Revolutions - 10.21- The Socialist Revolutionaries
Episode Date: November 10, 2019Narodism didn't die after 1881. It just went into hibernation. sponsor: awaytravel.com/revolutions20...
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Hello and welcome to revolutions.
Episode 10.21, The Socialist Revolutionaries.
Last time, we talked through the liberal, or at least liberal-ish, tradition of 19th century Russia.
However thin the thread, when Tsar Nicholas II ascended the throne in 1894, there was a group inside the
intelligentsia who hoped the arrival of a young new monarch would bring liberal political reform,
a constitution, representative government, freedom of speech, and the press, and assembly,
something resembling the rule of law, economic modernization, social improvements.
They were as grossed out as any radical by the chauvinistic, authoritarian, and backwards
triptych of orthodoxy, autocracy, and nationality.
It embarrassed them abroad and humiliated them at home.
But those liberals were always going to,
to want to stop well short of the places more radical leaders wanted to take Russia in the
1890s, whether these new groups of Marxist Social Democrats, or the groups we're going to talk about
today, the neo-Norotist socialist revolutionaries, or as everyone calls them, the SRs.
To begin this discussion, we need to back up to the late 1870s.
In 1879, the terrorism question divided the once unified Land and Liberty Party in the
into two factions. The small minority who followed Prehanov into the splinter group Black repartition,
which then wound up breaking with neurotic ideology entirely when they formed the explicitly
Marxist emancipation of labor group in 1884. But the majority of Land and Liberty had done what?
That's right. They embraced the terrorist campaign, re-dub themselves people's will,
and went off to kill the Tsar, finally succeeding in 1881.
But what happened to them after that?
Well, as I mentioned somewhat obliquely in episodes 10.16 and 10.17,
the People's Will organization was almost immediately smashed and scattered by the vengeful fist of the Akrona,
the Tsar's new secret police service.
The members of People's Will were hunted, arrested, tried by military tribunals,
and then either hanged or exiled.
Those who slipped this round up were forced into exile.
taking off for Switzerland or France or Britain.
A few stayed behind and dug in even harder on terrorist campaigning,
but their old networks were so disruptive,
and the repressive hand of the new Tsar Alexander III was so heavy
that it was nearly impossible to meet, publish, or plan.
So their great prize for successfully killing the Tsar
was the destruction of their party.
Not only were the 1880s a low point for radical neurotism
in terms of literal personnel and party organization,
but it also seemed like their ideas and theories were dead too.
Because what was the main organizing principle behind people's will in those critical years leading up to the assassination of Tsar Alexander II?
Well, first, while they fought for the peasants and wanted to base future Russian socialism in the rural villages,
the peasantry was, at present, too hopelessly smothered by the repressive imperial government to rise up on mass.
It would only be after the political war against the Tsar state was won.
one, that the peasants could be freed and rural socialism could flourish.
One of the main arguments in favor of an assassination campaign carried out by an elite cadre of
revolutionary terrorists was that it would deal a fatal, physical, and psychic blow to the forces
of political despotism.
On the physical level, this was very much a kill-the-head and-the-body-dyes kind of thing.
But on the psychic level, on an almost cosmic level, assassinating the czar would pre-executive.
that the Tsar was just a man after all, not some divine demigod.
And the superstitious peasants would then be roused from their fearful and superstitious stupor.
So, on both a practical and a spiritual level, killing the Tsar was supposed to simultaneously
cause the imperial apparatus to fall apart and trigger the people to rise up.
And then, people's will did it. They killed the Tsar. And what happened?
Pretty much the opposite. The repressive imperial police
state only spread wider and drove deeper, and asked for the peasants they did, nothing.
They were seemingly as inert and apathetic as ever. Certainly, there was no mass insurrection
accompanying the death of Tsar Alexander II, kind of disproving and discrediting all the strategic,
tactical, and ideological assumptions that people's will had been operating under.
That leads to what might seem like a pretty straight historical story for the
evolution of Russian radicalism at the end of the 19th century. The nihilism of the 1860s had led to the
mass mobilization going to the people of 1874, which failed, giving way to the elite terrorism
of people's will, which was exposed as fatally flawed in 1881, paving the way for the exciting
new brand of Russian Marxism to pick up the fallen torch in the 1890s. And is this what happened?
Well, yes and no. Everything I just said definitely led a new generation of radicals to be drawn to the Marxist ideas being disseminated by the emancipation of labor group, because Marxist analysis was going to make a lot of sense against the backdrop of the rapid industrialization of the Vita system. But neurotism did not die in the 1880s. It simply went into hibernation. And when it emerged from its slumber in the 1890s, it still found a lot of enthusiastic and
adherence. Not for the least reason that even with the rapid industrialization of the Vita system,
the empire was still overwhelmingly rural, agrarian, and peasant. The revival of the fortunes of
neurotism can be traced to two coinciding events in the early 1890s. The first was the famine of
1891, 1892 that we talked about in episode 10.18. Bad harvest led to frightening scarcity and then
outright famine, which resulted in the deaths of upwards of 500,000 people. The government was simply
unprepared and unequipped to deal with the crisis. And while people's will theory had been,
if we killed the czar, maybe the people will lose faith in the czar, there was now a new revelation.
If the czar lets the people die, then maybe the people will lose faith in the czar. The experience
of mass starvation caused by bad luck, but exacerbated by incompetence in
difference or outright malevolence by the Tsarist imperial apparatus, it was a real blow to the regime's
perceived legitimacy. Old Nerotis veterans of the 1870s working among the peasants in the 1890s
remarked how much more open and receptive they were to radical critiques of the government. So going to the
people had failed in 1874, but suddenly it was maybe an idea whose time had come by 1894. And speaking of those
Nerotus veterans, they are the other coinciding event of the early 1890s.
