1.
APPEALS AND
PROCLAMATIONS
From the Military Revolutionary Committee,
November 8:
To All Army Committees and All Soviets
of Soldiers Deputies.
The Petrograd garrison has overturned
the Government of Kerensky, which had risen against
the Revolution and the People
. In sending this
news to the Front and the country, the Military Revolutionary
Committee requests all soldiers to keep vigilant watch
on the conduct of officers. Officers who do not
frankly and openly declare for the Revolution should
be immediately arrested as enemies.
The Petrograd Soviet interprets the
programme of the new Government as: immediate
proposals of a general democratic peace, the immediate
transfer of great landed estates to the peasants, and
the honest convocation of the Constituent Assembly.
The peoples revolutionary Army must not permit troops
of doubtful morale to be sent to Petrograd. Act
by means of arguments, by means of moral suasionbut
if that fails, halt the movement of troops by implacable
force.
The present order must be immediately
read to all military units of every branch of the
service. Whoever keeps the knowledge of this
order from the soldier-masses
. commits a serious crime
against the Revolution, and will be punished with
all the rigour of revolutionary law.
Soldiers! For peace, bread,
land, and popular government!
* *
* *
To All Front and Rear Army, Corps,
Divisional, Regimental and Company Committees, and
All Soviets of Workers, Soldiers and Peasants Deputies.
Soldiers and Revolutionary Officers!
The Military Revolutionary Committee,
by agreement with the majority of the workers, soldiers,
and peasants, has decreed that General Kornilov and
all the accomplices of his conspiracy shall be brought
immediately to Petrograd, for incarceration in Peter-Paul
Fortress and arraignment before a military revolutionary
court-martial
.
All who resist the execution of this
decree are declared by the Committee to be traitors
to the Revolution, and their orders are herewith declared
null and void.
The
Military Revolutionary Committee Attached to the Petrograd
Soviet
of Workers and Soldiers Deputies.
*
* * *
To all Provincial and District Soviets
of Workers, Soldiers and Peasants Deputies.
By resolution of the All-Russian
Congress of Soviets, all arrested members of Land
Committees are immediately set free. The Commissars
who arrested them are to be arrested.
From this moment all power belongs
to the Soviets. The Commissars of the Provisional
Government are removed. The presidents of the
various local Soviets are invited to enter into direct
relations with the revolutionary Government.
Military
Revolutionary Committee.
2.
PROTEST OF THE MUNICIPAL
DUMA
The Central City Duma, elected on
the most democratic principles, has undertaken the
burden of managing Municipal affairs and food supplies
at the time of the greatest disorganisation. At
the present moment the Bolshevik party, three weeks
before the elections to the Constituent Assembly,
and in spite of the menace of the external enemy,
having removed by armed force the only legal revolutionary
authority, is making an attempt against the rights
and independence of the Municipal Self-Government,
demanding submission to its Commissars and its illegal
authority.
In this terrible and tragic moment
the Petrograd City Duma, in the face of its constituents,
and of all Russia, declares loudly that it will not
submit to any encroachments on its rights and its
independence, and will remain at the post of responsibility
to which it has been called by the will of the population
of the capital.
The Central City Duma of Petrograd
appeals to all Dumas and Zemstvos of the Russian Republic
to rally to the defence of one of the greatest conquests
of the Russian Revolutionthe independence and inviolability
of popular self-government.
3.
LAND DECREEPEASANTS
NAKAZ
The Land question can only be permanently
settled by the general Constituent Assembly.
The most equitable solution of the
Land question should be as follows:
1. The right of private ownership
of land is abolished forever; land cannot be sold,
nor leased, nor mortgaged, nor alienated in any way.
All dominical lands, lands attached to titles, lands
belonging to the Emperors cabinet, to monasteries,
churches, possession lands, entailed lands, private
estates, communal lands, peasant free-holds, and others,
are confiscated without compensation, and become national
property, and are placed at the disposition of the
workers who cultivate them.
