GIK
Introduction to the Group of International Communists
Group of International Communists, aka Group of Internationalist Communists (GIK) - Holland, 1926-?
Founded in 1926, the GIK was a group of left communists in Holland, whose ideas had been shaped by the experiences of the Russian and German Revolutions of 1917 and 1918.
Key texts: Fundamental principles of communist production and distribution
Members: Jan Appel
Links on libcom.org
GIK texts
Writings of Jan Appel
Autobiography of Jan Appel
GIK search results on libcom.org
Group of International Communists
Dutch left communist group set up in 1926 whose ideas were shaped by the outcomes of the 1917 Russian revolution and 1918 German revolution.
Appel, Jan, 1890-1985
A short autobiography of Jan Appel, aka Jan Arndt, a German libertarian communist and shipyard worker who most famously hijacked a steam ship to Russia after the German Revolution of 1918.
Appel's experiences during the 1918 Revolution drove him out of the Communist Party, and he subsequently helped found the more radical Communist Workers Party (KAPD).
Autobiography of Jan Appel
Jan Appel, 1890-1945, was a German socialist and shipyard worker whose experience of the 1918 Revolution, after which he hijacked a steam ship to Russia, drove him out of the Communist Party.
Joining the more radical Communist Workers Party (KAPD), he then moved to Holland, playing a role in the Dutch Resistance in World War II and and eventually co-founding the left-communist GIK.
By Jan Appel, 1966




