Chapter
XI
The Conquest of Power
(See App. XI, Sect. 1)
DECLARATION OF THE RIGHTS OF THE PEOPLES
OF RUSSIA (See App. XI, Sect. 2)
... The first Congress of Soviets,
in June of this year, proclaimed the right of the
peoples of Russia to self-determination.
The second Congress of Soviets, in
November last, confirmed this inalienable right of
the peoples of Russia more decisively and definitely.
Executing the will of these Congresses,
the Council of People’s Commissars has resolved
to establish as a basis for its activity in the question
of Nationalities, the following principles:
(1) The equality and sovereignty of
the peoples of Russia.
(2) The right of the peoples of Russia
to free self-determination, even to the point of separation
and the formation of an independent state.
(3) The abolition of any and all national
and national religious privileges and disabilities.
(4) The free development of national
minorities and ethnographic groups inhabiting the
territory of Russia.
Decrees will be prepared immediately
upon the formation of a Commission on Nationalities.
In the name of the Russian Republic,
People’s Commissar for Nationalities
YUSSOV DJUGASHVILI-STALIN
President of the Council of People’s Commissars
V. ULIANOV (LENIN)
The Central Rada at Kiev immediately
declared Ukraine an independent Republic, as did the
Government of Finland, through the Senate at Helsingfors.
Independent “Governments” spring up in
Siberia and the Caucasus. The Polish Chief Military
Committee swiftly gathered together the Polish troops
in the Russian army, abolished their Committees and
established an iron discipline….
All these “Governments”
and “movements” had two characteristics
in common; they were controlled by the propertied
classes, and they feared and detested Bolshevism….
Steadily, amid the chaos of shocking
change, the Council of People’s Commissars hammered
at the scaffolding of the Socialist order. Decree
on Social Insurance, on Workers’ Control, Regulations
for Volost Land Committees, Abolition of Ranks and
Titles, Abolition of Courts and the Creation of People’s
Tribunals…. (See App. XI, Sect. 3)
Army after army, fleet after fleet,
sent deputations, “joyfully to greet the new
Government of the People.”
In front of Smolny, one day, I saw
a ragged regiment just come from the trenches.
The soldiers were drawn up before the great gates,
thin and grey-faced, looking up at the building as
if God were in it. Some pointed out the Imperial
eagles over the door, laughing…. Red Guards
came to mount guard. All the soldiers turned to
look, curiously, as if they had heard of them but
never seen them. They laughed good-naturedly
and pressed out of line to slap the Red Guards on
the back, with half-joking, half-admiring remarks….
The Provisional Government was no
more. On November 15th, in all the churches of
the capital, the priests stopped praying for it.
But as Lenin himself told the Tsay-ee-kah,
that was “only the beginning of the conquest
of power.” Deprived of arms, the opposition,
which still controlled the economic life of the country,
settled down to organise disorganisation, with all
the Russian genius for cooperative action-to obstruct,
cripple and discredit the Soviets.
The strike of Government employees
was well organised, financed by the banks and commercial
establishments. Every move of the Bolsheviki
to take over the Government apparatus was resisted.
Trotzky went to the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs; the functionaries refused to recognise him,
locked themselves in, and when the doors were forced,
resigned. He demanded the keys of the archives;
only when he brought workmen to force the locks were
they given up. Then it was discovered that Neratov,
former assistant Foreign Minister, had disappeared
with the Secret Treaties….
Shliapnikov tried to take possession
of the Ministry of Labour. It was bitterly cold,
and there was no one to light the fires. Of all
the hundreds of employees, not one would show him where
the office of the Minister was….
Alexandra Kollontai, appointed the
13th of November Commissar of Public Welfare-the department
of charities and public institutions-was welcomed
with a strike of all but forty of the functionaries
in the Ministry. Immediately the poor of the great
cities, the inmates of institutions, were plunged in
miserable want: delegations of starving cripples,
of orphans with blue, pinched faces, besieged the
building. With tears streaming down her face,
Kollontai arrested the strikers until they should deliver
the keys of the office and the safe; when she got
the keys, however, it was discovered that the former
Minister, Countess Panina, had gone off with all the
funds, which she refused to surrender except on the
order of the Constituent Assembly. (See App. XI,
Sect. 4)
In the Ministry of Agriculture, the
Ministry of Supplies, the Ministry of Finance, similar
incidents occurred. And the employees, summoned
to return or forfeit their positions and their pensions,
either stayed away or returned to sabotage….
Almost all the intelligentzia being anti-Bolshevik,
there was nowhere for the Soviet Government to recruit
new staffs….
The private banks remained stubbornly
closed, with a back door open for speculators.
When Bolshevik Commissars entered, the clerks left,
secreting the books and removing the funds. All
the employees of the State Bank struck except the
clerks in charge of the vaults and the manufacture
of money, who refused all demands from Smolny and
privately paid out huge sums to the Committee for Salvation
and the City Duma.
Twice a Commissar, with a company
of Red Guards, came formally to insist upon the delivery
of large sums for Government expenses. The first
time, the City Duma members and the Menshevik and Socialist
Revolutionary leaders were present in imposing numbers,
and spoke so gravely of the consequences that the
Commissar was frightened. The second time he
arrived with a warrant, which he proceeded to read
aloud in due form; but some one called his attention
to the fact that it had no date and no seal, and the
traditional Russian respect for “documents”
forced him again to withdraw….
The officials of the Credit Chancery
destroyed their books, so that all record of the financial
relations of Russia with foreign countries was lost.
The Supply Committees, the administrations
of the Municipal-owned public utilities, either did
not work at all, or sabotaged. And when the Bolsheviki,
compelled by the desperate needs of the city population,
attempted to help or to control the public service,
all the employees went on strike immediately, and
the Duma flooded Russia with telegrams about Bolshevik
“violation of Municipal autonomy.”
At Military headquarters, and in the
offices of the Ministries of War and Marine, where
the old officials had consented to work, the Army
Committees and the high command blocked the Soviets
in every way possible, even to the extent of neglecting
the troops at the front. The Vikzhel was
hostile, refusing to transport Soviet troops; every
troop-train that left Petrograd was taken out by force,
and railway officials had to be arrested each time-whereupon
the Vikzhel threatened an immediate general
strike unless they were released….
