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[[Rudolf Pavlovič Mareček]] recruited the first potential members from the circle of an Ido language club.<ref name=leupod>* {{Citation|title=“Building the Internationalist City from Below”: The Role of the Czechoslovak Industrial Cooperative “Interhelpo” in Forging Urbanity in early-Soviet Bishkek|author=David Leupold|doi=10.1017/S0147547920000228}}</ref> | [[Rudolf Pavlovič Mareček]] recruited the first potential members from the circle of an Ido language club.<ref name=leupod>* {{Citation|title=“Building the Internationalist City from Below”: The Role of the Czechoslovak Industrial Cooperative “Interhelpo” in Forging Urbanity in early-Soviet Bishkek|author=David Leupold|doi=10.1017/S0147547920000228}}</ref> | ||
===Development=== | |||
===World War 2=== | |||
==Further reading== | ==Further reading== |
Latest revision as of 09:25, 14 April 2023
This article is a stub. You can help improve this article by editing it. |
International Worker Help (Ido: Internacia laboristal helpo), abbreviated to interhelpo, was a Czechoslovakia-based cooperative for developing socialism in Bishkek (then Frunze) of Soviet Kyrgyzstan.
It became a successful cooperative in the Soviet Union. It has been slandered by bourgeois media, accusing it of being a failure.
History[edit | edit source]
Foundation[edit | edit source]
Interhelpo was founded in 1923 by a group of Idists in response to the Communist International's Resolution on Proletarian Aid to Soviet Russia.
Rudolf Pavlovič Mareček recruited the first potential members from the circle of an Ido language club.[1]
Development[edit | edit source]
World War 2[edit | edit source]
Further reading[edit | edit source]
- David Leupold. “Building the Internationalist City from Below”: The Role of the Czechoslovak Industrial Cooperative “Interhelpo” in Forging Urbanity in early-Soviet Bishkek. doi: 10.1017/S0147547920000228 [HUB]
External links[edit | edit source]
- "interhelpo_home.html". Archived from the original.