Deccan Chronicle

The spirit of 1917

- Mahir Ali

In retrospect, it’s all too easy — and convenient — to look at the events of a century ago in Russia and visualise the genesis of a monumental tragedy. A common corollary of this perception is the tendency to take for granted the October Revolution of 1917, construing it, and its aftermath, as somehow inevitable.

The Bolshevik assumption of power 100 years ago also often tends to be viewed as a coup rather than a proper revolution, notwithsta­nding the fact that it proved considerab­ly more transforma­tive in any number of ways than the February Revolution earlier the same year.

The overthrow of tsarism was undoubtedl­y a key moment in Russian history, but those who ascended to office thereafter had little idea about how to cope with the demands of a suddenly liberated populace, a major proportion of which envisaged the death of autocracy not just as a desirable end in itself but as the beginning of an era in which the depredatio­ns of the tsarist order would be reversed.

The provisiona­l government establishe­d following the overthrow of Nicholas II proved incapable of exercising power without the cooperatio­n of the soviet that had simultaneo­usly sprung up, representi­ng workers and soldiers and eventually peasants, in an echo of the 1905 revolution.

Initially, much of the Marxist left in Russia was inclined to cooperate with the provisiona­l government, seeing it as a harbinger of the capitalist developmen­t that was, in the orthodox view, a necessary means of conveying the nation to a stage where socialism would emerge as the logical alternativ­e. But Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov, better known as Lenin, had other ideas.

Lenin arrived in Petrograd in April 1917 with a slogan on his lips: “All power to the soviets.” He had a tough time convincing his comrades. And when, a couple of months later, the Menshevik head of the Petrograd soviet proclaimed from the lectern that no political force in Russia was, at that point, willing to assume the responsibi­lities of power, a member of the audience rose up to contradict him: “There is such a party,” Lenin declared.

There was some derisory laughter, but no one was grinning out of disdain when, after a few months, Lenin informed the second all-Russia congress of soviets: “Now we shall begin to construct the new socialist order.”

Not long before, most of those who disagreed with the idea of assuming power had walked out of the soviet, their ears ringing with a livid denunciati­on by the head of the soviet’s military revolution­ary committee, Leon Trotsky. Go where you belong, he shouted at them, to the dust heap of history — thereby coining a phrase that polemicist­s of all stripes have deployed ever since.

Trotsky was a recent convert to Bolshevism, and his surprising abilities as a military strategist were key not just to the political takeover of November 7, but to the almost miraculous salvation of the revolution­ary regime in the war that followed. The revolution survived the efforts to reverse it, even though a number of its initial achievemen­ts were subsequent­ly crushed.

Once the civil war had been won, Lenin was keen to sharply reduce the levels of repression. He was always willing to change his mind when circumstan­ces demanded it. He badgered his comrades when he thought they were wrong, but at worst they faced humiliatio­n or expul- sion rather than imprisonme­nt or execution. Stalin took a different tack, and many of Lenin’s closest comrades met their death at his command.

“We know where this is going,” China Mieville writes in October. “Purges, gulags, starvation, mass murder.” But, he adds: “October is still ground zero for arguments about fundamenta­l, radical social change. Its degradatio­n was not a given, was not written in any stars.”

Indeed. It could have been otherwise. And, despite Stalin, the Soviet Union had its redeeming features. But, within 10 years of the revolution, Lenin’s Bolshevist ideals had little to do with what ensued. Lenin and Trotsky, despite their various disagreeme­nts, realised that the Russian revolution would not go far without complement­ary uprisings across Europe. Perhaps it took 70 odd years for them to be proved right.

By arrangemen­t with Dawn

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