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ERIC ED558003: Democracy's Champion: Albert Shanker and the International Impact of the American Federation of Teachers PDF

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DEMOCRACY’S CHAMPION ALBERT SHANKER and the International Impact of the American Federation of Teachers By Eric Chenoweth BOARD OF DIRECTORS Paul E. A lmeida Anthony Bryk Barbara B yrd-Bennett Landon B utler David K. Cohen Thomas R. Donahue Han Dongfang Bob Edwards The Albert Shanker Institute is a nonprofit organization established Carl Gershman in 1998 to honor the life and legacy of the late president of the Milton Goldberg American Federation of Teachers. The organization’s by-laws Ernest G. Green commit it to four fundamental principles—vibrant democracy, Linda Darling Hammond quality public education, a voice for working people in decisions E. D. Hirsch, Jr. affecting their jobs and their lives, and free and open debate about Sol Hurwitz all of these issues. John Jackson Clifford B. Janey The institute brings together influential leaders and thinkers from Lorretta Johnson business, labor, government, and education from across the political Susan Moore Johnson spectrum. It sponsors research, promotes discussions, and seeks new Ted Kirsch and workable approaches to the issues that will shape the future of Francine Lawrence democracy, education, and unionism. Many of these conversations Stanley S. Litow are off-the-record, encouraging lively, honest debate and new Michael Maccoby understandings. Herb Magidson Harold Meyerson These efforts are directed by and accountable to a diverse and Mary Cathryn Ricker distinguished board of directors representing the richness of Al Richard Riley Shanker’s commitments and concerns. William Schmidt Randi Weingarten ____________________________________________ Deborah L. Wince-Smith This document was written for the Albert Shanker Institute and does not necessarily represent the views of the institute or the members of its Board EMERITUS BOARD of Directors. Antonia Cortese Nat LaCour Edward J. McElroy EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR Leo E. Casey FRONT COVER PHOTO: Albert Shanker speaking at the Wiktor Alter-Henryk Erlich Ceremony in Warsaw in April 1988. Credit: Dementi DEMOCRACY’S CHAMPION ALBERT SHANKER and the International Impact of the American Federation of Teachers By Eric Chenoweth ABOUT THE AUTHOR Eric Chenoweth is co-director of the Institute for Democracy in Eastern Europe, which he founded with Irena Lasota in 1985. He also helped found and direct the Committee in Support of Solidarity in 1981. The American Federation of Teachers (AFT) supported and worked closely with both organizations. From 1987 to 1991, Mr. Chenoweth worked in the international affairs department of the American Federation of Teachers, where he focused on human rights and education for democracy projects, including many initiatives in Eastern Europe. After working briefly for the AFL-CIO, he returned to the Institute, where he has carried out programs in Yugoslavia, southeastern Europe, Belarus, the Caucasus, and Cuba. Since 2005, Mr. Chenoweth has also worked as a consultant for the Albert Shanker Institute and Freedom House and co- authored the contents of DemWeb.com, a joint project of the two organizations. ACKNOWLEGEMENTS I would like to thank first the Albert Shanker Institute, its officers Randi Weingarten and Lorretta Johnson, and its board of directors and staff for supporting this project. I am especially grateful to former executive director Eugenia Kemble, who shepherded the idea of a separate biography on Albert Shanker’s international work from its origins to near completion, to Burnie Bond and Randall Garton for their careful reading and editing of the text, and to Vicki Thomas for her inestimable work and assistance. The eagle editorial eye of Trish Gorman, the AFT’s former director of publications, was also greatly appreciated. I am grateful also to Richard Kahlenberg, the author of Shanker’s definitive biography and an enthusiastic supporter of an additional monograph to describe more fully this important but not as well known area of the former AFT president’s life. He provided not only his time and support but also invaluable advice to the project. Eadie Shanker, Al’s wife and partner of nearly four decades, was unstinting in her time, efforts, assistance, and friendship. Dan Golodner, the archivist of the AFT’s and Albert Shanker’s collection at Wayne State University’s Walter Reuther Library in Detroit, as well as its fine staff, should be commended for the fine work they do in keeping American labor history alive and relevant. My respect and appreciation go to them and the staffs at the Tamiment Library at New York University