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How Lenin fought to defend Georgia's self-determination

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  • How Lenin fought to defend Georgia's self-determination

    The Militant, NY
    Aug 24 2008


    How Lenin fought to defend Georgia's self-determination

    The Pathfinder book Lenin's Final Fight contains valuable documentary
    material on the place of Georgia and the national question in the
    battle by V.I. Lenin to defend the communist course of the October
    1917 Russian Revolution against challenges raised by a narrow,
    nationalist, petty-bourgeois layer that arose in the Soviet Union led
    by Joseph Stalin.
    Printed below is an excerpt from a review of Lenin's Final Fight that
    appeared in the June 5, 1995, Militant.

    BY MARTÃ?N KOPPEL

    Readers will find it hard to put down this book as they follow Lenin's
    struggle week by week, sometimes day by day, taking up political
    issues that remain vitally relevant today. Lenin discusses questions
    including the need to forge a union of workers and peasants republics,
    to defend the rights of oppressed nationalities and combat Great
    Russian chauvinism, and to strengthen the alliance between the working
    class and the peasantry. He takes up the New Economic Policy and its
    place in the world struggle for socialism, and defends the state
    monopoly of foreign trade.

    These questions, as the book's introduction notes, `deal with the most
    decisive piece of unfinished business in front of those who produce
    the wealth of the world and make possible culture: they deal with the
    worldwide struggle, opened by the Bolshevik-led revolution nearly
    eighty years ago, to replace the dictatorship of a tiny minority of
    exploiting capitalists families with the dictatorship of the
    proletariat,' that is, a workers state.

    The revolutionary government that came to power in October 1917 was
    based on councils of workers', peasants', and soldiers' delegates
    called soviets, the Russian word for council.

    It mobilized peasants to expropriate the big landlords' estates and
    distribute the nationalized land to be worked by the tillers. It freed
    oppressed peoples who had been under the tsarist boot of Russian
    oppression from Ukraine to Mongolia, and guaranteed their right to
    national self-determination'the first government in the world to do
    so.

    The Bolshevik leadership organized workers to expropriate capitalist
    property in industry, banking, and wholesale trade, and established a
    state monopoly of foreign trade.

    Georgian republic
    In September 1922, just a few months before the stroke that finally
    debilitated him, Lenin launched a political fight around the question
    of the Georgian republic and of the voluntary union of Soviet
    republics.

    In a letter to the party's Political Bureau and addressed to Bolshevik
    leader Lev Kamenev, Lenin criticizes the proposal by Joseph Stalin,
    the CP's general secretary, to incorporate five independent Soviet
    republics'Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belorussia, Georgia, and Ukraine'into
    the Russian Federation as `autonomous republics.' The book reprints
    the text of Stalin's initial plan.

    Lenin proposes a completely different approach: that Russia join with
    the other republics `on an equal basis into a new union, a new
    federation, the Union of the Soviet Republics of Europe and Asia.'

    This stance was crucial, given the strong proindependence sentiments
    of working people in Georgia and other Soviet republics in the
    Caucasus because of Russian tsarist domination in the past. The
    Georgian Communist Party had rejected Stalin's `autonomization' plan
    and favored remaining independent as part of a Soviet federation.

    Lenin's Final Fight documents how Lenin waged a political debate to
    win other members of the Bolshevik leadership to a proletarian
    internationalist stance on this question. This fight was based on one
    of the major conquests of the October 1917 revolution: the right of
    oppressed peoples to national self-determination.

    `War to the death'
    Through the efforts of Lenin and other Bolshevik leaders, the Union of
    Soviet Socialist Republics was founded as a federation of equals at
    the end of 1922. But Lenin felt compelled to `declare war to the death
    on dominant nation chauvinism,' as he put it in an October 6 memo to
    the party's Political Bureau.

    In a series of notes addressed in December 1922 to the upcoming 12th
    party congress, Lenin makes some of his sharpest and most concise
    statements on the national question. Referring to the argument by some
    Russian Communist leaders that a single government is needed to rule
    over all the Soviet republics, he states, `Where did that assurance
    come from? Did it not come from that same Russian apparatus which we
    took over from tsarism and slightly anointed with Soviet oil?'

    Affirmative action
    He adds that without a conscious approach of preferential treatment
    toward the historically oppressed nations'an affirmative action
    policy'all talk of a voluntary federation `will be a mere scrap of
    paper, unable to defend the non-Russians from the onslaught of that
    really Russian man, the Great Russian chauvinist, in substance a
    rascal and a tyrant, such as the typical Russian bureaucrat is.'

    Lenin condemns Stalin for his `spite against the notorious
    `nationalist socialism.'' Stalin had accused the Central Committee of
    the Georgian Communist Party of `nationalist deviations,' saying these
    should be `burned out with a red-hot iron.'

    Lenin's concern about Great Russian chauvinism was
    well-founded. Stalin and Grigory Ordzhonikidze, another Central
    Committee member, resorted to strong-arm tactics to try to ram through
    their policies on the national question. In protest, the Georgian CC
    resigned. The conflict flared up in late November when Ordzhonikidze
    struck one of the dissident Georgian communists during a verbal
    confrontation. This fact came to light through an investigation by a
    Political Bureau-appointed commission, headed by Russian CC member
    Feliks Dzerzhinsky.

    Over the final months of 1922, Lenin's doubts about the conduct of
    Stalin and his allies around the Georgian question mounted. Lenin
    organized three of his personal secretaries to carry out a separate
    investigation in February and March 1923 to verify the Dzerzhinsky
    commission's account. They reported to Lenin that Dzerzhinsky had
    basically whitewashed the abusive policies of Ordzhonikidze and
    Stalin.

    This report'kept secret by Moscow until the collapse of the Stalinist
    apparatus in the former USSR in 1991'appears in this volume for the
    first time in any language.

    http://www.themilitant.com/2008/7234/72 3453.html
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