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Part I - Revolution in the Nanyang

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 August 2019

Anna Belogurova
Affiliation:
Freie Universität Berlin

Summary

Chinese immigrant communists who were members of the Malayan Communist Party (MCP) invented the national discourse of a multiethnic Malayan nation in 1930 through the medium of a semantic slippage of the Chinese word minzu (nation, nationality, ethnic group). The MCP, which mixed elements of a traditional Chinese association and a Bolshevik party, was a product of the ideological and organizational hybridization common to anti-imperialist organizations in Southeast Asia in the interwar global moment. The Malayan nationalism of the MCP built on the official nationalism of the British government and was shaped by Comintern ideas concerning the internationalism of national communist parties and by the need for political inclusion of immigrants in the Malayan body politic. This idea of a Malayan nation wherein nationalism and internationalism did not contradict each other was a derivative discourse originating in colonialism, though it became central to the Malayan nation after independence. The heterogeneous origins of the Malayan national concept highlight the ambiguities of nationalism and help us understand why this concept is still under debate today.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Nanyang Revolution
The Comintern and Chinese Networks in Southeast Asia, 1890–1957
, pp. 1 - 80
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2019

1 Prologue A Durian for Sun Yatsen

The world of Chinese migrant communists in Malaya is a window into interwar Chinese communist networks, which formed as Chinese communists in the Nanyang (南洋), the historical region of Chinese migration, the South Seas, spanning from Vietnam and the Philippines down to Indonesia and across the Malay Peninsula to Siam, founded communist cells and brought their compatriots to their adopted homes for employment. These networks were often built onto existing Chinese networks, and, in addition to being empowered by the Comintern, they were used by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and the Chinese Nationalist Party, the Guomindang (GMD), during the second united front period in the 1930s and 1940s, including for the recruitment of Eighth Route Army fighters in communist guerrilla areas in mainland China.Footnote 1 These networks also became launching pads for anti-Japanese guerrilla forces during the war in Malaya. Many members of these networks maintained connections with both the GMD and the communists in the Nanyang, as both parties continued to make a Chinese Revolution there, that is, a struggle for the political rights of the Chinese overseas, which had started in the time of Sun Yatsen. These Chinese intellectuals, mostly school teachers and journalists and editors, set for themselves the task of civilizing both the local Chinese, by making them more “Chinese” in terms of language and culture, and the locals, by liberating them from British imperialism together with the Chinese, whose economic and political rights were jeopardized by British policies.

In that world, the torn relationship between Chinese overseas, China, and their adopted motherland, as well as the longing to become local while preserving a unique form of Chineseness, is represented by the metaphor of the durian, a Southeast Asian fruit with a strong smell. In Chinese, the word for “durian” (榴 莲, liulian) is a homophone of the word for “to linger” (流连). A taste for durian foretold that a Chinese person who had come to the Nanyang was destined to stay. In 1928, Chinese writer Xu Jie (许杰), dispatched by the Central Committee of the GMD to work for the GMD newspaper A Paper for the Benefit of the Public (Yiqunbao) in Kuala Lumpur, imagined the smelly durian as a symbol of the stink of the Nanyang’s capitalist society and the money-oriented mentality of Chinese hawkers.Footnote 2 Thus, in the story of Zheng He, a Chinese Muslim explorer of Southeast Asia, the durian tree was said to have grown from a latrine. Publication of Xu Jie’s essay ridiculing Chinese migrants’ attachment to the durian was not allowed, and since Xu was not willing to sell out his ideals, as he explained, after struggling for one year, he decided to leave the stinky world of the Nanyang. But where, he asked, would he go to leave the world of capitalism?Footnote 3 Around the same time, in 1932 the Singapore-born founder of Sun Yatsen’s Revolutionary Alliance, Zhang Yongfu, moved to China. In his recollection, Sun could not stand the durian either.Footnote 4

Regardless of Sun’s taste for the durian in reality, Zhang’s reminiscence was intended to demonstrate Sun’s loyalty to China at a time when the GMD promoted the identification of overseas Chinese (huaqiao 华桥) with China. It was during this epoch that the Malayan Communist Party (Malaiya gongchandang) (MCP), consisting of former GMD and CCP members aiming to promote the Chinese Revolution, also attempted to mediate between the Chinese community and the local environments, and to indigenize by using the communist language of anticolonial liberation and by recruiting non-Chinese members into Chinese organizations. Amid the confusion of sojourning between China and the Nanyang, Chinese communists in Malaya organized themselves in ways both familiar, as Chinese organizations among sojourners had for centuries, and novel, as Bolshevik revolutionary parties. The result was a hybrid product of the interwar global moment, a mix of old and new, shaped by misunderstandings, miscommunications, and contingencies.

Although the MCP was a predominantly Chinese overseas organization, it was rooted in the regional historical experience of Southeast Asian forms of organization in response to a shared set of challenges that came with colonialism. Similar to 1920s’ Java, we can see in Malaya that a new sense of agency was expressed in languages and forms that were novel at the time, “but at the same time based on the old ones,” such as newspapers, rallies, strikes, parties, and ideologies.Footnote 5 Similar to leftist Chinese immigrant intellectuals in Malaya, journalists in Java assumed new roles aside from being editors, writers, and commentators on readers’ letters: they talked at rallies and negotiated between the authorities and members of the political parties.Footnote 6 Similar to the MCP’s translation of national categories, a transformation of the national consciousness, pergerakan, was a process of translation and appropriation that “allowed people to say in new forms and languages what they had been unable to say.”Footnote 7 Similar to pergerakan, which involved the rise of Indonesian nationalism and the imagery of a free world in pan-Islamic and pan-communist terms, the MCP imagined its nation as part of a world liberated from colonialism.

In response to imperialism, across maritime Southeast Asia new ideas of nationalism and radicalism were grafted onto existing concepts and organizational forms, which shaped the hybridization of anti-imperialist and labor organizations. Independence ideas were translated through the religious appeal and social relevance of a Christian narrative among Philippine peasants into the early 1900s; the historical relationship between the middle-class leadership, landownership, the Catholic Church, and the revolutionary societies such as Katipunan, secret societies akin to Freemasonry, and early labor organizationsFootnote 8 resulted in the active participation of secret society members in the communist party. Javanese Muslims joined forces with the Partai Komunis Indonesia (PKI) because communism offered the best way of practicing Islam.Footnote 9 The worlds of Christianity, Islam, communism, and nationalism intersected. It was the Comintern’s Bolshevization that was to remedy such hybridity and, common to the communist parties of the 1930s, the divide between elite communists and labor movements and the party and “the masses.” Bolshevization also involved the adaptation of policies to local conditions, that is, indigenization.

The MCP’s history and the discourse of its Malayan nation were an illustration of the global connections of the interwar period and the products of the prevailing global trends of internationalization and indigenization, comparable with those of other international organizations such as Protestant missions and Buddhist organizations.Footnote 10 In this ideological moment, to borrow from Cheek,Footnote 11 all three movements, although offering conflicting visions of modernity, had structural similarities and embraced nationalism. Thus, nationalism did not contradict internationalism. In the MCP and in the Philippines and Indonesia, the movement for independence was intertwined with globalist thinking in the form of Comintern internationalism, the pan-Asianism of Sun Yatsen, Christianity, Islam, and anarchism.Footnote 12

In the context of the interwar internationalist moment,Footnote 13 while the 1917 Revolution transformed the Russian empire into what Terry Martin has called the “affirmative empire” of Soviet nationalities,Footnote 14 the internationalist Comintern acted through the only recognized “national” communist parties in the colonies to support and create nationalism. As the Comintern sought to break the world imperialist system through its “weakest link” in pursuit of a world proletarian revolution, in the context of societies with significant immigrant populations, the Comintern’s variant of internationalism created or built on existing discourses of multiethnic nations, similar to the Soviet republics.Footnote 15

While the roles that the Comintern and Chinese communist organizations in Malaya played in indigenous nationalism were unique among Chinese communist organizations overseas, similarly, in the Dutch East Indies the first to use the marker “Indonesia” were communists.Footnote 16 Also, Austrian communists were key in the shaping of nationalist discourses in a previously nonexistent nation.Footnote 17 At the same time, in the interwar global moment and internationalist zeitgeist,Footnote 18 the lack of contradiction between nationalism and internationalism in the MCP, as expressed in the Comintern’s promotion both of nations through the establishment of national parties and of a world revolution, fit the GMD and CCP’s aspiration for a world of equal nations. Through this discourse and the organization of a “national” party through an internationalist alliance of various ethnic groups, the MCP became both nationalist and internationalist. Thus, Malaya, similar to cosmopolitan China, in the words of Hung-Yok Ip, became an “internationalist nation.”Footnote 19 Comintern internationalism helped to ground the “ungrounded empire” of Chinese networks in Malaya.Footnote 20

The MCP was one node in the international network of the 1920s and 1930s, throughout which we can see the operation of the global interwar networks of Chinese communists, of the Comintern, and of transnational anti-imperialism. Similarly, according to Michele Louro, when Nehru participated in the League Against Imperialism (1927), he viewed nationalism and internationalism as not mutually exclusive, and his distinction between nationalism and internationalism, India and the world, was blurred.Footnote 21 Through the workings of this interwar globalization and the conjuncture of nationalism and internationalism in Chinese networks due to the nature of Chinese migration, which prompted overseas Chinese to be embedded in both sending and receiving environments and nationalism, the MCP’s nation under Chinese leadership in a multiethnic community illustrates the Chinese role in nationalism in Southeast Asia.

***

To explain the relationships among Southeast Asia, China, and the goals of a communist revolution in the 1930s, apart from a consideration of indigenous communist movements in Southeast Asia, we must consider the connections among three sides: the overseas Chinese, the huaqiao, shaped by the policies of their host governments; the Third Communist International or Comintern, run out of Moscow, with the Far Eastern Bureau (FEB) regional office in Shanghai; and China itself, including Sun Yatsen, GMD revolutionaries, and Chinese communists. Comintern networks were merely an added layer of a global network of Chinese sojourning communities in which Soviet ideology and, above all, nationalist Chinese communism were secondary to the survival behavior of the huaqiao community. This community was larger than families and smaller than the state, although it was trying to become the state in and of itself, and it promoted the anticolonial revolution in the region of the Nanyang. We see in what follows, as well, how these communities operated over long distances, and we gain insights into their organizational and justificatory structures.

Yet the earliest communist envoys in British Malaya were Sneevliet, Darsono, Semaun, and Baars, a group of Dutch and Indonesians from the Dutch East Indies who passed through Singapore in 1921–1922 on their way to and from Shanghai, Moscow, or Holland,Footnote 22 as well as Bao Huiseng, a founding member of the CCP who worked in Malaya in 1922. Tan Malaka’s activity in 1924 in Singapore cooperating with Chinese and supported by the Comintern notwithstanding, after the defeat of the uprising in Java in 1926–1927, many PKI refugees, such as Alimin, Musso, Winanta, Subakat, and Jamaluddin Tamin, among others, fled through Singapore.Footnote 23 The paths of Indonesian and Chinese communists thus ran parallel in Malaya. Despite a small number of Malays in the MCP during the 1930s, the MCP was unable to solve what has usually been seen as its main problem, that is, its Chinese orientation. The party was unable to attract any significant non-Chinese membership, yet the party genuinely identified with Malaya.

Philip Kuhn’s conception of Chinese overseas as having a need to be doubly rooted in China and in their local environments helps make sense of the MCP’s dual nationalism.Footnote 24 In MCP texts, this is expressed in the multiple meanings of the word minzu as “nation,” “nationality,” “people,” and “national.” The concept of minzu moved between different meanings for different audiences at different times, and even between different meanings for the same audience at different times. However, this process of slippage in meaning is not the same as a misunderstanding. I show that the variant meanings of minzu were consistent and coherent within specific discursive domains. Similarly, Comintern ideas of “national” parties helped Chinese communists in Malaya secure their place in the Malayan nation, which the British government promoted at the time despite not granting Chinese immigrants political rights. The British government rather promoted one “Malayan” identity, which would be based on the common language, Malay or English, and a “love for the land.”Footnote 25

These circumstances were channeled through a translation slippage of the word minzu. In the following decade, in the ranges of different meanings employed by different actors in the revolution in the Nanyang, this notion of “nation” literally sojourned between Malaya and China in MCP discourse. As “sojourning” better describes this process, it does not imply the negative connotation that was associated with Chinese immigrants at the time, as sojourners who were not really present in a new place and were always outsiders in some fashion. However, scholarship on overseas Chinese has shown that “sojourning Chinese” contradicted this perception in their historical experience. Sojourning Chinese were emphatically part of their host societies. In the same fashion, the sojourning concept for minzu was both changed by and rooted in the discursive worlds it entered. This book maps this movement over time and through contemporary documents and demonstrates the actual mechanics and ways in which Chinese immigrant communists imagined the “nation.”Footnote 26 The enduring meaning and flexibility of the concept of minzu, which can be found only in the details, did not only reflect the historical change but also played a role that shaped history. Those details are a key part of my story.

The MCP’s story is a history of the conjuncture of words, concepts, and changed social experiences. Chinese in Shanghai and Singapore used Russian directives in English based on their often global experience in the late 1920s. Perched in their different environments, they assigned significantly different meanings to these borrowed words and concepts. The mechanism for this was twofold, conceptual and social. When speakers of different languages interpreted authoritative texts or generated their own texts using the conceptual training available to them, a key word’s pragmatic definition (the change in the meaning of a key word reflected in its actual use) conjoined with the changed social experience of text writers and text readers to produce different meanings for the same words. I build on Koselleck’s Begriffsgeschichte (history of concepts) to map the social history of these meanings in the language.Footnote 27

Malayan Chinese communists’ adoption of the ideas of Comintern internationalism and of a national party was similar to the Hakka ethno-cultural group’s adoption of Christianity in Guangxi Province in the mid-nineteenth century, as they too had to assert their interests vis-à-vis the local population. In both cases, novel concepts and language effectively represented a change in the social experience of the local population. At the same time, as Kuhn has stressed, imported concepts and language (which, by the twentieth century, often came in the form of an integrated ideology) are not simply adapted to a new locality but also bring their own internal logic to the new environment. Thus, the novelty of an imported ideology (if it finds social efficacy) is twofold: it offers new ways to perceive and address the changed social reality, and it injects some new intentions and reasoning into a locality.Footnote 28 The case of the MCP’s Malayan nationalism offers a concrete look at the workings of ideological borrowing.

Minzu was a key word, one of the “significant, indicative words” that conveyed “strong feelings or important ideas” at the time, and despite nominal continuity in its general meaning, changes in its definition across cultural contexts were “radically different or radically variable, yet sometimes hardly noticed.” Raymond Williams tells us that these meanings are not confined to language but extend to “the users of language and to the objects and relationships” about which language speaks, and those “exist, indeed primarily, in material and historical ways.”Footnote 29

Language, central to the MCP story, defined how a nation was imagined and what a nation was to become. Slippages in meaning thus underlined the role of language in forming the basis for historical change and national consciousness. Yet language divisions impeded the MCP in its goal to become the (multi)national party of Malaya even while facilitating communication in transnational networks. The MCP’s “nation” is yet another example of the strategic use of Bolshevik language by various actors in the 1920–1930s and an example of how language formulations effected policies in the world of the Chinese Communist Party.Footnote 30 As minzu was translated between different languages and semantic fields, as in the case of comparable strategic adoption, where political power (real or symbolic) underpins the choice of meaning in “translingual practices,”Footnote 31 ultimately, the consequences of the “semantic hybridity” of translated concepts across cultures and intersecting ideological and political fieldsFootnote 32 were unintended. Marshall Sahlins’s concept of the structure of conjuncture, that is, meanings, accidents, and causal forces that shape conditions whose interactions in particular times and spaces seal the fates of whole societies,Footnote 33 is instructive to explain the case of the MCP’s Malayan nation, as during the same time period comparable ambiguities and fluidity in the meaning of the terms “country,” “ethnicity,” and “people” can be found in the contexts of Indonesia,Footnote 34 Japan,Footnote 35 and the Harlem Renaissance movement.Footnote 36

The MCP’s Malayan nation was one among other concepts of national belonging, as the Malayan community was multicultural and various actors experimented with ways to imagine a nation for those who lived in the Malayan peninsula in sultanates under British domination. For Malay-speaking Muslims, Indians who spoke South Asian languages, and those speaking the dialects of South China but writing in Mandarin, English, as the official language of the British government was the medium of communication. How does one imagine a community if the community speaks three or more languages?

Thus, it should not surprise us that the residents of British Malaya sought ways of imagining an inclusive community other than the single-language print capitalism described by Benedict Anderson, which, however, the British government successfully employed to imbue the idea of a Malayan nation in Chinese immigrants as well as a sense of common identity through Malay-language newspapers among Malays in the early 1930s.Footnote 37 Malay concepts of national belonging, such as bangsa, excluded immigrants, who in 1921 comprised half the population of British Malaya. Thus, these concepts could not appeal to the Chinese, who themselves comprised more than one-third of the population. Other imaginations that were comparable to national belonging and collective living in the Malay Peninsula, such as an Islamic community (umat) excluding non-Muslims, as a sultan-centered loyalty (kerajaan), and as a British Malayan nation, did not accommodate the political rights of a large immigrant population.Footnote 38 The MCP’s Malayan nation was to awaken as a proletarian multiethnic nation, similar to China as imagined by the Chinese communists,Footnote 39 run by an alliance of three communist parties representing the three largest communities of British Malaya, Chinese, Malay, and Indian, as the “national” Malayan Communist Party. However, the MCP is best understood as a “hybrid organization” with roots in older forms of Chinese associational life as well as in more novel forms and idioms of Bolshevization rather than as a mere pawn of the Comintern.Footnote 40

The heterogeneous origins of the Malayan national concept highlight the ambiguities of nationalism and help us to understand why this concept is still being debated today. After World War II, a form of territory-based civic nationalism among Chinese immigrants, which was invented by the intelligentsia (similar to the nationalism in Eastern Europe, Africa, Latin America, Southeast Asia, China, India, and even North America) in the 1930s and incorporated immigrant bourgeoisie into the nation, prevailed over the primordial ethnic (or perennial)Footnote 41 Malay concept of national belonging based on language, rights to land, or loyalty to a sultan, and over the concepts of the larger communities of Islam and Greater Indonesia. More continuities and similarities exist between MCP attitudes, those of the GMD, and those of the postwar Malayan Chinese Association (MCA) with the incorporation of Chinese into the independent body politic of Malaya.

As in the majority of modern nation-states, several forms of nationalism, as defined by Anthony D. Smith, can be distinguished in the MCP’s Malayan nation as can elements of all three types of nationhood: as a bureaucratic incorporation, as a vernacular mobilization by the intelligentsia, and as plural nations built by settlers in North America and Australia.Footnote 42 Malaya is thus an example of a constructed Southeast Asian nation where, as in other places in Asia, Africa, and Latin America, colonialism was a primary source of nationalism.Footnote 43 Similar to other nationalist movements, the MCP sought political power.Footnote 44 An imported concept, the MCP’s Malayan nation was an exemplary “derivative discourse” based on colonial borders and concepts.Footnote 45

As to the central question in studies of nationalism, which is, according to Hobsbawm, the criteria for nationhood, the MCP’s Malayan nation offers a complex answer.Footnote 46 It was invented, not as a tradition,Footnote 47 but rather as part of a novel national vision embedded in the interwar internationalist zeitgeist and in the British colonial discourse of the Malayan nation and Malayanization (a preferential policy, protection, and promotion of the Malay language) – that is, through state-sponsored top-down nationalism, as described by Ernest Gellner.Footnote 48 It was imagined by the Chinese émigré intellectuals for the Chinese community, similar to Anderson’s Latin American creoles, the contested pioneers of nationalism,Footnote 49 and indigenous Malays considered themselves to be excluded from the category of “Malayans.”Footnote 50 Chinese communists borrowed concepts and models from the Comintern, specifically concerning national parties and the principle of separate ethnic organizations among communists in the labor and communist movements in the United States. Those two models fit the local context because they allowed communists to imagine the nation promoted by the British government in a different way, one in which Chinese would have equal rights. Ultimately, the MCP’s Malayan nation was the beginning of the postwar phase of nationalism in Southeast Asia, described by Anderson as a response to global imperialism, led by bilingual intelligentsia and based on the distilled experience of European and American models.Footnote 51

The MCP was shaped by unintended consequences and by the historical contingencies of anti-imperialism in Southeast Asia, Chinese long-term migration trends, network connections, identity and localization, organizational behavior originating in South China, Soviet and GMD geostrategic visions, and the organizational practices of the Comintern and the international communist movement. The efforts by the GMD, the CCP, and the Comintern in the making of a world revolution overlapped in Southeast Asia, and an independent “national” Malayan communist organization was established as the Chinese communists in Malaya sought the Comintern’s international legitimacy and finances (Chapter 2). Combined with a growing need for Chinese immigrants to adopt a Malayan identity and to create a distinct Nanyang Chineseness, this resulted in the MCP’s adoption of the discourse of an independent Malayan nation led by communists and including Chinese immigrants (Chapter 3). The MCP’s discourse and activities show its hybrid – and torn – nature. The MCP tried to act in the traditional role of Chinese associations as a broker between the Chinese and the British government and, at the same time, it campaigned for the overthrow of governments in Malaya and China (Chapter 4). A comparison with the Chinese immigrant organizations’ relation to local nationalism in the American Philippines and the Dutch East Indies demonstrates that the policies of the colonial governments toward the Chinese immigrants and the nuances of their identity shaped the involvement of the Chinese immigrants in the indigenous national project. Another unintended result of the MCP’s interaction with the Comintern and of their overlapping interests in the mobilization of locally born Chinese was the strengthening of Chinese communist networks in Southeast Asia (Chapter 5). The GMD’s nationalist education policies in overseas Chinese schools were responsible for the rising popularity of communist ideas in Malaya (Chapter 6). Chinese communists in Malaya succeeded because of their dual Chinese and Malayan nationalism and in spite of, not because of, their propaganda. Xu Jie’s durian story captures the main problem in the relationship between the MCP and the Chinese community, that is, the tensions between the business orientation of the community and the MCP’s radicalism, which was disastrous for its following by the beginning of the war (Chapter 7). Yet the experience of the Japanese occupation was crucial in shaping the Chinese community’s identification with the territory of sovereign Malaya.

This book is based on a collection of materials produced by the MCP and collected by the Comintern, now archived in Moscow at the Rosskiiskii gosudarstvennyi arkhiv sotsial’no-politicheskoi istorii (Russian State Archive of Sociopolitical History) (RGASPI) and covering 1928–1935 and 1939–1941; MCP members’ memoirs from local literary and historical materials (wenshi ziliao), Chinese- and English-language periodicals from China and British Malaya, British Colonial and Foreign Office records that contain analytical reports and translations of MCP documents (which scholars sometimes regard as a “state perspective” and not as genuine MCP sourcesFootnote 52) as well as translations of press clippings from China; the materials of the Shanghai Municipal Police (SMP), including those at the National Archives and Records Administration (Washington, DC), as well as the GMD collection at the Hoover Archives. Because reports in Comintern correspondence are mostly signed by the Central Committee of the MCP, and only a few letters are signed by individuals, it is impossible, with rare exceptions, to attribute ideas and policies to certain individuals. This shortcoming thus migrated to this book, in which I have to refer to the Central Committee of the MCP (CC MCP) or, even worse, to the MCP or the Communist Youth League (CYL) as monolithic actors. Moreover, due to the inconsistent Romanization of different Chinese dialects as well as the large number of aliases that communists used, in many cases the Chinese characters for the names of people in Comintern sources cannot be determined.

***

In admission of my own commitments, I must state that I was born and raised in the Soviet Union. I had to join the Oktiabriata (Little Octobrist) and Young Pioneer organizations, but by the time I reached the age at which I would have joined the Komsomol (Communist Youth League), it was no longer mandatory. In school, we had to memorize the resolutions of party meetings in history classes. In university, my textbooks on the history of the “Ancient East” had quotes from Marx, Engels, and Lenin. When the Comintern was preparing to give 50,000 gold dollars for work in Malaya, my late grandmother, Anna Fedorovna Remizova, lived through famine in the Volga region in 1930–1932 and recalled how, as a child, she would go to the fields to look for edible plants. When I see requests for money in the letters from the Malayan communists to the Comintern, I think of my grandmother and of her father, who was arrested by the People’s Commissariat for Internal Affairs (Narodnyi Komissariat Vnutrennikh Del) (NKVD) for hiding a Bible. All this, no doubt, translates into the detachment, even cynicism, with which I approach MCP texts.

I also believe, however, that my attention to the practical aspects of the relationship between the Comintern and the MCP is not unreasonable. As I show in this book, the MCP consciously manipulated rhetorical and organizational tools designed for mobilization while its members asked the Comintern for money. The members of the MCP were practical, even if they dreamed of a soviet federation of Malayan states in which they would form the government. Aspirations to make one’s way to power with weapons, even in the name of the “masses,” can hardly be called idealism. Nonetheless, my job as a historian is first to understand and explain how things came to pass. Judgment must await future research.

