Tribute to Paul Singer (1932-2018)

A socialist activist

Book Chapter (2020)
Author(s)

Fábio Sanchez (Universidade Federal de Sao Paulo)

Fernando Kleiman (TU Delft - Information and Communication Technology)

DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-33920-3_7 Final published version
More Info
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Publication Year
2020
Language
English
Pages (from-to)
155-165
Publisher
Springer
ISBN (print)
9783030339197
ISBN (electronic)
9783030339203
Downloads counter
177

Abstract

Paul Singer (1932-2018) was most of his life a direct part of the twentieth-century social movements and those at the beginning of the twenty-first century. He is one of the most renowned and respected democratic left-wing activists of his time in Brazil. Paul Singer was born in Vienna (Austria) in a Jewish family, and he went to Brazil at 8 years old in 1940, escaping from the Nazis. He started his political education when he was a young boy. By the end of Getulio Vargas’ dictatorship in 1945, the Brazilian Communist Party was legally registered and attracting a large part of the country’s left-wing activists. Singer discovers that many of his friends are communists, but he decides to join the socialists, opposing the Stalinists. At the age of 15, he discovers a text from Rosa Luxemburg on the Russian Revolution (Luxemburg 2008). From then on, Rosa Luxemburg becomes a frequent reference for Singer’s activism and intellectual reflections, making him one of the first “Luxemburgists” in the country.