas." It carried a speech, delivered on his return to Saigon in October 1923, in which Ninh exhorted young people to "leave the homes of your fathers" and embrace the world.[9][10] Only then could they shake off the "suffocating ignorance" in which they were trapped by obscurantism. Ngo Van recalls the message as being that while Vietnam's oppression comes from France, so does the spirit of liberation.[11] Ninh published his own translation of Jean-Jacques Rousseau's The Social Contract under the title The Ideal of Annamese Youth (Cao-vọng cúa bọn thanh niên An-Nam. Dân uóc).[12]'[13]

Not confining himself to France, however, Ninh found inspiration in the words of figures as diverse as the Indian poet Rabindranath Tagore—"those who take pleasure in dominating foreign races abdicate little by little their own liberty"—and the assassinated German finance minister Walther Rathenau—"He who wants to rule above slaves is himself an escaped slave; the only man who is free is the one who is willing to be followed by freemen and willingly serves free men".[14] In March 1926, following the death of Phan Chau Trinh and Ninh's arrest, La Cloche Fêlée began serialisation of The Communist Manifesto.[15]

Nguyễn An Ninh published his paper in French because of the government's print restrictions on Vietnamese, and it was with regular pleas to his readers to translate for their "brothers".[16] Following the path of Tagore and of Congress leader Mohandas Gandhi in India, he saw himself as employing the ideals of the Enlightenment to both reappraise and reawaken the indigenous culture.[17] This was not a task he believed could be entrusted to the narrow urban and literate classes alone.[18][19]

In 1929 more than a hundred peasants and day labourers were convicted in Saigon for membership of "Nguyễn An Ninh Secret Society" (otherwise known as Thanh niên Cao vọng Đảng, the Youth Salvation Party). According to the Sûreté it had been an insurrectionist conspiracy that promised the initiated "some kind of agrarian socialism." The Trotskyist militant and later chronicler of the times Ngo Van concluded that the "Society" was largely a figment of "denunciations and torture-induced confessions."[20]

Early in 1928, Nguyễn An Ninh, who was fascinated by the growing popular reach of Caodaism had begun travelling by bicycle from village to village, his head shaved like a Buddhist monk.[21] He was in the company of Pham Văn Chieu, a young working-class figure from the Saigon underworld, and the later Trotskyist leader Phan Văn Hùm who had written him a fan letter in 1924.[22] The only concrete piece of advice Ninh is said to have given is for people to withhold their taxes, with the suggestion—in the recollection of one village school teacher—that within three years the colonialists would either capitulate or face a popular uprising.[23] While Ninh himself avoided creating a centralized command structure, Van believes that some of his comrades tried to organise in his wake and that other underground groups used the name of Nguyễn An Ninh to rally support".[20]

In a serialised and widely circulated account of their shared experience of Saigon's Maison Centrale,[24] the "Colonial Bastille,"[25] Phan Văn Hùm eulogised his friend as a man who, forsaking government offers of land and position, had struck "terror into the hearts of corrupt, servile sycophants" and shaken "the corner of the southern sky".[26]

Other, present-day pro-CPV sources have Nguyễn An Ninh returning to his mission the countryside after his release in 1931. He was accompanied by Nguyễn Văn Trân, a young Communist Party member he had known from Paris, and it was with the understanding that his Society was not a political party, but rather a mass movement from which there could, and should, be recruitment to the Communist Party.[27][28] Ninh, according to these sources, declined to join the party himself only because he believed himself of greater service to the movement as a non-party "patriotic intellectual".[29]

While Ninh was in prison, Pham Văn Chieu appears to have maintained contact with many of his erstwhile supporters in the countryside, and after the rural protests of 1930 to have led them into the Communist Party.[23]

When years later, in 1936, Ngo Van encountered Nguyễn An Ninh again in Saigon's Maison Central and asked him about his "agrarian programme," Ngo Van recalls that Ninh "raised his eyes [over the prison walls] toward the tamarind trees and began to sing Auprès de ma blonde [a traditional French ballad]: "In my father's garden . . . All the birds in the world come to build their nests". He later thrust into Ngo Van's hands Céline's "explosive" Voyage au bout de la nuit (Journey to the End of the Night).[30]

La Lutte and the Democratic Front edit

Between 1930 and the end of 1932 the colonial authorities responded to widespread rural and labour unrest with dragnet arrests. More than 12,000 political prisoners were taken, of whom 7,000 were sent to the penal colonies. The French shattered the structure of every anti-colonial faction including (at a time when most their leading cadres were already in prison or, with Ho chi Minh, abroad) the Indochinese Communist Party (PCI). Gathering around the independent figure of Nguyễn An Ninh, several of surviving representatives decided to bury their differences and together oppose the government in the Saigon municipal elections of April–May 1933.

The group, which included Nguyễn Văn Tạo of the PCI, the Trotskyist Tạ Thu Thâu, the anarchist Trinh Hung Ngau, and the independent nationalist Tran Van Thach, put forward a common "Workers's List" (So lao dong) and briefly published the paper La Lutte (The Struggle) to rally support for it. In spite of the restricted franchise, two of this Struggle group were elected (although denied their seats). Ngo Van identifies Nguyễn An Ninh as having been "the real linchpin." At the largest of the hustings he was elected to chair by acclaim.[31]

In 1934 Nguyễn An Ninh helped revive the La Lutte collaboration. Ninh and the Lutteurs "focused squarely on the plight of the urban poor, the workers and peasant labourers."[32] However, from 1936 the lengthening shadow of the Moscow Trials (obliging the Party loyalists to denounce their Trotskyist colleagues as "twin brothers of fascism"), and the failure of the Communist Party-supported Popular Front government in France to deliver on promises of colonial reform, ensured a split.[33] Tạ Thu Thâu and Nguyễn Văn Tạo came together for the last time in the April 1937 city council elections, both being elected.

