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Rosa
Luxemburg holds an enduring fascination as a radical socialist committed to democratic
values, and a woman whose charismatic personality and impassioned speeches inspired
her followerswithout resort to bureaucratic organisation. Her assistant and friend
Mathilde Jacob was Rosa Luxemburg's mainstay during her years of imprisonment
in the First World War. 'My dearest Mathilde' provided material and emotional
support, organised Rosa Luxemburg's clandestine communication with the outside
world, and herself played a key role in the illegal work of the Spartacus group.
When revolution broke out in Germany in 1918, she sought unsuccessfully to protect
Rosa Luxemburg in the tragic events that led to her death.
Mathilde Jacob's
memoir, written as testimony of 'love for a person and for a cause', and sent
abroad for safe-keeping when she fell victim to the Nazis, was unknown to Rosa
Luxemburg's early biographers and has only recently been published in Germany.
It paints a vivid portrait both of Rosa Luxemburg herself, and of the group of
friends - Karl Liebknecht, Leo Jogiches, Clara Zetkin and Paul Levi - that with
her made up the Spartacus leadership.
This translation is by Hans
Fernbach, who knew Mathilde Jacob as a family friend in Berlin; it is introduced
by David Fernbach, whose publications include, as editor, the Pelican edition
of Karl Marx's Political Writings.