Smolny was plainly powerless.
The newspapers said that all the factories of Petrograd
must shut down for lack of fuel in three weeks; the
Vikzhel announced that trains must cease running
by December first; there was food for three days only
in Petrograd, and no more coming in; and the Army
on the Front was starving…. The Committee for
Salvation, the various Central Committees, sent word
all over the country, exhorting the population to ignore
the Government decrees. And the Allied Embassies
were either coldly indifferent, or openly hostile….
The opposition newspapers, suppressed
one day and reappearing next morning under new names,
heaped bitter sarcasm on the new regime. (See
App. XI, Sect. 5) Even Novaya Zhizn characterised
it as “a combination of demagoguery and impotence.”
From day to day (it said) the Government
of the People’s Commissars sinks deeper and
deeper into the mire of superficial haste. Having
easily conquered the power… the Bolsheviki can not
make use of it.
Powerless to direct the existing mechanism
of Government, they are unable at the same time to
create a new one which might work easily and freely
according to the theories of social experimenters.
Just a little while ago the Bolsheviki
hadn’t enough men to run their growing party-a
work above all of speakers and writers; where then
are they going to find trained men to execute the diverse
and complicated functions of government?
The new Government acts and threatens,
it sprays the country with decrees, each one more
radical and more “socialist” than the last.
But in this exhibition of Socialism on Paper-more likely
designed for the stupefaction of our descendants-there
appears neither the desire nor the capacity to solve
the immediate problems of the day!
Meanwhile the Vikzhel’s
Conference to Form a New Government continued to meet
night and day. Both sides had already agreed in
principle to the basis of the Government; the composition
of the People’s Council was being discussed;
the Cabinet was tentatively chosen, with Tchernov
as Premier; the Bolsheviki were admitted in a large
minority, but Lenin and Trotzky were barred. The
Central Committees of the Menshevik and Socialist
Revolutionary parties, the Executive Committee of
the Peasant’s Soviets, resolved that, although
unalterably opposed to the “criminal politics”
of the Bolsheviki, they would, “in order to
halt the fratricidal bloodshed,” not oppose
their entrance into the People’s Council.
The flight of Kerensky, however, and
the astounding success of the Soviets everywhere,
altered the situation. On the 16th, in a meeting
of the Tsay-ee-kah, the Left Socialist Revolutionaries
insisted that the Bolsheviki should form a coalition
Government with the other Socialist parties; otherwise
they would withdraw from the Military Revolutionary
Committee and the Tsay-ee-kah. Malkin said,
“The news from Moscow, where our comrades are
dying on both sides of the barricades, determines
us to bring up once more the question of organisation
of power, and it is not only our right to do so, but
our duty…. We have won the right to sit with
the Bolsheviki here within the walls of Smolny Institute,
and to speak from this tribune. After the bitter
internal party struggle, we shall be obliged, if you
refuse to compromise, to pass to open battle outside….
We must propose to the democracy terms of an acceptable
compromise….”
After a recess to consider this ultimatum,
the Bolsheviki returned with a resolution, read by
Kameniev:
The Tsay-ee-kah considers it
necessary that there enter into the Government representatives
of all the Socialist parties composing the Soviets
of Workers’, Soldiers’ and Peasants’
Deputies who recognise the conquests of the Revolution
of November 7th-that is to say, the establishment
of a Government of Soviets, the decrees on peace,
land, workers’ control over industry, and the
arming of the working-class. The Tsay-ee-kah
therefore resolves to propose negotiations concerning
the constitution of the Government to all parties
of the Soviet, and insists upon the following
conditions as a basis:
The Government is responsible to the
Tsay-ee-kah. The Tsay-ee-kah shall be
enlarged to 150 members. To these 150 delegates
of the Soviets of Workers’ and Soldiers’
Deputies shall be added 75 delegates of the Provincial
Soviets of Peasants’ Deputies, 80 from the Front
organisations of the Army and Navy, 40 from the Trade
Unions (25 from the various All-Russian Unions, in
proportion to their importance, 10 from the Vikzhel,
and 5 from the Post and Telegraph Workers), and 50
delegates from the Socialist groups in the Petrograd
City Duma. In the Ministry itself, at least one-half
the portfolios must be reserved to the Bolsheviki.
The Ministries of Labour, Interior and Foreign Affairs
must be given to the Bolsheviki. The command
of the garrisons of Petrograd and Moscow must remain
in the hands of delegates of the Moscow and Petrograd
Soviets.
The Government undertakes the systematic
arming of the workers of all Russia.
It is resolved to insist upon the
candidature of comrades Lenin and Trotzky.
Kameniev explained. “The
so-called ‘People’s Council,’”
he said, “proposed by the Conference, would
consist of about 420 members, of which about 150 would
be Bolsheviki. Besides, there would be delegates
from the counter-revolutionary old Tsay-ee-kah,
100 members chosen by the Municipal Dumas-Kornilovtsi
all; 100 delegates from the Peasants’ Soviets-appointed
by Avksentiev, and 80 from the old Army Committees,
who no longer represent the soldier masses.
“We refuse to admit the old
Tsay-ee-kah, and also the representatives of
the Municipal Dumas. The delegates from the Peasants’
Soviets shall be elected by the Congress of Peasants,
which we have called, and which will at the same time
elect a new Executive Committee. The proposal
to exclude Lenin and Trotzky is a proposal to decapitate
our party, and we do not accept it. And finally,
we see no necessity for a ‘People’s Council’
anyway; the Soviets are open to all Socialist parties,
and the Tsay-ee-kah represents them in their
real proportions among the masses….”
Karelin, for the Left Socialist Revolutionaries,
declared that his party would vote for the Bolshevik
resolution, reserving the right to modify certain
details, such as the representation of the peasants,
and demanding that the Ministry of Agriculture be reserved
for the Left Socialist Revolutionaries. This was
agreed to….
