Preface
This book is a slice of intensified
historyhistory as I saw it. It does not pretend
to be anything but a detailed account of the November
Revolution, when the Bolsheviki, at the head of the
workers and soldiers, seized the state power of Russia
and placed it in the hands of the Soviets.
Naturally most of it deals with Red
Petrograd, the capital and heart of the insurrection.
But the reader must realize that what took place in
Petrograd was almost exactly duplicated, with greater
or lesser intensity, at different intervals of time,
all over Russia.
In this book, the first of several
which I am writing, I must confine myself to a chronicle
of those events which I myself observed and experienced,
and those supported by reliable evidence; preceded
by two chapters briefly outlining the background and
causes of the November Revolution. I am aware
that these two chapters make difficult reading, but
they are essential to an understanding of what follows.
Many questions will suggest themselves
to the mind of the reader. What is Bolshevism?
What kind of a governmental structure did the Bolsheviki
set up? If the Bolsheviki championed the Constituent
Assembly before the November Revolution, why did they
disperse it by force of arms afterward? And if
the bourgeoisie opposed the Constituent Assembly until
the danger of Bolshevism became apparent, why did they
champion it afterward?
These and many other questions cannot
be answered here. In another volume, Kornilov
to Brest-Litovsk, I trace the course of the Revolution
up to and including the German peace. There I
explain the origin and functions of the Revolutionary
organisations, the evolution of popular sentiment,
the dissolution of the Constituent Assembly, the structure
of the Soviet state, and the course and outcome of
the Brest-Litovsk negotiations
.
In considering the rise of the Bolsheviki
it is necessary to understand that Russian economic
life and the Russian army were not disorganised on
November 7th, 1917, but many months before, as the
logical result of a process which began as far back
as 1915. The corrupt reactionaries in control
of the Tsars Court deliberately undertook to wreck
Russia in order to make a separate peace with Germany.
The lack of arms on the front, which had caused the
great retreat of the summer of 1915, the lack of food
in the army and in the great cities, the break-down
of manufactures and transportation in 1916all these
we know now were part of a gigantic campaign of sabotage.
This was halted just in time by the March Revolution.
For the first few months of the new
régime, in spite of the confusion incident upon a
great Revolution, when one hundred and sixty millions
of the worlds most oppressed peoples suddenly achieved
liberty, both the internal situation and the combative
power of the army actually improved.
But the honeymoon was short.
The propertied classes wanted merely a political revolution,
which would take the power from the Tsar and give
it to them. They wanted Russia to be a constitutional
Republic, like France or the United States; or a constitutional
Monarchy, like England. On the other hand, the
masses of the people wanted real industrial and agrarian
democracy.
William English Walling, in his book,
Russias Message, an account of the Revolution of
1905, describes very well the state of mind of the
Russian workers, who were later to support Bolshevism
almost unanimously:
They (the working people) saw it was
possible that even under a free Government, if it
fell into the hands of other social classes, they
might still continue to starve
.
The Russian workman is revolutionary,
but he is neither violent, dogmatic, nor unintelligent.
He is ready for barricades, but he has studied them,
and alone of the workers of the world he has learned
about them from actual experience. He is ready
and willing to fight his oppressor, the capitalist
class, to a finish. But he does not ignore the
existence of other classes. He merely asks that
the other classes take one side or the other in the
bitter conflict that draws near
.
They (the workers) were all agreed
that our (American) political institutions were preferable
to their own, but they were not very anxious to exchange
one despot for another (i.e., the capitalist class)
.
The workingmen of Russia did not have
themselves shot down, executed by hundreds in Moscow,
Riga and Odessa, imprisoned by thousands in every
Russian jail, and exiled to the deserts and the arctic
regions, in exchange for the doubtful privileges of
the workingmen of Goldfields and Cripple Creek
.
And so developed in Russia, in the
midst of a foreign war, the Social Revolution on top
of the Political Revolution, culminating in the triumph
of Bolshevism.
Mr. A. J. Sack, director in this country
of the Russian Information Bureau, which opposes the
Soviet Government, has this to say in his book, The
Birth of the Russian Democracy: The Bolsheviks
organised their own cabinet, with Nicholas Lenine
as Premier and Leon Trotsky Minister of Foreign Affairs.
The inevitability of their coming into power became
evident almost immediately after the March Revolution.
The history of the Bolsheviki, after the Revolution,
is a history of their steady growth
.
Foreigners, and Americans especially,
frequently emphasise the ignorance of the Russian
workers. It is true they lacked the political
experience of the peoples of the West, but they were
very well trained in voluntary organisation.
