
.
.Vladimir
LENIN
Vladimir Ilyich Lenin
(22 April 1870 – 21 January 1924), born Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov,
was a Russian revolutionary and communist politician who led the
October Revolution of 1917. As leader of the Bolsheviks, he headed
the Soviet state during its initial years (1917–1924), as it
fought to establish control of Russia in the Russian Civil War and
worked to create a socialist economic system.
As a politician, Vladimir Lenin
was a persuasive orator, as a political scientist his extensive
theoretic and philosophical developments of Marxism produced
Marxism–Leninism, the pragmatic Russian application of Marxism.
Early
life and background
Lenin was born Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov, on 22
April 1870, to Maria Alexandrovna Blank, a schoolmistress, and
Ilya Nikolayevich Ulyanov a physics instructor, at Simbirsk, a
Volga River town in the Russian Empire of the nineteenth century;
following family custom, he was baptized into the Russian Orthodox
Church. Later, the USSR renamed Simbirsk as Ulyanovsk.
In 1869, Ilya Ulyanov became the Inspector of Public Schools,
and later the Director of Elementary Schools, for the Simbirsk
Gubernia Oblast (province), a successful career in the
Imperial Russian public education system. Yet, Tsarist cultural
mores defined the Ulyanov family stock as "ethnically mixed" —
"Mordovian, Kalmyk, Jewish, Volgan German, and Swedish, and
possibly others"; none the less, being of the intelligentsia, the
Ulyanovs educated their children against the ills of their time
(violations of human rights, servile psychology, etc.), and
instilled readiness to struggle for higher ideals, a free society,
and equal rights. Subsequently, excepting Olga (dead at age 19),
every Ulyanov child became a revolutionary.
In January 1886, his father died of a
cerebral hemorrhage; in May 1887 (when 17 years old), his eldest
brother Aleksandr Ulyanov was hanged for participating in a
terrorist assassination attempt against the Tsar, Alexander III
(1881–94). His sister, Anna Ulyanova, with Aleksandr when
arrested, was banished to an Ulyanov family estate at Kokushkino,
a village some 40 km (25 mi.) from Kazan — those events
transformed Lenin into a political radical, which official Soviet
biographies represent as central to his assuming the revolutionary track as political life.
Complementing these personal, emotional, and political
upheavals was his matriculation, in August 1887, to the Kazan
University, where he studied law and read the works of Karl Marx.
That Marxism-derived political development involved Lenin in a
student riot, and consequent arrest, in December 1887; Kazan
University expelled him, the police authorities barred him from
other universities, thence was under continuous police
surveillance — as the brother of a known terrorist.
Nevertheless, he studied independently and earned a law degree; in
that time, he first read
Das Kapital (1867–94). Three years later, in 1890, he was
permitted studies at the
University of Saint Petersburg.
In January 1892, he was awarded a first class diploma in law;
moreover, he was an intellectually distinguished student in the
Classical languages of Latin and Greek, and the modern languages
of German, French, and English, but had only limited command of
the latter two. In the 1917 revolutionary period, he relied upon
Inessa Armand to translate an article of his into French and
English; and wrote to S. N. Ravich in Geneva, "I am unable to
lecture in French".
Revolutionary
Lenin practised law in the Volga River port of
Samara for a few years, mostly land-ownership cases, from
which he derived political insight to the Russian peasants'
socio-economic condition; in 1893, he moved to St Petersburg, and
practised revolutionary propaganda. In 1895, he founded the League of
Struggle for the Emancipation of the Working Class, the
consolidation of the city's Marxist groups; as an embryonic
revolutionary party, the League were active among the Russian
labour organisations. On 7 December 1895, Lenin was arrested for
plotting against Tsar Alexander III, and was then imprisoned for
fourteen months in solitary confinement Cell 193 of the St.
Petersburg Remand Prison.
