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War & Peace Quote by Leon Jouhaux

"From 1918 on, trade unionists were to express from the platforms of their congresses the workers' desire for peace through a rational organization of the world"

About this Quote

The line lands with the calm audacity of someone trying to convert grief into governance. In 1918, “peace” wasn’t a vague aspiration; it was a demand extracted from mass death, inflation, strikes, and the dawning sense that the old diplomatic order had turned Europe into a slaughterhouse. Jouhaux, a French labor leader speaking from the organized muscle of the unions, frames workers not as a pressure group but as a legitimate foreign-policy constituency. “From the platforms of their congresses” matters: he’s sanctifying union congresses as public stages where international order can be debated, not merely wages and hours.

The key phrase is “rational organization of the world.” It’s technocratic on purpose, a rebuke to the romantic nationalism and secret treaties that helped propel World War I. “Rational” implies that war is a bug, not a feature - an outcome of irrational elites, profiteering, and rival empires. The subtext is also defensive: if workers don’t articulate a coherent international program, they’ll be cast either as radicals bent on chaos (the fear after the Russian Revolution) or as parochial bargainers uninterested in the “national interest.”

Jouhaux is staking a claim for labor internationalism that doesn’t require insurrection: peace achieved through institutions, rules, and coordination - the labor movement’s mirror image of the League of Nations idea, but anchored in shop floors and strike committees. It’s idealistic, yes, but strategically so: he’s trying to make peace a workers’ policy platform, not a statesman’s trophy.

Quote Details

TopicPeace
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Jouhaux, Leon. (2026, January 16). From 1918 on, trade unionists were to express from the platforms of their congresses the workers' desire for peace through a rational organization of the world. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/from-1918-on-trade-unionists-were-to-express-from-87328/

Chicago Style
Jouhaux, Leon. "From 1918 on, trade unionists were to express from the platforms of their congresses the workers' desire for peace through a rational organization of the world." FixQuotes. January 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/from-1918-on-trade-unionists-were-to-express-from-87328/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"From 1918 on, trade unionists were to express from the platforms of their congresses the workers' desire for peace through a rational organization of the world." FixQuotes, 16 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/from-1918-on-trade-unionists-were-to-express-from-87328/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

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Leon Jouhaux (July 1, 1879 - April 28, 1954) was a Leader from France.

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