Winifred Utley (23 January 1898 – 21 January 1978), commonly known as Freda Utley, was an English scholar, political activist and best-selling author. After visiting the
Soviet Union in 1927 as a trade union activist, she joined the
Communist Party of Great Britain
The Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB) was the largest communist organisation in Britain and was founded in 1920 through a merger of several smaller Marxist groups. Many miners joined the CPGB in the 1926 general strike. In 1930, the CPG ...
in 1928. Later, married and living in Moscow, she quickly became disillusioned with communism. When her Russian husband, Arcadi Berdichevsky, was arrested in 1936, she escaped to England with her young son. (Her husband was executed in 1938.)
In 1939, the rest of her family moved to the United States, where she became a leading anticommunist author and activist.
[Professor D. A. Farnie]
Freda Utley, Crusader for Truth and Freedom
which is excerpt from Chapter 30 on Freda Utley in
Britain and Japan, Biographical Portraits
editor, Hugh Cortazzi, Volume 4, London
Japan Society
2002, 361–371. She became an American citizen in 1950.
Early life and work
Utley's father was involved with
George Bernard Shaw, the
Fabians, and labour struggles before becoming an
attorney
Attorney may refer to:
* Lawyer
** Attorney at law, in some jurisdictions
* Attorney, one who has power of attorney
* ''The Attorney'', a 2013 South Korean film
See also
* Attorney general, the principal legal officer of (or advisor to) a gove ...
, journalist and businessman. He was introduced to her mother by
Edward Aveling,
Karl Marx's translator and longtime partner of his daughter,
Eleanor. In her memoirs, Utley describes her early influences as "liberal, socialist and free-thinking, strongly colored by the poetry of revolt and liberty and legends, stories and romances of heroism and adventure."
[Freda Utley,]
Odyssey of a Liberal: Memoirs
Washington National Press, Inc., (1970), Chapter 1 and 2.
Utley was educated at a boarding school in
Switzerland
). Swiss law does not designate a ''capital'' as such, but the federal parliament and government are installed in Bern, while other federal institutions, such as the federal courts, are in other cities (Bellinzona, Lausanne, Luzern, Neuchâtel ...
, after which she returned to her native England to earn a B.A. degree followed by an M.A. degree in history (with
first class honours) at
King's College London
King's College London (informally King's or KCL) is a public research university located in London, England. King's was established by royal charter in 1829 under the patronage of King George IV and the Duke of Wellington. In 1836, King's ...
. The
UK General Strike of 1926 and what she calls the "betrayal" of the workers by the British Trade Union Council and the
Labour Party made her more favourable to communism. After visiting Russia as the vice-president of the University Labour Federation in 1927, she joined the British Communist Party (CPGB) in 1928.
[ Utley writes about her conversion: "It was a passion for the emancipation of mankind, not the blueprint of a planned society nor any mystical yearning to merge myself in a fellowship absolving me of personal responsibility, which both led me into the Communist fold, and caused me to leave it as soon as I learned that it meant submission to the most total tyranny which mankind has ever experienced."][
From 1926 to 1928, she was a research fellow at the London School of Economics. During this period she focused on labour and production issues in manufacturing, in her case, the textile industries of Lancashire, then beginning to face competition from operators in India and Japan.][ In 1928, she married Russian economist Arcadi Berdichevsky who had been working in England for Arcos, the Soviet trade mission.][Georgie Anne Geyer]
Son Solves Mystery of Father's Death in Soviet Gulag
Uexpress.Com
24 September 2007.[ Francis Beckett]
How the son of a British communist became a leading Washington conservative
'' The Guardian'' 4 November 2005. After a visit to the Soviet Union in 1928, the Communist International sent Berdichevsky and Freda Utley on missions to Siberia, China and Japan, where she lived for nine months. In 1931, she published her first book, ''Lancashire and the Far East'' which established her as an authority on the subject of international competition in the cotton trades.[
Upon her return to Moscow with her husband, she became disillusioned with the system's inability to provide decent medical care or housing as well as the corrupt, hierarchical Communist Party system.][Freda Utley]
The Dream We Lost: The Soviet Union Then and Now
John Day Company, New York (1940), Chapters 3 and 4. Living in Moscow from 1930 to 1936, she worked as a translator, editor and a senior scientific worker at the Academy of Sciences' Institute of World Economy and Politics.[ During this time she also wrote, from a Marxist perspective, ''Japan's Feet of Clay'', an exposé of the Japanese textile industries that also attacked Western support for Japanese imperialism.][ The book was an international bestseller, translated into five languages, and solidified her credentials in communist circles.][
On 14 April 1936, Soviet police arrested her husband, then the head of an import/export government group. Unable to aid him, she left soon after for England with her young son Jon, using British names and passports.][ There, she mobilized important leftist friends like Shaw, Russell and Harold Laski to try to find Arcadi and even sent a letter directly to Soviet leader Joseph Stalin. Utley tried to get CPGB leader Harry Pollitt to intercede with Moscow on behalf of her Russian husband, but Pollitt refused.] She received two postcards from Arcadi reporting his five years' sentence to an Arctic Circle
The Arctic Circle is one of the two polar circles, and the most northerly of the five major circles of latitude as shown on maps of Earth. Its southern equivalent is the Antarctic Circle.