and the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung archives in Bonn, which hold the collections of the United Federation of Teachers and International Federation of Free Teachers Unions, respectively. As much as the written record, this monograph relies on the living memories of those who worked with Albert Shanker and followed him on his many international projects and endeavors to support democracy and workers’ rights. I thank all of those who shared their time, memories, and insights and helped to correct any mistakes in the record, especially: George Altomare, John Cole, Paul Cole, Antonia Cortese, Tom Donahue, Rita Freedman, Mary Hatwood Futrell, Tom Hobart, Rachelle Horowitz, Eugenia Kemble, Greg Humphrey, Lorretta Johnson, Jack Joyce, Phil Kugler, Nat Lacour, Irena Lasota, Herb Magidson, Jay Mazur, Ed McElroy, and Ruth Wattenberg. Two colleagues in Albert Shanker’s international work deserve special mention and thanks for their generous time and support: David Dorn, former long-time director of the AFT’s International Affairs Department, and Fred van Leeuwen, president of Education International, IFFTU’s successor organization. Copyright ©2013, The Albert Shanker Institute. All rights reserved. Suggested citation: Chenoweth, E. (2013), Democracy’s Champion: Albert Shanker and the International Impact of the American Federation of Teachers. Washington, DC, The Albert Shanker Institute. Design: Vicki Thomas Democracy’s Champion / 1 ___________________________________________ TABLE OF CONTENTS Chapter 1 A Life of Consequence 3 Chapter 2 Shanker’s Roots 9 Chapter 3 A First Step in International Waters 11 Chapter 4 The Making of a Teacher Unionist: The UFT Years 15 Chapter 5 The Making of an Internationalist: The UFT Years 19 Chapter 6 The AFT Presidency: A Platform for Internationalism 29 Chapter 7 IFFTU: A Platform for International Solidarity: 1974-81 47 Chapter 8 Institutionalizing International Affairs at the AFT: 1981-1997 53 Chapter 9 The IFFTU Years and Beyond: 1981-1993 81 Chapter 10 The Last Decade 89 Appendix I 97 References 101 Albert Shanker Institute / 2 ___________________________________________ “The very idea of unionism is solidarity. It means, ‘I’m not strong enough to do things alone. I’ve got to band together with brothers and sisters.’ And you can’t just do that with teachers. You’re not strong enough. And so you are in a general labor movement with other workers. And pretty soon you realize the same thing is true on ” a worldwide basis. Albert Shanker Democracy’s Champion / 3 ___________________________________________ 1 A LIFE OF CONSEQUENCE Anti-Semitism was rife in the poor, crowded neighborhood in Queens, New York, where Albert Shanker, the son of Russian Jewish immigrants, grew up. The hostile atmosphere—including a near-fatal attack by boys his own age and ever-present shouts of “Jew-boy”—led the young Shanker to live a largely solitary life, one that allowed him to pursue hobbies and devour newspapers, publications, and books of all types. Shanker escaped his unwelcoming environment and opened his mind to a grand variety of subjects, authors, and locales.1 Through his extensive reading, Shanker vicariously traveled the breadth of the earth and engaged himself in the world’s great events. At the time, he had little inkling that he too would actually play a significant role on the world stage, taking part in some of his era’s most contentious political struggles for freedom. Of course, Albert Shanker (1928-1997) is known mainly for his successful struggle to obtain collective bargaining for teachers, his leadership of teacher unions, and his championship of education reform. Certainly, as a labor leader, he had few rivals in a career that spanned forty years. A “quicksilver intellect” with an “iron- will in battle,” 2 Shanker built large and powerful city, state, and national unions of teachers and other public employees that still stand as models both for union democracy and worker representation. During his period of active leadership, the American Federation of Teachers (AFT) grew from a membership of 65,000 in 1960 to nearly one million teachers, school employees, professors, public employees, and other professionals in 1997, making it one of the largest affiliates of the AFL-CIO. (The AFT has since grown to 1.5 million members.) Drawing on his authority as a teacher union leader, Shanker also took a leading role in advocating for the reform and improvement of public education in the United States. He challenged the education establishment to adopt the innovative changes needed to improve schools, and his own members to accept radical changes to union contracts aimed at helping the children they served. Presidents, governors, legislators, school chancellors, and most anyone