Fragment on War, National Questions and Revolution by Rosa Luxemburg

Translation and introduction by Rida Vaquas. Original article can be found here

Rosa Luxemburg died on January 15th, 1919.

Introduction 

It has long become a truism that Marxism failed to grasp the problem of nationalism, particularly as the second half of the twentieth century saw national revolutions flourish whilst socialist movements collapsed. As national identity cements itself as a political force in our times, the Communist Manifesto’s declaration that “national one-sidedness and narrowmindedness become more and more impossible” can strike some as impossibly glib. The globalization of capital, far from diminishing the prospects of the nation-state, has instead spawned many nationalisms and even shaken the stability of ‘settled’ nation-states. Both Britain and Spain have faced secessionist movements in recent years. In the wake of this theoretical “failure” of Marxism, the response of Marxists has too frequently been to pack up and go home, taking the failure for granted. Nowadays the claim of “the right of nations to self-determination” is the accepted solution to the national question, even when no plausible working out has been shown. The “Leninist position” has become reified as part of socialist political programmes in the 21st century, even as very little sets it apart from the principle of national self-determination advocated by the Democratic President Woodrow Wilson.

After over half of a century of socialists firmly embracing nation-states, perhaps it is time to re-evaluate this “failure”. As opposed to understanding the principle of national self-determination as necessary to fill a hole in Marxist theory, we should understand it as blasting the hole itself and calling for the bourgeoisie to fill it. It is time to shed a light on the debates that took place within socialism before the principle of national self-determination became widely accepted as a necessary part of socialist programmes, in the period of the Second Socialist International between 1890 and 1914. This means an analysis of the national question from peripheral socialist parties rather than the centers in Germany and Russia. To seriously appraise the defeated alternatives to national self-determination allows us to appreciate that the nation-state is not the final word in history.

Much of the historiographical understanding of the national question debate in this period frames it as a dispute between two of the leading personalities: Rosa Luxemburg and Vladimir Ilyich Lenin. Rosa Luxemburg, as co-founder of the Social Democratic Party of Poland and the Kingdom of Lithuania (henceforth SDKPiL), positioned her party against the social patriotism of the rival Polish Socialist Party (henceforth PPS) who demanded the restoration of Poland, which was then partitioned under Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Russia. She fought against the Polish claim to independence at the London Congress of the Second International in 1896 and consistently argued for the Polish socialists in Prussia to be integrated into the German Social Democratic Party (henceforth SPD), rather than being a separate party. On the other hand, Vladimir Lenin, writing from the heart of the Tsarist empire, understood the right of nations to self-determination as a “special urgency” in a land where “subject peoples” were on the peripheries of Great Russia and experienced higher amounts of national oppression than they did in Europe.1

Rosa Luxemburg’s position has been recently evaluated as effectively forming a bloc with the chauvinist bureaucracy of the SPD.2 Luxemburg has further been accused of underestimating the force of national oppression and hence of “international proletariat fundamentalism”.3 By examining the debate as it took place in the Second International as a whole, we can understand these assessments of the case against national self-determination to be unsatisfactory and re-appraise the positive legacy of revolutionary internationalism.

Meanwhile, Lenin’s position has received praise in the wake of socialists relating to the national liberation movements of the 20th century, as “championing the rights of oppressed nations”.4 In this framework, the “liberation” of oppressed nations is the precondition of international working class unity and therefore national struggle clears the way for class struggle.

However, it is important to interrogate the consistency of Lenin’s position and hence dismantle the idea of a coherent Leninist position which emerges from its conclusions. The right of nations to self-determination, as Lenin took care to emphasize, could not be equated with support for secessionist movements. In 1903, as the Russian Social Democratic Party adopted the national self-determination as part of its programme, Lenin argued that “it is only in isolated and exceptional cases that we can advance and actively support demands conducive to the establishment of a new class state” against the calls of the PPS for the restoration of Poland.5 This lack of sympathy to struggles for national independence in practice was noted by contemporary socialist supporters of nationalism, the Ukrainian socialist Yurkevych polemicized that Lenin supported the right of national self-determination “for appearances’ sake” whilst in actuality being a “fervent defender of her [Russia’s] unity”.6 If the exercise of the right of national self-determination naturally leads to the formation of an independent state, Lenin was politically opposed to it in many of the same cases as Luxemburg. This distinction may be lost upon later “Leninists”, such as the Scottish Socialist Party who assume Scottish independence to be an extension of national self-determination, but it should not be obscured from our view.

Moreover, Lenin’s position changed through the course of his political experiences. The early Soviet government’s policy on nationalities required that “we must maintain and strengthen the union of socialist republics”.7 Instead of promoting secession, the Bolsheviks pursued a policy of Korenizatsiya (nativization) in which national minorities were promoted in their local bureaucracies and administrative institutions spoke the minority language. Hence national autonomy within a larger state was seen as an adequate guarantor of national rights to oppressed nations. Far from a consistent “Leninist position” of supporting the exercise of the right of national self-determination in nearly all cases, it is raised, what emerges as Lenin’s actual position is a theoretical “right” whose use is very rarely legitimated by historical conditions and the interests of the working class in practice, even where there are popular nationalist movements. Is this “right” really so far from the metaphysical formula that Rosa Luxemburg derided the principle of self-determination as?

Having dealt with the historical misapprehensions of Lenin’s position, it is time to reappraise the perspective of Rosa Luxemburg. Whilst her position is frequently presented as a theoretical innovation on her part, Luxemburg herself noted a longer anti-national heritage. Assessing the legacy of the earlier conspiratorial Polish socialist party, the Proletariat, she argued that they “fought nationalism by all available means and invariably regarded national aspirations as something which can only distract the working class from their own goals”.8 Far from national self-determination being an accepted orthodox Marxist position, we should keep in mind that the PPS had to argue for it at multiple congresses of the Second International in the case of Poland. After the revolutionary upsurges in Russia in 1905, a considerable segment of the PPS formed the PPS-Left, which similarly disavowed national independence as an immediate goal for socialists.

There were three core strands to Luxemburg’s opposition to national self-determination. Firstly, it was materially unviable given that no new nation could achieve economic independence owing to the spread of capitalism. Secondly, pursuing national self-determination in the form of supporting independence struggles did not make strategic sense for socialists as it inhibited them from placing political demands upon existing states. Finally, and most saliently for socialists today, even if national self-determination was politically and economically more than a utopian pipe-dream, it would still be against the interests of the working class to pursue it.

These latter two strands are more decisive in understanding Rosa Luxemburg’s position and are what make it more than a miscalculation rooted in economic determinism. Luxemburg herself appreciated the separation of the “economic” from the “political” under capitalism, as she argued capitalism “annihilated Polish national independence but at the same time created modern Polish national culture”.9 Far from being a national nihilist, Luxemburg stated that the proletariat “must fight for the defense of national identity as a cultural legacy, that has its own right to exist and flourish”.10 The 20th century has proven that political independence is materially possible. It has not shown that it is a remedy for national oppression and that it is a worthy goal for socialists.

National self-determination, in Luxemburg’s words, “gives no practical guidelines for the day to day politics of the proletariat, nor any practical solution of nationality problems”.11 As we can observe from Lenin’s policies on nationalities, there is no consistent conclusion that comes from the acknowledgment of this “right”. The only real conclusion is that affairs must be settled by the relevant nationality, which is presented as a homogeneous socio-political entity, as opposed to a site of class struggle in itself. The impracticality of this formula was not only resisted by Luxemburg, but also by Fritz Rozins, a Latvian socialist. Rozins, criticizing the position of Lenin in 1902, made the argument that several nations can occupy the same territory which problematized the demand for national self-determination.12

When examining contemporary manifestations of the national problem, these issues are thrown into sharper focus. In the case of Israel and Palestine, the framework of two competing claims of national self-determination which need to be reconciled with each other ultimately leads to endorsing an indefinite political and economic subordination of one nation by another. One way some sections of the modern Left attempt to address this is by rendering one nation’s claim (Israel’s) as inherently illegitimate, on account of its annexationist political project and racist domestic policy, and hence dismissing Hebrew Jewish people as constituting a national people with particular rights. However, making the right of national self-determination contingent upon the political project of its claimants would leave very few nations, if any, with this “right” at all, as its claimants tend to be an aspirational national bourgeoisie, whose class interests are tied to the continuation of the subjugation of the working class peoples within a territory, including working-class national minorities. The best way forward is to abandon such a “right” altogether, which assumes a basic unity between the interests of the oppressor and oppressed as part of the same nation. The question should instead be examined from the perspective of the common interests of the Israeli and Palestinian working classes against the Israeli state.

Abandoning national self-determination as a democratic “right”, which socialists should cease to guarantee as a part of their programmes is often equated with opposing national struggles in all cases. Rosa Luxemburg’s attitude to Armenia at the beginning of the 20th century demonstrates this is not the case. Unlike a number of her contemporaries who were concerned that the disintegration of the Ottoman Empire would only strengthen the hand of Tsarist Russia, Luxemburg argued emphatically that “the aspirations to freedom can here make themselves felt only in a national struggle” and hence that Social Democracy must “stand for the insurgents”.13 In her reasoning, the national struggle was appropriate for Armenia in a way that it was not for Poland, as the Armenian territories lacked a working-class, and were not bound to the Ottoman Empire by capitalist economic development, but by brute force. Perhaps ironically, this put her at odds with the Armenian Social Democrat David Ananoun, who rejected national secession on the grounds that new nation-states could not guarantee the rights of national minorities within them. The Armenian Social Democrats “always subordinated the solution of the national problem to the victory of the proletarian revolution”, including rejecting the specificity of Armenian situation.14 One could say they surpassed the supposed “international proletariat fundamentalism” of Rosa Luxemburg.

Both Ananoun and Luxemburg rejected territorial national self-determination as a framework, yet drew different conclusions in the specific case of Armenia. Why is that? By moving away from the idea that national oppression can be resolved by emergent nations, settling national oppression becomes the affair of the working class. Franz Mehring, on the left-wing of the SPD, clarified this in the case of Poland: “The age when a bourgeois revolution could create a free Poland is over, today the rebirth of Poland is only possible through a social revolution in which the modern proletariat breaks its chains”.15 Supporting a nationalist movement for Luxemburg only became tenable in the absence of an organized working class, and nationalism could not be the slogan raised to lead it. For Ananoun, conscious of the lack of capacity of forming coherent territorial states along ethnic lines in heterogeneous Transcaucasia, his position was conditioned by the concern of maintaining the rights and cultures of national minorities in territories that were necessarily going to contain multiple nationalities. This reveals the national question as it should be for the socialist movement: a question of the interests and the capacities of the working classes to place their demands upon bourgeois class states, and hence, the conquest of political power by the working classes. The maintenance of nationalities, in the form of culture and language, is part of the political and social rights that the working class wins through struggle against class states, not by creating them. Rather than debating whether a nation ought to exercise a “right” of self-determination, socialists should see the nation itself as a veil, under which contending classes are hidden.

What fundamentally determined Rosa Luxemburg’s attitude was understanding that nationalism was not an empty vessel in which socialists could pour in proletarian content. The ideology of nationhood intrinsically demands temporary class collaboration, at the very least, to the advantage of the ruling classes. An article she penned in January 1918, intended as friendly criticism of the early Soviet government’s policy on nationalities, most clearly articulates this perspective:

“The “right of nations to self-determination” is a hollow phrase which in practice always delivers the masses of people to the ruling classes.

Of course, it is the task of the revolutionary proletariat to implement the most expansive political democracy and equality of nationalities, but it is the least of our concerns to delight the world with freshly baked national class states. Only the bourgeoisie in every nation is interested in the apparatus of state independence, which has nothing to do with democracy. After all, state independence itself is a dazzling thing which is often used to cover up the slaughter of people.”16

This has been vindicated by historical experience. When we look at Poland today, a right-wing government is installing “Independence Benches” that play nationalist speeches.17 The speeches were delivered by none other than Józef Piłsudski, a former leader of the PPS who later abandoned socialism altogether. The warning of the Polish Communist Party, published in 1919, a year after Polish independence, that bourgeois “independence” in reality meant “the brutal dictatorship of the bourgeoisie over the proletariat” has proven more correct than any fantasy about the achievement of independence offering a permanent resolution to the national question, opening up the battlefield of class struggle.18 The formation of new class states does not resolve national oppression, so much as redistribute it.

Revolutionary internationalism, or the so-called “international proletariat fundamentalism”, stands as a rejoinder to those who seek shortcuts to social revolution by the construction of nation-states. Yet it also allows for a more positive assessment of nationalities. Rather than being bound to the political form of territorial states responsible for the oppression of millions across centuries, the traditions, institutions, and languages associated with nationalities can become part of a universal cultural legacy and human inheritance that requires neither the violence of borders nor of class rule. We can be moved by the words of the poet Adam Mickiewicz without scrambling to statehood. Capitalist development has made the endgame of the exercise of national self-determination, the nation-state, a dead-end for socialists. It is now necessary to pose the national question once more and seek different answers.


Monument to Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht, built in 1926 and destroyed in 1935.

Fragment on War, National Questions and Revolution

When hatred of the proletariat and the imminent social revolution is absolutely decisive for the bourgeoisie in all their deeds and activities, in their peace programme and in their policies for the future: what is the international proletariat doing? Completely blind to the lessons of the Russian Revolution, forgetting the ABCs of socialism, it pursues the same peace programme as the bourgeoisie, it elevates it to its own programme! Hail Wilson and the League of Nations! Hail national self-determination and disarmament! This is now the banner that suddenly socialists of all countries are uniting under – together with the imperialist governments of the Entente, with the most reactionary parties, the government socialist boot-lickers, the ‘true in principle’ oppositional swamp socialists, bourgeois pacifists, petty-bourgeois utopians, nationalist upstart states, bankrupt German imperialists, the Pope, the Finnish executioners of the revolutionary proletariat, the Ukrainian sugar babies of German militarism.

In Poland the Daszyńskis are in a cosy union with the Galician slaughterers and Warsaw’s big bourgeoisie, in German Austria, Adler, Renner, Otto Bauer, and Julius Deutsch are arm-in-arm with the Christian Socials, the landowners and the German Nationals, in Bohemia the Soukup and the Nemec are in a close phalanx with all the bourgeois parties – a touching reconciliation of the classes. And everywhere the national drunkenness: the international banner of peace! The socialists are pulling the bourgeoisie’s chestnuts out of the fire. They are helping, using their ideology and their authority, to cover up the moral bankruptcy of bourgeois society and to save it. They are helping to renovate and consolidate bourgeois class rule.

And the first practical coronation of this unctuous policy – the defeat of the Russian Revolution and the partition of Russia.

It is the politics of 4th August 1914, only turned upside down in the concave mirror of peace. The capitulation of class struggle, the coalition with each national bourgeoisie for the reciprocal wartime slaughter transformed into an international world coalition for a ‘negotiated peace’. The cheapest, the corniest old wives’ tale, a movie melodrama – that’s what they’re falling for: Capital suddenly vanished, class oppositions null and void. Disarmament, peace, democracy, and harmony of nations. Power bows before justice, the weak straighten their backs up. Krupp instead of cannons will produce Christmas lights, the American city Gari [?] will be turned into a Fröbel kindergarten. Noah’s Ark, where the lamb grazes peacefully next to the wolf, the tiger purrs and blinks like a big house cat, while the antelope crawls with horns tucked behind the ear, the lions and goats play with blind cows. And all that with the help of the magic formula of Wilson, of the president of the American billionaires, all that with the help of Clemenceau, Lloyd George and the Prince Max of Baden! Disarmament, after England and America are two new military powers! Disarmament, after the technology has immeasurably advanced. After all, states sit in the pocket of arms and finance capital through national debt! After colonies – colonies remain. The ideas of class struggle formally capitulate to national ideas here. The harmony of classes in every nation appears as the condition for and expansion of the harmony of nations that should emerge out of the world war in a ‘League of Nations’. 

Nationalism is an instant trump card. From all sides, nations and nationettes stake out a claim for their right to state formation. Rotted corpses rise out of hundred-year-old graves, filled with fresh spring shoots, and “historyless” peoples, who never formed an independent state entity up until now, feel a violent urge towards state formation. Poland, Ukraine, Belarussians, Lithuanians, Czechs, Yugoslavia, ten new nations of the Caucasus. Zionists are already erecting their Palestine Ghetto, provisionally in Philadelphia. It’s Walpurgis Night at Blockula today!

Broom and pitch-fork, goat and prong… To-night who flies not, never flies.

But nationalism is only a formula. The core, the historical content that is planted in it, is as manifold and rich in connections as the formula of  ‘national self-determination’, under which it is veiled, is hollow and sparse.

As in every great revolutionary period the most varied range of old and new scores come to be settled, oppositions are brought to their conclusions: antiquated remnants of the past, the most pressing issues of the present and the barely born problems of the future whirl together. The collapse of Austria and Turkey is the final liquidation of the feudal Middle Ages, an addendum to the work of Napoleon. In this context, however, Germany’s breakdown and diminution is the bankruptcy of the most recent and newest imperialism and its plans for world mastery, first formed in war. It is equally only the bankruptcy of a specific method of imperialist rule: by East Elbian reaction and military dictatorship, by siege and extermination methods, first used against the Hereros in the Kalahari Desert, now carried over to Europe. The disintegration of Russia, outwardly and in its formal results: the formation of small nation-states, analogous to the collapse of Austria and Turkey,  poses the opposite problem: on the one hand, capitulation of proletarian politics on a national scale before imperialism, and on the other capitalist counterrevolution against the proletarian seizure of power.

A K. [Kautsky] sees in this, in his pedantic, school-masterly schematism, the triumph of ‘democracy’, whose component parts and manifestation form are simply the nation-state. The washed-out petty-bourgeois formalist naturally forget to look into the inner historical core, forgets, as an appointed temple guard of historical materialism, that the ‘nation-state’ and ‘nationalism’ are empty pods into which each historical epoch and set of class relations pour their particular material content. German and Italian ‘nation-states’ in the 1870s were the slogan and the programme of the bourgeois state, of bourgeois class rule. Its leadership was directed against medieval, feudal past, the patriarchal, bureaucratic state and the fragmentation of economic life. In Poland the ‘nation-state’ was the traditional slogan of agrarian-noble and petty-bourgeois opposition to modern capitalist development. It was a slogan whose leadership was directed against the modern phenomena of life: both bourgeois liberalism and its antipode, the socialist workers movement. In the Balkans, in Bulgaria, Serbia and Romania, nationalism, the powerful outbreak of which was displayed in the two bloody Balkan wars as a prelude to the world war, was one hand an expression of aspirational capitalist development and bourgeois class rule in all these states, it was an expression of the conflicting interests of the bourgeoisie among themselves as well as the clash of their development tendency with Austrian imperialism. Simultaneously, the nationalism of these countries, although at heart only the expression of a quite young, germ-like capitalism, was and is colored in the general atmosphere of imperialist development, even with distinct imperial tendencies. In Italy, nationalism is already thoroughly and exclusively a company plaque for a purely imperialist colonial appetite. The nationalism of the Tripolitan war and the Albanian appetite has as little in common with the Italian nationalism of the 1850s and 1860s as Mr. Sonnino has with Giuseppe Garibaldi.

In Russian Ukraine, up until the October uprising in 1917, nationalism was nothing, a bubble, the arrogance of roughly a dozen professors and lawyers who mostly couldn’t speak Ukrainian themselves. Since the Bolshevik Revolution it has become the very real expression of the petty-bourgeois counterrevolution, whose head is directed against the socialist working class. In India, nationalism is the expression of an emerging domestic bourgeoisie, which aims for independent exploitation of the country on its account instead of only serving as an object for English capital to leech. This nationalism, therefore, corresponds with its social content and its historical stage like the emancipation struggles of the United States of America at the outset of the 18th century.

So nationalism reflects back all conceivable interests, nuances, historical situations. It shines in all colors. It is everything and nothing, a mere shell. Everything hangs on it to assert its own particular social core.

So the universal, immediate world explosion of nationalism brings with it the most colorful confusion of special interests and tendencies in its bosom. But there is an axis that gives all these special interests a direction, a universal interest created by the particular historical situation: the apex against the threatening world revolution of the proletariat.

The Russian Revolution, with the Bolshevik rule it brought forth, has put the problem of social revolution on the agenda of history. It has pushed the class contradictions between capital and labor to the most extreme heights. In one swoop, it has opened up a gaping chasm between both classes in which volcanic fumes boil and fierce flames blaze. Just as the June Rebellion of the Paris proletariat and the June massacres split bourgeois society into two classes for the first time between which there can only be one law: a struggle of life and death, Bolshevik rule in Russia has placed bourgeois society face to face with the final struggle of life and death. It has destroyed and blown away the fiction of the tame working class that is relatively peacefully organized by socialism, which bragged in theoretical, harmless phrases but practically worshipped the principle: live and let live – that fiction, which was what the practice of German Social Democracy and in its footsteps, the entire International, consisted of for the last thirty years. The Russian Revolution instantly destroyed the modus vivendi between socialism and capitalism, created out of the last half-century of parliamentarism, with a rough fist and transformed socialism from the harmless phrases of electoral agitation, the blue skies of the distant future, into a bloodily serious problem of the present, of today. It has brutally ripped open the old, terrible wounds of bourgeois society that had been healing since the June Days in Paris in 1848. 

All of this, of course, is initially only in the consciousness of the ruling classes. Just as the June Days, with the power of an electric shock, immediately imprinted the consciousness of an irreconcilable class opposition to the working class upon the bourgeoisie of all nations and cast a deadly hatred of the proletariat in their hearts whilst workers of all nations needed decades in order to adopt the same lessons of the June days for themselves, the consciousness of class opposition, it now repeats itself: The Russian Revolution has awakened a fuming, foaming, trembling fear and hatred of the threatening spectre of proletarian dictatorship in the entirety of the possessing classes in every single nation. It can only be compared with the sentiments of the Paris bourgeoisie during the June slaughters and the butchery of the Commune. ‘Bolshevism’ has become the catchword for practical, revolutionary socialism, for all endeavors of the working class to conquer power. In this rupturing of the social abyss within bourgeois society, in the international deepening and sharpening of class antagonism is the historical achievement of Bolshevism, and in this work – like in all great historical contexts – all errors and mistakes of Bolshevism vanish without a trace. 

These sentiments are now the deepest heart of the nationalist delirium in which the capitalist world has seemingly fallen, they are the objective historical content to which the many-colored cards of announced nationalisms are reduced. These small, young bourgeoisie that are now striving for independent existence, are not merely trembling with the desire for winning unrestricted and untrammeled class rule but also for the long-awaited delight of the single-handed strangling of their mortal enemy: the revolutionary proletariat. This is a function they had to concede up until now to the disjointed state apparatus of foreign rule. Hate, like love, is only grudgingly left to a third wheel. Mannerheim’s blood orgies, the Finnish Gallifet, show how much that the blazing heat of hate that has sprouted up in the hearts of all small nations in the last few years, all the Poles, Lithuanians, Romanians, Ukrainians, Czechs, Croats, etc., only waited for the opportunity to finally disembowel the proletariat with ‘national’ means. From all these young nations, which like white and innocent lambs hopped along in the grassy meadows of world history, the carbuncle-like eyes of the grim tiger are already looking out and waiting to “settle the accounts” with the first stirrings of “Bolshevism”. Behind all of the idyllic banquets, the roaring festivals of brotherhood in Vienna, in Prague, in Zagreb, in Warsaw,  Mannerheim’s open graves are already yawning and the Red Guards have to dig them themselves! The gallows of Charkow shimmer like faint silhouettes and the Lubinskys and Holubowitsches invited the German ‘liberators’ to Ukraine for their erection.

And the same fundamental idea reigns in the entire peace programme of Wilson. The “League of Nations” in the atmosphere of Anglo-American imperialism being drunk on victory and the frightening spectre of Bolshevism traversing the world stage can only bring forth one thing: a bourgeois world alliance for the repression of the proletariat. The first blood-soaked sacrifice that the High Priest Wilson, atop his omens, will make in front of the Ark of ‘The League of Nations’ will be Bolshevik Russia. The ‘self-determined nations’, victors and vanquished together, will overthrow it.

The ruling classes once again show their unerring instinct for their class interests, their wonderfully fine sensitivity for the dangers surrounding them. Whilst on the surface, the bourgeoisie are enjoying the loveliest weather and the proletarians of all countries are getting drunk on nationalist and ‘League of Nations’ spring breezes, bourgeois society is being torn limb from limb which heralds the impending change of seasons as the historical barometer falls. Whilst socialists are foolishly eager to pull their chestnuts of peace out of the fire of world war, as ‘national ministers’, they can’t help but see the inevitable, imminent fate behind their backs: the terrible rising spectre of social world revolution that has already silently stepped onto the back of the stage.

It is the objective unsolvability of the tasks bourgeois society faces that makes socialism a historical necessity and world revolution unavoidable.

No one can predict how long this final period will last and what forms it will take. History has already left the well-trodden path and the comfortable routine. Every new step, every new turn of the road opens up new perspectives and new scenery.

What is important is to understand the real problem of the period. The problem is called: the dictatorship of the proletariat, the realization of socialism. The difficulties of the task do not lie in the strength of the opponent, the resistance of bourgeois society. Its ultima ratio: the army is useless for the suppression of the proletariat as a result of the war, it has even become revolutionary itself. Its material basis for existence: the maintenance of society has been shattered by the war. Its moral basis for existence: tradition, routine, and authority have all been blown away by the wind. The whole structure has become loosened, fluid, movable. The conditions for struggle have never been so favourable for any emergent class in world history. It can fall into the lap of the proletariat like a ripe fruit. The difficulty lies in the proletariat itself, in its lack of maturity, or rather, the immaturity of its leaders, the socialist parties. The working class balks, it recoils before the uncertain enormity of its duty again and again. But it must, it must. History takes away all of its excuses: to lead us out of the night and horror of oppressed humanity into the light of liberation.

The Origin of the Split and the Reconstruction of Unity by Karl Kilbom

Introduction and translation by Emma Anderson. Original article can be found here.

Right-wing caricature of Kilbom

The following text was written by Karl Kilbom in 1938 after he had re-entered the Swedish Social-Democratic Party (SAP). He still remains a largely obscure figure in the history of the socialist movement, both internationally and in Sweden, but played a vital role in the development of the socialist movement in his home country.

Kilbom first entered SAP in 1910. He quickly rose in the ranks, becoming secretary of the youth-wing and later chief editor of its paper Stormklockan. With the victorious February Revolution in Russia, Kilbom along with the SAP youth wing left their party to form the Swedish Left Social-Democratic party, which would later be renamed the Swedish Communist Party (SKP) as it joined the Communist International (Comintern). Again Kilbom would rise in the ranks and become one of the most influential members alongside Nils Flyg. A conflict would soon develop between the majority of the party, represented by Kilbom and Fly, and the minority, represented by Hugo Sillén. The first conflict came in 1927 during the start of the “third period”, a period of radicalization of the Comintern, when the SKP, under orders of the Comintern, started to prepare an anti-war campaign in defense of the Soviet Union. This campaign would consist of mass-demonstrations and open meetings, and to get a larger mass base SKP tried to get the syndicalist union, Central Organisation of the Workers of Sweden (SAC), to join the campaign. During talks, SAC demanded that the campaign accept certain pacifist lines or else they would break off the whole thing. Against Comintern guidelines, SKP accepted the demands, which naturally led to large reactions from Comintern-loyal members like Sillén.

The second conflict was larger and regarded the relation to Social-Democracy. Social-Democrats in Sweden still had a large party and full control of the trade unions, where they led large anti-Communist campaigns. The Comintern-loyal members accepted the theory of “social-fascism” (Social-Democracy supposedly enabling fascism, thus equivocating the two) and put forward resolutions during the 1927 congress to point out the Social-Democrats as the worst enemy of all, dedicating no energy against the right-wing parties. On the other side, it was argued that Social-Democratic workers will not be won over by trying to smear Social-Democracy. Instead, concrete demands should be put forward that spoke to the members of SAP while making them question their own leaders. Sillén thought that Social-Democratic workers can only be won over by forming or supporting the formation of a Left-Opposition within SAP, while Kilbom argued that it could only be done through concrete trade union work.

After the seventh Comintern congress, the antagonisms in the party deepened. The minority continued its struggle against the majority, accusing then chairman Nils Flyg of Social-Democratic deviations because of his support for the slogan “worker’s majority” during the general election. At this time Karl Kilbom remained vague on this point. The infighting had thus far remained inside the central commitée but started to reach members.

An issue that Karl Kilbom was more involved in was how to conduct work within the Social-Democratic trade union confederation (LO). In 1926 the party’s executive commitée had decided that a trade union conference they had arranged should act as the formation of a leftist block within the LO-unions. Kilbom was opposed to this and argued for a looser form of organizing as to avoid being purged from LO. At the time being purged from LO was a much more serious thing that could lead to being fired from a workplace if it was a workplace where the union demanded that all workers be unionized. In the end, a “unity commitée” was formed. It held a vague program and was not supposed to be directly under control of the party. In 1927 this commitée managed to do no more than some solidarity work for strikes and had involved several non-communists in essential parts of the organization. These shortcomings were mostly blamed on the organization being too loose. Kilbom remained of the opinion that a firm organization should not be formed as it would risk dividing the trade union movement. During 1928 the commitée managed to gain more ground as Social-Democrats were moving more towards class-collaboration, and the commitée managed to join the red trade union international (Profintern). LO was at the time was still connected to the Amsterdam international while the LO-union for the mining industry had joined Profintern. This, of course, sparked a strong reaction from LO-leadership, which SKP tried to repel. Nonetheless, leading communists were purged.

The downfalls intensified the struggles and the executive commitée decided that this struggle between the two factions could not be solved locally, deciding to have the Comintern’s’ executive commitée intervene. It supported the minority, which the majority rejected and started taking the line that SKP has to leave Comintern. All those who took this line were then suspended from their position and purged. This led to the formation of a new party by Kilbom and Flyg, the Socialist Party (SP). In the split, SKP was barely functioning as it had lost it’s paper and trade union apparatus. The youth-wing of SKP had to step in and replace many party functions, its paper Stormklockan acting as the party paper during some periods. During the ’30s SKP intensified their “third-period” politics by starting to focus solely on organizing against trade unions and for wildcat strikes, while SP kept its focus on legal trade union work. While this might sound as a capitulation for Social-Democracy by the SP it was still the party that led the most militant labor struggles, being the spearhead of the strikes in the paper industry during 1932, a strike that was suppressed by the Social-Democratic leadership and by force by a recently militarized police. Most crucial is SP’s struggle for a united workers’ movement. Just as Kilbom was opposed to any politics that might cause a split in the trade unions during his time in SKP, he struggled for uniting LO and SAC (which had a larger membership at the time) so that the working-class would be unified in one labor union instead of separated along labor union lines.