Later, at a meeting of the Petrograd
Soviet, Trotzky answered a question about the formation
of the new Government:
“I don’t know anything
about that. I am not taking part in the negotiations….
However, I don’t think that they are of great
importance….”
That night there was great uneasiness
in the Conference. The delegates of the City
Duma withdrew….
But at Smolny itself, in the ranks
of the Bolshevik party, a formidable opposition to
Lenin’s policy was growing. On the night
of November 17th the great hall was packed and ominous
for the meeting of the Tsay-ee-kah.
Larin, Bolshevik, declared that the
moment of elections to the Constituent Assembly approached,
and it was time to do away with “political terrorism.”
“The measures taken against
the freedom of the press should be modified.
They had their reason during the struggle, but now
they have no further excuse. The press should
be free, except for appeals to riot and insurrection.”
In a storm of hisses and hoots from
his own party, Larin offered the following resolution:
The decree of the Council of People’s
Commissars concerning the Press is herewith repealed.
Measures of political repression can
only be employed subject to decision of a special
tribunal, elected by the Tsay-ee-kah proportionally
to the strength of the different parties represented;
and this tribunal shall have the right also to reconsider
measures of repression already taken.
This was met by a thunder of applause,
not only from the Left Socialist Revolutionaries,
but also from a part of the Bolsheviki.
Avanessov, for the Leninites, hastily
proposed that the question of the Press be postponed
until after some compromise between the Socialist
parties had been reached. Overwhelmingly voted
down.
“The revolution which is now
being accomplished,” went on Avanessov, “has
not hesitated to attack private property; and it is
as private property that we must examine the question
of the Press….”
Thereupon he read the official Bolshevik resolution:
The suppression of the bourgeois press
was dictated not only by purely military needs in
the course of the insurrection, and for the checking
of counter-revolutionary action, but it is also necessary
as a measure of transition toward the establishment
of a new régime with regard to the Press-a régime
under which the capitalist owners of printing-presses
and of paper cannot be the all-powerful and exclusive
manufacturers of public opinion.
We must further proceed to the confiscation
of private printing plants and supplies of paper,
which should become the property of the Soviets, both
in the capital and in the provinces, so that the political
parties and groups can make use of the facilities of
printing in proportion to the actual strength of the
ideas they represent-in other words, proportionally
to the number of their constituents.
The reëstablishment of the so-called
“freedom of the press,” the simple return
of printing presses and paper to the capitalists,-poisoners
of the mind of the people-this would be an inadmissible
surrender to the will of capital, a giving up of one
of the most important conquests of the Revolution;
in other words, it would be a measure of unquestionably
counter-revolutionary character.
Proceeding from the above, the Tsay-ee-kah
categorically rejects all propositions aiming at the
reëstablishment of the old régime in the domain of
the Press, and unequivocally supports the point of
view of the Council of People’s Commissars on
this question, against pretentions and ultimatums
dictated by petty bourgeois prejudices, or by evident
surrender to the interests of the counter-revolutionary
bourgeoisie.
The reading of this resolution was
interrupted by ironical shouts from the Left Socialist
Revolutionaries, and bursts of indignation from the
insurgent Bolsheviki. Karelin was on his feet,
protesting. “Three weeks ago the Bolsheviki
were the most ardent defenders of the freedom of the
Press… The arguments in this resolution suggest
singularly the point of view of the old Black Hundreds
and the censors of the Tsarist régime-for they also
talked of ’poisoners of the mind of the people.’”
Trotzky spoke at length in favour
of the resolution. He distinguished between the
Press during the civil war, and the Press after the
victory. “During civil war the right to
use violence belongs only to the oppressed….”
(Cries of “Who’s the oppressed now?
Cannibal!”).
“The victory over our adversaries
is not yet achieved, and the newspapers are arms in
their hands. In these conditions, the closing
of the newspapers is a legitimate measure of defence….”
Then passing to the question of the Press after the
victory, Trotzky continued:
“The attitude of Socialists
on the question of freedom of the Press should be
the same as their attitude toward the freedom of business….
The rule of the democracy which is being established
in Russia demands that the domination of the Press
by private property must be abolished, just as the
domination of industry by private property….
The power of the Soviets should confiscate all printing-plants.”
(Cries, “Confiscate the printing-shop of Pravda!”)
“The monopoly of the Press by
the bourgeoisie must be abolished. Otherwise
it isn’t worth while for us to take the power!
Each group of citizens should have access to print
shops and paper…. The ownership of print-type
and of paper belongs first to the workers and peasants,
and only afterwards to the bourgeois parties, which
are in a minority…. The passing of the power
into the hands of the Soviets will bring about a radical
transformation of the essential conditions of existence,
and this transformation will necessarily be evident
in the Press…. If we are going to nationalise
the banks, can we then tolerate the financial journals?
The old régime must die; that must be understood once
and for all….” Applause and angry cries.
Karelin declared that the Tsay-ee-kah
had no right to pass upon this important question,
which should be left to a special committee.
Again, passionately, he demanded that the Press be
free.
Then Lenin, calm, unemotional, his
forehead wrinkled, as he spoke slowly, choosing his
words; each sentence falling like a hammer-blow.
“The civil war is not yet finished; the enemy
is still with us; consequently it is impossible to
abolish the measures of repression against the Press.
“We Bolsheviki have always said
that when we reached a position of power we would
close the bourgeois press. To tolerate the bourgeois
newspapers would mean to cease being a Socialist.
When one makes a Revolution, one cannot mark time;
one must always go forward-or go back. He who
now talks about the ‘freedom of the Press’
goes backward, and halts our headlong course toward
Socialism.
“We have thrown off the yoke
of capitalism, just as the first revolution threw
off the yoke of Tsarism. If the first revolution
had the right to suppress the Monarchist papers,
then we have the right to suppress the bourgeois press.
It is impossible to separate the question of the freedom
of the Press from the other questions of the class
struggle. We have promised to close these newspapers,
and we shall do it. The immense majority of the
people is with us!
