Western Mass. Labor Action:
Its Veneer of Good Masks a Hidden Agenda
by Lisi de Bourbon
Williams Record (Williamstown, MA), 10/3/95
WILLIAMSTOWN -- When Jennifer Kling signed up last fall at a Williams
College community service fair to volunteer part-time with Western
Mass. Labor Action on Pittsfield's West Side, the last place she
thought she would wind up was in a cramped Brooklyn apartment house,
devoting her life to an underground political group.
After accepting an offer from Western Mass. Labor Action to help
the poor on a full-time basis, Kling dropped out of the prestigious
school shortly before finals during her sophomore year and headed
for the Brooklyn headquarters of the National Labor Federation.
It is WMLA's leftist parent organization, a group that once pushed
for an armed revolution against the United States.
"Kafka-esque Hell"
But instead of helping the working poor, Kling spent her "time
listening to mind-numbing lectures that started as late as midnight
and lasted as long as 18 hours".
Deprived of sleep and given limited contact with her friends and
family, Kling was confined to what one cult expert told The Williams
Record was a "Kafka-esque hell of pointless activity."
The college newspaper did on investigative report on the situation
Oct. 3.
Bored and in need of medical attention, Kling quit the organization
two months later, fleeing in the middle of the night when no one
could stop her.
Kling is one of three students who have left Williams in the last
10 years to dedicate their lives to WMLA or one of the National
Labor Federation's 41 affiliates across the country.
In an investigation this summer, Monica R. Martinez, assistant
dean of students, learned that WMLA and the National Labor Federation
are creations of the Communist Party USA, Provisional, a peculiar
cadre that practices an unorthodox brand of Marxism. It is not affiliated
with the regular Communist Party.
"They justified their actions with cultic practices in a way
that would horrify most leftists," said one former member who
spoke to the Eagle on condition of anonymity.
While the college has no plans to prevent WMLA or its operations
maoager, Edward W. Coffin Jr., from coming to campus to recruit
volunteers, Martinez said she has spoken to some students who are
currently involved to ensure they understand the relationship between
the groups.
"It's important to provide the information we have and at
that point, [the students] can make their own choice," she
said. "We're not saying, 'Don't do this or don't do that.'
My concern is that they're not who they say they are."
In addition to recruiting members from the ivy-covered halls of
Williams, WMLA has been knocking on doors of modest row houses in
Adams and working supermarket entrances in North Adams and Pittsfield.
In Pittsfield since 1977
Established in Adams in 1975 by Peggy Uman of Readsboro, Vt.,
and moved two years later to its present dingy storefront office
on Columbus Avenue, WMLA has operated as an alternative to traditional
social service agencies and private charities.
The group has attracted members with a promise of food, fuel,
clothing and medical and legal assistance in exchange for 62 cents
a month and some volunteer work.
Uman said this week that she founded the group because she had
been involved with the Eastern Farm Workers Association, formed
on Long Island in 1972 by Eugenio Perente-Ramos. The same year,
Perente-Ramos, a shadowy figure on the leftist fringe, began the
National Labor Federation and served as its leader until his death
in March.
"I was sympathetic with people who were working people and
I was doing what I thought was the right thing," she said,
declining to elaborate.
Despite her conviction, Uman left the group about, five years
ago following a series of personal tragedies and became a born-again
Christian.
Without being specific, she acknowledged that WMLA was a very
structured political organization and said there was a lot of "accountability
and reporting." She did not say to whom.
"Sacrificial Thing"
"It was a blood and guts sacrificial thing," she said.
"I'm glad to be free of it. But I thought it was doing a lot
of good."
Ironically, Uman is still listed as president of the WMLA on the
organization's letterhead.
The Eagle could not arrange an interview with Coffin for this
article. The Eagle did an expose of the group in 198[4].
"I have been out of the office all day on one thing or another;
what with heating season starting, we are jammed with many requests
for fuel (wood) and utility advocacy against the relentless WMECO,
for folks having trouble making their payments," he said in
a faxed note.
Whether or not WMLA has made a substantive dent in poverty in
Berkshire County is open to debate among local social service agencies.