In 1917 there were more than twelve million members
of the Russian consumers Cooperative societies; and
the Soviets themselves are a wonderful demonstration
of their organising genius. Moreover, there is
probably not a people in the world so well educated
in Socialist theory and its practical application.
William English Walling thus characterises them:
The Russian working people are for
the most part able to read and write. For many
years the country has been in such a disturbed condition
that they have had the advantage of leadership not
only of intelligent individuals in their midst, but
of a large part of the equally revolutionary educated
class, who have turned to the working people with
their ideas for the political and social regeneration
of Russia
.
Many writers explain their hostility
to the Soviet Government by arguing that the last
phase of the Russian Revolution was simply a struggle
of the respectable elements against the brutal attacks
of Bolshevism. However, it was the propertied
classes, who, when they realised the growth in power
of the popular revolutionary organisations, undertook
to destroy them and to halt the Revolution. To
this end the propertied classes finally resorted to
desperate measures. In order to wreck the Kerensky
Ministry and the Soviets, transportation was disorganised
and internal troubles provoked; to crush the Factory-Shop
Committees, plants were shut down, and fuel and raw
materials diverted; to break the Army Committees at
the front, capital punishment was restored and military
defeat connived at.
This was all excellent fuel for the
Bolshevik fire. The Bolsheviki retorted by preaching
the class war, and by asserting the supremacy of the
Soviets.
Between these two extremes, with the
other factions which whole-heartedly or half-heartedly
supported them, were the so-called moderate Socialists,
the Mensheviki and Socialist Revolutionaries, and
several smaller parties. These groups were also
attacked by the propertied classes, but their power
of resistance was crippled by their theories.
Roughly, the Mensheviki and Socialist
Revolutionaries believed that Russia was not economically
ripe for a social revolutionthat only a political
revolution was possible. According to their interpretation,
the Russian masses were not educated enough to take
over the power; any attempt to do so would inevitably
bring on a reaction, by means of which some ruthless
opportunist might restore the old régime. And
so it followed that when the moderate Socialists
were forced to assume the power, they were afraid
to use it.
They believed that Russia must pass
through the stages of political and economic development
known to Western Europe, and emerge at last, with
the rest of the world, into full-fledged Socialism.
Naturally, therefore, they agreed with the propertied
classes that Russia must first be a parliamentary
statethough with some improvements on the Western
democracies. As a consequence, they insisted upon
the collaboration of the propertied classes in the
Government.
From this it was an easy step to supporting
them. The moderate Socialists needed the bourgeoisie.
But the bourgeoisie did not need the moderate Socialists.
So it resulted in the Socialist Ministers being obliged
to give way, little by little, on their entire program,
while the propertied classes grew more and more insistent.
And at the end, when the Bolsheviki
upset the whole hollow compromise, the Mensheviki
and Socialist Revolutionaries found themselves fighting
on the side of the propertied classes
. In almost
every country in the world to-day the same phenomenon
is visible.
Instead of being a destructive force,
it seems to me that the Bolsheviki were the only party
in Russia with a constructive program and the power
to impose it on the country. If they had not succeeded
to the Government when they did, there is little doubt
in my mind that the armies of Imperial Germany would
have been in Petrograd and Moscow in December, and
Russia would again be ridden by a Tsar
.
It is still fashionable, after a whole
year of the Soviet Government, to speak of the Bolshevik
insurrection as an adventure. Adventure it was,
and one of the most marvellous mankind ever embarked
upon, sweeping into history at the head of the toiling
masses, and staking everything on their vast and simple
desires. Already the machinery had been set up
by which the land of the great estates could be distributed
among the peasants. The Factory-Shop Committees
and the Trade Unions were there to put into operation
workers control of industry. In every village,
town, city, district and province there were Soviets
of Workers, Soldiers and Peasants Deputies, prepared
to assume the task of local administration.
No matter what one thinks of Bolshevism,
it is undeniable that the Russian Revolution is one
of the great events of human history, and the rise
of the Bolsheviki a phenomenon of world-wide importance.
Just as historians search the records for the minutest
details of the story of the Paris Commune, so they
will want to know what happened in Petrograd in November,
1917, the spirit which animated the people, and how
the leaders looked, talked and acted. It is with
this in view that I have written this book.
In the struggle my sympathies were not neutral.
But in telling the
story of those great days I have tried to see events
with the eye of a
conscientious reporter, interested in setting down
the truth.
J.
R.
New York, January 1st 1919.