2 The Global World of Chinese Networks in the 1920s The Chinese Revolution and the Liberation of the Oppressed Minzu

“So we want to know where internationalism [shijiezhuyi] comes from? It comes from nationalism.”Footnote 1

From Global Trade to Global Emancipation: The Chinese Revolution in Moscow, Tokyo, Berlin, San Francisco, and Singapore

By the second half of the nineteenth century, Chinese migration had become a globalizing force of its own. The abolition of the transatlantic slave trade had created a demand for Chinese labor, and the opening of Chinese ports after the Opium Wars facilitated coolie trade to the Americas. Population crises and new opportunities across the globe, including the gold rush and the demand for indentured labor on plantations, pushed the Chinese from South China, who had a tradition of searching for opportunities overseas, to leave China for the British, Dutch, and Spanish colonies in the Americas and Southeast Asia, including sovereign Siam. Although the number of migrants is difficult to estimate because of inconclusive data, the 14.7 million departures from Xiamen, Shantou, and Hong Kong in 1869–1939 give an idea of the scale of the migration.Footnote 2

Although localized centuries-old communities of Chinese were politically second class to the Europeans, they were involved in administration and helped govern the colonies. They “borrowed” the Dutch and British empires in Southeast Asia and were essential middlemen for the functioning of those empires.Footnote 3 Chinese merchants had been rising to the position of rulers in the indigenous polities of today’s mainland Southeast Asia since the early second millennium. In Dutch and then British colonies, the Chinese had functioned as tax collectors, and they thrived on revenue farms until the late nineteenth century, particularly through the opium trade.Footnote 4 Yet European discriminatory policies toward the alien migrant Chinese and toward the circulation of nationalist ideas made acquisition of a local identity desirable for the Chinese. In the second half of the nineteenth century in the Philippines, in addition to helping to form the basis of the Manila-centered Hispanicized culture, which led people to identify as “Philippine” versus “non-Philippine” after the American takeover, Chinese mestizos were seen as potential challengers to Spanish rule because of their strong economic status as landholders. Indeed, Chinese mestizos played an important role in the Philippine Revolution of 1896–1898, even if they did not identify as Chinese.Footnote 5

In the meantime, emerging Chinese nationalism inside China resonated with and was amplified by the discriminatory policies of the colonial governments in overseas communities in Southeast Asia and in North American settler colonies. Despite the resentment of the Chinese overseas toward the Qing government for its inability to defend its subjects from the discriminatory policies of European colonial governments, they embraced Qing re-Sinicization efforts. From the establishment of Qing diplomatic representation and modern Chinese schools with Mandarin as the medium of instruction to the granting of patrilineal Chinese nationality beginning in 1909, the Chinese overseas sought to assert their Chinese and indigenous identities at the same time.

The Chinese nationalism of the early twentieth century is inseparable from the history of world anticolonial movements. The anticolonial struggles of Cuba and the Philippines, the Boer Wars, and the Asian migrant campaigns for rights in southern Africa, where the Chinese entered into an alliance with Indian migrants led by none other than GandhiFootnote 6 not only provided a stimulus for the development of Chinese nationalism but also set an organizational precedent for anti-imperialist leagues, which would become the mode of twentieth-century international anticolonial organizations and have been referred to as the precursors of the 1955 Bandung Conference.Footnote 7 The earliest one, the American Anti-Imperialist League (1898–1920), was established in the United States to protest the annexation of the Philippines and Cuba, whereas the beginnings of anti-imperialist leagues in East Asia were found in pan-Asian societies in the early 1900s in Japan and Shanghai. The goals of Chinese nationalism at the turn of the century included both the solution of China’s problems and the making of a world of independent nations. Liu Shipei, a member of the Indo-Chinese Asian Solidarity Society (Yazhou heqinghui) in Tokyo (1907), pointed out the importance of the solidarity of the “weak peoples” (ruozhong) of Asia in the confrontation between China and Asia and the imperialism of Japan and the West.Footnote 8

In these new networks of the transnational Save the Emperor Society (Baohuanghui) in the early 1900s and of the GMD and the CCP in the 1920s, preexisting ideas and aspirations for an interconnected just world were linked to new ideas of national identity and of a world communist revolution. These ideas were transported to diasporic networks, where long-held Chinese migrant ideas about the need for assimilation into local societies and policies of re-Sinicization were at work. Given the history of Chinese ideas about global interconnections, expressed in ancient concepts such as Tianxia, “All under Heaven,” and Datong, “Great Unity,” the pan-Asian ethos of the Chinese Revolution, and Sun Yatsen’s own discussions of internationalism (shijiezhuyi) stemming from nationalism, and the convergence of nationalism and internationalism in the May Fourth Movement, is not surprising.Footnote 9

The first Comintern agent in Asia was Dutchman Henricus Sneevliet, who founded the first communist party in Asia, the Partai Komunis Indonesia (PKI), in 1920 and modeled cooperation between the CCP and the GMD after cooperation between Indonesian communists and Islamic nationalists. He critically reflected that many GMD members linked Chinese traditional philosophy with socialist ideas.Footnote 10 For instance, the Datong party originated from the New Asia Alliance (Xin Ya tongmengdang) established by Chinese and Koreans in 1915 in Japan. The Comintern affirmed that the vision of “human equality and international harmony” and the anti-imperialist aspirations of Korean and Chinese members of the Datong party who sought Comintern support in founding the Korean and Chinese communist parties in 1920–1921 were socialist and were on the way to “becoming communist.”Footnote 11 However, members of the Datong party were unsuccessful in founding a Comintern-supported Chinese communist party because they lacked the reputation and organizational skills of Chen Duxiu and Li Dazhao. Also, as was often the case in the world of slow and unreliable 1920s transportation, they were late for the Third Comintern congress in June 1921 and could not join the group of official representatives of China who would establish the CCP the following month in the presence of Sneevliet.Footnote 12 The Datong party did not become the communist party of China, but these ideas permeated the world of Chinese communism, especially as the global expansion of Chinese organizations facilitated their further development.

In 1924, Sun Yatsen postulated in his lectures on nationalism that only if China returned to its historical policy of “helping the weak” (ji ruo fu qing) and opposing the strong and allied itself with the polities in the former Chinese sphere of influence, which had been lost to European colonial encroachment, would China be able to rise to power again.Footnote 13 New ideas of Asian unity in juxtaposition to the West and traditional ideas of China’s role as a benevolent patron in the region, which Sun Yatsen called the kingly way (wangdao) as opposed to the hegemonic ways of Western powers (badao),Footnote 14 were channeled into new anticolonial liberation ideologies and institutionalized in communist networks. Sun’s ideas evolved from China’s geopolitics and were shaped by anti-colonial wars in the Philippines, Africa, and Cuba and by Lenin’s 1918 discourse on the oppressed peoples and Bolshevik foreign policy as well as by the failure of the Versailles Treaty to solve the colonial question.

Sun Yatsen imagined the way to China’s revival as a world power was through an alliance with Japan or with the oppressed nations of Asia. Together with Mongolia, India, Afghanistan, Persia, Burma, and Annam, China would form a federation, a Great State of the East (Dongfang daguo). In 1924, Sun Yatsen defined pan-Asianism as “the question of what suffering Asian nations should do in order to resist the powerful nations of Europe – in other words, the great question focused on the elimination of injustices towards oppressed peoples.”Footnote 15 Sun’s “oppressed nations” were not only former Chinese vassals, friendly neighbors, and decolonized countries in the Americas but also Soviet Russia and post-Versailles Germany. The second anti-imperialist league, the League Against Imperialism (LAI), established with Comintern funding, began as the Hands-Off China Society created by Workers International Relief, based in Berlin.

Germany had a special place in Sun’s vision. In 1923, Sun harbored the idea of a three-country alliance wherein the Soviet Union would provide ideology and Germany would provide military technology and advisors to China. Sun planned that once China had restored its position as a powerful nation, it would help Germany restore its position, which had been undermined by the Versailles Treaty.Footnote 16 The German branch of the CCP (Lü De zhibu), established in 1922, became the Chinese-language faction of the Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands (KPD) (Degong Zhongguo yuyanzu) in 1927, one of the leaders of which was Liao Chengzhi, a celebrated leader of the international Chinese seamen organization and the son of assassinated GMD leader Liao Zhongkai.Footnote 17

Germany did not have a large Chinese labor community, but German communists treated Chinese students as China’s national voice. In response to the German branch of the CCP’s protest letter regarding Reuters’s report that the May Thirtieth Movement in China was yet another expression of Chinese xenophobia and another Boxer Uprising, newspapers published a retraction the following day and arrested Chinese students, participating in KPD-organized rallies against British imperialism and in support of China, received police apologies and were let go. Among them were Liao Huanxing, the future secretary of the LAI’s international secretariat and a Comintern cadre in Berlin who had been dispatched originally by the British GMD to establish a branch there, and the future leader of the People’s Liberation Army, Zhu De.Footnote 18

In 1927, at the Brussels inaugural congress of the LAI, a world congress of nationalist organizations, one-fifth of all representatives came from the GMD.Footnote 19 Initially, the GMD Central Committee decided to appoint Hu Hanmin, who had just returned from his Moscow trip during which he had advocated for GMD membership in the Comintern independently of the CCP, as the GMD’s representative to the first LAI congress. Liao, as Hu’s assistant, was to go in his place if Hu could not make it. In the meantime, in 1923 Liao started to work as a referent for the Varga Bureau in Berlin, the information office of the Comintern for Western Europe. He acted as a self-appointed representative of all worker parties of China at the Brussels congress,Footnote 20 at which he quoted Sun Yatsen’s plea that the GMD unite with the oppressed classes of the West and with the oppressed nations of the world to oppose oppressors and imperialists.Footnote 21 The LAI congress in 1927 devoted special attention to China. It is not difficult to see how the Chinese discourse on an alliance of oppressed peoples would be attractive among some circles in Germany, given Sun Yatsen’s support of the German cause. The KPD election campaign in competition with the Nazis against the peace at Versailles in the early 1930s, which was allegedly initiated by Stalin,Footnote 22 reflected the mood of postwar Germany. A GMD cadre reported the following in 1929 about the situation in Germany to the GMD Central Committee:

After the Great War, Germany was repressed by the Versailles Treaty and dared not offend other nations. Thus, their foreign policy is very prudent. Furthermore, the Sino–German unequal treaties were abolished long ago. Recently, attempting to gain our country’s markets in order to compete with other countries, they have mostly expressed sympathy with our nationalist movements (the Germans call themselves an oppressed nation, so they want very much to ally with weak and small nations in order to rise again). [Their sympathy] does not really come from the heart, but temporarily they do not constitute a big obstacle to our country either … The KPD previously had positive feelings toward us and were enthusiastic in aiding us.Footnote 23

Although the GMD cadre had reservations about the colonialist impulses lying behind Kaiser Wilhelm’s ambitions in Asia as a motivation for the KPD to aid the Chinese Revolution, it is clear from the letter that the GMD’s own motivation in its alliance with the KPD was strategic. Despite antipathy to foreigners among working-class supporters of the KPD and the KPD’s own use of China in its domestic political struggle,Footnote 24 KPD leaders extended a warm welcome to arriving Chinese communists and students.Footnote 25 In the soul searching of post-Versailles Germany, there was an intellectual fascination with China as a model of a nation that had changed dramatically and rapidly through revolution.Footnote 26

In the meantime, in Canton in 1925 Liao Zhongkai and Vietnamese leader Ho Chi Minh established an anti-imperialist league (AIL)Footnote 27 consisting of Vietnamese (“Annamites”), Koreans, Indians, and Javanese. This organization became the breeding ground for the key Vietnamese Marxist organization, the Association of Vietnamese Revolutionary Youth (Thanh Niên).Footnote 28 In 1927, the Union of the Oppressed Peoples of the East (Dongfang bei yapo minzu lianhehui) began to operate in Hankou and Shanghai, drawing membership from migrants of the same countries.Footnote 29 Vietnamese sources suggest that the GMD established the Shanghai AIL to wrest the leadership of the Asian communists from the Comintern.Footnote 30 Whether or not this is true, GMD attempts to join the Comintern in 1923–1927, promoted by Hu Hanmin among others, were pragmatic, aiming to realize the party’s vision of a world revolution.Footnote 31 Hu hoped to convert the Comintern into a global organization as an “International of Nationalities” (minzu guoji), alluding in the name to the “Third [Communist] International” (Disan guoji [gongchandang]), the Comintern, and with the GMD playing the leading role. Hu put this as follows:

In the days when Zong Li [Sun Yatsen] was alive, I contend that he proposed to organize a minzu guoji [International of Nationalities]Footnote 32 so that we, the Guomindang, could lead the international national revolutionary movement [lingdao guoji de minzu geming yundong] ourselves; when I went to Russia [in 1926] and suggested that the Guomindang become a Comintern member directly, I wanted the Guomindang to independently join the Comintern, acquire [independent] status, and not be subjected to communist control and secret dealings. So the idea to organize a minzu guoji and the idea to join the Comintern were consistent with each other and were in the same spirit … Frankly, my proposal to join the Comintern was because I hoped to organize a minzu guoji.Footnote 33

In the geopolitical imagination of China’s two anti-imperialist parties, the CCP and the GMD, both organizationally structured after a Bolshevik party and striving for a one-party dictatorship, the restoration of China’s power in its former imperial borders held an important place. Just as the Bolsheviks drew on tsarist imperial borderland policies, the CCP inherited the imperial borderland policies of the Qing dynasty as well as GMD internationalism, aspiring to liberate together the Chinese and indigenous peoples, in addition to appropriating Comintern internationalism.Footnote 34 In 1928, a CCP program prepared by Hungarian Eugen Varga, a renowned Soviet economist and the head of the Information-Statistical Institution of the Executive Committee of the Communist International (ECCI) in Berlin, included the restitution of the territories “seized by imperialists,” such as “Formosa, Indochina, Manchuria, etc.,” along with the abolition of the unequal treaties and the return of the concessions.Footnote 35 Varga’s information on China was provided by Liao Huanxing.Footnote 36

At the same time, the GMD was developing its overseas organizations and was promoting the anti-British cause among overseas Chinese. As a result of the Comintern policy of cooperation between the two parties, many CCP members had dual CCP and GMD membership. At the second national convention of the GMD in Canton in 1926, delegates from Malaya, Java, Burma, Siam, and Indochina planned the establishment of the Overseas Chinese Communist Division. Their goal was unity of the Chinese in the Nanyang and propaganda of emancipation among the “small weak races” (i.e., the indigenous peoples).Footnote 37 In 1926–1927, the GMD organized classes for overseas Chinese (huaqiao xuexiban) propaganda cadres who were to lead the overseas Chinese movement (huaqiao yundong) in Malaya.Footnote 38

During the interwar period, various international organizations, such as those of Protestant missionaries and Buddhists, which offered different visions of modernity, had structural similarities. They embraced internationalism and indigenization (involving locals in the organizations to put down roots in local chapters) as their modi operandi.Footnote 39 By the 1930s, these well-established trends could also be seen in the promotion of the Chinese Revolution by the Comintern and by the GMD and the CCP. These two parties’ overseas branches were hybrids of Chinese overseas organizations and political parties and had the need to localize so as to fit in better with local society.Footnote 40 As the Comintern sought to expand its organization, promoting global solidarity of the working class and world revolution, it also adopted indigenization strategies.

The Comintern, Nationalism, and Southeast Asia

The internationalism of the Comintern in the 1920s was one of many expressions of internationalism by transnational organizations in the interwar world, and it channeled the regional and national aspirations of anticolonial movements. Following the Bolsheviks’ international isolation of 1919, the Second Comintern Congress promoted nationalities and the colonial question in 1920. At the same time, various groups of Asian immigrants in Soviet Russia made efforts to advance the communist movement in Asia. Prior to the establishment of the Comintern office in China, the union of Chinese laborers in Russia established its own bureau of Chinese communists within the Russian communist party, the Bolsheviks, in 1920 and petitioned the Soviet government to send representatives to China. Chinese and Korean communists also approached the Comintern with suggestions to organize Comintern-supported parties. Contingency and luck were often decisive factors through which organizations became national communist parties. Thus, the initiatives of the members of the bureau of Chinese communists within the Russian communist party, who referred to themselves as the Chinese Communist Party, to organize their branches in Shanghai and Tianjin would have been approved by the Comintern in December 1920, if not for the death of the head of the party, Liu Qian.Footnote 41

Ideas of national liberation were intertwined with pan-regional concepts. In 1923, Indonesian communist leader Tan Malaka envisioned a federation of Eastern communists.Footnote 42 In 1924, members of the French Communist Party’s Union Intercoloniale African, Lamine Senghor, and Ho Chi Minh established the Ligue de Défense de la Race Nègre. In 1927, they attended the inaugural congress of the LAI in Brussels. In the 1920s, the Comintern’s support of the African cause by proposing to create a belt of black states within the United States, South Africa, Brazil, and Cuba in the manner of the invention of new nations in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) as soviet republics channeled African diasporic intellectuals’ pan-Africanism.Footnote 43 The idea of an indigenous nation-state, like Wilson’s self-determination slogans of a few years earlier, held great appeal in the colonized world.Footnote 44

Tan Malaka, a proponent of a pan-Asian communist network, and Sneevliet, defining his mission as to bring Marxist prophecies to China and to connect the Chinese movement with the international network, shaped the Comintern’s approach in the region. The Comintern sent Sneevliet to Shanghai in March 1921 to study the “movement in different countries in the Far East” so as to establish an office there. Sneevliet was impressed by the labor movement in South China and proposed connecting the movements in the Philippines, Indochina, and the Dutch East Indies with British India because of their similarities.Footnote 45 The Eastern Department of the ECCI was responsible for deciding the “guiding line” in the Malay Archipelago. This line was based on Sneevliet’s proposal to ECCI representative Tan Malaka, who had the task of building connections between the anti-imperialist movement in Indonesia and “all countries of the East,” especially with the “national liberation movement in China,” by building their organizations in the Malay Archipelago, Indochina, Siam, and Singapore.Footnote 46 Singapore was intended to be the platform to bring together the communist movements of China and Indonesia, including the movements of the overseas Chinese.Footnote 47 In 1923, with the rise of radicalism in Java, the most populous Indonesian island of the Dutch East Indies, Moscow started to strategize with regard to the Dutch East Indies. For the Comintern, the Malay Archipelago was an important strategic position between the Pacific and Indian Oceans, “near the most populated countries of the globe – China and India.”Footnote 48

Sun Yatsen’s alliance with the Soviet Union in 1923 and his ideas of anti-British pan-Asian unity matched Soviet plans for an alliance in the Far East.Footnote 49 Sneevliet’s and Malaka’s visions fit the international needs of the Soviet state. In 1923, in order to subvert the influence of British imperialism in China and Singapore, the Comintern planned to establish the “most important element of the anti-imperial struggle,” an organization of transport workers linking South China, the Malay Archipelago (Java and Sumatra), Indochina, Singapore, and Siam in order to stimulate a national revolutionary movement “in the deep interior of international imperialism on the Pacific coast and islands.” Propaganda in native languages (newspapers) would be launched from some port in the Pacific to develop a “national revolutionary movement.” Tan Malaka, posing as “a journalist from a national bourgeois paper so that he could legalize himself and as a nationalist could do a lecture tour against imperialism,” would be dispatched to establish communist cells in Java, Singapore, Bangkok, Hong Kong, Canton, and Shanghai. On the basis of information supplied via this communication channel through Vladivostok to Moscow, the Eastern secretariat would provide a guiding line to printing offices in Singapore and Hong Kong.Footnote 50

In 1924, Tan Malaka reported from his grand Asian tour, sponsored by the Comintern, that in Singapore, a Comrade L. had sufficiently established a school of 100 students and had made connections among plantations and “town workers.” Echoing Sneevliet, Malaka suggested that Singapore offered a chance to work not only in Malaya but also in India because it was “not very far” and because of the large number of Indian migrant workers in Singapore.Footnote 51 To promote a united front between the Chinese and Javanese, Tan Malaka had a plan to establish with “Comrade Tan” a Java–China special committee in Canton to study Chinese conditions in Java and to work among the “politically and economically important Chinese population.” Consisting of one member each from Hong Kong, Canton, and Java (including Malaka himself), this committee, which was established in June 1924 but was short lived, would build connections with the Javanese party and design policy for the Sino–Java Committee in Java. A graduate of the Whampoa Military Academy was to leave for Java to work as a teacher.Footnote 52 In Singapore, however, Malaka found that Chinese and Indians were more responsive to communist ideas than were the local Indonesian and Malay communities.Footnote 53 In response to Malaka’s request, experienced organizer Fu Daqing and a Hainanese labor organizer were dispatched to Singapore to organize Hainanese plantation laborers, among whom Cantonese-speaking Comrade L. was useless.Footnote 54 During a visit in 1925, PKI leader Alimin Prawirodirdjo, who did not speak Chinese, was reportedly able to recruit only Chinese and Indian laborers, yet the number of Indonesian communists did increase there when many fled to Singapore following the suppression of the 1926–1927 PKI uprising.Footnote 55

Aside from two Profintern “agents” who published a newspaper in Singapore in 1924,Footnote 56 a number of members of the Nanyang CCP organization studied in Moscow in the 1920s. These included Han Guoxiang; Yang Shanji, head of the Communist Youth League (CYL) in 1926 and the secretary of the Nanyang Provisional Committee (NPC) in 1928 (see Figure 2.1); Chen Yannian, son of Chen Duxiu;Footnote 57 and Xu Tianbing, a member of the older generation of the Revolution of 1911.Footnote 58 Fu Daqing, a member of the Guangdong Provincial Committee and the head of the NPC’s propaganda department, studied in Moscow in 1922–1924. He also participated in the Nanchang and Guangzhou uprisings as well as in Lenin’s funeral, and he was Borodin’s interpreter at the same time that Ho Chi Minh was Borodin’s secretary.Footnote 59 The NPC received either CCP or Comintern money occasionally. Once, after the fall of 1929, Fu Daqing’s subsidy saved the editorial board of the Nanyang Worker from starving for four days.Footnote 60

Figure 2.1 Yang Shanji, 1924. Born in Hainan, head of the Communist Youth League (CYL) in 1926 and secretary of the Nanyang Provisional Committee in 1928 during his studies at the University of the Toilers of the East in 1924.Footnote 61

Published with permission of the RGASPI.

The defeat of the communist uprising in the Dutch East Indies in 1926 shaped the Comintern’s approach to Singapore and Malaya. They were to be the basis from which to resurrect the Indonesian party and to build an intra-Asian network. At the same time, the Chinese Communist Party also started as a multicentered movement and expanded globally in the late 1920s.Footnote 62

The Global World of the Chinese Revolutionaries

Since the turn of the twentieth century, the ideas and organizational modes of Chinese networks had traveled across the world. Workers returning from the United States to China brought with them the modes of unionizing and striking, which they then used in Hong Kong and China in Sun Yatsen’s organization.Footnote 63 In the 1920s, the founding members of the CCP and the first generation of GMD envoys of re-Sinicization were dispatched around the world. Dong Chuping (董锄平), alias Dong Fangcheng (董方诚), visited Cuba in 1925, as well as a Philippine university together with Bao Huiseng, who had previously worked in Malaya in 1922.Footnote 64 The newspaper Datongbao was first published by the Chinese workers’ union in Soviet Russia in 1918 and commissioned by the Soviet government to propagate the Russian Revolution and Marxism among Chinese workers, but the title was chosen in a way that would attract Chinese readers. After the Chinese laborers who published Datongbao in Russia returned to China, they established the Datong society,Footnote 65 the newspaper of which was also published in the Philippines.Footnote 66

The activities of the LAI were closely intertwined with the activities of the Chinese revolutionaries. For example, the first Chinese communist organization in the United States was established after contact with the LAI network. A member of the American communist party, Ji Chaoding, alias C. T. Chi, represented the Students’ Society for the Advancement of Sun Yatsenism in America and the American Anti-Imperialist League at the Brussels World Anti-Imperialist Congress as well as at the International Congress of Oppressed Peoples in 1927. Upon returning, he, Shi Huang, and Xu YongyinFootnote 67 established a Chinese-language faction (Meigongdang zhongyang fushu Zhongguoju)Footnote 68 under the anti-imperialist committee of the American party.Footnote 69 After breaking with the GMD in 1927, the Chinese faction planned to take over the anti-imperialist activities of leftist GMD organizations in the United States, Canada, Cuba, and Mexico through branches of the Alliance for the Support of the Chinese Workers and Peasants Revolution in America (ASCWPRA) across the United States and in Havana. A revolutionary tradition of Chinese participation in the Cuban national independence struggle dated back to the Cuban war of independence, and local Cuban leaders such as Jose Marti had included the Chinese in internationalist solidarity and in the pan-American vision.Footnote 70As Chinese communists borrowed the regional imagination of the Monroe Doctrine, their goals were to promote cooperation of Chinese and American workers and pro-China policies, such as the abolition of the unequal treaties as well as the interests of Chinese immigrants.Footnote 71

Chinese revolutionary networks helped staff regional Comintern organizations in the Americas through connections between the Chinese faction and party members in Cuba, the Philippines, Canada, Chile, Mexico, and Peru.Footnote 72 The All-American Anti-Imperialist League (AAAIL) was reestablished by the Workers Party of America with Comintern authorization in 1925, but in 1927 it existed only on paper.Footnote 73 The All-American Alliance of Chinese Anti-Imperialists (est. 1928) consisted of Asian immigrants and established the Oriental branch of the American Anti-Imperialist League in 1929.Footnote 74 That same year, the ASCWPRA participated in the second anti-imperialist world congress in Frankfurt and joined the LAI.Footnote 75

A Chinese cadre on the Comintern – likely Wang Ming, who was the Moscow liaison for the Chinese section of the CPUSAFootnote 76 – suggested that the Chinese faction should become the center of huaqiao work in the Americas by recruiting avant-garde members of the AIL into the party and establishing local CCP cells. The Chinese faction was to help the parties in the Americas in organizing the huaqiao but was not to build local parties in Mexico or Canada. The Chinese faction acted as a liaison between the Comintern and the CCP, as this Chinese Comintern cadre asked the Chinese faction to forward to Moscow or Paris the materials from the CCP.Footnote 77 Chinese communists in Europe sent Comintern publications to Chinese communists in the United States, who in turn sent copies of The Chinese Vanguard (Xianfengbao) to Europe and to the LAI and to party propaganda to Malaya. Additionally, Chinese students such as Un Hong Siu, sponsor of the MCP, translated party publications into Chinese, as discussed in Chapter 6.Footnote 78

By 1928, Comintern activities aiming to bring workers to power internationally had ended in defeat in Europe and Asia alike. While in 1924 the Comintern had attributed this failure to the stabilization of world capitalism, at its Sixth Congress in 1928 the Comintern announced the beginning of a new Third Period of the “class against class” struggle.Footnote 79 The Comintern no longer encouraged legal methods through parliaments and the press as a strategy for communist parties, and cooperation with moderate labor movements and social democrats was banned. Instead, the Comintern started to establish communist parties in the colonies as a way of undermining European imperialism through its “weakest link.”Footnote 80 Such a shift would have come as no surprise given the successful launch of the anti-imperialist league project, for even if its results were modest at best, the scope of its ambitions was captivating.

