Top Menu
Stories we are covering
-
Cuba today
Reports, analysis, and stories from the struggle of the Cuban people to defend and build their socialist revolution.
-
The Quebec Student Strike
The story of the biggest student mobilization in Canadian history as it unfolds.
-
The Class Struggle in Greece
Reporting the viewpoint of the Communist Youth and the Communist Party of Greece for a People's Greece.
-
The youth movement
Statements and analysis about the way forward for the youth and student movement in Canada today by the YCL-LJC.
-
Socialist theory
Reflections on how to build a better world from a Leninist point of view.
FESTIVAL PHOTOS

FESTIVAL!
The opening ceremonies of the World Festival of Youth and Students wrapped up with a bang, as fireworks exploded over a large sports stadium in a township outside Pretoria that had just heard President Zuma welcome the delegates to South Africa, and the leader of the African National Congress Youth League call for free public education and putting the economy under the people’s control.
Some delegations are still in arrival. The opening gates and registration are a flurry of activity as youth people from all over Africa, but also Asia, Europe, Latin America and North America enter the festival looking tired but excited.
At the festival grounds, around the Tswane University of Technology and the Tswane Fair grounds, there are some logistical challenges but a great mood of friendship and solidarity as young people from diverse backgrounds and different ideologies gather.
A word picture for readers is not adequate.
Picture a street closed from traffic flowing with young people of all nationalities and people’s, some draped with national flags, others wearing sports jackets in their countries colours, or just casual shorts and t-shirts. Suddenly a group of South African youth, about fifteen, appear from around the corner of the building in a quick-step run. Their fists are in the air and their voices fill the space with a powerful yet beautiful struggle song in one of South Africa’s many national languages.
The delegation gets larger and their chants echo of the big festival hall buildings. Young people join in and follow them. Then another delegation appears with a giant banner – Our country will never again be a colony, it proclaims. The chanting and singing grows. In the background are giant, red, Vietnamese flags.
The South African sunshine is slipping away and bold thunderstorms are appearing on a horizon of small rolling hills with a beige dried grass. The rain falls and people rush indoors. Turning into a large hall, young people are seated behind a main podium discussing peace, sovereignty and social transformation in their respective countries. The current speaker from Bahrain is declaring the need to break with US imperialism in the Middle East with a series of lengthy but powerful slogans.
There are problems with translation and the delegates are hungry because the food has not yet arrived, but people are excited. Everyone has stories of new countries they have just met, what they have told them, gifts exchanged.
The rain has stopped and back out on the street a bus has stopped. Suddenly Latin American music blares as the delegates get off and a dance party appears in the street, joined by a crowd of small South African children dancing with the delegates. As the music fades the scene seems to almost blur in the heat, but the diversity and energy of this tremendous event, the largest anti-imperialist gathering of youth and students in the world, becomes clear.
The delegations from Africa are the largest. There are big groups from Angola, Zimbabwe, Libya, Algeria, and South Africa but also smaller delegations from countries like Senegal, Mozambique, and Egypt. But there are also sizable delegations from Sri Lanka, India, the Democratic Republic of Korea, Spain, France, Brazil, Cuba, and Venezuela.
Forty young delegates are attending from Canada, including youth activists from the Canadian Federation of Students, the Quebec solidaire political party, numerous local student organizations, and several locals of the Canadian Union of Public Employees, the Canadian Union of Postal Workers, Palestine solidarity activists, queer youth, young Metis and First Nations delegates, Quebequoise youth and the Young Communist League of Canada.
In the opening ceremonies the All-Canada delegation proudly marched with behind a banner demanding that a better Canada is possible, and with flags from Quebec, Aboriginal nations including the red Mohawk Unity Flag, and the Canadian flag.
What we are learning is that the young people all over the world do not accept the miserable future offered them by capitalism and imperialism. They yearn for a new world and a different social order, that puts people first. They are from Spain, talking about the strikes and protests. Iraqi Kurds, talking about ending the occupation and the fight for peace. They are US delegates who denounce their countries foreign policy. They are from Nepal and talking about the struggle to defeat the monarchy and now win democracy and for socialism.
People’s Voice will feature interviews from the festival in subsequent issues. Already young socialists and communists from diverse countries such as Palestine, Western Sahara, the United Arab Emirates, Hungry, Paraguay and Vietnam have been interviewed about struggles in their country.
Support the Fire Kevin O'Leary campaign!
Click to sign the petition and support the Rebel Youth magazine campaign to get rid of this racist, sexist and anti-worker pit bull, and to restore and expand funding for the CBC.
What's hot this month
About RY Magazine

Rebel Youth offers a weekly pan-Canadian Socialist perspectives on the youth and student movement across Canada and internationally. Produced by the Young Communist League of Canada, we publish in print edition three times a year. Our sister magazine in French is Jeunesse Militante Write us (Rebel Youth 290A Danforth Ave, Toroto ON., M4K 1N6) to get copy of either publication - $12 CND. for four issues. Read the media that fights back. Because there is no time like now to organize!
Donate to our magazine via our publisher, the Young Communist League of Canada
International
Student movement
Labour movement
- bc teachers strike (5)
- call center (3)
- caw (1)
- cep (2)
- ceta (3)
- free trade (2)
- grévé géneral (1)
- labour (30)
- nafta (2)
- privatization (5)
- unemployment (12)
- union (5)
- Venezuela labour law (2)
- wftu (3)
- young workers (149)
- youth unemployment (7)
Blog Archive
Environment
- ceta (3)
- climate change (2)
- energy (1)
- environment (30)
- northern gateway pipeline (2)
- nuclear (6)
- water (1)
Gender struggles
- abortion (3)
- child care (2)
- reproductive rights (1)
- trans rights (1)
- transgendered (2)
- women (28)
Harper watch
- budget (5)
- ceta (3)
- charter of youth rights (6)
- federal election (27)
- harper (48)
- immigration (3)
- jason kenney (2)
- jim flaherty (1)
- rob ford (3)
- syria (16)
Theory and tactics
- anti-communism (4)
- charter of youth rights (6)
- democracy (5)
- direct action (5)
- diversity of tactics (4)
- feminism (1)
- free education (2)
- Marxism (31)
- tactics (12)
YCL News
- YCL (64)
- YCL-LJC CC (2)
- YCL-LJC CEC (11)
Political prisoners
- ahmad saadat (3)
- cuban five (14)
- Liliany Obando (9)
- mahmoud sarsk (1)
Electoral politics
- communist party (36)
- federal election (27)
- NDP (7)
- quebec solidaire (16)