In 1937 Nils Flyg purged Kilbom, as Nils Flyg had moved towards being a supporter of Nazism (he saw it as the real anti-imperialist part in the coming war). Flyg died in 1943 from suicide when Nazi Germany had started to lose the war. Kilbom went back to the Social-Democrats and submitted the translated text below as his justification. 

The main goal of the socialist movement for Kilbom was to struggle for the betterment of the working-class and win influence over the middle-classes and peasants. In other words to organize primarily around class interests. He saw the constant infighting in the socialist movement as the main hindrance for this, seeing these battles as a distraction from actually taking on battles for working-class victories and organizing. One should, of course, be critical of his solution to the issue of disunity, but the text is an interesting highlight of the dangers that come with splits.

Photo of Kilbom

The origin of the split and the reconstruction of unity


From different perspectives, the question of working-class unity in practice is being discussed in every country. The discussion has been going on for years. Naturally, the interest of this debate has been stronger or weaker in different countries during different periods. The need for unity is not as strong where the large mass of workers are part of the Social-Democratic movement. The insight of needing unity and the struggle for its realization is the most powerful in countries where reactionary forces are powerful. But the issue of splits has still not been solved here. The reasons are many. Party-maneuvers are the most prominent reason. One cannot look past the fact that the work for recreating unity is a hard and tedious process. The contractions within the working-class and its parties are not always about political issues; some specialists on party history claim that most issues are from the start personal. Different temperaments, misunderstandings about motives and intentions, not having an open heart, lacking discussions about the political situations and perspectives, but also methods and the rate of work; these are the reasons without political motives that cause struggles within the party. From this we can garner that recreating unity is not always “simply” a question of political unity. Under all conditions, a good portion of self-control is needed to heal what has been destroyed, but most of all class interests need to come first and foremost.

Under all conditions it appears as if we are in a period of unity being restored. The current situation whips the working masses into demanding it both in politics and in the trade unions. But this can not be done overnight. During the period of 1917-21 groups would split from the working masses, almost all of which have come back to Social-Democracy. With an exception for Sweden, this reunification is practically complete. In both Norway and Denmark there are small communist groups that stand to the side of the Social-Democratic movement, groups with no political or trade unionist significance. Especially in the fascist countries there is cooperation between different tendencies in the labor movement, alongside some leftist bourgeoisie groups who are also set on the liquidation of fascism. In Germany, a party of proletarian unity will come about sooner or later. In England the forces are at play to restore working-class unity; according to information, the coming general election will raise the interest of restoring unity. Noteworthy is that the secretary of the Independent Labour Party, Fenner Brockvay, explained that he was for his party being absorbed into the Labor Party. The cooperation between the workers’ parties and the leftist bourgeoisie elements in the popular fronts in France and Spain is evidence for the power in striving for unity. Of course, the popular front can not be imported into Sweden. The conditions are different here, the same goes for all other countries where the working masses have already become part of the Social-Democratic movement.

During the years before 1914, the workers’ movement marched in a united way, both in politics and in the trade unions. The largest exceptions could be found in Russia, Holland, Spain, and the USA. Naturally, there were disagreements on theoretical, tactical and political questions in the other countries as well but it was seen as self-evident that there should only be one International. The International put a lot of its work into trying to build organizational unity in the countries where workers were divided up between multiple parties.

Then came the break out of war and the collapse of the International. Especially in the neutral countries was the misery of this realized. It was not long before new attempts were made to rebuild unity, or at least get the competing groups together in cooperation. The break out of war did not just break the International, it laid the ground for prominent splits in every country, waring as well as neutral. The workers’ movement had to solve a problem that was much harder to solve than it seemed at the time. It would, therefore, be dumb to deny for example the national feelings that showed itself deep within the working-class. The youth of today have no clue of what the war actually was. Most of us who experienced its horrors have forgotten them. About 65 million were mobilized, armed to the teeth and commanded – millions thought that there was nothing else to do if they wanted to save their own and their kin, home, and valuables – to kill the men at the other side of the trench. 10 million were killed, 87 percent workers and peasants, 20 million were harmed and 7.5 million were captured. Of these hundreds of thousands would die of starvation and common disease in prison camps located hundreds of miles from their home and loved ones. And what material worths were not destroyed! Houses and factories for 50 billion were destroyed, ships for 18, and so on. In France alone about 600,000 houses were destroyed, what horror must the owners and tenants have experienced. Don’t forget that the insanity lasted four years. If all hell was loose at the fronts, it was not that much better behind the frontlines. Was it that strange the masses were finally struck by desperation? Should one not be marveled if the working-class finally, shaped for years by violence and destruction with all the inventions of mankind, would reflect on actions aligned with the formulation: “Rather an end with horror than endless horror”? After the two first years of war, the struggle to end the war was quickly transformed into demands to end the entire capitalist system with revolutionary means. Future war was to be prevented through the fall of capitalism. Even if most parts of the capitalist world has not accepted this it was at least widely accepted that the political systems that existed before the war has to be abolished. Through extended rights for the working masses bourgeois democracy was to be solidified; internationally a new judicial order was to be created for the association between peoples and a special organization to act as administrator and supervisor over this new order. Everywhere the spirit of revolt took hold. The Russian Revolution became a powerful call for revolt. The entire world listened to it. It was followed by social revolutions in Finland, Germany (the events in Berlin towards the end of 1918 and 1919 was started with sailor uprisings in Kiel and Lübeck, and was followed by revolutionary uprisings in Ruhr and Hamburg alongside Bayern and Sachsen-Türingen, in the last three locations the workers held political power for shorter or longer periods), Austria, Hungary, and Italy. There were also revolutions for national liberation in the Balkans, the Baltic countries, Poland and many more countries.  That social motives also became a part of these revolutions was obvious. From August 1914 to the end of 1918 the world was at war. Already in 1917 it was clear that in Europe at least a new force of revolution was about to enter the arena. In this new situation, our part of the world remained until 1921-22. The working-masses and the anti-war bourgeoisie had a will to go on the offensive on a scale never seen before. 

In this period the workers’ movement exploded. Decades of organizational work was spoiled. Naturally, we mourn this fact. Of course, the situation today would be different if workers’ unity had been kept intact. But wasn’t the split in 1917-22 then historically unavoidable? After two decades the answer can not be anything else but one. Those who broke from the old labor movement twenty years ago fully believed that through creating new parties they were benefiting the class, and all of humanity. They were ready to struggle against capitalism, the system of war and death, to the point of self-destruction. Socialism and therefore a society of world peace was to be established. 

Things didn’t turn out this way! Today the situation is the complete opposite from the period of 1917-1922. Today the working-class has been pushed to be on the defensive in most of Europe. Already in 1922 it was clear that the situation was transforming into a new one – the fascists took power in Italy in October that year. At the start of 1923 Lenin got the Communist Party in Russia to radically change its course by accepting the New Economic Policy (NEP) after long struggles inside of the party. Does anyone today deny that it was necessary? Lenin explained that the main goal was to keep political power in the hands of the workers and to let capitalists gain influence on the market. For this Lenin was deemed “a tired man” who “no longer believed in the working masses”. But this retreat he pushed through preceded total or partial defeats in Finland, Germany, Hungary, and Italy. The dictatorship in the interest of the few could not be discerned. Lenin saw more clearly in 1923 than his opponents in the struggle inside the party. Today fascist or fascist related dictatorships have taken power in Portugal, Italy, Hungary, Germany, Austria, Greece, Romania, Albania, Latvia, Estonia, and Lithuania. It is also on its march in South America. In over half of Europe, looking at both population size and geographical area, the democratic rights of the working-class have been fully swept away. Not even human rights are recognized. Even bourgeoisie opposition elements are faced with concentration camps. The term freedom has been destroyed. The individual is a mere number in the hands of the dictatorship. Violence, lies, and fraud between states are developing at a rate that was unthinkable even during the great war.

How did we get here? Look at Italy! A unified, organized and led working-class would, especially at the time, have considered the effects before it started the factory occupations (which was started by the leftist elements of the workers’ movement) in northern Italy 1920. This inevitable loss gave more power to the fascists. The power of a unified working-class is that it would have been able to stop this action or at least conducted a retreat in such a way that its organizations would not collapse. If the workers’ movement had not collapsed then the situation for the petit bourgeoisie would not have become as dire and they would not have joined the fascists. With the occupation of the factories in Northern Italy both the communists and syndicalists were ruined, but the workers’ movement overall took the worst hit. After the autumn in 1920, the fascist terror was regularly used against all left elements. And more importantly, the fascists retained their full support from industrialists, financialists, military, and police.

Or look at Germany. Let us assume that part of the workers’ movement’s leaders did break the revolutionary offensive through their actions. But the chain of events does not stop there. Was it not then necessary for the communists to later join forces with the national socialists, who were becoming more well-liked by the working masses? The national socialists had on multiple occasions shown their intention of liquidating the entire workers’ movement. Internal struggles had developed to such a point that the “victory” of one’s own party, or one’s own tendency, started to overshadow everything else. For these socialists, the interests of the working-class had to take a backseat if they even considered the interests of the working-class. The war between the different tendencies, which often took very concrete forms, sowed distrust among workers about the possibility of a socialist society, or to even achieve any betterments at all. This also undermined the middle-classes’ and peasants’ trust for the ability of the workers’ movement to carry out any positive politics and therefore reduced its attraction power – and so they went to the Nazis. Those who knew people in Germany before Hitler seizing power had more and more the following reasoning: “There is nothing left but the Nazis. Before we went to the Social-Democrats and Communists but now they only consist of infighting, which is why no betterment of society will come from them.” Sure, this view was short-sighted but it inevitably grew from the split. This or that tendencies can “win” during a meeting, but does not the proletarian sense for unity when the third part, the bourgeoisie, wins all when the real challenges come? The development in Italy and Germany is neither just the result of working-class disunity, it is much more complicated than that, but it could be said that the development would not have been as dire if a united working-class with the support of leftist bourgeoisie elements could challenge the reactionary forces.

We have to learn from the same experiences in Spain. Workers – and also leftist bourgeoisie elements – forces were split and at times destroyed through infighting. Would not the situation be different today if the workers’ movement started marching on a unified line back in 1931? Through its actions, even the “left” wing helped the fascists (for example the “neutrality” of the syndicalists during the uprising in Catalonia 1934 and their peer “Workers’ Party of Marxist Unification” stance during the first year of Franco’s offensive). The infighting in Catalonia, which exploded in Barcelona in May of 1937, alongside the fight between the workers’ movement in Catalonia and the workers’ movement in Spain, shows us the most horrifying consequences of splits, and the conquest of Teruel by government forces shows us again the power of unity and unified leadership gives. The development in Spain since 1936 and the grim prospect of eventual fascist victory against the working-class in countries who still have democratic states – not to speak of the risks of a new war and the developments it would cause  – must be considered by the working-class. It is high time that we show that we learned something from what has happened in Europe during the last two decades. A Swedish comrade who spent six months in Spain as a volunteer in the war against fascism sent this greeting to Sweden: Do not wait with the realization of unity until you are in the trenches!

Never before during the last two decades have the struggle between the workers in our country been so limited, and contractions so small as they are now. For 99 percent there are no principal contradictions –  at most one percent of the working-masses hold a diverging understanding on this question, which for now has no practical meaning. The organizational split is based on tactical, not to mention traditional and emotional, conditions. To the extent that congress decisions matter, for example, the Socialist Party have for the past few years held the same stance as the Social-Democrats on two of the most important questions: democracy and military defense. At the last congress the following programmatic statement was accepted:

“The Socialist Party urgently raise the slogan of united action to defend the working people, both rural and in cities, economic and social interests for democratic rights. Defense of democracy demands that one works to better democracy and to expand democracy in all areas of society until socialist democracy has been realized through the decision of the majority of the people.

Because of this, the Socialist Party is ready to cooperate with all groups and parties who with and through the working people build the fundamentals for politics that benefit the working-class.”

This is a far cry from wanting a dictatorship. Likewise, the party has through a string of statements from its representatives in different situations admitted the need for military defense. On more than one occasion principal declarations have been given against pacifism and “defense nihilism”.

The Socialist Party gave its full commitment to the demand for the democratization of the military, which would not have been possible if it had been on principle against defense.

Considering all the circumstances, the development of the Social-Democratic party’s politics has proven to benefit the wide layers of people, who on a larger scale give their support back (last election the party got about 300,000 more votes). Therefore there is no reason from a worker’s perspective to not give them active political support. Each one who dreams of real politics must from now on admit that for the foreseeable future workers only flock around the Social-Democratic party. This can not be done with the old Socialist Party or the Communist Party. Even less would they be able to cooperate with the peasants and middle-classes. Under the current conditions in the world, it would be dumb, a crime, to refuse the support from the groups of people, both for what has been won and the coming politics, which with all its force aim to better the lives of those who have it the worst.

‘The United Front’ by Jose Carlos Mariategui

Translation and introduction by Renato Flores. 

Portrait by Bruno Portuguez Nolasco

Jose Carlos Mariategui was a Peruvian Marxist, who became the founder of the precursor to the Peruvian Communist Party. He was born in 1894, in Moquegua, but he came of age in Lima and on the Peruvian coast. Plagued by health problems, Mariategui’s flame extinguished at just thirty-five years of age. The world was robbed of one of the most brilliant South American Marxists of his generation. For decades, his work remained obscure outside of Peru, and available only to those who spoke Spanish. 

In this piece we present, Mariategui lays out a vision for a united front as the initial step of building the proletarians’ forces. Shadows of Sorel’s influence on Mariategui can be seen, as he constructs a myth of the united front and of the workers’ souls in longing for it. But more importantly- Mariategui’s united front was his conception of party-building. He wanted class and programmatic unity before strict theoretical unity. For years he resisted the Comintern’s wishes to build a Peruvian Communist Party that strictly adhered to the 21 theses, especially once the Comintern turned to the ultra-leftist “third period”. Instead, he started off with a newspaper, Amaunta, while collaborating closely with the weak workers’ and indigenous’ movements. 

The united front was central to Mariategui’s conception of politics. Two experiences had shaken him profoundly.  Mariategui was present in the Livorno congress, where the Italian Communist Party was founded. He had witnessed firsthand the failure of the Italian Socialist Party in the early 1920s to capitalize on the occupation of the factories, and how this had opened the floodgates for the later rise of Mussolini and fascism. Mariategui, like Gramsci, recognized that the Italian Socialists had no base among the Southern Peasantry, and this had hurt them substantially.

Mariategui was also shaken by the Mexican Revolution. Often ignored in the West, it took place as Europe was fighting in the trenches and the Bolsheviks made their wager for power. The Mexican Revolution was a complex social progress, with many sides to it. One of the most critical episodes took place in 1915 after the nascent bourgeoise led by Venustiano Carranza and Alvaro Obregón had defeated the semi-feudal forces of reaction. The bourgeois needed to consolidate its power against the peasant armies of Villa and Zapata, their previous allies. For this, they tragically drew from the anarcho-syndicalist workers in Mexico City’s Casa del Obrero Mundial, who willingly provided soldiers and support to destroy the “feudal and barbaric” peasant revolt of Villa and Zapata. Mexico’s revolution was interrupted as the workers delivered the state power to the national bourgeoisie. 

In both of these instances, the bourgeoisie had split the dispossessed and had pitted them against each other to defeat their radical pretenses. But some leftist Peruvians actually looked up to the Mexican model. APRA, led by Haya de la Torre wanted to move beyond Peru’s “semi-feudal” system through an alliance between the proletarian and the revolutionary bourgeoisie. Mariategui wanted nothing of this losing scheme and insisted on the centrality of the united front to unite all workers and Indian peasants against the real enemy, the bourgeoisie which had no revolutionary role to play. 

Mariategui fought on many fronts, theorizing a Peruvian Marxism that was both internationalist, and sensitive to the local conditions. Aside from running Amaunta, he lectured at a popular university, where he was regularly accosted by orthodox anarchists (something he refers to in the text). Mariategui was also involved in the indigenous movement, attending the third Indigenous Congress in 1923. He was one of the first Marxists to theorize the material relationship between the colonized Indians of Peru, understanding that Marxists should relate to their “question” not by declaring the inevitability of assimilation and trying to accelerate it, but by giving them control over the land. 

Mariategui’s group establish the Peruvian Socialist Party in 1928 only after the final break with de la Torre, who had founded a personalist party to contest the elections. The united front would slowly break, the PSP became a Comintern-compliant party after his death and was renamed to the Peruvian Communist Party. Mariategui’s legacy is ironically claimed by such diverse parties as ARPA, which he regularly polemicized against, and Shining Path, who could not be further from Mariategui’s united front as they bombed and killed other leftists as often as they attacked the state. Mariategui is today seeing renewed interest in the Anglosphere, including the recent publication of “In the Red Corner” by Haymarket books. As today’s socialist forces reckon with a defeated and nonexistent workers’ movement, Mariategui’s united front remains as relevant as ever to rebuild our fighting forces.

Soviet May Day Poster

The United Front

May the First is a worldwide day of unity for the revolutionary proletariat, a date that gathers all the organised workers in an immense international united front. On this date, the words of Karl Marx resound, unanimously abided and obeyed: “Proletarians of all countries, unite!”. On this day, all the barriers that differentiate and separate the proletarian vanguard into several groups and several schools spontaneously fall. May 1st does not belong to a single International. It is the day of all Internationals. Today, socialists, communists, and libertarians of all shades mix and blur in a single army that marches towards the final struggle.

In short: this date is an affirmation and an instantiation that the proletarian united front is possible, that it is practicable, and that no present interest or requirement is opposed to its realization.

This international date invites many meditations. But for the Peruvian workers the most current, the most timely one is that which concerns the necessity and the possibility of the united front. Recently, there have been some sectionist attempts. It is thus urgent to understand each other, it is urgent to be concrete to prevent these attempts from prospering, preventing them from undermining and undercutting Peru’s nascent proletarian vanguard.

Since I joined this vanguard, my stance has always been that of a convinced patreon, that of a fervent propagandist of the united front. I remember declaring this at one of the opening conferences of my course on the history of the world crisis. I answered the first gestures of resistance and apprehension from some veteran and hieratic libertarians, who are more concerned with the rigidity of dogma than with the effectiveness and fecundity of action, I said then from the tribune of the People’s University: “We are still too few to divide ourselves. Let us not make an affair out of labels or titles.”

Subsequently, I have repeated these or other analogous words. And I will not get tired of repeating them. The class movement, among us, is still very incipient, very limited, for us to think about fractioning it and splitting it. Before the inevitable hour of division arrives, it falls unto us to perform plenty of common work, plenty of solidarity work. We have many long journeys to undertake together. It is up to us, for example, to awaken in the majority of the Peruvian proletariat class consciousness and class belonging. This task belongs equally to socialists and syndicalists, to communists and to libertarians. We all have a duty to sow the seeds of renewal and to spread class consciousness. We all have a duty to keep the proletariat away from the yellow unions and the false “institutions of representation”. We all have a duty to fight against reactionary attacks and repressions. We all have a duty to defend the proletarian tribune, the proletarian press, and the proletarian organization. We all have a duty to uphold the demands of the enslaved and oppressed indigenous race. And in the fulfillment of these historical duties, of these elementary duties, our paths will meet and join, whatever our ultimate goal is.

The united front does not cancel the personality, nor does it not void the affiliation of any of those who compose it. It does not mean the confusion or amalgamation of all doctrines into a single one. It is a contingent, concrete and practical action. The program of the united front considers exclusively the immediate reality outside of all abstractions and utopias. To preach the united front is not to preach ideological confusion. Within the united front each one must preserve his own affiliation and his own ideology. Each one must work for his own beliefs. But all must feel united by class solidarity, bound by the struggle against the common rival, bound by the same revolutionary will and by the same rejuvenating passion. To form a united front is to have a mindset of solidarity in the face of a concrete problem; in the face of an urgent need. It does not mean renouncing the doctrines that one serves, nor abandoning the position that one occupies in the vanguard. The diversity of tendencies and ideological nuances is inevitable in that immense human legion called the proletariat. The existence of defined and precise tendencies and groups is not an evil. On the contrary, it is the sign of an advanced period of the revolutionary process. What matters is that these groups and tendencies know how to understand themselves when facing the concrete reality of the day. Let them not be Byzantinely sterilized in reciprocal exconfessions and ex-communications. Do not drive the masses away from the revolution with the spectacle of dogmatic quarrels between their preachers. Do not use your weapons nor waste your time in hurting each other, but use them in combating the social order, its institutions, its injustices, and its crimes.

Let us warmly reach out to feel the historical bond that unites us to all the men of the vanguard and to all the patrons of renewal. The examples that come to us daily from outside are uncountable and magnificent. The most recent and poignant of these is that of Germaine Berthon. Germaine Berthon, an anarchist, accurately fired her revolver at an organizer and operator of White terror, thus avenging the murder of the socialist Jean Jaurés. The noble, heightened and sincere spirits of the revolution perceive and respect the historical solidarity of her efforts and her works. The privilege of sectarian incomprehension and egotism belong to the petty spirits, who lack horizons and wings, and the dogmatic mentalities, which desire to petrify and immobilize life inside of a rigid formula.

Among us the proletarian united front is fortunately a choice and an evident longing of the proletariat. The masses call for unity. The masses demand faith. And that is why their soul rejects the corrosive, disintegrating and pessimistic voice of those who renege and of those who doubt, and instead seeks the optimistic, warm, youthful and fruitful voice of those who assert and of those who believe.

 

Speech On Environmental Protections by Karl Liebknecht

Translation and Introduction by Rida Vaquas. 

Garden City of Tomorrow, Howard Ebenezer, 1902

This speech was delivered in 1912 to the Prussian House of Deputies in response to a proposal by the Free People’s Party. Environmental destruction was not as far-reaching then as it is now, yet Liebknecht was keenly aware of the disappearance of butterflies and insects, of the small changes that bode ill. 

For Liebknecht, protecting nature was inextricable from putting nature in the hands of the people. In his day, Berlin had seen many conflicts between its working-class inhabitants and the Prussian government in particular regarding access to the Grunewald, the forests around Berlin. By the turn of the century, the people of Berlin had successfully driven the Kaiser from hosting the Saint Hubertus hunt there, using it for their own recreation and abusing the participants in the hunt. While the populace made it their spot for picnics and trips, the state government made numerous attempts at selling it off to real estate developers. Time and time again, Berliners mobilized themselves to resist this privatization of green space, and repeatedly won.

In our time, the garden city movement has largely been associated with well-meaning middle-class liberalism. Yet while those elements were certainly present in Wilhelmine Germany, when Liebknecht calls for cities to be transformed into garden cities, he is speaking for working-class communities who organized themselves for the right to live in flourishing environments. In 1909 social-democratic metalworkers founded Gartenstadt Kolonie-Reform, a project to build social housing in green surroundings in Magdeburg. These colorful buildings, designed by Bruno Taut, the ‘worker’s architect’, are a reminder that class struggle is concerned with aesthetic values, with the way that the light falls on a blue house.

We are at the point that capitalism is threatening our continued existence. Two million people in London are living with illegal air pollution. Millions of songbirds are vacuumed to death every year in the course of industrial olive harvesting. Across the world, millions of people are already living with climate-related disease, displacement, and desertification. The exploitation of natural resources by capital has not been in our interests. As the wealthy flee Phoenix for Flagstaff to escape the rising temperatures, the poor risk their lives to migrate only to be detained. Capitalist organization of industry and agriculture has led to the devastation of entire communities, resource depletion on a mass scale and the sixth mass extinction. Protecting our natural environment can only be accomplished by overcoming the alienation from nature that is synonymous with the alienation of labour that capitalism has wrought upon us.

Absent from this speech is hope in a technological deus ex machina that can save us at the 11th hour.  As he argues nature ‘once destroyed cannot easily be replaced again’. This rings even truer today. Recycling has been revealed to be only another administrative step on the way to landfills, ‘clean’ energy can be just as dirty as fossil fuels. The Left today needs to reckon with this reality: there is no way out of the coming catastrophe other than totally transforming how we live. 

This does not mean regressing into a dreary austerity, of inflicting punishment upon ourselves. Quite clearly, the blithe statement ‘happiness is not found in things’ does not help the people who are deprived of the essential material conditions for life, overwhelmingly the international working class. However, the individualized, lonely, consumption of an ever-increasing pile of ‘things’ in the West is a punishment that capitalism has inflicted upon us: a planetary death sentence. We have been robbed of the time and resources to live in a real community: to share our meals with friends, to develop hobbies, to walk through the woods together.  Instead of clinging to a sordid loneliness, we must bring forward a vision of a good life that contests that this loneliness is all there is.

Karl Liebknecht’s chief insight was that overcoming the alienation of humanity from nature will be joyous! Our programme is to bring nature to the people. We shall transform the ‘stone deserts’ into the people’s gardens.


Liebknecht in 1915

It would have been more desirable for us if the Commission had taken a somewhat more vigorous decision because the trend from which this proposal emerges, which the commission has only adopted in a watered-down form, is so appealing and worthy of credit that we can only express our agreement with great emphasis. It is truly extraordinarily important that we recognize more and more what irreplaceable value nature has in her beauty, and that her glories, once destroyed, cannot easily be replaced again. Unfortunately, that’s why we have every reason, in order to sharpen our conscience, to remind the government: it is easy to clear a forest, to dry out a lake, it is easy to devastate a landscape and to disfigure it – for example the Löcknitztal. But it is tremendously difficult to make amends. When we consider the centuries, the millennia of work that nature has needed in order to create the natural monuments that generations have enjoyed, it can easily be understood that all means of modern technology cannot do anything other than fail in settling the destruction that has already taken place. We cannot – and in Goethe’s phrase, we want to call for levers and screws – force nature to restore to us what a foolish thirst for destruction, a dangerous egoism mixed with short-sighted greed for profits, has ripped away from us in our time.

We are seeing how an appreciation for the value of the treasures of nature has only recently re-emerged amongst broader circles, after the wild period of development of our industry, of our commerce, in which all other interests took a back seat to the interest of “Get rich! Enrichissez vous!” This was the time when people mocked those who sought to appreciate and protect aesthetic values as fools who had not sufficiently understood the spirit of the times. Now, after a while, there has been a certain retreat, substantially because of the immeasurable importance of nature and as its value for the health of the population is increasingly recognized, as well as in the moral, spiritual and physical aspects. When we look at what the landscapes look like when we travel by train, especially close to big cities, we are often filled with seething resentment over the recklessness with which the most beautiful landscapes have been sacrificed for the advertising needs of our capitalist circles. This is a brutality without limits and all attempts to limit this tendency have not been of any use as of yet. This is taught us by simple observation: whether we go out of Berlin to the east, west, north or south, everywhere we see these disgusting billboards, which deface the landscape in the most outrageous manner.

It is undoubtedly true that amongst the population itself the necessary respect for national treasures is not frequently prevalent. If the previous speaker has pointed out that the schools and the press should be a lot more effective in providing this orientation, we can only agree. But we must also consider the following: our metropolitan population, in comparison to the population of a small rural community or town, represents a much larger amplitude of need to be in a closer communion with nature. If the entirety of the metropolitan population was as reckless towards nature as is customary and natural in every village and rural community, the complete devastation of nature would follow as a logical consequence. The harm caused as a result of the destruction of natural resources in the vicinity of metropolises therefore cannot be traced back to some kind of brutalizing influence of the metropolises, but is simply a result of the tremendous accumulation of masses of people, who only have a much smaller area of nature available to them in comparison to the rural population, an area to which naturally many more people come than in villages and small cities. Hence, we have every reason to reject the accusations against the metropolitan population. The danger that our natural resources are threatened by big cities is far more simply the logical consequence of the entirely unhealthy amassment of people in the great stone deserts that we called cities.

There is another aspect. The population in the countryside is in a natural communion with nature, nature has not been estranged from them. The rural population is outside every day, almost every hour, and knows how to interact with nature. The population of a city, which has been abruptly detached from nature by the extraordinarily harmful system of colonisation, have been brutally torn from the natural mother soil on which mankind flourished – one can almost say they have been uprooted. This population, when they have the opportunity to go out into nature on holidays or Sundays, will obviously not have the complete understanding for interacting with it, but they will also have an absolute need, such a curiosity, such an intense compulsion to get in touch with nature, to get to know nature that has been wholly estranged from them. They have a requirement for the most diverse orientation, intellectually and viscerally, to do this.  This explains a lot and this is why you will not find such a need in the countryside. It is wholly natural and not an expression of some kind of vandalism when city children come outside and tear off a few leaves, or branches or flowers. It is a natural need and can only be tackled by providing a proper fulfillment of this need. 

This is why, gentlemen, I think it is necessary to point out once more that every measure that aims to protect nature against human intervention and destruction, must necessarily have corresponding measures which bring nature closer to the people and gives people the opportunity to build the kind of relationship with nature that is necessary for intellectual, moral and physical flourishing. And gentlemen, this includes building great people’s parks and playgrounds. It means that children in the big cities are frequently brought out into nature, that even cities themselves are developed into garden cities, and the type of development that is unfortunately still common in big cities is removed and in this way the dangerous character of the big city as a phenomenon which cuts off the people from nature is gradually remedied. This is a tremendous piece of social welfare which concerns the roots of human, physical and psychological needs. The issue is sufficiently grave. If the human race, particularly in the cities, is not to be further crippled, intellectually, morally and physically,  it is urgent to take the direction I have just laid out, at least. This direction means abolishing the separation between human beings and nature once more, to bring people and nature closer to each other, so that people can once more approach the nourishing soil of nature and once more be in a position where they can absorb all of the strength nature alone can provide to man.

Gentlemen, I am firmly convinced that the Persian king who whipped the sea to calm it down performed no less futile work than the previous speakers in their invocations against fashions in ladies’ hats.

I have no doubt that some of you who vociferously clamor against fashions in hats in public must learn at home that fashions pertaining to forces that the male world absolutely cannot match.