Old Networks, New Ideas: The Nanyang Organization

Because of the demand for labor after World War I in the colonies and because of easy travel, the Nanyang was a popular destination for “progressive Chinese and revolutionaries” (Zhongguo de jinbu de renshi he gemingzhe).Footnote 81 In 1921–1925, journalists and teachers, GMD and often CCP members, spread the ideas of the May Fourth Movement and found employment with Chinese schools and newspapers in the Nanyang. Various organizations, including the GMD, the Guangdong CCP and CYL, the All-China General Labor Union, the Shanghai Student Federation, and the Kheng Ngai Revolutionary Alliance (Qiongya geming tongzhi datongmeng), sent envoys to promote both the ideas of the Chinese Revolution and anti-British sentiments among the overseas Chinese.Footnote 82 The head of the Overseas Bureau of the GMD in China, older Tongmenghui member Peng Zemin, dispatched cadres to organize local student unions, labor unions, and GMD branches in the Nanyang Chinese Union of Public Societies (Nanyang huaqiao ge gongtuan lianhehui) so as to promote the anti-British cause.Footnote 83 Such propaganda was especially relevant in the aftermath of the so-called May Thirtieth Incident, during which several student participants in the protests against Japanese business owners were killed by the police of the International Settlement in Shanghai, and which led to worldwide growth of CCP membership.

In 1925, All-China General Labor Union cadres in Singapore established worker night schools and unions among seamen and servants in foreigners’ houses – who, in the English version of the document, were given the dramatic title of “foreign affairs workers” (waiwu, 外务).Footnote 84 In 1926, more than 300 students and workers in Singapore were involved with the communists.Footnote 85 The Nanyang regional committee of the CCP (Zhongguo gongchandang Nanyang qubu weiyuanhui), covering British Malaya and the Dutch East Indies, and the CYL of about 300 members were formed in Malaya in 1926, but their organizational relationship with the CCP was ambiguous.Footnote 86 Hainanese trade guilds were the first to display communist sentiments in the 1920s when labor unions took shape, and Hainanese dominated unions of rubber tappers, domestic servants, shoemakers, carpenters, seamen, and mechanics.Footnote 87 The driving forces behind communist organizations in Malaya were Hainanese members of the leftist GMD, who were teachers at night schools (known as the Main School), although they did not have permanent headquarters. They instead organized student unions and spread propaganda and Chinese nationalism among workers’ unions. Acting within their Nanyang jurisdiction, they discussed the failed uprising in the Dutch East Indies at their meetings.Footnote 88 In 1927, the founder of the CYL, Pan Yunbo (潘云波), attended the Pan-Pacific Trade Union Conference in Hankou where he likely learned the ideas of communist organizations around the world, including the model of separate ethnic organizations in the United States.Footnote 89

After the CCP’s defeat in China in April 1927 at the hands of the Guomindang, especially after the Canton uprising, many CCP members fled to the Nanyang. The majority of refugee communists settled in Malaya because it was easier to establish party cells and labor unions there, where the Chinese were sympathetic to the Chinese Revolution and more “relatively progressive” (bijiao jinbu) than in places where the GMD was strong, similar to Siam. Others went to Indochina and to Palembang in Sumatra.Footnote 90 In 1928, the Nanyang CCP was renamed the Nanyang Provisional Committee of the CCP (Zhongguo gongchandang Nanyang linshi weiyuanhui), reflecting the fact that the committee’s relationship with the CCP was being established because of the CCP’s destruction after April 1927.Footnote 91

The jurisdiction of the committee was as ambiguous as the boundaries of the Nanyang itself, which included all of mainland and maritime Southeast Asia.Footnote 92 The predominantly Hainanese organization consisted of the members of the Nanyang General Labor Union (NGLU), the night schools, and the Nanyang CYL. The committee consisted of thirteen persons, mainly Hainanese, including a five-member standing committee.Footnote 93 The committee was to direct local committees (diwei) in Singapore, Penang, Malacca, Johor, Kuala Lumpur, Seremban, Ipoh, Sungai Lembing, Riau in the Netherlands East Indies (NEI), Selangor, Negeri Sembilan, Terengganu, Kelantan, Palembang (Sumatra), and Siam, with subcommittees for labor, propaganda, the armed forces, women, finance, and relief.Footnote 94 In October 1928, the party had 600 members.Footnote 95

In 1929, the NPC included secretaries Zhang Chengxiang (张成祥) and Xu Tianbing (徐天炳), also known as Wu Qing (吴青); Chen Sanhua (陈三华); Fu Daqing (傅达庆), head of the propaganda department; and Wei Zhongzhou (魏忠洲), head of the secretariat. The editorial board of Nanyang Worker (Nanyang gongrenbao), with the exception of Zhang Chengxiang, lived in the secretariat’s office and posed as a huaqiao family. The Chinese and English publications of Nanyang Worker were in demand; its distribution increased from several hundred copies to 2,000. Although there was one comrade from Siam, as well as A-Fu, a sixteen-year-old who spoke fluent Malay and was indispensable for party operations, the NPC focused on China. At party meetings, which were held once or twice a month or every other month, the NPC held theoretical discussions about Marxism-Leninism and the crisis of capitalism as well as the reasons for the failure of the Chinese Revolution. It also handled routine questions about party fees, the recruitment of new members, the establishment of a revolutionary mass organization, patriotic propaganda, and international education among overseas Chinese, and complained about the low cultural level of workers in night schools.Footnote 96

Singaporean leaders paid rare visits to the Malay states and had little influence there.Footnote 97 Front organizations of the NPC were the NGLU, the AIL, the CYL, and the Nanyang General Seamen Union, all of which had overlapping leaderships. The NPC leaders were often arrested and deported by the British authorities, especially after bombings during a shoemakers’ strike and assassination attempts on visiting GMD officials in 1928, when one of the bomb throwers was found to be in possession of communist literature. Although the strike was preceded by the formation of a shoemakers’ union as an affiliate of the NGLU, and the NPC was assumed to have been behind the strike, the MCP in its later correspondence with the Comintern blamed the bombings on the “masses.”Footnote 98 Thus, the NPC’s role remained uncertain. The NPC also piggybacked on the anti-Japanese boycott and the campaign organized by the Chinese community to commemorate the GMD’s retreat from Ji’nan, known as the Ji’nan Incident.Footnote 99 In 1928, the Straits Times reported that the communists had “good organization, clever leaders, and the will to progress.”Footnote 100

As we have seen, the CCP’s local organization in Malaya was shaped by the historical trends of Chinese migration and the political forces in China as well as by the interwar global and Southeast Asian communist connections. The need of Chinese organizations to indigenize so as to fit in better with local society matched the need for the localization of Comintern operations.

World Revolution, Chinese Revolution: Indigenization and Internationalization

Since the emergence of Chinese nationalism in the late nineteenth century, Chinese community organizations had been concerned with bringing in and representing not only Chinese. The MCP’s impulse to involve non-Chinese in its activities paralleled the impulses not only of newly emerging Chinese organizations like the GMD but also of organizations with longer histories, such as temples. In 1893, the leader of the Chinese community in Kuala Lumpur, Kapitan Cina (Chinese Captain) Yap Ah Loy, founded a temple dedicated to the previous Kapitan, and the processions of the temple included Indians and Japanese along with headmen of Chinese subethnic groups. Yap Ah Loy sought to portray himself as representing not only the Chinese but the wider community as well.Footnote 101

During the 1920s, the GMD further put into practice its earlier Asianist ideas of the liberation of the oppressed peoples. Since 1927, efforts by Chinese political organizations to embed themselves in their host environments had been evident in the left-wing GMD and in the CCP’s Nanyang Provisional Committee, as both had called for local non-Chinese in British Malaya, that is, Malays, Javanese, and Tamils,Footnote 102 to be involved in a united movement for liberation from colonial oppression.Footnote 103 During the commemorative demonstration on the anniversary of Sun Yatsen’s death on March 12, 1927, which resulted in clashes with the police, known as the Kreta Ayer Incident, the GMD issued pamphlets promoting the common interests of the “weak nationals” of the Nanyang and overseas Chinese in their goal to achieve self-determination and to end the discrimination against Chinese.Footnote 104 The leftist GMD, which was strong in Singapore, controlling twenty-one of twenty-nine branches (the Main School),Footnote 105 proclaimed that its goal was “the emancipation of the [Chinese] race.”Footnote 106 The Comintern’s plan to infiltrate Southeast Asia through indigenization, using local agents and propaganda in native languages, was likewise central to the CCP’s expansion into the Nanyang. In July 1928, the NPC had already decided to start a “national” movement to attract Malays and Indians to the Chinese party organization. It also set a goal of unifying all nationalities and seeking the Comintern’s guidance and leadership.Footnote 107

The CCP’s aim of involving non-Chinese in its organization is reflected in the writings of Li Lisan, who by 1928 was the head of the Guangdong Provincial Committee and the de facto CCP leader. He had experience working in France among Chinese laborers, and his charismatic leadership and ability to adapt to different local cultural contexts had resulted in the CCP’s first successful labor mobilization in 1922 in the Anyuan coal mines.Footnote 108 Li Lisan criticized the Nanyang communists in his January 1, 1929, diary entry for “making a Chinese Revolution.” This “Chinese Revolution” referred specifically to anti-Japanese propaganda and boycotts, to the campaign for democratic freedoms and improved labor conditions, and to protests against British attempts to control Chinese education in Malaya.Footnote 109

Li Lisan promoted the establishment of a CCP organization independent of the GMD. Criticizing the GMD policy of promoting “patriotism” in Chinese communities, Li instead advocated a Nanyang Revolution that would mark the beginning of a “national” movement:

The Party’s Nanyang branch has been established for three years; the number of comrades has increased greatly. However, there has been a fundamentally erroneous idea from the beginning, i.e., to “make a Chinese Revolution” in the Nanyang. Although, certainly, to make a “Chinese Revolution” in the Nanyang is a joke, it has deep historical roots. Was not the Nanyang the “cradle” of the Guomindang? This is because the Chinese in the Nanyang were brutally oppressed by imperialism; for this reason they thought, “This is because China is too weak, and cannot protect Chinese immigrants.” That is why Chinese in the Nanyang have a very strong patriotic mentality [aiguo guannian]. This patriotic mentality is the source of making a Chinese Revolution in the Nanyang. Now our party must completely rectify this mentality; it must promote the following idea among the broad masses: “In order to achieve the liberation of the Chinese people in the Nanyang, the Nanyang Revolution must succeed, and for this reason we must go back to making the Nanyang revolutionary movement.” This will put the Nanyang Revolution on the right track and will be the correct starting point for the Nanyang party line.Footnote 110

The same words were included in a draft resolution of the Central Committee (CC) of the CCP to the Nanyang Provisional Committee entitled “the revolutionary movements and policies of our party in the Nanyang.” The directive set the goals of the Nanyang Revolution as national independence from the British and Dutch governments, an alliance of “Nanyang nationalities,” and a Nanyang republic. The central point of the directive was that a Nanyang communist party consisting exclusively of Chinese promoting a Chinese Revolution indicated a need to adapt the communist strategy to the local context, as policies developed in the labor and anti-imperialist movements in China were applied in the Nanyang without consideration of local conditions. Those conditions included the Nanyang’s colonial status, the “many nationalities” living there, and its more developed industry.Footnote 111 Although the idea that the Nanyang Revolution depended on the success of the revolution in China was also criticized, Li Lisan’s directive still tasked the Chinese with emancipation of the Nanyang and emphasized that Chinese and locals could not achieve colonial liberation separately. Written in English, this letter makes his opinion clear:

We should further impress these slogans and conception deeply upon the minds of the Chinese to remove their wrong ideas as to look down on other nations [i.e., ethnic groups] and then the real unity can be obtained … But it is known that Chinese there did oppress Malay people, because the latter are poor and backward in civilisation. So it is the fundamental task of our party to tighten the relationship of all the oppressed nations and to make the Malay people understand that in order to release them from the yoke of the imperialists, the unity of the oppressed is absolutely necessary. If the Chinese want to claim for emancipation, it is possible only when all the oppressed nations are released. It is absolutely impossible to release any single nation separately … Thus, the principal task of our party is first of all to make all the oppressed unite and strive for the goal of national emancipation.Footnote 112

The directive echoes two central points that were discussed at the Comintern congress in Moscow. Specifically, these were the Chinese Revolution as a frame of reference and the need for each party’s policy to be based on local conditions,Footnote 113 that is, the policy of indigenization of the communist movement. These points were also echoed in statements by leaders of other communist parties, such as the Taiwanese Communist Party and the Philippine Communist Party, in 1928–1930.Footnote 114

Li Lisan’s suggestions reflected what was happening in the Comintern. In 1928, he participated in the Sixth Congress of the CCP (June 18 to July 11) and in the Sixth Congress of the Comintern (July 17 to September 1) in Moscow. The CCP’s Sixth Congress elected a new leadership aligned closely with the Comintern, announced the goal of organizing soviets, and supported guerrilla warfare.Footnote 115 According to two sources, the reorganization of the Nanyang communist organization in 1928 into the NPC took place at the Sixth Congress of the CCP.Footnote 116 However, the Nanyang communists’ views on the Nanyang Revolution were independent of the Comintern’s. Moreover, Li Lisan (and others) referred to this letter to the Nanyang communists as a draft for discussion only, as they considered the problems of the Nanyang “complicated.” Although they also submitted this draft directive to the Comintern for approval, Li Lisan asserted that even prior to that, the Nanyang communists were to follow the draft resolution.Footnote 117 In doing so, the CCP was making a gesture toward the Comintern and also redirecting responsibility to the Comintern.

According to available documentary evidence, it was the CCP that first suggested the organization of a Nanyang party under Comintern leadership: “The party in the Nanyang should make preparations to establish an independent party of the Nanyang, directly instructed by the Third International.” Moreover, it stated, “suggestions should be submitted to the Third International to call their attention to the work of the Nanyang because it would occupy a very important position during the looming World War, and to ask them to convene a meeting of the parties of various nations to discuss the work of the Nanyang.”Footnote 118 (In the Comintern’s analysis, the coming war would resolve contradictions among the imperialist powers that persisted after the First World War.) The CC thus redirected the Nanyang communists to the Comintern and Profintern to obtain the resources necessary to implement these suggestions.Footnote 119

An ECCI letter written in October 1930, after the MCP had been formally established, confirms the local initiative for the establishment of the MCP and calls the newly established party “nothing more than a Singapore organization of the CCP that recently decided to separate into an independent communist party of the Malay states.” The ECCI letter continued: “It is a very serious step forward, as it is absolutely clear that it is necessary to establish an independent communist party of the Malay states which will include the proletariat of all nationalities who inhabit them and which will be capable of organizing and leading a united struggle of the toiling masses of Malaya.”Footnote 120 However, in its letter to the British communist party, the MCP emphasized that the Nanyang communists followed the “advice of the ‘Bureau’ in reorganizing themselves into an independent communist party of Malaya,” apparently stressing its international credentials.Footnote 121

However, far from expressing an intention to undermine the CCP’s position in Southeast Asia,Footnote 122 in 1928 the Comintern also considered establishing a CCP overseas center “near China (Singapore, Manila, etc.),” where Central Committee members could carry out their work unrecognized, unlike the situation in Shanghai, where they were known to the now hostile GMD.Footnote 123 After the establishment of the MCP, the Comintern echoed Li Lisan in criticizing the MCP for “mechanistically grafting the methods and slogans of the Chinese movement in Malaya.”Footnote 124 The Comintern’s recommendations and Li Lisan’s directive to stop focusing on the Chinese Revolution both aimed to promote the indigenization of the revolution, that is, a united front with the non-Chinese.Footnote 125

Similar to the migrant structure of the communist movement and of society at large, the MCP’s vision of a multiethnic party organization was likely influenced by the American communist movement. Li Lisan suggested that the Pan-Pacific Trade Union Secretariat could help the MCP “in building a stable foundation” for the trade union movement in the Nanyang, which should first be organized among separate ethnic groups and then be united into one trade union.Footnote 126 The head of the Pan-Pacific Trade Union Secretariat (est. 1927 in Hankou) was American communist Earl Browder, whose organizational ideas originated in the American multiethnic context. Moreover, the Comintern promoted the same policy of indigenization in Malaya as in the United States, where Americanization was a response to pressures by American communists, as immigrant sections in the CPUSA were the largest.Footnote 127 Much as Li Lisan had appealed to the Nanyang communists, the Chinese Comintern cadre from Moscow reminded Chinese communists in the United States that they had to pay attention to local conditions in those countries where they established chapters of the AAAIL, but at the same time they should not forget to conduct revolutionary work among Chinese migrants in the United States.Footnote 128 In the Chinese communist networks enhanced by the Comintern, policies were generally built on locally based approaches and applied elsewhere as well.

This was possible with the globally mobile Chinese communists. The translator of Li Lisan’s letter, lacking knowledge of the South Seas, mistranslated “Zhaowa” (Java) as “Cuba” and “Senmeilan” (Sembilan) as “Ceylon.” One of few translators available since Tan Malaka’s desperate search for one in 1924,Footnote 129 the translator was likely Stanford student Shi Huang, who was dispatched to Cuba and Canada in 1929 by the Chinese faction of the CPUSA to build an Oriental branch of the American Anti-Imperialist League on the Pacific coast among local communists. After visiting Cuba, Shi went to Moscow to study and he returned to China in 1930 to work as a translator for the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party, though he perished in a GMD jail in 1934.Footnote 130

By 1930, while the two trends of the interwar global moment, internationalism and indigenization, were manifested in the transnational organization of the Chinese Revolution, the importance of the Chinese Revolution as a harbinger of global changes perceived as the world revolution originally advocated by the Comintern, had become integral to the platforms of both the CCP and the GMD. In the words of Hu Hanmin, “Our Chinese nation is truly so large that our national revolution must obtain international assistance and establish international contacts. Of course, the responsibilities that we, the Chinese people, ought to bear will be heavy ones indeed. To the smaller and weaker nations we should offer support in order to strengthen the forces of revolution and secure the foundation for revolution.”Footnote 131 Li Lisan considered China to be the site of the most acute conflicts of interest (protivorechie) among the imperialist powers, where the prospect of a communist revolution seemed most likely. Li Lisan therefore argued, “[i]ncreasing international propaganda for the Chinese Revolution among the international proletariat and regarding the defense of the Chinese Revolution as the most serious task of the Chinese Communist Party.”Footnote 132 Li Lisan continued Hu Hanmin’s earlier attempts to use the Comintern for the benefit of the Chinese Revolution and to promote Chinese nationalism. On April 17, 1930, one week before the MCP’s founding, he suggested establishing a new, more efficient Far Eastern Bureau (FEB) of the Comintern, which had been reestablished in late 1928 in Shanghai. In communications with the Eastern secretariat of the Comintern in Moscow, he specifically demanded that organizational activities among foreign sailors, while carried out by “foreign comrades from England, France, Japan, India, [and] Indochina,” should remain under CCP leadership.Footnote 133 Despite Li Lisan’s exile to Moscow for his devastating policy of doomed uprisings, which nearly destroyed the CCP, he was involved in a number of important Comintern projects, working in the mid-1930s in the Xinjiang border region.Footnote 134 Li Lisan also took part in drafting policies for the MCP.

Conclusion

The proximity of British Malaya to the Dutch East Indies, a place of great interest to the Comintern as well as the homeland of one of the visionaries of early communism in Indonesia, Tan Malaka, on the one hand, and a historically large Chinese community in British Malaya, on the other, shaped the birth of communism in the British colony.

Globalizing forces brought about a new political imagination and new forms of activism in Asia. Pan-Asianism, anticolonialism, and indigenous nationalist projects shaped the two Chinese political parties overseas, the GMD and the CCP. Traditional Chinese universalist ideas and organizational patterns of Chinese migration, as well as discrimination against Chinese migrants, resonated with the interwar internationalist moment and with Sun Yatsen’s idea of allying with the oppressed for the sake of China’s revival. As we see in Chapter 6, Sun’s ideas permeated school curricula both in China and in overseas communities and thus channeled the Chinese migrant revolutionaries’ struggle for equal rights where they intended to settle in their search for employment and livelihood. The Comintern’s goal of liberating the colonies offered an internationalist legitimization for those revolutionaries. Chinese communists argued that in the Philippines, in Cuba, and around the world, Chinese communists could help the revolutions of local residents (juliudi de minzu geming) along with the revolution in ChinaFootnote 135 and that a world revolution and national liberation of the colonies would be beneficial for China’s national interests and for the “soviet” (suweiai) revolution.Footnote 136

Chinese communists borrowed existing imperial imaginations and institutions to develop their own networks and to improve the livelihood of their compatriots and revive China as well as to build a better world of justice and equality. The result was hybrid organizations of anti-imperialist leagues based on the American imagination of the Monroe Doctrine and on the global Comintern vision. They took responsibility for the movement in the Americas based on huaqiao organizations, as it was in the Nanyang, where its policy matched China’s patterns of historical patronage in Southeast Asia, as discussed in Chapter 5. In this global quest for China’s revival, Chinese migrants found partners among those whom Sun Yatsen described as the “oppressed nations.” Among Germans, discriminated Chinese workers in the United States, native workers in the American colonies, and native Filipinos and Malays, who were oppressed by their colonizers, the label of being an “oppressed nation” reflected their subjugated status vis-à-vis the winners at Versailles.

In these overlapping networks of Chinese migrants and the Comintern, organizational modes circulated across the globe. The internationalization of the idea of the Chinese Revolution and the indigenization of two Chinese overseas organizations, the CCP and the GMD, manifested a feature of interwar global connectedness in conjunction with a continuous need for Chinese organizations to localize. Worldwide economic nationalism as a reaction to the Great Depression led scholars to proclaim “the end of globalization,”Footnote 137 yet, as we see in what follows, a new localized chapter of a global organization had been established by 1930 in the Nanyang. The era was one of those “global moments” that, in the context of “developing a global consciousness in diverse social contexts,” contributed to the integration and overlap of distinct discursive communities on local, national, and regional levels.Footnote 138

The discourse of the Nanyang Revolution as an indigenized revolution and the concern with the CCP directive being inappropriate for local conditions demonstrated a conjuncture of the Comintern’s indigenization and the indigenization of the Chinese organizations, the GMD and the CCP.Footnote 139 These cast a fresh light on the ways in which both MCP nationalism and the Comintern’s ideas about indigenization were used for mobilization purposes. Moreover, these indigenization trends coincided with the quest for local identity and subculture among huaqiao intellectuals in British Malaya.

3 The Nanyang Revolution and the Malayan Nation, 1929–1930 Nations, Migrants, Words

Background

In Southeast Asia, indigenous nationalists adopted the Western concept of nation-states. The nation-states there had also been shaped by the geopolitical limits of colonial and precolonial polities as well as by the colonial concepts of boundaries and colonial ethnic policies.Footnote 1 During the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the exclusion and xenophobia generated by increasing Chinese migration to Southeast Asia and the Pacific region fostered the nationalism of the host countries and helped strengthen the idea of territorial borders.Footnote 2 British Malaya was not an exception. While the idea of a Malayan nation was first promoted by the British government, immigrants did not have political rights in that nation.

British Malaya came under colonial control between 1874 and 1919. A mass migration of Chinese laborers to the Malay Peninsula began after Britain imposed its rule in the western Malay states in 1874 to pacify feuds among Chinese tin mine owners.Footnote 3 These owners benefited from the British takeover,Footnote 4 but violence by Chinese secret societies led to a British ban on such organizations beginning in 1890, including on the GMD in Malaya (1925) and in Singapore (1930). Noncompliant Straits Settlement Chinese community leaders were deported, Chinese were denied their Chinese political rights as “aliens,” and re-Sinicization through Chinese-language education and the press of the Chinese government was restricted.Footnote 5 In contrast, the British recruited Malays into lower administrative ranks, protected Malay land rights, and preserved Malay peasant customs.Footnote 6

The Chinese in Malaya viewed such actions as oppressive, and leaders of commercial, clan, and regional associations therefore promoted Chinese political rights. The Chinese dominated the cities of the Malay Peninsula and comprised the majority of the population in most of the states. According to the 1921 census, nearly half of the Malayan population, around 3,358,000 people, was Indian (14.2 percent) or Chinese (35 percent), and in 1931, the shares increased to 16 percent and 39 percent, respectively.Footnote 7 At this time, 65 percent of Chinese in Malaya worked in tin mines, small rubber holdings, and farms, while 75 percent of Indians worked on European rubber estates.Footnote 8

Malays felt “left behind” in their world during the colonial period, invaded by foreign capital, goods, and labor, and they were alarmed by the rise in Chinese immigration.Footnote 9 Toynbee famously wrote in 1931 that Malaya was destined to become “a Chinese province by peaceful penetration.”Footnote 10 In these circumstances, debates took place regarding the creation of a Malay nation based on race, descent, and land rights (bangsa Melayu). Newspapers promoted the spirit of Malay unification and the erosion of boundaries dividing the Malay community, and Malay intellectuals talked about the crisis of Malay Muslim society and promoted “the values of rationalism and egalitarianism.”Footnote 11 In the 1930s, Malay newspapers were filled with articles discussing service to the bangsa (nation). Warta Bangsa, the first issue of which was published in 1930, declared that its goal was to “raise up” the Malay race. The bangsa excluded non-Malays, though it was not based on Islam. To counter the rise of pan-Islamic sentiments, the British government supported the cultivation of a Malay identity on which the creation of a bangsa community was contingent.Footnote 12 Originally, the Malay sense of identity evolved around kerajaan, a community oriented toward a royal ruler, the raja. After World War I, the issue of descent came to the forefront, as Malays refused to recognize the right of the Peranakan Chinese, Indians, and Arabs to serve as representatives on the Legislative Councils of the Malay States and of the Straits Settlements in light of the economic gap between Malays and non-Malays. At the same time, Malays were reluctant to participate in politics because of the disapproval of the Malay elite and the British authorities. In 1931, a comment by Penang Chinese leader Lim Cheng Yan that the Chinese community had become inseparable from Malaya sparked a debate in the Malay press, which created a sense of solidarity in the Malay community. The Malay press discussed bangsa Melayu and argued against the historical legitimacy of the term Malaya.Footnote 13 For many Malays, the term Malayan invoked the threat of immigrant domination.Footnote 14

As a consequence of the Great Depression in Malaya, the world’s foremost producer of tin and rubber, both the new wave of poor Chinese migrants who had no citizenship rights in the colony and the more affluent locally born Chinese were hit hard. Not only did the economic depression and British protectionist policies undermine Chinese economic power in Malaya but the British government also introduced legislation limiting Chinese migration. For immigrants, it became crucial to become a part of the “Malayan nation” promoted by the British government and to have the legal status of locals in order to gain political and landowning rights as well as to decrease the risk of deportation.