In February 1897, he was exiled to eastern Siberia, to the village
Shushenskoye in the Minusinsky District, Yenisei Gubernia. There,
he met Georgy Plekhanov, the Marxist who introduced socialism to
Russia. In July 1898, Lenin married the socialist activist
Nadezhda Krupskaya, and, in April 1899, he pseudonymously
published the book
The Development of Capitalism in Russia (1899), by
Vladimir Ilyin, one of the thirty theoretical works he wrote
in exile.
At exile's end in 1900, Lenin travelled Russia and
Europe (Munich, Prague, Vienna, Manchester and London, with a
memorial plaque at Percy Circus WC1, King's Cross), but resided in
Zurich, where he worked as a Geneva University lecturer. He and
Julius Martov (later a leading opponent) co-founded the
newspaper
Iskra
(Spark), and published articles and books about
revolutionary politics, whilst recruiting for the Social
Democrats. In such clandestine political work, Vladimir Ulyanov
assumed aliases, and, in 1902, adopted Lenin as his
definitive
nom de guerre, derived from the
Siberian
Lena River.
In 1903, the
Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (РСДРП) ideologically
diverged as the Bolshevik and the Menshevik factions; the RSDLP party faction names Bolshevik
(majority) and Menshevik (minority) derive from the narrow
Bolshevik electoral defeat of the Mensheviks to the party's
newspaper editorial board, and to central committee leadership.
The break partly originated from Lenin's book
What Is to Be Done? (1901–02), which proposed a smaller
party organisation of professional
revolutionaries, with Iskra in a primary
ideologic role.
In November 1905, Lenin returned to Russia to support the
1905 Russian Revolution. In 1906, he was elected to the Presidium
of the RSDLP; and shuttled between Finland and Russia, but resumed
his exile in December 1907, after the Tsarist defeat of the
November Revolution. Until the February and October revolutions of
1917, he lived in Western Europe, where, despite relative poverty,
he developed Leninism — urban Marxism adapted to agrarian Russia
reversing Karl Marx’s the economics–politics prescription, to
allow for a dynamic revolution led by a vanguard party of professional revolutionaries.
In 1909, to disambiguate philosophic doubts about the proper
practical course of a
socialist revolution, Lenin published
Materialism and Empirio-criticism (1909), which became a
philosophic foundation of Marxism-Leninism. Throughout exile,
Lenin travelled Europe, participated in socialist activities, (the
1912 Prague Party Conference). When Inessa Armand left Russia for
Paris,
she met Lenin and other exiled Bolsheviks. Rumour has it she was
Lenin's lover; yet historian Neil Harding notes that there is a
"slender stock of evidence . . . we still have no evidence that
they were sexually intimate".
In 1914, when the First World War
(1914–18) began, most of the mass Social Democratic parties of
Europe supported their homelands' war effort. At first, Lenin
disbelieved such political fickleness, especially that the Germans
had voted for war credits; the Social Democrats' war-authorising
votes broke Lenin's mainstream connection with the Second
International (1889–1916). He opposed the Great War, because the
peasants and workers would be fighting the bourgeoisie's
"imperialist war" — one that ought be transformed to an
international civil war, between the classes. At war's start, the
Austrians briefly detained him in Poronin, his town of residence;
on 5 September 1914, Lenin moved to neutral Switzerland, residing
first at Berne, then at Zurich.
In 1915, in Switzerland, at anti-war
Zimmerwald Conference, he led the Zimmerwald Left minority, who
failed, against the majority pacifists, to achieve conference’s
adopting Lenin's proposition of transforming imperialist war to
class war. In the next conference (24–30 April 1916), at
Kienthal, Lenin and the Zimmerwald Left presented a like
resolution; but the conference concorded only a compromise
manifesto.