involved in education sought Shanker’s advice and counsel. His ideas remain the basis for many education reform initiatives today.3 These twin achievements of Shanker, as a trade union leader and an education reformer, have tended to overshadow a third realm of accomplishment: his international work in the cause of free trade unions, human rights, and democracy. The Albert Shanker Institute commissioned this monograph to describe Shanker’s international work more fully than has been available until now.4 It profiles a multifaceted leader whose 1 Richard D. Kahlenberg, Tough Liberal: Albert Shanker and the Battles Over Schools, Unions, Race, and Democracy (New York: Columbia University Press, 2007), 17-25, and Jack Schierenbeck, “Class Struggles: The UFT Story: Al Shanker’s Rise to Power, Part 8,” January 13, 1997, 2-3, UFT website, www.uft.org. 2 Obituary of Albert Shanker, New York Times, February 24, 1997, national edition. 3 See, for example, “Legacy of Education Reformer Albert Shanker Discussed at Forum,” Headlines, Harvard Graduate School of Education, November 13, 2007. In the article, Harvard Professor Susan Moore Johnson is quoted as saying that, “It’s just stunning to lay out, one after another, these reforms that were his ideas.” 4 Kahlenberg’s Tough Liberal, the authoritative biography of Shanker, focuses on the first two pillars of Shanker’s life, labor and education. A good summary of Shanker’s international work during the 1980s appears in Chapter 13. Albert Shanker Institute / 4 ___________________________________________ comprehensive worldview involved him and the union in the important international challenges of his times, and—as a consequence—helped to bring about substantial democratic change and the end of the Cold War. • • • Shanker’s involvement in international affairs was based on what one former staff member called “Al’s total belief in democracy and freedom.”5 The idea at the core of his total belief was freedom of association: the right of workers everywhere in the world (including professional employees) to organize trade unions of their choosing and to bargain collectively with their employer. Indeed, trade union organizing was his first and last mission—starting in 1953, when he joined the New York Teachers Guild, until his death in February 1997 at age 68. Integral to his belief in unions was Shanker’s view that the wellbeing of American workers, including his own members, was inextricably tied to the broader American labor movement, represented by the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO). It was, in his view, the “most democratic and progressive force for achieving great social change in the United States.”6 In turn, Shanker believed that the American labor movement’s fate was tied to the international trade union movement and free worker movements abroad. As Shanker explained: The very idea of unionism is solidarity. It means, “I’m not strong enough to do things alone. I’ve got to band together with brothers and sisters.” And you can’t just do that with teachers. You’re not strong enough. And so you are in a general labor movement with other workers. And pretty soon you realize the same thing is true on a worldwide basis.7 Another fundamental aspect of Shanker’s “total belief” was that all people have the right to live under a democratic system of government. Shanker argued repeatedly that democracy is the only political system in which the fundamental rights and equality of all people can be effectively protected and their interests represented. Conversely, “there is no freedom or democracy without trade unionism. The first thing the dictator does is get rid of the trade unions."8 In Shanker’s view, the preponderance of right-wing and left-wing despotisms in the 20th century offered abundant proofs in favor of democracy. For him, any dictatorship was abhorrent. Yet, the idea of expanding democracy was not universally accepted. Indeed, many progressives abandoned the goal of promoting democracy as part of U.S. foreign policy aims. In the 1960s and 1970s, thinkers on the New Left, an ideological movement that emerged from the 1960s, embraced violent revolutions in Cuba and China as the new political model. Members of the political and business establishment generally favored détente and trade, which resulted in the acceptance of repression even in the case of totalitarian regimes. Many intellectuals trumpeted economic development over democracy in undeveloped countries, and it was often difficult to find a defense of democracy’s benefits in public or academic settings.9 5 Interview with Ruth Wattenberg, former editor of the AFT’s American Educator and former coordinator of the Education for Democracy Project, December 16, 2011. 