Category
page 1Communism in Finland
Finnish Socialist Workers' Republic
theoretical precursor of a Finnish socialist state
Red Guards
paramilitary organization in Finland in the early 1900s
Tammisaari prison camp
Concentration camp and prison in Dragsvik, Ekenäs in Finland
Taistoism
thumb | right | Taisto Sinisalo in 1970
Taistoism () was an orthodox pro-Soviet tendency in the mostly Eurocommunist Finnish communist movement in the 1970s and 1980s. The Taistoists were an interior opposition group in the Communist Party of Finland. They were named after their leader Taisto Sinisalo, whose first name means "a battle", "a fight" or "a struggle". Sinisalo's supporters constituted a party within a party, but pressure from the Communist Party of the Soviet Union prevented the party from formally splitting. The term taistolaisuus was a derogatory nickname invented by Helsingin Sa
Agit-prop
Finnish vocal ensemble