In spring of 1916, in Zurich, Lenin wrote
Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism (1916). In
this work Lenin synthesised previous works on the subject by
Karl Kautsky,
John A. Hobson (Imperialism:
A Study, 1902), and
Rudolf Hilferding (Das Finanzkapital, 1910), and
applied them to the new circumstances of the First World War
(1914–18) fought between the German and the British empires —
which exemplified the imperial capitalist competition, which was
the thesis of his book. This thesis posited that the merging of
banks and industrial cartels gave rise to finance capital — the
basis of imperialism, the zenith of capitalism. To wit, in
pursuing greater profits than the home market can offer, business
exports capital, which, in turn, leads to the division of the
world, among international, monopolist firms, and to European
states colonizing large parts of the world, in support of their
businesses. Imperialism, thus, is an advanced stage of capitalism
based upon the establishment of monopolies, and upon the
exportation of capital (rather than goods), managed with a global
financial system, of which colonialism is one feature.
In accordance with this thesis, Lenin believed that Russia was
being used as a tool of French and British capitalist imperialism
in World War One and that its participation in the conflict was at
the behest of those interests.
Russian return
After the 1917 February Revolution provoked the abdication of
Tsar Nicholas II (1894–17), Lenin decided upon a Russian return;
difficult, for he was isolated in neutral Switzerland, surrounded
by belligerent countries fighting the Great War, nevertheless, the
Swiss Communist Fritz Platten obtained Imperial German permission
allowing Lenin (and cohort) to traverse Germany in a
diplomatically-sealed train. Geopolitically, the Germans expected
his return to politically disrupt Imperial Russia — in aid of
ending the Eastern front war (17 August 1914 – 3 March 1918), so
that Germany could concentrate upon defeating the Western allies.
Having traversed Germany, Lenin continued through Sweden, aided by
local Communists Otto Grimlund and Ture Nerman.
On 16 April 1917, Lenin arrived at the
Finland Station,
Petrograd, Russia, to assume command of the Bolsheviks, and
published the
April Theses (1917), calling for uncompromising opposition
to the
Provisional Government (March–November 1917).
Initially, this leftist position isolated the Bolsheviks, yet
rendered the Bolshevik party as a pragmatic political refuge for
people disillusioned with the vacillating Provisional Government
and dissociated them, in particular, with the government's policy
of continuing the war with Germany, as manifested in the
disastrous Kerensky Offensive of July 1917. In Petrograd
dissatisfaction with the regime culminated in the spontaneous July
Days riots, by industrial workers and soldiers. After being
suppressed, these riots were blamed by the government on Lenin and
the Bolsheviks. Aleksandr Kerensky, Grigory Aleksinsky, and other opponents,
also accused the Bolsheviks, especially Lenin — of being Imperial
German
agents provocateur; on 17 July,
Leon Trotsky defended them:
An intolerable atmosphere has been created, in which you, as
well as we, are choking. They are throwing dirty accusations at
Lenin and Zinoviev. Lenin has fought thirty years for the
revolution. I have fought [for] twenty years against the
oppression of the people. And we cannot but cherish a hatred for
German militarism . . . I have been sentenced by a German court
to eight months' imprisonment for my struggle against German
militarism. This everybody knows. Let nobody in this hall say
that we are hirelings of Germany.
In the event, the Provisional Government arrested the
Bolsheviks and outlawed their Party, prompting Lenin to flee to
Finland. In exile again, reflecting on the July Days and its
aftermath, Lenin determined that, to prevent the triumph of
counter-revolutionary forces, the Provisional Government must be
overthrown by an armed uprising.
Meanwhile, he published
State and Revolution (1917) proposing government by
soviets (worker-elected councils).
In late August 1917, after the failed coup d’ État of
the General
Kornilov affair, popular support for the Provisional
Government collapsed, whilst support for the Bolshevik Peace,
Land, Bread programme increased; jailed Bolsheviks were freed.