I would like to point this out once more: Protection of natural monuments is not enough for us, most importantly, natural monuments must be made accessible to all of us, only then can they be protected because it is only then that the necessary feeling, the necessary appreciation of these natural monuments can be produced and maintained in humanity. As all sorts of nonsense has been mentioned here about what the populace does against nature and its monuments, I would like to take the opportunity after the deputy Ramdohr’s statements to point out how repeatedly the most serious grievances are raised in the press and in every national circles against the activities of the Jungdeutschlandbund and Jugendwehr in nature. Through these events, which serve exclusively militarist and chauvinist purposes, the youth are absolutely not raised to respect nature, to gain a finer appreciation for nature. On the contrary, a contempt of nature is cultivated in them because through these events, they become accustomed to regarding open nature in the fields and forests as merely a plain country for field duty exercises, and not as one of the greatest wonders that humble humanity. In any case, the appreciation for engaging yourself in the details of the beauties of nature is only destroyed by such a militarist violation of nature, but never enlarged.

Gentlemen, I am not alone in expressing these perspectives but rather, I repeat, they have been expressed frequently by the press of thoroughly national circles.

Gentlemen, I must point out yet again: if birds and other species have been spoken about a lot here, it is particularly important to protect them. But when we consider the youth again, the protection of the insect world comes quite eminently into our view. I hope that those amongst us who were butterfly or beetle collectors [in our youth] made it their concern not only to catch the animals but also to nurture them. It is entirely beyond doubt that such an encounter with nature is of overwhelming significance for the moral and intellectual development of the youth. For example, we see in the vicinity of Berlin how the world of insects has been nearly brought to a state of extinction. I remember how at the start of the 1890s, I could still find butterflies, beetles as well as plants around Berlin that you absolutely cannot find anymore these days. These are the regrettable consequences that result from the conditions in the big cities and many other harmful things that are related to each other. I would like attention to be directed particularly towards the protection of the world of insects, butterflies, beetles, etc.

Gentlemen, I have taken the initiative to speak again owing to the statements of the gentleman Schnepp, who spoke of red flyers that had been pasted somewhere obtrusively. I don’t know if the honorable gentleman Dr. Schnepp spoke from his own experience. I am certain he has never seen such a flyer in his life. If such flyers have been stuck up where nature is spoiled by them, then we would be the most remorseful of all, of course.

There is no doubt that such things aren’t approved by us. However I would like to claim that this has never happened. And if one from our side has sinned once, then I am sure that the other side has sinned in this regard three times more.

The Military Question in the Framework of the Construction of the Communal State

Translation by Rudy Flores and Debs Bruno of a document from the Venezuelan Left on the question of the Communal State and Military organization. 

In general, the term “Military” is understood as everything that is related to the business of war. Consequently, Military is the qualifier that is coined for organizations, institutions, thoughts, theories, practices, customs, resources, equipment, goods, in short, everything that is related to the issue of war: the use of force or armed violence so that the opponent, adversary or enemy ends up behaving a certain way. Hence, the classic division between the Military and the Civil. In this order of ideas, the “Civil” is what initially is not Military. It is stated that initially, taking into account that the delimitation or border between the Military and the Civil is less and less precise or evident. For example, a car or vehicle conceived and built for civil use, whatever it’s brand or manufacturing origin, can perfectly adapt and be used consequently to execute a war action. Indeed, by providing it with an explosive charge and activating it by the means of a suitable device, it is possible to generate results similar to those produced by a military bomb dropped by a military aircraft. In this sense, the difference between the VBIED (civil) and the bomb dropped by the aircraft (military), lies in the fact that one vehicle moves on the ground and the other in the air.

In this sense, what is relevant is not the fact that goods or resources conceived and produced for Civil use, that is, for purposes other than war, are increasingly used in military or armed controversies. Such a situation has always been present in the development of human history. What is relevant and essentially decisive is that with the consolidation of the State as a tool of domination of a social class over the remaining classes that structure a given society, the “Military” ended up being relatively monopolized by it and, more concisely, by the class, group, elite or clique that governs it, since, in short, the military force organized as a constituent component of the State ends up acquiring the character of the State itself. In such a context, it becomes the main instrument of ensuring its domination as a social class over the rest of society.

In fact, all Monarchs claimed for themselves the capacity to have a PERMANENT ARMY and, subsequently, to designate their high commands, at the same time that they reserved for themselves the position of COMMANDER IN CHIEF. The Anti-absolutist or Anti-monarchist Social Movements inspired fundamentally by Liberal ideology fought for the suppression or delimitation of these monarchical prerogatives. With the triumph of Liberalism, therefore with the establishment of the STATE OF LAW as the universal model of the bourgeoisie for the political organization of the nation-society, the criterion of the necessity of the PERMANENT ARMY was consolidated in order to attend to all matters of the security and defense of the nation. In such a context, the PRINCIPLE OF CIVIL SUPREMACY was established, that is, that the planning, organization, financing and conducting of the Military resided in the sphere of the Civil.

Consequently, the bourgeoisie that managed to become hegemonic in their respective societies and subjected the military institutions to the aforementioned PRINCIPLE OF CIVIL SUPREMACY. Obviously this is only the case in the theoretical-normative plane, since in material reality such military bodies or apparatuses do not cease in their claim to enjoy absolute autonomy in all that is inherent to the security and defence of the nation, with the particularity that the limits of security and defence have also become diffuse and increasingly blurred.

In the singular case of Venezuela, it is not an exaggeration to affirm that the State military organization has managed to place itself in a position of notorious and indisputable supremacy in relation to the rest of the public and private institutions that currently exist in society. In this sense, the high commanders of the Bolivarian National Armed Force, as an armed body which is constitutionally responsible for guaranteeing the security and defense of the nation, product of the protagonism and supremacy that it has acquired at the expense of all the State civil institutions and, essentially, of the dismantling and deactivation of the Revolutionary Popular Movement, have practically managed to monopolize or hegemonize all the instances and organisms that make up the Venezuelan State and, subsequently, the activities that these carry out within the framework of the fulfillment of their ends.

For illustration purposes only, it is worth mentioning that today, under the direct or covert control of the high military hierarchy, are almost all activities related to the importation of food, medicines, domestic appliances, medical equipment, spare parts, and auto parts, liquors, etc.; the purchase and sale of fuel; The purchase and sale of material for the construction and manufacturing of housing; the presidencies of almost all public enterprises; almost all the directorates or management of administration and finance of public powers, ministries, public enterprises, governorates, mayors’ offices, etc.; the majority of private companies that have contracts with the State; the exploitation and commercialization of mining resources; in summary, the Venezuelan State and hence, the Venezuelan society are under the management of the high military command. This does not mean that it is the only group that benefits from government management as a whole, since bankers, importing bourgeoisie, insurance and securities brokers, owners of transnational companies, currency exchange offices, owners of television and radio plants, oil and other fuel trading companies, the high bureaucratic hierarchy of the State, etc., also enjoy full hands on the secret and stateless businesses that are carried out to the detriment of the assets of all the Venezuelan people.

Thus, the first lesson to be drawn from the constant conflict between the Military and the Civil throughout the history of humanity and, logically, the singularities that this struggle presents in our historical development as a society, is to understand that it is not enough for the Constitution and other laws of the Republic to establish legal norms that prohibit or limit the military institution as a whole. The dynamics that it unleashes in its daily work, as well as the logic that ultimately guides its development make such prohibitions or limits inefficient or ineffective, in short, that such normative devices end up being discursive proclamations that have no impact on reality, that is to say, that they end up being dead letters.

The center of the question is in what has been insisted in this series of articles related to the Communal State, that is to say, with the historical challenge that implies the design, construction and activation of a set of mechanisms or physical means that in the concrete historical reality prevent the high command of the PERMANENT AND PROFESSIONAL ARMY from becoming a group or factor that hegemonizes all the institutionality of the State and the life of society, which evidently requires questioning and overcoming the traditional and generally accepted Military approach of Liberal-bourgeois root, whose reasonings prevail even in organizations that proclaim themselves revolutionary and Marxist. In such a perspective, it is vital for the historical future of the Homeland to undertake a broad, energetic and intense process of Popular Education inspired by the most advanced currents of revolutionary thought on the question of the security and defense of the People, without this leading to the denial of the Nation, but as an obligatory distinction within the framework of the class struggle and with a view to the construction of the Communal State.

Thus, what is demanded by the reality that Venezuela is going through, which, logically, is not limited to guaranteeing the continuity of the management of the current governing elite, but obliges us to tackle everything that is necessary in order to build a worthy, decent, safe, productive, prosperous, independent, sovereign homeland, in short, a happy homeland, in other words, a Socialist Homeland, proposes to transcend the individual questioning of this or that high military official by virtue of his authoritarian, corrupt or treasonous practices to give way to a true BATTLE OF IDEAS around the Liberal-bourgeois ideology that sustains and orients the raison d’être and behavior of the military institution as a whole.

In this context, and having as a guiding objective the question of the construction of the Communal State, it is necessary to rethink what concerns the monopolization by the Permanent and Professional Army of everything that implies the security and defense of the people-society and, naturally, everything that this implies, that is to say, economy, politics, culture, etc. In other words, the security and defense of what Venezuela means concerns all Venezuelans, given that its future as a concrete historical reality will depend on the quality of the future that each and every one of the members of the people-society will have to face, therefore, the first point to be elucidated on the occasion of the construction of the Communal State is whether the exclusivity of the handling of the security and defense issue is preserved in the hands of the military institution or, on the contrary, it advances according to the conception of the PEOPLE IN ARMS, that is, of the autonomous preparation and organization for war of the oppressed and exploited classes and social sectors that are part of the Venezuelan nation-society, logically taking into account the ways in which this has been developed at the same time.

The simple fact is that until now there is no other way to repel armed aggression other than through the use of armed force. Vindicating the institution of the PEOPLE IN ARMS does not mean being militaristic and even categorically denies the need for the existence of a permanent and professional military corps, since what is discussed is not the professionalization and permanence of the corps as such, but in reality, assumes the monopoly of the direction of all matters related to the war, beyond what is established by the institutional legal order of the State.

It is reiterated that this is an essential and decisive aspect, especially if one considers the distinctive features of our historical process as a Republic, in which the following stand out, among others: The civil mandates in our republican history have been an exception, or in opposite sense, the military mandates have been the constant in our republican history. Military caudillismo has been the main factor in the conduction of the processes of struggle that have developed in it; the conformation of the Permanent and Professional Army goes back to the beginnings of the XX century, the period in which the centralization of the State is concretized and its capitalist-bourgeois character begins to manifest itself.

On the other hand, it is necessary to keep in mind the characteristic features of the dominant mentality in the Venezuelan State military force, which obviously has repercussions on its collective behavior: metaphysical and esoteric vision of life; full ignorance of the materialist conception of history, therefore, denial of the class struggle and abstract vindication of the notion of Nation; deification of the figure of Bolivar and a valuation of the revolutionary struggle waged by the Venezuelan people as events executed by individually considered heroes; demerit and underestimation of the civil, therefore, authoritarianism and arrogance in the face of everything that is not military; corporate spirit, consequently, they constitute themselves as a group with their own interests that leads them to separate themselves from the mission that corresponds to them as a State institution; uncritical obedience to superior orders; Mechanical distrust of any reflection, proposal or initiative that does not come from their natural commanders; conservation of secrecy in the administration and use of resources; acriticity; omission of accountability; Dogmatic discipline, in short, the mentality that prevails as a whole is one that is functional to the domination exercised by hegemonic capitalist groups through the Liberal-Bourgeois State currently prevailing in Venezuela, hence the idea that vertebrates the majority of the Permanent and Professional Army membership is that to the extent that they obediently and efficiently serve the governing classes and groups, they achieve at the end of their military careers a golden retirement product of what they have been irregularly accumulating throughout that.

Anyone can think that this is not the moment to exteriorize these reflections since they can contribute to weaken or demoralize the revolutionary forces that inside and outside the military institution face with patriotic firmness the imperialist aggression of which Venezuela is the object. It is based on the opposite consideration, that is to say, that to the extent that Venezuelans consciously assume that the question of the security and defense of the country is not an exclusive affair of the military and, consequently, openly fight in order to correct all the deviations present in the PERMANENT MILITARY BODY, in that same measure progress will be made in the deepening and strengthening of all that supposes the security and defense of the homeland. In the same way, to the extent that progress is made towards a new military organization that breaks with the monopoly that the Permanent Army exercises over the issues inherent to security and defense, to the same extent progress is made in the construction of a new type of State which, in our case, is the Communal State.

In this order of ideas, it is determining to bear in mind that the construction of the Communal State does not take place in a vacuum, that is to say, on the margin or outside of what is happening at present in Venezuela, hence it is mandatory to start from the concrete reality in which one lives, in this sense, it is vital to bear in mind the distinctive features of our historical process and the characteristic features of the Venezuelan military mentality, since they constitute inputs for the process of formulating a revolutionary strategy based on the building of the Socialist Homeland, especially in the field of Popular Education and the theoretical foundations of the new institutional legal order of the Republic.

Likewise, the complex, dynamic and delicate situation that we are going through is part of the current national situation, because of the intensification of the imperial offensive led by the US government. Therefore, it is within the framework of this decisive reality in which the construction of the Communal State will be hastened, because, it is reiterated, materially it cannot be built in a vacuum. This is why the Revolutionary Popular Movement, and especially the Communal and Peasant Movement, which has raised and promotes the project of concretizing the organization of the Communal State as part of the solutions to the chaos in which Venezuela lives, has before it a set of tasks related to the preparation and development of the People’s War, in the perspective of confronting and annihilating all the bourgeois political-military organizations that, being at the service of imperialism, seek to take back the homeland to the colonial situation, ignoring the fact that sovereignty was conquered by the Venezuelan people on the battlefields with weapons in their hands, and with them, and with the same heroic attitude, will know how to defend it in order to guarantee its perpetuity.

In this sense, arming the revolutionary masses as part of the development of the People’s War in the face of imperialist aggression, and as a strategy of anti-capitalist struggle, implies anticipating the establishment of the institution of the PEOPLE IN ARMS, which in turn represents the prefiguration of one of the structuring elements of the Communal State. This is why it is said that burying the internal bourgeoisie at the same time as initiating the internationalization of the People’s War against capital, especially that embodied in Yankee imperialism, means advancing by leaps and bounds in the process of building the Communal State.

FROM THE VENEZUELAN MOUNTAINS AND FIELDS

PRODUCE FOOD, TECHNOLOGY AND DIGNITY

LET’S KEEP PUSHING THE SUN

‘Expelled, but Communist’ by Boris Souvarine

Translation and introduction by Medway Baker. 

Boris Souvarine was one of the leading founders of the French Communist Party (PCF) in 1921, after having founded the weekly Bulletin communiste, a publication dedicated to promoting adherence to the Communist International, in 1920. Bulletin communiste became an organ of the PCF, but ceased publication in late 1924, after Souvarine was expelled from the party for his support of Trotsky (with whom he would later break) in the Soviet factional struggles. This was part of a process called “Bolshevisation,” in which the Comintern’s member parties were brought into line with the commands of the centre (sometimes for the better, often as an expression of Soviet factional struggles). In the piece we present today, Souvarine fervently denies that this process has anything to do with the “true Bolshevism” of Lenin; in fact, he asserts that it marks a return to the “degenerated socialism” of the Second International.

The piece below was published in October 1925, in the first issue of the new Bulletin communiste refounded by Souvarine following his expulsion. In this article, he discusses not only Bolshevization, but also the French syndicalists, especially Alfred Rosmer and Pierre Monatte. Both of these revolutionaries became committed militants of the Communist Party (Rosmer in 1921, Monatte in 1923), only to be expelled alongside Souvarine in late 1924. Below, Souvarine both defends the place of these “communist syndicalists” in the PCF (while excoriating the “neo-Leninists of 1924”), and critiques them and their publication, Révolution prolétarienne, for once again taking up the syndicalist name.

At the heart of this piece is ultimately a commitment to organizing communists across theoretical lines. What matters for Souvarine is not theoretical shibboleths, but a commitment to class warfare, to the principle of communists’ active support of workers’ everyday struggles, to the dictatorship of the proletariat—in a word, to revolutionary Marxism. Serving the working class is communists’ highest duty for Souvarine, and this requires not only supporting the struggles of the exploited masses but also uniting the forces of those revolutionaries who have a common aim and method, the aim and method of revolutionary Marxism. This was what Souvarine fought for when he agitated within the Socialist Party (SFIO) for acceptance of the Comintern’s principles; this was what he fought for after his expulsion from the party he helped to build, insisting that the former syndicalists should not abandon the banner of communism, and that “when the Party really works for the proletariat, we should be with it.” It is only when the forces of revolutionary Marxism are united in the class struggle, in the service of the exploited and oppressed, that revolutionaries can truly advance the communist project.

Although Souvarine would ultimately grow farther and farther away from the communist movement, we present this piece on its own merits, as a defense of Marxist unity, and as a critique of both Stalinism and syndicalism.


Portrait of Souvarine and Anatoli Lunatscharsky

Expelled, but Communist

Translated from “Exclus, mais communistes,” Bulletin communiste 6, no. 1 (October 23, 1925).

There was but a handful of men in 1914 who stood against the unleashing of bourgeois and proletarian chauvinism, the abdication of the International, the bankruptcy of socialism, syndicalism, and anarchism, the collapse of international solidarity between workers.

There was but a handful of revolutionaries in 1917 who supported the Bolsheviks, reviled and hunted; who expressed an active sympathy with them before their victory, and remained loyal to it in the bleakest of hours.

There are today, amid the crisis of international communism, but a handful of indomitable men who maintain the vital spirit of Marxist critique, who continue the living tradition of communism, who maintain proletarian consciousness in their class pride—against the deviations of the revolutionary organisation, against the abandonment of the proletariat’s general interest to the bureaucratic coteries, against the mortal dangers of adventurism, servility, and corruption.

The task is thankless and grueling. The architects of this curative resistance are drowned in contempt. The working class, misled once again, no longer recognise their own. But the men of the proletariat and the revolution have been through worse. They hold out. The certainty of the duty fulfilled animates them, their faith in immutably serving the same cause and being armed with tested communist truths fortifies them. If they needed, in 1914 and 1917, to “hope to engage,” they have been able to dispense with “succeeding to persevere.” Even more so, in 1924, they made their choice without regret, rich with the enlightening experience of the past ten years, which assured that their initial meager band was destined to become legion.

The outcome of the endeavor called “Bolshevization,” in accordance with the so-called “Leninism” invented after the death of Lenin, is not in the slightest doubt: it will be—it already is—a disaster. Russian Bolshevism, undefeated by the assaults of the capitalist world, diminished only by its recent internecine struggles, in time put aside the most novice exaggerations of the methods instituted after Lenin’s death. As for European neo-Bolshevism, the monstrous caricature of true Bolshevism, this has already gone bankrupt a year after its appearance, and it would disappear from the contemporary schools—if we can even call a set of sad practices a “school”—if it were not artificially supported by the Soviet Revolution, the strength of which is not the least bit revealed by the number of its parasites.

And the outcome of the work undertaken by the menders of the diverted communist movement is not anymore in doubt. But our efforts will be met with success only by a single condition: to remain loyal to the proven approaches that led to the strength of contemporary communism. The assimilation of knowledge and experiences acquired over the course of the last ten years of wars and revolutions is indispensable to the progression of the communist idea. The original traditions of the proletariat of each country are incorporated into this. But a return to old concepts, displaced by the active science of revolution, would be a veritable regression, no matter how revolutionary these concepts may have been in their time. We raise the question of whether the organ of our companions in the struggle for the restitution of the errant revolutionary movement, Révolution prolétarienne, by sporting the label of “communist syndicalist” (syndicaliste communiste), is taking a step forward or a step back.


(Revolutionary) syndicalism borrowed the elements of its school in part from Marxism, in part from Bakuninism, and in part from the mixed heritage of utopianism, reformism, and heroic insurrectionism, transmitted from generation to generation among the proletariat of the Latin countries. Even though the unevenness of its formation damned it to rapid extinction, it was able to represent a stage of communist thought superior to the degenerated socialism of the Second International: not only because the latter, in its decline, conferred an easy prestige on the former, but essentially because its practice was worth far more than its theory. This is why the Bolsheviks, before even having founded the Third International, considered the syndicalists to be allies, as a variety of communists destined to merge sooner or later into the organizations of communism.

Even more: the Bolsheviks knew to treat anarchists, strictly speaking, as combatants of the proletarian revolution, as auxiliaries, as possible reinforcements. Lenin wrote State and Revolution both to re-establish the Marxist conception of the abolition of the state, and to demonstrate that communists were differentiated from anarchists, on this point, by their means, and not by their goals.

In light of the plain failure of international socialism during the imperialist war, the rebirth of the proletarian International was accomplished with the aid of syndicalists and anarchists. Zimmerwald and Kienthal were our common will. Lenin was the one who directed this policy. Those excluded from the Congress of London in 1896 re-entered the International, under the aegis of left social democrats, radical Marxists, and Bolsheviks.

The first French section of the Communist International, called the Committee of the 3rd International (Comité de la IIIe Internationale), was formed from three subsections: left socialists, syndicalists, and anarchists. It was consecrated as the French branch of the new International. If anarchists and syndicalists split with us, it was of their own free will, not of ours. Repeatedly, even Zinoviev felt the need to address greetings to Péricat, which, in his fashion, he overemphasized….

The founding conference of the Communist International, in March 1919, declared in its “Platform”:

“It is vital to form a bloc with elements of the revolutionary workers’ movement who, in spite of the fact that they did not earlier belong to the socialist party, have essentially declared for the proletarian dictatorship through the soviets, that is to say, with syndicalist elements.”

In January 1920, the Communist International addressed a message to the revolutionary syndicalists and anarchists of the Untied States, the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW):

“Our goal is the same as yours: a community without a state, without a government, without classes, in which the workers will administer production and distribution in the interest of all.

“We invite you, revolutionaries, to rally to the Communist International, born at the dawn of the global social revolution. We invite you to take the place that is yours by right of your courage and revolutionary experience, at the forefront of the proletarian red army battling under the banner of communism.”

On the French syndicalists in particular, here is how Zinoviev spoke in 1922, at the 3rd World Congress, when Lenin was still there to give him instructions:

“The most important political observation made by the Executive and its representatives, of which several, such as Humbert-Droz, have spent nearly six months in France, is that—and we must speak frankly—we must search for a large number of communist elements in the ranks of the syndicalists, the best syndicalists, that is to say the communist syndicalists. It is strange, but it is thus.”

The same Zinoviev, in the same year, at the 2nd Congress of the Red International of Labour Unions, adopted this language:

“As we all know, the Second International was stricken by ostracism, and excluded from its organization whoever was more or less anarchist. The leaders of the Second International wanted nothing to do with these elements. They held the same attitude with regard to the syndicalists. The Third International has broken with this tradition. Born in the tempest of the world war, it has realized that we must have an entirely different attitude towards the syndicalists and anarchists.”

And Zinoviev referred to the first congress of the new International:

“At the First Congress of the CI, we said, ‘No one is asking the question: Do you call yourself an anarchist or a syndicalist? We ask you: Are you a partisan or an adversary of the imperialist war, for a relentless class struggle or no, for or against the bourgeoisie? If you are for the struggle against our class enemy, you are one of us…’”

This is not all. Zinoviev said further:

“We estimate that all the anarchists and all the syndicalists who are the sincere partisans of class struggle are our brothers.”

And finally, so as to quash any sort of ambiguity:

“The anarchists have organised a whole range of attacks against us. However, we do not intend to revisit our attitude in regard to the anarchists and syndicalists. We maintain our positions. As Marxists, we will be patient until the very process of class struggle brings into our ranks proletarian elements who still remain outside of our organisation.”

It would be superfluous to quote any more to determine the traditional policy of the Communist International towards communist syndicalists.


This policy has borne its fruits. The Communist International has recruited among the syndicalist ranks—perhaps anarchist syndicalists, more likely communist syndicalists—the elements that we have always considered “the best,” and without which certain sections of the Communist International would not exist.

In America, it was among the syndicalists (William Foster, Andreychin, Bill Haywood, Crosby), among the left socialists around The Liberator sympathetic to the IWW (John Reed, Max Eastman), among the anarchists (Robert Minor, Bill Chatov), that it found most of its communists.

In England and Ireland, it was among the syndicalists (Tom Mann, Jim Larkin, Jack Tanner) and in the movement of the Shop Stewards’ Committees, of a syndicalist nature (Murphy, Tom Bell, etc.), that it recruited.

In Spain, it was among the syndicalists and the anarchists that it found Joaquim Maurín, Arlandis, Andrés Nin, Casanellas, and many others.

In France, finally, the Communist International drew from the syndicalist ranks those who, alongside the new militants who emerged from the war, should, according to the CI, exercise decisive influence, and gradually eliminate that of the social democrats inherited from the old party, of obsolete Jaurèsism and null Guesdism. It was by Lenin’s uncontested authority that Rosmer became the primary French representative to the Executive. It was Zinoviev, Lozovsky, and Manuilsky who accorded the highest priority to bringing Monatte into the Party. Certainly, Trotsky was not the last to support this policy, but never did he give up on winning the communist syndicalists to the purely Marxist conception of communism, and his last discussion with Louzon remains memorable.

Even today, when the French Communist Party is diminished, emptied, weakened, after a year of pseudo-Leninist dominion, it is the syndicalists of yesterday, the anarchists of the day before yesterday, like Monmousseau and Dudilleux, that the Executive is forced to go find.

How, then, can we explain the 1924 neo-Leninists’ spontaneous and systematic defamation of this “communist syndicalist” journal, even though all the Communist International’s platforms, resolutions, commentaries, traditions, recruitment practices, command them to treat its founders as friends, as allies, as communists, and even as “brothers,” as Zinoviev has said?

The answer becomes clear with irresistible logic and force, disengaged from the official communist texts quoted above: these false “Leninists” act as the most vulgar social democrats. They have naturally adopted the attitude of the Second International—condemned by the Third, to which they are profoundly foreign, or into which they have intruded. These people know nothing of our movement, of our ideas, of our history. Placed in the presence of an unexpected question, to which the solution was not prepared for them by the bureaucracy allocated to this task, and to which their inaptitude for work prevented them from finding enlightenment in the documents available to all, they improvised an answer, and, as is their habit, pronounced a great deal.

Their specifically social-democratic reaction to “communist syndicalism” characterizes an entire doctrine.

“How can one be Persian?” Montesquieu jested agreeably. “How can one be a communist syndicalist?” ask the creators of 1924’s “Leninism.” The Communist International, in the time of Lenin and Trotsky, responded in advance. It was only after the death of the first and the absence of the second that in this question, as in so many others, true Bolshevism was thrown out, and replaced by the offensive return of degenerated socialism, masked in neo-Leninism.


But if Révolution prolétarienne is far above the commentaries of its detractors, it is within range of the critique of its friends, of those who, in agreement with Zinoviev on this question, consider communist syndicalists to be “brothers.” And we must clearly say that many of us do not approve of the label.

What is our rationale? Ten issues of the journal have appeared and we have found nothing that justifies the abandonment of that which we call simply “communism.” Monatte and Rosmer said after their expulsion: “We return to whence we came.” This is meaningless. Why not remain that which they had become—“communists”? We understand that they still are communists. But this should suffice. Unless the experience has led them to introduce something new into their theories? They have surely not abandoned the old without mature reflection.

Monatte, Rosmer, and Delagarde were expelled from the Party by way of senseless accusations—with the secret aim of pushing them down a hill that they could not reclimb. This wish was immediately dashed, and none of those who knew them expected anything else: only foreigners to the communist workers’ movement could hope to eliminate them. They remained themselves, but they changed their name. As if they wanted only to differentiate themselves from the demagogues who discredit the communist name. But the name of syndicalist is no more pristine than that of communist; the marks are less recent, is all.

They remain loyal to the Marxist conception of class struggle, the proletarian dictatorship, the state. And as for Lenin’s conception of the Party and the International? They said to our comrades, after their own expulsion, “Remain in the Party, you are in your proper place.” And they discussed the day when the party would become truly communist, when the mass of communists outside of the party would retake it, themselves among them. None of this has anything to do with syndicalism.

All that remains is that they are profoundly disappointed with the degeneration of this Party that together we attempted to make communist, and that they do not wish to renew their attempt, preferring instead that others do so. An understandable feeling, but a feeling only, and totally personal. They can even less theorize it than they can say simply, “Comrades, remain in the Party.”

In fact, when it comes to true syndicalism, we found nothing other than an article by Allot. And this syndicalism is nothing new; it is old, and it is not of the best of its kind. Allot’s article, so remarkable on a number of fronts, serious, documented, and instructive, ended on an elementary critique of the intervention of the Party in a strike. But what does Allot demonstrate? Exactly the opposite of his intention. He proved that the Party did well to intervene in the strike in question. Whose fault is it if “the trade union organizations appeared to be erased”? If the facts establish that syndicalism does not suffice at all? It is a critique that well represents the impotence of syndicalist theory, as this justifies the criticized acts. Since when have strikes had for their goal to save the trade unions from their “erasure”? Is the strike conducted for the union, or is the union made for the strike? The strike has as its goal the satisfaction of demands: if the goal is achieved, all that has contributed is good. If the Party plays a part, all the better for the workers first, for the Party after. Nothing is more legitimate than the benefit gained by the party from serving the working class. What is condemnable is an attempt to profit from a situation to the detriment of the working class; but nothing like this took place at Douarnenez. “Communists,” said Marx and Engels, “have no interests distinct from those of the proletariat in general.” This undying principle remains our law: the communist party that lives up to it acts well, that which discards it loses its communist quality.

The Party that has lost its political sense, its consciousness of its role, intervenes by disserving the movement that it pretends to support. The clumsiness, incapacity or indignity of those responsible cannot be placed on the principle of interference. It is possible that at Douarnenez, certain communists said foolish things, but none of them had a monopoly, and this does not prove that the Party should not involve itself in workers’ struggles. Critiquing the mistakes made, without having the special goal of emphasizing the union or the Party, simply in pursuing the interest of the strike, this is serving the working class and, at the same time, without doing so expressly, the union and the Party themselves. Because the union and the Party have no other well-understood interest than that of the proletariat.

That which discredits our Party and our International is a tendency to ignore the interest of the working class to serve the interests of the bureaucrats. But when the Party really works for the proletariat, we should be with it. This is made all the easier for us by the fact that it was us, including Monatte and Rosmer, who worked so hard to substantiate this idea that the Party must occupy itself a little less with vulgar politics and much more with workers’ struggles. If the communist deputies loitered less in the halls of the Chamber and frequented more the meetings of strikers, all the better.