The Founding of the MCP

An independent Nanyang party was formed in 1930 through the initiative of the Nanyang Provisional Committee of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in Singapore, which became the core of the newly established MCP.Footnote 15 The Comintern policy of creating national parties and fostering a world revolution based on local conditionsFootnote 16 was related to several factors: the indigenization trend in the CCP, a growing tendency for Malayan Chinese to see advantages in identifying with Malaya, and a sense among Chinese intellectuals of an identity independent of China.

Chinese communists in Singapore and Malaya hoped that the establishment of the MCP would help expand their organizational network, saying, “[t]he CP of [the] Malaya Peninsula can help the organization in those districts where the communist party has not been formed.”Footnote 17 Since the work of Nanyang Chinese organizations was insufficiently active for the organization of a new party, in consultation with the CC CCP in Guangdong, Chinese communists decided to first reestablish party organizations and then to revive party work. Because of this decision and because of arrests, their conference was delayed for more than a year. However, twenty individuals eventually attended the third conference of the Nanyang party, the MCP founding conference, from April 22 to 23, 1930. Eleven of these individuals were arrested on April 29, including the secretary of the party, the secretary of the labor union, and a member of the Central Committee.Footnote 18

Two Comintern envoys, Fu Daqing and Ho Chi Minh, the head of the Comintern’s office in Hong Kong in 1930 – who was also possibly the head of the Southern Bureau of the CCP with jurisdiction over the Nanyang – presided over the conference.Footnote 19 Among other founders were Li Guangyuan (黎光远), Wu Qing (吴清), Secretary Wei Zongzhou (魏宗周),Footnote 20 Lin Qingchong (林庆充), Wang Yuebo (王月波), Chen Shaochang(陈绍昌), Pang Qinchang, and Lee Chay-heng. The standing committee of MCP members included Wu Qing, Fu Daqing, and Li Guangyuan. All were predominantly Hainanese and in their twenties.Footnote 21 Also in attendance was a CYL representative from Siam.Footnote 22 Famous writer Ai Wu, who had joined a communist cell in Burma in 1928, missed the meeting because the ship on which he was traveling was placed under quarantine.Footnote 23

The establishment of the MCP was under double supervision, that of both “the central committee and K,” likely “Kvok” (Nguyen Ai Quoc, or Ho Chi Minh) or the Comintern, who decided the political line in the Nanyang. The representative of the Far Eastern Bureau (FEB), that is, Ho Chi Minh, chaired the conference.Footnote 24 Ho was concerned about the CCP’s domination in mainland Southeast Asia over Vietnamese communist networks and sought to balance this out with the Comintern’s authority. He had decided to establish his Indochinese party under Comintern jurisdiction a month earlier so as to exclude the influence of the CCP’s Singapore branch, which by 1930 was attempting to lead communist organizations in Annam (central Vietnam), Indochina, and Siam on behalf of the Comintern. Then, possibly to counter the influence of the Vietnamese, the NPC decided to hold a reorganization meeting as soon as possible, without waiting for NPC inspector “Comrade Li”Footnote 25 to return from Siam and Indochina, citing that it was running out of money, apparently hoping for Comintern subsidies. Once the MCP had been established, Ho proposed a joint three- to five-member committee of the CCP, the Annamese party, and the Comintern’s FEB in order to foster cooperation between the Yunnan and Tonkin sections, Hong Kong and Annam, and the Annamese working in China. Despite Ho formally proposing cooperation among the Vietnamese, the CCP, and the Comintern, his suggestions ran contrary to Li Lisan’s proposal to keep Indochinese seamen in China under the guidance of the CCP (see Chapter 2). Ho was worried that the Chinese communists in “the secretariat of Nanyang” considered the Philippines, Indochina, Siam, Malaya, and the Dutch East Indies to be under their leadership. Ho, however, did not hesitate to instruct the MCP to build independent parties in Siam, Borneo, and Sumatra at the MCP’s founding meeting. Six weeks prior to this meeting, as the FEB was planning “the conference of [the] communist organization of Malaya,” Ho approached the FEB in Shanghai with some suggestions regarding future strategies. As a result, the Comintern decided to dispatch Ho to Singapore together with Moscow-trained Chinese representative Fu Daqing, who had been involved in communist organizations in Malaya since the mid-1920s.Footnote 26

Ideas about Vietnamese and Chinese responsibility for the emancipation of the peoples of Southeast Asia can be traced to regional imaginations, not unlike the inter-polity relations of the tributary system of dynastic times. With the influence of social Darwinist ideas, these nostalgic visions were enhanced with new force. Further reinforcement for these ideas came in the form of Comintern-promoted internationalism. Ho Chi Minh, who was familiar with the problem of embedding a predominantly Hainanese communist organization in Siam in the 1920s,Footnote 27 reprimanded the Chinese communists for not learning Malay. Like the Chinese, Vietnamese communists also sought to indigenize their revolution, and Ho presented himself as a role model, as he had learned French and English while working as a migrant laborer in London.Footnote 28

The MCP’s Malayan Nation (Post-1930)

Like the CCP, the newborn MCP emerged as a text-focused party that spent much time producing, interpreting, and disseminating written material and that was aptly described by the British as a “paper movement.” From October to November 1931, for example, police in Singapore seized a total of 4,716 copies of various documents.Footnote 29 The MCP’s efforts to become “international” were based on Comintern texts as a means of communication and of bonding with non-Chinese. In this multilingual community, there were clear slippages in meaning between different languages. The mechanism for these slippages was twofold, conceptual and social. As speakers of different languages interpreted authoritative texts and key words using the conceptual training available to them, a key word’s pragmatic definition (the change in the meaning of a key word reflected in its actual use) joined with the changed social experience of the text’s writers and readers to produce different meanings for the same words. I take inspiration from Koselleck’s Begriffsgeschichte to connect conceptual history and social history.Footnote 30

Shifts in the meaning of one particular key word, minzu, came in conjunction with the changed social experience of Chinese migrant identification with Malaya and created the basis for the MCP’s formulation of its idea of a form of Malayan nationalism inclusive of immigrants. The genealogy of the word minzu, used to connote the Comintern concept of “national,” can be traced to Sun Yatsen’s use of both minzu and guojia (country) as translations of the English word nation when referring to China. Both the GMD and the CCP used minzu in this dual meaning as “nation” and “nationality.” Multiple meanings of minzu as “ethnic,” “people,” “nation,” and “nationality” are reflected in a CCP statement from 1929: “The national problem of the Nanyang – the nations [minzu] in the Nanyang are very complex.”Footnote 31 In MCP discourse, a Chinese term meaning “nation,” “nationality,” “race,” “ethnic group,” and “national,” minzu, came to mean “Malayan nation.”Footnote 32 These multiple meanings resulted in a semantic slippage when the Comintern embarked on establishing a Malayan national party in a country that only existed in relation to the British colonial concept of Malaya, meaning the Malay Peninsula. Point seventeen of the twenty-one requirements for official acceptance as a Comintern section stated that an applicant party should be named a “party of a country” (partiia etoi strany).Footnote 33 By adding the attribute “Malayan” to “nation” (i.e., minzu), the Comintern reinforced the concept of a Malayan country that was territorially based on British Malaya.

The Chinese communists in the Nanyang, however, imagined another national Malayan party, a federation of communist parties organized along ethnic lines. There were several reasons for that. For one, as discussed in the previous chapter, this was likely based on the model that originated in the multiethnic context of the United States. The CCP understood the word minzu to mean “people,” probably also because the communist cells in mainland Southeast Asia were organized according to ethnicity, differentiating, for instance, Chinese from Vietnamese.Footnote 34 Since 1927, the predominately Chinese party’s base had presented a problem for the “relationship between the revolutionary parties of the other peoples” and was hard to solve without organizing parties of “various peoples” separately.Footnote 35 Another possible factor was the reality of ethnic division within industries, which impacted the makeup of trade unions.Footnote 36

Since 1929, the CCP had intended to unify Chinese ethnic cells across the Nanyang into one party.Footnote 37 In 1930, to solve the problem of the party’s focus on Chinese communities, the MCP members-to-be suggested “[establishing] a nucleus among each people [i.e., ethnic community], in order to establish an independent party of each people.”Footnote 38 In other words, the Nanyang communists interpreted the Comintern’s principle of national parties as being based on ethnic groups. The MCP’s political resolution in English stated the following:

In view of the mistake that the system of [the] Malay party belongs to [the] Chinese party, some members insist to organise an unity party embracing all people in Malaya. This organisational line is also contradictory to the organisational principle of [an] international party, for the unit of organisation is people. Each native people should organise a national party … To organise a unity party consisting of various peoples is incorrect.Footnote 39

This statement was incompatible with the Comintern’s policy of having one communist party per country. Over this paragraph, a Comintern cadre wrote Sovershenno neverno (“Absolutely wrong”). Elsewhere, the FEB noted that “[t]he idea of creating several Communist parties based on the [different] nationalities in Malaya must be energetically combated”; in the Malayan state, there was to be only one party, which would include “workers of all nationalities.”Footnote 40

In CCP documents from 1928–1929, the term Malaya was not used, and there was thus no correlation with “national.”Footnote 41 However, starting with the MCP’s founding conference minutes, the terms Malaya party and Nanyang party were used interchangeably and had the meaning of “national party.” The goal of the MCP’s revolution was to achieve “a united front of the oppressed peoples” and to organize “the Democratic Republic by free union among the various people of [the] Nanyang,” a concept that, in the same paragraph, was termed the “Democratic Republics of the Malay States.”Footnote 42 The idea of a soviet federation made sense in Malaya – and in the Nanyang – with its multiple minzu, which, for the Comintern, translated into the Russian natsionalnost’ (nationality).Footnote 43 Following the Comintern’s directives, the MCP now conceived of the Malayan nation as encompassing all Malayan ethnic groups in the fashion of the multiethnic Soviet federation. Thus, the Comintern gave Chinese communists in the Nanyang the discursive tools to imagine Malaya, consisting at the time of several sultanates under British dominion, as a nation-state.

As a result of different understandings of the word minzu by the CCP and the Comintern, a communist organization that was built according to people became the basis of a countrywide communist party of a nonexistent nation. With the equating of the ethnic Chinese party with the national Malayan party, the Chinese communists were to lead Malaya’s oppressed peoples to colonial liberation and nationhood on behalf of the Malayan nation and the Malayan Revolution. It was this slippage that made Malaya a territorialized nation and a country in MCP discourse, since, like the Comintern, the MCP used national to refer to the jurisdictional space of the party, so “national” meant “Malayan.” Before the establishment of the MCP, the Chinese communists imagined the place where they were, the Nanyang and the Malayan Peninsula, as a place inhabited by different ethnic groups (minzu). By promoting a national (i.e., Malayan) party and a Malayan Revolution, the Comintern conformed to the nascent idea of a national Malayan identity among Chinese immigrant communists and their jurisdiction over both the Nanyang and Malaya.

The boundaries between the Malayan party and the Nanyang party remained ambiguous. From 1928, the twentieth plenum of the CCP Central Executive Committee in Guangdong, in accordance with the Comintern line, decided to transform the special committees of Siam, Annam, Burma, and the Indian islands into the Siam Committee, the Annam Committee, and the Communist Party of the Nanyang Peoples.Footnote 44 In 1928, the NPC plenum decided that the communists had to start a “national movement” in the Nanyang so as to attract Malays and Indians to the Chinese party organization and to accept the Comintern’s leadership.Footnote 45 The party of the Nanyang was to become independent when the parties of various nations in the Nanyang were united into a general organization.Footnote 46 Since 1929, the CCP had planned that the “Communist Party of the Nanyang Nationalities” (Kommunisticheskaia partiia nan’ianskikh narodnostei) would include the larger territory of the Indian islands, meaning the Malay Archipelago, Burma, and the Annam and Siam committees.Footnote 47

At the MCP’s founding conference, the Nanyang party was to be renamed the Nanyang Various Peoples Communists’ Joint Secretariat as a transitional organization for “the communist party in the various oppressed peoples of [the] Nanyang” and would include a Malay communist party or a “Communist Committee of [the] Malay Peninsula.”Footnote 48 Comintern documents before 1930 also demonstrate that the Nanyang was termed alternatively as the Malay Archipelago, the Malay states, or Indonesia.Footnote 49 As early as 1918, Nanyang had been translated into English as “Malaysia” by the first “area studies” institution in China, at Ji’nan University, and Comintern translators also translated Nanyang as “Malaya.”Footnote 50 The Comintern confirmed this conception of the Nanyang as a Malay region by assigning responsibility for movements in Indonesia, Siam, and Burma to the MCP in 1934.Footnote 51

In these uncertain boundaries of the Nanyang, populated by various peoples, we recognize the pattern of Sun Yatsen’s idea of a Chinese nation comprising multiple peoples. In 1912, in his inaugural address as provisional president of the Republic of China, Sun Yatsen spoke of the future republic as uniting all territories of the former Qing empire and all five ethnicities (zu) – Manchu, Han, Mongol, Hui, and Tibetan – in one nation (yiren), which would be the “unity of the nation.”Footnote 52 The similarity of the multiethnic conditions in Malaya and in the Chinese empire, now a republic, in both of which the Chinese were the dominant minzu, rendered the application of the Comintern’s principle of internationalism logical.

In 1930, the MCP, which primarily consisted of CCP members, subsequently changed its idea of a national party in accordance with the Comintern idea of an ethnically inclusive party in order to acquire Comintern recognition and funding. However, because of the MCP’s inability to involve non-Chinese in the organization, the de facto ethnic mode of organization of workers and nationalist movements continued throughout the 1930s. The founding conference, as in 1929, thus criticized the party for its continuing failure to indigenize, accusing it of not understanding “the revolutionary task in Nanyang”Footnote 53 and of not adapting “to the practical life of Malaya.”Footnote 54 The Nanyang comrades recognized that Malay natives should participate in the revolution in the Nanyang, but because of a lack of money and cadres, this recognition did not go further than discussions about the tactics of the party, educational classes, and the establishment of party publications.Footnote 55 The party did not adapt to Malay conditions because it consisted of Chinese immigrants and because of the “patriotism of Chinese toiling masses in Malaya,” as well as a lack of investigation into the conditions in Malaya and a lack of special instructions from the CC CCP to the “Malay party.” The way to fix this, the MCP imagined, was by establishing organizations consisting of members of different nationalities.Footnote 56 The indigenization of the MCP, which had been previously promoted by the GMD and the CCP in 1929, was now also promoted by the Comintern.

The MCP’s indigenization ran through the rhetoric of internationalism and world revolution. The MCP thus promoted the liberation of Malaya through a Malayan Revolution, which would contribute to the world revolution: “Comrades! The III congress [the founding meeting] has entrusted us with the full responsibility for the revolutionary movement of the Malay Peninsula. We must organize the Malayan proletariat and poor peasantry into a new army of the world revolution for the emancipation of all oppressed peoples of [the] Malay [P]eninsula.”Footnote 57

Indigenizing the Chinese Revolution through the Malayan Nation, Advancing Malay Civilization through the Chinese Revolution

In 1930 the Comintern promoted the mobilization of Malaya’s three major ethnic communities through the MCP, calling for support for the Chinese and Indian Revolutions and “the liberation of Malaya.”Footnote 58 Malaya was a unique place to promote slogans of support for the Chinese and Indian Revolutions that would also benefit the Malayan and world revolutions, since in 1931 Indians and Chinese comprised such a sizable proportion of Malaya’s population. In the MCP texts, this translated into the “emancipation of the oppressed Malay nationalities” (Malai bei yapo de minzu jiefang) or the “the people of Malaya” (Malai de renmin), who consisted of “complex nationalities” (fuza de minzu).Footnote 59 The MCP argued that it had to organize Malay and Indian workers to address the low political awareness of the Chinese masses (qunzhong de zhengzhi shuiping jiaodi), which manifested itself in an immigrant mentality (yimin de xinli). In the Darwinian world of revolution, the establishment of a workers and peasants’ state (gongnong de guojia) would bring liberation to the Malayan nation (Malai minzu duli) or “the people of Malaya” (Malai de minzhong), rendered in English translation as “Malaya.” It would also help overcome economic backwardness and would bring the Malay “civilization”Footnote 60 to a higher stage of development (xiang zhao geng gao de wenming fazhan).Footnote 61

For the MCP, colonial emancipation meant “civilizational progress”: “The British often say in Malaya that peoples of the East are of the second sort [xiadeng de dongxi], regardless of whether they are educated elites or not, and they do so because otherwise the peoples of the East will stand up, work on their own country [jiajin ziji guojia de gongzuo], and overcome imperialist domination, and their civilization will advance [wenming jinbu].”Footnote 62 Propaganda rhetorically defending the Soviet Union, which had been “economically and culturally backward” but in ten years had surpassed any “so-called civilized country,” made sense because it offered a model of civilizational breakthrough.Footnote 63

Internationalism was intrinsic to indigenization through these discourses of aid to the Chinese and Indian Revolutions for the sake of the Malayan Revolution and ultimately the world revolution. Because Malaya’s production depended on a labor influx from these two countries, revolutions in China and India became the first conditions for the emancipation of the Malay nation (Malai minzu jiefang), the MCP argued. To help the Indian and Chinese Revolutions and to expand the movement in Malaya, the MCP needed to organize Chinese and Indian workers. The revolution in India was important because it would help to spread revolution in other British colonies and to bring down British imperialism.Footnote 64 The Comintern thus provided a new international justification for the internationalism of the Chinese Revolution of Sun Yatsen by merging Chinese nationalism and Asianism together in the MCP’s Malayan nationalism.

The Comintern responded to MCP initiativesFootnote 65 with a directive to promote these two revolutions. In the earliest such document, dated December 1930, the Comintern recommended that the MCP promote support for the Chinese and Indian Revolutions among their respective ethnic communities and use different slogans in each. The rationale was that the emancipation of Malaya would help the emancipation of China and India, which would be beneficial for the Malayan Revolution. This attitude also provided a rhetorical tool to attract members of the Chinese community and, most important, on behalf of and to the benefit of the national liberation of Malaya. For instance, the Comintern suggested that among the Chinese population, the slogan that the emancipation of Malaya would help the emancipation of China had to be used, as the same imperialists who oppressed China also oppressed Malaya. The same was promoted among Hindu workers regarding Indian emancipation: “You must tell the native workers that the emancipation of Malaya can be put into practice only through the united front of all toiling masses of the Malay state regardless of nationalities.”Footnote 66 The FEB suggested that the MCP explain to the native Malay workers that they should fight not for the lowering of wages among Chinese and Indian workers to their level but for the opposite.Footnote 67

As had Li Lisan in the past, the Comintern criticized the MCP, saying it was a group of Chinese immigrants who were living “by the interests of the Chinese movement” and who were “separated from the life of the indigenous strata of toiling Malays” and Malaya-born “indigenous Chinese” because of their “attempt to mechanistically graft the methods and some slogans of the Chinese movement in Malaya.”Footnote 68 The Comintern felt that the MCP was still “more of a CCP organization … working among the Chinese workers who fled from China, rather than an independent party of Malaya States.”Footnote 69 The ECCI considered the MCP to be “the Singapore group” and recommended that the FEB connect with it and “establish leadership over its activity, and try to convert it and use it for the establishment of the communist party of the Malay archipelago, including Malay, Indian, and Chinese (including indigenous) workers,” who would be able to lead the revolutionary movement of Malaya. The FEB was to help the MCP prepare Chinese, Malay, and Indian cadres, who would be able to organize an independent MCP and who “would help the communist movement in Indonesia to form.”Footnote 70

Moreover, the Comintern pointed out, “[t]he proletarian movement in Singapore can play a huge role in the agitation and organization of the countries that surround it.” The FEB continued, “[i]t is necessary to create an organizational network through the whole country of Malaya states. You already have an organizational basis in the Chinese communist group. Now it is necessary without delay to make every effort that these Chinese communists no longer exist like a group of Chinese emigrants, living with their minds and hearts solely upon events in China and mechanically reproducing all such [phenomena] in the Malaya states.” The Comintern refused to recognize the established MCP as the Malayan communist party and suggested that the “communist party in the Malaya States” should be established on the basis of the preliminary committee that the Nanyang communists had established in April 1930.Footnote 71

The Comintern’s vision echoed the same method of indigenization of immigrant communist networks that Ho Chi Minh had promoted in Indochina and that the GMD had advocated in Malaya. This indigenization was rooted in the civilizing aspirations of immigrant communists in Southeast Asia. The revolution offered a way of localizing the Chinese communist organization in Malayan society, as the MCP was eager to build a cross-ethnic alliance. When the party distributed its pamphlets during the celebration of a communist festival in “Hindus” and “Malayan” languages, it reported that “the native masses seemed very pleased” to have revolutionaries among themselves as well, while the Chinese were also pleased that Malays and Indians “[were] with them now.”Footnote 72 However, despite aloof slogans and an emphasis on non-Chinese membership numbers, it was obvious that non-Chinese membership was negligible.

Malays in the MCP

Although membership at the founding conference was reported as 1,500 as well as 5,000 labor union members, the party had only 1,130 party members (including five Malays) and more than 4,250 members of communist-influenced red trade unions in October 1930. The conference itself included only one Malay and one representative from the Netherlands East Indies.Footnote 73 However, the term Malay may be deceptive, for by April 1, 1930, of six Malays arrested because of their association with the Chinese communists, five (Ahmed Baiki bin Suile, Ali Majid, Jamal Ud Din, Emat, alias Abdul Hamid, and Haji Mohamed bin Hashim) came from Sumatra, Sulawesi, and Java, and it is likely that the sixth, Salleh Bin Sapi, did as well.Footnote 74 Despite its alleged goals, the MCP was still said to be exclusively Chinese (apart from one Indian) and appeared to have “no plan to involve non-Chinese other than vulgar conversation and politeness,” because of difficulties with their different “language and custom.”Footnote 75 The discrepancy in the documents sent to the Comintern, which report an MCP membership of 10 percent “Malaysians and Indians,” may have been because the CC in Singapore relied on reports from local cells, which were often intercepted and therefore irregular. Some MCP envoys claimed that they themselves did not have sufficient knowledge of party membership to make accurate reports.Footnote 76 Furthermore, when the CC and other local organizations sent envoys to Shanghai in 1930 as MCP representatives in hopes of gaining Comintern funding and recognition of autonomy,Footnote 77 there was a clear benefit to show growing recruitment of non-Chinese, which had been a condition stipulated by the Comintern. It is evident, however, that these estimates were exaggerated, since other sources (see Table 3.1) show no improvement.