In October, Lenin returned from Finland, and inspired the October
Revolution with the slogan All Power to the Soviets! From the
Smolny Institute for girls, Lenin directed the Provisional
Government’s deposition (6–8 November 1917), and the storming (7–8
November) of the Winter Palace to realise the Kerensky
capitulation that established Bolshevik government in Russia.
|
“ |
If Socialism can only be realized when the intellectual
development of all the people permits it, then we shall not
see Socialism for at least five hundred years. |
” |
|
— Vladimir Lenin, November 1917 |
On 8 November 1917, the Russian
Congress of Soviets elected the pragmatic Lenin as Chairman of the
Council of People's Commissars, as such, declaring that "Communism
is Soviet power plus the electrification of the entire country" in modernising Russia
into a twentieth-century country:
We must show the peasants that the organisation of industry
on the basis of modern, advanced technology, on electrification,
which will provide a link between town and country, will put an
end to the division between town and country, will make it
possible to raise the level of culture in the countryside and to
overcome, even in the most remote corners of land, backwardness,
ignorance, poverty, disease, and barbarism.
Yet the Bolshevik Government had to first withdraw Russia from
the First World War (1914–18). Facing continuing Imperial German
eastward advance, Lenin proposed immediate Russian withdrawal from
the West European war; yet, other, doctrinaire Bolshevik leaders
(e.g. Nikolai Bukharin) advocated continuing in the war to foment
revolution in Germany. Lead peace treaty negotiator Leon
Trotsky proposed No War, No Peace, an intermediate-stance
Russo–German treaty conditional upon neither belligerent annexing
conquered lands; the negotiations collapsed, and the Germans
renewed their attack, conquering much of the (agricultural)
territory of west Russia. Resultantly, Lenin's withdrawal proposal
then gained majority support, and, on 3 March 1918, Russia
withdrew from the First World War via the
Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, losing much of its European
territory. Because of the German threat Lenin moved the Soviet
Government from Petrograd to
Moscow on 10–11 March 1918.
On 19 January 1918, relying upon the
soviets, the Bolsheviks, allied with anarchists and the Socialist
Revolutionaries, dissolved the Russian Constituent Assembly
thereby consolidating the Bolshevik Government’s political power.
Yet, that left-wing coalition collapsed consequent to the Social
Revolutionaries opposing the territorially-expensive Brest-Litovsk
treaty the Bolsheviks had concorded with Imperial Germany. The
anarchists and the Socialist Revolutionaries then joined other
political parties in attempting to depose the Bolshevik Government, who defended themselves with
persecution and jail for the anti-Bolsheviks.
To initiate the Russian economic recovery, on 21 February 1920,
he launched the GOELRO plan, the State Commission for
Electrification of Russia, and also established free universal
health care and free education systems, and promulgated the
politico-civil rights of women. Moreover, since 1918, in
re-establishing the economy, for the productive business
administration of each industrial enterprise in Russia, Lenin
proposed a government-accountable leader for each enterprise.
Workers could request measures resolving problems, but had to
abide the leader's ultimate decision. Although contrary to
workers' self-management, such pragmatic industrial administration
was essential for efficient production and employment of worker
expertise. Yet Lenin’s doctrinaire Bolshevik opponents argued that
such industrial business management was meant to strengthen State
control of labour, and that worker self-management failures were
owed to lack of resources, not incompetence. Lenin resolved that
problem by licencing (for a month) all workers of most factories;
thus historian S.A. Smith's observation: "By the end of the civil
war, not much was left of the democratic forms of industrial
administration promoted by the factory committees in 1917, but the
government argued that this did not matter since industry had passed into the ownership
of a workers' state."
Internationally, Lenin’s admiration of the Irish socialist
revolutionary James Connolly, led to the USSR’s being the first
country to grant diplomatic recognition to the Irish Free State
that fought the Irish War of Independence from Britain. In the
event, Lenin developed a friendship with Connolly's revolutionary
son, Roddy Connolly.