“Now that the insurrection is
over, we have absolutely no desire to suppress the
papers of the other Socialist parties, except inasmuch
as they appeal to armed insurrection, or to disobedience
to the Soviet Government. However, we shall not
permit them, under the pretence of freedom of the
Socialist press, to obtain, through the secret support
of the bourgeoisie, a monopoly of printing-presses,
ink and paper…. These essentials must become
the property of the Soviet Government, and be apportioned,
first of all, to the Socialist parties in strict proportion
to their voting strength….”
Then the vote. The resolution
of Larin and the Left Socialist Revolutionaries was
defeated by 31 to 22; the Lenin motion was carried
by 34 to 24. Among the minority were the Bolsheviki
Riazanov and Lozovsky, who declared that it was impossible
for them to vote against any restriction on the freedom
of the Press.
Upon this the Left Socialist Revolutionaries
declared they could no longer be responsible for what
was being done, and withdrew from the Military Revolutionary
Committee and all other positions of executive responsibility.
Five members-Nogin, Rykov, Miliutin,
Teodorovitch and Shiapnikov-resigned from the Council
of People’s Commissars, declaring:
We are in favour of a Socialist Government
composed of all the parties in the Soviets. We
consider that only the creation of such a Government
can possibly guarantee the results of the heroic struggle
of the working-class and the revolutionary army.
Outside of that, there remains only one way:
the constitution of a purely Bolshevik Government
by means of political terrorism. This last is
the road taken by the Council of People’s Commissars.
We cannot and will not follow it. We see that
this leads directly to the elimination from political
life of many proletarian organisations, to the establishment
of an irresponsible régime, and to the destruction
of the Revolution and the country. We cannot
take the responsibility for such a policy, and we
renounce before the Tsay-ee-kah our function
as People’s Commissars.
Other Commissars, without resigning
their positions, signed the declaration-Riazanov,
Derbychev of the Press Department, Arbuzov, of the
Government Printing-plant, Yureniev, of the Red Guard,
Feodorov, of the Commissariat of Labour, and Larin,
secretary of the Section of Elaboration of Decrees.
At the same time Kameniev, Rykov,
Miliutin, Zinoviev and Nogin resigned from the Central
Committee of the Bolshevik party, making public their
reasons:
... The constitution of such
a Government (composed of all the parties of the Soviet)
is indispensable to prevent a new flow of blood, the
coming famine, the destruction of the Revolution by
the Kaledinists, to assure the convocation of the
Constituent Assembly at the proper time, and to apply
effectively the programme adopted by the Congress
of Soviets….
We cannot accept the responsibility
for the disastrous policy of the Central Committee,
carried on against the will of an enormous majority
of the proletariat and the soldiers, who are eager
to see the rapid end of the bloodshed between the
different political parties of the democracy….
We renounce our title as members of the Central Committee,
in order to be able to say openly our opinion to the
masses of workers and soldiers….
We leave the Central Committee at
the moment of victory; we cannot calmly look on while
the policy of the chiefs of the Central Committee
leads toward the loss of the fruits of victory and
the crushing of the proletariat….
The masses of the workers, the soldiers
of the garrison, stirred restlessly, sending their
delegations to Smolny, to the Conference for Formation
of the New Government, where the break in the ranks
of the Bolsheviki caused the liveliest joy.
But the answer of the Leninites was
swift and ruthless. Shliapnikov and Teodorovitch
submitted to party discipline and returned to their
posts. Kameniev was stripped of his powers as
president of the Tsay-ee-kah, and Sverdlov
elected in his place. Zinoviev was deposed as
president of the Petrograd Soviet. On the morning
of the 5th, Pravda contained a ferocious proclamation
to the people of Russia, written by Lenin, which was
printed in hundreds of thousands of copies, posted
on the walls everywhere, and distributed over the
face of Russia.
The second All-Russian Congress of
Soviets gave the majority to the Bolshevik party.
Only a Government formed by this party can therefore
be a Soviet Government. And it is known to all
that the Central Committee of the Bolshevik party,
a few hours before the formation of the new Government
and before proposing the list of its members to the
All-Russian Congress of Soviets, invited to its meeting
three of the most eminent members of the Left Socialist
Revolutionary group, comrades Kamkov, Spiro and Karelin,
and ASKED THEM to participate in the new Government.
We regret infinitely that the invited comrades refused;
we consider their refusal inadmissible for revolutionists
and champions of the working-class; we are willing
at any time to include the Left Socialist Revolutionaries
in the Government; but we declare that, as the party
of the majority at the second All-Russian Congress
of Soviets, we are entitled and BOUND before the people
to form a Government….
... Comrades! Several members
of the Central Committee of our party and the Council
of People’s Commissars, Kameniev, Zinoviev, Nogin,
Rykov, Miliutin and a few others left yesterday, November
17th, the Central Committee of our party, and the
last three, the Council of People’s Commissars….
The comrades who left us acted like
deserters, because they not only abandoned the posts
entrusted to them, but also disobeyed the direct instructions
of the Central Committee of our party, to the effect
that they should await the decisions of the Petrograd
and Moscow party organisations before retiring.
We blame decisively such desertion. We are firmly
convinced that all conscious workers, soldiers and
peasants, belonging to our party or sympathising with
it, will also disapprove of the behaviour of the deserters….
Remember, comrades, that two of these
deserters, Kameniev and Zinoviev, even before the
uprising in Petrograd, appeared as deserters and strike-breakers,
by voting at the decisive meeting of the Central Committee,
October 23d, 1917, against the insurrection; and even
AFTER the resolution passed by the Central Committee,
they continued their campaign at a meeting of the
party workers…. But the great impulse of the
masses, the great heroism of millions of workers,
soldiers and peasants, in Moscow, Petrograd, at the
front, in the trenches, in the villages, pushed aside
the deserters as a railway train scatters saw-dust….
Shame upon those who are of little
faith, hesitate, who doubt, who allow themselves to
be frightened by the bourgeoisie, or who succumb before
the cries of the latter’s direct or indirect
accomplices! There is NOT A SHADOW of hesitation
in the MASSES of Petrograd, Moscow, and the rest of
Russia….
