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Resistance movement

A resistance movement is an organized group of people that tries to resist the government or an occupying power, causing disruption and unrest in civil order and stability. Such a movement may seek to achieve its goals through either the use of nonviolent resistance (sometimes called civil resistance), or the use of force, whether armed or unarmed. In many cases, as for example in the United States during the American Revolution,[1] or in Norway in the Second World War, a resistance movement may employ both violent and non-violent methods, usually operating under different organizations and acting in different phases or geographical areas within a country.[2]

Etymology

The Oxford English Dictionary records use of the word "resistance" in the sense of organised opposition to an invader from 1862.[3] The modern usage of the term "Resistance" became widespread from the self-designation of many movements during World War II, especially the French Resistance. The term is still strongly linked[by whom?] to the context of the events of 1939–45, and particularly to opposition movements in Axis-occupied countries. Using the term "resistance" to designate a movement meeting the definition prior to World War II might be considered by some[who?] to be an anachronism. However, such movements existed prior to World War II (albeit often called by different names), and there have been many after it – for example in struggles against colonialism and foreign military occupations. "Resistance" has become[when?] a generic term that has been used to designate underground resistance movements in any country.

Background

 
Libyan commander Omar Mukhtar, popularly known as the "Lion of the Desert", led the Libyan Mujahidin in a decade-long resistance campaign against the imperialist forces of Fascist Italy during 1923-1932

Resistance movements can include any irregular armed force that rises up against an enforced or established authority, government, or administration. This frequently includes groups that consider themselves to be resisting tyranny or dictatorship. Some resistance movements are underground organizations engaged in a struggle for national liberation in a country under military occupation or totalitarian domination. Tactics of resistance movements against a constituted authority range from nonviolent resistance and civil disobedience, to guerrilla warfare and terrorism, or even conventional warfare if the resistance movement is powerful enough. Any government facing violent acts from a resistance movement usually condemns such acts as terrorism, even when such attacks target only the military or security forces. Resistance during World War II was mainly dedicated to fighting the Axis occupiers. Germany itself also had an anti-Nazi German resistance movement in this period. Although the United Kingdom did not suffer invasion in World War II, preparations were made for a British resistance movement in the event of a German invasion (see Auxiliary Units).

Geographies of resistance

 
Members of the Norweigian resistance movement Milorg, engaged in supply raids, espionage as well as the sabotage of German heavy water production during WW2

When geographies of resistance are discussed, it is often taken for granted that resistance takes place where domination, power, or oppression occurs and so resistance is often understood as something that always opposes to power or domination. However, some scholars believe and argue that looking at resistance in relation to only power and domination does not provide a full understanding of the actual nature of resistance. Not all power, domination, or oppression leads to resistance, and not all cases of resistance are against or to oppose what is categorized as "power". In fact, they believe that resistance has its own characteristics and spatialities. In Steve Pile's (1997) "Opposition, Political Identities and Spaces of Resistance," geographies of resistance show:

That people are positioned differently in unequal and multiple power relationships, that more or less powerful people are active in the constitution of unfolding relationships of authority, meaning and identity, that these activities are contingent, ambiguous and awkwardly situated, but that resistance seeks to occupy, deploy and create alternative spatialities from those defined through oppression and exploitation. From this perspective, assumptions about the domination/resistance couplet become questionable.

— Steve Pile, 1996: 3

We can better understand resistance by accounting different perspectives and by breaking the presumptions that resistance is always against power. In fact, resistance should be understood not only in relations to domination and authority, but also through other experiences, such as "desire and anger, capacity and ability, happiness and fear, dreaming and forgetting",[4] meaning that resistance is not always about the dominated versus the dominator, the exploited versus the exploiter, or the oppressed versus the oppressor. There are various forms of resistance for various reasons, which then can be, again, classified as violent and nonviolent resistance (and "other" which is unclear).

Different geographical spaces can also make different forms of resistance possible or impossible and more effective or less effective. Furthermore, in order to understand any resistance – its capacity to achieve its objective effectively, its success or failure – we need to take closely into account many variables, such as political identities, cultural identities, class, race, gender and so on. The reason is that these variations can define the nature and outcome of resistance. Harvey (1993),[citation needed] who looked at resistance in relations to capitalist economic exploitation, took on a fire accident happened in the Imperial Foods chicken processing plant in Hamlet, North Carolina in 1991, in which 20 of 200 workers were killed and 56 were injured due to poor working conditions and protections. He compared this accident with a similar fire accident at Triangle Shirtwaist Company, New York, 1911, killing 146 workers, which caused a labor resistance by 100,000 people.[5] He argued that no resistance took place in response to the fire accident in Hamlet because most of the people who died there were black and women workers, and he believed that not only class but also other identities such as race, gender, and sexuality were important factors in understanding nature and outcome of resistance. For an effective resistance, he proposed that four tasks should be undertaken:

First, social justice must be defined from the perspective of the oppressed; second, a hierarchy of the oppressions has to be defined…..; third, political actions need to be understood and undertaken in terms of their situatedness and position in dynamic power relations: and finally, an epistemology capable of telling the difference between different differences has to be developed.

There are many forms of resistance in relations to different power dominations and actors. Some resistance takes place in order to oppose, change, or reform the exploitation of the capitalist economic systems and the capitals, while other resistance takes place against the state or authority in power. Moreover, some other resistance takes place in order to resist or question the social/culture norms or discourse or in order to challenge a global trend called "globalization". For example, LGBT social movements is an example of resistance that challenges and tries to reform the existing cultural norms in many societies. Resistance can also be mapped in various scales ranging from local to national to regional and to global spaces. We can look at a big-scale resistance movement such as anti-globalization movement that tries to resist the global trend of capitalist economic system. Or we can look at the internal resistance to apartheid, which took place at national level. Most, if not all, social movements can be considered as some forms of resistance.