The remnants of old doctrinaire syndicalism, the attempt to revive ideas that have no more historic value, are not progress from the step already traversed by the syndicalists who became communists. And they add to the already large confusion that troubles the consciousness of the working-class vanguard. The less of this we find in Révolution prolétarienne, the more it will strengthen itself in its task of revolutionary restitution.

The question of a return to syndicalism could perhaps have been posed if the communism of 1919-1923, true communism, that of the first four congresses of the Third International, that of Lenin and Trotsky, had failed. Such a catastrophe would have put into question all its theories, all its practices. But happily, nothing of the sort came to pass. That which failed was not communism, but its caricature, the “Leninism of 1924.” That which failed was not Bolshevism, but its parody, so-called “Bolshevization.”

The communism of Marx and Engels, Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg, Lenin and Trotsky, is sufficient to guide militants to working-class emancipation. The last word has not been said. More will come who add onto the greatest teachings of the communists. But the spirit of communism will be immutable, and we will inspire ourselves to serve our cause with dignity. 

‘Evolution of the National Question’ and ‘The East and Revolution’ by Safarov

Translation and Introduction by Medway Baker.

Safarov (upper right) with Ural Regional Soviet, circa 1918.

Georgy Safarov was born in St. Petersburg in 1891. He joined the Bolsheviks in 1908, and from 1910 spent many years exiled in Switzerland, returning to Russia alongside Lenin in 1917. Despite spending most of his political career up until the revolution in Western Europe, he took a keen interest in the national question, especially the plight of the Muslim population of Russian Central Asia. He was sent to Soviet Turkestan in 1919 to aid in the establishment of soviet power and the fight against the counterrevolutionary Basmachi movement. The complexity of carrying out these tasks—establishing soviet power, winning over the oppressed masses, building socialism, and combatting both counterrevolutionary nationalism and Russian chauvinism—led Safarov to engage in a comprehensive study of Central Asian economic and social conditions. The two pieces we present below were written around the time that Safarov was engaged in a struggle with Mikhail Tomsky, who also had come to hold a leadership position in Soviet Turkestan. Tomsky, as Matthieu Renault elaborates in his essay Revolution Decentered: Two Studies on Lenin, wished to transplant the methods used with regard to the peasantry in the Russian core—the tax-in-kind, etc.—directly to Turkestan, without consideration for the national chauvinism and economic dominance of Russian peasants, workers, and administrators, and the resentment of the native population towards these colonisers. To this proposal, Safarov counterposed the establishment of committees of the poor peasants and distribution of the lands of the large landowners to these peasants, in order to encourage class conflict within the Muslim population, against both their own elites and the Russian colonisers. As Renault demonstrates, Lenin—eternally concerned with Great Russian chauvinism and bureaucratism—attempted to mediate between the two, but clearly sided with Safarov. This was a struggle that he and Safarov were to lose.

The first essay, The Evolution of the National Question, published in the French publication Bulletin communiste in early 1921, is a brief sketch of the development of the national question throughout the revolutionary period, and concludes with a list of problems and a set of prescriptions for the Soviet government to act upon. The style, structure, and content suggest that it was rather hastily written as a call to action, a feature that we have attempted to preserve in this translation. The second, The East and Revolution, published in Bulletin communiste a few months after (and having been published in German in late 1920), greatly elaborates on the content of the first article, with references to anthropological, economic, and historical studies, especially of the Central Asian peoples of the Russian Empire. In the spirit of scientific inquiry, Safarov examines the nature of imperialism, its effect on the economies and societies of colonised nations, the changes in the global and Russian situations since the beginning of the First World War, and the experiences of the national-democratic and proletarian revolutions occurring worldwide in the wake of the war. He then discusses solutions to the national question, in an earnest attempt to resolve the tensions inherent to the national-democratic and socialist revolutions in Russia, and by extension the world.

A key part of his solution is the soviets, which he identifies as “a class organisation borrowed from the proletariat of the advanced countries.”

But the importance of the soviets, for Safarov, is not the particularities of the soviet form as manifested in Russia in 1917 (he in fact refers also to the anjoman, a type of revolutionary council that emerged during the Persian Constitutional Revolution of 1906-09). Rather, it is their status as popular organs of the revolutionary masses, created in the actual process of the class struggle, and as anti-agreementist organs from which the exploiting strata are excluded. For Safarov, the significance of the soviet form is not in their size, nor in their organisational norms; it is in their class composition. Only the class-independence of the labouring masses (the proletariat, the peasantry, and the petty producers alike) from their exploiters can fully carry out the project of national liberation from imperialism. The native exploiters, Safarov demonstrates, will inevitably betray the interests of the majority of the nation in favor of their own class interests, and in so doing will side with imperialist dictatorship.

It is crucial to note that Safarov does not at any point confuse national liberation with the transition to communism, nor does he advocate liquidation of the proletarian struggle against exploitation into the pure struggle for national liberation. On the contrary, he stresses that “this entire programme [for national liberation] has not a single communist element,” and insists on the necessity of “conserving at all price the independence of the workers’ movement, even in its embryonic form.” For Safarov, the struggle for national liberation is a necessary component of the progression towards communism, of the development of the exploited masses’ revolutionary consciousness — but national-democratic revolutionaries are not to be confused with communists, and it is the duty of communists to struggle against these elements in order to win over the exploited masses.

It is notable that for Safarov, the national policy he proposes “coincides with another [task]: that of winning the masses of petty producers, the middle peasants of Central Russia to soviet rule.” In effect, the alliance of the Russian workers and peasants with the toiling masses of the oppressed nations is mirrored by the alliance between the proletariat and the peasanty (the smychka). Just as the Russian proletariat was incapable of exercising power without the support and active participation of the peasantry (unless they wanted to wage a brutal war against the countryside), it was also unable to exercise power without the participation of the exploited strata of the oppressed nations. Safarov, clearly referencing the Basmachi movement, insists that attempting to exercise proletarian power over the oppressed nations, without taking into consideration their particular conditions and tasks, “can obtain but a single result: to unite the exploited masses with their exploiters in a common struggle for the freedom of national development” — that is, a struggle against the Soviet Republic. This applies not only to the Soviet Republic internally, but also to the international revolution. Even Soviet economic policy is mirrored in Safarov’s vision for the global socialist economy: the peasant soviet republics of the once-oppressed nations, he says, will trade raw materials to the proletarian soviet socialist republics in exchange for manufactured goods and technical expertise, just as the New Economic Policy was founded upon equal exchange between the workers and the peasants. Safarov claims that this will allow the peasant soviet republics to develop at their own pace, so that they can “prepare for communism.”

The tendencies that Safarov identifies constitute an early version of a thesis later elaborated upon by postcolonial revolutionaries and scholars, such as Frantz Fanon. The thesis rejects both stageism—the idea that the bourgeois and proletarian revolutions are and must be entirely distinct events—and the notion that proletarian revolution must be directly transplanted to the colonies by the advanced proletariat of the imperial core, to the exclusion of a native, national-democratic revolution. These two stages of revolution—national and socialist—are not identical, but neither can they be isolated from each other.

We thus present these works as not only a part of the Bolsheviks’ debate on the national question, but also as a study on the dynamics of national oppression and revolution. We contend that these articles are not only a historical curiosity, but can provide insight into questions of imperialism, uneven economic development, and national oppression even today, along with the larger body of scientific study on the national question.


Bolshevik poster in Russian and Uzbek text, 1920, reads: “life of the eastern masses of the Soviet Union”

The Evolution of the National Question

Translated from “L’Évolution de la question nationale,” Bulletin communiste 2, no. 4 (January 27, 1921).

I

The experience of the revolution has not been sufficiently instructive with regard to the national question. At the beginning of the October Revolution this question had not been posed as concretely, nor with such tangible importance and keenness as today. In the first year of soviet power, the right of oppressed peoples to self-determination manifested itself above all as the liquidation of the colonial heritage of the old Russian Empire. Tsarist Russia oppressed and enslaved the “allogenous peoples” (inorodtsy). Soviet power gave them national equality, up to and including the right to create an independent state. The needs of the struggle against internal counterrevolution made this question a problem of prime urgency. Thanks to the concentration of the proletariat in the big cities and the industrial regions of Central Russia, to the favourable strategic position inhabited by this proletariat over the course of Russian history, the seizure of power could not have been easier. But these same circumstances determined in advance the historic path of the Russian counterrevolution, bourgeois and aristocratic, a path travelling from the outer provinces towards the centre. All the preceding history of Russia had been the history of Russian colonisation, and this fact distinguished itself from the moment of the proletariat’s seizure of power: it brought us face to face with the necessity of overcoming the existing antagonism between the Russian proletarian centre and the outer provinces, which are neither Russian nor proletarian; between the Russian city and the non-Russian country. The key to victory was in the resolution of the national question. But obtaining this resolution has not been easy. It has been necessary, firstly, to educate the Russian proletarian masses, infected—at least among their backwards sections—by an unconscious nationalism that makes them see the Russian cities as the focal point of the revolution, and the non-Russian villages as the focal point of the petite bourgeoisie; this leads them to apply the same methods of attack against these villages as are employed against capital. It has been necessary on the other hand to overcome the age-old distrust of the non-Russian villages towards the Russian cities and factories. The cities and the factories were developed and fortified on the immense expanses of the peasant world, as centres of Russian colonisation. The Bashkir knows this all too well, as the factories in the south Urals took away all their wealth and land; the nomadic Kirghiz knows it all too well, and looks askance at the Orenburg, Kazalinsk, Petrovsk, and Tashkent railways, which have always been nests of the scorpions called “police”; the poor Ukrainian peasant, too, knows it all too well. The assault against capital, advancing beyond the outskirts of the city, encounters an environment where the classes were not distinguished. It comes up against an impassable wall of national distrust. The primary attitude of the oppressed, non-Russian countryside was above all the desire for the Russian cities to finally cease commanding them, and to let the oppressed nations freely pursue their proper path towards national development. The poor sections of the oppressed nations considered soviet power to be a force hostile to their national character. The well-off sections and the nationalists of the intellectual stratum, having become the direct object of requisitions and confiscations, as well as of the struggle against counterrevolution, speculation, and sabotage, saw soviet power as a direct menace to their class domination or to their privileges as intellectual workers. This state of mind naturally facilitated, in a large way, the projects of the Russian counterrevolution. Crushed in the first declared encounter, they naturally seized upon the principles of separation, decentralisation, and independence. Kolchak, “Supreme Leader of the Russian Forces,” and Denikin, leader of “Russia One and Indivisible,” are figures of the second period of the Russian counterrevolution. Before selling their beloved “Fatherland” on the global market, where the demand was not yet enough, the counterrevolution first engaged in business among themselves, in the outer provinces of the old Russian Empire.

The experience of the civil war taught the labouring masses of the oppressed nations that the Ukrainian Rada led to Hetman Skoropadskyi and the German general Eichhorn, which wasn’t far from Kolchak’s Alash Orda or the Musavatist government of the English oil barons. The masses of Russian proletarians inhabiting the frontiers understood, too, that without the middle peasant it was impossible to hold firm against the aristocrats and the generals, that without the allogenous peoples it was impossible to create global proletarian power. The immediate collision of Soviet Russia with international imperialism compelled the oppressed nations to stand with the Russian proletariat against imperialist dictatorship, since the latter excluded all possibility of democracy and national liberty. The civil war was terrible, but it made the peoples of Russia pass through entire eras of history. Over the course of the civil war the possessing classes of the oppressed nations demonstrated to even the most backwards their internal, profound impotence in maintaining their positions of national independence in the struggle between capital and the soviets.

The conclusion of this experience has been clear and indubitable: all the bourgeois-national movements, led by the ruling class, have a natural tendency to adapt to imperialism, to enter into the imperialist system of the great powers, the buffer states, and the colonies. The natural tendency, unconscious from the first, of all national-revolutionary movements, is, by contrast, to draw on the revolutionary governing organisation of the proletariat of the more advanced countries, in order to obtain, by this course, their freedom to develop their nation in the global socialist economic system presently being constructed. The structure of the Federation of Soviets of Russia, the decisions of the Congress of the Peoples of the East, the existing alliance with the eastern revolutionary movements with the European revolutionary proletariat, are proof of this.

Three years of soviet power have presented the national question on a global scale, as a question of class struggle.

II

We can thus say that soviet power is the algebraic formula of revolution. The Second Congress of the Communist International recognised this, in concluding that the backwards peoples, with the aid of the proletariat of the more advanced countries, and by means of the formation of soviets, can jump over the capitalist stage to immediately prepare for communism. This is not a rationale understood by the “socialist colonisers,” who proclaim all national features to be counterrevolutionary prejudices, and who recognise nothing other than the national prejudices of the dominant nations. Our Russian colonisers in no way differentiate themselves from the bourgeois socialists of the Yellow International. To combat them is to combat bourgeois—however radical it appears—influence on the proletariat. If we transplant the communist revolution, unaltered, to the backwards countries, we can obtain but a single result: to unite the exploited masses with their exploiters in a common struggle for the freedom of national development. In these countries all the nationalisations and socialisations have about as much a basis as the nationalisation of the small peasant’s minuscule exploitation, or that of the cobblers’ awls. But the soviets are the class organisational form which permits the smooth advancement to communism, starting from the lowest stages of historical development. The semi-proletarian Kirghiz, the poor Bashkir, the Armenian peasant, each has wealthy classes in their country. These wealthy strata take away the former’s right to freely dispose of their labour, they enslave them as agrarian serfs, they divest them of the products of their labour, which they appropriate as a usurer’s profit; they keep them in ignorance; they maintain for themselves a sort of monopoly on the national culture, supported by the Mullahs, the Ishans, and the Ulamas. For the labourers of the backwards countries, bourgeois democracy can represent nothing other than a reinforcement of traditional domination, half-feudal, half-bourgeois. The brief experience of the “Kokand Autonomy”—which had more partisans among the Russian police than among the poor Muslims—, the experience of Alash Orda, the experience of Musavatist rule in Azerbaijan and Dashnak rule in Armenia, the recent experience of the pseudo-nationalist government of the Tehran merchants, taught in the imperialist countries of Europe, can all testify to this in perfect clarity. Six years of turmoil, 1914 to 1920, have brought hardship to the labourers of the backwards countries. The Kirghiz who were mobilised in 1916 to dig trenches have even now not been able to recover their lands, once given by the tsar to the rich peasants of Russia. The name “Kolchak” is well-known to the old allogenous peoples. The economic crisis, the absence of flour and cloth, has significantly exacerbated the subjugation of the poor class among the Kirghiz, in Bashkiria, in Turkestan, etc.… The lack of land, far from being resolved, has done nothing but grow, as the shortage grows, and as the nomads are forced to become sedentary. In the countries of the East, placed between life and death by the yoke of English imperialism, the crisis clears the market of European products, but at the same time it augments the appetites of the Western generals, the adventurers and the national usurers. The only remedy to all these afflictions is the labourers’ soviets, which by grouping the exploited together must end class inequality, give the land to the poor, free the artisan from the usurious intermediaries, liberate the toilers from drudgery and taxes, begin the education of the masses and the radical betterment of their conditions of existence, all at the public expense. This entire programme has not a single communist element. It is only after its realisation that the preparation for communism can begin among the backwards peoples. Here, as everywhere, we must terminate that which has not terminated — which has been incapable of terminating — capitalism. The communist revolution, throughout its entire course, must struggle against the exploiters of all historic periods and all types. The soviets are the revolution’s primary weapon, the universal form of this struggle.

III

Soviet power has become the form by which the right of the oppressed peoples to self-determination manifests. The soviet organisation of the oppressed peoples, from the national point of view as from the political point of view, sets itself against a slew of practical barriers, arising from class inequality and from traditional injustices.

There are enormous spaces, populated by the nations formerly oppressed by tsarism, a great distance away from the railroads. A characteristic example: the Semirechye line, impossible to construct, although the remoteness of this region with respect to Turkestan proper permits the large Russian peasants to maintain an autonomous existence. The nomads fear the city, because they see it as an erstwhile nest of police.

There are no Muslim printed letters, because printing was the privilege of the dominant nation.

There is no one literate in the native language; in Turkestan the cantons are forced to lend secretaries between each other for their executive committees.

There are no specialists for intellectual labour, and intellectuals count only in the dozens. There is no one who can teach others to read and write. This summer in Turkestan we trained a thousand Muslim schoolmasters, but even in just the already-existing schools, we are still missing about 1500.

As regards Russian specialists, we can employ them in the colonial provinces only with the utmost precaution, as they were all more or less agents of the colonial yoke—the colonial plunder. Their distinctly Russian sabotage, which they decorate with bureaucratic scruples and references to decrees, carries a criminally systematic character.

Finally, white-Russian “internationalism” has not yet been completely uprooted in the Communist Party.

The application of all these measures comes up against obstacles: the absence of primers, of scholars, of native specialists, etc.

The Communist Party must clearly understand these facts. It must declare that the soviet autonomy of the oppressed nations is an urgent task for the Communist Party and for soviet power. We must concentrate the attention of the labouring masses, of the proletarian vanguard, and of the entire soviet and communist apparatus on this problem, as we have done in the past in regard to the middle peasant. The liberation of the East, where there is more national and class slavery than anywhere else, is today the centrepiece of our international policy — the international policy of the socialist proletariat. It is there that we will practically address the problem of organising the International Republic of Soviets and the global socialist economy. In three years of soviet power, the national question has undergone many changes. Declarative formulas have passed into the practical organisation of nations. From the military struggle with the national counterrevolution, we have passed to soviet autonomy. From the struggle with the internal counterrevolution we have passed to global policy. The conclusions that present themselves must be taken up by the Commissariats of Agriculture and of Procurement, the Supreme Council of the National Economy, and all the other relevant organs, so that an excessive zeal to execute our labour mobilisations, our taxes-in-kind, etc., will not generate a so-called “counterrevolution.” Our entire party must be mobilised morally to the service of the national liberation of the oppressed. 


Soviet poster from Baku, 1920, text in Azeri, reads: “Through their strong union, workers and peasants destroy oppressors.”

The East and Revolution

Translated from “L’Orient et la Révolution,” Bulletin communiste 2, no. 17 (April 28, 1921). Originally appeared in German in Die kommunistische Internationale, no. 15 (December 1920).

The Second Congress of the Communist International recognised that “the masses of the backwards countries, led by the conscious proletariat of the developed capitalist countries, will arrive at communism without passing through the different stages of capitalist development.” We came to recognise this principle through the experience of the national soviet republics in the territory of the former Russian Empire, and through the revolutionary awakening of the colonial peoples and the oppressed nationalities of the East: India, China, Persia, Turkey, etc.… These peoples were cut off from the course of their historical development by European imperialism. They found themselves excluded from the technical revolution, from the rupture with the old social forms, and from the progress of civilisation. European capitalism did not at all revolutionise the mode of production in these countries. It did nothing but erect its own superstructure—in the form of an imperialist bureaucracy, of a commercial agency of European capital and a European “importation” industry—upon the feudal-patriarchal regime which had constituted itself over the course of centuries. It reinforced the exploitation of the agrarian population, by seizing the best lands, the sources of materials and fuel, but did not eliminate the old, reactionary feudal forms of exploitation. Where it could, for example in the Indies, it destroyed the local industry of petty artisans, by saturating the native markets with items manufactured in Europe, outcompeting the locally-manufactured items. Labour, rendered unoccupied by the elimination of petty production, became employed in agriculture. The establishment of industrial hegemony, and the military and political dictatorship of European capital in the colonies, led the great majority of the native population to become “attached to the land” so to speak, and inevitably also to emigration of the surplus population to the industrial centres (such as the exodus of Persians, reduced to finding work in Baku), and the horrific mortalities that periodically desolate certain countries in times of scarcity (India).

The Role of European Capitalism

Therefore, European capitalism has retarded the economic development of the colonies, just as much as it has the development of culture; it has artificially maintained the old social forms and the old reactionary ideology. Certainly, it could not have manifested otherwise in this part of the world and, all things considered, it has fulfilled its role as unconscious revolutionary agent. Friedrich Engels himself recognised this “civilising mission,” even as it concerns former tsarist Russia. In a letter to Karl Marx on May 23, 1851, he wrote, “Russian rule, despite its wickedness, despite its Slavic dirtiness, has a civilising influence on the Black and Caspian Seas and on Central Asia, on the Bashkirs and Tatars.” But here he misses the point. Capitalism of “importation” has the particularity that, in the colonies, it does not in practice follow the same method as in Europe and America. It does not develop the land for capitalist production. The colonialists burn the land to clear it for agriculture, they grow all sorts of grains until the ground is rendered completely barren, and then they abandon it for new lands. It is intensive cropping in all its rapacious brutality. The ruined artisan is not transformed into the industrial proletarian, but is rather transported by force to the countryside, where he has to work as a half-serf day labourer, and becomes literally the rich landlord’s or director’s workhorse, a slave to European exploitation. The nomad who lost his herd meets the same fate. The autonomous petty producer, who does not go to sell his labour on a capitalist farm, is reduced to misery, and becomes the insolvent debtor to the local usurer and to the European commissioner. At the same time that it destroys the native small industry and ruins the agrarian economy, European capitalism reserves all the offices, all the honours and all the important posts to the bearers of “high culture”, to Europeans.

The European is engineer, overseer, commissioner, administrator; the native, labourer and farmer. Just as in capitalist society, the development of the productive forces is accomplished through the intensification of the dominion of capital over labour, in the colonies this development has augmented the class antagonisms between the dominating nation and the oppressed nation. European capitalism barely disturbed the native elites, nor the exploiters of the peoples it oppresses. The big landlords, the merchants, the native usurers, the clergy, and even the police are left at their posts, legitimised by habit, by religion and by history. Only, above them, new figures appeared; the representatives of the imperialist bureaucracy and European capital, the Christian missionaries and the commercial agents. To the feudal exploitation of the peasant by the big landlord, the usurer, and the despotic state was added the oppression of the whole nation by foreign capital. In addition, the European yoke, far from destroying the backwards civil and familial customs, the traditional ancestral ideology, did nothing but consolidate them, by making them dear to the oppressed masses, who see in them a form of conserving their national culture, as well as a weapon in their struggle for political autonomy and their own culture, against the violent assimilation by European capital. This is what explains the strength of pan-Slavism, pan-Mongolism, pan-Asianism (“Asia for Asians!”), and other analogous movements that tend to consolidate the position of the possessing classes in the oppressed nationalities.

“The desire to safeguard the old, backwards forms of production from the invasion of capitalism: this is the economic base that has realised, without difficulty, the unification of the immense masses dispersed across the continents of Asia, Africa, and Europe.”1 Pan-Islamism as well as other, analogous movements are prominent examples.

European capitalism has not yet had the time to dissolve in the industrial furnace the population of the colonies and the half-enslaved peoples of the East, which the communist revolution and the European proletariat will break open. This is the fatal consequence of this imbalance in the development of different parts of the global economy, an imbalance that constitutes the very essence of the capitalist mode of production. Capitalism has dug an abyss between developed industry and the backwards rural economy. Capitalism has created a contradiction between the production of articles of consumption and the production of the means of production themselves. It has created a collision between the industrial progress of Europe and the backwards economic state of the colonies. It is exactly the transformation of industrial capitalism into imperialism that has caused the world war.

During the imperialist war, many colonial peoples were forced to provide military contingents and working-class armies for the war in Europe. The imperialist war brought the national question to the forefront, on a world-historic and world economic scale. Relying on Turkey, German imperialism attempted to draw into its camp the peoples of the East. The Entente’s imperialism, by virtue of its international situation, naturally had to speculate instead on its relationship with the Latin and Slavic peoples of Europe.

The Military and Political Dictatorship of Conquest

The imperialist war stripped away from the colonies all the “advantages” of their connection with European capital—commodities, the technical and capital means of the Europeans—and at the same time added cannon-fodder and a multitude of raw materials to the usual colonial tribute. The political yoke was equally strengthened. The result of the war was, on the one hand, the spoils of Versailles, and on the other hand the proletarian revolution in Russia and the revolutionary crisis in Europe. Thus, the march of the revolution in the East was predetermined. The war inhibited the base, the foundation of the capitalist mode of production, not only for the national economy of each country in particular, but for the entire global economy. In Europe, the industrious and enterprising capitalist of peacetime—who, hiring labour everywhere and constantly searching for new available capital, would constantly flood the market with streams of commodities—has been replaced with the speculator, declared enemy of large consumption, conscious protagonist of the continual reduction of social production; likewise, in the East, the European travelling salesman, the “peaceful conqueror” has been replaced with the true conqueror, the peacemaker with gold epaulettes, clad in menacing armour made in the European military style, and equipped with a “mandate” for an indeterminate number of colonial slaves and for limitless territory. In Europe, civil war has created an economic necessity for military dictatorship. The awakening of the oppressed peoples of Asia to the struggle for their national existence has equally created an economic necessity of the strengthening of capital’s doctrine of conquest in the East. The military dictatorship in Europe, and the doctrine of conquest in Asia, have been the only means for capitalism to enlarge its base of production, amidst the global disorganisation and the general revolutionary crisis. Looting one to make gifts for the other, making gifts to this one to loot a third, and so on, without end: this is the real essence of the politics of international imperialism, obligated to zig-zag before the proletarian revolution in Europe and the colonial revolution in Asia.

From this peril emerges the community of interests and solidarity in the struggle. The alliance with the European communist proletariat has emerged as an urgent historical necessity for the peoples of the East. The grand course of world history has seen the collision of capitalism with its direct successors—the revolutionary proletarians—and with its bastards—the oppressed peoples. Capitalism has divided humanity into dominant and oppressed nations. The revolution has brought about the union of the workers of the dominant nations with the majority of labourers in the oppressed nations.

It is through the proletarian revolution in Russia that the global revolutionary crisis has begun. The victory of the proletariat in the empire of the tsars, this “prison house of nations,” has given this alliance a concrete manifestation. The Russian revolutionary A. I. Herzen wrote, “The Europeans consider Russia to be Asia; the Asians, for their part, consider Russia to be Europe.” This was the situation of tsarist Russia. In Europe, it fulfilled the role of the international gendarme; in Asia, it conducted the power politics of European bandits. As strange as it may seem, this ancient formula, if turned on its head, characterises the present situation. To the eyes of Europe, the bankers and the big proprietors, the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic appears as the propagator of a terrible infection called “Asiatic bolshevism.” In the East, Russia finds itself as the bearer of the ideas of European communist revolution. It is in this phenomenon that we find the revolutionary importance of our geographic position between the East and the West. The Russian proletariat, the vanguard, had to practically resolve the accession of the masses of petty producers to the communist revolution; it had to resolve the question of the transformation of national movements from national-democratic into socialist-revolutionary…. The past march of historical development will sweep them to victory. Concentrated in the great halls of large industry, able to animate immense spaces, the proletariat, from the first, finds itself in a strategic position more advantageous than that of its enemies; the counterrevolution had to take the offensive from the outer reaches of the country, where it has attempted to draw upon the possessing and exploiting strata, upon the nations once oppressed by tsarism. In effect, all the prior history of Russia has been the “history of colonisation”!2

One of the first acts of the proletarian government was to enact “the declaration of the rights of the peoples of Russia” (2 November 1917), in which it recognised the right of self-determination, up to and including the right of separation from Russia—the right to form a distinct national state—for all the peoples of the old tsarist empire. Be that as it may, to manifest the right to national autonomy in the soviet form, it is necessary above all to overcome the historical contradiction between the Russian city and the non-Russian village, deprived of all national rights. It is necessary to win the confidence of the toiling masses of the oppressed nations, by eliminating the unconscious nationalism with which the backward elements of the Russian working masses are imbued; and by clearly demonstrating to the oppressed masses the true nature of soviet power, the power of the toilers. In truth, this task coincides with another: that of winning the masses of petty producers, the middle peasants of Central Russia to soviet rule; and it is this that will enable the solution. The counterrevolution will help to unmask bourgeois democracy before the eyes of the middle peasant, who sees, hiding behind the grand rhetoric of revolutionary socialism, a new landlord. The counterrevolution will contribute to eliminating the illusions of the labourers of tsarist-oppressed nations in national-bourgeois democracy. In effect, during the civil war, the counterrevolutionary nationalists have swerved to march openly behind the bellicose nationalist intellectuals, who present themselves as the old Russian police, as flag-waving Russian patriots, as European imperialists. Kolchak, Denikin, Mannerheim, Skoropadskyi, and the Allied and German generals have thus unmasked the Kirghiz “Alash Orda,” Petliura’s Ukrainian partisans, and many others.

The Separation of Classes

We can say without exaggeration that the separation between the classes of the oppressed nations has occurred only over the course of the civil war. It is through direct struggle, as class interests collide, that the masses have acquired revolutionary experience; and because of this revolutionary experience, they have moved on to new forms of social organisation. The Kirghiz steppes gave birth to “Alash Orda,” declared partisan of the Constituent Assembly in Samara which brought about the rise of Kolchak; and it was under Kolchak’s boot that the labouring Kirghiz masses consciously rallied to soviet power. Bashkiria underwent the same experience. Ukraine had to pass through an even longer series of successive stages: in the first place, the struggle between the Rada and soviet power put pressure on the new workers; next, the German general Eichhorn, in league with the ataman Pavlo Skoropadskyi; after them, Petliura and the French generals took their turn; then, the brief establishment of soviet power, overthrown by the unrest of the rural magnates and Petliura’s partisans; after that, the representative of a Russia “one and indivisible,” Denikin; and lastly, through the inevitable logic of the events, Ukrainian soviet power. Vynnychenko’s metamorphosis from leader of the bourgeois Rada to the vice-president of the Council of People’s Commissars of the Ukrainian Soviet Republic is the most telling of all these displays.

It is over the course of the civil war between the dictatorship of the proletariat and imperialism that soviet power has become the form of national autonomy and of class differentiation among the toiling masses of the oppressed nations. On the territory of the old Russian Empire, the alliance of the oppressed peoples with the revolutionary proletariat has taken shape in the form of the socialist federation of national soviet republics. The soviet revolution among the peoples of the East, who once formed an integral part of the Russian Empire, has bridged the gulf between the communist West and the revolutionary East.