... We shall not submit to any
ultimatums from small groups of intellectuals which
are not followed by the masses, which are PRACTICALLY
only supported by Kornilovists, Savinkovists, yunkers,
and so forth….
The response from the whole country
was like a blast of hot storm. The insurgents
never got a chance to “say openly their opinion
to the masses of workers and soldiers.”
Upon the Tsay-ee-kah rolled in like breakers
the fierce popular condemnation of the “deserters.”
For days Smolny was thronged with angry delegations
and committees, from the front, from the Volga, from
the Petrograd factories. “Why did they
dare leave the Government? Were they paid by the
bourgeoisie to destroy the Revolution? They must
return and submit to the decisions of the Central
Committee!”
Only in the Petrograd garrison was
there still uncertainty. A great soldier meeting
was held on November 24th, addressed by representatives
of all the political parties. By a vast majority
Lenin’s policy was sustained, and the Left Socialist
Revolutionaries were told that they must enter the
government…. See next page.
The Mensheviki delivered a final ultimatum,
demanding that all Ministers and yunkers be
released, that all newspapers be allowed full freedom,
that the Red Guard be disarmed and the garrison put
under command of the Duma. To this Smolny answered
that all the Socialist Ministers and also all but
a very few yunkers had been already set free,
that all newspapers were free except the bourgeois
press, and that the Soviet would remain in command
of the armed forces…. On the 19th the Conference
to Form a New Government disbanded, and the opposition
one by one slipped away to Moghilev, where, under
the wing of the General Staff, they continued to form
Government after Government, until the end….
[Graphic Page-276 Meeting announcement]
Announcement, posted on the walls
of Petrograd, of the result of a meeting of representatives
of the garrison regiments, called to consider the
question of forming a new Government. For translation
see App. XI, Sect. 6.
Meanwhile the Bolsheviki had been
undermining the power of the Vikzhel. An appeal
of the Petrograd Soviet to all railway workers called
upon them to force the Vikzhel to surrender
its powers. On the 15th, the Tsay-ee-kah,
following its procedure toward the peasants, called
an All-Russian Congress of Railway Workers for December
1st; the Vikzhel immediately called its own
Congress for two weeks later. On November 16th,
the Vikzhel members took their seats in the
Tsay-ee-kah. On the night of December 2d, at
the opening session of the All-Russian Congress of
Railway Workers, the Tsay-ee-kah formally offered
the post of Commissar of Ways and Communications to
the Vikzhel-which accepted….
Having settled the question of power,
the Bolsheviki turned their attention to problems
of practical administration. First of all the
city, the country, the Army must be fed. Bands
of sailors and Red Guards scoured the warehouses,
the railway terminals, even the barges in the canals,
unearthing and confiscating thousands of poods
1 of food held by private speculators. Emissaries
were sent to the provinces, where with the assistance
of the Land Committees they seized the store-houses
of the great grain-dealers. Expeditions of sailors,
heavily armed, were sent out in groups of five thousand,
to the South, to Siberia, with roving commissions to
capture cities still held by the White Guards, establish
order, and get food. Passenger traffic on the
Trans-Siberian Railroad was suspended for two weeks,
while thirteen trains, loaded with bolts of cloth and
bars of iron assembled by the Factory-Shop Committees,
were sent out eastward, each in charge of a Commissar,
to barter with the Siberian peasants for grain and
potatoes….
Kaledin being in possession of the
coal-mines of the Don, the fuel question became urgent.
Smolny shut off all electric lights in theatres, shops
and restaurants, cut down the number of street cars,
and confiscated the private stores of fire-wood held
by the fuel-dealers…. And when the factories
of Petrograd were about to close down for lack of
coal, the sailors of the Baltic Fleet turned over
to the workers two hundred thousand poods from
the bunkers of battle-ships….
Toward the end of November occurred
the “wine-pogroms” (See App. XI,
Sect. 7)-looting of the wine-cellars-beginning with
the plundering of the Winter Palace vaults. For
days there were drunken soldiers on the streets….
In all this was evident the hand of the counter-revolutionists,
who distributed among the regiments plans showing
the location of the stores of liquor. The Commissars
of Smolny began by pleading and arguing, which did
not stop the growing disorder, followed by pitched
battles between soldiers and Red Guards…. Finally
the Military Revolutionary Committee sent out companies
of sailors with machine-guns, who fired mercilessly
upon the rioters, killing many; and by executive order
the wine-cellars were invaded by Committees with hatchets,
who smashed the bottles-or blew them up with dynamite….
Companies of Red Guards, disciplined
and well-paid, were on duty at the headquarters of
the Ward Soviets day and night, replacing the old
Militia. In all quarters of the city small elective
Revolutionary Tribunals were set up by the workers
and soldiers to deal with petty crime….
The great hotels, where the speculators
still did a thriving business, were surrounded by
Red Guards, and the speculators thrown into jail.
(See App. XI, Sect. 8)...
Alert and suspicious, the working-class
of the city constituted itself a vast spy system,
through the servants prying into bourgeois households,
and reporting all information to the Military Revolutionary
Committee, which struck with an iron hand, unceasing.
In this way was discovered the Monarchist plot led
by former Duma-member Purishkevitch and a group of
nobles and officers, who had planned an officers’
uprising, and had written a letter inviting Kaledin
to Petrograd. (See App. XI, Sect. 9)....
In this way was unearthed the conspiracy of the Petrograd
Cadets, who were sending money and recruits to Kaledin….
Neratov, frightened at the outburst
of popular fury provoked by his flight, returned and
surrendered the Secret Treaties to Trotzky, who began
their publication in Pravda, scandalising the
world….
[Graphic Page-279 Proclamation ]
Bolshevik order. A proclamation
of the Committee to Fight against Pogroms, attached
to the Petrograd Soviet. For translation see
App. XI, Sect. 11.
The restrictions on the Press were
increased by a decree (See App. XI, Sect. 10)
making advertisements a monopoly of the official Government
newspaper. At this all the other papers suspended
publication as a protest, or disobeyed the law and
were closed…. Only three weeks later did they
finally submit.