Not all resistance takes place in physical spaces or geographies but in "other spaces" as well. Some resistance happens in the form of Protest Art or in the form of music. Music can be used and has been used as a tool or space to resist certain oppression or domination. Gray-Rosendale, L. (2001) put it this way:[6]

Music acts as a rhetorical force that sanctions the construction of the boys' new black urban subjectivities that both challenge urban experience and yet give voice to it...music contributes a way to avoid physical and psychological immobility and to resist economic and cultural adaptation...and challenges the social injustice prevalent within the Northern economy.

— Gray-Rosendale, 2001: 154–56

In the age of advanced IT and mass consumption of social media, resistance can also occur in the cyberspace. The Aboriginal Health and Medical Research Council of NSW's Tobacco Resistance and Control (A-TRAC) team created a Facebook page to help promote anti-smoking campaign and rise awareness for its members.[7] Sometimes, resistance takes place in people's minds and ideology or in people's "inner spaces". For example, sometimes people have to struggle within or fight against their inner spaces, with their consciousness and, sometimes, with their fear before they can resist in the physical spaces. In other cases, people sometimes simply resist to certain ideology, belief, or culture norms within their minds. These kinds of resistance are less visible but very fundamental parts of all forms of resistance.

Controversy regarding definition

On the lawfulness of armed resistance movements in international law, there has been a dispute between states since at least 1899, when the first major codification of the laws of war in the form of a series of international treaties took place. In the Preamble to the 1899 Hague Convention II on Land War, the Martens Clause was introduced as a compromise wording for the dispute between the Great Powers who considered francs-tireurs to be unlawful combatants subject to execution on capture and smaller states who maintained that they should be considered lawful combatants.[8][9]

More recently the 1977 Protocol Additional to the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949, and relating to the Protection of Victims of International Armed Conflicts, referred in Article 1. Paragraph 4 to armed conflicts "... in which peoples are fighting against colonial domination and alien occupation and against racist regimes..." This phraseology, according USA that refused to ratify the Protocol, contains many ambiguities that cloud the issue of who is or is not a legitimate combatant:[10] ultimately, in US Government opinion the distinction is just a political judgment.

By the way, some definitions of resistance movement have proved controversial. Hence depending on the perspective of a state's government, a resistance movement may or may not be labelled a terrorist group based on whether the members of a resistance movement are considered lawful or unlawful combatants and whether they are recognized as having a right to resist occupation.[11]

According to Joint Publication 1-02, the United States Department of Defense defines a resistance movement as "an organized effort by some portion of the civil population of a country to resist the legally established government or an occupying power and to disrupt civil order and stability". In strict military terminology, a resistance movement is simply that; it seeks to resist (change) the policies of a government or occupying power. This may be accomplished through violent or non-violent means. In this view, a resistance movement is specifically limited to changing the nature of current power, not to overthrow it; and the correct[according to whom?] military term for removing or overthrowing a government is an insurgency. However, in reality many resistance movements have aimed to displace a particular ruler, especially if that ruler has gained or retained power illegally.

Freedom fighter

 
A group of Afghan mujahideen, who were considered to be freedom fighters by Western nations, October 1987
 
Mugshot of Ants "the Terrible" Kaljurand, a famous Estonian freedom fighter and nazi-collaborator

Freedom fighter is another term for those engaged in a struggle to achieve political freedom for themselves or obtain freedom for others.[12] Though the literal meaning of the words could include "anyone who fights for the cause of freedom", in common use it may be restricted to those who are actively involved in an armed rebellion, rather than those who campaign for freedom by peaceful means, or those who fight violently for the freedom of others outside the context of an uprising (though this title may be applied in its literal sense)

Generally speaking, freedom fighters are people who use physical force to cause a change in the political and or social order. Notable examples include Umkhonto we Sizwe in South Africa, the Sons of Liberty in the American Revolution, the Irish Republican Army in Ireland and Northern Ireland, the Eritrean People's Liberation Front, and the National Resistance Army in Uganda, which were considered freedom fighters by supporters. However, a person who is campaigning for freedom through peaceful means may still be classed as a freedom fighter, though in common usage they are called political activists, as in the case of the Black Consciousness Movement. In India, "Freedom fighter" is an officially recognized category by the Indian government covering those who took part in the country's independence movement; people in this category (can also include dependant family members)[13] get pensions and other benefits like special railway counters.[14]

People described as freedom fighters are often also called assassins, rebels, insurgents or terrorists. This leads to the aphorism "one man's terrorist is another man's freedom fighter".[15] The degree to which this occurs depends on a variety of factors specific to the struggle in which a given freedom fighter group is engaged.

During the Cold War, the term freedom fighter was first used with reference to the Hungarian rebels in 1956.[16] Ronald Reagan picked up the term to explain America's support of rebels in countries controlled by communist states or otherwise perceived to be under the influence of the Soviet Union, including the Contras in Nicaragua, UNITA in Angola and the multi-factional mujahideen in Afghanistan.[16]

In the media, the BBC tries to avoid the phrases "terrorist" or "freedom fighter", except in attributed quotes, in favor of more neutral terms such as "militant", "guerrilla", "assassin", "insurgent", "rebel", "paramilitary", or "militia".[17]

Common weapons

Partisans often use captured weapons taken from their enemies, or weapons that have been stolen or smuggled in. During the Cold War, partisans often received arms from either NATO or Warsaw Pact member states. Where partisan resources are stretched, improvised weapons are also deployed.

Examples of resistance movements

The following examples are of groups that have been considered or would identify themselves as groups. These are mostly, but not exclusively, of armed resistance movements. For movements and phases of activity involving non-violent methods, see civil resistance and nonviolent resistance.