Many representatives of those organizations said they have heard
very little about WMLA and few, if any, have collaborated with the
group on projects to help the poor.
Speaking on condition of anonymity, one human services professional
said that he did not hold WMLA in very high regard.
"I won't refer anyone there and will never refer anyone there
because as far as I know, they don't do anything," he said.
Daniel Dillon, president of Central Berkshire United Way, also
said he is unfamiliar with WMLA and that he has had only one encounter
with the organization.
This May the United Way coordinated a massive food drive with
the Pittsfield postal workers, who collected canned goods and other
non-perishables from city residents. The food was taken to the post
office, where local social service agencies were invited to retrieve
it for their clients.
Dillon said Coffin and several members helped themselves to a
disproportionate amount of the food.
"I'm not condemning Ed, but he showed up this year and took
load after load," he said. "I don't know who they feed
or where they distribute that food."
According to ex-volunteers, some of the food is given to those who
request it. But most of it lies around the office and is eaten by
the members themselves.
One ex-volunteer, who asked that her name be withheld, said she
was appalled by manner in which the food was handled and the filthy
condition of WMLA's quarters.
"I just couldn't take it anymore, the place was just a mess,"
she said, adding that cats were allowed to roam freely among loaves
of Italian bread that were donated to WMLA by local bakeries.
The woman, who lives in Pittsfield, said she became a member when
her family was running low on firewood and couldn't afford to buy
any. She said she also received some juice and other items. Later
that year, she decided to volunteer because WMLA gave her the wood.
In addition to collecting food and clothing, WMLA solicits money
from local businesses and residents.
Community Support
Its newsletter, Western Massachusetts Alliance News, is filled
with advertisements from auto repair shops, plumbers and other small
businesses from a broad spectrum of Northern and Central Berkshire
communities.
None of the advertisers interviewed were familiar with WMLA's
reputation or its affiliation with the National Labor Federation.
But all of them said the organization struck them as one that
genuinely wants to hclp needy people.
"They call me four times a year trying to get extra money
or repairs, which I don't do, but I give them $25, $50, $100 a year,"
said Bill Kirpens, owner of Bill's Automotive on Curtis Street in
Pittsfield. "They were not very aggressive; I never felt they
wanted me to join. They were no more aggressive than the local fire
departments, police departments or the Veterans of Foreign Wars."
But when the recruiters set up a table for a few days this month
and last month on Williams' campus seeking money and volunteers,
some students objected to their heavy-handed solicitation tactics.
Guilt Trip
Record editor-in-chief Joshua Resnick, author of the Williams
article, said the recruiters played on the students' guilt in their
efforts to extract their donations and time.
"I encountered people who said the recruiters would yell things
like, 'You don't care anymore,' 'You have this unearned privilege,'
and 'The plight of the working man is your responsibility,'"
Resnick said, adding that they managed to sign up at least 20 students.
Former members and some human service providers say Coffin is
dedicated to the cause of helping the poor. One ex-volunteer said
he doubted that Coffin receives a paycheck and that he has to skim
a portion of the money be collects from donors to eke out a living
while sending funds to headquarters.
A couple of volunteers said he does not have his own home and
that they think he lives in WMLA's cluttered office.
Resnick said he could understand how students and volunteers could
succumb to Coffin's entreaties to join WMLA.
"His rhetoric is unbelievable and his tactics are aggressive.
He can talk for hours," Resnick said.
In an editorial in last week's Record, Resnick blasted two faculty
members for inviting Coffin into their classrooms to address students,
many of whom are freshmen. Bringing him in lent WMLA an air of legitimacy,
he argued, and allowing Coffin to pass around a sign-up sheet was
"incredibly irresponsible."
Michael Samson, an assistant professor of economics, and Alex
W. Willingham, a professor of political science, said in telephone
interviews this week they have both asked Coffin to talk to students
in their introductory classes about the difficulties of living in
the Berkshires on a minimum wage salary. In both classes he passed
around sign-up sheets.
Both said they were unfamiliar with WMLA's ties to the National
Labor Federation until reading Resnick's article.
Samson contended that any skepticism generated by WMLA stems from
a conflict between Coffin's values and those embraced by the mainstream.
