Having lived in Europe on many occasions when this day was celebrated it has become more and more saddening to see it so neglected here. Being born raised and educated in Chicago the fact that it commemorates an important event in labor history that happened there gives it even more meaning for me. Just to refresh your memory:
International Workers' Day
nternational Workers Day, also known as Labour Day in some places, is a celebration of labourers and the working classes that is promoted by the international labour movement, socialists, communists and anarchists and occurs every year on May Day, 1 May, an ancient European spring holiday. The date was chosen for International Workers' Day by the Second International, a pan-national organization of socialist and communist political parties, to commemorate the Haymarket affair, which occurred in Chicago on 4 May 1886. The 1904 International Socialist Conference inAmsterdam, the Sixth Conference of the Second International, called on "all Social Democratic Party organisations and trade unions of all countries to demonstrate energetically on the First of May for the legal establishment of the 8-hour day, for the class demands of the proletariat, and for universal peace."[3]
Being a traditional European spring celebration, May Day is a national public holiday in many countries, but in only some of those countries is it celebrated specifically as "Labour Day" or "International Workers' Day". Some countries celebrate a Labour Day on other dates significant to them, such as the United States, which celebrates Labor Day on the first Monday of September.
This year is special because we have the most pro labor candidate we have had for a long time. Bernie Sanders has helped renew our awareness of the central role of workers in every country in the world.
Join me in paying tribute to those who built everything we have.