The Russian proletariat knew to take advantage of their special situation, to simultaneously challenge the imperialism of millions of communists—of the European proletariat—and the threatening wall that is the revolting toilers in the East. Comrade Lenin well noted the international significance of various essential traits of our revolution, when he spoke of “the inevitable historical repetition, on the international scale, of what has occurred here.”3 Soviet power, that is the state form of the labouring masses, has been victoriously tested in practice in the revolutionary industrial city of Petrograd, as well as in the Russian hamlet of the Vyatka Gubernia; among the Tatar peasants dwelling on the Volga, as in the Ukrainian villages; in the East so strongly attached to its national customs, in the East where patriarchy reigns and where blood ties are still so important to everyday life, in the lands of the Kirghiz, in Bashkiria, in Turkestan and Azerbaijan. Everywhere, soviet power has demonstrated its strength. Karl Marx already noted this peculiarity of proletarian government in his critique of Paris Commune. “The multiplicity of interpretations to which the Commune has been subjected, and the multiplicity of interests which construed it in their favour, show that it was a thoroughly expansive political form, while all the previous forms of government had been emphatically repressive. It was essentially a working-class government, the product of the struggle of the producing against the appropriating class, the political form at last discovered under which to work out the economic emancipation of labour.”4

The revolution accelerates the progress of events to the highest point. It accentuates class contradictions to the extreme, even in the most backwards areas. The long, historic learning process makes way for a learning process governed by the revolutionary method. Peoples and social classes develop, over the course of a few months, more than over dozens of years of normal development.

Soviet propaganda poster from 1921 targeting Muslim women, reads “Now I too am free.”

Oppressors and Oppressed

The world revolution against imperialism places the oppressors and the oppressed on the same level.

The transformation of bourgeois-national movements into social-revolutionary movements has its origins in the conflict of class interests—conflict that manifests with a particular acuity among nations engaged in the struggle for independence, and which can equally be provoked by an external influence: that of the international situation. The elimination of bourgeois domination in the advanced nations necessarily pulls the more backwards nations along the road of the soviet revolution. The counterrevolution then involves itself as an aggressor.

The dictatorship of imperialism unmasks bourgeois nationalism in the West as well as in the East. The dominant strata of the oppressed nations endeavour immediately to seize control of the state machinery and their class victims. For them, the national revolution is the expansion of the national foundation of exploitation. This expansion consists in the manufacturer, the merchant, and the large landlord expelling the foreign interlopers and creating their own state apparatus of class oppression. On the other hand, at the same time, “a class of intellectuals develops and their own written language transforms into a necessity of the national culture, even if in substance this culture had to be very international. And if a nation feels the need for a national intelligentsia, this class, in turn, feels the need for a great, intellectually developed nation.”5

The national bourgeoisie and the bourgeois intellectual class want to have their market, their stock exchange, their bureaucracy, their officer corps, their writers and journalists, their ministers, their representatives, their teachers and their musicians. At the start, their national need finds its expression in bourgeois development. But this need, in the global economic disorganisation and revolutionary crisis, inevitably falls into class contradictions in a nation that has won its national independence. Democracy, in the name of the national interest, transforms into a national bourgeois dictatorship. Finland, a country with ancient democratic traditions, is a poignant example. “It seemed to us,” writes Comrade Kuusinen, on the beginning of the revolution in Finland, “that parliamentary democracy opened a wide and straight path for our workers’ movement, leading right to our aim. Our bourgeoisie had neither army nor police; what’s more, it didn’t even have the possibility of organising them legally, as to do so they would need the assent of the socialist majority in parliament.”6 And nevertheless, the bourgeoisie organised its white guard and defeated the Finnish working class with the aid of the German imperialists.

Bourgeois democracy is now unable to ensure national peace in the countries that have become independent and which contain national minorities. This is the practical experience of Ukraine: “Petit-bourgeois democracy cannot maintain its power in Ukraine, as the internecine struggle fractures it into hostile parties.”7 The intelligentsia and the bourgeoisie, in a nation that frees itself, profess an aggressive bourgeois nationalism, and this leads them to betray the cause of national liberation, to pass into the camp of the imperialists, from which they buy their bourgeois domination at the price of national freedom. The examples are legion: Latvia, Ukraine, Finland, Poland, Estonia, Czechoslovakia, Georgia, the Musavat government in Azerbaijan, Greece, “the Israelite state of Palestine,” the pseudo-national state of Persia which, in fear of its soviet revolution, has thrown itself into the arms of the British, etc. The aggressive nationalism of the oppressed nations’ bourgeoisie and large landlords makes their countries into buffer states of the imperialist powers against the revolution. As a result, social conflict—class antagonism—manifests first of all in the domain of the national interest: the labouring masses reclaim their national independence from the yoke of the imperialists; the exploiting strata cling to their class privileges and, because the foreign yoke was, up until that moment, a powerful means of conserving the most reactionary forms of exploitation—in the east, feudal and patriarchal customs—, the revolutionary awakening of the labouring masses transports the revolution from the national terrain to that of social relations. The national question is raised as one of class inequality. The reason is perfectly clear: if industrial capital and the intelligentsia are, in the early stages, the protagonists of national liberation, the big landlords and the native bureaucracy are the declared partisans of European assimilation. The national revolution, waged against the foreign invaders and the native big landlords, therefore pushes the merchant class into the camp of imperialist puppets. Thus we reach this general conclusion: all the bourgeois-national movements led by the possessing strata—by the exploiting strata—have an objective tendency to adapt to imperialism, to enter into the imperialist system of the “great powers,” to transform into “buffer states” and colonies. At the outset, the strictly historic, unconscious tendency of all national-revolutionary movements of the labouring masses, in the colonies and in the half-enslaved countries, is to draw on a revolutionary state organisation, a class organisation borrowed from the proletariat of the advanced countries, to ensure the freedom of national development in the forming global socialist economy.

The advent of organs of autonomous revolutionary management—the anjoman of the first Persian Revolution, the experience of the eastern national soviet republics, the beginning of the revolutionary peasant movement in the East, the birth of communist movements in Persia, in Turkey, in China, and in the Indies—all this proves that the labouring masses of the East are marching towards the international federation of national soviet republics.

For the Grouping of Communist Elements

It was in understanding the above that the 2nd Congress of the Communist International decided to support national revolutionary movements in the colonies and in the backwards countries, but under the express condition that the truly communist elements of the future workers’ parties in these countries are grouped together and instructed in their special tasks, in the necessity that they combat the bourgeois-democratic movement in their own nations; the Communist International must enter into a temporary alliance with bourgeois democracy in the colonies and the backwards countries, nevertheless without ever fusing with it; and in conserving at all price the independence of the workers’ movement, even in its embryonic form. In the East, as in the West, the way to soviet power has been paved by the process of capitalist development itself. In the West, it was paved by the transformation of “peaceful” industrial capitalism, of imperialism and bourgeois democracy into military dictatorship; in the East, by the implantation of capitalism as a foreign organisation of class domination, as a superstructure over the native society. In India, as the Indian communist Comrade Roy noted, “we are seeing, for the first time in history, an entire people being economically exploited by a true state power.”8 But it is not thus only in India. Russian Turkestan, up until the revolution, was in the same situation. Still today, we see the same state of affairs in Persia, in China, in all the colonies. As for the governmental organisation of the native exploiters, this is relatively weak in the East, where it adopts a purely feudal character.

On the subject of Persia, Victor Bérard had this to say: “Persia is neither a state nor a nation. It is the strange combination of a feudal anarchy and a centralised taxation system, the unstable mix of nomadic tribes and barely settled farmers, Moluk-us-Sawaif, as the natives say, monarchical federation or, more precisely, royal flock of nations.”9

The oppressive and exploitative character of state power is evident here. The base of all social life is the small farmer, ferociously exploited by the feudal state, by the large landowner, and by commercial capital, the true usurer.

The fact that, in the East, state power—as much the native feudal power as the power of the “invaders,” the European imperialists—manifests above all as the immediate exploiter of the population in the economic domain, has an immense political importance: no political revolution is possible in this situation without an economic revolution. Experience confirms this. “Just like their Western counterparts, the exploiting plutocracies of the Near-Eastern countries make every effort to give their rule the appearance of popular rule. The introduction of parliamentarism in Turkey and in Persia, as well as the transformation of Georgia (under the leadership of the Mensheviks), Armenia (under the leadership of the Dashnaks), and Azerbaijan (under the leadership of the Musavatists) into democratic republics, took place under the slogan of ‘Liberty and Equality.’ Nevertheless, every one of these politicians was incapable of providing even the illusion of democracy. The masses of people drown in unbelievable misery, while the agents of foreign imperialism swim in opulence. The land remains in the hands of its old owners, the old fiscal system remains in place, bringing immeasurable harm to the labourers, and the state not only tolerates, but encourages usury.”10

The Form of the Revolution in the East

The “bourgeois-democratic” revolution, in the East, inevitably takes the form of a dynastic revolution: it expands the privileges of the exploiters, but does not alleviate the burden of exploitation for the oppressed one bit. Native feudalism does nothing but assume the cast-offs of “European democracy.”

The East is living history. In some places, we still find remnants of the primitive communitarian society (clan, patriarchy), where patriarchal and feudal customs are conserved in full force. The religion of the East is simultaneously social and political. It consecrates the existing civil and familial order. It is the direct support for social inequality. It plays about the same role as Catholicism in the Middle Ages. “From the point of view of the orthodox Muslim, the theocratic Muslim state is the community of believers, of which the earthly representative is the ‘sultan’ (sovereign, leader); he is no more than the representative of God on Earth, a representative with a mission to take care—in conformity with the exigencies of ‘sharia’ (religious law)—of the civil and religious affairs of the community entrusted to him by God. To accomplish this, he, the ‘amiliami’ (the collectors of the ‘zakat,’ a ritual tax), and other civil servants receive a modest compensation of forty kopeks per day. The ‘zakat,’ which is meant to be used to help the poor, orphans, and invalids; to wage war against the infidels; in short, to serve the needs of society and the state, has become, in the hands of the latest Muslim sovereigns, a personal revenue that they use as they please, without any control and in an absolutely illegal fashion; the troops and even the popular militia, created to war against the infidels, to propagate Islam by force of arms, and to protect the community from outside enemies, are transformed bit by bit into the sovereign’s bodyguards, used to oppress the people and serving exclusively the personal or dynastic interests of these sovereigns. The Muslim community has been transformed into rayat, into herds of docile, mute slaves.”11

The centuries-long domination of the total surplus-value of labour was necessarily an obstacle to the expansion of social production, and it hindered all technical and economic progress. The primitive hoe (ketmen) and plough (omach) are still practically the only agricultural tools of the Central Asian farmer. There, capital is naturally stalled in its development; it has not gone further than usury and the sale of produce at the bazaar.

Religious law (sharia) defines property rights thus: “Property (mulk) is all that man possesses, whether it be the thing itself or its fruits.” This definition is the loyal reflection of primitive forms of production: religion recognises the proprietor’s right to sell the things that belong to him, as well as its “fruits”; it recognises his right to dispose of the surplus product of his natural goods.

A multitude of peoples in the East have not completely reached agricultural life in their evolution (the Kirghiz, the Turkomans, the Arabs, the tribal peoples of northern India, the Kurds, etc.). Nevertheless, among these peoples the survival of the primitive communal society has, over time, become a source of exploitation of the poor majority by the rich clan leaders. For example, we will look at the Kirghiz of the steppes. “Possessors of an extensive economy, the rich Kirghiz has already completely renounced physical labour; he is no more than the manager, the administrator; those who do the work are the day-labourers. The number of these labourers varies on average from seven to nine by economy, but there are economies where twenty labourers are exploited, or even more. A curious phenomenon to observe in the economy of the rich Kirghiz is the union of traits characteristic of modern capitalism with those of primitive nomadic society… The clan, despite its evident decomposition, still remains the legitimate proprietor of a given territory in the Kirghiz consciousness. The rich Kirghiz, abiding by this boundlessness of the right to use the land, covets considerable advantages: he puts to pasture his numerous herds without obstacle on all the territory of his relatives. Even up to the present, he has nothing pushing him to close off his land from that of the mass of the Kirghiz people.”12

The Task at Hand

From the above, we can easily understand why the Congress of the Revolutionary Peoples of the East (Baku, September 1920) recognised that “the soviet system is the only one which truly gives the labouring masses the possibility of taking power from their natural enemies, the upper classes (large landowners, speculators, high functionaries, officers), and to determine their own fate. Only soviet power empowers the poor labourers to take and keep the land from the landowners. The amalgamation of the soviets in large federations, and their autonomy within the framework of these federations: this is the only means for the toilers of different countries, who once warred among each other in the East, to pursue a peaceful existence, to destroy the foreign and native oppressors’ power, and to defeat all attempts by these oppressors to restore the old state of things.” To the forceful organisation of petty production and exploitation from above, the revolution substitutes the autonomous revolutionary organisation of the petty producers—the half-workers—in the form of the workers’ soviets. “Eliminate the prime cause of all oppression and exploitation—the power of the invading foreign capitalists and native tyrants (sultans, shahs, khans, beys, with all their bureaucrats and parasites)—seize power and exercise it in all domains (administrative, economic, and financial); refuse to fulfil any obligations to the feudal landlords and overthrow their authority; eliminate all personal and economic dependence on the landlords; abolish the large estates, under whatever legal form they may take; take the land from the large landlords without compensation or indemnities, and share it among the peasants, the farmers and the day-labourers who cultivate it”13: this is the task at hand. The alliance between the peasant soviet republics of the East with the soviet socialist republics of the West: this is the path that communism must pursue, to take hold of the entire global economy.

The proletariat of the West will help the toilers of the East with their knowledge, their technical expertise, and their organisational forces. The peasant soviet republics will provide the socialist industry of the West with the raw materials and fuel that it needs. Such an international division of labour between the city and the village, on the basis of amicable collaboration, is necessitated by the logic of the struggle against global economic disorganisation—the evident manifestation of capitalism’s decomposition. It is solely by this division of labour that we can eliminate the dependence of the Eastern people’s economy on the guardianship of the European and American banks, trusts, and syndicates.

The path to salvation of European industry, which suffers from a lack of raw materials and fuel necessary for its development, is the socialist industrial colonisation of the East. The soviets are not a repressive regime against the national customs and traditions of the peoples of the East; they will not drag these peoples by force into the kingdom of liberty. On the contrary, they will make them find their own path towards communism, by the cooperation of petty producers, by the organisation of public works (irrigation systems), and the formation of state enterprises.

Saint Francis of Assisi by Karl Kautsky

Translation and introduction by Rida Vaquas. 

Karl Kautsky, to the extent his writings on religion are known at all in the English speaking world, is primarily known for writing “Foundations of Christianity” in which he argues that the early Christian community was essentially “a proletarian organisation”, characterized by class hatred against the rich and a common consumption of goods, but changed its character as a result of its contempt for labour. This was the culmination of many years of interest in Christianity, Kautsky had previously edited a four volume book “Forerunners of Modern Socialism” that featured many heretical Christian sects, the first volume appearing in 1895. He was far from alone in the Social Democratic movement from having a sustained interest in Christianity. In the same year as the following article appeared, Vorwärts advertised a book by Emil Rosenow, “Against the Rule of Priests: Cultural Images from the Religious Struggles of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Century”, including chapters on asceticism, the monastic orders and the friars. As a journalist, Franz Mehring wrote several articles about the history of the Jesuits, and Calvin and Luther. The topic of Francis of Assisi was taken up once more in 1908, this time in the revisionist journal Sozialistische Monatshefte, by sculptor and writer Emmy von Egidy. 

Most of these publications are underpinned by a form of Protestant secularism: in which the medieval church is represented as a dominant institution within society rather than a “central system of practices, meanings and values”, a medium through which all social life was conducted. Rosa Luxemburg wrote that the Counter-Reformation was a part of what “shattered the beginnings of a new human culture”, which brought those in German lands back under the yoke of an oppressive church. Radical religious movements are recurrently praised insofar as they are a struggle against the papacy, identified as exploiter and ruler analogous to modern states.  Only a minority of socialist thinkers put forward a dissenting perspective, one being the Catholic pastor Wilhelm Hohoff, who argued in his 1881 book “Protestantism and Socialism” that the Reformation had, in fact, paved the way for capitalism.

The present article is not free from the critical assumptions that social progress was a struggle against the medieval church, and that the medieval church itself was a monolithic institution of the ruling class. However, it is unusual in its focus on what Kautsky sees as a communist movement that remained within the Church, even if it ultimately assesses the Franciscans as becoming assimilated into a ruling class institution. This brief introduction is not the place to put forward an alternative perspective on the history of the monastic and mendicant orders, but it is useful to shed a light on what Kautsky understood as communistic about them. 

For Kautsky, the intransigence of a proletarian communist movement ultimately derives from its commitment to labour, “the common duty of work, the communism of production and the means of production”, an ideal which poses a challenge to exploitation in a way that a communism based on consumption cannot. This may seem counterintuitive in an era where we have titles such as “Fully Automated Luxury Communism” and “abolish work” is a common radical slogan. Yet it is precisely the commitment to labour for which Kautsky praises the early Franciscans, and it is their turn away from labour which Kautsky sees as exemplifying their assimilation into the institutions of exploitation. 

A rejoinder that could be posed is that Kautsky was writing at a time in which there were not the technological means to do away with work, in his words, “enjoyment without labour is not yet possible” and surely now, a modern day Karl Kautsky, having watched some TED talks about the state of artificial intelligence technologies, would propose a post-work society as a communist project. But this misses something crucial. Kautsky grasped the human and social dimension of labour, the dimension which is obscured by work in a capitalist society, where work’s ends are profoundly anti-human. In Marx’s famous schema, one does not become a fisherman, hunter, cattle-rearer or critic by working in communism. Nonetheless, one does still fish, hunt, rear cattle and criticise. What then is radical about labour?

The early Franciscans, as Kautsky narrates, “would help the workers in their labour and therefore share their meals and their lodgings”. Numerous biographies of Saint Francis have detailed the kind of labour they would undertake: they served the leprosariums, repaired abandoned chapels, or worked with farmers and artisans. Labour was not simply busy-work, nor was the end simply self-sustenance. It was a way of existing within the community, of living for the sake of one another, even the most outcast amongst us. When we reduce all labour to the debasing kind we do now, ensuring only our own survival for the benefit of the richest, we forget that labour is fundamentally a way of relating to the total human community. Communism, at its most challenging, is not about a redistribution of goods, no matter how sweeping: such a project could be completed by any technocratic social democratic administration. It is about a fundamental transformation of human relations in order to dissolve all that estranges us from each other: it is hence a revolution in how we work and who and what we work for.

Kautsky had a lively interest in Christianity, what he described as a “colossal phenomenon” in “Foundations of Christianity”. However, firmly grounded in the historical materialist method, he did not venture to discuss Franciscans in terms of their spirituality. For that we have to turn to Emmy von Egidy, who wrote that Francis, “the Poverello, led humanity out of the dark torment of medieval spiritual anxieties into a freer, warmer, brighter life, towards the wonderful Franciscan ideal: to own nothing, in order to have everything”. Whilst such exultation is absent in Kautsky, he nonetheless turns eloquent when rescuing the Franciscans from the condescension of bourgeois history deeming their way of life as unnatural. The bourgeoisie, he argues, have confused the imperatives of capital with the imperatives of human life itself. What distinguishes an emancipatory project from an accommodationist one is its radical refusal to accept an unjust world as being representative of who we are and who we can be. For Kautsky, where the Franciscans fail is not in making that radical refusal but in being unable to keep it up. As communists, we are reminded to be watchful of our refusal, and in refusing to accept the permanence of capitalism, we must also refuse to accept the permanence of the injustices we perpetrate towards others owing to our “nature”.

This article was not only intended to be historical. It also had a clear allegorical function, revealed by Saint Francis being described as “the Jaurès of the thirteenth century”.  The Franciscan order gaining papal recognition is meant to be understood as analogous to the decision that Alexandre Millerand, a French Socialist at the time, made in joining the Waldeck-Rousseau cabinet in 1898, a decision that Jean Jaurès justified on account of defending the republic against “more hateful and more violent enemies”. Millerand himself sat in a cabinet with Gaston de Gallifet, the butcher of the Paris communards, whilst the cabinet’s administration was marked out by bloody strikes in which the army was deployed. This was not a problem limited to France; the liberal politician Giolotti sought to convince the reformist Turati to join his government in Italy in 1903, an attempt that failed due to the opposition of the Italian socialist party. The influence of Liberal trade unionists on the early British Labour Party in this period is similarly well-known. 

For Kautsky, as he later outlined explicitly in “Republic and Social Democracy in France” (1905), the entry of a socialist into a bourgeois government was to turn the socialists into a tool of the bourgeoisie, carrying out what they were too weak to do themselves. In this article, it is represented by the papacy striving “to make the Franciscans complicit in the church’s exploitation and make them into its defenders”. Of course, the declaration that socialists should not work with the bourgeoisie does not break much new ground in orthodox Marxism and there are few who would overtly quibble with it today. Yet the much-touted atomization and fragmentation of the working class have often caused many “leftists” to look for power and influence in social alliances, or forced them into a never-ending lesser-evilism in which we justify the violence done to our class and ourselves against the specter of the violence that is still to come. The struggle against “ministerialism” in the Second International was not simply a tactical question about when it is correct for socialists to enter government: it was a question about the nature of the movement. There are many guises by which one can do the bourgeoisie’s dirty work: whether it is by using socialist credentials to spread racist myths about migration or by putting a revolutionary gloss on exploitative resource extraction from the Global South, or by framing our programmes according to what is “reasonable” until we are no more than aspirational administrators of a bourgeois state. In each instance, we both bolster the existing order whilst narrowing the scope of our own project. In order to reject ministerialism, to be able to truly say “for this system, not one man, not one penny!”, we have to reject the entire framework in which these “political” choices are made. The clarification of the world as it is can no longer be confused with the acceptance of the world as it is. Emancipatory politics demands more from us.


Saint Francis of Assisi: Revisionist of Medieval Communism

Original source: Der heilige Franz von Assisi : ein Revisionist des mittelalterlichen Kommunismus von Karl Kautsky, Die Neue Zeit, 22/35 (1904), pp. 260 – 267.

Endeavors to abolish a kind of private property or even all private property are as old as propertylessness, poverty, and the phenomenon of the masses. To this extent, we can say that socialism stretches back far into our history. But the proletariat, the class of the dispossessed, was not always the same, and its differences correspond to the differences in the form of socialism they produced.

This is not a new idea, although it is still not recognized everywhere, and yet it is impossible to fully understand a movement such as the Franciscans, whom a historian has recently written about, without it. For this idea, it is very important to highlight the distinctive features of the different forms of the proletariat is very important because they assemble into two types and because it clearly shows how different the attitude of the papal church is to each of them. 

The communism of primitive Christianity was sustained by a lumpenproletariat on a mass scale. Small enterprise in production still dominated, as far as it was engaged in by free men, collective production, the communism of the means of production, was not worth considering as the ideal of the proletariat. The communism that they strived for was one of enjoyment of goods. Yet the lumpenproletariat shuns work, enjoyment without labour is their ideal and so the ideal of primitive Christianity became a communism of enjoyment without labour. The role models of pious Christians became the lilies and the ravens, who did not spin or weave, who did not sow or reap and yet splendidly thrived.

Yet enjoyment without labour is not yet possible as the common destiny of humanity. Whoever wants to enjoy without labour can only do it off the back of another, whose labour they exploit.

In spite of its communism, the early church hence required the division of society into two classes, one labouring and one exploiting and, as it always goes, the exploiters thought themselves to be better than those they exploited. The latter, they were the sinful children of the world. The exploiters organized in the church elevated themselves above them as saints, as chosen by the Lord. Of course, the exploiters were initially without property and poor and were sustained by the efforts of the community. But the organization of begging and the beggars soon became the dominant force in the church. Begging itself soon reached such staggering excess that from the poverty of the individual religious emerged the wealth of the clergy.

Originally the early church stood in opposition to the dominant society and the state which rested upon inequality, oppression, and exploitation. The more the Church developed from early Christian communism into an institution of exploitation and domination, the more its hostility to the state and society dwindled and hence the easier it became to reconcile itself with the existing order, what Constantine brilliantly attained.

Meanwhile, the same causes result in the same effects time and time again. As often as the masses of lumpenproletariat swell, attempts arise to revive early Christian communism afresh. After some centuries, often even after only decades, the organizations created through this always become a new institution of exploitation and domination within the Church, insofar as they succeed. This is due to the logic of the predicament and is proven by the history of each monastic order.

The communism of the labouring proletariat is of a completely different kind to this lumpenproletarian communism. The labouring proletariat only emerges as a mass phenomenon with the mass production of capital. They recognize the necessity of labour very well. They feel it as a burden, yet they realize it is indispensable. They do not seek to get rid of it, they prefer to make it easier, firstly by the deployment of all members of society capable of work and then by the use of the tools of production that mass industry brings with it. The common duty of work, communism of production and the means of production, that is the necessary ideal of the labouring proletariat.

This ideal signifies the abolition of all exploitation and of all class differences. It is in irreconcilable opposition to all these differences and to society based on exploitation. The communism of the labouring proletariat will be constantly fought against by ruling classes to the bitterest end, even it appears meekly and timidly.

The first beginnings of a proletariat exploited in a capitalist manner – weavers – are found in the cities of North Italy in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, where simultaneously a numerous lumpenproletariat roved around, starving and begging. In the Franciscan movement, both classes of the proletariat joined together. It therefore shows the character of both forms of communism: it wanted to renew primitive Christianity and yet it began to develop the sprouts. of a modern socialist movement. However, corresponding to the youth and weakness of the labouring proletariat at the time, they were very weak sprouts lacking vitality and were quickly overrun by lumpenproletarian tendencies. Due to the unification of both elements, the Franciscan movement is of enormous interest for the history of socialism. Its double-sided character also gave the papacy the opportunity to clearly put forward its own position towards both kinds of communism.

Francis was born in Assisi, a small city in Umbria in 1182, as the son of a silk merchant, and had the opportunity to come into contact with the cloth weavers of Lombardy, who had already founded communist brotherhoods at the time. This confirmed anew the important role that weavers played in communist movements of the Reformation period up until the Anabaptists, which I drew attention to in “Forerunners of Socialism”.

In around 1207, Francis began to preach communism. He renounced his worldly possessions and assembled young men around him who would live in voluntary poverty, but not without labour, according to the early Christian ideal. They would help the workers in their labour and therefore share their meals and their lodgings. They could not accept money in any circumstance. They were only permitted to beg if they could not do anything else to earn a living.

Labour played a great role in the beginning of the Franciscans. It is said of one of the first young men of St. Francis, Blessed Giles of Assisi:

“‘He resolved to always live by the labour of his own hands and he fulfilled this purpose’. Hence he went to the forest and carried wood on his shoulders, he sold it and therefore acquired what was necessary to him, that did not mean money but rather food. He helped cut grapes, carried them to the wine press and helped to tread on them. He broke nuts and earned half of the crop according to convention, which he distributed amongst the poor. He sifted flour in a cloister and earned seven loaves for it, he earned even more loaves because he carried water and helped with the baking. For good loaves, he also swept the kitchen.”

The Franciscan movement rapidly grew in its spread and influence over the proletarian classes in Northern Italy and soon caught the attention of the papacy. At the time, the church was the owner of the greatest riches and hence was the strongest exploiter of Christian peoples. Naturally, all communist movements of this period were primarily directed against the papal church and between them mortal enmity had to unfold. But the church already knew that one can become the ruler of a people’s movement much more easily by corrupting it with apparent concessions than by seeking to suppress it violently. Only when the former was not successful did it walk the second path, at least in the era of its intelligence. Francis of Assisi made it easier for the papacy to walk the first path. He belonged to the naive ideologues who think that deep-rooted social contradictions could be talked away by convincing the opponent. In 1210 he came before Pope Innocent III and prided himself on making an impression on him.

His organization was recognized and received permission to preach. This was totally unlike the heretical communists such as the Waldensians and the Apostolic Brethren who lived in open war with the Church. Francis, the Jaurès of the thirteenth century, hoped to be able to peacefully use the organization of the ruling classes, at the time the church, in order to imperceptibly undermine and abolish this class. Yet as a result, his communist organization was incorporated into the organization of domination and exploitation. His communism became a new pillar of papal domination and exploitation: that was his achievement. It was communism that changed as a result of this assimilation, not the papacy.

The communism of the labouring proletariat was too incompatible with all exploitation. In contrast, the communism of the lumpenproletariat, who lived by not by labour but by begging, could assimilate itself very well into clerical exploitation, which itself emerged from it. As soon as the papacy achieved influence amongst the Franciscans, it made every effort to get them to give up labour, to restrict themselves to begging without labour, which was sponsored through manifold privileges and made profitable. The papacy strived to make the Franciscans complicit in the church’s exploitation and make them into its defenders. The workshy elements in the order were promoted by the papacy and brought to its leadership, which simultaneously invoked vast greed in it. Organized mendicancy became ever more profitable, popes and cardinals saw to it that the Franciscans acquired property. Of course, the rules of the order forbade all property to them, not only individual but also collective, yet they did not forbid the use of the church’s property. So the order thrived under the papal sun of mercy, it soon lived in palaces and celebrated lavish meals and yet it became ever more estranged from its original purpose. A far cry from weakening or abolishing the wealth and the power of the church, the Franciscans became the most eager advocates of the papacy, the power of which they expanded as a result of the influence they exercised amongst the lower classes of the people. They became for the papacy of the Reformation era the same as what liberal officials of the English trade unions and the ministerialist socialists in France became for the bourgeoisie in our own era: powerful pillars of the existing order which mutate the proletariat from being a revolutionary force into a conservative element. 

It was with anguish that Francis saw this transformation that he had in no way intended. He could not have recognized at the time that things have their natural logic, even today some people cannot grasp it. Over and over again he appealed to the brothers to return to poverty and labour. In his testament he declared:

“I worked with my hands and still wish to work and I firmly wish that all my brothers give themselves to honest work… Let the brothers beware that they by no means receive churches or poor dwellings or anything which is built for them unless it is in harmony with that holy poverty which we have promised in the Rule, and let them always be guests there as pilgrims and strangers. And I firmly command all of the brothers through obedience that, wherever they are, they should not be so bold as to seek any letter from the Roman Curia either personally or through an intermediary, neither for a church or for some other place or under the guise of preaching or even for the persecution of their bodies.”

