Center for Vision and Values ^ | February 3, 2014 | Paul 
G. Kengor 
Pete Seeger’s death at age 94 is a cultural catharsis for the American left. 
The New York Times accorded his passing the kind of space normally reserved for 
the death of a president. Such was Seeger’s special place of reverence among 
liberals. 
The media is hailing Seeger as a “social-justice” crusading “progressive,” a 
voice for the poor, the downtrodden, the working man, and the environment. He’s 
also being portrayed as a victim of wild-eyed McCarthyites who maniacally 
searched for a red under every bed. 
Well, the full story is a little different. 
Pete Seeger had in fact been a Marxist, a committed one who stumped for 
international communism at the height of the Stalin era. Interviewed in 2008 for 
the PBS series, “American Masters,” Seeger conceded those sympathies. He first 
joined the Young Communist League at Harvard (mid-1930s) and later (early 1940s) 
joined Communist Party USA (CPUSA). 
That latter fact is a halting one. Many American communists, especially 
Jewish communists, bolted from CPUSA when their beloved Joseph Stalin allied 
with Hitler, specifically via the August 1939 Hitler-Stalin Pact. Not Seeger. He 
was undeterred, joining the party after the pact. (For the record, likewise 
undeterred was Barack Obama’s mentor, Frank Marshall Davis, who also joined 
CPUSA after the pact.) 
Seeger was a loyal comrade. If you were a communist agitator/organizer 
staging a big display or furthering the revolution, Pete Seeger’s presence was 
as reliable as a red flag. He was guaranteed to provide musical entertainment 
for the cause. 
Here are a few examples: 
At the massive anti-Vietnam rally held in New York City in April 1967, 
organized by the radical New Mobe, Seeger was there, strumming for the faithful. 
In the 1950s, New York communist parents sent their red-diaper babies to the 
Little Red School House, founded in the 1920s by “progressives.” There, the 
likes of Angela Davis, Victor Navasky, the sons of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, 
and future Weather Underground terrorist Kathy Boudin (still in jail for murder) 
sat at the knee of leftist celebrities like Seeger, who played and taught music 
there. 
Seeger also provided rousing performances at the summer “commie camps” in the 
Catskills where the New York faithful sent their children to study the gospel 
according to Marx. These surreal spectacles were a sort of twisted red version 
of Vacation Bible School. 
But Seeger’s most disturbing work as a Marxist minstrel was his crooning for 
“The Almanacs,” which historian Ron Radosh—himself a former red-diaper 
baby—calls a “communist folk-singing group.” At varying times, “The Almanacs” 
included Seeger, Woody Guthrie, Burl Ives, and Will Geer, later known as 
“Grandpa” on TV’s “The Waltons.” Seeger founded the group in 1941. 
The most egregious work by “The Almanacs” was its propaganda for the 
insidious American Peace Mobilization, which Congress identified as “one of the 
most seditious organizations which ever operated in the United States” and “one 
of the most notorious and blatantly communist fronts ever organized.” Founded in 
1940, the objective of the American Peace Mobilization was to keep America out 
of the war against Hitler. This also meant no Lend-Lease money to Britain. 
Why did the American Peace Mobilization take such a position? It did so 
because Hitler signed an alliance with Stalin. For American communists, any 
friend of Stalin was a friend of theirs. They literally swore an oath, formally 
pledging to a “Soviet America” and to “the triumph of Soviet power in the United 
States.” They were unflinchingly devout Soviet patriots. 
In my book Dupes, I publish the declassified Soviet Comintern document 
detailing how the American Peace Mobilization “was organised on the initiative 
of our Party in Chicago in September, 1940.” (Obama’s mentor, Frank Marshall 
Davis, was there.) 
As for mobilizing the “peace,” eager Pete Seeger was there to salute the 
flag. 
The kick-off rally to attract naïve recruits (i.e., liberal dupes) to the 
American Peace Mobilization was a huge April 1941 promotional in New York. The 
featured musical talent was Stalinist Paul Robeson and “The Almanacs.” Almost 
every “folk ballad” was a swipe at America and FDR—who communists were attacking 
at that point—for supporting an “unjust war” by aiding Britain as it was 
besieged by the Nazis’ ferocious onslaught. 
Such was the position of American communists, like Pete Seeger. 
Of course, liberals should be enraged at Seeger for efforts like this. 
Unfortunately, they don’t understand their own history. For them, the bad guys 
are never on the left. As ex-communist James Burnham used to say, for the left, 
the preferred enemy is always to the right. 
Speaking of which, in the left’s perverse moral universe, I’ll be viewed as 
the bad guy for pointing out these sordid facts about Pete Seeger. I’ll be 
pitied for my crass McCarthyism, whereas Seeger will be forever lionized by 
liberals as a peace-loving lamb, a happy-hearted hippie unfairly persecuted for 
his mere pursuit of “social justice.” - See more at: 
http://www.visionandvalues.org/2014/02/pete-seeger-marxist-minstrel/#sthash.5lgAMa3u.dpuf
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