Pre–20th century

Pre–World War II

World War II

Post–World War II

Africa

East Asia, Southeast Asia, and Oceania

Europe

Middle East

Indian subcontinent

Western hemisphere

Notable individuals in resistance movements

World War II

Other resistance movements and figures

See also

Citations

  1. ^ "The often-overlooked nonviolent roots of the American Revolution". pri.org. July 4, 2016.
  2. ^ On the relation between military and civil resistance in occupied Norway 1940–45, see Magne Skodvin, "Norwegian Non-violent Resistance during the German Occupation", in Adam Roberts (ed.), The Strategy of Civilian Defence: Non-violent Resistance to Aggression, Faber, London, 1967, pp. 136–53. (Also published as Civilian Resistance as a National Defense, Harrisburg, US: Stackpole Books, 1968; and, with a new Introduction on "Czechoslovakia and Civilian Defence", as Civilian Resistance as a National Defence, Harmondsworth, UK/Baltimore, US: Penguin Books, 1969. ISBN 0-14-021080-6.)
  3. ^ "resistance". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.) "W. H. Jervis Hist. France v. §6. 65 Witikind became the hero of the Saxon resistance."
  4. ^ Steve Pile (1997), "Opposition, political identities and spaces of resistance", p. 3.
  5. ^ Pile (1997), "Opposition, political identities and spaces of resistance", pp. 5–7.
  6. ^ Gray-Rosendale, L. and Gruber, S. (2001), Alternative Rhetorics: challenges to the rhetorical tradition. New York: State University of New York Press. pp. 154–56.
  7. ^ Michelle Hughes, "Social media and tobacco resistance control" 2014-01-16 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 1 September 2013.
  8. ^ Rupert Ticehurst (1997) in his footnote 1 cites The life and works of Martens as detailed by V. Pustogarov, "Fyodor Fyodorovich Martens (1845–1909) – A Humanist of Modern Times", International Review of the Red Cross (IRRC), No. 312, May–June 1996, pp. 300–14.
  9. ^ Ticehurst (1997) in his footnote 2 cites F. Kalshoven, Constraints on the Waging of War, Dordrecht: Martinus Nijhoff, 1987, p. 14.
  10. ^ Gardam (1993), p. 91.
  11. ^ Khan, Ali (Washburn University – School of Law). "A Theory of International Terrorism", Connecticut Law Review, vol. 19, p. 945, 1987.
  12. ^ Merriam-Webster definition
  13. ^ PTI (18 August 2016). "Pension of freedom fighters hiked by Rs 5,000". The Hindu Business Line. Retrieved 23 February 2017.
  14. ^ Lisa Mitchell (2009). Language, Emotion, and Politics in South India: The Making of a Mother Tongue. Indiana University Press. p. 193. ISBN 978-0-253-35301-6.
  15. ^ Gerald Seymour, Harry's Game, 1975.
  16. ^ a b Garthoff, Raymond L. (1994). The Great Transition: American-Soviet Relations and the End of the Cold War. Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution. pp. 18–19, 270–271. ISBN 0-8157-3060-8.
  17. ^ . BBC Editorial Guidelines and Guidance. BBC Editorial Team. Archived from the original on 1 July 2019. Retrieved 6 July 2018.
  18. ^ Perry, Simon (2011). . Eugene, Oregon: Wipf and Stock. ISBN 978-1-60899-659-9. Archived from the original on 2019-08-03. Retrieved 2022-01-02.
  19. ^ Bartlett, A Military History of Ireland
  20. ^ Willey, K., When the Sky Fell Down: The Destruction of the Tribes of the Sydney Region, 1788–1850s, Collins, Sydney, 1979
  21. ^ Collins, D., An Account of the English Colony in New South Wales, Vol. 1, Cadell and Davies, London, 1798.
  22. ^ "Hezbollah: A State Within a State - by Hussain Abdul-Hussain". Hudson Institute. Retrieved October 3, 2020.
  23. ^ Hanaini, Abdalhakim; Ahmad, Abdul Rahim Bin (July 6, 2016). "Objectives, Mechanisms and Obstacles of Hamas External Relations - Hanaini - Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences". Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences. 7 (4): 485. Retrieved October 3, 2020.

General references

  • Gardam, Judith Gail (1993). Non-combatant Immunity as a Norm of International Humanitarian, Martinus Nijhoff. ISBN 0-7923-2245-2.
  • Ticehurst, Rupert. "The Martens Clause and the Laws of Armed Conflict" 30 April 1997, International Review of the Red Cross no. 317, pp. 125–34. ISSN 1560-7755

