History of Communism in Europe

Volume 11, 2020

Transnational Biographies: Destinies at the Crossroads Before and After the Cold War

Arturo Zoffmann Rodriguez
Pages 19-40

From Mexico to Moscow via Madrid
the Borodin Mission and the Origins of Communism in Mexico and Spain, 1919-1920

This article traces the steps of Mikhail Borodin, the first Comintern representative in Mexico and Spain, in 1919-20. He helped create the Mexican and the Spanish communist parties. In order to do this, he latched onto pre-existing networks of transnational activism and recruited a posse of young, committed, and cosmopolitan cadre. Through them, Borodin tried to mobilise the widespread euphoria for Bolshevism that existed among sectors of the Mexican and the Spanish left. However, the potential for vigorous communist movements remained largely untapped due to the recklessness of Borodin and his aides. The Borodin mission is a telling episode in the formative months of the Communist International, pointing to the importance of contingency, individual agency, and transnational activism in the establishment of the international communist movement.