Table 3.1 Non-Chinese members in communist organizations in Malaya

MCPRed labor unions
19305 Indians300 Indians and Malays (at least 30 Malays and 220 Indians)
Malays: 2 members and 1 candidate, possibly including a former PKI member, Subajio; 1 CC member and 5 CC candidates
March 1931Total: 1,220
  • Indians: 350

  • Malays: 30, as well as 72 Javanese

  • Total: 5,830

September 19311,220 Indians and Malays Total: 8,175
December 1931
  • Indians: 28

  • Malays: 17, as well as 1 Javanese

  • Indians: 180

  • Malays: at least 700

  • In Singapore, 10 percent Malays, Tamils, and Javanese, 9 Javanese and 57 Indians “under influence”Footnote 78

Obviously, those few Malays were not very visible in the MCP, since in 1931 Comintern envoy Ducroux discovered that in the MCP, there was “no single Malay or Indian, but Indians were in the Malaya trade unions.”Footnote 79 Overall, there were more non-Chinese in the AIL.Footnote 80 However, the MCP had no language skills and asked the Comintern for the help of the Javanese and Indian parties, who could send Chinese, Indians, or Javanese from the Kommunisticheskii universitet trudiashchikhsia Vostoka (KUTV), and of Comintern cadres who knew different languages to help recruit Indians and Malays into communist organizations.Footnote 81

The MCP’s difficulties in engaging Malays were not surprising, given the typically condescending attitudes that perpetuated European nineteenth-century stereotypes.Footnote 82 An MCP report stated that: “All aborigines are lazy. Though they have fertile land, they do not persevere to till it but spend their fatal time in sexual abuses, idleness and superstition.”Footnote 83 Ho Chi Minh, in his report, described the MCP’s arrogance eloquently:

Chauvinism and provincialism: They thought that being Chinese, they must work only for China, and only with the Chinese. They looked upon the natives as inferior and unnecessary people. There were no contacts, no relations between the Chinese members and the native masses. The consequences of that exclusiveness are that when they need the cooperation of the natives they find no one or find only mediocre elements.Footnote 84

For example, the MCP decided that the Malay and Hindu comrades had an “infantile education” and therefore could not be trusted with the press to publish Malay- and “Hindu”-language propaganda.Footnote 85 Some party members in Selangor, Singapore, and Malacca “[sabotaged] the work on the grounds that Indian and Malayan workers were too backward and [were] not receptive to revolutionary ideas.”Footnote 86 However, the CC MCP in 1930 was critical of such attitudes toward Malays and insisted that though Malays were not revolutionary because of the current British policy of harmonization, they still needed to be dragged out of their present economic condition and their civilizational level had to be raised: “A Malay workers and peasants’ state can only be established by Malayan workers and peasants.”Footnote 87 Malay intellectuals, in the view of the MCP, lacked nationalism and collaborated with the British government, which destroyed their “conception of independence and emancipation.”Footnote 88

Member of the MCP, artist and musician Zhang Xia (张霞) also described Malays as lazy and as having low cultural levels (landuo, wenhua shuiping you di) in contrast to the industrious, intelligent, and patient (qinlao, naiku, congying) Chinese.Footnote 89 The Weekly Herald (Xingqi daobao), in a 1935 article about the British colonization of Malaya, reported that the British and the Malays had different cultural levels (wenhua chengdu buyi) and that the Malayan national movement (minzu yundong) comprised Chinese. The article included a cartoon of “drunken and stupefied” colonial people sleeping in the middle of the day, which illustrates the Nanjing GMD government’s outlook on the “oppressed” peoples of the Nanyang, an outlook the MCP shared.Footnote 90

Indonesian communists continued to attempt to organize Malays in the Malayan Peninsula in 1928–1930, mostly unsuccessfully, but Alimin and Musso allegedly organized a Malay section of the AIL and built connections with Indonesians and Malays studying in Cairo. In Lenggeng in Negeri Sembilan, there was a Sumatran Islamic reformist movement, Kaum Muda, which was connected with the communists in Indonesia.Footnote 91 Indonesian Comintern agents were also unsuccessful in recruiting Malays into the MCP. Similarly, a group of Chinese sent by the Nanyang party to Indonesia in 1930 failed to generate links to the PKI. Fearing arrest in Singapore, PKI leader Alimin went to Shanghai in 1931, where he worked among Malay and Javanese seamen until arrests decimated the local Comintern bureau in June 1931. It was hoped that Tan Malaka, whom the Comintern discovered in Shanghai, where he had been in hiding since 1927, would be an effective organizer, but he was arrested en route in Hong Kong.Footnote 92 In Malaya itself, the MCP had no connection with the short-lived Belia Malaya (Young Malaya) (1930–1931), established by Malay student teachers at Sultan Idris Training College, including Ibrahim Yaacob, inspired by the idea of unity with Indonesia in a greater Malaysia Raya (but since 1926 they had contacts with Alimin and Sutan Djenain, a member of the CC MCP and of the Malayan Racial Emancipation League, respectively).Footnote 93 This apparent gap in communication is significant, given that in 1937 Yaacob and his Young Malay Union (Kesatuan Melayu Muda) (KMM) were credited with creating the discourse of an inclusive multiethnic Malayan nation.Footnote 94

In 1934, when the Comintern requested that the MCP send Malays to Moscow for training, the MCP responded that it was difficult to persuade the five Malay comrades (Ma ji) they had found in Melaka and Selangor to leave their families even for one week. One comrade in Singapore was sufficiently qualified to conduct propaganda among Malays (Malai minzu gongzuo de zhongxin): “The long-term education of Malay comrades [Malaiya ji tongzhi] is very needed. However, they do not want to come to us; we can only go to the locality and teach there and after, perhaps, can gather a training group of Malay comrades.” A lack of help from local organizations was also blamed for the lack of Malay involvement (in Sembilan), and many MCP members considered efforts in this direction to be futile.Footnote 95

However, with overall MCP membership in decline by 1934 due to arrests, one letter mentions only seven Malays (although it does not state whether this refers to all Malays in the party, which had a total membership of 588).Footnote 96 The total union membership of 6,035 included 518 Malays and 52 Indians.Footnote 97 Malay membership in the Singapore CYL increased from 3 in 1932 to 20 in 1934 (with 411 Chinese). During 1932, the number of Indians in the Singapore labor union fell from 120 to 20 and the number of Malays from 50 to 20 (total membership of 3,000).Footnote 98 Since 1931, the MCP had printed propaganda material in Malay, and in 1934, Indonesian communists provided language help, although they were concerned with the independence of Indonesia rather than Malaya.Footnote 99 Amir Hamzah Siregar left Singapore for Java in 1934 and was arrested there; an MCP inspector, a Christian Batak named Djoeliman Siregar, was arrested during his tour of Negeri Sembilan and Malacca. A Salim sent a report on Selangor to the CC MCP in 1937.Footnote 100 Despite having founded the Malayan Racial Emancipation League in 1936, headed by a committee with two Tamils and two Malays, the MCP remained almost entirely Chinese, also likely because of Malay anti-immigrant stances.Footnote 101

“The Future of the Nanyang Revolution”

The history of the Chinese words for “assimilation into local society” (tonghua) and “allegiance to China” (guihua) provides insight into the MCP’s understanding of how non-Chinese peoples could be involved in the party. As China expanded territorially before the twentieth century, these terms had come to denote the assimilation of non-Han peoples in the borderlands (tonghua) and foreigners into Chinese culture (guihua); however, there was no word for the reverse process. Although Chinese communities in the Nanyang had been characterized by social adaptation (and a certain loss of their Chineseness), increased migration in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries had encouraged a process of re-Sinicization by the Chinese state that only encountered barriers when Chinese migration was restricted after 1929.Footnote 102 The Nanjing GMD state’s vocabulary of assimilation reflected its acknowledgment of the foreignness of overseas Chinese, who were being re-Sinicized (guihua) to prevent their assimilation into the local culture (tonghua).Footnote 103

Closer links with China, however, also led to tensions between descendants of earlier Chinese migrants who had married local women and had developed more connections with local society. In the face of increased Malay activism, some locally born Chinese leaders, like English-educated Tan Cheng Lock (1883–1960), even began to speak of the “Malayan spirit and consciousness” (emphasis added).Footnote 104 Tan was a prominent Malaya-born Chinese businessman and politician, the head of the Straits Chinese British Association in Malacca from 1928 to 1935. There are parallels between his and the MCP’s activity and discourse. He promoted Malaya’s self-government in 1926 as well as Chinese participation in the Legislative Councils of the Federated Malay States and of the Straits Settlements.Footnote 105

However, for other Chinese the restrictions on Chinese immigration as a result of the depression and the dramatic increase of Malaya’s locally born Chinese population, from 20.9 percent in 1921 to 29.9 percent in 1931, increased anxiety about the Chineseness of locally born Chinese.Footnote 106 Many teachers from Chinese-language schools and writers for Chinese-language newspapers, as well as intellectuals prominent in the MCP, were also GMD members.Footnote 107 One example was Xu Jie, the author of the durian story. He was appointed by the CC GMD as an editor of Yiqunbao in Kuala Lumpur in 1928–1929. Xu Jie maintained connections with local communists who shared news with him. In addition to founding New Rise Literature (Xinxing wenyi, 新兴文艺), which was a disguised form of the proletarian revolutionary literature movement, he was involved in local literary movements and with local writers, and he also promoted the concept of “more purely indigenous literature,” Malayan Chinese literature (Ma hua wenxue), and the idea of a Nanyang “local color” (Nanyang secai). This was a response to the condescending attitude toward a local “imitation” of Chinese culture expressed by the first generation of educated migrant Chinese. These local Chinese writers were creating a Nanyang huaqiao culture while also asserting their difference from China. The reorientation toward a Nanyang (local) color was an attempt to redefine the place of Chinese emigrants in Chinese culture, not, as Kenley puts it, “to become indigenous.”Footnote 108 Along with the dissatisfaction of the local Chinese with the huaqiao education program that came from the central government in Nanjing and did not take their needs into account, this literary trend can also be viewed as a manifestation of the adaptation efforts by the immigrant Chinese in Malaya. There were complaints that Mandarin teachers who came from China did not want to learn about Malaya. It was hoped that with time locally born teachers would come to teach Mandarin in the schools.Footnote 109

According to Kenley, the rise of aspirations for local Chineseness among Chinese intellectuals and their desire to liberate Malaya’s “native” peoples from the British government were the consequences of the increased influence of communist political immigrants from China after 1928.Footnote 110 Moreover, Chinese intellectuals’ aspirations for a Nanyang huaqiao culture resonated with the CCP’s impulse, expressed in Li Lisan’s letter, to make a Nanyang – not a Chinese – revolution in the Nanyang and with the establishment of a local communist party. This was also encouraged by the Comintern, which ultimately offered an opportunity to put these aspirations into practice. This is illustrated in a story by Xu Jie, a follower of a “nativist” group (xiangtupai), who relied on true stories (which he also mentions in his memoir) as the basis for fiction.Footnote 111

Xu Jie published a story at the same time in January 1929Footnote 112 when the Chinese communists in Malaya received Li Lisan’s letter. This story contains a discussion of the Nanyang Revolution, echoing Li Lisan’s directive and the reports of the Nanyang communists to the CCP and the Comintern. Xu’s discussion of a Nanyang Revolution likely reflected discussions among Kuala Lumpur communists with whom he was in contact. Xu Jie viewed the revolution in the Nanyang as different from the revolution in China. Whereas in China the revolution was confined to a limited territory because of undeveloped infrastructure, in the Nanyang it would not be easy to stir up a revolution (presumably due to relatively good living conditions), but developed transport and infrastructure would make it easier to coordinate a revolution once it arose. Thus, infrastructure would help not only to crush the revolution but also to conduct it more effectively. Moreover, capitalism in the Nanyang, while fulfilling its own tasks, at the same time contributed to the success of the world revolution. As Xu Jie’s analysis of the Nanyang conditions suggests, the Nanyang’s prosperity struck the Chinese because of its contrast with China.Footnote 113 The CC CCP letter written by Li Lisan mentioned the same issues and presented the Nanyang as a place of highly developed industries and hence as the center of the labor movement in the Pacific and the center of communication. The Nanyang CYL also debated with the CCP about the nature of the Nanyang Revolution.Footnote 114

Xu’s idea that young locally born Chinese would become leaders of the liberation of the oppressed peoples of the Nanyang if they knew the Chinese language was an expression of the GMD’s global vision as well as the goal of cultivating an identification with China among overseas Chinese. In another short story, Xu wrote:

At the bookstore I saw that youngster, Ai Lian … He had a touch of melancholy. I thought, this is that specific expression that the oppressed peoples of the colonies have. In a flash, I also recalled the eyes of that [Indian] man, and the yellow scraggy eyes of that Malay, and also recalled those two flashing bayonets. Ai Lian furtively read Chinese books; he especially liked to read books on social sciences … At that time, our eyes met. Again, like last time on the road, he smiled slightly at me. I also nodded but did not say a word. “You, promising youth, when you train yourself, strengthen yourself, you will become the center of the Nanyang Revolution!”Footnote 115

Xu’s point – that the hope of the Nanyang Revolution, who would liberate their oppressed fellow countrymen, including Malays and Indians, would be young locally born Chinese who maintained a Chinese identity – provides a rare insight into the intersection of the discourses of the Comintern, Malayan Chinese immigrant intellectuals, the GMD, the CCP, and the English-language public sphere in British Malaya. It also demonstrates the changes in conceptual and social aspects of the discursive community of Chinese revolutionaries.

Xu Jie wanted to include the locally born Chinese in the Nanyang Revolution so that they could fulfill the mission of emancipating “weak nations” through their Chinese identity and Chinese language, which ensured that they were not “slaves” who spoke Malay and English, the language of the colonial regime. The CYL had similar concerns.Footnote 116 In fact, the two locally born Chinese in Kuala Lumpur, students of a Methodist English school, who figured in Xu’s short story were recruited by the local CYL after they published pieces in Yiqunbao.Footnote 117 Thus the Nanyang communist organizations started to recruit locally born Chinese who would soon become active in the liberation of Malaya and its oppressed peoples and who would also be in demand by the Comintern, as we see in Chapter 5.

The Chinese identity of the locally born thus translated into their participation in the indigenous revolutionary and nationalist project. The Chinese in another revolutionary project in the Nanyang, the Philippine party, despite its similarities with the Malayan party, did not embrace indigenous nationalism. Here, the Chinese identity of the locally born Chinese also played an important role.

Chineseness: The Philippines

As in Malaya, the first communist organization established in the Philippines was a CCP chapter. There, as among other Chinese overseas communities, the popularity of communist parties grew after the March Eighteenth Massacre (1926), when a demonstration protesting Japanese pressure in the Dagu port was suppressed by the North China (Beiyang) government, and after the May Thirtieth Movement.Footnote 118 The CCP sent Lin Xingqiu (林星秋) to establish a CCP cell in the Philippines in 1926.Footnote 119 The Special Philippine Branch (Feilübin tebie zhibu) in Manila (est. 1927) consisted of five communist cells of three people. One student cell was at the University of the Philippines, which intended to recruit Filipinos; one was at the Philippine Chinese middle school (Feiqiao zhongxue); one was at a night school; and two were in the GMD, consisting of workers and shop employees. Shop employees were the majority of party members (twenty-three) as well as primary school students and women outside of Manila.

Altogether, there were thirty “pure” party members (danchun dangyuan). There was also a cell of three people in Suzugun (Japan) and two in Cebu.Footnote 120 In 1927, 300 shop employees established the Association of Chinese Migrant Workers (Fei huaqiao laodong xiehui).Footnote 121 In 1928, drawing on the report of Gao Zinong (高子农), alias Meditsinskii (Medical), a Fujianese member of the Chinese CYL sent by the CCP to study in Moscow,Footnote 122 the Comintern planned to establish a communist party in the Philippines.Footnote 123 Like the Chinese communists in Malaya, Gao promoted political rights for Chinese immigrants in the Philippines and viewed the Nanyang as a location of strategic commercial and military ports, and as a market.Footnote 124

The Philippine party was a chapter of the Chinese transnational communist network. Shared characteristics with the Malaya organization included the popularity of anarchist ideas,Footnote 125 study societies and night schools as hotbeds of Marxist ideas, student and shop employee membership, a connection gap between student leaders and workers, and a workers’ preference for traditional ways of self-organizing (“yellow” unions, as the communists called them) over radical red unions.Footnote 126 As in Malaya, Chinese laborers were reluctant to become involved in local politics or with non-Chinese (yizu), and even with Chinese outside their native place or surname associations (tongxinghui). They were beyond the reach of revolutionary propaganda, as they were illiterate, participated in brotherhoods and friendship associations (xiongdihui and youyishe), and were afraid to protest against their Chinese bosses (see Chapter 4). The GMD had more appeal among “capitalists,” students, and women’s organizations. Chinese communists were also on a mission to liberate the masses of low political and cultural levels (zhengzhi sixiang [wenhua] di), affected by a colonial education, and were happy to report progress among students at Philippine University, formerly “the most backward in the East.”Footnote 127

The Comintern approach to Philippine national emancipation was, similar to its approach in Malaya, by a united front of the Philippine population, under the leadership of the communist party, to bring together “the proletariat, the peasantry, the urban poor, and the revolutionary students – the Moros, mountain tribes, and Chinese toilers, as well as the Christian Filipinos.”Footnote 128 The Comintern also promoted unity between Chinese immigrants and Filipino labor movements and campaigned against the deportation of Chinese workers in the Philippines and internationalist support for the Chinese Rrevolution.Footnote 129 As it had done in Malaya, the Comintern promoted solidarity with the Chinese and Indian Revolutions and contacts with the revolutionary movements in China, Indonesia, Malaya, and the United States.Footnote 130

Why did the Chinese communists in the Philippines not come up with the discourse of a multiethnic Philippine nation despite similarities with the party in Malaya, the long-term presence of a large number of ethnic Chinese, and rule by colonial authorities to overthrow? For one, unlike in Malaya, the Comintern promoted the “equality of all minorities, regardless of race or creed, and their absolute right to self-determination – including complete separation.”Footnote 131 Also, the Comintern policy of naming one communist party per host country shaped the organizational forms of Chinese communist organizations in different settings. Where there was already a Comintern-endorsed communist party, Chinese communists joined as a Chinese-language faction, similar to that in Germany and the United States.Footnote 132 In the historical area of Chinese emigration in the Nanyang, where Chinese communists were the earliest communists, and in Malaya and the Philippines, they established national parties. The Philippine party consisting of Chinese migrants had no CCP organizational identity. In contrast to the Nanyang Communist Party, which was responsible for the regional revolution in the Nanyang, the chapter of the Chinese Communist Party in the Philippines was already known as the Philippine Communist Party (Feilübin gongchandang) in 1928 and was organizationally autonomous from the CCP.Footnote 133 The Comintern established the Communist Party of the Philippine Islands (CPPI) on November 7, 1930, and one year later the Comintern was still pushing the party to connect with the CCP.Footnote 134

In the Philippines, communists were not the only ones promoting independence, unlike in Malaya. Moreover, Chinese mestizos were already considered a part of the Philippine nation and there was an insufficient number of new Chinese immigrants whose rights the party would promote. There was no sense of an intergenerational Chinese identity to bridge the two groups in the late 1920s and early 1930s, despite the continuity of Chinese mestizos’ participation in the Philippine liberation movement, from Jose Rizal to the anti-Japanese resistance during World War II.Footnote 135 As a matter of fact, in 1928 Gao Zinong did not even see Rizal as Chinese. On the contrary, because he was celebrated by the American government as an anti-Spanish Philippine hero, Rizal was considered to be an ally of the “American imperialists.”Footnote 136 There was a lack of shared Chinese identity between Chinese immigrants like Gao and locally born Chinese mestizos, who instead shared a Christian identity with the locals.Footnote 137

As a consequence of Spanish policies regarding the “Filipinization” of Chinese mestizos, by the end of the nineteenth century mestizo culture had become part and parcel of Filipino culture and, after the American takeover, of the discourse of the Philippine “nation” that the American government took up in an effort to coopt nationalist demands. Because of the leadership of Chinese mestizos in the Philippine Revolution, it has been argued that Chinese mestizos laid a foundation for the independent Philippine nation.Footnote 138

American policies also favored Chinese mestizos’ self-identification as Filipino. Not only culturally, Chinese mestizos had already formed a part of the Filipino identity in the late nineteenth century.Footnote 139 Unlike Malaya, the Philippines already existed as a nation-state, albeit not an independent one, and former Chinese mestizos, now called Filipinos, were part of the Philippine people.Footnote 140 Gao said the Americans had curtailed the national movement (minzu yundong) through assimilation and manipulation of the nonhomogeneous attitudes of various Philippine nationalities toward independence (Fei ge minzu dui duli yundong de yijian bu yizhi), promoting the idea of the Philippines as part of the confederation of the United States (Meiguo lianbang).Footnote 141

American exclusion laws had barred the immigration of Chinese laborers to the Philippines, so the communist party lacked the potential constituency of immigrant Chinese who had to become local so as to improve their lot. Unlike their counterparts in British Malaya, by the second half of the nineteenth century Chinese mestizos in the Philippines already owned large landholdings. Moreover, they were able to improve their economic position after the American takeover. In contrast, during the same period in British Malaya, the economic position of locally born Chinese deteriorated.Footnote 142 In absolute numbers in 1903–1939, the Chinese population in the Philippines grew from 41,035 to 117,487, which was negligible to the 2 million Chinese immigrants in Malaya. Moreover, unlike in Malaya, beginning in 1935, a Chinese person born in China could – albeit with many conditions that included property ownership – naturalize as Filipino.Footnote 143

Finally, in 1930, there were only twenty-five Chinese Communist Party members and sixty-two Filipinos, including one Chinese member of the Politburo. At the party’s founding conference, there was one Chinese delegate, although Chinese trade unions were the most active in the Philippines.Footnote 144

To summarize, by the early 1930s the absence of a discourse of a multiethnic nation among the Chinese communists in the Philippines could be explained by a lack of Chinese members in the communist party, a comparatively low number of Chinese laborers in the Philippines, the relative economic affluence of the local Chinese mestizos, and, possibly, conflicting Comintern ideas about national unity and the self-determination of minorities. In addition, the local Chinese had already became “Filipino” and had become a part of the indigenous nation of the Philippines.

Conclusion

The Comintern exported from Europe not only revolution but also the idea of the nation-state. In British Malaya, this export was facilitated by the Chinese immigrant community that needed to gain political rights that no other existing discourse of national belonging could provide. By 1930, Comintern insistence on the founding of national parties based on separate countries, as well as the British fostering of a Malayan nation, led the MCP to become an early adopter of the multiethnic Malayan state.

The case of minzu is an example of how different understandings of a single word had far-reaching consequences. The term national communicated different meanings to partners in revolution who did not fully understand one another. The shift in the meaning of minzu was produced by the interaction of three realms: the Malayan, the Chinese, and the international, including the Comintern in Moscow and communist organizations in the United States. The crossing of languages, groups, intellectual worlds, and how they perceived and reasoned with shared authoritative texts to address their problems shaped conceptual categories and discourses. The altered meaning of the word minzu reconciled the “Malayan nation” with Chinese nationalism for the members of the MCP.

To involve non-Chinese in a Chinese revolutionary organization, promoted by both the CCP and the GMD, was the MCP’s survival strategy, which we can call indigenization, though the organization was to remain rooted in China by advocating for the rights of the Chinese and by promoting a Chinese identity among locally born Chinese. What Kuhn calls the “embeddedness” of the Chinese community in local society was to be achieved through Chinese leadership in the joint liberation of oppressed local peoples and resident Chinese. The Comintern’s emphasis on the importance of colonial revolutions in the fall of empires in the form of local, that is, Malayan, nationalism offered a perfect solution for the need to be connected to both ends of migration among the Chinese living in colonies overseas. This was through dual nationalism, Chinese and indigenous.Footnote 145 As in other transnational identities that provided the basis for the “pan” movements – Slavic, Islamic, and African – that had emerged during the nineteenth century, interwar internationalism also became significant as a vehicle for national identities because it provided an international legitimization for national sovereignty.Footnote 146

By encouraging a Malayan Revolution, the Comintern stimulated the nationalization of the revolution in Malaya as opposed to a revolution led by international or expatriate forces. However, though the Chinese communists sought to create a non-Chinese revolution, they continued to perceive the Nanyang in terms of China’s regional imagination, where China was the leader.

In this context, the newly formed MCP understood the Comintern’s communist internationalism and support for the Chinese Revolution as referring to the defense of Chinese interests and the liberation of oppressed nations along the lines of Sun Yatsen’s ideas about China’s political alliance. For Chinese communists located in Singapore and Malaya, the evolving discourse matched the indigenizing need of Chinese organizations, which was also promoted by the Nanjing GMD. Chinese nationalism grafted onto Comintern internationalism became Malayan nation–based nationalism, locally relevant and internationally progressive. This allowed the MCP to secure an unoccupied niche necessary for localization – the niche of the liberators of Malaya.

In another place in Southeast Asia with a long history of Chinese patronage, settlement, and localization, the Philippines, the spread of the Western idea of the nation-state and the patterns of Chinese migration and localization also shaped the formation of an indigenous nation by the end of the nineteenth century with a strong role of the local Chinese.Footnote 147 Yet, as the discourse of a soon-to-be-independent Philippine nation had been embraced by the American government, Chinese communists could not claim a niche as liberators of the Philippines from colonialism, for that niche was already occupied.Footnote 148 As such, the Comintern’s brand of internationalism was redundant for Chinese localization in the Philippines. In this story of international forces and regional imaginations, the Chinese identity of migrant Chinese was an important factor determining whether they would engage in indigenous nationalism.

Comparable concerns about political rights in Western colonies in Southeast Asia shaped Chinese political participation in indigenous nationalist projects and their identities vis-à-vis the local population. Different colonial policies shaped the configuration of ideas of ethnic, civic, and national belonging in the Malay realm. Writing in the late 1940s, Tan Malaka, who, together with Alimin,Footnote 149 in 1925 prepared the first manifesto of a communist party in the Philippines, attributed the participation of mestizos in the Philippine Revolution to the common religion, Christianity, but called them “indigenous Indonesians” and stressed the continuity between the Philippine Revolution and the Indonesian communist movement.Footnote 150 Tan Malaka embraced the idea of Indonesia Raya, Greater Indonesia, which in precolonial times included the Philippines, Malaya, and Indonesia;Footnote 151 Ibrahim Yaacob was also a proponent of Greater Malay Unity (Melayu Raya), which he based on bangsa (common descent), thus excluding non-Malays.Footnote 152

Despite differences resulting from the position of Malays as the dominant group in Malaya and Malay concepts of national belonging in East Sumatra and Malaya, Malaya and the Dutch East Indies saw parallels in the development of the concepts of national belonging, the place of communists in that development, and Chinese participation in its gestation during the same time period. In Malaya and East Sumatra, with similar political cultures centered on the institution of a sultanate (kerajaan) and analogous colonial policies undermining the authority of sultans, and a high proportion (more than 50 percent) of immigrant Chinese, which spurred similar resentment among the Malays, Malays saw the idea of Indonesia as undermining their rights to land. In Malaya in the 1920s, sultans called for restoration of their power and even in 1940, at the Malay congress, participants were unwilling to link the descent-based bangsa to kebangsaan (nationalist and independence) goals in defining the Malay identity.Footnote 153

In the Dutch East Indies, where by the early 1920s the term Indonesia was accepted and used among nationalist organizations,Footnote 154 the communist PKI was the first to adopt “Indonesia” in its name, as the Comintern promoted the concept of “one party, one country.” In 1927, the Perserikatan Tionghwa Indonesia (Union of Chinese of Indonesia) was founded by the Peranakan Chinese, and in 1928, a conference of social groups in Batavia adopted the goal of one nation, one homeland, one language. The Dutch also promoted Malay, or Bahasa Indonesia, as a unifying language, and in the following year, Sukarno organized the Partai Nasional Indonesia, the Nationalist Party of Indonesia.Footnote 155

Comparable discussions of concepts of national belonging among the MCP and among the Chinese in Indonesia stemmed from the Chinese community movement for political and landownership rights. The relationship with local nationalism among Chinese communities in the Malay realm was shaped by a reaction to colonial policies in Southeast Asia and the Comintern’s promotion of national parties and Chinese participation in those parties. All these also shaped the parties’ organizational hybridity.

Footnotes

1 Prologue A Durian for Sun Yatsen

1 Lai, H. Mark, Chinese American Transnational Politics (Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 2010), p. 104.

2 Ching Fatt Yong, Origins of Malayan Communism (Singapore: South Sea Society, 1991), p. 43.

3 Xu Jie, “Liulian [Durian],” in Xu Jie, Yezi yu liulian: Zhongguo xiandai xiaopin jingdian [Coconut and Durian: Little Souvenirs of Contemporary China] (Shijiazhuang: Hebei jiaoyu chubanshe, 1994), pp. 3946.

