The Battle at Old Market Square was an anti-fascist protest on 5 June 1934 in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.

Members of the Nationalist Party of Canada (NPC) planned a rally in Winnipeg's Exchange District, attended by an estimated 75 to 100 sympathizers of Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini.[1] This event was "a public provocation aimed at the organized labor movement, Jews, and minority communities".[2] This rally prompted 500 protesters from various anti-fascist groups to converge on Old Market Square; at least 20 Nationalist members were injured and seven were arrested when police arrived to subdue the crowd.[2]

The conflict "demonstrated the successful and deeply rooted popular resistance to fascist provocations" in Winnipeg: the NPC held no further public meetings and "no fascist group in the city would ever find itself in a position to mount such public campaigns of discrimination".[2]

References

  1. Ryan Thorpe (19 November 2021). "Inside the war on hate". Winnipeg Free Press.
  2. 1 2 3 Helmut-Harry Loewen (2009). "Battle at Old Market Square, Winnipeg, 1934". International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest. Blackwell via Canadian Anti-racism Network.

Further reading

  • Gord Hill (2019). "Battle of Old Market Square". briarpatch. 48 (4): 21.
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