Early years Gil Green was born Gilbert Greenberg in
Chicago. His parents were
working class Jewish immigrants from the
Russian Empire. Green's father, who worked as a tailor, died when Gil was about 10, leaving his mother to support the family as a garment worker. He went to work full-time for the Young Workers (Communist) League in 1927 when he was named the organization's district organizer for Chicago. Although re-elected to the National Committee in 1969 despite his contention that the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia had been "a very serious blunder," Green later quit the National Committee, although he remained a member of the Communist Party for another two decades.
Later years, death, and legacy In 1991, following the collapse of communism in the
Soviet Union, Green left the party and helped found the
Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism. Green died at a nursing home in
Ann Arbor, Michigan on May 4, 1997, at the age of 90.
Michael Myerson sorted his papers. Green's papers reside at the Tamiment Library of
New York University in New York City and at the Chicago History Museum in Chicago, IL. ==Footnotes==