The Arctic Circle marks the southernmost latitude at w ...
prison for alleged association with Trotskyists. (She herself had flirted with Trotskyism.)
In 1956, she learned he had died on 30 March 1938. It would not be until 2004 that her son Jon Basil Utley would learn from the Russian government
The Government of Russia exercises executive power in the Russian Federation. The members of the government are the prime minister, the deputy prime ministers, and the federal ministers. It has its legal basis in the Constitution of the Russia ...
the details of his death by firing squad for leading a hunger strike at the Vorkuta prison labour camp. He was "rehabilitated" posthumously in 1961 under post-Stalin rehabilitation laws.
In 1938, Utley published two books on Japan's military attacks on China at the beginning of the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945). ''Japan's Gamble in China'', with an introduction by Laski, described Japan as "a police state, governed by a bureaucracy wedded to a plutocracy." The ''News Chronicle'' made her a war correspondent and she spent three months in China in 1938, making two trips to the front line. Her 1939 book ''China at War'' idealized the Chinese communists. The work aroused considerable popular sympathy for China and helped foment poor relations with Japan prior to World War II. Her goal was to make for herself an international reputation and prove her communist credentials to free her husband.[ Author Francis Beckett includes a chapter on Utley's ordeals in his 2004 book ''Stalin's British Victims''.
]
Anticommunism
Utley and her son and mother moved to the United States in 1939. Believing Arcadi to be dead, she expressed, in the 1940s, her disgust with communism and the Soviet Union in her book ''The Dream We Lost'', later published as ''Lost Illusions''. Bertrand Russell wrote the introduction: "I knew Freda Utley first when she was in the process of becoming a Communist; I continued to know her through the stages of her disenchantment, the tragedy of her husband's arrest, and the despair induced by the failure of all her efforts to procure his release."[ Utley described her work as emanating from "the only Western writer who had known Russia both from inside and from below, sharing some of the hardships and all the fears of the forcibly silenced Russian people."
In a review, author Pearl Buck wrote: "It is a strongly unassailable indictment of Russian Communism. It is a strongly dramatic story and one interesting enough to make a major novel, the story of a brilliant mind, rigorously truthful in its working".][ Communist publishers and ]intelligentsia
The intelligentsia is a status class composed of the university-educated people of a society who engage in the complex mental labours by which they critique, shape, and lead in the politics, policies, and culture of their society; as such, the in ...
in both Britain and the US tried to discredit Utley.[ In the posthumously published book ''Reagan, In His Own Hand: The Writings of Ronald Reagan That Reveal His Revolutionary Vision for America'', ]Ronald Reagan
Ronald Wilson Reagan ( ; February 6, 1911June 5, 2004) was an American politician, actor, and union leader who served as the 40th president of the United States from 1981 to 1989. He also served as the 33rd governor of California from 1967 ...
's speechwriter wrote about Utley that "many of the intellectuals didn't want to hear what she had to say. She had impressive academic credentials when she came to the U.S. but publishers and the academy closed doors against her. She understood all too well. She had tried communism and learned its falseness. She said only those 'who have never fully committed themselves to the communist cause' can continue to believe in it."
In 1940, Guido Baracchi
Guido is a given name Latinised from the Old High German name Wido. It originated in Medieval Italy. Guido later became a male first name in Austria, Germany, the Low Countries, Scandinavia, Spain, Portugal, Latin America and Switzerland. The mea ...