6 Interview with Bill Moyers, PBS, shown in the video presentation, “Albert Shanker: A Memorial Tribute,” American Federation of Teachers, 1997. 7 Interview for the video “AFT International Affairs,” shown at the 1990 AFT Convention in Boston, MA. 8 Ibid. 9 See, for example, “The Problem of the New Left” by Tom Kahn (Commentary, July 1966); “Political Terrorism: Hysteria on the Left” by Irving Howe (New York Times, April, 2, 1970); Détente and Confrontation: American-Soviet Relations from Nixon to Reagan by Raymond L. Garthoff (Brookings Institution Press, 1985); and “Theories of Political Development” a curriculum by Daniel Brumberg of Georgetown University http://www9.georgetown.edu/faculty/brumberg/govt778.pdf). Democracy’s Champion / 5 ___________________________________________ Shanker challenged these views. Democracy, in his estimation, offered the best possibility for achieving both economic development and freedom. He went further: he considered it a moral imperative for citizens of democratic countries both to safeguard their own civic and political institutions and to help those struggling for freedom and against tyranny, including in the Soviet bloc. If the government would not act on that imperative, he knew the union movement would. Shanker’s belief in public education was intertwined with his belief in democracy. All democratic societies support universal public education systems, with the aim of providing all children with a comprehensive education. By giving children a chance to learn and advance themselves, public education offers the best chance of creating a society in which equal opportunity is the rule and not the exception. Public education was thus an essential institution to be both safeguarded and improved. A weak public school system, Shanker argued, would result in greater economic stratification and political inequality.10 For his internationalist views, Shanker had an important framework: the AFL-CIO and George Meany, its president from 1955 to 1979. Meany adhered to and greatly expanded labor’s strong tradition of worker internationalism. The American Federation of Labor (AFL)’s first leader, Samuel Gompers, had played a key role in forming the International Labor Organization in 1919 and in making worker rights standards an integral part of international law. His successor, William Green, backed efforts to save Jewish and other trade unionists from fascist and communist repression.11 After World War II, as Green’s secretary-treasurer and then as his successor, George Meany presided over the American labor movement’s extensive international operation, which was fundamentally responsible for the reconstruction of Europe’s free trade union movement and for providing sustained support to free trade unions in the developing world. After the 1955 merger of the AFL and the Congress of Industrial Organizations to form the AFL-CIO, Meany, as president of the merged organization, expanded labor’s international reach with the creation of three regional institutes aimed at fostering free trade unions around the world: the African American Labor Center, American Institute for Free Labor Development, and Asian American Free Labor Institute. For Meany and his predecessors, worker rights were as indispensable to democracy as free markets were to capitalism in the eyes of businessmen.12 As Shanker became more involved in the AFL-CIO’s international work, he gained greater respect for its role in supporting worker rights and free trade unionism around the world. As president of the AFT, Shanker played an unusually active role in the union’s international trade secretariat, the International Federation of Free Teachers’ Unions (IFFTU).13 As a member of IFFTU’s executive board and then as president from 1981 to 1993, Shanker worked closely with IFFTU’s leaders and affiliates to increase the federation’s membership (from 5 million to 8 million), to strengthen its democratic identity, and to strengthen its support of free teacher unions in their struggles against repression. In the early 1990s, Shanker led the IFFTU in merger negotiations with a larger rival organization, the World Confederation of Organizations of the Teaching Professions (WCOTP), resulting in the creation of Education International (EI) 10 See Appendix I, Albert Shanker’s “Where We Stand” columns on international issues. 11 See, e.g., JLC collection and exhibit at the Tamiment Library, Robert Wagner Archives, Bobst Library (“Anti- Nazi Activities” in Introduction to the Collection). 12 See Chapters 5 (“Cold War”) and 19 (“Human Rights”), Robinson, Archie, “George Meany and His Times,” (Simon and Schuster, New York: 1981). 