4 During the war, Zhang held high positions in Wang Jingwei’s government and was imprisoned by the GMD for two years. He was not forgiven by old friends when he returned to Singapore in 1949 and so he moved to Hong Kong, where he lived in seclusion until his death in 1957. Liu Changping and Li Ke, Fengyu Wanqingyuan: Buying wangque de Xinhai geming xunchen Zhang Yongfu [Trials and Hardships of Wangqing Garden: Meritorious Official of the Xinhai Revolution Zhang Yongfu Should Not Be Forgotten] (Beijing: Zhongguo wenshi chubanshe, 2011), pp. 239240; Zhang Yongfu, Nanyang yu chuangli Minguo [Nanyang and the Establishment of the Republic] (Shanghai: Zhonghua shuju, 1933), p. 99.

5 Takashi Shiraishi, An Age in Motion: Popular Radicalism in Java, 1912–1926 (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1990), pp. xiiixiv.

6 Footnote Ibid., p. 59.

7 Footnote Ibid., pp. 339–340.

8 Ken Fuller, Forcing the Pace: The Partido Komunista ng Pilipinas: From the Founding to the Armed Struggle (Diliman, Quezon City: University of the Philippines Press, 2007), pp. 1011; Reynaldo Clemeña Ileto, Pasyon and revolution: Popular movements in the Philippines, 1840–1910 (Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press, 1979).

9 Shiraishi, An Age in Motion, pp. 244, 249.

10 Don A. Pittman, Toward a Modern Chinese Buddhism: Taixu’s Reforms (Honolulu, HI: University of Hawaii Press, 2001); Dana L. Robert, “First Globalization? The Internationalization of the Protestant Missionary Movement between the World Wars,” in Ogbu Kalu and Alaine Low, eds., Interpreting Contemporary Christianity: Global Processes and Local Identities (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2008), pp. 93130.

11 Timothy Cheek, The Intellectual in Modern Chinese History (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015).

12 For the role of transnational anarchism, see Benedict Richard O’Gorman Anderson, Under Three Flags: Anarchism and the Anti-Colonial Imagination (London; New York, NY: Verso, 2005).

13 Erez Manela, The Wilsonian Moment: Self-Determination and the International Origins of Anticolonial Nationalism (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007).

14 Terry Martin, The Affirmative Action Empire: Nations and Nationalism in the Soviet Union, 1923–1939 (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2017).

15 Francine Hirsch, Empire of Nations: Ethnographic Knowledge and the Making of the Soviet Union (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2005).

16 Norman G. Owen, ed., The Emergence of Modern Southeast Asia: A New History (Honolulu, HI: University of Hawaii Press, 2005), p. 298.

17 I am grateful to Felix Wemheuer for this point and for the reference. Robert Menasse, Das war Österreich: Gesammelte Essays zum Land ohne Eigenschaften (Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp, 2005), pp. 6061.

18 Daniel Laqua, Internationalism Reconfigured: Transnational Ideas and Movements between the World Wars (London: I. B. Tauris, 2011).

19 Hung-Yok Ip, “Cosmopolitanism and the Ideal Image of Nation in Communist Revolutionary Culture,” in Chow, Doak, and Fu, eds., Constructing Nationhood in Modern East Asia (Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press), pp. 215246.

20 To borrow from Aihwa Ong and Donald Nonini, Ungrounded Empires: The Cultural Politics of Modern Chinese Transnationalism (London: Routledge, 1997).

21 Michele Louro, “India and the League Against Imperialism: A Special ‘Blend’ of Nationalism and Internationalism,” in Ali Raza, Franziska Roy, and Benjamin Zachariah, eds., The Internationalist Moment: South Asia, Worlds, and World Views 1917–39 (New Delhi: SAGE Publications India, 2014), pp. 2255, esp. p. 43.

22 Cheah Boon Kheng, From PKI to the Comintern, 1924–1941: The Apprenticeship of the Malayan Communist Party. Selected Documents and Discussion (Ithaca, NY: Southeast Asia Program, Cornell University, 1992), p. 7.

23 Footnote Ibid., pp. 9, 10.

24 Philip A. Kuhn, “Why China Historians Should Study the Chinese Diaspora, and Vice-Versa,” Liu Kuang-ching Lecture, 2004, University of California, Davis, Journal of Chinese Overseas 2(2) (2006), pp. 163172.

25 “United Malaya,” Malaya Tribune, December 26, 1933, p. 3.

26 For the MCP’s “national” outlook, see Sze-Chieh Ng, “Silenced Revolutionaries: Challenging the Received View of Malaya’s Revolutionary Past” (MA Thesis, Arizona State University, 2011), p. 21; C. C. Chin, “The Revolutionary Programmes and Their Effect on the Struggle of the Malayan Communist Party,” in Karl Hack and C. C. Chin, eds., Dialogues with Chin Peng: New Light on the Malayan Communist Party (Singapore: National University of Singapore Press, 2004), pp. 260278.

27 Reinhart Koselleck, “Begriffsgeschichte and Social History,” in Futures Past: On the Semantics of Historical Time (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1985), pp. 7391. I also draw on the methodology from Timothy Cheek, “The Names of Rectification: Notes on the Conceptual Domains of CCP Ideology in the Yan’an Rectification Movement,” Indiana East Asian Working Paper Series on Language and Politics in Modern China, no. 7, East Asian Studies Center, Indiana University, January 1996.

28 Philip A. Kuhn, “Origins of the Taiping Vision: Cross-Cultural Dimensions of a Chinese Rebellion,” Comparative Studies in Society and History 19(3) (July 1977), pp. 350366. I thank Timothy Cheek for this point.

29 Raymond Williams, Keywords: A Vocabulary of Culture and Society (London: Fontana, 1983), pp. 9, 13, 15, 20.

30 Michael Schoenhals, Doing Things with Words in Chinese Politics: Five Studies (Berkeley, CA: Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California, 1992); Stephen Kotkin, Magnetic Mountain: Stalinism as a Civilization (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1997).

31 Lydia He Liu, Translingual Practice: Literature, National Culture, and Translated Modernity: China, 1900–1937 (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1995).

32 Kai-wing Chow, “Narrating Nation, Race, and National Culture: Imagining the Hanzu Identity in Modern China,” in Chow, Doak, and Fu, eds., Constructing Nationhood in Modern East Asia (Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 2001), pp. 4784, esp. p. 48.

33 Marshall Sahlins, Historical Metaphors and Mythical Realities: Structure in the Early History of the Sandwich Islands Kingdom (Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 1981). My thanks to James Wilkerson for introducing me to Sahlins’s work.

34 Leo Suryadinata, Peranakan Chinese Politics in Java, 1917–42 (Singapore: Singapore University Press, 1981). See more in Chapter 4.

35 Kevin M. Doak, “Narrating China, Ordering East Asia: The Discourse on Nation and Ethnicity in Imperial Japan,” in Chow, Doak, and Fu, eds., Constructing Nationhood in Modern East Asia, pp. 85116.

36 Anthony Dawahare, Nationalism, Marxism, and African American Literature between the Wars: A New Pandora’s Box (Jackson, MI: University Press of Mississippi, 2002), p. 62.

37 Benedict Anderson, Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism. Revised Edition. (London; New York, NY: Verso, 1991), p. 43; Ariffin Omar, Bangsa Melayu: Malay Concepts of Democracy and Community, 1945–1950 (Kuala Lumpur; New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 1993), p. 18.

38 Anthony Milner, The Invention of Politics in Colonial Malaya: Contesting Nationalism and the Expansion of the Public Sphere (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994), pp. 282283.

39 John Fitzgerald, Awakening China: Politics, Culture, and Class in the Nationalist Revolution (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1998).

40 For other parties’ agency in their relations with the Comintern, see Matthew Worley, ed., In Search of Revolution: International Communist Parties in the Third Period (London: I. B. Tauris, 2004); Kevin McDermott and Jeremy Agnew, The Comintern: A History of International Communism (Houndmills: Macmillan, 1996); Tim Rees and Andrew Thorpe, eds., International Communism and the Communist International, 1919–1943 (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1998).

41 For the categorization of nationalism, see Anthony D. Smith, Nationalism and Modernism: A Critical Survey of Recent Theories of Nations and Nationalism (London: Routledge, 1998), pp. 5556, 223226, 194. For the Southeast Asian context, see Clifford Geertz, The Interpretation of Cultures (London: Fontana, 1973).

42 Smith, Nationalism and Modernism, pp. 212, 193–194.

43 See Nicholas Tarling, Nationalism in Southeast Asia: If the People Are with Us (London: Routledge, 2004); Smith, Nationalism and Modernism, p. 70.

44 John Breuilly, Nationalism and the State (Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1994).

45 Partha Chatterjee, Nationalist Thought and the Colonial World: A Derivative Discourse (London: Zed Books, 1986).

46 Eric J. Hobsbawm, Nations and Nationalism since 1780: Programme, Myth, Reality (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012), p. 5.

47 Eric Hobsbawm and Terence Ranger, eds., The Invention of Tradition (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983), introduction, pp.11–14.

48 Ernest Gellner, Nations and Nationalism (Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 2006).

49 For a survey of the critique of Anderson’s idea, see, for instance, Nicola Miller, “Latin America: State-Building and Nationalism,” in John Breuilly, ed., The Oxford Handbook of the History of Nationalism (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013), pp. 388391.

50 Omar, Bangsa Melayu, p. 113.

51 Anderson, Imagined Communities, ch. 7.

52 Personal communication with C. C. Chin in Singapore in December 2010. A similar view of police sources on the MCP is taken by Cheah, From PKI to the Comintern, pp. 5–6.

2 The Global World of Chinese Networks in the 1920s The Chinese Revolution and the Liberation of the Oppressed Minzu

1 Sun Zhongshan [Sun Yatsen], “Sanminzhuyi [Three People’s Principles,” in Minzuzhuyi [Nationalism], lecture 4, February 17, 1924, in Sun Zhongshan quanji [Collected Works of Sun Yatsen], 11 vols. (Beijing: Zhonghua shuju, 1986), vol. 9, pp. 220231, esp. p. 226. In the English translation, shijiezhuyi is translated as cosmopolitanism”: “We must understand that cosmopolitanism grows out of nationalism.” The Three Principles of the People, San Min Chu I. By Dr. Sun Yat-Sen. With Two Supplementary Chapters by Chiang Kai-shek. Translated into English by Frank W. Price. Abridged and edited by the Commission for the Compilation of the History of the Kuomintang (Taipei: China Publishing Company, 1960), pp. 2127, esp. p. 25.

2 Philip A. Kuhn, Chinese among Others: Emigration in Modern Times (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2008), pp. 114, 150; Kaoru Sugihara, “Patterns of Chinese Emigration to Southeast Asia, 1869–1939,” in Kaoru Sugihara, ed., Japan, China, and the Growth of the Asian International Economy, 1850–1949 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005), pp. 244274.

3 Kuhn, Chinese among Others, p. 58.

4 Craig A. Lockard, “Chinese Migration and Settlement in Southeast Asia before 1850: Making Fields from the Sea,” History Compass 11(9) (2013), pp. 765781; Kuhn, Chinese among Others, pp. 75, 184.

5 Edgar Wickberg, “The Chinese Mestizo in Philippine History,” Journal of Southeast Asian History 5(1) (1964), pp. 62100.

6 Melanie Yap and Dianne Leong Man, Colour, Confusion, and Concessions: The History of the Chinese in South Africa (Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 1996), pp. 138168.

7 Rebecca E. Karl, Staging the World: Chinese Nationalism at the Turn of the Twentieth Century (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2002); Fredrik Petersson, “‘We Are Neither Visionaries Nor Utopian Dreamers’: Willi Münzenberg, the League Against Imperialism, and the Comintern, 1925–1933” (PhD dissertation, Åbo Akademi University, 2013), pp. 1–2.

8 Fred H. Harrington, “The Anti-Imperialist Movement in the United States, 1898–1900,” Mississippi Valley Historical Review 22(2) (1935), pp. 211230; Karl, Staging the World, pp. 113–114, 169–173.

9 Sun, “Minzuzhuyi [Nationalism],” p. 226; Xu Jilin, “Wusi: Shijiezhuyi de aiguo yundong [May 4th: Cosmopolitan Patriotic Movement],” Zhishi fenzi luncong [Compendia of Intellectual Debates] 9 (2010); Fitzgerald, Awakening China, p. 347.

10 Henk Sneevliet, “The Revolutionary-Nationalist Movement in South China,” in Die Kommunistische Internationale, September 13, 1922, in Tony Saich, The Origins of the First United Front in China: The Role of Sneevliet (Alias Maring) (Leiden: Brill Academic Publishers, 1991), pp. 748757, esp. p. 751.

11 Wu Jianjie, “Cong da Yazhouzhuyi zouxiang shijie datongzhuyi: Lilun Sun Zhongshan de guojizhuyi sixiang [From Pan-Asianism to World Great Harmony: Sun Yatsen’s Internationalism],” Jindai shi yanjiu [Studies in Modern History] 3 (1997), pp. 183198; Ishikawa Yoshihiro, The Formation of the Chinese Communist Party, tr. Joshua Fogel (New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 2012), pp. 131132, ch. 2.

12 Ishikawa, The Formation of the Chinese Communist Party, pp. 141–142.

13 Sun, “Minzuzhuyi [Nationalism],” p. 253.

14 Sun, “Dui Shenhu shanghui yisuo deng tuanti de yanshuo [Address to the Chamber of Commerce and Other Organizations in Kobe],” November 28, 1924, in Sun Zhongshan quanji [Collected Works of Sun Yat-sen], vol. 11, pp. 401–409.

15 Duan Yunzhang, Zhongshan xiansheng de shijieguan [The Worldview of Mr. Sun Yatsen] (Taibei: Xiuwei zixun keji, 2009), p. 168; Sun, “Minzuzhuyi [Nationalism],” pp. 193, 200, 253, 304, 409.

16 Fei Lu (Roland Felber), “Jiezhu xinde dang’an ziliao chongxin tantao Sun Zhongshan zai ershi niandai chu (1922–1923) yu Su E guanxi yiji dui De taidu de wenti [Regarding Sun Yatsen’s Views on Relations with the Soviet Union (1922–1923) and His Attitudes toward Germany Based on New Archival Materials],” in Sun Wen yu huaqiao: Jinian Sun Zhongshan danchen 130 zhounian guoji xueshu taolunhui lunwenji [Sun Yatsen and Chinese Overseas: The Proceedings of the Academic International Conference Commemorating the 130th Anniversary of the Birth of Sun Yatsen] (Kobe: Caituan faren Sun Zhongshan jinianhui, 1997), pp. 5769.

17 Liao Huanxing, “Zhongguo gongchandang lü Ou zongzhibu, 1953 [The European Branch of the Chinese Communist Party, 1953],” in Zhongguo shehui kexueyuan xiandaishi yanjiushi, Zhongguo geming bowuguan dangshi yanjiushi, eds., Zhongguo xiandai geming shi ziliao congkan. “Yi Da” qianhou. Zhongguo gongchandang di yi ci daibiao dahui qianhou ziliao xuanbian [Series of Materials on Chinese Modern Revolutionary History. Around the Time of the First Congress: A Selection of Materials, vol. 2] (Beijing: Renmin chubanshe, 1980), pp. 502510.

18 Liu Lüsen, “Zhongcheng jianyi de gongchandang ren: Geming xianqu Liao Huanxing tongzhi zhuanlüe [Loyal and Persistent CCP Member: A Biography of the Revolutionary Avant-Garde Comrade Liao Huanxing],” in Zhonggong Hengnan xianwei dangshi lianluo zhidaozu Zhonggong Hengnan xianwei dangshi bangongshi, ed., Yidai yingjie xin minzhuzhuyi geming shiqi Zhonggong Hengnan dangshi renwu [An Era of Heroes: Party Members during Hengnan’s Revolutionary Period of New Democracy] (1996), pp. 3–11; Liu Lüsen, “Zhongcheng jianyi de gongchandang ren Liao Huanxing [Loyal and Persistent CCP Member Liao Huanxing],” Hunan dangshi yuekan [Hunan Party History Monthly] 11 (1988), pp. 2022.

19 Hans Piazza, “Anti-Imperialist League and the Chinese Revolution,” in Mechthild Leutner, Roland Felber, Mikhail L. Titarenko, and Alexander M. Grigoriev, eds., The Chinese Revolution in the 1920s: Between Triumph and Disaster (London: Routledge, 2002), pp. 166176.

20 Li Yuzhen, “Fighting for the Leadership of the Chinese Revolution: KMT Delegates’ Three Visits to Moscow,” Journal of Modern Chinese History 7(2) (2013), pp. 218239; Liao’s response to the criticism of the KPD Chinese language group, February 4, 1929, “An die I.K.K.” RGASPI 495/225/1043, pp. 31–37, esp. pp. 32, 34.

21 Liao Huanxing, “Zhongguo renmin zhengqu ziyou de douzheng: Guomindang zhongyang changwu weiyuanhui daibiao de jiangyan [The Righteous Struggle of the Chinese People: Speech by the Representative of the Standing Committee of the GMD],” in Zhonggong Hengnan xianwei dangshi ziliao zhengji bangongshi, ed., Zhonggong Hengnan difang shi: Xin minzhuzhuyi geming shiqi [The History of the CCP in Hengnan County: The Revolutionary Period of New Democracy] (Beijing: Zhonggong dangshi chubanshe, 1995), pp. 142145.

22 Gregor Benton, Chinese Migrants and Internationalism (London: Routledge, 2007), pp. 32, 3536.

23 The report of the Chinese Nationalist Party [Guomindang], French General Branch Report on European Party Affairs to the Third National Congress (March 1929), in Marilyn Levine, The Found Generation: Chinese Communists in Europe during the Twenties (Seattle, WA: University of Washington Press, 1993) pp. 122153, esp. pp. 149150. Original Source: Service de liaison des originaires des territoires français d’outre-mer (SLOTFOM) VIII, 6.

24 Joachim Krüger, “Die KPD und China,” in Mechthild Leutner, ed., Rethinking China in the 1950s (1921–1927) (Münster: LIT Verlag, 2000), pp. 107116.

25 Liao left the LAI and his Berlin post for Moscow after the conflict with Münzenberg in 1928. Joachim Krüger, “A Regular China Voice from Berlin to Moscow: The China-Information of Liao Huanxin, 1924–1927,” in Leutner, Felber, Titarenko, and Grigoriev, eds., The Chinese Revolution in the 1920s, pp. 177186; Petersson, “We Are Neither Visionaries Nor Utopian Dreamers,” p. 199.

26 Li Weijia, “Otherness in Solidarity: Collaboration between Chinese and German Left-Wing Activists in the Weimar Republic,” in Qinna Shen and Martin Rosenstock, eds., Beyond Alterity: German Encounters with Modern East Asia (New York, NY: Berghahn Books, 2014), pp. 7393.

27 To distinguish the numerous anti-imperialist leagues founded across Asia autonomously from the League Against Imperialism in Brussels, the acronyms AIL will be used for the former and LAI will be used for the latter throughout the text.

28 Sophie Quinn-Judge, Ho Chi Minh: The Missing Years, 1919–1941 (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2003), pp. 8384.

29 “Dongfang bei yapo minzu lianhehui shang zhongzhihui cheng [A letter from the Union of the Oppressed Peoples of the East to the Central Committee of the GMD],” July 23, 1927, File 7625.1, Hankou dang’an, reel 64, Hoover Archives.

30 Quinn-Judge, Ho Chi Minh, p. 167.

31 Li, “Fighting for the Leadership.”

32 David P. Barrett translates this as “Nationalist International” in “Marxism, the Communist Party, and the Soviet Union: Three Critiques by Hu Hanmin,” Chinese Studies in History 14(2) (1980–1981), pp. 4773.

33 Hu Hanmin, “Minzu guoji yu disan guoji [International of Nationalities and the Third (Communist) International],” in Cuncui xueshe, ed., Hu Hanmin shiji ziliao huiji, di si ce [Hu Hanmin’s Works, vol. 4] (Xianggang: Dadong tushu gongsi, 1980), pp. 1395–1401, esp. pp. 14001401.

34 Vera Tolz, Russia’s Own Orient: The Politics of Identity and Oriental Studies in the Late Imperial and Soviet Periods (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011), pp. 134167; Joseph Esherick, “How the Qing Became China,” in Joseph Esherick, Hasan Kayali, and Eric van Young, eds., Empire to Nation: Historical Perspectives on the Making of the Modern World (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2006), pp. 229259.

35 Draft Program of the CCP, April 1928,” in Titarenko, Mikhail L. and Mechthild Leutner, eds., VKP(b), Komintern i Kitai. Dokumenty. T.III. VKP(b), Komintern i sovetskoe dvizhenie v Kitae, 1927–1931 [CPSU (Bolshevik), the Comintern, and China. Documents. Volume 3. CPSU (Bolshevik), the Comintern, and the Soviet Movement in China, 1927–1931] (Moscow: AO Buklet, 1999), pp. 364371.

36 Krüger, “A Regular China Voice from Berlin to Moscow.”

37 British Colonial Office Records (CO), “Monthly Bulletin of Political Intelligence” (MBPI), January 1926, p. 1, CO 273/534, in Records of the Colonial Office, Commonwealth and Foreign and Commonwealth Offices, Empire Marketing Board, and Related Bodies Relating to the Administration of Britain’s Colonies (Kew, Surrey: National Archives, 2009).

38 Li Yinghui, Huaqiao zhengce yu haiwai minzuzhuyi (1912–1949) [Overseas Chinese Policy and Overseas Chinese Nationalism (1912–1949)] (Taibei: Guoshiguan, 1997), p. 491.

39 Robert, “First Globalization?”; Pittman, Toward a Modern Chinese Buddhism.

40 Kuhn, “Why China Historians Should Study the Chinese Diaspora”; Li Minghuan, Dangdai haiwai huaren shetuan yanjiu [Contemporary Associations of Overseas Chinese] ([Xiamen]: Xiamen daxue chubanshe, 1995), and John Fitzgerald, Big White Lie: Chinese Australians in White Australia (Sydney, NSW: University of New South Wales Press, 2007) approach the GMD as a Chinese association.

41 Ishikawa, The Formation of the Chinese Communist Party, pp. 83–84, 137–139.

42 “Guiding Principles in the Colonial Question, by Tan Malaka,” 1923, RGASPI 495/154/700/23–5.

43 Brent Hayes Edwards, The Practice of Diaspora: Literature, Translation, and the Rise of Black Internationalism (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2003), p. 29; Piazza, “Anti-Imperialist League”; Marc Gallicchio, The African American Encounter with Japan and China: Black Internationalism in Asia, 1895–1945 (Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 2000), p. 68; Marc Becker, “Mariátegui, the Comintern, and the Indigenous Question in Latin America,” Science & Society 70(4) (October 2006), pp. 450479; Hirsch, Empire of Nations.

44 Manela, The Wilsonian Moment.

45 “Report of Comrade H. Maring to the Executive,” July 11, 1922, in Saich, The Origins of the First United Front in China, pp. 305323, esp. p. 307; Saich, “Introduction,” The Origins of the First United Front in China, pp. 3, 91.

46 Maring, “Instruktsia upolnomochennomu vostochnogo otdela ispolkoma Kominterna po rabote v Indonesii [Instructions for the Representative of the Eastern Department of the ECCI on Work in Indonesia],” undated, but judging from the referenced fourth Comintern congress, it must be 1922–1923. RGASPI 495/154/700/18–20. This is a Russian translation of “Instruktion an den Bevollmächtigten des Ost-Ressorts (Abteilung) der Exekutive der Komintern für die Arbeit in Indonesien [Instructions to the Representative of the East Department (Division) of the Executive of the Comintern on Activities in Indonesia],” drafted by Henk Sneevliet. Undated. Henk Sneevliet Papers, inv. no. 349, accessed on August 2, 2012, at the International Institute of Social History, Amsterdam, www.iisg.nl/collections/sneevliet/life-4.php.

47 Hassan [Tan Malaka], Letter, July 7, 1924, RGASPI 534/4/106/1–2.

48 Popov, “Gollandskaia Indiia [Dutch East Indies],” December 17, 1923, RGASPI 495/214/700/32–36.

49 Boris Nicolaevsky, “Russia, Japan, and the Pan-Asiatic Movement to 1925,” Far Eastern Quarterly 8(3) (1949), pp. 259295.

50 Grigorii Voitinskii, the Head of the Eastern Secretariat, “Spravka [A Note],” 1923, RGASPI 495/154/700 /8, 8ob.

51 Tan Malaka’s letter from Canton to Heller, signed by his alias, “Hassan,” July 7, 1924, RGASPI 534/4/106/1–2. Original English text. L. N. Heller (1875–?) was the head of the Eastern Department of the Profintern in 1922–1930. Titarenko and Leutner, Komintern i Kitai [Comintern and China], vol. 3, p. 1526.

52 Tan Malaka’s letter, July 7, 1924. Tan Malaka only cited Encyclopaedie van Nederlandsch-Inndië. 2nd edn. (Gravenhage: Martinus Nijhoff, 1917–1939), without providing his own account of the events regarding the Canton bureau. Tan Malaka, From Jail to Jail. Translated and introduced by Helen Jarvis (Athens, OH: Ohio University Center for International Studies, 1991), vol. 1, pp. 103106, 109115, 245n18.

53 Cheah, From PKI to the Comintern, p. 9.

54 Tan Malaka’s letter, July 7, 1924; Gene Z. Hanrahan, The Communist Struggle in Malaya. With an introduction by Victor Purcell (New York, NY: Institute of Pacific Relations, 1954), p. 9; “Monthly Review of Chinese Affairs” (MRCA), December 1931, p. 6, CO 273/572.

55 Ruth Thomas McVey, The Rise of Indonesian Communism (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1965), p. 231; Santos [Alimin], “Brief Description of My Activities in the Past,” January 10, 1939; Alimin, untitled, undated, RGASPI 495/214/3/123–124, 161–165.

56 Tan Malaka’s letter from Canton, September 16, 1924, RGASPI 534/ 4/106/9.

57 Yong, Origins of Malayan Communism, pp. 50–51, 68.

58 Zhu Yihui, “Xu Tianbing,” Hainan mingren zhuanlüe (xia) [Biographical Dictionary of Famous Hainanese. Second Part] (Guangzhou: Guangdong lüyou chubanshe, 1995), pp. 143146.

