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CHAPTER XVII
REVOLUTION AND DICTATORSHIP
BECAUSE the Revolution and the Bolshevik dictatorship were things
of an entirely different and even opposite nature. And here is where
most people make the greatest mistake in confusing the Russian
Revolution with the Communist Party and speaking of them as if they
were one and the same, which emphatically they are not.
This will become clear to us if we compare the aims of the
Revolution with the ends sought by the Bolsheviki.
The Revolution was a mighty uprising against oppression and
misery. It voiced the longing of the masses for liberty and justice.
It attempted to do away with everything that kept man in subjection,
made him a slave and a beast of burden. The Revolution tried to
establish new forms of life, conditions of real equality and
brotherhood.
We have already seen that the Revolution was not a superficial
change, that it did not stop with the February events. The Tsar had
been abolished and the power of his autocracy broken, but the result
was only another form of government. The economic and social
conditions remained the same. Yet it was just those that the people
meant to change. That is why the October Revolution took place. Its
purpose was to rebuild life altogether, on new social foundations.
How was it to be rebuilt? It is evident that taking Romanov out of
the Kremlin palace and putting Lenin in his Place would not do it.
Something more was necessary. It was necessary to give the soil to
the peasant, to put the factories in the hands of the workers and
their labor organizations. In short, it was the aim of October to
afford the people an opportunity to make use of the political freedom
won in February.
That is the way the masses sized up the situation. And they acted
upon it. They began to apply liberty to their needs. They wanted
peace, so they stopped the war, first of all. It was months later
that the Bolshevik Government signed the Brest-Litovsk treaty and
concluded an official peace with Germany. But so far as the Russian
armies were concerned, war was at an end long before, without
diplomatic negotiations. Trotsky frankly admits this in his work on
the Revolution.** 1917, by Leon Trotsky.MOSCOW, 1925.
The Russian workers and peasants, temporarily in soldiers'
uniforms. had taken matters into their own hands and terminated the
war by leaving the fronts.
Similarly did the peasantry and the proletariat act in solving the
industrial and agrarian problems. While the Provisional Government
was still discussing land reforms, the masses themselves acted,
through their local councils and Soviets The peasants took the land
they needed and began cultivating it. With simple common sense and
inherent popular justice they settled the agrarian problem over which
politicians and lawgivers had been breaking their beads for many
decades without result. The Bolsheviki, when they came to power,
"legalized" what the peasants had already accomplished
without asking anybody's permission.
In like manner did the workers' Soviets. start to solve the
industrial problem by taking over the factories and mines and
managing them for the general benefit instead of for the profit of
the "owners." That was actual abolition of capitalism and
wage slavery, long before the Bolshevik Government declared
capitalist ownership "legally" at an end.
All the other problems of every-day life the Revolution was
similarly solving by the practical and direct activity of the masses
themselves. Cooperative organizations brought city and village
together for the exchange of products; house Committees looked after
the housing question; street and district committees were organized
for the safety of the city,
and other voluntary bodies were formed for the defense of the
people's interests and of the Revolution.
The requirements of the situation directed the efforts of the
masses; liberty of action brought initiative into play, and the wants
of the people shaped their creative capacities to the needs of the
hour.
These collective activities constituted the Revolution. They
were the Revolution. For "revolution" is not some vague
thing without definite meaning and purpose; nor does it signify
political scene shifting or new legislation. The actual Revolution
took place neither in February nor in October, but between those
months. It consisted in the free play and interplay of the
revolutionary energies and efforts of the people, in independent
popular initiative and creative work, inspired by common need and
mutual interests.
That was the spirit and tendency of the great economic and social
upheaval in Russia. It solved problems as they arose, on the basis of
liberty and free cooperation.
This process of the Revolution was stopped in its development by
the Communist Party seizing political power and constituting itself a
new government.
We have just seen what the aim of the Revolution was; we know what
the masses of Russia wanted and what means they used to achieve it.
