Abstract
Up until the late summer of 1923, the Arbeiterhilfe had articulated an international solidarity which incorporated Soviet Russia as one the most central focal points and recipients of the expressed international solidarity in Europe and the world. The Arbeiterhilfe’s change in direction in 1923 saw in effect a return to a form of classic working-class solidarity as the aim of international solidarity was no longer the saving or building of a socialist republic but the supporting of the German workers who had been thrown into an even deeper social despair due to Weimar Germany’s imminent economic, political and social collapse. This was the beginning of a vast international solidarity campaign organised to combat “Hunger in Germany.”
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