Still the strike of the Ministries
went on, still the sabotage of the old officials,
the stoppage of normal economic life. Behind
Smolny was only the will of the vast, unorganised popular
masses; and with them the Council of People’s
Commissars dealt, directing revolutionary mass-action
against its enemies. In eloquent proclamations,
(See App. XI, Sect. 12) couched in simple words
and spread over Russia, Lenin explained the Revolution,
urged the people to take the power into their own
hands, by force to break down the resistance of the
propertied classes, by force to take over the institutions
of Government. Revolutionary order. Revolutionary
discipline! Strict accounting and control!
No strikes! No loafing!
[Graphic Page-281 Appeal to work hard ]
Appeal of the Petrograd Soviet, the
Petrograd Council of Professional Unions, and the
Petrograd Council of Factory Shop Committees, to the
Workers of Petro. grad, urging them to work hard and
not to strike. For translation see App. XI,
Sect. 13.
On the 20th of November the Military
Revolutionary Committee issued a warning:
The rich classes oppose the power
of the Soviets-the Government of workers, soldiers
and peasants. Their sympathisers halt the work
of the employees of the Government and the Duma, incite
strikes in the banks, try to interrupt communication
by the railways, the post and the telegraph….
We warn them that they are playing
with fire. The country and the Army are threatened
with famine. To fight against it, the regular
functioning of all services is indispensable.
The Workers’ and Peasants’ Government
is taking every measure to assure the country and
the Army all that is necessary. Opposition to
these measures is a crime against the People.
We warn the rich classes and their sympathisers that,
if they do not cease their sabotage and their provocation
in halting the transportation of food, they will be
the first to suffer. They will be deprived of
the right of receiving food. All the reserves
which they possess will be requisitioned. The
property of the principal criminals will be confiscated.
We have done our duty in warning those
who play with fire.
We are convinced that in case decisive
measures become necessary, we shall be solidly supported
by all workers, soldiers, and peasants.
On the 22d of November the walls of
the city were placarded with a sheet headed “EXTRAORDINARY
COMMUNICATION”:
The Council of People’s Commissars
has received an urgent telegram from the Staff of
the Northern Front….
“There must be no further delay;
do not let the Army die of hunger; the armies of the
Northern Front have not received a crust of bread
now for several days, and in two or three days they
will not have any more biscuits-which are being doled
out to them from reserve supplies until now never
touched…. Already delegates from all parts
of the Front are talking of a necessary removal of
part of the Army to the rear, foreseeing that in a
few days there will be headlong flight of the soldiers,
dying from hunger, ravaged by the three years’
war in the trenches, sick, insufficiently clothed,
bare-footed, driven mad by superhuman misery.”
The Military Revolutionary Committee
brings this to the notice of the Petrograd garrison
and the workers of Petrograd. The situation at
the Front demands the most urgent and decisive measures.
... Meanwhile the higher functionaries of the
Government institutions, banks, railroads, post and
telegraph, are on strike and impeding the work of
the Government in supplying the Front with provisions….
Each hour of delay may cost the life of thousands
of soldiers. The counter-revolutionary functionaries
are the most dishonest criminals toward their hungry
and dying brethren on the Front….
The MILITARY REVOLUTIONARY COMMITTEE
GIVES THESE CRIMINALS A LAST WARNING. In event
of the least resistance or opposition on their part,
the harshness of the measures which will be adopted
against them will correspond to the seriousness of
their crime….
------------------+----------+
The masses of workers and soldiers
responded by a savage tremor of rage, which swept
all Russia. In the capital the Government and
bank employees got out hundreds of proclamations and
appeals (See App. XI, Sect. 14), protesting,
defending themselves, such as this one:
TO THE ATTENTION OF ALL CITIZENS.
THE STATE BANK IS CLOSED!
WHY?
Because the violence exercised by
the Bolsheviki against the State Bank has made it
impossible for us to work. The first act of the
People’s Commissars was to DEMAND TEN MILLION
RUBLES, and on November 27th THEY DEMANDED TWENTY-FIVE
MILLIONS, without any indication as to where this
money was to go.
... We functionaries cannot take
part in plundering the people’s property.
We stopped work.
CITIZENS! The money in the State
Bank is yours, the people’s money, acquired
by your labour, your sweat and blood. CITIZENS!
Save the people’s property from robbery, and
us from violence, and we shall immediately resume
work.
EMPLOYEES OF THE STATE BANK.
From the Ministry of Supplies, the
Ministry of Finance, from the Special Supply Committee,
declarations that the Military Revolutionary Committee
made it impossible for the employees to work, appeals
to the population to support them against Smolny….
But the dominant worker and soldier did not believe
them; it was firmly fixed in the popular mind that
the employees were sabotaging, starving the Army,
starving the people…. In the long bread lines,
which as formerly stood in the iron winter streets,
it was not the Government which was blamed,
as it had been under Kerensky, but the tchinovniki,
the sabotageurs; for the Government was their
Government, their Soviets-and the functionaries
of the Ministries were against it….
At the centre of all this opposition
was the Duma, and its militant organ, the Committee
for Salvation, protesting against all the decrees
of the Council of People’s Commissars, voting
again and again not to recognise the Soviet Government,
openly cooperating with the new counter-revolutionary
“Governments” set up at Moghilev….
On the 17th of November, for example, the Committee
for Salvation addressed “all Municipal Governments,
Zemstvos, and all democratic and revolutionary organisations
of peasants, workers, soldiers and other citizens,”
in these words:
Do not recognise the Government of
the Bolsheviki, and struggle against it.
Form local Committees for Salvation
of Country and Revolution, who will unite all democratic
forces, so as to aid the All-Russian Committee for
Salvation in the tasks which it has set itself….
Meanwhile the elections for the Constituent
Assembly in Petrograd (See App. XI, Sect. 15)
gave an enormous plurality to the Bolsheviki; so that
even the Mensheviki Internationalists pointed out
that the Duma ought to be re-elected, as it no longer
represented the political composition of the Petrograd
population…. At the same time floods of resolutions
from workers’ organisations, from military units,
even from the peasants in the surrounding country,
poured in upon the Duma, calling it “counter-revolutionary,
Kornilovitz,” and demanding that it resign.