External links

  •   Quotations related to Resistance movement at Wikiquote

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template message A resistance movement is an organized group of people that tries to resist the government or an occupying power causing disruption and unrest in civil order and stability Such a movement may seek to achieve its goals through either the use of nonviolent resistance sometimes called civil resistance or the use of force whether armed or unarmed In many cases as for example in the United States during the American Revolution 1 or in Norway in the Second World War a resistance movement may employ both violent and non violent methods usually operating under different organizations and acting in different phases or geographical areas within a country 2 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Background 3 Geographies of resistance 4 Controversy regarding definition 5 Freedom fighter 6 Common weapons 7 Examples of resistance movements 7 1 Pre 20th century 7 2 Pre World War II 7 3 World War II 7 4 Post World War II 7 4 1 Africa 7 4 2 East Asia Southeast Asia and Oceania 7 4 3 Europe 7 4 4 Middle East 7 4 5 Indian subcontinent 7 4 6 Western hemisphere 8 Notable individuals in resistance movements 8 1 World War II 8 2 Other resistance movements and figures 9 See also 10 Citations 11 General references 12 External linksEtymology EditThe Oxford English Dictionary records use of the word resistance in the sense of organised opposition to an invader from 1862 3 The modern usage of the term Resistance became widespread from the self designation of many movements during World War II especially the French Resistance The term is still strongly linked by whom to the context of the events of 1939 45 and particularly to opposition movements in Axis occupied countries Using the term resistance to designate a movement meeting the definition prior to World War II might be considered by some who to be an anachronism However such movements existed prior to World War II albeit often called by different names and there have been many after it for example in struggles against colonialism and foreign military occupations Resistance has become when a generic term that has been used to designate underground resistance movements in any country Background Edit Libyan commander Omar Mukhtar popularly known as the Lion of the Desert led the Libyan Mujahidin in a decade long resistance campaign against the imperialist forces of Fascist Italy during 1923 1932 Resistance movements can include any irregular armed force that rises up against an enforced or established authority government or administration This frequently includes groups that consider themselves to be resisting tyranny or dictatorship Some resistance movements are underground organizations engaged in a struggle for national liberation in a country under military occupation or totalitarian domination Tactics of resistance movements against a constituted authority range from nonviolent resistance and civil disobedience to guerrilla warfare and terrorism or even conventional warfare if the resistance movement is powerful enough Any government facing violent acts from a resistance movement usually condemns such acts as terrorism even when such attacks target only the military or security forces Resistance during World War II was mainly dedicated to fighting the Axis occupiers Germany itself also had an anti Nazi German resistance movement in this period Although the United Kingdom did not suffer invasion in World War II preparations were made for a British resistance movement in the event of a German invasion see Auxiliary Units Geographies of resistance Edit Members of the Norweigian resistance movement Milorg engaged in supply raids espionage as well as the sabotage of German heavy water production during WW2 When geographies of resistance are discussed it is often taken for granted that resistance takes place where domination power or oppression occurs and so resistance is often understood as something that always opposes to power or domination However some scholars believe and argue that looking at resistance in relation to only power and domination does not provide a full understanding of the actual nature of resistance Not all power domination or oppression leads to resistance and not all cases of resistance are against or to oppose what is categorized as power In fact they believe that resistance has its own characteristics and spatialities In Steve Pile s 1997 Opposition Political Identities and Spaces of Resistance geographies of resistance show That people are positioned differently in unequal and multiple power relationships that more or less powerful people are active in the constitution of unfolding relationships of authority meaning and identity that these activities are contingent ambiguous and awkwardly situated but that resistance seeks to occupy deploy and create alternative spatialities from those defined through oppression and exploitation From this perspective assumptions about the domination resistance couplet become questionable Steve Pile 1996 3 We can better understand resistance by accounting different perspectives and by breaking the presumptions that resistance is always against power In fact resistance should be understood not only in relations to domination and authority but also through other experiences such as desire and anger capacity and ability happiness and fear dreaming and forgetting 4 meaning that resistance is not always about the dominated versus the dominator the exploited versus the exploiter or the oppressed versus the oppressor There are various forms of resistance for various reasons which then can be again classified as violent and nonviolent resistance and other which is unclear Different geographical spaces can also make different forms of resistance possible or impossible and more effective or less effective Furthermore in order to understand any resistance its capacity to achieve its objective effectively its success or failure we need to take closely into account many variables such as political identities cultural identities class race gender and so on The reason is that these variations can define the nature and outcome of resistance Harvey 1993 citation needed who looked at resistance in relations to capitalist economic exploitation took on a fire accident happened in the Imperial Foods chicken processing plant in Hamlet North Carolina in 1991 in which 20 of 200 workers were killed and 56 were injured due to poor working conditions and protections He compared this accident with a similar fire accident at Triangle Shirtwaist Company New York 1911 killing 146 workers which caused a labor resistance by 100 000 people 5 He argued that no resistance took place in response to the fire accident in Hamlet because most of the people who died there were black and women workers and he believed that not only class but also other identities such as race gender and sexuality were important factors in understanding nature and outcome of resistance For an effective resistance he proposed that four tasks should be undertaken First social justice must be defined from the perspective of the oppressed second a hierarchy of the oppressions has to be defined third political actions need to be understood and undertaken in terms of their situatedness and position in dynamic power relations and finally an epistemology capable of telling the difference between different differences has