Conducts research and collects data on the global history of labour, workers, and labour relations

Workers International Relief

12 September 1921
Famine in Russia 1921-1922
Source: 
BG A44/152

Workers International Relief (WIR) was created on the initiative of the German communist Willi Münzenberg on September 12, 1921 to recruit international support in response to a drought and famine in Russia. The famine came at the end of  seven years of unrest and warfare in World War I, revolutions, civil war and food requisitions by the Bolsheviks. Death toll is estimated at five million, cases of cannibalism were reported. The Bolshevik government grudgingly accepted help from the American Relief Administration (ARA) as well. 

In subsequent years the WIR supported workers in other countries suffering from the effects of strikes, armed conflict, and natural catastrophes by distribution of clothes, food, and funds. It was dissolved in 1935.