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Red Army Faction


 

The Red Army Faction (in German: Rote Armee Fraktion; RAF), also known as the Baader-Meinhof Group, or the Baader-Meinhof Gang, which was one of the core groups within the RAF, was postwar Western Germany's most active left-wing terrorist organization. The RAF referred to its members as "urban guerrillas". It operated from the 1970s to 1998, causing great unrest (especially in the autumn of 1977, which led to a national crisis) and killing dozens of high-profile Germans in its more than 20 years of existence.

Origins of the name

The name was inspired by that of the Japanese Red Army, a Japanese leftist paramilitary group. The usual translation into English is the Red Army Faction although the original is actually a fraction, an old word for a unit under Communist party discipline. The word is rarely used in English today except in mathematics, whereas the word Fraktion is still used in German, to mean any parliamentary subgroup - dictionaries normally translate this meaning as faction. Fraktion was thrown in to illustrate the connection leftist organisations felt with a large, international Marxist struggle.

Related Topics:
Japanese Red Army - Fraction - Communist party - English - Marxist

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