to be developed There are many forms of resistance in relations to different power dominations and actors Some resistance takes place in order to oppose change or reform the exploitation of the capitalist economic systems and the capitals while other resistance takes place against the state or authority in power Moreover some other resistance takes place in order to resist or question the social culture norms or discourse or in order to challenge a global trend called globalization For example LGBT social movements is an example of resistance that challenges and tries to reform the existing cultural norms in many societies Resistance can also be mapped in various scales ranging from local to national to regional and to global spaces We can look at a big scale resistance movement such as anti globalization movement that tries to resist the global trend of capitalist economic system Or we can look at the internal resistance to apartheid which took place at national level Most if not all social movements can be considered as some forms of resistance Not all resistance takes place in physical spaces or geographies but in other spaces as well Some resistance happens in the form of Protest Art or in the form of music Music can be used and has been used as a tool or space to resist certain oppression or domination Gray Rosendale L 2001 put it this way 6 Music acts as a rhetorical force that sanctions the construction of the boys new black urban subjectivities that both challenge urban experience and yet give voice to it music contributes a way to avoid physical and psychological immobility and to resist economic and cultural adaptation and challenges the social injustice prevalent within the Northern economy Gray Rosendale 2001 154 56 In the age of advanced IT and mass consumption of social media resistance can also occur in the cyberspace The Aboriginal Health and Medical Research Council of NSW s Tobacco Resistance and Control A TRAC team created a Facebook page to help promote anti smoking campaign and rise awareness for its members 7 Sometimes resistance takes place in people s minds and ideology or in people s inner spaces For example sometimes people have to struggle within or fight against their inner spaces with their consciousness and sometimes with their fear before they can resist in the physical spaces In other cases people sometimes simply resist to certain ideology belief or culture norms within their minds These kinds of resistance are less visible but very fundamental parts of all forms of resistance Controversy regarding definition EditOn the lawfulness of armed resistance movements in international law there has been a dispute between states since at least 1899 when the first major codification of the laws of war in the form of a series of international treaties took place In the Preamble to the 1899 Hague Convention II on Land War the Martens Clause was introduced as a compromise wording for the dispute between the Great Powers who considered francs tireurs to be unlawful combatants subject to execution on capture and smaller states who maintained that they should be considered lawful combatants 8 9 More recently the 1977 Protocol Additional to the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949 and relating to the Protection of Victims of International Armed Conflicts referred in Article 1 Paragraph 4 to armed conflicts in which peoples are fighting against colonial domination and alien occupation and against racist regimes This phraseology according USA that refused to ratify the Protocol contains many ambiguities that cloud the issue of who is or is not a legitimate combatant 10 ultimately in US Government opinion the distinction is just a political judgment By the way some definitions of resistance movement have proved controversial Hence depending on the perspective of a state s government a resistance movement may or may not be labelled a terrorist group based on whether the members of a resistance movement are considered lawful or unlawful combatants and whether they are recognized as having a right to resist occupation 11 According to Joint Publication 1 02 the United States Department of Defense defines a resistance movement as an organized effort by some portion of the civil population of a country to resist the legally established government or an occupying power and to disrupt civil order and stability In strict military terminology a resistance movement is simply that it seeks to resist change the policies of a government or occupying power This may be accomplished through violent or non violent means In this view a resistance movement is specifically limited to changing the nature of current power not to overthrow it and the correct according to whom military term for removing or overthrowing a government is an insurgency However in reality many resistance movements have aimed to displace a particular ruler especially if that ruler has gained or retained power illegally Freedom fighter Edit Freedom fighter redirects here For other uses see Freedom Fighters A group of Afghan mujahideen who were considered to be freedom fighters by Western nations October 1987 Mugshot of Ants the Terrible Kaljurand a famous Estonian freedom fighter and nazi collaborator Freedom fighter is another term for those engaged in a struggle to achieve political freedom for themselves or obtain freedom for others 12 Though the literal meaning of the words could include anyone who fights for the cause of freedom in common use it may be restricted to those who are actively involved in an armed rebellion rather than those who campaign for freedom by peaceful means or those who fight violently for the freedom of others outside the context of an uprising though this title may be applied in its literal sense Generally speaking freedom fighters are people who use physical force to cause a change in the political and or social order Notable examples include Umkhonto we Sizwe in South Africa the Sons of Liberty in the American Revolution the Irish Republican Army in Ireland and Northern Ireland the Eritrean People s Liberation Front and the National Resistance Army in Uganda which were considered freedom fighters by supporters However a person who is campaigning for freedom through peaceful means may still be classed as a freedom fighter though in common usage they are called political activists as in the case of the Black Consciousness Movement In India Freedom fighter is an officially recognized category by the Indian government covering those who took part in the country s independence movement people in this category can also include dependant family members 13 get pensions and other benefits like special railway counters 14 People described as freedom fighters are often also called assassins rebels insurgents or terrorists This leads to the aphorism one man s terrorist is another man s freedom fighter 15 The degree to which this occurs depends on a variety of factors specific to the struggle in which a given freedom fighter group is engaged During the Cold War the term freedom fighter was first used with reference to the Hungarian rebels in 1956 16 Ronald Reagan picked up the term to explain America s support of rebels in countries controlled by communist states or otherwise perceived to be under the influence of the Soviet Union including the Contras in Nicaragua UNITA in Angola and the multi factional mujahideen in Afghanistan 16 In the media the BBC tries to avoid the phrases terrorist