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Cyril Briggs was an Afro-Caribbean writer and American communist activist. Originally a journalist for the New York City newspaper Amsterdam News, he was radicalized in the course of covering stories of lynchings and the lack of justice for African Americans in the early part of the twentieth century. In 1917 he founded the African Blood Brotherhood to provide Black people with solidarity in opposition to racial discrimination and published the organization’s magazine, The Crusader. The Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, also called the Russian Revolution, was inspirational to him with its promise of equality for all workers around the world, no matter their color, ethnicity, or gender.