The last days of the Duma were stormy with the bitter
demands of the Municipal workers for decent living
wages, and the threat of strikes….
On the 23d a formal decree of the
Military Revolutionary Committee dissolved the Committee
for Salvation. On the 29th, the Council of People’s
Commissars ordered the dissolution and re-election
of the Petrograd City Duma:
In view of the fact that the Central
Duma of Petrograd, elected September 2d, ... has definitely
lost the right to represent the population of Petrograd,
being in complete disaccord with its state of mind
and its aspirations … and in view of the fact that
the personnel of the Duma majority, although having
lost all political following, continues to make use
of its prerogatives to resist in a counter-revolutionary
manner the will of the workers, soldiers and peasants,
to sabotage and obstruct the normal work of the Government-the
Council of People’s Commissars considers it its
duty to invite the population of the capital to pronounce
judgment on the policy of the organ of Municipal autonomy.
To this end the Council of People’s Commissars
resolves:
(1) To dissolve the Municipal Duma;
the dissolution to take effect November 30th, 1917.
(2) All functionaries elected or appointed
by the present Duma shall remain at their posts and
fulfil the duties confided to them, until their places
shall be filled by representatives of the new Duma.
(3) All Municipal employees shall
continue to fulfil their duties; those who leave the
service of their own accord shall be considered discharged.
(4) The new elections for the Municipal
Duma of Petrograd are fixed for December 9th, 1917….
(5) The Municipal Duma of Petrograd
shall meet December 11th, 1917, at two o’clock.
(6) Those who disobey this decree,
as well as those who intentionally harm or destroy
the property of the Municipality, shall be immediately
arrested and brought before the Revolutionary Tribunals….
The Duma met defiantly, passing resolutions
to the effect that it would “defend its position
to the last drop of its blood,” and appealing
desperately to the population to save their “own
elected City Government.” But the population
remained indifferent or hostile. On the 31st
Mayor Schreider and several members were arrested,
interrogated, and released. That day and the next
the Duma continued to meet, interrupted frequently
by Red Guards and sailors, who politely requested
the assembly to disperse. At the meeting of December
2d, an officer and some sailors entered the Nicolai
Hall while a member was speaking, and ordered the
members to leave, or force would be used. They
did so, protesting to the last, but finally “ceding
to violence.”
The new Duma, which was elected ten
days later, and for which the “Moderate”
Socialists refused to vote, was almost entirely Bolshevik….
There remained several centres of
dangerous opposition, such as the “republics”
of Ukraine and Finland, which were showing definitely
anti-Soviet tendencies. Both at Helsingfors and
at Kiev the Governments were gathering troops which
could be depended upon, and entering upon campaigns
of crushing Bolshevism, and of disarming and expelling
Russian troops. The Ukrainean Rada had taken command
of all southern Russia, and was furnishing Kaledin
reinforcements and supplies. Both Finland and
Ukraine were beginning secret negotiations with the
Germans, and were promptly recognised by the Allied
Governments, which loaned them huge sums of money,
joining with the propertied classes to create counter-revolutionary
centres of attack upon Soviet Russia. In the
end, when Bolshevism had conquered in both these countries,
the defeated bourgeoisie called in the Germans to
restore them to power….
But the most formidable menace to
the Soviet Government was internal and two-headed-the
Kaledin movement, and the Staff at Moghilev, where
General Dukhonin had assumed command.
Graphic Page-287 Education Proclamation]
Proclamation of the Commission of
Public Education attached to the City Duma, concerning
the strike of school-teachers, just before the Christmas
holidays. The Duma had been re-elected, and was
composed almost entirely of Bolsheviki. For translation
see App. XI, Sect. 17.
The ubiquitous Muraviov was appointed
commander of the war against the Cossacks, and a Red
Army was recruited from among the factory workers.
Hundreds of propagandists were sent to the Don.
The Council of People’s Commissars issued a
proclamation to the Cossacks, (See App. XI, Sect.
16) explaining what the Soviet Government was, how
the propertied classes, the tchin ovniki, landlords,
bankers and their allies, the Cossack princes, land-owners
and Generals, were trying to destroy the Revolution,
and prevent the confiscation of their wealth by the
people.
On November 27th a committee of Cossacks
came to Smolny to see Trotzky and Lenin. They
demanded if it were true that the Soviet Government
did not intend to divide the Cossack lands among the
peasants of Great Russia? “No,” answered
Trotzky. The Cossacks deliberated for a while.
“Well,” they asked, “does the Soviet
Government intend to confiscate the estates of our
great Cossack land-owners and divide them among the
working Cossacks?” To this Lenin replied.
“That,” he said, “is for you
to do. We shall support the working Cossacks
in all their actions…. The best way to begin
is to form Cossacks Soviets; you will be given representation
in the Tsay-ee-kah, and then it will be your
Government, too….
The Cossacks departed, thinking hard.
Two weeks later General Kaledin received a deputation
from his troops. “Will you,” they
asked, “promise to divide the great estates of
the Cossack landlords among the working Cossacks?”
“Only over my dead body,”
responded Kaledin. A month later, seeing his
army melt away before his eyes, Kaledin blew out his
brains. And the Cossack movement was no more….
Meanwhile at Moghilev were gathered
the old Tsay-ee-kah the “moderate”
Socialist leaders-from Avksentiev to Tchernov-the active
chiefs of the old Army Committees, and the reactionary
officers. The Staff steadily refused to recognise
the Council of People’s Commissars. It
had united about it the Death Battalions, the Knights
of St. George, and the Cossacks of the Front, and was
in close and secret touch with the Allied military
attachès, and with the Kaledin movement and the Ukrainean
Rada….
The Allied Governments had made no
reply to the Peace decree of November 8th, in which
the Congress of Soviets had asked for a general armistice.
On November 20th Trotzky addressed
a note to the Allied Ambassadors: (See App.
XI, Sect. 18)
I have the honour to inform you, Mr.