or freedom fighter except in attributed quotes in favor of more neutral terms such as militant guerrilla assassin insurgent rebel paramilitary or militia 17 Common weapons EditMain article Insurgency weapons and tactics Partisans often use captured weapons taken from their enemies or weapons that have been stolen or smuggled in During the Cold War partisans often received arms from either NATO or Warsaw Pact member states Where partisan resources are stretched improvised weapons are also deployed Examples of resistance movements EditThe following examples are of groups that have been considered or would identify themselves as groups These are mostly but not exclusively of armed resistance movements For movements and phases of activity involving non violent methods see civil resistance and nonviolent resistance Pre 20th century Edit The Sicarii were a first century Jewish movement opposing Roman occupation of the Jewish Promised Land 18 The Yellow Turbans were peasant rebels against the Eastern Han dynasty led by Zhang Jue was crushed by the lack of co ordination with other Yellow Turban groups as well as destabilization The Abbasid Revolution overthrow of the Umayyad dynasty under Abu Muslim which was caused by discrimination against non Arab Muslims and government corruption The Mamluks were Turkic slaves who overthrew the Ayyubid dynasty In opposition to British rule in Ireland and the subsequent Plantations of Ireland the native Gaelic population at times with and against the Hiberno Normans lords launched the Bruce campaign in Ireland 1315 1318 the Desmond Rebellions 1569 1573 amp 1579 1583 the Nine Years War also known as Tyrone s Rebellion 1593 1603 the Irish Rebellion of 1641 amp the subsequent Irish Confederate Wars 1641 1653 the Williamite War in Ireland 1688 1691 the Irish Rebellion of 1798 also known as the United Irishmen Rebellion and the Tithe War 1831 1836 19 The Jacobite risings were a series of rebellions uprisings and wars to reinstate the Stuart dynasty The American Continental forces of the American Revolutionary War were essentially a resistance movement against the British Empire Francis Marion was an American Revolutionary War partisan who led a partisan guerrilla movement against Great Britain Indigenous Australians in the early history of Australia Pemulwuy An indigenous Australian who resisted the European colonization of Australia In 1797 a state of guerrilla warfare existed between indigenous people and settler communities in Sydney The Aboriginals were led by Pemulwuy a member of the Bidjigal tribe who occupied the land 20 Pemulwuy was eventually shot and killed by Henry Hacking in 1802 21 Jandamarra The first Indigenous Australian to use firearms and conduct organized warfare in battle against settlers leading a war against Euro Australian settlers for three years from 1894 to 1897 The resistance movement ended when Jandamarra was shot dead by an Aboriginal tracker Resistance movements against France also emerged during the Napoleonic Wars The 1808 invasion of Spain by Bonaparte sparked a resistance movement composed mostly of the lower classes who felt that the nobility was simply allowing themselves to fall under French control Lord Wellington remarked that it was extraordinary that the French had managed to remain in the country for so long about 4 years Landsturm German resistance groups fighting against the French in the Napoleonic Wars Certain Native Americans during Manifest destiny Tsali Cherokee tribal member who led a small band of Cherokee people against the United States military during the Trail of Tears era Executed in exchange for the survival of his band the band were integrated into the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians Osceola Seminole chief who was very influential Resisted deportation during the period of Indian removal Led a number of successes until being captured by the United States during faux peace talks died a few months later in prison During the American Civil War there were also resistance movements on both sides Bushwhackers were Confederate guerrillas who engaged in raids robberies and massacres against the Union forces and affiliated citizens Continued resisting for some years after the American Civil War ended Responsible for the Lawrence Massacre Jayhawkers were Union guerrillas who engaged in the same acts as the bushwhackers did they were also active during Bleeding Kansas most prominent member was John Brown responsible for the Pottawatomie Massacre and John Brown s raid on Harper s Ferry Carbonari 19th century Italian movement resisting Austrian or Bourbon rule The Polish National Government Underground Polish supreme authority during the January Uprising against Russian occupation of Poland In 1863 1864 it was a real shadow government supported by majority of Poles who even paid taxes for it and was a significant problem for the Okhrana the secret police of the Russian Empire Andres Avelino Caceres resistance movement against invading Chilean forces during the War of the Pacific The Kataas Taasang Ka Galang galangang Katipunan ng mga Anak Ng Bayan KKK was an organization in the Philippines that instigated the Philippine Revolution in 1896 against the Spanish colonials and resulted in the dissolution of the Republic of Biak na Bato and the exile of the Philippine Government headed by Emillo Aguinaldo Pre World War II Edit Filipino guerrilla units after official end of Philippine American War 1902 1913 Chinese Communist Party Chinese Red Army Chinese Soviet Republic Communist controlled China 1927 1949 Fujian People s Government Shaan Gan Ning Border Region Charlemagne Peralte and his Cacos rebels who resisted the United States occupation of Haiti Freikorps Ukrainian forces in the Ukrainian War of Independence 1917 1921 Forest Guerrillas 1921 1922 Jewish paramilitary organizations that resisted the British authorities in Palestine 1920s until 1948 prior to the founding of the State of Israel include the Haganah the Irgun and Lehi Augusto Cesar Sandino led a rebellion against the United States occupation of Nicaragua Lwow Eaglets Black Lions 1936 Irish Republican Army 1918 1922 Turkish national movement Association for the Defense of the Rights of Anatolia and Rumelia TIGR 1927 1941 Ustase Croatian nationalist and fascist resistance movement against the Kingdom of Yugoslavia White movement National Alliance of Russian SolidaristsWorld War II Edit See also Resistance during World War II Albanian resistance movement Austrian resistance movement O5 Belgian resistance movement British resistance movements SIS Section D and Section VII planned Resistance organisations Resistance in the German occupied Channel Islands The Auxiliary Units organized by Colonel Colin Gubbins as a potential British resistance movement against a possible invasion of the British Isles by Nazi forces note that it was the only resistance movement established prior to invasion albeit the invasion never came Bulgarian resistance movement Burmese resistance movement Chechen anti Soviet resistance Chinese resistance movements Anti Japanese Army for the Salvation of the Country Chinese People s National Salvation Army Heilungkiang National Salvation Army Jilin Self Defence Army Northeast Anti Japanese National Salvation Army Northeast Anti Japanese United Army Northeast People s Anti Japanese Volunteer Army Northeastern Loyal and Brave Army Northeastern People s Revolutionary Army Northeastern Volunteer Righteous amp Brave Fighters Hong Kong