13 IFFTU was one of 12 autonomous international trade secretariats (ITSes) associated with the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU) that were organized around similar trades or services (metalworkers, construction trades, etc.). In 2006, the ICFTU merged with the Christian Democratic World Confederation of Labor to form the International Trade Union Confederation. ITSes now call themselves Global Union Federations (GUFs). Albert Shanker Institute / 6 ___________________________________________ in 1993.14 The 30-milllion-member EI today is the largest global union federation (GUF) in the international free trade union movement. But Albert Shanker’s influence on the global scene was broader than his organizational achievements. His leadership of successful strikes in New York City and his imprisonment twice for violating laws forbidding public sector walkouts were international news. European trade unionists and socialists respected an American “willing to go to jail for his trade union principles.”15 Over time, his stature gave his voice greater worldwide resonance than virtually any other contemporary labor leader except George Meany. His “Where We Stand” column, which appeared weekly in the New York Times for 27 years and covered union, education, and international issues, had mainly a domestic audience and focus, but it also enjoyed a large international readership. It was read in numerous countries by union leaders, businessmen, opinion and policy makers, education ministers, and even prime ministers.16 Within the United Federation of Teachers (UFT) and the AFT, the local and national unions Shanker led, he demanded that the leadership and staff attend meetings and conferences of the AFL-CIO on international affairs. Upon being elected AFT president, Shanker invited a wide range of international speakers to the union’s executive council meetings and AFT conventions—from Kurdish and South African resistance leaders to Soviet and Yugoslav dissidents; he implemented exchanges for AFT leaders with teacher unions abroad; and carried out assistance and training programs for unionists in other countries. In 1981, he created a separate international affairs department within the union, which became the largest international department among AFL-CIO affiliates. The department’s broad mix of programs—union development training, democracy promotion, civic education, AIDS awareness training, among others—has engaged AFT members at all levels in the international work of the union. It was involved in key democracy struggles where Shanker believed the labor movement had to play a part. Today, it continues to organize a wide range of leadership exchanges, training programs, and solidarity campaigns. Shanker also believed that the union movement had to be involved in U.S. foreign policy debates since union members had such a key stake in their outcome. He frequently used his “Where We Stand” column and the union’s publications to educate members and others on human rights issues, to give support to dissidents and democratic forces struggling against dictatorship, and to advocate on foreign and defense policy issues. On foreign policy, he developed a reputation as a hard-liner, or hawk, similar to that of the AFL-CIO. His views were part of what Rick Kahlenberg calls Shanker’s “tough liberalism.” Former AFT vice president Herb Magidson describes Shanker’s views as “muscular liberal internationalism,” meaning the advocacy of a strong defense against freedom’s enemies and the use of American power to foster freedom and democratic change.17 Shanker advocated these views in both political parties, but mostly the Democratic Party, which shared his pro- labor and liberal principles and where he had more influence. He also made sure labor’s voice was heard in important opinion and policymaking circles, like the Trilateral Commission, the Council on Foreign Relations, 14 Historically, the WCOTP, like its largest member, the National Education Association (NEA), had less of a trade union orientation than IFFTU and the AFT and it still included organizations dominated by administrators. WCOTP also maintained cordial relations with the communist-dominated teachers’ international federation, called FISE. In the merger negotiations, the two agreed to associate with the ICFTU and to have a strict requirements for democratic organization to qualify for membership (see chapter 9 for a full discussion on IFFTU and EI). 15 Interview with the former president of the German Teachers Union and former member of the executive board of IFFTU and EI (1981-97), Dieter Wunder, September 25, 2011. 16 Interviews with David Dorn, June 6, 2011, Eugenia Kemble, June 6, 2011, et. al. 17 Herb Magidson, “Defending Democracy: Albert Shanker Still Leads the Way,” American Educator (Summer 2008), 25-30.

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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.