Those who are damaged because of this
social transformation of the rights of property are
entitled to public aid during the time necessary for
them to adapt themselves to the new conditions of
existence.
2. All the riches beneath the
earthores, oil, coal, salt, etc.as well as
forests and waters having a national importance, become
the exclusive property of the State. All minor
streams, lakes and forests are placed in the hands
of the communities, on condition of being managed
by the local organs of government.
3. All plots of land scientifically
cultivatedgardens, plantations, nurseries, seed-plots,
green-houses, and othersshall not be divided, but
transformed into model farms, and pass into the hands
of the State or of the community, according to their
size and importance.
Buildings, communal lands and villages
with their private gardens and their orchards remain
in the hands of their present owners; the dimensions
of these plots and the rate of taxes for their use
shall be fixed by law.
4. All studs, governmental and
private cattle-breeding and bird-breeding establishments,
and others, are confiscated and become national property,
and are transferred either to the State or to the
community, according to their size and importance.
All questions of compensation for
the above are within the competence of the Constituent
Assembly.
5. All inventoried agricultural
property of the confiscated lands, machinery and
live-stock, are transferred without compensation to
the State or the community, according to their quantity
and importance.
The confiscation of such machinery
or live-stock shall not apply to the small properties
of peasants.
6. The right to use the land
is granted to all citizens, without distinction of
sex, who wish to work the land themselves, with the
help of their families, or in partnership, and only
so long as they are able to work. No hired labour
is permitted.
In the event of the incapacity for
work of a member of the commune for a period of two
years, the commune shall be bound to render him assistance
during this time by working his land in common.
Farmers who through old age or sickness
have permanently lost the capacity to work the land
themselves, shall surrender their land and receive
instead a Government pension.
7. The use of the land should
be equalisedthat is to say, the land shall be divided
among the workers according to local conditions, the
unit of labour and the needs of the individual.
The way in which land is to be used
may be individually determined upon: as homesteads,
as farms, by communes, by partnerships, as will be
decided by the villages and settlements.
8. All land upon its confiscation
is pooled in the general Peoples Land Fund.
Its distribution among the workers is carried out by
the local and central organs of administration, beginning
with the village democratic organisations and ending
with the central provincial institutionswith the
exception of urban and rural cooperative societies.
The Land Fund is subject to periodical
redistribution according to the increase of population
and the development of productivity and rural economy.
In case of modification of the boundaries
of allotments, the original centre of the allotment
remains intact.
The lands of persons retiring from
the community return to the Land Fund; providing that
near relatives of the persons retiring, or friends
designated by them, shall have preference in the redistribution
of these lands.
When lands are returned to the Land
Fund, the money expended for manuring or improving
the land, which has not been exhausted, shall be reimbursed.
If in some localities the Land Fund
is insufficient to satisfy the local population, the
surplus population should emigrate.
The organisation of the emigration,
also the costs thereof, and the providing of emigrants
with the necessary machinery and live-stock, shall
be the business of the State.
The emigration shall be carried out
in the following order: first, the peasants without
land who express their wish to emigrate; then the
undesirable members of the community, deserters, etc.,
and finally, by drawing lots on agreement.
All which is contained in this nakaz,
being the expression of the indisputable will of the
great majority of conscious peasants of Russia, is
declared to be a temporary law, and until the convocation
of the Constituent Assembly, becomes effective immediately
so far as is possible, and in some parts of it gradually,
as will be determined by the District Soviets of Peasants
Deputies.
4.
THE LAND AND
DESERTERS
The Government was not forced to make
any decision concerning the rights of deserters to
the land. The end of the war and the demobilisation
of the army automatically removed the deserter problem
.
5.
THE COUNCIL OF PEOPLES
COMMISSARS
The Council of Peoples Commissars
was at first composed entirely of Bolsheviki.
This was not entirely the fault of the Bolsheviki,
however. On November 8th they offered portfolios
to members of the Left Socialist Revolutionaries,
who declined. See page 273. {of original volume}