1 / 63

The Russian Revolution, Part II

The Russian Revolution, Part II. Vladimir Lenin (1870-1924). Russian Communists Program of the Russian Social-Democratic Workers Party (Bolsheviks): Russian capitalism is underdeveloped – but it is already bankrupt, unviable The Russian state is unreformable

eugene
Télécharger la présentation

The Russian Revolution, Part II

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Russian Revolution, Part II

  2. Vladimir Lenin (1870-1924)

  3. Russian Communists • Program of the Russian Social-Democratic Workers Party (Bolsheviks): • Russian capitalism is underdeveloped – but it is already bankrupt, unviable • The Russian state is unreformable • The only solution to the Russian crisis is to move directly to socialism, bypassing the capitalist phase • Overthrow of the old ruling classes • Establish a new state run by workers and peasants

  4. But Russia is backward: how can it go socialist when Europe is still capitalist? The Bolsheviks were convinced that the disaster of the First World War was bound to produce socialist revolutions in major European countries – in Germany, above all Faith in the inevitability of “world revolution” was a crucial element of their thinking Success of the Russian revolution depended on the spread of revolution beyond Russia

  5. 1917: the October Revolution

  6. Lenin’s plan: • Advance the most radical demands to gain popular support: -a democratic peace -radical land reform -worker control of factories -self-determination of non-Russian nationalities of the Empire • Push the Soviets to take power • Overthrow the Provisional Government by force, if necessary

  7. November 7 (October 25), 1917: Bolsheviks and their allies stage an armed coup, overthrow the Provisional Government, and organize a Soviet Government, led by Lenin and confirmed by the All-Russian Congress of Soviets’ Deputies, which proceeds to implement the radical program The Decree on Peace: Russia exits the war, offers immediate peace talks to all warring parties to conclude a democratic peace The Decree on Land: Distribution of all farmland to peasants on the basis of equality (the same amount of land per capita)

  8. The arrest of the Provisional Government, Nov.7, 1917

  9. The Council of People’s Commissars – the first Soviet Government, October 1917

  10. In October, 1917, the Bolshevik Party had 0.3 mln. members in a country of 140 mln. people with a collapsed state • Bolshevik chances of establishing a new state seemed non-existent • The essence of their strategy was to recognize and accept the new reality in the country as irreversible: • Russia has lost the war, and its army has dissolved • Peasants have taken over farmland and divided it • Workers have taken over factories • Soviets have been set up throughout the country without the Bolsheviks • Nationalists in non-Russian provinces of Russia were organizing themselves as new independent states • The new “Soviet Republic” was a way to organize a new Russian state

  11. Фактически социальная база большевиков была намного шире. На выборах в учредительное собрание они набрали 24% голосов. При этом они одержали убедительную победу в городах (Москва - 48%, Петербург - 45%), центральных и северо-западных губерниях (53,1%) и, что ещё важнее, в армии. В целом за них проголосовало 40% военных, при этом на ближайших к столицам фронтах и Балтийском флоте поддержка составляла 56%-67%. Далее, даже после официального разрыва к ним примыкала значительная часть левых эсеров и анархистов. В целом, на 1917 год альянс большевиков и левых эсеров поддерживало около 30% населения, а всевозможные социалистические партии - 80%. • http://www.regnum.ru/news/1608860.html

  12. The Internationale, international socialist anthem: • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AshKNKFB6YM • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5DTbashsKic

  13. The first Soviet government is a revolutionary dictatorship • A civil war is inevitable: • Old ruling classes fight back • Political opponents of dictatorship (including many leftists) resist the coup • Popular opposition • Foreign powers intervene

  14. The Civil War, 1918-22 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oI6PxuvZ3J4

  15. The main question of the Civil War: • Will the Bolshevik dictatorship (“the Reds”) be overthrown? • The anti-Bolsheviks (“The Whites”) represented a wide spectrum of political forces, with a range of motives for opposition

  16. The Whites • The Right: forces trying to restore autocracy and empire • The Center (liberals): oppose the dictatorship, argue for a democratic, constitutional republic • The Left: oppose the Bolshevik dictatorship, committed to socialism to be achieved by democratic means

  17. Foreign interventions in the Russian Civil War • Germany • Britain (incl. the Lockhart Conspiracy) • France • USA • Japan • Poland • Czech military units