Establishing the Cheka
On December 20, 1917, The Whole-Russian Extraordinary
Commission for Combating Counter-Revolution and Sabotage (Chrezvychaynaya
Komissiya), the Cheka (Extraordinary Commission) was created
by a decree issued by Lenin to defend the Russian Revolution. The
establishment of the Cheka, secret service, headed by Felix
Dzerzhinsky, formally consolidated the censorship
established earlier, when on "17 November, the Central Executive
Committee passed a decree giving the Bolsheviks control over all
newsprint and wide powers of closing down newspapers critical of
the régime. . . .";
non-Bolshevik soviets were disbanded; anti-soviet newspapers were
closed until
Pravda (Truth) and
Izvestia (The News) established their
communications monopoly. According to Leonard Schapiro the
Bolshevik "refusal to come to terms with the [Revolutionary]
socialists, and the dispersal of the Constituent assembly, led to
the logical result that revolutionary terror would now be
directed, not only against traditional enemies, such as the
bourgeoisie or right-wing opponents, but against anyone, be he
socialist, worker, or peasant, who opposed Bolshevik rule". On
December 19, 1918, a year after its creation, a resolution was
adopted at Lenin's behest that forbade the Bolshevik's own press
from publishing "defamatory articles" about the Cheka. As Lenin
put it: "A Good Communist is also a good Chekist."
Combating anti-Semitism
Lenin recognised the value of mass communications technologies
for educating Russia’s mostly illiterate, heterogeneous populaces;
as Bolshevik leader, he recorded eight speeches to gramophone
records in 1919, that went unpublished. During the
Khrushchev era (1953–64), seven were published, but,
significantly, the suppressed eighth speech delineated Lenin’s
opposition to anti-Semitism:
The Tsarist police, in alliance with the landowners and the
capitalists, organized
pogroms against the Jews. The landowners and capitalists
tried to divert the hatred of the workers and peasants, who were
tortured by want, against the Jews. . . . Only the most ignorant
and down-trodden people can believe the lies and slander that
are spread about the Jews. . . . It is not the Jews who are the
enemies of the working people. The enemies of the workers are
the capitalists of all countries. Among the Jews there are
working people, and they form the majority. They are our
brothers, who, like us, are oppressed by capital; they are our
comrades in the struggle for socialism. Among the Jews there are
kulaks, exploiters, and capitalists, just as there are
among the Russians, and among people of all nations . . . Rich
Jews, like rich Russians, and the rich in all countries, are in
alliance to oppress, crush, rob, and disunite the workers . . .
Shame on accursed
Tsarism, which
tortured and persecuted the Jews. Shame on those who foment
hatred towards the Jews, who foment hatred towards other
nations.
Failed
assassinations
First, on 14 January 1918, in
Petrograd, after a speech, assassins ambushed Lenin in his
automobile; he and
Fritz Platten were in the back seat when assassins began
shooting, and "Platten grabbed Lenin by the head and pushed him
down . . . Platten's hand was covered in blood, having been grazed
by a bullet as he was shielding Lenin".
Second, on 30 August 1918, the
Socialist Revolutionary Fanya Kaplan approached Lenin after a
speech; at his automobile, whilst he rested a foot upon the
running board, in speaking with a woman, Kaplan called to Lenin,
and, as he turned to face her in reply, she shot him three times.
The first bullet struck an arm, the second bullet struck his jaw
and neck, and the third bullet missed him — and wounded the woman
with whom he was speaking; the wounds felled him, unconscious.
Fearing in-hospital assassins, Lenin was delivered to his Kremlin apartment; physicians decided against removing the
bullets — lest the surgery endanger his recovery, which proved
slow.
To the public,
Pravda ridiculed Fanya Kaplan as a failed assassin,
latter-day
Charlotte Corday (a murderess of
Jean-Paul Marat) who could not derail the Russian Revolution,
reassuring readers that, immediately after surviving the
assassination: "Lenin, shot through twice, with pierced lungs
spilling blood, refuses help and goes on his own. The next
morning, still threatened with death, he reads papers, listens,
learns, and observes to see that the engine of the locomotive that
carries us towards global revolution has not stopped working. . .