The objects of the Bolsheviki as a political party, on the other
hand, were of an entirely different nature. As frankly admitted by
themselves, their immediate goal was a dictatorship; that is, the
formation of a powerful Bolshevik State which should direct the life
and activities of the country according to the views and theories of
the Communist Party.
To give due credit to the Bolsheviki let me say right here that
there never was any political party more devoted to its cause, more
wholehearted in its efforts to advance it, more determined and
energetic in the achievement of its purposes. But those purposes
were entirely foreign to the Revolution and opposed to its real
needs. They were, in fact, so contrary to the spirit and aims of the
Revolution that their achievement meant the destruction of the
Revolution itself.
No doubt the Bolsheviki really thought that only by means of their
dictatorship could Russia be converted into a Socialist paradise for
the worker and farmer. Indeed, as Marxists they could not see things
in any other way. Believers in an all-powerful State, they had no
confidence in the people; they had no faith in the initiative and
creative ability of the toilers. They distrusted them as a
"multi-colored mob which has to be forced into liberty."
They agreed with the cynical maxim of Rousseau that the masses "can
be made free only by compulsion."
"Proletarian compulsion in all its forms," wrote
Bukharin, the foremost Communist theoretician, "beginning with
summary execution and ending with compulsory labor is, however
paradoxical it may sound, a method of reworking the human material of
the capitalistic epoch into Communist humanity."
That was the Bolshevik gospel; it was the attitude of a party that
believed a revolution could be run by the orders of a Central
Committee.
What followed was the logical outcome of the Bolshevik idea.
Claiming that only the dictatorship of their Party could properly
conduct the Revolution, they bent all energies to secure that
dictatorship. It meant that they had to take things exclusively into
their own hands, to have the designs of the Party accomplished at any
cost.
We need not go into the details of the schemes and political
manipulations of those days which finally resulted in the Communist
Party gaining the upper hand. The important point is that the
Bolsheviki did contrive to carry out their Plans. Within a few months
after the October Revolution, by April, 1918, they were in entire
control of the government.
By taking advantage of the excitement of the revolutionary days
and the inevitable confusion, they exploited the situation for their
own objects. They used the political differences to rouse fierce
party passions, resorted to every means to denounce their opponents
as enemies of the people, branded them counter-revolutionists, and
finally succeeded in damning them in the eyes of the workers and
soldiers. Declaring that the Revolution must be protected against
those alleged enemies, they were enabled to proclaim their own
dictatorship. In the name of "saying the Revolution" they
began eliminating all other revolutionary elements, non-Bolshevik,
from positions of influence, finishing by suppressing them entirely.
It must be left to future historians to determine whether
Bolshevik repression of the bourgeoisie, with which they started
their rule, was not merely a means toward the ulterior purpose of
suppressing all other non-Bolshevik elements. For the Russian
bourgeoisie was not dangerous to the Revolution. As already
explained, it was an insignificant minority, unorganized and
powerless. The revolutionary elements, on the contrary, were a real
obstacle to the dictatorship of any political party.
Because dictatorship would meet with the strongest opposition not
from the bourgeoisie but from the truly revolutionary classes which
considered dictatorship inimical to the best interests of the
Revolution, the elimination of these would therefore be of prime
necessity to any political party seeking dictatorship. Such a policy,
however, could not successfully begin with the suppression of
the revolutionists: it would provoke the disapproval and resistance
of the workers and soldiers. It would have to be begun at the
bourgeois end and means found gradually to spread the net over the
other elements. Distrust and antagonism would have to he wakened.
intolerance and persecution stimulated, popular fear created for the
safety of the Revolution in order to secure the people's support for
an ever-widening campaign of elimination and suppression, for the
introduction of the bloody hand of red terror into the life of the
Revolution.
But as I have said, it is the place of the future historian to
determine to what extent such motives fashioned the events of those
days. Here we are more concerned with what actually happened.
What happened was that before long the Bolsheviki established the
exclusive dictatorship of their Party.
"What was that dictatorship," you ask, "and what
did it achieve?"
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