![]() ![]() At 67 Boulevard de Belleville, Paris 11, they opened the Librarie ouvrière which was a hang-out for oppositionist communists close to the Italian Left. On 6 October 1926, in Paris he married the Swiss Dora aka Dori Ris. ![]() He was part of the oppositionist faction led by Albert Treint – ‘Redressement communiste’ – up until 1 December 1928 before mingling with ‘Contre le courant’ militants. In 1926-1927, he was a helper-assistant at the Agriculture ministry’s research and analysis laboratory, before being dismissed from his job as chemist-micrographer because of his political activities. He was active in the Jeunesses communistes in Paris’s 7 th arrondissement, joining the Antifascist Students’ Defence Alliance and hanging around the quasi-communist review Clarté, to which he was contributing by 1927. After completing his secondary schooling, he entered the Grignon agricultural school (Seine-et-Oise) and then studied at the science faculty in Paris. He spent his childhood in Guise, Nîmes and Sens and then Versailles. ![]() His mother, née Marie Dollet, had family links with Godin and his father, Jules Prudhommeaux (see the Dictionnaire biographique du movement ouvrier français) was an active pacifist and cooperativist. Born in Guise (Aisne department) 15 October 1902 – died in Versailles (Yvelines) on 13 November 1968: ultra-left communist militant turned libertarian: poet, writer and translatorĪndré Prudhommeaux was born in the Familistère de Guise established by J-B Godin. ![]()
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