resistance movements Gangjiu dadui Hong Kong Kowloon big army East River Column Dongjiang Guerrillas Southern China and Hong Kong organisation Chinese Muslims in the Second Sino Japanese War Muslim Detachment 回民義勇隊 Huimin Zhidui Muslim corps Czech Resistance movement Danish resistance movement Dutch resistance movement The Stijkel Group a Dutch resistance movement which mainly operated around the S Gravenhage area Valkenburg resistance Estonian resistance movement Forest Brothers French resistance movement Bureau Central de Renseignements et d Action BCRA Conseil National de la Resistance CNR Francs Tireurs et Partisans FTP Free French Forces FFL French Forces of the Interior FFI Maquis Pat O Leary Line German resistance to Nazism Bastlein Jacob Abshagen Group Confessing Church Edelweiss Pirates Ehrenfeld Group European Union Kreisau Circle National Committee for a Free Germany Anti Fascist Committee for a Free Germany Neu Beginnen Red Orchestra Robert Uhrig Group Saefkow Jacob Bastlein Organization Solf Circle Vierergruppen in Hamburg Munich and Vienna White Rose German pro Nazi resistance Volkssturm a German resistance group and militia created by the NSDAP near the end of World War II Werwolf German guerrillas resisting Allied occupation of Germany 1945 Greek resistance movement List of Greek Resistance organizations Cretan resistance National Liberation Front EAM and the Greek People s Liberation Army ELAS EAM s guerrilla forces National Republican Greek League EDES National and Social Liberation EKKA Indian resistance movements Quit India Movement largely non violent anti British resistance within Indian territory Azad Hind Indian National Army Indian force fighting alongside Imperial Japan against Allied forces Free Indian Army Indian unit in Nazi Germany fighting against the Allies for India s Independence Italian resistance against fascism Arditi del Popolo Assisi Network Brigate Fiamme Verdi Comitato di Liberazione Nazionale Concentrazione Antifascista Italiana DELASEM Democrazia Cristiana Four days of Naples Giustizia e Liberta Italian Civil War Italian Co Belligerent Army Navy and Air Force Italian Communist Party PCI Italian Partisan Republics Italian Socialist Party PSI Labour Democratic Party PDL Movimento Comunista d Italia National Liberation Committee for Northern Italy Partito d Azione Scintilla Italian pro fascist resistance Black Brigades Italian guerrilla war in Ethiopia Japanese anti imperial resistance Dissent in the Armed Forces of the Empire of Japan Japanese in the Chinese resistance to the Empire of Japan Japanese Communist Party Japanese People s Emancipation League Japanese People s Anti war Alliance League to Raise the Political Consciousness of Japanese Troops Japanese pro imperial resistance Japanese holdout Volunteer Fighting Corps Jewish resistance movement including Jewish partisans and Jewish Anti Fascist Committee Resistance movement in Auschwitz Korean resistance movement Provisional Government of the Republic of Korea Korean Liberation Army Korean Volunteer Army Latvian resistance movement Lithuanian resistance Lithuanian Latvian and Estonian Forest Brothers Latvian national partisans and Lithuanian partisans resistance movements during the Soviet invasion and occupation of the Baltic countries continued after the end of World War II Luxembourgish resistance movement Norwegian resistance movement Philippine resistance movement Multiple often opposing organizations were active during the Japanese Occupation Polish Underground State and Polish resistance organizations such as Armia Krajowa the Home Army Polish underground army in World War II 400 000 sworn members Narodowe Sily Zbrojne Bataliony Chlopskie Gwardia Ludowa the People s Guard and Armia Ludowa the People s Army Zydowska Organizacja Bojowa ZOB the Jewish Fighting Organisation Jewish resistance movement that led the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising in 1943 Zydowski Zwiazek Walki ZZW the Jewish Fighting Union Jewish resistance movement that led the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising in 1943 Russian pro Nazi German collaborationist movement Anti Soviet partisans Committee for the Liberation of the Peoples of Russia Russian pro Nazi German collaborationist resistance movement Russian Liberation Army GULAG Operation Lokot Autonomy Russian Fascist Party Russian Liberation Movement Union for the Struggle for the Liberation of the Peoples of Russia White movement members within pro Nazi circles Slovak resistance movement Soviet resistance movement of Soviet partisans and underground which had Moscow organized and spontaneously formed cells opposing German occupation Belarusian Soviet partisans Estonian Soviet partisans Latvian Soviet partisans Moldovan Soviet partisans Soviet partisans in Finland Soviet partisans in Poland Young Guard Soviet resistance Thai resistance movement Ukrainian resistance movements Ukrainian Insurgent Army anti German anti Soviet and anti Polish resistance movement Ukrainian People s Revolutionary Army anti German anti Soviet and anti Polish resistance movement Yugoslav resistance movements Yugoslav Army in the Homeland the Chetniks Blue Guard Slovenian Chetniks National Liberation Army the Partisans Croatian Partisans Macedonian Partisans Serbian Partisans Slovene Partisans Viet Minh Post World War II Edit Post WWII anti fascism ongoing Africa Edit Casamance conflict ongoing Conflict in the Niger Delta ongoing Front for the Liberation of the Enclave of Cabinda Frente para a Libertacao do Enclave de Cabinda ongoing Harakat al Shabaab Mujahideen ongoing Lord s Resistance Army ongoing Mai Mai ongoing March 23 Movement Mau Mau MPLA Ogaden National Liberation Front Sudanese resistance ongoing Symbionese Liberation Army Umkhonto we Sizwe African National Congress ZANU PF East Asia Southeast Asia and Oceania Edit East Turkestan Islamic Movement ongoing Free Papua Movement ongoing Kuomintang insurgency in China Kuomintang Islamic insurgency Kuomintang in Burma New People s Army ongoing Pathet Lao People s Liberation Army Chinese Communist Party South Thailand insurgency ongoing Tibetan resistance movement ongoing Viet Cong Viet Minh Europe Edit Albanian insurgency in Yugoslavia Kosovo Liberation Army Kosovo Protection Corps National Liberation Army Liberation Army of Presevo Medveđa and Bujanovac Anti communist resistance in Poland Caucasus Emirate Continuity Irish Republican Army Crusaders Croatian Ustase guerrilla movement fighting against Yugoslav communist forces Cursed soldiers Polish anticommunist resistance Free Wales Army Greek resistance Hungarian Uprising Irish National Liberation Army Irish People s Liberation Organisation Irish Republican Army Insurgency in the North Caucasus 2009 2017 Mudiad Amddiffyn Cymru National Liberation Front of Corsica Fronte di Liberazione Naziunale Corsu oglaigh na hEireann ongoing Prague Spring Provisional Irish Republican Army 1969 1997 Real Irish Republican Army ongoing Romanian anti communist resistance movement Spanish Maquis Ukrainian resistance during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine ongoing United Irishmen Middle East Edit Armenian resistance Free Patriotic Movement 1988 2005 Free Syrian Army 2011 2014 Splinter branches and groups who use the name ongoing Front for the Liberation of the Golan ongoing General Military Council for Iraqi Revolutionaries ongoing Gaddafi loyalism ongoing Insurgency in the Maghreb 2002 present ongoing Iraqi insurgency 2003 2011 Taliban 2001 