, a scholar, communist and labor advocate, revealed a letter Utley had written to a friend in 1938: I have not pretended to be a Stalinist but have kept my mouth shut about Russia until now. Naturally I have no illusions left—nor had any before they took Arcadi. I am not a Trotskyist as I have become convinced that all dictatorships are much the same and that power corrupts everyone. Without democracy there can be no real socialism. But I fear the world is progressing towards 'National Socialism' on the Russian-German model. Little difference between them."[Murder Will Out, An open letter to members of the Communist Party]
Guido Baracchi, 1940 o
Marxist.Org
In 1945, '' Reader's Digest'' sent Freda Utley to China as a correspondent. The trip resulted in ''Last Chance in China'', which held that Western policies, especially cutting off armaments to the Chinese Nationalists, favored the Chinese Communist Party victory. She began a crusade to name those who "lost China".[
In 1948, '' Reader's Digest'' posted Utley to (Germany), resulting in Utley's next book, ''The High Cost of Vengeance'' which criticizes as war crimes ]Allied
An alliance is a relationship among people, groups, or states that have joined together for mutual benefit or to achieve some common purpose, whether or not explicit agreement has been worked out among them. Members of an alliance are called ...
occupation policies, including the expulsion of millions of Germans from European nations after World War II and the Morgenthau plan. She also accused the United States of torture of German captives, the Allied use of slave labour in France and the Soviet Union and criticized the Nuremberg Trials legal processes.[ Utley's book was excoriated by '' The New York Times'' but was according to her own publisher praised by Reinhold Niebuhr in '' The Nation'' magazine.
The last of her studies of the Far East, ''The China Story'', was published in 1951 and was a best seller for several months. '' Time'' magazine called Utley "a seasoned, firsthand observer of China events." Following the ]Suez Canal Crisis
The Suez Crisis, or the Second Arab–Israeli war, also called the Tripartite Aggression ( ar, العدوان الثلاثي, Al-ʿUdwān aṯ-Ṯulāṯiyy) in the Arab world and the Sinai War in Israel,Also known as the Suez War or 1956 Wa ...
of 1956, Utley spent six months in the Middle East and published her last book on international affairs ''Will the Middle East Go West?'' In it, she warned that America's support of Israel would drive the Arab countries into the waiting arms of the communists.[ In 1970, Utley published the first volume of her autobiography ''Odyssey of a Liberal'' which recorded her early experiences in Fabian Society circles, education, marriage, life in the Soviet Union and travels up until 1945. She never published the second volume.][
Upon her death in 1978, ''Time'' magazine published an obituary of Utley. '' The New York Times'' mentioned a gathering of leading conservatives to pay tribute to Utley ten years after her death. In 2005, her son, Jon Utley, endowed the Freda Utley Prize for Advancing Liberty, administered by the Atlas Economic Research Foundation. Ten thousand dollars a year is bestowed upon overseas think tanks that promote economic liberalism and minimal government.][
]
Controversies
Freda Utley's bestseller ''Japan's Feet of Clay'' was criticized for factual inaccuracies and an exaggerated negative view of the Japanese people and a misinterpretion of the class system. The Japanese government held her responsible for the initiation of an American boycott of Japanese goods and banned the book and Utley from Japan.[ Nevertheless, ]Stanford University
Stanford University, officially Leland Stanford Junior University, is a private research university in Stanford, California. The campus occupies , among the largest in the United States, and enrolls over 17,000 students. Stanford is consider ...
keeps "Freda Utley collection's coverage of sociopolitical conditions in interwar Japan and the Sino-Japanese conflict" in its Japanese collection.
During the late 1930s and 1940s, Utley supported the 1938 Munich Agreement with Adolf Hitler because she thought the Soviet Union was more dangerous than Hitler and doubted the US and Britain could defeat the German war machine.[ Also, she asserted that most of the people in the ]Sudetenland
The Sudetenland ( , ; Czech and sk, Sudety) is the historical German name for the northern, southern, and western areas of former Czechoslovakia which were inhabited primarily by Sudeten Germans. These German speakers had predominated in the ...
