Robert Bruce Avakian (born March 7, 1943)[1][2] is an American political activist who is the founder and chairman of the Revolutionary Communist Party, USA (RCP), a group often described as a cult surrounding Avakian.[3] Coming out of the New Left[4] of the 1960s, he is credited with the organization’s ideological framework, "the New Synthesis" or "New Communism".[5]
In the early 1970s, Avakian served a prison sentence for desecrating the American flag during a demonstration.[6] He was charged with assaulting a police officer in January 1979 at a demonstration in Washington, D.C. to protest Deng Xiaoping's meeting with Jimmy Carter.[4][14][15] After receiving an arrest warrant, Avakian went to France and applied for political refugee status.[1] In 1980, he gave a speech to 200 protestors in downtown Oakland[16] and his police assault charges were dropped a few years later.[1][4]
In 2005, Avakian published an autobiography, From Ike to Mao and Beyond: My Journey from Mainstream America to Revolutionary Communist.[1][17] He has been the Revolutionary Communist Party's central committee chairman and national leader since 1979.[16][18] In 2016, the RCP USA and others helped form the organization Refuse Fascism, which called for the removal of Donald Trump.[19]
In August 2020, Avakian released a statement about what he called the "growing threat" of fascism in the United States, calling on supporters to use "every appropriate means of non-violent action" to remove Trump, including voting for Joe Biden for president, while continuing to organize for revolution.[20]
Legacy
Avakian is a controversial figure. He is viewed by supporters as a revolutionary leader whose body of work has advanced communist theory and represents a "pathway to human emancipation" from the capitalist system.[21][22] He is criticized by detractors for an alleged cult of personality around him,[23] which the party has called "lies and slander."[24]
Three Interviews with Bob Avakian: Up Close and Personal with Bob Avakian - Heart and Soul & Hard-Core for Revolution (2023) (Part 1, Part 2 and Part 3)
^ abcdefAvakian, Bob (2005). From Ike to Mao and Beyond: My Journey from Mainstream America to Revolutionary Communist. Insight Press. ISBN9780976023623.
^Avakian, "Bob Avakian Speaks on the Mao Tsetung Defendants' Railroad and the Historic Battles Ahead", Introduction and pp. 18—21.
^Athan G. Theoharis, "FBI Surveillance: Past and Present", Cornell Law Review, Vol. 69 (April 1984); and Peter Erlinder with Doug Cassel, “Bazooka Justice: The Case of the Mao Tse Tung Defendants – Overreaction Or Foreshadowing?”, Public Eye, Vol. II, No. 3&4 (1980), pp. 40—43.