http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/dimitrov/obituary.htm
Georgi Mikhailovitch Dimitrov was born on June 18, 1882, in
the town of Radomir, of a proletarian revolutionary family. When he was only 15
years old, the young Dimitrov, working as a compositor in a printshop, joined
the revolutionary movement and took an active part in the work of the oldest
Bulgarian trade union of printers.
In 1902, Dimitrov joined the Bulgarian Workers' Social
Democratic Party. He actively combated revisionism on the side of the
revolutionary Marxist wing of Tesnyaki led by Dimitri Blagoyev.
The self-sacrificing revolutionary struggle of Dimitrov
earned him the warm love of the revolutionary workers of Bulgaria, who, in
1905, elected him secretary of the Alliance of Revolutionary Trade Associations
of Bulgaria. In that post he remained right up to 1923, when that alliance was
disbanded by the fascists.
While leading the struggle of the Bulgarian proletariat,
Dimitrov displayed courage and staunchness in the revolutionary struggles, was
repeatedly arrested and persecuted. In the September armed uprising of 1923 in
Bulgaria he headed the Central Revolutionary Committee, set an example of
revolutionary fearlessness, unflinching staunchness and devotion to the cause
of the working class. For his leadership of the armed uprising in 1923 the fascist
court sentenced Dimitrov in his absence to death. In 1926, after the
provocative trial, engineered by the fascists, against the leadership of the
Communist Party, Dimitrov was again sentenced to death in his absence.
Compelled, in 1923, to emigrate from Bulgaria, Dimitrov led
the life of a professional revolutionary. He worked actively in the Executive
Committee of the Communist International.
In 1933, he was arrested in Berlin for revolutionary
activity. During the Leipzig Trial, Dimitrov became the standard-bearer of the
struggle against fascism and imperialist war. His heroic conduct in the court,
the words of wrath which he flung in the face of the fascists, exposing their
infamous provocation in connection with the Reichstag fire, unmasked the fascist
provocateurs and roused new millions of workers throughout the world to the
struggle against fascism.
In 1935, Dimitrov was elected General Secretary of the
Executive Committee of the Communist International. He waged a persistent
struggle for the creation and consolidation of the united proletarian and
popular front for the struggle against fascism, against the war which the
fascist rulers of Germany, Japan and Italy were preparing. He called untiringly
on the masses of the working people of all countries to rally around the
Communist Parties in order to bar the way to the Fascist aggressors.
Dimitrov did great work in the ranks of the international
Communist movement in forging the leading cadres of Communist Parties loyal to
the great teachings of Marxism-Leninism, to the principles of proletarian
internationalism, to the cause of the defense of the interests of the people's
masses in their respective countries.
During the Second World War, Georgi Dimitrov called on the
Communists to head the national-liberation anti-fascist movement, and
tirelessly worked at organizing all patriotic forces for the rout of the
fascist invaders. He led the struggle of the Bulgarian Workers' Party
(Communists) and all Bulgarian patriots who rose in arms against the German-fascist
invaders.
For his outstanding services in the struggle against fascism
he was, in 1945, awarded the Order of Lenin by the Presidium of the Supreme
Soviet of the U.S.S.R.
[…]
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