Yet everything was futile because Francis did not dare to take the decisive step of breaking obedience to the pope. Hence Francis was canonised two years after his death (1228), canonised because he, even against his will, had betrayed the proletarian cause through his alliance with the ruling authorities. Of course, the original tendencies of the order could not be completely blotted out for long. The strict, proletarian tendency sustained itself for a long time, mainly nourished by the Tertiaries, one of the order’s organizations of lay brothers attached to it. These were mostly labouring proletarians, who emphasised again and again the communist and oppositional character and invoked the wrath of the “more lenient” exploiting tendency, whose “leniency” and “tolerance” primarily came to light in their generosity in relation to the rule of the order, the undermining of which they executed calmly. In contrast, they were the most savage opponents of the stricter tendency, whose advocates they cleared away by fire, sword and the burial of living bodies. The strengthening of the Reformation movement finally ended all attempts to reawaken communist tendencies in the arms of the Franciscan order, as it clearly pointed out to all energetic communist elements that the fall of the papacy was the indispensable precondition of every further development in society and showed the absurdity of all endeavors to reform society through peaceful means with the cooperation of the papal church.

It can be clearly seen that the Franciscan movement is an important link in the chain of communist movements and Dr. Glaser should be recognized for the fluent investigation of sources by which he has illuminated its history.

Unfortunately, he is a student of Brentano’s and as such is obligated to remain blind towards class antagonisms. As he cannot go deeper, he must stay at the surface. As he cannot separate different communist tendencies according to the character of the classes from which they emerge, he cannot grasp their emergence from the real lives of their time and hence he must situate them as simple efforts to realize traditional pious hopes.

The master himself does likewise in the review of Glaser’s book, published in the first issue of the new series of “Archiv für soziale Gesetzgebung und Statistik” that is now known by the title “Archiv für Sozialwissenschaft und Sozialpolitik”. Brentano provides a “genealogy of attacks on property” there. In a truly professorial manner, he explains particular communist tendencies not by forms of property and forms of production of their time but rather by the propagation and interpretation of traditional ideas by a teacher, whose students try to realize these teachings. Hence he thinks, alongside Glaser, the entirety of the communist calamity was fundamentally caused by the Old Testament, in which there is only one who owns: Jehovah. This is where Brentano’s family tree of socialism ends. Where the Old Testament’s conception of property comes from remains a mystery. However, once it has been given, it plants itself ineradicably from one mind to another until it gets to Marx. This is where Brentano’s history of socialism meets with Eugen Dühring’s, who uncovered Marxism as a plagiarisation of the Jewish jubilee.

The French utopians of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries form one of the mediating links between Marx and Christian communism. At the time, these people gave up being truly Catholic in their thinking yet there remained “the old conception of communism as being the only state corresponding with natural law, but the justification of property as a necessity since the Fall of Man declined … Consequently there were most vehement theoretical attacks on property and attempts to theoretically justify communism. . . . Characteristically, everyone, from whom these arguments originated, had either been clergy or had undergone a theological education and had fallen away from Christianity. So there was Abbé Morreln, Abbe Mabeln, the priest Meslier.”

This demonstration of evidence is characteristic of Brentano. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the educational institutions of Romance countries were almost completely in the hands of theologians, and there were few educated people who had not “undergone a theological education”. Voltaire and Diderot were students of Jesuits. The socialist Abbés can be set against the bourgeois economists, Abbés Baudeau, Rannal and Morellet as well as the Abbot Galliani, and the liberal politicians Abbé Sienes and the Bishop Tallerand – to only call some names which immediately come to my mind. There was no tendency in seventeenth and eighteenth century France that would not have been represented by some Abbés.

On the other hand, it is in no way true that all French communists of this period were theologians. Vairasse, for example, was a soldier, Fontenelle had a legal education, Restif de la Bretonne got through his youth as a typesetter. 

One sees from the evidence – the only thing from which Brentano argues – that nothing is left of the connection between French communism in the period of the Enlightenment and early Christian communism. 

Brentano’s genealogy does less violence to the apparent facts of medieval communism. Its representatives did actually refer to the Bible. But it is completely wrong to see the causes of a party in a party’s arguments. The causes have produced the party and increased their numbers. The human intellect was always a means to serve the needs of mankind. It is limitless in its discoveries to satisfy these needs. The foundations for all social and hence political strivings are to be ultimately sought in this with the social conditions changing the needs, insofar as they are of a social nature, and not in the arguments made to serve them. Whoever, instead of researching the relationship between the needs, aims and the arguments of a social movement, restricts themselves to investigating the formal connections of the arguments and aims of this movement and similar arguments and aims of earlier movements will always remain in the dark about the real driving forces of history.

This limitation of Brentano’s and his students is no accident, it is necessarily grounded in their bourgeois perspective. Only the communist movements appear to them as purely ideological, they recognize very well the connections between the tendencies of the papacy and the economic requirements of nascent capitalism. But the bourgeois way of thinking is the only one that they grasp, it seems to them as normal, as coming from the natural needs of mankind. The contradiction between the proletarian and bourgeois social outlook appears to Brentano as the “contradiction between the natural position of humanity towards worldly goods and the renunciation that is demanded”; “the instincts of human nature are stronger than the legacy of Saint Francis triumph over the demands of asceticism” – by which asceticism means the abolition of property, not the requirement for chastity, which neither Glaser nor Brentano bring into view and, even in the struggle between the strict and the lenient, “the demands of asceticism” of the triumphant tendency in the Franciscans do not come into view. “The instincts of human nature” are not even sexual desires but the desire for property.

The fact that the teachings of the Church adapted themselves to the needs of nascent capital is further described as “the great convergence of church teachings with life”.

The needs of capital are therefore for Brentano the needs of life, of nature, of reality. The needs of the proletariat appear to captives of bourgeois thought as only the needs of the anti-natural, the reveries of an ideology estranged from the world. Class contradictions viewed in this way are happily transformed into a conflict between reality and ideal, the natural and unnatural. The communist endeavors of the Middle Ages, therefore, failed not because of the weaknesses and immaturity of the labouring proletariat but because they could not be reconciled with the demands of life. Hence the impracticability of communism in the Middle Ages changes from being a result of the historically determined relations then into something which holds unconditionally true for all periods, an essentially necessary phenomenon. One sees yet again how closely tied the opposition to the materialist conception of history is with bourgeois thought.

Alongside this, it is also remarkable the extent to which Brentano and even more of his students are sympathetic to the tactics of the papacy to make the communists harmless: to elevate them into the ranks of the privileged and hence detach them from the proletariat and corrupt them. Our Munich Professor knows well that these are the same tactics from England that he and his people have been fruitless trying in Germany for the last thirty years in order to embourgeoise Social Democracy. This tactic, which certain gullible souls in our own ranks occasionally boastfully highlight as an example of the great labour sympathies of these gentlemen, is, in fact, more dangerous to the emancipation efforts the proletariat than all oppression. 

The victory march of Social Democracy can no longer be hindered by violent oppression, but rather only by the corruptive privileging of its individual ranks. However, this is only for a while. Class antagonisms break out again and again. They are the great lever that ruin all the tricks of our opponents and launch the driving forces of social development time and time again.

Considerations on the Basis of the Socio-Political, Economic and Cultural Development of the Turkic Peoples of Asia and Europe by Mirsaid Sultan Galiev

Translation and introduction by Örsan Şenalp and Asim Khairdean

The below is an attempt to provide an English translation of one of the key texts of the visionary militant Mirsaid Sultan Galiev, written between 1923 – 25 titled Some of our Considerations on the Basis of the Socio-political, Economic, and Cultural Development of the Turkish People of Asia and Europe. 1 We believe that Sultan Galiev’s work and writings are very relevant for today, in the contemporary world, in relation to the important debates about identity politics and the Left, decolonization, political Islam, the re-emergence of the extreme right-wing, Marxism, the Russian Revolution, Bolshevism and the new Eurasianism amongst other things. The presented text is one of the key sources in which Sultan Galiev summarizes the main tenets of his analysis on the current world situation in the given conjuncture (the aftermath of the 1917 Russian Bolshevik Revolution), where he lays down an original and alternative strategy for world revolution. With this we are also publishing two supporting documents from the political trial against him which had begun in 1923, re-opened in 1928 and remained open until the final verdict was made in 1939, sentencing Galiev to execution which took place on January 28, 1940. 

A decade in prison and exile divides the two supporting texts: The first document is Galiev’s testimony of December 18, 1928, and the second one is the official sentence which is dated December 8, 1939. Both of these have been translated from the Russian versions. We provide a translation of these documents in order to provide a little bit of historical and materialist context, for not only the text but the conditions of its writing and distribution and its subsequent disappearance and reemergence. 

The primary text was found in the early 90s in KGB archives Box. No. 4: Volume No. 2: List No. 1. 2 The text was published in Russian (in Tatarstan) for the first time in 1995, following the opening of the archives to the public, with the following reference and with an introduction written by I. Tagirov: “Nekotorye nashi soobrazheniia ob osnovakh sotsial’no-politicheskogo, ekonomicheskogo i kul’turnogo razvitiia Tyuretskikh narodov Azii i Evropy.” The second time the article was published in 1998, this time with the title “Tezisy ob ob osnovakh sotsial’no-politicheskogo, ekonomicheskogo i kul’turnogo razvitiia Tyuretskikh narodov Azii i Evropy” in Izbrannye Trudy, together with the two accompanying texts we present below. 3   

With this translation, we have tried to overcome certain problems that we encountered and we must outline them here. First of all, we had to take as the source material for our translation the Russian text which was published in the 90s. This text was arranged and kept in the archives of the Politburo / GPU and later KGB. It was difficult to determine whether the original text was written in the Tatar language by Sultan Galiev or not. If indeed the original text was in Tatar, then the translation must have been done by the GPU and if that is the case we would not know how much is possibly lost in translation from Tatar to the Russian language. The translation could have done before, during or after the trial, or even after the execution of Galiev. This would imply that the GPU could have modified the text. At any rate, it has several inconsistencies of style and apparent absences such as the abrupt ending and missing second part.

The political and historical context in which the original text was written and received by Soviet authorities and leaders, therefore, generates serious problems about the text too. This text, whose only surviving copy is that produced and kept by the GPU, was the main grounds for Sultan Galiev’s second arrest in 1928. This was under Stalin’s orders, on accusations of anti-party political activity, at the start of the first of the Stalinist purges from the Communist Party which notably Galiev survived for a further decade. During this time he was sent to exile for ten years and sentenced to death on December 8, 1939. The article was seen as the main evidence for the betrayal of Galiev and so it is worth noting some inconsistencies in the references to it by Galiev and by the GPU. For this reason, we have tried to retain the formatting as much as possible.

In his 1928 testimony, Sultan Galiev confesses that he wrote the text in 1923, and completed it in 1925, and although he planned it in two parts he claims that he then gave up on the entire idea, and so did not finish the article.4 However, we understand from his testimony and sentence that the activities he was accused of and he actually undertook were organizational activities in line with the vision already set forth. According to Galiev’s own introduction, the second part was supposed to be where he would outline the practical and organizational aspects of his political strategy, as well as the tactics about how to realize this strategy. Notably, it is the part in which the idea of a Colonial International is supposed to be expounded since this does not appear anywhere in the existing first part but does appear in both Galiev’s testimony and in the GPU’s sentence and was also picked up by Bennigsen. The GPU sentence in particular even mentions aspects of the organizational structure of the CI as outlined in the text which are conspicuously absent from the current version. Such denial as part of Galiev’s testimony might have been an act of survival under the conditions that the author found himself at the time. Obviously, the content could have been direct and sufficient evidence to get him executed immediately. However, in the lack of such evidence, it is the existing text and Galiev’s ongoing activities after 1928 that are presented as the rationale for his sentence and execution in 1939. Although Galiev denies the existence of the second part before his executors, there is a good reason to assume that the text might have been hidden or destroyed by the author, a third party close to him or other interested parties.

This leads to the next problem of the first ever reference to this key text being made in the literature by the curious figure of Alexandre Bennigsen 5, who has established fame as a ‘Cold Warrior’ having led an academic wing of the ‘nation building’ campaign under the coordination of Zbigniew Brzezinski and his right arm Paul Henze.6 This situation creates another enigma around Galiev and the present text. We do not know, for instance, how Bennigsen and his students could have managed to penetrate the KGB archives or learned about the context of the text before the archives were opened in the early 90s. It may well be that Bennigsen or his team had discovered the existence of the text as an outcome of the study of Crimean Tatars in Ottoman Archives, which was led by Bennigsen himself in the Topkapi Palace. 7 In any case, the first reference to the text by Bennigsen, to the archived material seems to be picked up and used as secondary references by others, including French Marxist historian Maxime Rodinson.8 And this reference has made Galiev’s article known to other scholars and researchers who refers to it. Bennigsen and Quelquejay thought of Sultan Galiev as the father of the Third Worldist revolutionism, for his alternative vision crystallized in the present translation about the establishment of a ‘Colonial International”, an “International of the Oppressed Peoples.” Besides this, the controversial notion of ‘Muslim National Communism’ was attributed to Galiev’s overall thought by Bennigsen for the first time and since then the notion was adopted by other authors writing about Galiev. 9 Although Bennigsen and his students have done their work in order to undermine the unity of the USSR within the Cold War framework, by using Galiev; their work has revealed the historical originality of the person of Galiev and his ideas. Galiev’s thinking and political struggle to realize his ideas, by building an alternative to the Comintern was inspired by his version of historical materialism. According to Galiev, he builds his analysis as a revision of Lenin’s theory of imperialism and Marx’s theory of capitalism. He claims to achieving this by using a methodology he claims is a more radical version of dialectical and historical materialism. Galiev renames his methodology as energetic materialism and asserts that such a method of thinking has its roots in the East before it was established by Marx and Engels in the West. Independent of Bennigsen’s objectives, what we see in the below text is Galiev’s is a highly original analysis, that can indeed be seen as a precursor of the work of Frantz Fanon, CLR James, Che Guevara, Andre Gunder Frank, Dependency and World-System theorists. Important to note that, some authors have argued that the original ideas referred to as Galievism are initially based on the thoughts developed by Mollanur Vahidov. Galiev himself confirms this, in his 1923 testimony, by mentioning Validov’s name as his mentor.10 As Bennigsen highlights in 1986, Galiev does not cite or give resource neither for his term energetic materialism nor for the predecessors of this thinking system in the East. It was Alexander Bogdanov however who in his earlier work on empiriomonism synthesized the energetism of Ernest March and William Ostwald with the materialism of Marx and Engels. Curiously, Bogdanov in his magnum opus Tektology also makes a similar claim to that of Galiev that “tektological thinking” has its roots in the Eastern philosophy. 11 Therefore one might assume that it was Bogdanov’s thought which was the source that Galiev did not cite here. Bogdanov’s arrest on similar charges of “counter-revolutionary” activities in September 1923, some months after Galiev’s first arrest in May 1923 might indicate a connection to be further researched.12 More recent work of Craig Brandista 13, and James D. White14 might provide direction for future research. 

In any case, all references to the archived text and its published versions in Russian in the English speaking world remained secondary, referring only to the work of Bennigsen. Strikingly, but also probably because of these problems mentioned above, no English translation has been made until now. There may be other reasons that explain the lack of motivation amongst historians for translating Sultan Galiev’s work into English or other European languages, such as Galiev not being as prolific a writer as Lenin, Stalin, Trotsky, Bukharin or other Bolshevik leaders and intelligentsia. After all, Izbrannıe Trudı contains only around 1000 pages of material, collected in one volume, and is mainly composed of official writings which were found in the Soviet archives and published in 1998. However, Galiev was undoubtedly a key political figure, the highest-ranking Muslim amongst the Bolshevik leaders, and one of the first high ranked leader who got arrested and accused with anti-party activities and expelled from the party (as early as 1923). He and his fellows and followers were accused of being ‘Galievists’, bearers of a certain line of thinking and practice. The line of thinking and action that was labeled as ‘Galevist’ was strategically linked to the issues related to the policies on colonies, nationalities, self-determination, approach to agrarian classes, to Islam, and thus to the confrontation with the Imperialism of the West in the East. Therefore the Galiev case was not only related to the spread of the world revolution, but also to the issues of Russian nationalism and practice of revolutionary democracy in the Soviet government itself.15 

The overall enigma of the Galiev case and the lack of English translations of at least his key texts motivated us to undertake such an initial effort and make the present translation, even though we cannot read nor write Russian. Of course, we are aware of the fact that this constitutes a problem for the reader with regard to the trustworthiness of the end result. We decided to proceed anyway and then look for solutions to minimize the effects of these problems as much as we could. Our starting point was the early Turkish translations of both the present item (also published in 1998) as well as Turkish translations of other works of Galiev, a selection made from Izbrannıe Trudı and published by Halit Kakınç.17 As one of co-translators of the article below, Örsan Şenalp was then a member of the editorial board of Ulusal and was acquainted with the text and its Turkish translation. Asim Khairdean worked on the English rough translations of the Russian and the Turkish texts. Finally, we compared and corrected the outcomes of two versions and applied this to the two annexed documents as well. Needless to say, ours are just initial translations. Of course, there is still the need for a professional translation by a native English speaker and Russian literate historian.   

Before we end, we would like to thank Fabian Tompsett, Zbigniew Marcin Kowalewsky, Matthieu Renault, John Biggart, Craig Brandist, Eric Blanc, and Sebastian Budgen for the suggestions and insight they provided.  

Mirsaid Sultan-Galiev and Narkomnats Commissars, 1923

Document I: From the testimony of M. Sultan-Galiyev to the investigator of December 18, 1928

The question is put squarely: am I ready to disarm ideologically and organizationally or not? I answer at the beginning, yes, I am ready. What is my armament and what should be my disarmament? My armament consisted of well-known ideas and thoughts, in a certain worldview about the development of the revolutionary movement in the colonies and the work of Soviet power and the Communist Party in the national republics and regions, mainly the Turkic ones, which grew gradually in the course of the development of the revolution in Russia, starting as early as 1917.

This outlook has its own dynamics, the history of its development, which was determined by the peculiar perception of certain moments in the development of the international revolution in general and of party and Soviet work in the national parliaments in particular. 

The basic principles of my outlook were laid out by me in my testimonies to the OGPU back in 1923 – when I was arrested on charges of trying to establish contact with Zaki Validov.18 I consider it necessary to repeat them now in brief. The formulation of my views was:

First: The crisis in the development of the world revolution, which forced the party to shrink into the framework of building socialism in one country, is the result of a “reassessment of the significance, on the part of the European Communists, of the role of the Western European proletariat in organizing the world socialist revolution, on the one hand, and in underestimating the significance of national liberation movements in the colonial countries in the system of international revolution, on the other.” 19

Secondly: The Party’s insufficiently firm policy on the national question before the Eleventh Party Congress, 20 in the sense of underestimating its national manifestations in the work in the national parliaments and, as a result, the growth of great-power tendencies, on the one hand, and the discontent of the nationals on this basis, on the other.

As you know, I then recognized as erroneous my attempt to establish contact with Zaki Validov, qualified it as a crime against the party of which I was a member, and declared my readiness to accept the deserved retribution from your hands.

I did not make a clear statement on my part about my renunciation of the assessment, of the course of the development of the revolution, that had developed in my mind. 

When I was released from prison, I, at least, had no clear answer: who, after all, is right on the main issues – I or the party. I remember only one thing: I had made a firm decision to put an end to all my past, in being released from prison and staying in one form or another in the party. I learned about my expulsion from the party, as you know, here at the OGPU, before my release, after you made a written commitment from me to refuse to conduct anti-Party and anti-Soviet work. The message about this had a depressing impression on me. Some hope appeared to me in the possibility of reinstating the rights of a member of the party after being visited by Stalin some time after my release from prison, when I was instructed that this question could be put in about a year. Somewhere in the depths of my soul, there was, in addition, a hope for Vladimir Ilyich. For some reason, it seemed to me that Ilyich would be interested in my business and restore me to the party. I looked forward to his recovery. His death killed this hope in me. Ilyich’s loss for me was, therefore, a double blow. I loved this man as God in my youth. If you searched me, you should find in my papers a small sheet, where I brought my impressions of the deceased, after returning from his funeral. The image I painted on this little piece of paper will forever remain in my soul.

My hope for a return to the party revived after my statement to the Central Control Commission in 1924. The promise of support for my request on the part of Mr. Stalin strengthened this hope in me. The Central Control Commission, as you know, denied me my request. It was the third fresh and heavy blow to me.

The moment of negotiation and consideration of my application to the Central Control Commission coincided with the moment of the withdrawal from Tatarstan of a group of Tatar communists – Mukhtarova, Enbaev, and Gasim Mansurov, comrades close to me through my joint work with them during the revolution. Also from the party, the local Party organization of the People’s Commissariat of the Tatarstan Republic – Yunus Validov and deputy head of the Sovnarkom Comrade Ishak Kazakov, an old revolutionary who worked among us from the days of October. It was also preceded by my open defamation, in the pages of the Tatar and Russian press and in separate pamphlets, as a counter-revolutionary. I learned about the qualification of my act, as objectively counter-revolutionary, on the part of the Second National Meeting under the Central Committee of the Party, a year later, after expelling me from the party, and before that it was not clear to me why such a furious attack was taking place on me as against a counter-revolutionary.

The counter-revolutionary label, glued to me, oppressed me even worse because in my heart I considered myself a Communist, a Leninist, a party member, a revolutionary. I am in all parts of my being protesting against it (in my notes you can find a letter to the Central Committee, which I thought to compose at the same time on this occasion, but for some reason struggled with and abandoned). I considered this a great injustice towards myself and experienced it as the greatest tragedy. To me, all the more, it was hard, that I already experienced a serious tragedy in your prison. After all, I’m not only a revolutionary, but also a person. I, as a revolutionary, signed a death sentence to myself. I considered this to be the greatest act of revolutionary honesty and courage on my part and found, in this, great moral satisfaction for myself. I think you understood that then. But as a man, as an animal organism, I still experienced a heavy sense of death. And under this heavy feeling, I was with you for 2 weeks, while my fate was being decided. You see for yourself – I’m only 36 years old, and almost all my head is gray. You will understand, therefore, that strange feeling of resentment, insult, and humiliation that I experienced, and experienced at moments when I was exposed as a counter-revolutionary. Especially in those cases when this came from the people with whom I once fought alongside, against the opponents of the October Revolution and the Soviet government.

Here is the psychological background on the basis of which I gradually matured the decision to create an independent party, based on the revision of Marxism and Leninism on colonial and national issues. This was also facilitated by the extremely difficult situation that was created around the so-called “right” Tatar and partly Bashkir communists.

The result of this was my initial sketch of a part of the theses on “some issues of economic and cultural development of the Turkic peoples of Europe and Asia.” In them, I wanted to justify the opposition to the communist slogan of national self-determination by the slogan of “the liberation of the colonies through the dictatorship of the colonies over the metropole.” Communism, according to my analysis and a new understanding, was pictured to me as a new and progressive form of European nationalism for the first time, meaning the policy of consolidation and unification of the material and cultural forces of the metropolitan countries under the aegis of the proletariat. In the future, I intended to expand these theses on the colonial question in general, based on the radical revision of the Leninist theory of imperialism and Stalin’s interpretation of it. I speak quite frankly, as I am, in front of you and before history, in the end, one person, but I have nothing to hide. If in your hands during a search I had a pamphlet by V.I. Lenin “Imperialism, as the newest stage of development of capitalism” with my notes on the margins and on the covers, then on them you will be able to form an approximate representation of my understanding of imperialism. According to my theory of imperialism, imperialism is inherent in capitalism in general, regardless of the stage of its development; it seemed to me that in this respect Ilyich nevertheless lacks clarity. From my formulation, therefore, there was a possibility in the theory and practice of the existence of socialist or communist imperialism, since at this stage of its development international capital (which must grow from a revolution into socialism) represents a system of colonial management.

I here ask you not to confuse my concept with the battered and rotten lampoon of Kautsky and the dirty lies of the imperialist bourgeoisie about the “red imperialism of the Soviets.” From my same theses, you will see that I am an irreconcilable enemy both of the world bourgeoisie and Menshevism.

The draft of my theses I first read to Yunus Validov. He insisted on making some amendments, especially with regard to the formulation of the content of the national liberation movement of individual colonial countries (including the Turkic-Tatar nationalities of Soyuzia) and questioned the correctness of the basic slogan of “colonial dictatorship over the metropole,” where we opposed ourselves to the Communist International. Validov then lived in my apartment. He was already expelled from the party. Above him was the threat of a public trial on charges of a criminal offense. We both suffered a great deal. Nevertheless, the discussion of the program for the future of the “International of the Colonial Peoples” was very intensive. Our main provisions were worked out by us, but they are not set out on paper. Tactics and strategy were defined. The social base of our future “Colonial International” party was determined by the workers, peasants and the petty bourgeoisie. Tactically, we stood for the use also of the progressive part of the large national bourgeoisie (the industrial bourgeoisie). It was decided after the trial of Validov, if he was not left in the party, to flee abroad and begin negotiations with underground or semi-legal colonial revolutionary organizations about the establishment of the Bureau of the International in one of the eastern countries. First of all, Validov was to contact Sun-Yat-Sen and then to transfer to India. I had to stay in the USSR and organize a small but strong nucleus here and also go abroad and contact the Fourth International and the anarchist organizations of Europe. Such was our decision before the trial of Validov. Validov in the court kept himself, in my opinion, revolutionary. You know that. The court, as is known, did not resolve in his favor … Nevertheless, we carried out our decision and were then detained ourselves. We once again thoroughly thought out the issue and decided to seek a review of the court’s decision before the Central Control Commission, and in case of a negative decision by him and in this instance, to appeal the decision of the Central Control Commission first to the party congress and then to the Comintern. The decision of Validov in this sense was unshakable. He believed in his own right. I supported him. Before deciding on the fate of Validov, we decided to stay in the USSR, regardless of whether you pursued us or not, whether it was possible for us to go abroad or not, that is, already having made a full break with you (as it should be understood), depending on the outcome of the resolution of the question of leaving him in the party. Severe illness and the subsequent death of Validov however, removed this issue from the order of the day.

The loss of Validov was a heavy blow to me. In him, I lost one of my most loyal friends and support. The son of a serf-peasant, he was a real rebellious and revolutionary slave.

The transcript of his speech at the trial was kept by me. It must have got to you. There on the first page, there should be a signature made by the hand of Validov himself. It spoke about the growth of the right, danger in the country and the need for an organized fight against it. Validov, before death, asked me to reproduce his speech and distribute it among the population. By this way, he wanted to rehabilitate himself after death. I, however, did not do this and kept his speech only as historical material. I did not want to endure our discord with the party in public.

After the death of Validov, I suspended the work on the preparation of the theses. It seemed to me that the planned course of our action was still wrong. In the program we are planning, there was no clarity, firstly, regarding the social entity of the organization we are creating, and secondly, regarding the definition of our attitude to communism as a system, as a principle. It was unclear what we should promise to the colonies liberated from the hegemony of metropolitan countries: communism, or capitalism, or something third “not bourgeois” and how to ensure the organizational triumph of communism as a system in general, if we accept it for the colonies. The question as to the stages in the development of the national liberation movement with regard to communism was also unclear: whether communism was established after the end of the national liberation, or whether its growth coincided with the development of the national liberation movement. And I’ve thought about this for a long time. In addition, I was sick with tuberculosis, which greatly exhausted me and I had to go to the Crimea.

Later, after returning from the Crimea, in the winter of 1925 I read extracts from my theses to Comrade Budayli from the Tatarstan Republic. He also gave readings to Mukhtarov and Enbaev, and even later, it seems in 1926, showed them to their comrade Deren-Ayerly. Reading the theses, I pointed out to my comrades that they represented only a draft outline of my views on the development of the revolutionary movement in the Turkic regions of Europe and Asia. Comrades, agreeing with the analysis of the Turkic world in the system of world economy and politics, resolutely argued against the first part of the theses, regarding the opposition of the colonial communists with Europeans and about the slogan “the dictatorship of the colonies over the metropole.”

I did not show my theses to anyone else. As you can see, the theses are not finished, but among the papers on separate sheets there are rough drafts of the formulations of the remaining parts of the theses, not only in the form of completed and ready-made thoughts but in the form of “possible productions.” In the process of their analysis, their antitheses could also arise.

I did not manage to finish them. I did not have too much time and there was no “Engels” at hand. This is the first point. Secondly, I still did not lose hope for my rehabilitation within the party. For some reason, it seemed to me that the Central Committee of the Party would finally consider my position. This hope grew especially strong in the period when you started talking about “changing the route of the revolution” in terms of a turn towards active participation in the national liberation movement of the colonies, specifically, the Chinese revolution. The result of this was my second letter to T. Stalin at the end of 1925 or the beginning of 1926 with the question of whether it is possible for me to raise the question of restoring my membership in the party and on what conditions. Moreover, even later, under the influence of the experience of the Chinese revolution and the development of the national liberation movement in India and other colonial countries, and also in the USSR itself, the question gradually arose in me as to whether I was really mistaken in the main, namely in determining the revolutionary significance of the theory and practice of Leninism in applying them to resolving the colonial question and hence in determining the revolutionary role of the CPSU(B) and the Comintern, that is, speaking simply, I do not break through an open door. 

Mugshot of Sultan-Galiev

Document II:  SENTENCE

THE UNION OF THE SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS THE MILITARY BOARD OF THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNION OF SSR, DECEMBER 8, 1939, CONSISTING OF:

Chairman – Brigouveneurist T. Alekseyeva

Members: Brigvoyenurist Sislina and Comrade Bukanova

As the secretary-lawyer T. Mazur, in a closed court session in the city of Moscow, December 8, 1939, examined the case on charges of – Sultangalieva Mirseida21 Haydar Galievich 1892, the birth of the Bashkir Assr, by nationality Tatar, servant, non-partisan, by the NKVD in 1928 (on June 28, 1930, Col. of the State Political University) a sentence of up to 10 years for criminal activities, is provided for by Articles 58-1a, 58-2 and 58-11 of the Criminal Code.

The preliminary and judicial investigation found that since 1919, Sultan-Galiev is the organizer and the actual leader of the anti-Soviet nationalist group which for many years has been actively fighting against Soviet power and the CPSU(B).

Throughout 1919-1920, Sultan-Galiev was in organizational connection with the well-known nationalists who were in exile: Ibragimov22, Abdurran and others, together with whom they agreed on organizing the struggle against Soviet power on the basis of pan-Turkism and pan-Islamism, with the aim of secession from Soviet Russia of the Turkic-Tatar regions and the establishment in them of a bourgeois-democratic Turanian state.

