Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

The Russian Revolution; from Vladimir Lenin to Vladimir Putin

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NSUNDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2017

ext Tuesday, November 7, marks the centenary of an event that changed the course of world history for the better part of the 20th century – the Russian Revolution of 1917.

It was the good ship ‘Aurora’ anchored on the river Nev, flying the Red flag of the revolution­aries, which fired the first salvo into the nearby Winter Palace of Czar Nicholas in Petrograd (St. Petersburg). It signalled the climax of the proletaria­t struggle that toppled the Romanov dynasty and brought the Bolshevik Party led by Vladimir Lenin to power.

The revolution reverberat­ed around the world with the formation of the first Government of workers and peasants, the Marxist-Leninist and then the Communist Party, and the USSR (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics).

Many countries experience­d tumultuous events during the last century, not least Sri Lanka. But what the people of the USSR experience­d was arguably unparallel­ed. The Russian Revolution occurred during World War I when the country was at war with Germany. Then came the revolution. A civil war between the Old Guard and the newcomers ensued. World War II was soon to follow - that cost a staggering 20 million Soviet lives. Having turned tables on the German Third Reich, the Soviet Red Army marched into Berlin and with the rest of the Allied Powers, the USSR carved out parts of Eastern Europe for itself as satellite states, witnessing what became known as the ‘Cold War’ with the West.

Then there was ruthless dictator Josif Stalin who modernised the impoverish­ed nation, but under his jackboot. One of his victims being Marxist ideologue Leon Trotsky – murdered in Mexico for opposing him. The USSR was ahead in the space race sending the dog Laika and then astronaut Gagarin to orbit Earth and financed revolution­s abroad, but Marxist economic doctrine of central planning failed to deliver food on the table to the ordinary masses. The resultant collapse of the economy, and finally of the USSR itself, forced it to eat humble pie. Eventually they embraced a market economy -- and capitalism; and a powerful oligarchy of the super-rich emerged with a widening rich-poor divide.

Today, Revolution is anathema to the administra­tion of Vladimir Putin, the Russian overlord at the helm in the seat of power at the Kremlin of an otherwise emasculate­d Russian Federation. With growing opposition to his iron-fisted rule, Putin has occupied the hot seat since 2000, and is uneasy with the word -- Revolution. He is not even celebratin­g the centenary of the Russian Revolution; trying to whitewash that period of Soviet history by putting the Revolution in the dustbin of history, and recreating the greatness and grandeur of the nation under the former Romanov Empire.

Putin has given new life to the Russian Orthodox Church which went into oblivion under Communist rule; given capitalism a foremost place in the economy and oversees ‘guided’ democracy.

It is quite a quirk of history that while the Germans – and the British ambassador, were accused of playing a role in the Russian Revolution a hundred years ago, today the Russians are accused of interferin­g in the elections in the United States and countries in the West.

The Russian Revolution had a huge impact on the politics of Sri Lanka as well. We had a Bolshevik Party here led by a Trotsky follower, Colvin R. de Silva armed with a Ph.D from Britain. Prof. Harold Laski of the London School of Economics influenced many other young Sri Lankan postgradua­te students of the day to return and form the LSSP and the CP (Moscow). They all played a role in Sri Lanka’s freedom struggle and became influentia­l political leaders until 1977 when they – and their economic theories, were swept away in an electoral tsunami against socialism here as it happened around the world. Russia and China, the then proponents of Marxist-Leninism are today’s advocates of free markets.

(Please see articles on Plus cover and in ST 2 on the subject)

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