wanted to be part of Germany instead of Czechoslovakia, as also asserted by Nazi Germany. Once in America, she sympathized with the antiwar America First Committee. In 1941, she reached a mass '' Reader's Digest'' audience calling for a negotiated peace between (Germany) and Britain. She also opposed the demand for Germany's unconditional surrender.[
Knowing her views were rooted in opposition to the Soviet Union, the Friends of the Soviet Union tried for four years to have her deported. Finally, in 1944, Representative ]Jerry Voorhis
Horace Jeremiah "Jerry" Voorhis (April 6, 1901 – September 11, 1984) was a Democratic politician and educator from California who served five terms in the United States House of Representatives from 1937 to 1947, representing the 12th ...
passed a private bill for "the relief of Freda Utley" from the 1940 Alien Registration Act
The Alien Registration Act, popularly known as the Smith Act, 76th United States Congress, 3d session, ch. 439, , is a United States federal statute that was enacted on June 28, 1940. It set criminal penalties for advocating the overthrow of th ...
.[
]
Utley's criticisms of Allied policies in her book ''The High Cost of Vengeance'' from 1949 included charges of "crimes against humanity
Crimes against humanity are widespread or systemic acts committed by or on behalf of a ''de facto'' authority, usually a state, that grossly violate human rights. Unlike war crimes, crimes against humanity do not have to take place within the ...
":
Other statements like: "There sno crime that the Nazis committed that we or our allies did not also commit ourselves" caused controversy. Utley wrote in ''The High Cost of Vengeance'': "I had referred to our obliteration bombing, the mass expropriation and expulsion from their homes of twelve million Germans on account of their race; the starving of the Germans during the first years of the occupation; the use of prisoners as slave labourers; the Russian concentration camps, and the looting perpetrated by Americans as well as Russians." In her 1993 book ''Denying the Holocaust: The Growing Assault on Truth and Memory'', the American historian Deborah Lipstadt critically examines the dissemination and impact of such arguments by Utley and other "revisionists", claiming that "the argument that the United States committed atrocities as great, if not greater, than those committed by Germany has become a fulcrum of contemporary Holocaust denial."
In the 1950s, Utley helped Senator Joseph McCarthy
Joseph Raymond McCarthy (November 14, 1908 – May 2, 1957) was an American politician who served as a Republican U.S. Senator from the state of Wisconsin from 1947 until his death in 1957. Beginning in 1950, McCarthy became the most visi ...
compile his lists of highly placed people suspected of communist sympathies.[ She gave evidence against China expert Owen Lattimore to the Tydings Committee and evidence against alleged "]fellow traveler
The term ''fellow traveller'' (also ''fellow traveler'') identifies a person who is intellectually sympathetic to the ideology of a political organization, and who co-operates in the organization's politics, without being a formal member of that o ...
s" (communist sympathizers) like Asian scholar J. K. Fairbank and '' Red Star Over China'' author Edgar Snow to other congressional committees. In the unpublished second volume of her autobiography, she held that McCarthy had been "captured by the forces of the ultra-right and thereby led to destruction."[
]
Books
* ''Lancashire and the Far East''. Allen & Unwin (1931)
*Published under the pseudonym Y.Z. ''From Moscow To Samarkand''. Hogarth Press (1934)
* ''Japan's Feet of Clay''. Faber & Faber, London (1937)
* ''Japan's Gamble in China''. Faber & Faber, London (1938)
* ''China at War''. John Day Company, New York (1938)
* ''The Dream We Lost: The Soviet Union Then and Now''. John Day Company, New York (1940)
* ''The High Cost of Vengeance'', Henry Regnery Company, Chicago, (1948) (translated to German as ''Kostspielige Rache'')
* ''Last Chance in China''. Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill, (1948)
* ''Lost Illusion'' (revision of ''The Dream We Lost''), George Allen & Unwin Ltd, (1948)
* ''The China Story''. Henry Regnery Company, Chicago, (1951)
* ''Will the Middle East Go West?''. Henry Regnery Company, Chicago, (1956)
* ''Odyssey of a Liberal: Memoirs''. Washington National Press, Inc., (1970)
References
External links
*
Freedoms' Foundation Freda Utley Collection on Freedom and Mass Communication
Freda Utley's Living Legacy
Atlas Foundation
web page.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Utley, Freda
1898 births
1978 deaths
Alumni of King's College London
American political writers
Communist Party of Great Britain members
British expatriates in the Soviet Union
English communists
English political writers
Writers about the Soviet Union
Writers about China
Writers about communism
People educated at Prior's Field School
20th-century British women writers
20th-century British non-fiction writers
Women political writers
American anti-communists