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Jean Jacques Soudeilles

Jean-Jacques Soudeilles (1899-1951), also known by his pseudonyms Souzy, Jean Jacques, and Jacques Lost, was a historian, journalist, and Communist French Resistance.

First Communist Party member-SFIC (future French Communist Party ), it becomes critical to the evolution of the party in 1924, and signed the "Letter of 250" of the Left Opposition in 1925. It then creates an oppositional communist group in Lyon, which is in contact with the group's Paris Boris Souvarine. He joined the Communist Democratic Club at its founding in 1930.

In 1940 he founded the group of resistance "Free France" with Elie Peju , Avinin Antoine and Auguste Pinton , a movement that became in December 1941 Free-Shooter. Soudeilles invested in publishing the underground newspaper of the movement.

From 1943 he is the maverick Provisional Consultative Assembly in Algiers. Upon release, disappointed by the political evolution of France, it stops the militant activism.

He was the director of Radio-Brazzaville.

Books

  • Jean Jacques, Social struggles and strikes under the old regime: life and death of corporations, Spartacus , 1970.
  • Jacques Lost, The Revolt of the silk workers , Spartacus, 1974.
  • Jacques Lost, The Revolution failed, Stalinist imposture, foreword by Charles Jacquier, Sulliver Editions , 1997.

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