59 “Proverochniy list studenta, Fedorov (Fu Tagin) [Student’s Registration Card (Fu Tagin)],” RGASPI 495/225/793/5. Fang Chuan and Zhang Yi, eds., Zhongguo xiandai mingren zhenwen yishi [Stories of Famous People in Modern China] (Beijing: Zhongguo huaqiao chubanshe, 1989), pp. 393394; Zhonghua renmin gongheguo minzhengbu, ed., Zhonghua zhuming lieshi di ershisan juan [Famous Martyrs of China, vol. 23] (Beijing: Zhongyang wenxian chubanshe, 2002), pp. 560562.

60 Then sixteen-year-old Xie Fei, a native of Wenchang County in Hainan and the future first wife of Liu Shaoqi, was a Nanyang Provisional Committee CCP member from June 1929 to February 1932. Xie Fei, “Huiyi Zhongguo gongchandang Nanyang linshi weiyuanhui de gongzuo, 1929–1930 [Remembering the Work of the Nanyang Provisional Committee, 1929–1930],” in Geming huiyilu: Zengkan 1 [Revolutionary Reminiscences: Expanded edition 1] (Beijing: Renmin chubanshe, 1983), pp. 159169, esp. p. 166.

61 Komarov’s Personal File (Yang Shanji), RGASPI 495/225/652.

62 Hans van de Ven, From Friend to Comrade: The Founding of the Chinese Communist Party, 1920–1927 (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1991); Ishikawa, The Formation of the Chinese Communist Party.

63 Lai, Chinese American Transnational Politics, p. 57.

64 Gao Zinong, “Zhongguo gongchan qingnian tuan Feiliebin tebie difang gongzuo baogao [Work Report of the Philippine Special Local Committee of the Chinese Communist Youth League],” June 1–December 7, 1928, RGASPI 495/66/7/137–169; Bai Dao, “Dong Chuping: Wode geming yinluren [Dong Chuping: My Revolutionary Fellow Traveler],” in Bai Dao wenji di qi ji [Collected Works of Bai Dao, vol. 7] (Beijing: Zhongguo xiju chubanshe, 2002), pp. 549569; Peng Zhandong, “Cong aiguo qiaoling Peng Zemin zhandou yisheng kan huaqiao huaren zai Zhongguo geming lichengzhong de tuchu gongxian [The Life of Patriotic Overseas Chinese Peng Zemin as an Example of the Contributions of the Overseas Chinese to the Chinese Revolution],” Qiaowu huigu [Overseas Chinese Reminiscences, vol. 2] (Beijing: Guowuyuan qiaowu bangongshi, 2006). Online version accessed on March 17, 2019: http://qwgzyj.gqb.gov.cn/qwhg/129/64.shtml; Yong, Origins of Malayan Communism, p. 43.

65 Xue Xiantian, “Guanyu lü E huagong lianhehui jiguanbao Datongbao [On Datongbao, the Newspaper of the Union of Chinese Workers in Russia],” Jindai shi yanjiu [Studies in Modern History] 3 (1991); Gao Jinshan, “Lü E huagong zai Makesezhuyi chuanbozhong de tezhu zuoyong [The Role of Chinese Laborers in Russia in Marxist Propaganda],” Dangshi bocai [CCP History] 11 (2004), cited in Zhang Weibo, “Datong lixiang yu Zhonggong chuangjian [The Idea of Datong and the Establishment of the CCP],” in Zhonggong yida huizhi jinianguan, ed., Zhongguo gongchandang chuangjian shi yanjiu [Studies on the Founding of the CCP] (Shanghai: Renmin chubanshe, 2012), pp. 4254, esp. p. 52.

66 Gao Zinong, “Zhongguo gongchan qingnian tuan Feiliebin tebie difang gongzuo baogao [Work Report of the Philippine Special Local Committee of the Chinese Communist Youth League],” p. 141.

67 Liao Huanxing, “Zhongguo gongchandang lü Ou zongzhibu, 1953 [European Branch of the Chinese Communist Party, 1953]”; Lai, Chinese American Transnational Politics, p. 65.

68 Wang Ming’s letter to the Chinese faction of the Communist Party of the United States of America (CPUSA), undated, RGASPI 515/1/4117/30.

69 “Report of the Bureau of the Chinese Fraction, Translation from Chinese,” August 5, 1928, RGASPI 515/1/1451/41–48.

70 Benton, Chinese Migrants and Internationalism, pp. 37–47; “Guba huaqiao ying jiaji geming huodong [Cuban Chinese Must Intensify Revolutionary Activities],” Xianfengbao [The Chinese Vanguard] (107), November 15, 1933.

71 “Report of the Bureau of the Chinese Fraction. Translation from Chinese,” August 5, 1928.

72 Letter to the Chinese Faction of the CPUSA, April 4, 1933, RGASPI 515/1/4117/31–38ob.

73 Petersson, “We Are Neither Visionaries Nor Utopian Dreamers,” pp. 70, 175.

74 Josephine Fowler, Japanese and Chinese Immigrant Activists Organizing in American and International Communist Movements, 1919–1933 (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2007), pp. 145147.

75 Lai, Chinese American Transnational Politics, p. 73.

76 Gao Hua, Hong taiyang shi zenyang shengqide: Yan’an zhengfeng yundong de lailong qumai [How the Red Sun Rose: The Yan’an Rectification Movement] (Xianggang: Zhongwen daxue chubanshe, 2011), p. 101.

77 “Pismo v kitaiskoe buro KP SShA s predlozheniami po voprosu o rabote sredi kitaiskikh emigrantov [A Letter to the Chinese Faction of the CPUSA: With Suggestions Regarding the Work among Chinese Migrants],” RGASPI 515/1/3181/19–23. It was likely written sometime after July 10, 1933, for the letter mentions the “Extraordinary National Conference” held in New York, July 7–10, 1933. The Communist Party of America (1919–1946). Party History. Accessed August 31, 2015. www.marxists.org/history/usa/eam/cpa/communistparty.html.

78 Zhang Bao, “Er, sanshi niandai zai Meiguo de Zhongguo gongchandang ren [CCP Members in America in the 1920s and the 1930s],” in Guoji gongyun shi yanjiu ziliao [Research Materials on the History of the International Communist Movement] 4 (1982), pp. 150161.

79 Alexander Vatlin and Stephen A. Smith, “The Comintern,” in Stephen A. Smith, ed., The Oxford Handbook of the History of Communism (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014), pp. 187194.

80 Shestoi kongress Kominterna: Stenograficheskii otchet. Vyp. 4, Revoliutsionnoe dvizhenie v kolonial’nykh i polukolonial’nykh stranakh [The Sixth Comintern Congress: Stenographic Report, vol. 4: Revolutionary Movement in Colonial and Semi-Colonial Countries] (Moscow; Leningrad: 1929), p. 24.

81 Xie Fei, “Huiyi Zhongguo gongchandang Nanyang linshi weiyuanhui de gongzuo, 1929–1930 [Remembering the Work of the Nanyang Provisional Committee, 1929–1930].”

82 Yong, Origins of Malayan Communism, pp. 65, 69; “The Minutes of the Third Representative Conference of Nanyang,” April 23, 1930, RGASPI 514/1/634/93–158, esp. p. 110.

83 Yong, Origins of Malayan Communism, p. 51.

84 “Report on the Labour Movement,” in “Minutes of the Third Representative Conference of Nanyang,” pp. 110–112; Huang Muhan, “Worker Movement in Federated Malay States,” March 5, 1931, RGASPI 495/62/9/1–4.

85 Huang Muhan, “Worker Movement in Federated Malay States.”

86 Yong, Origins of Malayan Communism, p. 69; Zhou Nanjing, Shijie huaqiao huaren cidian [Dictionary of the Overseas Chinese] (Beijing: Beijing daxue chubanshe, 1993), p. 560.

87 Heng Pek Koon, Chinese Politics in Malaysia: A History of the Malaysian Chinese Association (Singapore; New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 1988), p. 25.

88 Yong, Origins of Malayan Communism, pp. 73–74.

89 Pan Yunbo is discussed in more detail in Chapter 6.

90 Xie Fei, “Huiyi Zhongguo gongchandang Nanyang linshi weiyuanhui de gongzuo, 1929–1930 [Remembering the Work of the Nanyang Provisional Committee, 1929–1930].”

91 Yong, Origins of Malayan Communism, p. 72.

92 Footnote Ibid., p. 92; “Obshchee polozhenie profdvizheniia v Nan’iane [General Conditions of the Labor Movements in the Nanyang],” April 21, 1931, RGASPI 495/62/9/9–14. In Russian, “Nanyang” was translated as “South Islands” and “the Islands in the Pacific Ocean.” See “Doklad o polozhenii na ostrovakh Tikhogo okeana [Report about the Conditions in the Islands of the Pacific Ocean],” December 28, 1929, RGASPI 495/66/13/67.

93 “Doklad o polozhenii na ostrovakh Tikhogo okeana [Report about the Conditions in the Islands of the Pacific Ocean],” p. 94. For the backgrounds of the committee members, see Yong, Origins of Malayan Communism, pp. 90–99, 101.

94 Report by the Secretary of Chinese Affairs, “Kuo Min Tang and Other Societies in Malaya, January–March 1928,” April 27, 1928, pp. 1–7, esp. p. 3, CO 273/542.

95 “Minutes of the Third Representative Conference of Nanyang,” p. 130.

96 Xie Fei, “Huiyi Zhongguo gongchandang Nanyang linshi weiyuanhui de gongzuo, 1929–1930 [Remembering the Work of the Nanyang Provisional Committee, 1929–1930].”

97 “Societies Opposed to Kuo Min Tang,” in “The Report by the Secretary of Chinese Affairs on Kuo Min Tang up till June 30th 1927,” p. 147, CO 273/542/52010.

98 CC MCP, “From Malaya. To the FEB [Far Eastern Bureau of the Comintern],” February 7, 1931, RGASPI 495/62/10/2–3. For more details on the shoemakers’ strike, see Yong, Origins of Malayan Communism, pp. 113–118.

99 See Chapter 7.

100 “Communism in Malaya: Present Positions,” Straits Times, November 16, 1928, p. 11.

101 Sharon A. Carstens, “Chinese Culture and Policy in Nineteenth-Century Malaya: The Case of Yap Ah Loy,” in David Ownby and Mary Somers Heidhues, eds., “Secret Societies” Reconsidered: Perspectives on the Social History of Modern South China and Southeast Asia (Armonk, NY: M. E. Sharpe, 1993), pp. 120153, esp. p. 142.

102 MBPI, May 1927, CO 273/535/ C28030, p. 4.

103 Yong, Origins of Malayan Communism, pp. 78, 160; “Resoliutsia priniataia posle obsledovaniia raboty vremennogo komiteta v 1929 [Resolution Adopted after Investigation of the Work of the (Nanyang) Provisional Committee in 1929],” RGASPI 495/62/1/23–27, esp. 23.

104 “Message to the Overseas Chinese in Respect of the Second Anniversary of the Death of Sun Chung San [Sun Yatsen],” CO 273/538.

105 Quinn-Judge, Ho Chi Minh, p. 134.

106 “Purport of the General Registration of Tang Members of China Kuo Min Tang,” September 22, 1928, pp. 1–3, CO 273/542/ 52010/28.

107 Vremennyi komitet malaiskogo arkhipelaga [Nanyang Provisional Committee], “V tsentral’nyi komitet. Otchet Malaiskogo Komiteta profsoiuzov [To the Central Committee. The Report of the Soviet of Trade Unions of the Malay Archipelago],” July 19 and August 22, 1928, RGASPI 495/62/1/1–17, esp. 2, 3.

108 Ren Guixiang and Zhao Hongying, eds., Huaqiao huaren yu guogong guanxi [Chinese Overseas and CCP–GMD Relations] (Wuhan: Wuhan chubanshe, 1999), p. 80; Elizabeth J. Perry, Anyuan: Mining China’s Revolutionary Tradition (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2012), pp. 8586, 148.

109 Vremennyi komitet malaiskogo arkhipelaga [Nanyang Provisional Committee], “V tsentral’nyi komitet. Otchet Malaiskogo Komiteta profsoiuzov [To the Central Committee. The Report of the Soviet of Trade Unions of the Malay Archipelago].”

110 Zhonggong zhongyang dangshi yanjiushi diyi yanjiubu, ed., Li Lisan bai nian dancheng jinianji [Commemoration on the 100th Anniversary of Li Lisan’s Birth: Collection of Writings] (Beijing: Zhonggong zhongyang dangshi chubanshe, 1999), “1 January 1929,” pp. 6869.

111 CCP CC, “A Letter from the Central Committee of the CCP to the Nanyang Provisional Committee. A Draft Resolution of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party on the Revolutionary Movements and Policies of Our Party in the Nanyang,” January 22, 1929, RGASPI 514/1/532/8–13, pp. 13, 8–9.

112 Footnote Ibid., p. 10.

113 Stenograficheskii otchet VI kongressa Kominterna [Stenographic Report of the Sixth Congress of the Comintern] (Leningrad: Gosudarstvennoe izdatel’stvo, 1929), vypusk 5 [issue 5], p. 143, vypusk 4 [issue 4], p. 414.

114 Konstantin Tertitskii and Anna Belogurova, Taiwanskoe kommunisticheskoe dvizhenie i Komintern. Issledovanie. Dokumenty (1924–1932) [The Taiwanese Communist Movement and the Comintern: A Study. Documents. 1924–1932)] (Moscow: Vostok-Zapad, 2005), p. 95; Gao Zinong, “Zhongguo gongchan qingnian tuan Feiliebin tebie difang gongzuo baogao [Work Report of the Philippine Special Local Committee of the Chinese Communist Youth League].”

115 Tony Saich, “The Chinese Communist Party during the Era of the Comintern (1919–1943),” unpublished manuscript.

116 Xie Fei, “Huiyi Zhongguo gongchandang Nanyang linshi weiyuanhui de gongzuo, 1929–1930 [Remembering the Work of the Nanyang Provisional Committee, 1929–1930].” p. 161; Hu Zhiming de shehuizhuyi sixiang [The Socialist Thought of Ho Chi Minh],” in He Baoyi, Shijie shehuizhuyi sixiang tongjian [World Socialist Thought] (Beijing: Renmin chubanshe, 1996), p. 492.

117 CC CCP, “A Letter from the Central Committee of the CCP to the Nanyang Provisional Committee,” 1929.

118 Footnote Ibid., p. 10.

120 Executive Committee of the Communist International (ECCI), “Malaiskoe pis’mo [Malayan Letter],” Letter to the FEB, October 23, 1930, RGASPI 495/62/2/1,2.

121 MCP, “To the English Komparty [sic], London,” June 1, 1930, RGASPI 495/62/6/1–1ob.

122 Cheah, From PKI to the Comintern; Yong, Origins of Malayan Communism, pp. 131–134; Rene H. Onraet, Singapore: A Police Background (London: Dorothy Crisp, 1947), p. 109; Quinn-Judge, Ho Chi Minh, p. 168. One exception to this view is Charles B. McLane, Soviet Strategies in Southeast Asia (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1966), pp. 202203.

123 “Pis’mo A. E. Albrekhta I. A Piatnitskomu [The Letter of A. E. Albreht to I. A. Piatnitskii],” May 1, 1928, in Titarenko and Leutner, Komintern i Kitai [Comintern and China], vol. 3, pp. 381–384. A. E. Albrekht was the representative of the Comintern’s International Liaison Department (Otdel Mezhdunarodnykh Sviazei) (OMS) in China. Iosif (Osip) A. Piatnitskii was a member of the ECCI presidium. For their biographical information, see Titarenko and Leutner, Komintern i Kitai [Comintern and China], vol. 3, pp. 1514, 1557–1558.

124 ECCI Letter to the FEB, October 23, 1930.

126 CC CCP, “A Letter from the Central Committee of the CCP to the Nanyang Provisional Committee,” 1929.

127 Jacob A. Zumoff, The Communist International and US Communism, 1919–1929 (Leiden; Boston, MA: Brill, 2014), p. 15, ch. 5.

128 Letter to the Chinese Faction of CPUSA, April 4, 1933.

129 Tan Malaka’s letter, October 1924, RGASPI 534/4/106/19–22, esp. 20.

130 Fowler, Japanese and Chinese Immigrant Activists, pp. 145–146; Hu Xianzhang, ed., Ziqiang buxi houde zaiwu: Qinghua jingshen xunli [Self-Discipline and Social Commitment Are Tsinghua Spirit] (Beijing: Qinghua daxue chubanshe, 2010), pp. 124127; CC CCP, “A Letter from the Central Committee of the CCP to the Nanyang Provisional Committee,” 1929.

131 Hu Hanmin, “Minzu guoji yu disan guoji [International of Nationalities and the Third (Communist) International].”

132 “Pismo Li Lisania Zhou Enlaiu i Tsiui Tsiubo [Li Lisan’s Letter to Zhou Enlai and Qu Qiubo (Qu Qiubai)],” April 17, 1930, in Titarenko and Leutner, Komintern i Kitai [Comintern and China], vol. 3, pp. 865–868.

134 Elizaveta Kishkina (Li Sha), Iz Rossii v Kitai – put’ dlinoiu v sto let [From Russia to China: One Hundred Years’ Journey] (Moscow: Izdatel’skii proekt, 2014), p. 100.

135 Gao Zinong, “Zhongguo gongchan qingnian tuan Feiliebin tebie difang gongzuo baogao [Work Report of the Philippine Special Local Committee of the Chinese Communist Youth League]”; Xu Yongying, “Zhongguo Guomindang yu Guba geming [The Chinese GMD and the Cuban Revolution],” The Chinese Vanguard (105), October 15, 1933.

136 Han Han (possibly Chen Hanxing), “Lun zai huaqiao gongzuo zhong zhixing geming luxian [Regarding the Revolutionary Line in Working among Chinese Overseas],” The Chinese Vanguard, March 15, 1934, p. 3. The phrase “China’s soviet revolution” (Zhongguo suweiai geming) migrated to the CCP texts from the Comintern’s discourse, which promoted the “soviet movement” (sovetskoe dvizhenie) in China. It referred to the specific mode of government by soviets. A soviet (“council” in Russian) was a governing organization made up of the “toiling masses” during the Russian Revolution of 1917. Thus, the phrase “China’s soviet revolution” describes the aspired revolutionary government led by the communist party.

137 Harold James, The End of Globalization: Lessons from the Great Depression (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2001).

138 Sebastian Conrad and Dominic Sachsenmaier, “Introduction: Competing Visions of World Order: Global Moments and Movements, 1880s–1930s,” in Sebastian Conrad and Dominic Sachsenmaier, eds., Competing Visions of World Order: Global Moments and Movements, 1880s–1930s (New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007), pp. 125, esp. p. 15.

139 The trope of central missives being inappropriate for local conditions echoes the fears of scholarly officials that bureaucracy could substitute written texts for living “practical” experience. Alexander Woodside, Lost Modernities: China, Vietnam, Korea, and the Hazards of World History. Edwin O. Reischauer Lecture. (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2006), pp. 2021.

3 The Nanyang Revolution and the Malayan Nation, 1929–1930 Nations, Migrants, Words

1 Thongchai Winichakul, Siam Mapped: A History of the Geo-Body of a Nation (Honolulu, HI: University of Hawaii Press, 1994); David Henley, “Ethnogeographic Integration and Exclusion in Anticolonial Nationalism: Indonesia and Indochina,” Comparative Studies in Society and History 37(2) (1995), pp. 286324; Christopher E. Goscha, Going Indochinese: Contesting Concepts of Space and Place in French Indochina (Copenhagen: Nordic Institute of Asian Studies, 2012).

2 Sebastian Conrad and Klaus Mühlhahn, “Global Mobility and Nationalism: Chinese Migration and the Re-territorialization of Belonging, 1880–1910,” in Conrad and Sachsenmaier, eds., Competing Visions of World Order, pp. 181212.

3 Kuhn, Chinese among Others, pp. 160–161.

4 Footnote Ibid., p. 182.

5 Ching Fatt Yong and R. B. McKenna, The Kuomintang Movement in British Malaya, 1912–1949 (Singapore: Singapore University Press, 1990), pp. 47, 137, 141; Wang Gungwu, “The Limits of Nanyang Chinese Nationalism, 1912–1937,” in Charles D. Cowan and Oliver W. Wolters, eds., Southeast Asian History and Historiography (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1976), pp. 405423.

6 William Roff, The Origins of Malay Nationalism (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1967), pp. 118, 122.

7 Cheah Boon Kheng, Red Star over Malaya: Resistance and Social Conflict during and after the Japanese Occupation of Malaya, 1941–1946 (Singapore: Singapore University Press, 1983), p. 3; Roff, Origins of Malay Nationalism, p. 208.

8 Yeo Kim Wah, The Politics of Decentralization: Colonial Controversy in Malaya, 1920–1929 (Kuala Lumpur: Oxford University Press, 1982), pp. 3335.

9 Anthony Milner, The Malays (Malden, MA; Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, 2008), pp. 110111.

10 Footnote Ibid., p. 227.

11 Milner, Invention of Politics in Colonial Malaya, pp. 270, 290.

12 Footnote Ibid., pp. 272–273.

13 Omar, Bangsa Melayu, pp. 1, 14–19.

14 Yamamoto Hiroyuki, Anthony Milner, Midori Kawashima, and Kazuhiko Arai, eds., Bangsa and Umma: Development of People-Grouping Concepts in Islamized Southeast Asia (Kyoto: Kyoto University Press, 2011); Anthony Reid, “Melayu as a Source of Diverse Modern Identities,” in Timothy Barnard, ed., Contesting Malayness: Malay Identity across Boundaries (Singapore: Singapore University Press, 2004), pp. 124.

15 Letter of the ECCI to the FEB, October 23, 1930; Hanrahan, The Communist Struggle in Malaya, pp. 38–39.

16 FEB, “To the Malayan Comrades,” December 17, 1930, RGASPI 495/62/12/1–2ob.

17 “Resolutions Adopted at the Third Congress of the Malaya Party,” 1930, RGASPI 495/62/3/1–10.

18 “Minutes of the Third Representative Conference of Nanyang,” p. 109; “Protokol der.3. Delegierten Konferenz von Nanyang (Malayische) [Protocol of the Third Representative Conference of the Nanyang Party (Malayan)],” undated, but likely 1930, RGASPI 514/1/634/86–92; MCP, “To the English Komparty.” The existing MCP historiography has conflicting dates for the MCP’s establishment. See Hack and Chin, eds., Dialogues with Chin Peng, pp. 61–62. There are also conflicting accounts of the place. According to Fujio Hara and Yong, the MCP was established either in Sembilan, Kuala Pilah, or in Johor, Buloh Kesap. Fujio Hara, “Di’erci shijie dazhan qiande Malaiya gongchandang [The MCP before the Second World War],” Nanyang ziliao yicong [Compendia of Nanyang Materials] 160(4) (2005), pp. 5670, esp. p. 57; Yong, Origins of Malayan Communism, pp. 128–129. Nowhere in the MCP documents collected by the Comintern was the place of the MCP’s establishment mentioned.

19 Quinn-Judge, Ho Chi Minh, p. 162.

20 Likely, the same individual as Wei Zhongzhou. See Chapter 2.

21 Yong, Origins of Malayan Communism, pp. 72, 98, 130, 134–141.

22 “Minutes of the Third Representative Conference of Nanyang,” pp. 137–140.

23 Fan Quan, “Ji Ai Wu yige kule yibeizi, xiele yibeizi de zuojia [Remembering Ai Wu: A Bitter Life, a Writer of the Lifetime],” in Fan Quan, Wenhai xiaoyan [The Smoke of the Sea of Literature] (Ha’erbin: Heilongjiang renmin chubanshe, 1998), pp. 6891.

24 “Protokol der.3. Delegierten Konferenz von Nanyang (Malayische) [Protocol of the Third Representative Conference of the Nanyang Party (Malayan)],” p. 86.

25 There are two possible candidates for this “Comrade Li” in the Nanyang party: Li Qingxin (李启新) or Li Guangyuan (黎光远).

26 Quinn-Judge, Ho Chi Minh, pp. 156–157; Ho Chi Minh, “Malay,” November 18, 1930, RGASPI 534/3 /549/25–27. Ho’s authorship is established based on the content of the report; Christopher E. Goscha, Thailand and the Southeast Asian Networks of the Vietnamese Revolution, 1885–1954 (Richmond: Curzon Press, 1999), pp. 76113; “Protokol der.3. Delegierten Konferenz von Nanyang (Malayische) [Protocol of the Third Representative Conference of the Nanyang Party (Malayan)],” p. 87; “Minutes of the Third Representative Conference of Nanyang,” pp. 134, 144–146; “The FEB Letter to the ECCI,” March 3, 1930, in Titarenko and Leutner, Komintern i Kitai [Comintern and China], vol. 3, pp. 821–823.

27 Goscha, Thailand and the Southeast Asian Networks of the Vietnamese Revolution, p. 89.

28 “Minutes of the Third Representative Conference of Nanyang,” p. 145.

29 Hans J. van de Ven, “The Emergence of the Text-Centered Party,” in Tony Saich and Hans J. van de Ven, eds., New Perspectives on the Chinese Communist Revolution (Armonk, NY: M. E. Sharpe, 1995), pp. 532; Hanrahan, The Communist Struggle in Malaya, p. 9; MRCA, December 1931, pp. 31–32, 55; MRCA, October 1931, pp. 44–45, CO 273/572.

30 Koselleck, “Begriffsgeschichte and Social History,” pp. 73–91.

31 Tan Liok Ee, “The Rhetoric of Bangsa and Minzu: Community and Nation in Tension, the Malay Peninsula, 1900–1955,” Working Paper (Clayton, Australia: Centre of Southeast Asian Studies, Monash University, 1988), pp. 27–28; CC CCP, “A Letter from the Central Committee of the CCP to the Nanyang Provisional Committee,” p. 10.