  18. The Russian Civil War, 1918-1920

  19. The Red Star first appeared on the helmets of the Red Army

  20. Stars on the epaulettes of the Russian Imperial Army

  21. Order of Red Banner – the first Soviet war medal

  22. General Anton Denikin, first commander of the White armed forces

  23. Lev Trotsky, the Commissar of War

  24. Red Army volunteers, 1918 Red Army personnel, Civil War

  25. A Red Army political rally, 1919

  26. Artillery unit of the Red Eagles Regiment, Yekaterinburg, 1919

  27. The Anchugov family, Red Army volunteers, Ural region, 1919

  28. Women sewing uniforms for the Red Army

  29. A Red Army propaganda train, 1919

  30. White army soldiers

  31. Baron Petr Vrangel, succeeded Denikin as commander of White armed forces

  32. Admiral Aleksandr Kolchak, White “Supreme Ruler of Russia”, 1918

  33. Mikhail Frunze, Red commander who defeated Kolchak and Vrangel

  34. Semyon Budenny, Commander of the First Cavalry Army

  35. Ukrainian Anarchists (The Greens): Nestor Makhno with his staff

  36. War Communism

  37. Economic policy • Abolition of private ownership and market economy • The state organizes direct exchange of goods between the city and the countryside • Full nationalization of industries • Requisition of “surplus” foodstuffs from the peasantry • Goods and services are distributed by the state • Equalization and naturalization of wages • Forced collectivization • Forced labour • Militarization of industrial work

  38. Politics • One-party dictatorship • The Soviets are purged of any opposition and fully subjected to Party control • Fusion of the Party and the state • “Exploiting classes” are expropriated, denied basic rights, and forced to do manual labour • Repression of opposition and dissidents • Party takeover of mass media • Militarization of state and society (a new battle order) • Creation of a new military (the Red Army) and a new agency for political repression – the Cheka (All-Russian Emergency Commission for Struggle Against Counterrevolution and Sabotage) • “Revolutionary legality” – state terror instead of rule of law

  39. Red and White Terror Lenin, in October 1917, about the decision of Congress of Soviets to ban death penalty: “Nonsense! How can one carry out a revolution without executions?” K. Danishevsky, Chairman of the Supreme Revolutionary Military Tribunal, 1918: “Military tribunals are not and must not be guided by any judicial norms. They are punitive organs created in the course of intense revolutionary struggle, which formulate their sentences, guided by revolutionary necessity and by the legal consciousness of the Communists.” Admiral Kolchak: “I forbid the arrests of workers. They must be shot or hanged…” http://www.auditorium.ru/books/4530/ch5.pdf

  40. “Don’t look for evidence in a case that the defendant rebelled against Soviet power with weapons or words. The first thing you must ask him is which class he belongs to, what his education is, and what profession he is in. These are the questions which will decide the defendant’s fate. This is the essence of Red Terror.” http://www.auditorium.ru/books/4530/ch5.pdf • “The VCheka is not an investigative or judiciary body – it is a combat unit of the party of the future – the communist party. It destroys without trial or isolates from society by incarcerating in a concentration camp. Its word is law. Its work must spread to all spheres of public life where counterrevolution is rooted: the army, food supply, public education, all economic organizations, health system, fire brigades, communications, etc. etc.” – • http://www.hrono.info/biograf/lacis_mi.html

  41. In the Arkhangelsk region, 38,000 people were arrested by White authorities (10% of the population). Of them, 8,000 were executed and 1,000 died of beatings or diseases. “A year ago, the population saw us as those who freed them from the heavy Commissar yoke. Today, it hates us as much as the Comissars, if not more – and what is worse than hatred, it no longer trusts us, expecting from us only the worst.” – A. Budberg, War Minister in the Kolchak Administration, August 1919

  42. Red Terror

  43. White Terror

  44. Ideology and ethics • The cult of Revolution • World Revolution is the path to humanity’s liberation and progress; Russia’s key role in it • The Revolution justifies any means of achieving its goals • Class hatred of “exploiters”, class war against them • Civil war is inevitable and necessary • Need for self-sacrifice and heroism – among the Communists as well as the masses • Collectivism vs. individualism • Atheism vs. religion • Need to replace existing culture with a new “proletarian” one

  45. ENDS AND MEANS • Lenin: “The good of the revolution, the good of the working class – this is the supreme law”. • Trotsky: “Do the consequences of the revolution justify its victims? The question is of a theological kind, and therefore fruitless. One would be equally justified to ask, confronted with the hardships and woes of one’s personal existence: was it worth to be born at all?”

  46. Red poster: “Have you volunteered for the Red Army?”

More Related