46 years of Carnation Revolution
The revolution has also immortalized the Portuguese song ‘Grândola, Vila Morena’ written by Zeca Afonso in 1972, based on the theme of fraternity between people of the Portuguese town of Grândola.
The Dublin McDonald’s strike, 1979
The strikers’ demands were simple – union recognition and an end to low pay.
Arrest of anti-Nazi ‘White Rose’ group members
The White Rose is one of the best-known German resistance groups against the Nazi fascist regime.
1951 New Zealand waterfront strike
The National government, led by Sidney Holland, in an attempt to break the strike, implemented harsh measures including censoring the press from reporting on the strike and making it illegal to provide food and money to the striking workers and their families
Mandela released from jail
He was released after spending 27 years in jail for his role in anti-apartheid movement in South Africa.
Yugoslav partisan Lepa Radić executed by Nazis
With the noose around her neck, she cried out: “Long live the Communist Party, and partisans! Fight, people, for your freedom! Do not surrender to the evildoers! I will be killed, but there are those who will avenge me!”
1982 Women led occupation at Plessey Capacitors plant: Negotiation begins
The workers accused the company management of deliberately engineering the apparent lack of profitability of the plant to justify closure, despite the annual sales figures showing increased profits.
1919 workers strike in Glasgow
Coming barely a year after the Russian Revolution, the Secretary of State for Scotland declared the strike a “Bolshevist uprising.”
Justice for Randy Malayao!
The assassination led to massive protests in Philippines against the witch-hunting of communist and peace activists by right wing Rodrigo Duterte regime.
Assassination of MK Gandhi
His assassin was Nathuram Godse, belonging to far-right Hindu organization, Hindu Mahasabha.
Labor strike in St. Kitts
The strike in St. Kitts was part of wave of labor uprisings in the British Caribbean colonies in 1930s.
Liberation of Nazi concentration camp in Auschwitz by Soviet Army
The camp became a major site of the Nazis’ Final Solution to the Jewish Question, where more than one million Jews, Poles, Romani and Soviet prisoners of war (POWs) were exterminated, many in gas chambers.