32 In the English-language discourse of the day, minzu pointed to race. However, because the English-language MCP documents do not use the word race, nor is the relevant Chinese word, zhongzu, used to any significant extent, I do not analyze this meaning of minzu. One of the few uses of the word race in MCP texts is as follows: “We are not animals and we want to preserve our races.” “An Open Letter from the C. C. of the C. P. of Malay to the Working Class of Malay,” November 7, 1930, RGASPI 495/62/6/1a–4. For the ambiguity and negotiation of the meaning of minzu in other contexts in the twentieth-century Chinese world, see James Leibold, “Searching for Han: Early Twentieth-Century Narratives of Chinese Origins and Development,” in Thomas Mullaney, ed., Critical Han Studies: The History Representation and Identity of China’s Majority (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2012), pp. 210233.

33 21 uslovie priema v Komintern [Twenty-One Conditions for Acceptance into the Comintern]. 2nd edn. Introduction by O. Piatnitskii, (Izdatel’stvo TsK VKP(b), 1934).

34 Goscha, Thailand and the Southeast Asian Networks of the Vietnamese Revolution, pp. 76–113.

35 “Minutes of the Third Representative Conference of Nanyang,” pp. 116–118.

36 N. A. K. [Nguyen Ai Quoc, alias Ho Chi Minh], “Economic Conditions in Malay, Letter from Singapore,” June 10, 1930, RGASPI 495/62/8/4–6.

37 CC CCP, “A Letter from the Central Committee of the CCP to the Nanyang Provisional Committee,” p. 12.

38 “Resolutions Adopted at the Third Congress of the Malaya Party,” p. 8.

39 Footnote Ibid., p. 4.

40 FEB, “To the Malayan Comrades,” December 17, 1930.

41 Vremennyi komitet malaiskogo arkhipelaga [Nanyang Provisional Committee], “V tsentral’nyi komitet. Otchet Malaiskogo Komiteta profsoiuzov [To the Central Committee. The Report of the Soviet of Trade Unions of the Malay Archipelago].”

42 “Minutes of the Third Representative Conference of Nanyang,” pp. 118–119.

43 “Resoliutsia priniataia posle obsledovania raboty vremennogo komiteta v 1929 [Resolution Adopted after Investigation of the Work of the (Nanyang) Provisional Committee in 1929].”

44 “Otchet o polozhenii v Nan’iane [Report about the Situation in Nanyang],” January 1930, RGASPI 514/1/632/7–28, esp. 16.

45 Vremennyi komitet malaiskogo arkhipelaga [Nanyang Provisional Committee], “V tsentral’nyi komitet. Otchet Malaiskogo Komiteta profsoiuzov [To the Central Committee. The Report of the Soviet of Trade Unions of the Malay Archipelago],” pp. 2, 3.

46 CC CCP, “A Letter from the Central Committee of the CCP to the Nanyang Provisional Committee,” p. 12.

47 “Otchet o polozhenii v Nan’iane [Report about the Situation in Nanyang],” p. 16.

48 “Minutes of the Third Representative Conference of Nanyang,” p. 120.

49 Vremennyi komitet malaiskogo arkhipelaga [Nanyang Provisional Committee], “V tsentral’nyi komitet. Otchet Malaiskogo Komiteta profsoiuzov [To the Central Committee. The Report of the Soviet of Trade Unions of the Malay Archipelago]”; FEB, “To the Malayan Comrades,” December 17, 1930.

50 “Zhongguo yu Nanyang. China and Malaysia” [Bulletin of Ji’nan University] 1 (1918) in Meng Liqun, ed., Nanyang shiliao xubian [Continuation of the Compilation of Nanyang Historical Materials], vol. 1 (Beijing: Guojia tushuguan chubanshe, 2010), p. 1; “List of Circulars Issued by the C. C. of the C. P. of Malaysia,” 1933–1934, RGASPI 495/62/24/46–47.

51 FEB, “Pismo Ts.K.Malaiskoi K.P. o VII kongresse i.t.d [Letter to the CC MCP about the 7th Congress of the Comintern, etc.],” June 1, 1934, RGASPI 495/62/22/13–13ob.

52 Sun Zhongshan, “Linshi da zongtong xunyanshu [The Proclamation of the Provisional President],” in Sun Zhongshan quanji [Collected Works of Sun Yatsen], vol. 2 (Beijing: Zhonggua shuju, 1981), cited in Joseph Esherick, “How the Qing Became China,” in Joseph Esherick, Hasan Kayalı, and Eric van Young, eds., Empire to Nation: Historical Perspectives on the Making of the Modern World (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2006), pp. 229259, esp. p. 245.

53 “Minutes of the Third Representative Conference of Nanyang,” pp. 130–131.

54 Footnote Ibid., pp. 130, 136–137.

55 Footnote Ibid., pp. 133–134.

56 “Resolutions Adopted at the Third Congress of the Malaya Party,” pp. 3, 8.

57 CC MCP, “Notice Issued by the C. C. of the Communist Party of the Malay States Relating to the Conclusion of the III Delegate Congress of the Nanyang Communist Party,” May 1, 1930, RGASPI 495/62/3/11–25, esp. 25.

58 FEB, “To the Malayan Comrades,” December 17, 1930.

59 “Zhongyang tonggao di si hao. Guanyu Yingguo muqian de zhengzhi qingxing yu women de gongzuo [Central Committee Circular no. 4. On Contemporary British Politics and Our Work],” August 10, 1930, RGASPI 495/62/13/31–32; “Gongren ying zuo shenmo shiqing [What Workers Should Do],” November 15, 1930, RGASPI 495/62/23/84–93.

60 “Civilization” (wenming) here is used interchangeably with “culture,” as the comment on the Soviet Union in the next paragraph demonstrates, and it does not refer to a particular Malay civilization as an entity. For a similar interchangeable usage of wenming and wenhua in discussions on the relative benevolence of the Chinese civilization over the European colonial one, attracting other peoples for assimilation and thus bearing the responsibility to emancipate the oppressed, see “Zhongguo duiyu shijie de shiming [China’s Responsibility to the World],” in Simian, Gaoji zhongxueyong benguoshi. Er ce [The History of Our Country for Middle School. Second Part] (1935), pp. 254–258, Wang Gung Wu Library, Chinese Heritage Centre, Nanyang Technological University.

61 “Zhongyang tonggao di qi hao. Yuanzhu Zhongguo Yindu geming yu muqian gongzuo de zhuanbian [Central Committee Circular no. 7. Aid to Chinese and Indian Revolutions and the Changes in Our Current Work],” September 15, 1930, RGASPI 495/62/13/36–38; “What Workers Should Do,” 1930, p. 86; “What Workers Should Stand For,” November 11, 1930, RGASPI 495/62/5/9–20, esp. 10.

62 Singapore City Committee of the MCP, “Shijie wuchan jieji geming lingxiu Liening tongzhi qushi di qi zhounian jinian [Commemorating the Seventh Anniversary of the Death of the Leader of the World Proletarian Revolution Comrade Lenin],” January 21, 1931, RGASPI 495/62/5/26.

63 “The Present Situation in Malaya and the Task of the CPM (Draft Letter),” July 10, 1931, RGASPI 495/62/17/27–53, esp. 32; the C. C. of the C. P. of Malay, “Central Circular no. 9. The Commemoration of the October Revolution and the Preparation for the Solidarity Strike,” October 3, 1930, RGASPI 495/62/13/40–44.

64 “Zhongyang tonggao di si hao. Guanyu Yingguo muqian de zhengzhi qingxing yu women de gongzuo [Central Committee Circular no. 4. On Contemporary British Politics and Our Work]”; “Zhongyang tonggao di qi hao. Yuanzhu Zhongguo Yindu geming yu muqian gongzuo de zhuanbian [Central Committee Circular no. 7. Aid to Chinese and Indian Revolutions and the Changes in Our Current Work].”

65 The C. C. of the C. P. of Malay, “Central Circular no. 2. Preparation for the Mass Demonstration on ‘Aug. 1st’ the International Red Day,” June 18, 1930, RGASPI 495/62/13/18–22a.

66 FEB, “To the Malayan Comrades,” December 17, 1930.

68 ECCI Letter to the FEB, October 23, 1930.

69 FEB, “To the Malayan Comrades,” December 17, 1930.

70 ECCI Letter to the FEB, October 23, 1930.

71 Ironically, the authors of this Comintern letter, apparently unaware of Li Lisan’s promotion of a Nanyang Revolution, labeled the proponents of the China-leaning policy in the MCP as leftist and influenced by Li Lisan and Chen Duxiu. Footnote Ibid.

72 “Report from Malay,” 1931, RGASPI 495/62/11/27–29.

73 “Minutes of the Third Representative Conference of Nanyang,” pp. 130, 136–137; “Protokol der.3. Delegierten Konferenz von Nanyang (Malayische) [Protocol of the Third Representative Conference of the Nanyang Party (Malayan)]” “Resolutions Adopted at the Third Congress of the Malaya Party,” p. 4; “Informatsiia o Malaiskikh Shtatakh [Information about the Malay States],” October 3, 1930, RGASPI 495/62/7/2–4.

74 “A Report Showing the Connection between Chinese and Non-Chinese Concerned in Communist Activities in Malaya,” April 1, 1930, CO273/561/72074, cited in Cheah, From PKI to the Comintern, pp. 53–56.

75 Ho Chi Minh, “Malay”; “Report from Malay”; “To the C. C. of the Chinese Party and the Comintern,” sometime in 1930, RGASPI 495/62/11/1–4; “Informatsiia o Malaiskikh Shtatakh [Information about the Malay States].”

76 “To the C. C. of the Chinese Party and the Comintern,” p. 3; Wang Yung Hai, “To the Far Eastern Bureau,” December 28, 1930, RGASPI 495/62/6/17–21.

77 The FEB’s Letter to Ducroux, May 20, 1931, RGASPI 495/62/2/6–7.

78 Because of secrecy considerations, MCP communications rarely mention names. Undated report, probably 1931, RGASPI 495/62/7/9–8; “Declaration of Subajio,” June 21, 1930, RGASPI 495/154/752/37–38; MCP’s Letter to Ho Chi Minh and Ho Chi Minh’s Letter to the Comintern, November–December 1930, RGASPI 495/62/6/5–7; “Report from Malay”; Huang Muhan, “Worker Movement in Federated Malay States”; “A Report from 12 September 1931 from Malaya about the Labour Union to CC MCP,” MRCA, December 1931, pp. 41, 44, CO 273/572.

79 Letter from the FEB to the “Center” regarding Malaya, Indonesia, and India, June 10, 1931, Shanghai Municipal Police Files (SMP), 1929–1945 (Wilmington, DE: Scholarly Resources, 1989) D2510/49–50.

80 Khoo Kay Kim, “The Beginnings of Political Extremism in Malaya, 1915–1935” (PhD dissertation: University of Malaysia, 1973), pp. 127–128, 312–318, 356; McLane, Soviet Strategies in Southeast Asia, pp. 131–136; Yong in Hack and Chin, eds., Dialogues with Chin Peng, pp. 72, 238.

81 The MCP’s Letter to Ho Chi Minh, December 18, 1930, RGASPI 495/62/6/5–7; “Informatsiia o Malaiskikh Shtatakh [Information about the Malay States].”

82 Milner, Invention of Politics in Colonial Malaya, ch. 3, esp. p. 64.

83 “To the C. C. of the Chinese Party and the Comintern,” p. 2.

84 Ho Chi Minh, “Malay,” p. 25.

85 “Report from Malay.”

86 “Resolution on the Labour Movement Passed by the C. C. of the C. P. of Malaysia on March 24, 1934 (Abridged Translation),” RGASPI 495/62/23/46–49.

87 “Zhongyang tonggao di qi hao. Yuanzhu Zhongguo Yindu geming yu muqian gongzuo de zhuanbian [Central Committee Circular no. 7. Aid to Chinese and Indian Revolutions and the Changes in Our Current Work],” p. 38.

88 “Minutes of the Third Representative Conference of Nanyang,” p. 114.

89 Zhang Xia, “Xianyou xian lü Ma huaqiao yu geming huodong [Immigrants from Xianyou County in Malaya and Revolutionary Activities],” in Zhongguo renmin zhengzhi xieshang huiyi Fujian sheng Xianyou xian weiyuanhui, ed., Xianyou wenshi ziliao di er ji [Literary and Historical Materials of Xianyou County, vol. 2] (1984), pp. 3439.

90 “Guoji lunping duxuan: Yingguo tongzhi Malaiya zhi zhengce ji qi minzu yundong (jielu Nanyang yanjiu) [Selected International Review Readings: The Policy of British Colonization of Malaya and Its National Movement (Excerpts from Nanyang Studies)],” Weekly Herald (Xingqi daobao), no. 7 (1935), p. 5.

91 Cheah, From PKI to the Comintern, pp. 9–11.

92 “Minutes of the Third Representative Conference of Nanyang,” pp. 144–146; Alimin, Letters, April 23, September 29, 1930, RGASPI 495/214/752/40–41, 86; Santos [Alimin], “Brief Description,” 1939; Santos [Alimin], Untitled, undated; Santos, “Svedeniia o Malake [Information about Malaka],” June 7, 1939, RGASPI 495/214/3/35–37; Musso, “Situatsiia v Indonesii posle vosstaniia [The Situation in Indonesia after the Uprising],” September 22, 1930, RGASPI 495/214/752/53–76.

93 Roff, Origins of Malay Nationalism, pp. 224–225, 255; Cheah, From PKI to the Comintern, p. 21.

94 Tan Liok Ee, “The Rhetoric of Bangsa and Minzu.”

95 Guo Guang, “Magong laixin san hao [A Letter from the MCP no. 3],” March 24, 1934, RGASPI 495/62/22/1–7, esp. 5.

96 “Magong laijian. Malaiya de qingshi yu dang de renwu [A Document Received from the MCP. The Situation in Malaya and the Tasks of the Party],” August 25, 1934, RGASPI 495/62/27/1–5; Guo Guang, “Magong laixin san hao [A Letter from the MCP no. 3].”

97 “Report of Labour Federation of Malaya no. 1 to the Profintern,” March 25, 1934, RGASPI 495/62/24/13–16ob.

98 MRCA, October 1932, p. 37, CO 273/580; “Magong zhongyang laijian. Zhengge tuan de zuzhi gaikuang [A Document Received from the CC MCP. The Organizational Situation in the CYL],” August 25, 1934, RGASPI 495/62/27/7.

99 MRCA, December 1931, pp. 31–48, CO 273/572; Straits Settlement Police Special Branch, “Review of Communism in Malaya during 1934,” December 31, 1934, Political Intelligence Journal, pp. 2, 3, CO 273/616. For an example of Malay-language propaganda by the MCP, see CC MCP, “Surat yang terbuka kepada saudara-saudara kita Melayu dan Indian [An Open Letter to Our Malay and Indian Brothers],” 1934, RGASPI 495/62/22/14–17.

100 Cheah, From PKI to the Comintern, pp. 19–20.

101 “Supplement no. 1 of 1937 to the Straits Settlements Police Special Branch, Political Intelligence Journal, Review of Communist Activities in Malaya, 1936,” pp. 3, 4; “Straits Settlements Police Special Branch Report for the Year 1936,” p. 7, CO 273/630.

102 Zhao Gang, The Qing Opening to the Ocean: Chinese Maritime Policies, 1684–1757 (Honolulu, HI: University of Hawaii Press, 2013), pp. 45, 188190; Kuhn, Chinese among Others, pp. 250–282.

103 Wang Gungwu, “Tonghua, Guihua, and History of the Overseas Chinese,” in Ng Lun Ngai-ha and Chang Chak Yan, eds., Liangci shijie dazhan qijian zai Yazhou zhi haiwai huaren [Overseas Chinese in Asia between the Two World Wars] (Hong Kong: Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1989), pp. 1123.

104 Tan Cheng Lock, “Extract from Mr. Tan Cheng Lock’s Speech at the Meeting of the Legislative Council Held on 1st November 1926,” in C. Q. Lee, ed., Malayan Problems from the Chinese Point of View (Singapore: Tannsco, 1947), pp. 8893, esp. p. 90.

105 Kennedy Gordon Tregonning, “Tan Cheng Lock: A Malayan Nationalist,” Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 10(1) (1979), pp. 2576; Heng, Chinese Politics in Malaysia, p. 27.

106 Kanagaratnam Jeya Ratnam, Communalism and the Political Process in Malaya (Kuala Lumpur: University of Malaya Press, 1965), p. 9; Wang, “The Limits of Nanyang Chinese Nationalism.”

107 Yōji Akashi, “The Nanyang Chinese Anti-Japanese Boycott Movement, 1908–1928: A Study of Nanyang Chinese Nationalism” (Kuala Lumpur: Department of History, University of Malaya, 1968), pp. 69–96, esp. p. 77; Ching Fatt Yong, “An Overview of the Malayan Communist Movement to 1942,” in Hack and Chin, eds., Dialogues with Chin Peng, pp. 247–251.

108 Ke Pingping as related by Xu Jie, Kanke daolu shang de zuji [Road Full of Misfortunes] (Shanghai: Huadong shifan daxue chubanshe, 1997), pp. 149151, 171217; David Kenley, New Culture in a New World: The May Fourth Movement and the Chinese Diaspora in Singapore (1919–1932) (London: Routledge, 2003), pp. 157176, 180181, Footnote n. 50.

109 Li Yinghui, Huaqiao zhengce yu haiwai minzuzhuyi (1912–1949) [The Origin of Overseas Chinese Nationalism (1912–1949)], p. 476; Ta Chen, Emigrant Communities in South China: A Study of Overseas Migration and Its Influence on Standards of Living and Social Change (New York, NY: Secretariat, Institute of Pacific Relations, 1940), p. 277.

110 Kenley, New Culture in a New World, p. 153.

111 Ke Pingping as related by Xue Jie, Kanke daolu shang de zuji [Road Full of Misfortunes], pp. 171, 173, 208.

112 Footnote Ibid., pp. 170–177.

113 Xu Jie, “Yelin de bieshu [Mansion in the Coconut Grove],” and “Liang ge qingnian [Two Youths],” in Xu Jie, Yezi yu liulian: Zhongguo xiandai xiaopin jingdian [Coconut and Durian: Little Souvenirs of Contemporary China], pp. 1833, 3448.

114 CC CCP, “A Letter from the Central Committee of the CCP to the Nanyang Provisional Committee,” p. 13. Ke Pingping as related by Xue Jie, Kanke daolu shang de zuji [Road Full of Misfortunes], p. 171. The CYL disagreed with the CC CCP’s definition of the formulation of the essence of the revolution in the Nanyang, where an anticapitalist national revolution (fan zibenzhuyi de minzu geming) was required. The Nanyang CYL decided that xing (性) in fan zibenzhuyi xing de minzu geming, which was decided by the CCP to be the nature of the Nanyang Revolution, was to be erased, as otherwise it did not convey the spirit of the anticapitalist struggle strongly enough. The essences of the Chinese and Siamese Revolutions were similar because of similar conditions in both countries, which were both semi-colonies. “Dui dang jueyi Nanyang geming xingzhi de yijian [Suggestions Regarding the Party Decision on the Nature of the Nanyang Revolution],” in the CC of the Nanyang CYL, “Nanyang gongzuo baogao [Nanyang Work Report],” 1928, RGASPI 533/10/1818/4–16, p. 16.

115 Xu Jie, “Liang ge qingnian [Two Youths],” p. 48.

116 Nanyang gongzuo baogao [Nanyang Work Report], p. 5; Xu Jie, “Liang ge qingnian [Two Youths].”

117 Ke Pingping as related by Xue Jie, Kanke daolu shang de zuji [Road Full of Misfortunes], pp. 173–175.

118 Gao Zinong, “Zhongguo gongchan qingnian tuan Feiliebin tebie difang gongzuo baogao [Work Report of the Philippine Special Local Committee of the Chinese Communist Youth League].”

120 Footnote Ibid., esp. p. 166.

122 Gao Zinong’s letter to Xiang Zhongfa, June 1, 1928, RGASPI 495/66/7/134–135; Gao Zinong, “Zhongguo gongchan qingnian tuan Feiliebin tebie difang gongzuo baogao [Work Report of the Philippine Special Local Committee of the Chinese Communist Youth League].”

123 V. Demar, “Vopros o sozdanii sektsii kommunisticheskogo Internatsionala na filippinskikh ostrovakh [Regarding the Establishment of the Comintern Section in the Philippine Islands],” April 17, 1928, RGASPI 495/66/5/1-4.

124 Gao Zinong, “Zhongguo gongchan qingnian tuan Feiliebin tebie difang gongzuo baogao [Work Report of the Philippine Special Local Committee of the Chinese Communist Youth League],” pp. 145 ob., 156.

125 Lai, Chinese American Transnational Politics, p. 53.

126 Gao Zinong, “Zhongguo gongchan qingnian tuan Feiliebin tebie difang gongzuo baogao [Work Report of the Philippine Special Local Committee of the Chinese Communist Youth League],” p. 141.

127 Footnote Ibid., pp. 141, 157–159.

128 Eastern Secretariat of ECCI, “Letter regarding tasks of the CPPI,” December 14, 1931, RGASPI 495/66/16/1–5, esp. 3.

129 ECCI, “Draft Letter Regarding the Situation in the Philippines and Tasks of the CPPI,” October 10, 1931, RGASPI 495/66/16/187–208; “Draft Resolution on the Revolutionary Trade Union Movement in the Philippines,” August 16, 1931, RGASPI 495/66/23/59–67, esp. 67.

130 Tim Ryan, “The Present Situation in the Philippines and the Immediate Tasks of the Communist Party,” February 17, 1931, RGASPI 496/66/23/1–24, esp. 22–23.

131 Eastern Secretariat of the ECCI, “Draft Letter to C. P. of the Philippines,” July 22, 1931, RGASPI 495/66/16/65–91, esp. 81.

132 In the United States the Chinese communists in 1927 wanted to call themselves the Chinese communist party, but the executive secretary of the CPUSA, Ruthenberg, did not permit them to do so, suggesting they should be called the Chinese faction of the American party. Fowler, Japanese and Chinese Immigrant Activists, p. 125.

133 Gao Zinong, “Zhongguo gongchan qingnian tuan Feiliebin tebie difang gongzuo baogao [Work Report of the Philippine Special Local Committee of the Chinese Communist Youth League].”

134 Profintern, “Direktivy po rabote na Fillippinakh [Directive for Work in the Philippines].” The document is undated, but since the previous document in the file is dated 1931, this document is possibly from 1931 as well. RGASPI 534/6/148/162–163.

135 Shubert S. C. Liao, ed., Chinese Participation in Philippine Culture and Economy (Manila: Bookman, 1964).

136 Gao Zinong, “Zhongguo gongchan qingnian tuan Feiliebin tebie difang gongzuo baogao [Work Report of the Philippine Special Local Committee of the Chinese Communist Youth League].”

138 Wickberg, “The Chinese Mestizo in Philippine History,” pp. 95–96. The Philippine National Assembly was established in 1907, and in 1916, the date of eventual decolonization was set for 1946. Richard T. Chu, Chinese and Chinese Mestizos of Manila: Family, Identity and Culture, 1860s–1930s (Leiden: Brill, 2010), pp. 321325, 277278.

139 The reasons included American simplification of the earlier Spanish designation of Philippine residents as either Filipino or non-Filipino, economic competition with Chinese immigrants, the weakness of China, and a caution not to identify with Chinese mestizo leadership in the Philippine Revolution, which was feared by the American government. Wickberg, “The Chinese Mestizo in Philippine History.”

140 Gao Zinong, “Zhongguo gongchan qingnian tuan Feiliebin tebie difang gongzuo baogao [Work Report of the Philippine Special Local Committee of the Chinese CommunistYouth League].”

141 Footnote Ibid., p. 157.

142 Wickberg, “The Chinese Mestizo in Philippine History.”

143 However, as a consequence of the rise of Chinese nationalism, many Chinese born in the Philippines chose Chinese citizenship rather than naturalization as Filipinos. In the 1920s, anti-Chinese sentiments increased due to the economic problems of the time, as did Chinese nationalism, which was propagated in Chinese schools by the GMD. Chu, Chinese and Chinese Mestizos of Manila, pp. 288–298, 316, 327–329.

144 “Report on the Philippines,” January 1, 1931, RGASPI 495/ 66/ 2/48–62, esp. pp. 48–49, 53.

145 See Kuhn, “Why China Historians Should Study the Chinese Diaspora.”

146 Cemil Aydin, The Politics of Anti-Westernism in Asia: Visions of World Order in Pan-Islamic and Pan-Asian Thought (New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 2007), pp. 4, 201203.

147 Wickberg, “The Chinese Mestizo in Philippine History.” Political leadership is still a common approach of Chinese indigenization in the Philippines. See Teresita Ang See, “Integration, Indigenization, Hybridization and Localization of the Ethnic Chinese Minority in the Philippines,” in Leo Suryadinata, ed., Migration, Indigenization and Interaction: Chinese Overseas and Globalization (Singapore: Chinese Heritage Centre, World Scientific Publishing, 2011), pp. 231252.

148 According to Kuhn, the Chinese migrant community had to find an unoccupied niche in the economy in order to survive. Kuhn, Chinese among Others, p. 48.

149 “Santos” [Alimin], “Tovarishcham Kuusinenu i Manuil’skomu [To Kuusinen and Manuilsky],” January 6, 1936, RGASPI 495/16/8/22–27.

150 Tan Malaka, From Jail to Jail, vol. 1, pp. 162, 117–120.

151 Ramon Guillermo, “Andres Bonifacio: Proletarian Hero of the Philippines and Indonesia,” Inter-Asia Cultural Studies 18(3) (2017), pp. 338346.

152 Omar, Bangsa Melayu, p. 11.

153 Footnote Ibid., pp. 5, 9, 11, 20–21, 24–25.

154 Robert Edward Elson, The Idea of Indonesia: A History (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008), p. 44.

155 Owen, The Emergence of Modern Southeast Asia, pp. 298–299.

Figure 0

Figure 2.1 Yang Shanji, 1924. Born in Hainan, head of the Communist Youth League (CYL) in 1926 and secretary of the Nanyang Provisional Committee in 1928 during his studies at the University of the Toilers of the East in 1924.61

Published with permission of the RGASPI.
Figure 1

Table 3.1 Non-Chinese members in communist organizations in Malaya

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