."; despite unharmed lungs, the neck wound did spill blood into a
lung.
The Russian public remained ignorant of the true physical
gravity of the wounded Soviet Head of State; other than panegyric
of immortality, they knew nothing about either the (second) failed
assassination, the assassin, Fanya Kaplan, or of Lenin's health.
Historian Richard Pipes reports that "the impression one gains . .
. is that the Bolsheviks deliberately underplayed the event to
convince the public that, whatever happened to Lenin, they were
firmly in control". Moreover, in a letter to his wife (7 September
1918), Leonid Borisovich Krasin, a Tsarist and Soviet régime
diplomat, describes the public atmosphere and social response to the failed
assassination on 30 August, and Lenin's survival:
As it happens, the attempt to kill Lenin has made him much
more popular than he was. One hears a great many people, who are
far from having any sympathy with the Bolsheviks, saying that it
would be an absolute disaster if Lenin had succumbed to his
wounds, as it was first thought he would. And they are quite
right, for, in the midst of all this chaos and confusion, he is
the backbone of the new body politic, the main support on which
everything rests.
From having survived a second assassination originated the
cult of personality, that Lenin, per his intellectual origins and
pedigree, disliked and discouraged as superstition revived;
nevertheless, his health, as a fifty-three-year-old man, declined
from the effects of two bullet wounds, later aggravated by three
strokes, culminating in his death.
Red Terror
In response to Fanya Kaplan's failed assassination of Lenin on
30 August 1918, and the successful assassination of the Petrograd
Cheka chief Moisei Uritsky, Stalin to Lenin proposed "open and
systematic mass terror . . . [against] . . . those responsible";
the Bolsheviks instructed Felix Dzerzhinsky to commence a Red
Terror, announced in the 1 September 1918 issue of the
Krasnaya Gazeta (Red Gazette).
To that effect, among other acts, at Moscow,
execution lists signed by Lenin authorised the shooting of 25
Tsarist ministers, civil servants, and 765
White Guards in September 1918.
In his Diaries in Exile, 1935,
Leon Trotsky recollected that Lenin authorised the
execution of the Russian Royal Family.
However, according to
Greg King and Penny Wilson's investigation into the fate of
the Romanovs, Trotsky's recollections on this matter, seventeen
years after the events described, are unsubstantiated, inaccurate
and contradicted by what Trotsky himself said on other occasions.
Earlier, in October,
Lev Kamenev and cohort, had warned the Party that terrorist
rule was inevitable, given Lenin’s assumption of sole command.
In late 1918, when he and
Nikolai Bukharin tried curbing Chekist excesses, Lenin
over-ruled them; in 1921, via the
Politburo, he expanded the Cheka's discretionary death-penalty
powers.
The foreign-sponsored White
Russian counter-revolution failed for want of popular Russian
support, because the Bolshevik proletarian state, protected with
"mass terror against enemies of the revolution", was socially
organised against the previous capitalist establishment, thus
class warfare terrorism in post–Tsarist Russia originated in
working class (peasant and worker) anger against the privileged
aristocrat classes of the deposed absolute monarchy. During the
Russian Civil War, anti-Bolsheviks faced torture and summary
execution, and by May 1919, there were some 16,000 enemies of the
people imprisoned in the Tsarist katorga labour camps; by September 1921 the prisoner populace exceeded
70,000.
In pursuing their revolution and
counter-revolution the White and the Red Russians committed
atrocities, against each other and their supporting populaces, yet
contemporary historians disagree about equating the terrorisms —
because the Red Terror was Bolshevik Government policy against
given social classes, whilst the class-based White Terror was
racial and political, against Jews, anti-monarchists, and
Communists.
Professor Christopher Read states that though terror was
employed at the height of the Civil War fighting, "from 1920
onwards the resort to terror was much reduced and disappeared from
Lenin's mainstream discourses and practices".