Coffin, he said, espouses beliefs that do not jibe with the American
free market system.
"His values are at odds with that and that's a factor with
people calling this a cult," Samson said. "We don't say
Wall Street firms shouldn't recruit at Williams because the popular
perception is that a job from a Wall Street firm is a good job to
take. Yet adopting self-imposed poverty is not prestigious."
Samson said he has canvassed neighborhoods in Adams with Coffin
and has seen sign up volunteers and distribute wood and food to
the working poor. Last October, he said he attended a Halloween
party given by WMLA at the Adams Youth Center on Park Street that
was a success and drew about 50.
Although Samson said the event was free to anyone who wished to
attend, an Adams woman said this week in a telephone interview that
her mother bought four tickets at $2 apiece from an elderly woman
who sold them to her a few days before the party.
The woman's mother gave her the tickets so she could bring her
three children to the event. But the party turned out to be a total
flop, said the woman, who asked not to be identified.
No Costumes, No Games
"I was so uncomfortable, even though it sounded like it could
be a great time," she said. "No one was wearing costumes,
there were no games, there was no candy and not a lot of people
were there. It was definitely not a party."
But Samson insisted it was a great party and that everyone had
a good time.
Jordan Tama joined WMLA a year ago after Coffin appeared in one
of Samson's classes. Tama, then a freshman, along with three other
students, were deployed in the less-affluent neighborhoods of Adams
and North Adams and went door to door, offering to lend a helping
hand to those who needed one.
Accompanied by Coffin Tama said the students made the pitch about
the food, fuel, clothing, and medical and legal assistance to those
who opened their doors.
"I liked doing it for a while," said Tama, who is no
longer a member. "I enjoyed it because it was a way to get
involved with a community other than Williams."
As the year went on, Coffin made more demands on the students'
time and finally pressed them to spend a night with him last winter
at WMLA's offices to help put out the monthly newsletter.
But instead of writing and editing stories or laying out pages,
the students spent most of the night listening to Coffin pontificate
about the history of labor in America and the history of his organization.
Indoctrination Session
"He spent most of his time on attempted indoctrination,"
said Tama. "I had the impression he was Marxist or communist
in ideology, but he purposely stayed away from those words for fear
of scaring us off because of the stigma attached to them."
He eventually surmised the WMLA wanted him not only to help the
poor, but to become part of the National Labor Federation's inner
core to revolutionize this country's socioeconomic and political
structure. In fact, Tama, a Brooklyn native, said that when he went
home for Thanksgiving break last year, he received a phone call
on Thanksgiving day from one of the volunteers from the Women's
Press Collective. Affiliated with the National Labor Federation,
the group also has offices in Brooklyn.
When he was a part-time volunteer, Tama said he saw the poor receive
the food, fuel and clothing but never saw them receive the medical
or legal services.
"He made promises to people when they'd never get anything
out of the organization," Tama said.
Moreover, he said Coffin wasn't necessarily up front about the
real mission of WMLA and its parent organization.
"My main feeling is the problem I have with WMLA is not related
to WMLA itself, but to the fact it's a front for the national organization
and to the fact is that Ed wasn't fully open in terms of telling
us what went on down there particularly with Jen [Kling],"
he said.
Although Kling, who is living in the Midwest, managed to wrest
herself from the National Labor Federation, students from other
colleges have not been as lucky. And for their parents, the anguish
is unbearable and the pain insurmountable.
Two Mothers' Anguish
Two mothers with students in affiliates of the National Labor
Federation were so frightened about losing their daughters forever
that they did not want to reveal their names or addresses. Both
said they feared that if their daughters found out they spoke publicly
about them, the daughter could get so upset they would never return
home.
Both women suspect that members of the organization screen the
letters they mail to their daughters. Sometimes the daughters don't
receive their letters at all. And it's very difficult to get in
touch with them by telephone, the women said.
Even more distressing, the mothers are not allowed to be alone
with them during visits and the women are not permitted to take
their children outside the headquarters.
"It's like having somebody in jail with an intermediate sentence,
but hasn't committed any crime," said one of the women.
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