In the wake of renewed labour unrest, with Tạ Thu Thâu and Nguyen Van Tao, Nguyễn An Ninh's was soon back in prison. When released early in 1939, but still under house arrest, he was persuaded to let his name go forward with Nguyễn Văn Tạo, and other Party cadres, as a Democratic Front candidate in the April 1939 Cochinchina Colonial Council elections.[34] Together with the Constitutionalist slate, his list was defeated by the now wholly Trotskyist lutteurs. The La Lutte Workers and Peasants platform was revolutionary (radical land redistribution and workers' control) but in a restricted income-tax payer election the key was the Trotskyists' opposition to the French Indochina defence levy that the Communist Party, in the spirit of Franco-Soviet accord, had felt obliged to support.[35]

Final incarceration and death edit

When on 23 August 1939, Franco-Soviet relations were finally sundered by the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact and war followed two weeks later, "sedition" of every stripe and faction was repressed. Nguyễn An Ninh was sentenced to 5 years in prison and 10 years exile.

Nguyen An Ninh died in the Côn Đảo island prison, Poulo Condore, on 14 August 1943. It is possible that his jailers had decided his fate. They may have regarded him as a figure the Japanese occupiers would seek to use politically.[36]

Commemoration edit

Thirty-seven years after his death, on 1 August 1980, the Vietnamese Socialist Republic posthumously conferred upon Nguyễn An Ninh the title “Revolutionary Martyr.”[2] In what is now Ho Chi Minh City, Ninh is memorialised in the Nguyễn An Ninh High school and in Nguyễn An Ninh Street, a central thoroughfare familiar to the city's growing number of foreign visitors. A museum dedicated to Nguyễn An Ninh was opened on the site of his parental home northwest of Ho Chi Minh City, in District 12 In 2002.[37]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Ho Tai 1992, p. 74.
  2. ^ a b Anh, Da (2012). "Nguyen An Ninh - a patriotic lawyer". vietnamlawmagazine.vn. Retrieved 19 June 2022.
  3. ^ Thanh, Trịnh Vân (1966), Thành ngữ điển tích danh nhân từ điển. Saigon, Nhà xuất bản Hồn Thiêng.
  4. ^ Gisele Bousquet, Behind the Bamboo Hedge: The Impact of Homeland Politics in Parisian Vietnamese Community, University of Michigan Press, pp. 47-48
  5. ^ Nguyen An Ninh, La France en Indochine, Paris, Impr. de A Debeauve, 1923
  6. ^ Pham, David Lan (2015). "Two respectable revolutionaries named Phan". www.caidinh.com. Retrieved 19 June 2022.
  7. ^ Ngoc, Huu (2012). "Octobre 1923, un discours incendiaire". lecourrier.vn (in French). Retrieved 19 June 2022.
  8. ^ Van 2010, pp. 40–42.
  9. ^ "L’idéal des jeunes Annamites", reprinted in La Cloche fêlée No. 5 (7 January 1924) and No. 6 (11 January 1924).
  10. ^ Ho Tai 1992, pp. 77–78.
  11. ^ Van 2010, pp. 158–159.
  12. ^ Nguyen An Ninh, Cao-vọng cúa bọn thanh niên An-Nam. Dân uóc, Saigon, Xưa-nay, 1926
  13. ^ Bruce Lockhart, William J. Duiker: Historical Dictionary of Vietnam, Oxford, 2006, S. 260f
  14. ^ Ho Tai 1992, p. 82.
  15. ^ Ho Tai 1992, p. 160.
  16. ^ Peycam 2012, p. 128.
  17. ^ Pham, Kevin D. (2020). "Nguyễn An Ninh's Anti-Colonial Thought: A New Account of National Shame". Polity. 52 (4): 521–550. doi:10.1086/710685. ISSN 0032-3497. S2CID 222177675.
  18. ^ Lockhart, Duiker, Historical Dictionary of Vietnam, 3, 260f
  19. ^ Ho Tai 1992, p. 76.
  20. ^ a b Van 2010, p. 227n45.
  21. ^ Ho Tai 1992, pp. 190–192.
  22. ^ Ho Tai 1992, p. 190.
  23. ^ a b Ho Tai 1992, p. 194.
  24. ^ Phan Van Hum, Ngồi tù Khám Lớn (In the Maison Centrale), Saigon, 1929
  25. ^ Zinoman 2001, p. 256.
  26. ^ Van 2010, p. 78.
  27. ^ Đóng góp thầm lặng của một người ngoài Đảng
  28. ^ "Các phong trào đấu tranh yêu nước đầu thế kỷ XX". Archived from the original on 17 December 2007. Retrieved 17 September 2020.
  29. ^ Nguyên Hùng, "Nam Bộ - Những nhân vật một thời vang bóng", NXB Công An Nhân Dân 2003
  30. ^ Van 2010, pp. 79–80.
  31. ^ Van 2010, p. 55.
  32. ^ Christopher Gosha, The Penguin History of Modern Vietnam, Penguin, London, 2016, 0. 255
  33. ^ Frank N. Trager (ed.). Marxism in Southeast Asia; A Study of Four Countries. Stanford, Calif: Stanford University Press, 1959. p. 142
  34. ^ Van 2010, pp. 81, 156.
  35. ^ Van 2010, p. 168.
  36. ^ j050807 (29 May 2017). "Nguyễn An Ninh (Version anglaise)". Quêhươngtôi (in French). Retrieved 19 June 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  37. ^ Hong, Lien (2008). "Nhà tưởng niệm Nguyễn An Ninh || thptnan.com - trường Nguyễn An Ninh". Archived from the original on 12 September 2012. Retrieved 10 December 2022.

Bibliography edit