However, after a clerical insurrection in the town of Shuia, in a
19 March 1922 letter to Vyacheslav Molotov and the Politburo,
Lenin delineated action against defiers of the decreed Bolshevik
removal of Orthodox Church valuables: "We must . . . put down all
resistance with such brutality that they will not forget it for
several decades. . . . The greater the number of representatives
of the reactionary clergy and reactionary bourgeoisie we succeed
in executing . . . the better." As a result of this letter,
historian Orlando Figes estimates that perhaps 8,000 priests and
laymen were executed. And the crushing of the revolts in Kronstadt
and Tambov in 1921 resulted in tens of thousands of executions.
Civil War
In 1917, as an anti-imperialist,
Lenin said that oppressed peoples had the unconditional right to
secede from the Russian Empire; however, at end of the Civil War,
the USSR annexed Armenia, Georgia, and Azerbaijan, because the
White Movement used them as attack bases. Lenin pragmatically
defended the annexations as geopolitical protection against capitalist imperial
depredations.
To maintain the war-isolated cities and the armies fed, and to
avoid economic collapse, the Bolshevik government established war
communism, via
prodrazvyorstka, food requisitioning from the peasantry,
for little payment, which peasants resisted with reduced harvests.
The Bolsheviks blamed the
kulaks'
withholding grain to increase profits; but statistics indicate
most such business occurred in the black market economy.
Nonetheless, the prodrazvyorstka resulted in armed confrontations
which the Cheka and Red Army suppressed with shooting hostages,
poison gas, and labour-camp deportation; yet Lenin increased
the requisitioning.
The six-year long White–Red civil war, the war communism, the
famine of 1921, which killed an estimated 5 million, and foreign
military intervention reduced much of Russia to ruin, and provoked
rebellion against the Bolsheviks, the greatest being the Tambov
rebellion (1919–21). After the March 1921 left-wing Kronstadt
Rebellion mutiny, Lenin replaced war communism with the New
Economic Policy (NEP), and successfully rebuilt industry and
agriculture. The NEP was his pragmatic recognition of the
political and economic realities, despite being a tactical,
ideological retreat from the socialist ideal; later, the
doctrinaire
Josef Stalin reversed the NEP in consolidating his control of
the Communist Party and the USSR.
Later life
and death
The mental strains of leading a revolution, governing, and
fighting a civil war aggravated the physical debilitation
consequent to the wounds from the attempted assassinations; Lenin
still retained a bullet in his neck, until a German surgeon
removed it on 24 April 1922.
Among his comrades, Lenin was notable for working almost
ceaselessly, fourteen to sixteen hours daily, occupied with minor,
major, and routine matters. About the man at his life’s end,
Volkogonov said:
“Lenin was involved in the challenges of delivering fuel into
Ivanovo-Vosnesensk . . . the provision of clothing for miners,
he was solving the question of dynamo construction, drafted
dozens of routine documents, orders, trade agreements, was
engaged in the allocation of rations, edited books and pamphlets
at the request of his comrades, held hearings on the
applications of peat, assisted in improving the workings at the
‘Novii Lessner’ factory, clarified in correspondence with the
engineer P. A. Kozmin the feasibility of using wind turbines for the electrification of villages . . . all
the while serving as an adviser to party functionaries almost
continuously.”
When already sick, Lenin remembered that, since 1917, he had
only rested twice: once, whilst hiding from the Kerensky
Provisional Government (when he wrote
The State and Revolution), and whilst recovering from
Fanya Kaplan’s failed assassination.
In March 1922, when physicians examined him, they found evidence
of neither nervous nor organic pathology, but, given his fatigue
and the headaches he suffered, they prescribed rest. Upon
returning to St. Petersburg in May 1922, Lenin suffered the first
of three strokes, which left him dumb for weeks, and severely
hampered motion in his right side; by June, he had substantially
recovered. By August he resumed limited duties, delivering three
long speeches in November. In December 1922, he suffered the
second stroke that partly paralyzed his right side, he then
withdrew from active politics. In March 1923, he suffered the
third stroke that rendered him mute and bed-ridden until his death.