Ambassador, that the All-Russian Congress of Soviets…
on November 8th constituted a new Government of the
Russian Republic, in the form of the Council of People’s
Commissars. The President of this Government is
Vladimir Ilyitch Lenin. The direction of Foreign
Affairs has been entrusted to me, People’s Commissar
for Foreign Affairs….
In drawing your attention to the text,
approved by the All-Russian Congress, of the proposition
for an armistice and a democratic peace without annexations
or indemnities, based on the right of self-determination
of peoples, I have the honour to request you to consider
that document as a formal proposal of an immediate
armistice on all fronts, and the opening of immediate
peace negotiations; a proposal which the authorised
Government of the Russian Republic addresses at the
same time to all the belligerent peoples and their
Governments.
Please accept, Mr. Ambassador, the
profound assurance of the esteem of the Soviet Government
toward your people, who cannot but wish for peace,
like all the other peoples exhausted and drained by
this unexampled butchery….
The same night the Council of People’s
Commissars telegraphed to General Dukhonin:
... The Council of People’s
Commissars considers it indispensable without delay
to make a formal proposal of armistice to all the
powers, both enemy and Allied. A declaration conforming
to this decision has been sent by the Commissar for
Foreign Affairs to the representatives of the Allied
powers at Petrograd.
The Council of People’s Commissars
orders you, Citizen Commander,... to propose to the
enemy military authorities immediately to cease hostilities,
and enter into negotiations for peace.
In charging you with the conduct of
these preliminary pourparlers, the Council of People’s
Commissars orders you:
1. To inform the Council by direct
wire immediately of any and all steps in the pourparlers
with the representatives of the enemy armies.
2. Not to sign the act of armistice
until it has been passed upon by the Council of People’s
Commissars.
The Allied Ambassadors received Trotzky’s
note with contemptuous silence, accompanied by anonymous
interviews in the newspapers, full of spite and ridicule.
The order to Dukhonin was characterised openly as
an act of treason….
As for Dukhonin, he gave no sign.
On the night of November 22nd he was communicated
with by telephone, and asked if he intended to obey
the order. Dukhonin answered that he could not,
unless it emanated from “a Government sustained
by the Army and the country.”
By telegraph he was immediately dismissed
from the post of Supreme Commander, and Krylenko appointed
in his place. Following his tactics of appealing
to the masses, Lenin sent a radio to all regimental,
divisional and corps Committees, to all soldiers and
sailors of the Army and the Fleet, acquainting them
with Dukhonin’s refusal, and ordering that “the
regiments on the front shall elect delegates to begin
negotiations with the enemy detachments opposite their
positions….”
On the 23d, the military attaches
of the Allied nations, acting on instructions from
their Governments, presented a note to Dukhonin, in
which he was solemnly warned not to “violate
the conditions of the treaties concluded between the
Powers of the Entente.” The note went on
to say that if a separate armistice with Germany were
concluded, that act “would result in the most
serious consequences” to Russia. This communication
Dukhonin at once sent out to all the soldiers’
Committees….
Next morning Trotzky made another
appeal to the troops, characterising the note of the
Allied representatives as a flagrant interference
in the internal affairs of Russia, and a bald attempt
“to force by threats the Russian Army and the
Russian people to continue the war in execution of
the treaties concluded by the Tsar….”
From Smolny poured out proclamation
after proclamation, (See App. XI, Sect. 19) denouncing
Dukhonin and the counter-revolutionary officers about
him, denouncing the reactionary politicians gathered
at Moghilev, rousing, from one end of the thousand-mile
Front to the other, millions of angry, suspicious
soldiers. And at the same time Krylenko, accompanied
by three detachments of fanatical sailors, set out
for the Stavka, breathing threats of vengeance,
(See App. XI, Sect. 20) and received by the soldiers
everywhere with tremendous ovations-a triumphal progress.
The Central Army Committee issued a declaration in
favour of Dukhonin; and at once ten thousand troops
moved upon Moghilev….
On December 2d the garrison of Moghilev
rose and seized the city, arresting Dukhonin and the
Army Committee, and going out with victorious red
banners to meet the new Supreme Commander. Krylenko
entered Moghilev next morning, to find a howling mob
gathered about the railway-car in which Dukhonin had
been imprisoned. Krylenko made a speech in which
he implored the soldiers not to harm Dukhonin, as
he was to be taken to Petrograd and judged by the Revolutionary
Tribunal. When he had finished, suddenly Dukhonin
himself appeared at the window, as if to address the
throng. But with a savage roar the people rushed
the car, and falling upon the old General, dragged
him out and beat him to death on the platform….
So ended the revolt of the Stavka....
Immensely strengthened by the collapse
of the last important stronghold of hostile military
power in Russia, the Soviet Government began with
confidence the organisation of the state. Many
of the old functionaries flocked to its banner, and
many members of other parties entered the Government
service. The financially ambitious, however,
were checked by the decree on Salaries of Government
Employees, fixing the salaries of the People’s
Commissars-the highest-at five hundred rubles (about
fifty dollars) a month…. The strike of Government
Employees, led by the Union of Unions, collapsed,
deserted by the financial and commercial interests
which had been backing it. The bank clerks returned
to their jobs….
With the decree on the Nationalisation
of Banks, the formation of the Supreme Council of
People’s Economy, the putting into practical
operation of the Land decree in the villages, the democratic
reorganisation of the Army, and the sweeping changes
in all branches of the Government and of life,-with
all these, effective only by the will of the masses
of workers, soldiers and peasants, slowly began, with
many mistakes and hitches, the moulding of proletarian
Russia.
Not by compromise with the propertied
classes, or with the other political leaders; not
by conciliating the old Government mechanism, did
the Bolsheviki conquer the power. Nor by the organized
violence of a small clique. If the masses all
over Russia had not been ready for insurrection it
must have failed. The only reason for Bolshevik
success lay in their accomplishing the vast and simple
desires of the most profound strata of the people,
calling them to the work of tearing down and destroying
the old, and afterward, in the smoke of falling ruins,
cooperating with them to erect the frame-work of the
new….