to 2021 Islamic Republic of Afghanistan ongoing National Resistance Front of Afghanistan Hezbollah 22 ongoing Houthis Ansar Allah ongoing Popular Mobilization Forces Lebanese Front Lebanese Forces 1975 1990 National Liberation Front Algeria Palestinian militants ongoing Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigade Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine Hamas 23 ongoing Palestinian Islamic Jihad ongoing Palestine Liberation Organization ongoing Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine ongoing Polisario Front ongoing People s Mujahedin Organization of Iran South Yemen Movement ongoing Indian subcontinent Edit Mukti Bahini 1971 Bhutan Tiger Force Indian Independence movement and Pakistan movement Insurgency in Jammu and Kashmir ongoing Khalistan Sindhudesh ongoing Tamil Tigers Western hemisphere Edit American Indian Movement Black Guerrilla Family ongoing Black Panther Party Boricua Popular Army Contras of Nicaragua Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia ongoing Front de liberation du Quebec Fruit of Islam Fuerzas Armadas de Liberacion Nacional Puertorriquena Guatemalan National Revolutionary Unity Los Macheteros Puerto Rican armed independence movement ongoing MOVE Montoneros Ejercito Revolucionario del Pueblo Peronist Armed Forces of Argentina Nancahuazu Guerrilla Paraguayan People s Army ongoing Popular Revolutionary Army ongoing Sandinistas Shining Path ongoing Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement Tupamaros Weather Underground Zapatistas ongoing Notable individuals in resistance movements EditWorld War II Edit Mordechaj Anielewicz Josip Broz Tito Dragoljub Draza Mihailovic Edmund Charaszkiewicz Charles de Gaulle Mildred Harnack Jan Karski Henryk Iwanski Marcel Louette Max Manus Jean Moulin Christian Pineau Hannie Schaft Aris Velouchiotis Mao Zedong Chiang Kai shek Sandro Pertini Luigi Longo Ferruccio Parri Witold Pilecki Sophie Scholl Haile Selassie Gunnar Sonsteby Other resistance movements and figures Edit chief Mkwawa of Uhehe chief Kimweri of Tanganyika Kinjekitile Ng wale Michel Aoun Hassan Nasrallah Buenaventura Durruti Corazon Aquino Giuseppe Garibaldi Geronimo Ho Chi Minh Juan Peron Lembitu Louis Joseph Papineau Nestor Makhno Maria Nikiforova Osceola Red Cloud Juba Rummu Juri Osman Batur Mustafa Kemal Ataturk Sant Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale Ulo Voitka Pancho Villa Emiliano Zapata Ernesto Guevara Abbas al Musawi Russel Means Leonard Peltier John Brown Osama bin Laden Cochise William Quantrill Crazy Horse Tecumseh Fidel Castro Maqbool Bhat Vladimir Lenin Leon Trotsky Sitting Bull Mangas Colorado Alfred the Great El Cid Lawrence of Arabia Charlemagne Peralte Boudica King Arthur Spartacus Charles Martel Nat Turner Toussaint Louverture Jean Jacques Dessalines Sans Souci Nelson Mandela William Wallace Robert the Bruce Little Turtle Mahatma Gandhi Marvin Heemeyer Republic of Rose Island Blocking of Telegram in Russia List of whistleblowersSee also EditAnti war Anti capitalism Anti communism Anti fascism Anti imperialism Asymmetric warfare People s war Civil resistance Civil rights movement Collaborationism and Collaboration the opposite of resistance Covert cell Definitions of terrorism Defensivism Fictional resistance movements and groups Fifth column clandestine citizen operatives loyal to a foreign government Guerrilla warfare Insurgency Irregular military List of guerrillas List of revolutions and rebellions Nonviolent resistance Opposition to the Iraq War Opposition to the Vietnam War Partisan military Polish Secret State Protesting Propaganda Reagan Doctrine Rebellion Resistance Studies Magazine Riot Social change Sniper Special Activities Division Special Operations Executive Unconventional warfareCitations Edit The often overlooked nonviolent roots of the American Revolution pri org July 4 2016 On the relation between military and civil resistance in occupied Norway 1940 45 see Magne Skodvin Norwegian Non violent Resistance during the German Occupation in Adam Roberts ed The Strategy of Civilian Defence Non violent Resistance to Aggression Faber London 1967 pp 136 53 Also published as Civilian Resistance as a National Defense Harrisburg US Stackpole Books 1968 and with a new Introduction on Czechoslovakia and Civilian Defence as Civilian Resistance as a National Defence Harmondsworth UK Baltimore US Penguin Books 1969 ISBN 0 14 021080 6 resistance Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required W H Jervis Hist France v 6 65 Witikind became the hero of the Saxon resistance Steve Pile 1997 Opposition political identities and spaces of resistance p 3 Pile 1997 Opposition political identities and spaces of resistance pp 5 7 Gray Rosendale L and Gruber S 2001 Alternative Rhetorics challenges to the rhetorical tradition New York State University of New York Press pp 154 56 Michelle Hughes Social media and tobacco resistance control Archived 2014 01 16 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 1 September 2013 Rupert Ticehurst 1997 in his footnote 1 cites The life and works of Martens as detailed by V Pustogarov Fyodor Fyodorovich Martens 1845 1909 A Humanist of Modern Times International Review of the Red Cross IRRC No 312 May June 1996 pp 300 14 Ticehurst 1997 in his footnote 2 cites F Kalshoven Constraints on the Waging of War Dordrecht Martinus Nijhoff 1987 p 14 Gardam 1993 p 91 Khan Ali Washburn University School of Law A Theory of International Terrorism Connecticut Law Review vol 19 p 945 1987 Merriam Webster definition PTI 18 August 2016 Pension of freedom fighters hiked by Rs 5 000 The Hindu Business Line Retrieved 23 February 2017 Lisa Mitchell 2009 Language Emotion and Politics in South India The Making of a Mother Tongue Indiana University Press p 193 ISBN 978 0 253 35301 6 Gerald Seymour Harry s Game 1975 a b Garthoff Raymond L 1994 The Great Transition American Soviet Relations and the End of the Cold War Washington D C Brookings Institution pp 18 19 270 271 ISBN 0 8157 3060 8 Editorial Guidelines Section 11 War Terror and Emergencies Accuracy and Impartiality BBC Editorial Guidelines and Guidance BBC Editorial Team Archived from the original on 1 July 2019 Retrieved 6 July 2018 Perry Simon 2011 All Who Came Before Eugene Oregon Wipf and Stock ISBN 978 1 60899 659 9 Archived from the original on 2019 08 03 Retrieved 2022 01 02 Bartlett A Military History of Ireland Willey K When the Sky Fell Down The Destruction of the Tribes of the Sydney Region 1788 1850s Collins Sydney 1979 Collins D An Account of the English Colony in New South Wales Vol 1 Cadell and Davies London 1798 Hezbollah A State Within a State by Hussain Abdul Hussain Hudson Institute Retrieved October 3 2020 Hanaini Abdalhakim Ahmad Abdul Rahim Bin July 6 2016 Objectives Mechanisms and Obstacles of Hamas External Relations Hanaini Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences 7 4 485 Retrieved October 3 2020 General references EditGardam Judith Gail 1993 Non combatant Immunity as a Norm of International Humanitarian Martinus Nijhoff ISBN 0 7923 2245 2 Ticehurst Rupert The Martens Clause and the Laws of Armed Conflict 30 April 1997 International Review of the Red Cross no 317 pp 125 34 ISSN 1560 7755External links Edit Quotations related to Resistance movement at Wikiquote Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Resistance movement amp oldid 1147115197, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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