In 1923, Sultan-Galiev M. together with a certain Kara-Sacal, the foundations of a political program common to all the Turkic nationalities of the USSR and the colonial peoples of the foreign East were worked out, a cipher was developed, a password and nicknames were established.

In the period of 1925, Sultan-Galiev wrote a program of struggle under the heading “On the Basics of the Economic, Political and Cultural Development of the Turkic Peoples,” in which he put forward the idea of ​​creating a “colonial International,” with the organization of a special committee for the leadership of the Pan-Turkic movements of the Turkic peoples in the USSR, with branches on the ground, whose task was to organize the preparation of a branch off of the national Turkic republics and regions from the Soviet Union.

Since 1923 and for several years Sultan-Galiev had an organizational relationship with the Trotskyite-Zinoviev underground, contacting them with subversive work, against the CPSU(B) and the Soviet authorities.

In the period 1931-1933. Sultan-Galiev, even while in the Solovetsky camps, did not abandon his criminal activities with like-minded people – Enbaev, Bakiyev, and others –  negotiated the creation of the so-called “Turan Workers ‘and Peasants’ Socialist Party.”

In the same year of 1933, Sultan-Galiev undertook the assignment to establish a connection with the leader of the Tatar White emigration Gayaz Iskhakov.

Along with these criminal acts during the period from 1919 to 1928 and from 1934 to the date of his arrest Sultan-Galiev led a large recruitment drive to create anti-Soviet bourgeois-nationalist organizations and groups.

In addition, it was established that since 1922 Sultan-Galiev was connected with the diplomatic representatives of a foreign state who, for espionage purposes, informed about secret decisions of the Central Committee of the CPSU(B) on Eastern issues about secret decisions on the national question, and also gave his consent to the transfer of information about the armed forces of the USSR. He gave the representative of foreign intelligence in 1927 a verbatim report of the so-called “Ryskulov national meeting.”

Recognizing Sultan-Galiev as guilty of the crimes provided for in Articles 58-1a, 58-2 and 58-11 of the Criminal Code of the RSFSR, the Military Collegium of the Supreme Court of the USSR, guided by Articles 319 and 320 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of the RSFSR has agreed:

Sultan-Galiyev Mirsaid Haydar Galiyich to be given the highest measure of criminal punishment – execution, with confiscation of all personal property belonging to him. The verdict is final and not subject to appeal.

A copy of the document was transferred from the Central Archive of the Federal Counterintelligence Service of the Russian Federation.

Second All-Russia Congress of Communist Organization of Orient Peoples in 1919

Document III: Some considerations on the basis of socio-political, economic and cultural development of the Turkic peoples of Asia and Europe23

Methodology  

Before we base the foundations on which we will establish the socio-political, economic, and cultural developments of the Turkic peoples of Asia and Europe in the epoch we are experiencing, we have to, at least briefly, dwell on the methodology of our views on the topic.   

To avoid any ambiguity and misunderstanding we must first point out that we approach this particular issue, as well as in general other issues, from the materialist worldview and philosophy. And from the various currents of this revolutionary philosophical school, we dwell on a more radical branch, so-called historical or dialectical materialism. We believe that this branch of materialistic philosophy is the most faithful and scientifically grounded system of cognition of individual phenomena in the social life of human society since with its help we can produce the most correct and accurate analysis of their causes and predict or anticipate their consequences.

But at the same time, let us state in advance that our belonging to this school – of dialectical, or rather, energetic materialism – should not be interpreted as a blind imitation of the Western European representatives of this school (i.e. the so-called Marxists or Communists), nor a blind copying of all that they think or produce. We do not do this for the following reasons:

    1. We believe that materialistic philosophy is not at all an exclusive “accessory” of Western European scientific thought, since this kind of philosophy, in one form or another, as well as a well-known system of thinking, has arisen in other non-European peoples (Persians, Arabs, Chinese, Turks, Mongol, etc.) long before the birth of modern European culture.
    2. Many of us, even before the last revolution in Russia, were imbued with an energetic materialist world outlook, and it was not artificial and grafted from the outside, but naturally arising from the essence of the conditions surrounding us: the most severe economic, political and cultural oppression of Russian nationalism and Russian statehood.
    3. Our adherence to the supporters of historical materialism does not at all oblige us to agree to and regard anything as “sacred”, indisputable and indestructible, as presented by contemporary Russian or even European monopolists of the idea of ​​dialectical materialism.

 You can declare yourself a thousand times a materialist, a Marxist, a Communist or, as is in fashion in Russia now, a Leninist, screaming about it to the whole world, with as much strength and opportunity as you have, and write hundreds and thousands of volumes on hundreds and thousands of topics on this subject, but at the same time not have the slightest dose of true materialism or communism, or a grain of genuine revolutionism in your judgments and conclusions, let alone actions. And we not only do not give any obligations to you but even in spite of all your expectations, we “dare” challenge you for the right to monopolize the idea of ​​dialectical materialism.

So, for example, we find that in the basic questions of the restructuring of the social life of mankind, which are, firstly, the national-colonial question, and secondly, the question of the methods of implementing communism, that is, the social system, where there will be no classes and there will be no exploitation of man by man, Russians, and behind them the West-European Communists at the present time make the grossest mistakes, the result of which may not be the salvation of mankind from the “oppression of anarchy and elements,” but his terrible ruin, impoverishment, and extinction. We agree with them (not always and not on all matters), when they criticize and plunder the rapacious European capitalism by predatory European imperialism; we agree with them when they speak of the reactionary nature of modern European capitalist culture and the need to fight it… but we nevertheless completely disagree with the recipes they have offered, as conclusions from their reasoning about all this. We believe that with the recipe proposing the replacement of the dictatorship over the world of one class of the European public (the bourgeoisie) by its antipode (proletariat), i.e. its other class, there will be no particularly great change in the social life of the oppressed nations of mankind. In any case, if any change occurs, it is not for the better, but for the worse. This will only be a replacement for a less powerful and less organized dictatorship (the centralized dictatorship of the forces united on a European scale) of the same capitalist Europe (including here and America) over the rest of the world. In contrast, we put forward a different proposition – the concept that the material prerequisites for the social reorganization of mankind can be created only by establishing the dictatorship of colonies and semi-colonies over the metropole. Only this way is capable of creating real guarantees for the liberation and emancipation of the productive forces of the globe, chained by Western imperialism.

Proceeding from this methodology, we establish a certain system of questions, the answer to which must give the most correct solution to our main task. We consider the issues through the following topics: 

What is the Turkic world in the present-day world economy and politics as a socio-productive organism?

What conditions are lacking (internal and external) for the normal economic, political and cultural development of the Turkic peoples (both in general and their individual branches)?

In what ways can these conditions be achieved, whether through evolutionary development or through revolutionary changes?

Specific methods of work in one direction or another:

a) strategy and tactics,

b) forms of organization.

The Turkic World in the system of the modern world economy and policy as a productive-social organism 

The question of the place and role of the modern Turkic world in the system of the current international economy and politics is, in our opinion, the main issue from which we can outline the correct solution of our main question about the fundamentals of the socio-political, economic and cultural development of the Turkic peoples of Asia and Europe.

Not knowing exactly what we are, inside the system of existing international social and legal relations and what kind of relations we have, we can not determine what we should become and what should turn into.

An analysis of this question can be started only from the second part of it, i.e. from the question of what is the modern system of international social and legal relations – economic, political and cultural-domestic.

The following factors are the distinguishing points that determine the features of this system:

  1. The Slave (colonial-imperialist) character of the modern world economy and politics.

Analysis of social and legal relations between individual peoples of the world reveals that the nationalities from which modern mankind is formed are sharply divided into two camps that are hostile to each other and unequal in number according to their social and legal situation; in one camp there are peoples constituting only 20-25% of humanity, who have managed to take into their hands almost the entire globe, with all the “living” and dead riches contained in it and on it, and established the monopoly “right” to exploit them; in another camp there are peoples making up 4/5 of all mankind and falling under the economic, political and cultural bondage and slavery of the peoples of the first camp, in other words, the “master” or “civilized” peoples. 

In the “civil” language of “gentlemen”, the peoples of the first group are called “civilized,” “civil” nations, called upon to save mankind “from slavery, ignorance, and poverty.” The peoples of the second group in their language are called “savages,” “natives,” etc. and created, according to their “scientific” judgments, to serve the interests of “civilized-nations.” The “natives” and “savages” have not yet invented special terms for the designation of “civilized” peoples and, whether by the “poverty” of their lexicon or lack of scientific understanding, they call them simply “dogs,” “robbers,” “executioners,” and other similar “indecent” and incomprehensible epithets.

The peoples of the first category include the “civilized” peoples of Europe and America, which spread gradually in other parts of the world are generally called “the peoples of the West.” The second group includes the peoples of Asia and Africa and the Aborigines of Australia and America, colonized by Europeans.

Analyzing the relations between the two groups of people, we state that the entire system of economic, political and cultural relations of the peoples of the West (metropolitan countries) to the peoples of the colonies and semi-colonies characterizes the system of slaveholding relations.

A number of conditions, of a historical and natural-geographical nature that influenced the progress of technology and culture of the peoples of the West, conditioned the transition into their hands of the means of economic and cultural communication between the peoples of different parts of the world, in other words the international communications and military-strategic points, thereby creating the prerequisites for the transition into their hands the entire initiative in the development of the world’s political and economic relations between the peoples of Western and Eastern cultures.

By a well-known moment of history, the technology and culture of the peoples of Europe proved to be more viable and rational, from the point of view of the struggle for existence, than that of the hegemons of the world, the Muslim peoples of Asia and Africa, who were settling on them at that time, and allowed them to break up the latter and occupy the necessary bridgeheads, to freely extend their influence to the rest of the Asian and African continent.

World trade routes, trade markets and sources of raw materials, as well as military-strategic points, with few exceptions, were in the hands of the peoples of the West. And the people of the West extended their system of intra-national slavery (if serfdom in the epoch of feudalism was a form of slave-owning economy, then class oppression in the era of capitalism is also slave-owning – the exploitation of man by man, but only in another, reformed form) entirely to their colonies – “black” and “yellow” continents, thus giving an international character to it and transformed it into an “international” system of slavery. The peoples of these continents actually turned into slaves deprived of the right to own the natural wealth of their countries and work for the benefit of their “civil” masters – the people of the metropole. 

  1. The parasitic and reactionary character of the material culture of metropole as the main factor of the world development of this epoch.

The colonial-slave-owning character of the modern system of world economy determines entirely its next feature-the deep parasitism and the highly reactionary nature of the entire present culture of the peoples of the West as the main factor in the development of mankind in this epoch. These, the properties of the material culture of the metropolitan countries are expressed in the following two points:

a) The static moment – the monopolistic concentration of the means of production and circulation, and the subjects of consumption that are necessary for humanity, in the hands of the peoples of the metropole. 

In the hands of the metropolitan countries with some 300-350 million people has accumulated all the main means of production (factory industry), means of circulation (financial capital and its apparatus), ways and means of transportation and communication (sea routes, railway lines, air messages, telegraph and radiograph); as well as sources of raw materials (oil, coal, ore, animals and plant products) and markets for industrial products. In this respect, the West seems to be a giant octopus, embracing with its tentacles four-fifths of humanity and sucking from it all its vital juices. To this we must add that the octopus is not an ordinary octopus from under the waters of the ocean, but an octopus-armadillo, an octopus warrior, an octopus, a deadly bearer armed with the latest military art and military “inventions” of the West. True, these gains did not increase the courage and bravery of this octopus. But his cowardly cruelty and bloodthirstiness has increased: the octopus now sucks the lifeblood from the living organism of the peoples of the colonies and semi-colonies, enriching one, the smaller, part of the world’s population at the expense of exhaustion, pauperization, degeneration and extinction of the other, the majority.

b) The Dynamic Moment – the parasitic and reactionary character of the material of the metropole from the point of view of the maximum development of the productive forces of mankind.

This moment is closely connected with the first and is its complement and development.

In fact, it is the basis for what the modern culture of metropolitan countries seeks as a regulator of the development of mankind in the current epoch.

If the essence of the material culture of the peoples of the West consisted solely in the monopolistic nature of the modern system of their economy (monopoly capitalism or imperialism), then this as a form of organization of the world economy would be only half bad. But the whole point is that the essence of the material culture of the metropolitan countries, the main internal content of it, that is, the true content of all these “monopoly capitalisms,” “imperialisms” and other social categories of the public of the West is not at all in this static form, but in its dynamic, in the specific tendency of its development.

This trend is that the existence and development of the modern material culture of the peoples of the West is based not only on the preservation of slave-owning and bonded relations to the peoples of the East, in other words on the exploitation of the natural – natural forces and resources of colonies and semi-colonies, but also on the delay of the development of the domestic productive forces of the latter, on the suppression of the growth of their material culture.

What is the basis for the modern culture of the West?

On the monopoly production and sale of goods for the metropolitan countries and colonies, in other words as a monopolist in the world economy and production process.

What is it based on?

On the delay in the development of the domestic economy, in the absence of a national industry of colonies and semi-colonies; in other words on the preservation of the agrarian, purely peasant character of these countries, when they, because of the absence or underdevelopment of national industry, are forced to resort in their economic life to the “help” of the metropolitan countries, in other words, the world monopoly industry.

Specifically, this process consists of the following elements:

a) The provision of the main elements of the economy of the metropole – industry – with cheap raw materials, hence the aggressive policy of the peoples of the West towards the countries of Asia and Africa as sources of raw materials, with all that accompanies this policy and the resulting phenomena: firstly, the ruthless struggle with the remnants of independence of the semi-colonies and the brutal suppression of the slightest manifestation of political independence on the part of the colonies, and secondly, constant competitive wars due to colonial possessions between individual national metropolitan groups. In other words, the development of social contradictions between colonies and metropole, on the one hand, and national conflicts between individual national groups of dictatorial metropole, on the other.

b) The provision of cheap production costs for the factories of industry, by improving the technology of production and exploitation of the labor of industrial workers in the metropolitan areas and subsidiary workers from the colonies. Hence, the existence of class contradictions in metropolitan areas and the emergence of class-based political parties on the basis of these contradictions.

c) The provision of cheap (profitable) markets for the products of the industry of the metropole. Hence, the deepening of the colonial-aggressive policy of the metropolitan countries directed not only to keep the colonies and semi-colonies in their own hands and under their own yoke but also to keep them precisely as permanent markets for the sale of industrial fabrics in the metropole.

The result of this policy is only an even greater aggravation of social contradictions between colonies and metropole, and these contradictions assume the importance of a factor of paramount international importance.

The last element in the process of the dynamics of the material culture of metropolitan countries occupies a particularly important place in the system of established relationships between the metropolitan countries and colonies. This element, being the main active spring of the modern culture of the peoples of the West, simultaneously acts as the main cause of all those social abnormalities that are revealed in the development of modern mankind as a whole.

These abnormalities are obvious and they can only be denied by blind people and political degenerates. They are as follows:

a) The Hostile and unproductive operation of the natural riches of the Earth, in the peculiarities of the resources of colonial and semi-colonies, from the point of view of the general interests of humanity.

This truth hardly requires proofs, it is enough to observe the management of the metropolitan areas, ‘home’, and in the colonies, so as not to be immediately convinced of this.

b) The irrational organization of the global process of production and distribution and as a whole and the unproductive waste of mass human energy.

The means of production, concentrated mainly in the hands of the metropolitan countries, are far from the main sources of raw materials and world markets and thus necessitate the transfer, of raw materials to the means of production, firstly and the products of its processing (goods) to the markets secondly. For example, some wool or leather raw materials from Tibet, India or Afghanistan should get to the UK, turn into cloth, shoes or other goods and then travel back to their “homeland.” Or, for example, Turkestan or Transcaucasian cotton (by the way, together with the Baku oil) must first make a trip to the country of the “civilized” – somewhere in Moscow or Ivanovo-Voznesensk and, turning into a manufactory or something else, to do the opposite (secondary) journey to the same Turkestan or Transcaucasia, and sometimes further – to Persia, Afghanistan, etc. From the point of view of economy of means and human energy, it would be more expedient to act in just the opposite way: to process raw materials into what is necessary for people in its “motherland,” in other words in the colonies and semi-colonies themselves where, incidentally, with the exception of the means of production (which can be moved there from metropolitan areas or organized again), there is a combination of all the necessary conditions for this: raw materials, liquid fuels, unused and extinct human energy, the need for appropriate factories from the population of the colonies, and sending it to “foreign travel” only as is necessary; in other words conforming to the corresponding natural consumer demand from there, not as a “wild” raw material, but as a “civil” commodity.

c) The waste of mass human energy for the constant and regular “protection” of the existing order of things and the structure it requires, in other words, the existing irrationality in the organization of the world economy and the relevance of this social negligence (injustice). 

It expresses itself in the rabid militarism of the West, in the monstrous growth of its land, sea, and air armaments and the corps of internal and external guards. The peoples of the West are protected not only from the oppressed peoples of the colonies and semi-colonies and from all sorts of “yellow,” “black” and other “dangers” and “panisms,” but also “from each other.”

d) The delay of the natural development of the productive forces of the colonies and semi-colonies, the majority of the world population. On this ground emerges the social inequality between the peoples of the colonies and the metropole and the prevention of the cultural development of all of modern mankind as a whole.

It is advantageous for Western predatory imperialism to maintain backward forms of economy and social relations in colonial countries. Only on the basis of this backwardness, can the predatory culture of the metropole breathe and develop. To keep the colonial peoples in darkness and oppression and not give them the opportunity to revive culturally is the most real and vital need of the peoples of the West, which have turned into jailers of the freedom of mankind. Hence the social inequality that we see in the position of the peoples of the metropolitan countries, on the one hand, and the peoples of the colonies oppressed by them, on the other. While the peoples of metropolitan countries enjoy all the benefits of culture and all the gains of technology and science, the peoples of the colonial countries, in their mass, are forced to drag out the existence of half-starved slaves and beggars. We see steel and granite skyscrapers on one side and pitiful huts and shacks on the other; cars, trams, buses, trains, steamships and airplanes on one side, pathetic nags and antediluvian airbuses and wagons on the other; electric plows, tractors, steam threshers, melioration, artificial fertilizer fields, etc. on one side and a wooden plow, a shovel, a pickaxe and a pitchfork on the other; electricity, telephone, telegraph and radio on one side, a beam and a kerosene oil lamp and the absence of everything else on the other; fine arts, literature, games and laughter on one side, hopelessness and darkness, constant suffering and tears on the other; satiety, contentment and a secure life on one side, hunger, cold, poverty, disease, death and degeneration on the other.

Can we justify this state of affairs? Can we call it a normal position, normal order? No, and again no! From the point of view of any morality, this is an expression of the greatest social abnormality and glaring world social injustice.

  1. Strengthening the national cultures of the metropole to consolidation.

We would be incomplete in our analysis of the material culture of metropolitan countries if we leave unanswered yet another question, namely: where is the modern material culture of the peoples of the metropolitan countries headed and what does it want to become? This question is closely connected to the dynamics of the development of this culture and reveals one of the most characteristic and significant features of it, determining the prospects for the development of the world for the entire immediate era. We define this line as the desire for consolidation, in other words to the centralized unification of the disparate national-material cultures (capital) of the peoples of the metropole.

Does this desire exist?

Yes, it does. The recent international imperialist war, revolutionary cataclysms in Russia and other countries after the war, today’s “diplomatic” struggle between certain groups of “victorious” countries, the feverish work of the separate political parties of the peoples of the West are all the most diverse manifestations of this aspiration.

This aspiration is under pressure from the following two contradictions:

1) The discrepancy between the existing structure of the material culture of the peoples of metropolitan countries (nationally scattered, often proprietary or anarchic capitalist) of its internal essence, in other words, the needs of these people in a more organized and improved robbery and exploitation of the peoples of the colonies and semi-colonies;

2) In connection with this, the emergence in the colonies of material and political prerequisites for national independence and social emancipation from the yoke of the metropolitan countries; strengthening the so-called national liberation movement of the colonies.

We take the first contradiction. What is it specifically expressed in? It expresses itself in the fact that the existing order, the existing structure of the foundations of the material culture of the peoples of metropolitan countries cannot provide them with impunity, regular and, most importantly, full exploitation of the peoples of the colonies. The material needs of the peoples of metropolitan countries have outgrown the existing form of their material culture. The robbery and sucking of juices from the body of enslaved humanity, produced individually, without a single plan and a centralized will, are not effective enough in terms of productivity and not only do not give the maximum expected results, but even contrary to the will of the robbers, are fraught with all sorts of surprises. It turns out that such a system of exploitation of colonies and semi-colonies and the rest of the oppressed part of mankind cannot stop the complete circulation of blood in their bodies. They continue to maintain their vitality, continue to live, breathe, and sometimes, when their enslavers are engaged in a fight among themselves because of someone else’s good, they even dare to oppose them. Can the peoples of the West afford such a “luxury” on the part of the peoples of the colonies? Of course not. Whether they want to or not, the question of changing the internal structure of their material culture, the question of the transition to a new, higher, more organized and perfect forms of management, rises before them and it can not be otherwise!

What is the essence of the internal structure of the material culture of the metropolitan countries of the lived (passing) era? Its essence lies in two provisions: private property within nations and private property between nations, in other words, the relative disunity of the means of production and circulation of the accumulated wealth both within the nations themselves, and between individual nations.

Let us take the first position – private property within nations. What results does it give in the course of developing the material culture of the peoples of the West? Firstly, competition between individual owners (capitalists) and their associations (trusts, syndicates, cartels, etc.) or even among whole industries themselves. In pursuit of profit and of bigger profit shares they mutually struggle among themselves and a significant part of their energy goes to the organization of this struggle and this competition. True, this competition, being the only and necessary part of capitalism based on private property in general, plays a generally progressive role in the concentration and centralization of capital. Nevertheless, on a social scale, under the condition of the existence of colonies aspiring for independent development, it is for metropolitan countries a factor that weakens their exploitative power over the former. If, for example, any capitalist enterprise of England is sent to work in India, then it must spend part of its capital to fight a similar British enterprise or joint-stock company and lose a certain percentage of its forces and capabilities on this. Due to non-centralization and non-unity on a national scale, the plundering of British capital in India does not fully and completely bring about the effect and results that it could give in case of centralization.  

The principle of private ownership inevitably gives birth to another factor that is negative from the point of view of the power of the peoples of the metropolitan countries, namely, the class struggle based on intra-national class inequality. Against the backdrop of the class struggle in the West, there were three main political trends reflecting the ideology of the respective main classes of metropolitan countries: conservatism, the political ideology of the big bourgeoisie; liberalism as a political ideology of the middle and petty bourgeoisie and socialism as the ideology of the working class. The struggle of these classes among themselves, reflecting, in fact, and to a certain extent, their desire for political power, cannot but weaken at some moments the offensive strength of the peoples of the metropolitan countries in relation to the colonies. Here we can give an example of the defeat of Russia during the Russo-Japanese War of 1904, when the presence of a rather pronounced class struggle within Russia (the liberal Russian commercial and industrial bourgeoisie came up with a number of political requirements with respect to the feudal landlord, Russian workers came out with political demands both in relation to that and to the other) was the main prerequisite for the defeat of Russian troops in the theater of military operations.

The opposite example is the classic example of the victory of the reborn Turkey over the gangs of international imperialism in 1922, largely conditioned by the fact that if the insurgent Turkey was a monolithic national whole, uniting all classes of the Turkish people in one fiery impulse of the struggle for national independence, then the camp of opponents – Europe – was a bubbling volcano of national and class contradictions.

And here we have to state that the fight of classes inside the metropole in the modern conditions of their development is again a weakening the future preventative force of the hegemony of the west. 

The second contradiction – private property between the metropolitan nations – is also a similar factor. In other words, the national fragmentation of their material culture, giving rise to the strongest national competition and national struggle between them. The presence of this factor greatly hinders the position of the peoples of metropolitan countries as the hegemons of the world. It weakens their general pressure on the colonies and leaves for them the possibility of movement and maneuver. What is the basis of the preservation of Turkey’s independence, the revival of Afghanistan’s independence, the strengthening of the elements of Egypt’s independence? What is the basis for the strengthening of the national liberation movement in India, Morocco, China, etc.? What is the basis for the revival of some old (Poland) and the emergence of new state formations (Czechoslovakia, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Ireland) in Europe itself? What is the basis for strengthening the national liberation movement of non-Russian nationalities in Russia?

All this is, to a large extent, based precisely on the national disunity of the material culture of the West. The struggle of the peoples of the metropole among themselves because of primacy and because of hegemony over the world contributes only to ease their pressure on the colony and opens up the possibility for the latter to struggle for political independence.

Let us pass to the analysis of the second contradiction, i.e. Liberation movement of the Colonies and Semicolonies. Is there really such a movement and if “yes,” is it really growing and progressing? We will answer this with the language of facts.

Japan: Half a century ago, Japan was a small semi-colonial country, which could not even think about participating in international politics. But when it came to awakening, how she crushed the thunder of the peoples of Asia and the gendarme of Europe, the hardened feudal imperialist, tsarist Russia. Ten years have not passed since Japan participates in the beating of Europe, as Germany’s next imperialist power, by Russia. For the time being, at least, Germany has been knocked out of the rut. And now Japan is forming a bloc with France, China and Russia against England. The combination may change, but the fact remains. If these plans are justified, then the next day she will participate in the formation of a bloc against the transatlantic power – America. And this is quite natural. Japan can not remain forever on its islands. The future of the Japanese people requires opening doors to Siberia for resettlement and the doors of China and other countries for the allotment of Japanese commercial and industrial capital. It is in her interest to smash the giants of European imperialism by parts.

Turkey: Even the notorious enemies of the long-suffering Turkish people are now clear what is happening in this country: a healthy process of national revival. Those who doubted, or did not believe it, experienced it on their own skin. The bayonets of the Turkish workers and peasants and the Turkish progressive intelligentsia, dedicated to the cause of the national revival of Turkey, have taught those who should think realistically. Four hundred years ago, Russian tsars had to defeat the Kazan Khanate, the citadel of the northern Turks, and through the corpses of the Tatar fighters, step further – to the East. Then the Western European imperialists had to defeat the southern Ottoman Turks to open their way to the same East. Was not the desperate attack of Turkey on their side preceding the advance of the peoples of the West to the East? To become the real masters of the situation in Asia and Africa, the peoples of Europe had to step over the corpses of the Ottoman fighters. The fall of Kazan under the onslaught of the Russians occurred not in one day. Dozens of times they attacked it, and the conquest of Tatarstan is preceded by dozens of years of struggle between the then two northern titans: Kazan and Moscow. The winners did not immediately manage to consolidate their gain. It took several decades of uninterrupted guerrilla warfare between the victors and the vanquished, with all the horrors of extermination and slaughter, until the will of the vanquished was finally broken. Europe needed hundreds of years of struggle against the southern Turks to weaken them and take away from them the Balkans, Egypt, Arabia, Mesopotamia, etc. The rulers of Europe failed and will not be able to break Turkey. She is alive and will live. We think that she will not only live, but will also breathe life into those former parts that were torn away from her by the violence of Europe, to the rest of the Middle East.

China: China, this oldest nation of all the old peoples of the world, slept for a long time, but finally opened its eyes. He is awakening now. Awakening from centuries of hibernation, he lies on the bed and straightens his numb joints. But he will soon rise to his feet. No power can keep him in bed now. What is happening in recent years in China, this is a deep indication of the revival of these people. The Chinese people managed to make a revolution in 1911. She will also be able to complete the next revolution, after which the unified parts of China will merge into a mighty steel fist, after the impact of whose punch the peoples of the West will hardly recover. The periodic outbreaks of the civil war in China are only a prelude to the great concert of the revival of the four hundred million Chinese people. Let tens and hundreds of thousands of victims perish in this bloody struggle of the Chinese people; these sacrifices are unavoidable and they will not be wasted for nothing. Civil wars in China are only a manifestation of the great process of consolidating the Chinese nation, which will require for its completion, not one more decade.

India: India awakens as well. The process of rebuilding India is more painful than the process of China’s rebirth. And this is quite understandable: after all, India is a colony of the most powerful of European bandits – England. But no matter how terrible the old sea pirate is, it can not resist the liberation movement of India. Through repression, bribery, provocations and diplomatic tricks, England will be able, perhaps, to delay the process of emancipation of India, but it can not completely stop it.

The liberation movement of India is wavy. The rise of revolutionary sentiments alternate with their decline. But one thing is clear: any such temporary “decline” in the revolutionary mood of the Indian people is only a shift, followed by a new upsurge and a new wave of revolutionary sentiments, stronger and more formidable. We have no doubt that eventually, the day will come when the revolutionary wave of the liberation movement of India will break through all the artificial dams that Britain has barred from it and the whole world, Egypt, Morocco, and the colonies of Russia will be influenced by its flooding. It strengthens the general chorus of revolutionary efforts for liberation from the oppression of the West and the movement of Egypt, Morocco and the colonies of Russia is no different from the revolutionary liberation movement of China, India, Turkey, etc. All of them occur under the slogan of emancipation from imperialism, or rather, the hegemony of the peoples of the West. It differs only in its shape and pace: it is stronger or weaker, faster or slower, more stormy or calmer, larger or less than the movement of the former, depending on which country, under what historical conditions and with what kind of driving forces it occurs. 

We will not dwell in more detail on the movement of Egypt, Morocco and other African or Asian colonies of the West, because these are well known in their basic features. Here we will highlight the movement of the colonial peoples of Russia. We note that the liberation movement in the colonies of Russia (Turkestan, the Caucasus, Ukraine, the Crimea, Belarus, the Turkic-Finnish and Mongolian peoples) is evident. If the defeat of tsarist Russia by Japan in 1904, which caused the revolution of 1905, contributed to the awakening of national self-consciousness of the colonial, oppressed peoples of this country, its defeat on the Western and Caucasian fronts in the world war that caused the revolution of 1917 only deepened the process of the liberation movements of these peoples. The facts of the separation of Poland, Finland and the small Baltic states from Russia; the facts of the emergence of the Tatar, Bashkir, Kirghiz, Central Asian, Transcaucasian, Ukrainian, Byelorussian and other republics, as well as a dozen autonomous national regions, systematically fighting for the expansion of sovereignty rights, eloquently confirm this position. And no matter how much the pan-Russians and their supporters (under whatever mask they may be: under the guise of “democrats” or “communists”) seek to eliminate this movement, no matter how much they try to reduce their role to the role of ordinary Russian provinces, or to its weakening, they have not yet succeeded in doing so, and will not be able to, no matter how clever the frauds are, invented by them, in the direction of combating the growing activity of the “nationals” in their struggle for national independence. So far, all this has produced only the opposite results.