After the first stroke, Lenin dictated government papers to
Nadezhda; among them was
Lenin's Testament (changing the structure of the soviets),
partly inspired by the 1922 Georgian Affair (Russian cultural
assimilation of constituent USSR republics), and it criticized
high-rank Communists, including Josef Stalin, Grigory Zinoviev,
Lev Kamenev, Nikolai Bukharin, and Leon Trotsky. About the
Communist Party's General Secretary (since 1922), Josef Stalin,
Lenin reported that the "unlimited authority" concentrated in him
was unacceptable, and suggested that "comrades think about a way
of removing Stalin from that post."
At Lenin's death, Nadezhda mailed his testament to the central
committee, to be read aloud to the 13th Party Congress in May
1924, however, to remain in power, the ruling
troika — Stalin, Kamenev, Zinoviev — suppressed Lenin's
Testament; it was not published until 1925, in the United
States, by the American
intellectual
Max Eastman. In that year, Trotsky published an article
minimizing the importance of Lenin's Testament, saying that
Lenin's notes should not be perceived as a will, that it had been
neither concealed, nor violated;
yet he did invoke it in later anti-Stalin polemics.
Lenin died at 18.50 hrs, Moscow time, on 21 January 1924, aged
53, at his estate in Gorki Leninskiye. In the four days that the
Bolshevik Leader Vladimir Ilyich Lenin lay in state, more than
900,000 mourners viewed his body in the Hall of Columns; among the
statesmen who expressed condolences to Russia (the USSR) was
Chinese premier Sun Yat-sen, who said:
"Through the ages of world history, thousands of leaders and
scholars appeared who spoke eloquent words, but these remained
words. You, Lenin, were an exception. You not only spoke and
taught us, but translated your words into deeds. You created a
new country. You showed us the road of joint struggle . . . You,
great man that you are, will live on in the memories of the
oppressed people through the centuries."
Winston Churchill, who encouraged British intervention against
the
Russian Revolution, in league with the
White Movement, to destroy the Bolsheviks and Bolshevism,
said:
"He alone could have found the way back to the causeway . . .
The Russian people were left floundering in the bog. Their worst
misfortune was his birth . . . their next worst his death."
Three days after his death, Petrograd was renamed
Leningrad in his honour, so remaining until 1991, when the USSR
dissolved, yet the administrative area remains "Leningrad Oblast".
In the early 1920s, the Russian cosmism movement proved so popular
that Leonid Krasin and Alexander Bogdanov proposed to cryonically
preserve Lenin for future resurrection, yet, despite buying the
requisite equipment, that was not done. Instead, the body of V. I.
Lenin was embalmed and permanently exhibited in the Lenin
Mausoleum, in Moscow, on 27 January 1924. Despite the official
diagnosis of death from stroke consequences, the Russian scientist
Ivan Pavlov reported that Lenin died of neurosyphilis.
Post-mortem
Since the dissolution of the USSR in late 1991, reverence for
Lenin declined among the post-Soviet generations, yet he remains
an important historical figure for the Soviet-era generations.
Eastern European countries removed most statues of Lenin, yet
Russia retains some; however, his historical importance merited
the installation of one such statue, from Poprad, Slovakia, in
Seattle, Washington, USA, as a kitsch reminder of the Cold War
(1945–91). In 1991, a Lenin statue was placed atop the "Red
Square" apartment building, at Essex and Houston streets, in New
York City. Furthermore, also in 1991, after a contested vote,
between Communists and liberals, the Leningrad government reverted
the city's name to St. Petersburg, whilst the surrounding
Leningrad Oblast remained so named;
like-wise the city of Ulyanovsk (V. I. Lenin's birthplace) remains
so named. Gyumri in Armenia was named Leninakan from 1924 to 1990,
Khujand in Tajikistan Leninabad from 1936 to 1991.
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