By establishing the USSR, the pan-Russians would like to restore, in fact, a single, indivisible Russia, the hegemony of the Great Russians over other peoples, but not a year later did all the nations declared their loud protest against the centralistic tendencies of pan-Russian Moscow (the session of the Council of Nationalities of the last session of the Central Executive Committee of the USSR).

Wanting to weaken Turkestan, economically and politically, Moscow is dismembering the Turanian peoples today into small separate tribes, but in less than two years, the dismembered parts of Turan 24 will talk about restoring unity and unite into a stronger, more powerful and organized state unit. Today, Russia separates Mongolia from China. She wants to “tame” this country to herself. And Mongolia does not mind succumbing to Moscow’s embrace. But what Mongolia will say tomorrow, when it gets to its feet and strengthens its “Khuruldan”25, it is still unknown. From the experience of the last revolution in Russia, we came to the conclusion that no matter what class in Russia came to power, none of them would be able to restore the former “greatness” and power of this country. Russia as a multinational state and the state of the Russians inevitably goes to disintegration and to dismemberment. One of two things: either it (Russia) will be dismembered into its constituent national parts and form several new and independent state organisms, or the Russian sovereignty in Russia will be replaced by the collective sovereignty of the “nations,” in other words, the dictatorship of the Russian people over all other people will be replaced with the dictatorship of these latter people over the Russian people. This is a historical inevitability as a derivative of a combination. Rather, the first will happen, and if the second happens, it will still be just a transition to the first. The former Russia, which was restored under the present form of the USSR, will not last long. It is transitory and temporary.

These are only the last sighs, the last convulsions of the dying. Against the backdrop of the disintegration of Russia, the figures of the following national state entities are quite distinct: Ukraine (with Crimea and Belarus), the Caucus can exist as a union of the North Caucasus with Transcaucasia, Turan (as an alliance of Tatarstan, Bashkiria, Kyrgyzstan and a federation of Turkestan republics), Siberia and Great Russia. We do not consider Finland, Poland and the small Baltic states that have already separated from Russia.

Thus, the facts of the liberation movement of the colonies and semi-colonies are evident. It exists and it is real, it progresses and develops.

Where are the reasons and the material basis of this movement? From what does it arise and what is its real essence and sum of international social and legal mutual relations?26

Critique of the Saltsjöbaden Agreement

Translation by Emma Anderson of a pamphlet by Gösta Kempe from 1939. We publish this as a document of workers struggle against reactionary union laws that promote class cooperation and a demonstration that questions of procedure are also political questions. 

The following pamphlet was written in 1939, right after the Saltsjöbaden Agreement had been signed by the Swedish Trade Union Confederation(LO). It was largely seen as a way to consolidate the power of the social democratic leadership through class collaboration with the organized capitalists. As the pamphlet describes, the mass membership opposed the concessions every step of the way but was constantly pushed back by being excluded from votes and through propaganda campaigns. It is a cautionary tale of where reformism takes on more and more responsibilities in managing capitalism built on peace between classes.

While the pamphlet is eight decades old it is still relevant today, most recently the Saltsjöbadet Agreement(and its propaganda of “solidarity based wage politics”) was used to try and delegitimize the independent union Swedish Dock Workers Union’s strike. The purpose of the strike was to obtain a collective bargain agreement and the right to have union safety officers, which in the end they got. During this the LO-leadership(along with Näringslivet) has again created a similar situation, it is pushing for restricting the right to strike and take industrial actions. The only difference is that they are pushing for a legislature this time so that they can combat trade unions that are already not under the Saltsjöbadet Agreement. They again push the propaganda line that it is needed to resolve the conflicts in the docks and that the strikes are “unwieldy” by being a threat to the “solidarity based wage politics”. Membership is excluded from voting on the issue while larger and larger parts of the membership are opposing the law.

Core to understanding the Saltsjöbadet Agreement is to understand the Swedish Model of the labor market, which the Saltsjöbadet Agreement helped establish. While other states, such as the US, has a state-mandated minimum-wage and the labor movement can mostly only affect how the labor market functions through laws, the Swedish Models is based on agreements between the two parties on the labor market, employers and employees. Some labor rights are also codified in both law and in the collective bargaining agreement as a way to ensure that workers under the collective bargaining agreement can keep their protections even if the law was to change. To summarize, the Swedish model is designed to keep the peace on the labor market through negotiations and agreements between both parts. What the Social democratic government after the 2018 general election is arguing now when it comes to the legislature against the right to strike is that if strikes are used in any other cases than an absolute last resort(and never against an employer who has signed the collective bargaining agreement) then trade unions would start to favor the interests of their membership over peace and harmony on the labor market, between workers and capital.

The most important lesson in this pamphlet is as follows; for the workers’ movement to be as strong as possible it needs to destroy the obstacles of class struggle, and never willingly submit to any forms of class collaboration in return for “advantages” or short-term gains. In other words, oppose reformism and “trade unionist” politics.

It’s hard to find much concrete info on the author, Gösta Kempe, but he was a member of the then called Swedish Communist Party which is now Vänsterpartiet.

Striking workers in Sweden, 1890.

Saltsjöbaden Agreement with Comments by Gösta Kempe

History

On the 20th December 1938, the working class received a very special Christmas gift when the Swedish Trade Union Confederation (LO) signed a main agreement with the Employers Organization. This was an agreement that had the purpose of determining the form of interaction between workers and employers in Sweden.

To understand the formation of this agreement it’s necessary to have a historical overview of the bourgeois reaction’s pursuit of anti-unionist legislation. If we return to 1928 we can see the bourgeois parties enthusiastically joining together in the struggle for the collective bargain agreement law and the law regarding the labor court. At that point in time, they had a majority in parliament and could complete the legislature despite the unanimous opinion of the workers.

But the bourgeois reaction was not satisfied with this and continued its struggle, through some labor leaders capitulating and becoming not only loyal to the decisive class-laws but also accepting them as a neutral legal instrument above classes. This made the reactions vanguard, the right-wing parties, more brave, and they continued their pursuit of destroying the freedoms of the trade union movement.

The employers now discovered an “innocent” third-person who were being “terrorized” by the organized workers. They now demanded a new law that would defend this innocent third party during economic conflicts. The Lindman administration tasked a professor Bergendal to investigate the right of neutrality for the third-man in labor disputes. On the 30th of November, he submitted a proposal for a law on the topic. It was rejected but the new social democratic government immediately started a new investigation under the same name, trettonmannakommisionen. On the 4th of May, this commission submitted a new proposal that in many parts made the original proposal harsher. Despite the proposal being almost unanimously rejected by the trade union movement, the government made a proposition in parliament in 1935 that was mainly based on the commission’s proposal. The government’s proposal, that was named “lex Möller”, caused heated debates in the entire trade union movement. Despite the LO-leaderships adherence to the governments line it could only mobilize a small number of its trade unions. A majority of the LO-unions opposed the law about a third-person and invited both the government and members of parliament to its protest resolutions. This strong extra-parliamentary action was undoubtedly why the proposal fell, not even the proposers daring to vote for it.

But did anyone dare to think the law for a third-person had been buried? No! Through the right-wing parties and people’s party, the reaction had shown its face to put forward motions on the matter. It was not only on this front that the right-wing parties and reactionary elements in the people’s party tried to restrict the freedom of the trade union movement. They have for a long time fought for a so-called labor peace law and justified it by stating that the trade unions are causing a disturbance on the labor market. By being tactically on the offensive and with a good portion of nastiness they have made the social democratic government waver. Under pressure from reactionary circles both in and outside of parliament the government created a committee with the task of investigating the question of labor peace. It was created on the 31st of December 1934 and consisted of leader Nothin, editor Severin, and director Elov Eriksson. A year later on the 9th of December 1935, the committee submitted its report. It consisted of several proposals (and conclusions) on how to regulate the relation between workers and employers on the labor market. The proposal from the Nothin-committee included the idea of making strikes at firms vital to society forbidden with the government as a full arbiter, forbidding workers from holding votes on the proposals of negotiations and delegates and forbidding blockades that aren’t connected to a labor conflict.

The committee had from time to time “considered” if it wasn’t better that the rules and norms could be implemented through an agreement between all major organizations and not through the legislature. Apparently, the Nothin-committee had only taken an impression of the mighty opinion released against the third-person law inasmuch as they recommended such a line.

This wink from the Nothin-committee was picked up on by the LO-leadership in the spring of 1936, as it proposed to negotiate with the Employers Organization regarding certain labor market issues. But the Employers Organization also had its part in the initiative. LO’s journal Fackföreningsrörelsen admitted the following,

“The initiative to negotiations between the Swedish Employers Organization and LO holds both parties in high regard… The initiative is not spontaneous or hasty.”

All things considered, the government had already probed this terrain before the negation initiative was made public. A committee was created with five representatives from each major organization and was named the Labor Market Committee. The negotiations have been happening at Saltsjöbadet, behind closed doors, away from the reality of class struggle. At the same time, the LO-leadership has been systematically pushing propaganda on the ideological front amongst trade union members to make the proposal easier to accept. Under the banner “solidarity based wage politics”, the aim was to try and theoretically justify its class collaboration line. Since the Saltsjöbadet agreement was released one is no longer confused as to why there was such an intense propaganda campaign to accept the false and trade-union hostile theories of “solidarity based wage politics”. It is now clear that the purpose was to make it easier for the workers to accept the proposal from the labor market proposal without any reservations.

With this short orientation, we have sought to lay out the historical context of the Saltsjöbadet Agreements formation. This is about a continuing process where the bourgeois reaction wants to play the leading role. The Saltsjöbadet Agreement is an attempt to neutralize the rising political influence of the working class and to make them voluntarily submit to the demands of this reaction. To accept this agreement is to betray oneself and will lead to dire consequences for the entire labor movement.

The Contents of the Saltsjöbaden Agreement

The main agreement, that was signed a few days before Christmas 1938, between LO and the Employers Organization is commonly referred to as the Saltsjöbadet agreement. The agreement is divided up into five chapters: Chapter 1 is about rulings regarding the labor market committee. Chapter 2 is about the order of negations. Chapter 3 deals with the question of  “termination of employment and layoffs”(in other words paragraph 23). Chapter 4 envisions “restrictions of economic industrial actions” (in other words a defense of the Third Man). Chapter 5 finally describes “restrictions of conflicts affecting functions vital to society”.

These five chapters make up the “Saltsjöbaden agreement”. The goal is to continually update the agreement with new paragraphs in as much as the working class doesn’t demand the agreement in its current form. The labor market committee will keep its negations going, where it will bring up the rules on voting. Where they want to get with this was already signaled by the Nothin-committee, it has already been very directional in other aspects so it is not hard to guess what the result they want is. Within the LO-leadership there have already been preparations to restrict the rights of its members. To help justify this editor Lind was tasked with writing a pamphlet titled “Union Democracy”, which serves as a good representation of the Nothin-committee report.  

CHAPTER I

Labor Market Council

This council would consist of six members, three from LO and three from the Employers Organisation. The tasks of the council are to handle termination of employment and layoffs, interpreting the main agreement, restricting economic industrial actions, conflicts that affect functions vital to society and in general issues regarding the labor market.

The council is also tasked with being the arbiter of resolving twists regarding restrictions of economic industrial actions. If the members can not come to an agreement both parts will call in a “neutral” chairperson who will take part in the decision.

If one only looks at the council’s tasks it may appear as if the agreement has a democratic character. On the other hand if one more closely studies the agreements more reactionary paragraphs the dictatorial position of the council becomes more apparent. The trade unions that accept the main agreement will effectively surrender its leadership right of a veto to the council. This affects every case that falls under the main agreement.

The summoning of a “neutral” chairperson can only be done in questions that deal with chapter 4, in other words, the restriction of economic industrial actions. Nonetheless, this “neutral” chairperson can be fatal for the workers’ side. Experience has shown that the “neutral” chairperson almost always follows the employers’ line, workers, therefore, hold no illusions that they are actually neutral. The fact that the “neutral” chairperson can’t be summoned to help resolve other questions is a tactical move. They are first trying to win over the majority of the unionized workers to the principles of the main agreement. If only the trade unions join then more reactionary additions are already ready to be added, additions that would have been too challenging to add in the first revision of the agreement.  

CHAPTER II

Order of Negotiations

The order of negotiations as described in the main agreement is a reactionary extension of the collective bargaining agreement order of negotiations. It will encompass legal disputes as well as interest disputes. Through this, it will get a wider base than a labor court. The order of negotiations encompasses the non-establishment of or prolonging of collective wage agreements. The main purpose is for disputes regarding working conditions to not be sent to labor court or for industrial action to be taken before the parts have tried to reach a solution through negotiations. Every industrial action is closed off, even if allowed by the collective bargaining agreement before the issue has gone through the respective instances according to the order of the agreement of negotiations. What does this entail in practice? An issue that is very heated will go through a time-killing process before a definitive solution is reached. First, the issue will be dealt with on a local level. If it can’t be solved then it will be sent to a central negotiation, if it is again not solved it will be sent to the labor market council. Indeed, they have prescribed a set time interval between every instance but one must still expect it to become a large bureaucratic apparatus.

The order of negotiations will especially be a shackle around the feet of the trade unions, who have a need for quick calls to action against nasty and unreasonable employers. On this question, one can apply the old saying: “While the grass grows, the cow dies”.

CHAPTER III

Termination of employment and layoffs (§ 23)

The controversial paragraph 23, which has been a cause of big discussions and negotiations at trade union congresses and at agreement negotiations, would according to the workers’ side have its claws removed through the establishment of the main agreement. At a closer inspection of the contents of the paragraphs, one soon comes to a realization that no real change has happened. The employer’s right to lead and distribute work, to freely employ and fire workers, regardless if they are organized or not, will continue to happen without any rules being broken. There is an added right to negotiate a firing before it happens, but this does not change anything in practice since this is already described in almost all trade union’s collective bargaining agreement.

The main agreement recommends a seven-day warning before termination of employment and layoffs of workers who have been employed for at least one year. This could have meant a softening of paragraph 23 but in reality, this rule is invalidated by the last sentence in the paragraph, which states the following:

“If a situation occurs, which causes a reduction in the labor force in a shorter time period before the recommended time before a notice about termination of employment and layoffs, and the situation could not have been predicted by the employer, then the notice should be submitted as soon as possible.”

This section should be self-explanatory. It shreds the entire ruling on the notice about termination of employment and layoffs, making it merely an illusion. Who will decide if the employer could have predicted a decrease in production or not? The employer themselves of course!

In reality, there have been no changes on the issue of termination of employment and layoffs. If the employer wants, it warns seven days before the time that it would otherwise have been doing the firing. The only change for the worker is that the worker gets a notification telling them that their work ends in seven days. The worker doesn’t get to stay and work any longer than before. If the employer “forgets” to send out this notification seven days in advance, it can get around the ruled on deadline for a notice about termination of employment and layoffs by simply stating that it couldn’t predict a loss of market demand and so on. What is then left of this so-called softening of paragraph 23? One could argue that the paragraph has in some aspects created more order. Thus, one has concretely outlined how a firing should be done and recommends taking the workers ability into account. Who will decide the ability of the labor force? Some say both parts. They are correct formally, but in practice, the employers’ line will be the dominating one, as it gets the chance to legally fire “displeasing” workers.

Paragraph 5 in the third chapter means regulations that could massively affect the workers. To be brief it means that an employer can monopolize the labor force. We imagine a firm with professionally qualified workers, who use an appropriate opportunity to improve their wages and are therefore forced to leave their positions. The employers report the matter through their organization to the labor market council, who with the support of the main agreement can order the trade union to force their members to return to work. This doesn’t have to be in connection with a wage movement — it can even happen under other circumstances, where workers for some reason which to change the workplace. If one draws this paragraph to its logical conclusion workers at a workplace would become serfs to its employer.

CHAPTER IV

Restrictions of Industrial actions (Third Man)

This chapter is primarily shaped after the government proposition of 1935 regarding some economic industrial actions, it fell due to the mighty opposition from unionized workers. Now they are seeking other methods and tricks to get the workers to accept this restriction of trade union freedoms.

The restriction primarily deals with industrial actions against a third-man during economic conflicts but also against industrial actions against the other side.

When it comes to the third man it was an issue rolled out by the right-wing parties and Employers Organization in connection to the Becker-conflict in Stockholm 1930. What happened? The company Wilh. Becker and the new company M. Hansén were producing painting color, lacquer, and chemicals. Their workers had a collective bargaining agreement, while the workers in the many company stores in Stockholm did not have one. The Swedish Commercial Employees’ Union, to which the workers were members of, proposed establishing a collective bargaining agreement. The companies rejected the proposition. The union responded with a blockade against all company stores, along with the transportation to and from them. The conflict became drawn out. It went on from the 3rd of May to 14th of November 1930.

The rest of the trade union movement acted in solidarity by enacting blockades against merchants who sold the company products. Who would be correct in criticizing the trade union movements’ tactics in this case? Here we were dealing with an employer who opposed the establishment of a collective bargaining agreement for its store workers. The trade union movement used the only tools at hand for a struggle against ruthless employers, that is to say, strikes, blockades, and shows of solidarity from other workers. With what right can the employers and distributors say that they were unfairly treated by the trade union movement? As usual, it was the employers with the support of its merchants who were selling their scab products who caused the conflict. If there then was a need for legislature on the labor market it should have been directed at the employers instead of the trade union movement since employers always cause the “disturbance”. Despite this, the right-wing sought to establish a law against the workers with the Becker-conflict as the reason.

What is the “neutral” third man?

The “Neutral” third man is according to the Saltsjöbadet Agreement all those who work during strikes not approved by the labor court, in other words, scabs. It can also be decoys who takes over a company whose previous owner did not pay out the wages owed to the workers unless the workers can prove that the new owner knew about the unpaid wages. Other included are merchants and traders who distribute and sell from companies where conflict is ongoing, stock owners who own below 50 percent of the stocks in the company. All of these are to be treated as “neutral” third men, who the trade unions are not allowed to enact industrial actions against.

How can one explain that stock owners, who own 49 percent of the stocks in a company, should be seen as a neutral third man? Every individual who in some way own part of a company should be seen as a part in the conflict between the workers and its employer. It should be seen as natural that a stock owner who owns 49 percent has the same interest as the one who owns 51 percent.

On the other hand, the agreement dictates that those who give economic support to a side lose their right to be seen as neutral, this in reality just means those who give donations to striking workers.

Security duties

Security duties are the work that at the eruption of conflict still needs to be finished for the operation to be finished in a technically correct manner, as well as work to not put people, buildings, machines, pets, and so on in danger. With all right Swedish Building Workers’ Union steward Linde asked the employer’s interpretation of chapter 4, § 9, mom. f) regarding security duties. He wrote the following in their union paper:

“It would not surprise me if the employers with the support of this agreement would demand workers finish the roof of a building before they can go on strike during a conflict.”

With this motivation that exists in the main agreement, the employer can abuse the paragraph during a conflict for its own gain at the cost of the workers. For agricultural workers, it would be practically impossible to ever take industrial action since the salvage of the crops, milking and feeding the cattle counts as security duties. The landowner and large farmers can, on the other hand, take industrial actions against the agricultural workers without the workers being able to defend themselves. As a consequence of the main agreement, the workers have to subordinate themselves the employers.

In practically all trades and branches of industry, the employer can successfully abuse the paragraph regarding security duties. At the same time, the paragraph does not describe any security for the labor force. The employer can without any account for the partner and children of the worker throw the worker out into unemployment. Here if anywhere would a security paragraph be reasonable.

Supporters of the Saltsjöbadet Agreement claim that the agreement also goes for the employers. They claim it includes “neutral rules” that limit both the industrial actions of both sides. Are they trying to turn the agreement into some sort of justice existing above the classes? Those that think along these lines have completely ignored the class contradictions between workers and employers.

Workers collective action through trade unions is the only way that workers can successfully raise their interests against employers. Every restriction of the trade union’s freedoms means reducing its ability to take action. The Employers Organization, on the other hand, finds its most effective weapon in the giant capital that its members possess. Through its economic position of power and absolute power over the company they can, regardless of any laws and agreements, make sure its interests are met at the cost of the workers. They can even do this without breaking any laws and agreements. While the agreement is still in effect they can lower the piece wages and raise the work rate, which in effect raises the rate of exploitation of the workers, they can fire workers en masse without coming in conflict with the main agreement or the collective bargaining agreement law. On the trade union side, one has to understand the differences between the ability of workers and employers to use industrial actions. If one does it becomes much easier to understand the enthusiasm for the Saltsjöbadet Agreement amongst the employers and reactionary circles.

CHAPTER V

Treatment of conflicts concerning functions vital to society

The issue of conflicts concerning functions vital to society was also subject to the Nothin-committee’s investigation. The main agreement does not outline any concrete guidelines about which firms should be seen as doing “functions vital to society” and therefore the supporters of the agreement ignore this very important paragraph. The first paragraph states the following:

“To prevent industrial disputes from affecting functions that are vital to society as much as possible, both the Employers Organization and LO will hastily review every conflict situation where an organisation or public agency or by a similar organ that represents the public’s interest deem the conflict to be a threat to the interest of the public.”

With the support of this paragraph, disputes in most trades and branches of industry can be assigned the category of “concerning functions vital to society”. All state and municipal firms can be considered “functions vital to society” but also private firms, which industry can not with a bit of “good intentions” also be assigned the same category? Even if the propaganda for the Saltsjöbadet Agreement states that it would only affect hospitals and the like, it is not possible to explain away the fact that this paragraph is so unclear that it could be used to consider key industries for the Swedish economy as “functions vital to society”.

Demands of restricting or ending a dispute that has erupted at a firm, which is deemed  “concerning functions vital to society”, can be put forward by the government, county government, city council or similar. The labor market council then has to test the demand. If a majority is reached in the council it will tell LO and the Employers Organisation to end or restrict the conflict.

This paragraph alone would have tough consequences for the trade union movement.

The agreement has legal ramifications, but can be terminated in six months

For the trade union that accepts the main agreement, it will also have legal ramifications according to the collective bargaining agreement law. It means that breaking the main agreement falls under the jurisdiction of the labor court.

The agreement’s period of notice is six months, provided it ends at the same time as the collective bargaining agreement. Otherwise, it can’t be ended before the collective bargaining agreement period of notice.

It is up to every trade union to establish the main agreement with the corresponding organization on the employer’s side.

A general assessment of the main agreement

The Saltsjöbadet Agreement only means disadvantages for the trade union movement and advantages for the employers. Saltsjöbadet Agreement supporters within the trade union movement argue that one can sacrifice some parts of our freedoms since the labor movement has already won such great political influence in the social institutions. They capitulate under the pressure from big finance in the same way that many democracies today capitulate to fascism. The consequences are the same: for every compromise, the appetite of the reaction gets worse.

The Employers Organization has dictated the reactionary content of the Saltsjöbadet Agreement and the worker representatives have fallen away. The employers have shown that they are superior to LO in defending their own class interests.

The Saltsjöbadet Agreement is a straitjacket that restricts the freedoms of the trade union movement to a very large extent. It is a gateway to a general offensive from the capitalists to lower the living standards of the working-class.

The Press’ assessment of the “Saltsjöbaden Agreement”

The signatories of the main agreement claim that the agreement has gotten good press. This is being economical with the truth. The bourgeois press has enthusiastically accepted the Saltsjöbadet Agreement in unison. But they aren’t just happy, there is still a looming fear that the workers will prevent the agreement from being signed. The social democratic press has very embarrassingly referred to the agreement and given a very scant political analysis. No enthusiasm can be found. A small warning can be read between the lines from time to time.

The union press has taken a strongly critical position against the agreement. The Hotel and Restaurant workers paper “Hotel-revue” first issue of 1939 writes:

“Do the organized workers have a reason to on one hand look at the main agreement critically and the other practically? It can not be allowed to swallow it without and critique. It would be to put a too big of a pressure on one’s guts. Especially since of the cooks was the Employers Organization and the most influential of the two[…]

[…] It serves nothing to hide the fact the employer’s’ interests have won great success in the main agreement. Paragraph 23 has been more concrete in their favor in a manner that probably surprises even them.”

In the Typographical Union paper, their editor Wessel develops his critical points against the main agreement and draws certain parallels to the “Workers’ Front” in Germany. He writes:

“The apologistics around the so-called Saltsjöbadet Agreement has shown the world that the Swedish trade union movement — the proportionally strongest in the world — is willing to put itself in a straitjacket. It is as if one is searching to form a workers front after famous pattern. The only difference is that in Sweden it is to be done voluntarily by workers while it has been done by violence in other countries.”

There has been dramatic secrecy around the negotiations that almost border on ridiculous. In the same manner, some authors of the Saltsjöbadet agreement at a conference in France stated in front of a surprised audience of the French employers and a small number of workers how idyllic Sweden is, “where wolves and sheep cooperate.”

In the builder’s union paper their steward Linde, who is also a LO-secretariat member, states the following:

“As a general judgment of the whole agreement, we are sorry to say that the advantages come at a price that is all too high and one has to ask if the agreement will actually be able to prevent any future legislation. On top of that, the way that the agreement was accepted is questionable, to say the least. Having discussed and decided on the agreement at a LO-congress when the negotiations started would have been much more reasonable.“

From these statements, we can clearly see that trade union leaders are very critical of the agreement. Furthermore, it is completely natural that trade union leaders with a sense of duty could not recommend the workers in Sweden to voluntarily disarm itself.

Legislation or the “Saltsjöbaden Agreement”?

Supporters of the Saltsjöbadet Agreement only have one “argument” to push the agreement on unionized workers, which is that it is either the agreement is passed or face legislation against the trade union movement. They claim that the right-wing parties want more anti-trade union laws while wishing that they can circumvent this by solving the issue through the agreement.

Does this “argument” hold up? We say no! The workers’ parties have a majority in parliament these repressive laws should be stopped there already. How could one suppose that this majority would push through laws against the trade unionist movement? It would be an open betrayal of the voters and against democracy. The threat of legislature as an alternative to Saltsjöbadsavtalet is, in other words, an emergency argument with no real basis.

On the other hand, there is a real danger of further legislature if the trade union movement accepts the Saltsjöbadet Agreement. The reactionary forces are counting on first winning worker-community and restrictions of trade union freedoms. With this, they can submit propositions with a much larger force on legislation in parliament in a much more serious manner. The legislation will probably be justified by saying that not all workers and employers are encompassed by the Saltsjöbadet Agreement since the workers have already accepted the principles of the Saltsjöbadet Agreement, it would only be a formality to pass a law on it.

Everything, therefore, points to it being easier to solve the problem before it gets worse. If one wants to avoid further class-laws against the trade union movement, one has to forcefully reject the Saltsjöbadet Agreement.

Peace on the labor market and economy

The authors of the Saltsjöbadet Agreement legitimate it by saying that both workers and employers need to take business into consideration. What do they mean by “take business into consideration”? For them, it is synonymous with the profits they are striving for. The profits weigh more for the capitalists than the interests of the motherland and people.

Instead of compromises with the demands of reaction, the labor movement should use its growing political influence to restrict the power of the employers and big finance. As long as the employer is free to exploit labor force they should be forced to also have responsibilities to it. Instead of the Saltsjöbadet Agreement and repressive laws, we should consider laws that defend the labor force, so that workers who have been employed for 10, 20 and 30 years can’t just be thrown out into unemployment. Workers that have been employed for a long time at a company should be guaranteed compensation when production is reduced. It should also be a law that employers have to finance effective unemployment insurance.

It is necessary that the bourgeois reaction’s offensive against workers and their trade unions are met with a counter-offensive.   

The tasks of the trade union movement in the struggle against the “Saltsjöbaden Agreement”

The LO secretariat and representatives are split on the Saltsjöbadet Agreement. The majority are for a line of capitulation and recommend that unionized workers just swallow the agreement whole.

The majority in the LO-leadership has effectively set union democracy aside by signing the agreement. Such an important question as the Saltsjöbadet Agreement should be decided on by the members through a vote. We should expect to be able to vote on it in a LO-congress at the very least. The Saltsjöbadet Agreement is even worded in such a way that it intervenes in LO’s own statutes.

It’s now up to every trade union to decide whether to establish such a main agreement or not. We have to hope that the trade union leaderships don’t make the same mistake as LO by not listening to its members before signing an agreement with the employers. When it comes to such an important question, the broadest democracy must be put into practice. Every single member should be able to make their voice heard on the matter. This in practice necessitates a general vote on it in every trade union. Of course, before a vote, there needs to be a campaign of consciousness-raising amongst the trade union members to show what the actual contents of the Saltsjöbadet Agreement really is.

Education is the most effective weapon in our struggle against the Saltsjöbadet agreement. Therefore we recommend that all trade union leaders bring it up for discussion at union meetings, organize study groups, send educational articles to the trade union press, and so on.

The reactions attempt to create splits amongst the organized workers through the Saltsjöbadet Agreement need to be relentlessly pushed back against. The trade union movement needs to act as one against the common enemy and fight against every attempt by the enemy to shackle the working-class.

The struggle against the  “Saltsjöbaden Agreement” concerns the entire working-class

What is needed now is to defend the rights and freedoms of the trade union movement, in essence, to defend the social and economic interests of the working class in the struggle against the employers.

At the LO-congress of 1931 and 1932, representatives spoke out against any form of repressive legislation directed at the trade union movement. The representatives attacked the right-wing parties with very sharp statements and ended with this powerful call:

“Workers, men and women! The freedoms of the trade union movement are is threatened! The workers have never before been so vulnerable to restrictions of these freedoms. The workers have also never before been so ready to strike back and face losses than now.”

Unionized workers! These words have never been more relevant than right now! Follow the call to action by the 1932 LO-congress! Reject the Saltsjöbadet Agreement! Let us stand guard to defend our proud and strong trade union movement. The struggle to build the trade union movement has cost far too many sacrifices to be able to justify crawling into its repression voluntarily.

If one wants to defend the economic and social conquests of the Swedish working-class — if one wants to better the conditions for the most marginalized peoples in society — if one wants to defend democracy and the nation’s right to self-determination against the international and national reaction and fascism — then one has to fight the Saltsjöbadet Agreement!