Many of those who had been tried and convicted of various crimes back in the 1870s,
like those convicted in the famous trial of the 193, were now completing their sentences
of Siberian exile and returning home by the early 1890s.
Then, in his benevolent generosity, when Tsar Nicholas II ascended the throne, he marked the
occasion by granting wide-reaching amnesties and pardons that invited former political prisoners
to rejoin society. Now, sure, many of those who returned were like, okay, that's all in the
past. Siberia sucked. I have paid for my youthful follies, and I would like to just go home now,
please. But plenty of those returning had changed not one jot, and they had spent their years
either in prison or in exile, simply biting their time. And because they had gone into isolation,
holding old neurotist ideas, they came out of that isolation, holding those same old ideas.
They missed the memo that their ideas had been discredited, that neurotism and the rural peasants were old news.
The future belonged to the Marxists and the urban proletariat.
Now, they were not insensible to the fact that conditions in the 1890s were not what they had been in the 1870s,
and that past experience and new ideas would mean some of the program would need to be adapted or revised.
But still, they had no intention of being merely a stepping stone on the road to Marxist proletarian revolution.
Okay, so what we are up to specifically in this week's episode is setting up the formation of the coming socialist revolutionary party in January of 1902.
So what we're going to spend the rest of today talking about are the four distinct groups who would start coming together independently of each other in the mid-1890s who would go on to form the core of that socialized.
Socialist Revolutionary Party. These groups formed organically and separately, often starting with
one or two people deciding one day to get a little group together. Maybe to educate the workers or
the peasants, maybe to offer reading material and discussion space for students, maybe to try to
link with like-minded members of the intelligentsia. These groups were self-starting and self-funded.
They were often a mix of old veterans and young upstarts. They were never very big.
seven people here, a dozen people there, 50 at most. But what they all had in common is that they were
working in the old neurotic tradition. Well, that, and they were all destined to feed into the
SRs. So the first group we'll talk about is called the Union of Socialist Revolutionaries,
but they will be better known to history by the shorthand name, the Northern Union. And just as a
general warning as we go forward, not just for today, but for the rest of the series,
All these people are going to be calling themselves the Socialist Revolutionary Union and the Workers' Union of Revolutionary Socialists and the Socialist Revolutionary Party as opposed to the Revolutionary Socialist Party as opposed to the Party for Revolutionary Socialism as opposed to the Revolutionary Party of Socialists.
Don't worry too much about the names just now.
Just try to follow along with the ideas and the people who are participating in the movement.
So anyway, what becomes known as the Northern Union formed in 1896 in the South.
western city of Saratov, but moved its headquarters to Moscow the following year.
And just to remind you of the scale here, the Northern Union, at its peak, is only going to have
about 30 full-fledged members. The organizing force behind the Northern Union was Andrei
Argonoff, who will be on the Central Committee of the SRs come the Revolution of 1905.
Born in 1866, he was too young to have been a part of the original run of People's Will Terrorism,
But in his early 20s, Argonov hooked up with the few 1880s holdouts in Tombsk and then spent the early 1890s circulating among student groups,
which led to the more formal organization of the Northern Union a few years later.
When it was formed, the Northern Union represented the most unreconstructed ideological continuity with the now defunct people's will.
Argonov would write a declaration of principles for the group in 1819.
called Our Tasks, which set out their political goals and tactical approach for the revolution.
Both friends and rivals alike noted that it was cribbed almost entirely from similar people's will declarations in the 1870s.
The argument was that though the peasants, the people, would be the principal beneficiaries of the revolution,
they were not yet ready to carry out the revolution themselves.
They would not be able to overcome their poverty,
ignorance and apathy until the Tsarist apparatus had been brought down. And the best way to attack
and topple that apparatus was through violent terrorist assassination campaigns. Before there can be a
social or economic revolution, there must first be a political revolution carried out by die-hard
radicals inside the intelligentsia. So this, I mean, all of this I just said five minutes ago when I
was talking about what people's will believed. And other groups, among them, neo-neurotus and anarchists,
and Marxist Social Democrats would read our tasks and find it full of tried and failed
neurotic dogmatism.
While the Northern Union was getting going, there was another developmental pattern centered
especially in Ukraine that is collectively referred to as the Southern Groups.
Unlike Argonoff and the Northern Union, the Southern groups really leaned into the
neo part of neo-neurodism, and they adapted their program to A, a,
account for the failures of the 1870s, B, acknowledge the reality of Vita System Russia in the 1890s,
and C, grappled directly with the Marxist analysis now going mainstream inside radical circles.
On the matter of terrorism, they either tried to avoid directly taking a stand or coming down firmly in opposition.
Terrorism and assassination might be viscerally exciting, but it had not and would not get the job.
done. The Southern groups were also recalculating the immediate revolutionary potential of the peasants.
While the old recycled people's will dogma that the Northern Union was spouting said they
can't be activated until the Tsar has been toppled, the Southern groups suspected that things had
changed, the times had changed, and that activating the peasants was not only possible but necessary
to carry out a socialist revolution in Russia. And they also agreed that a sure path to
appealing to the workers and the peasants
was to focus on addressing their immediate concerns and grievances,
and then helping them alleviate those immediate concerns and grievances.
But just as the Southern groups criticized the Northern Union for reheating spoiled potatoes,
the Northern Union criticized the Southern groups for splitting off from neurotism entirely.
This isn't neo-neurodism, this is something else entirely.
For example, one of the big features of neuroticism was a desire to either head off,
or leapfrog over industrial capitalism.
And the southern groups tended to accept the Marxist position that capitalism was coming,
and that the urban proletariat might very well serve as the advanced guard of the next revolution.
On top of this heresy, they added another.
That willingness to talk about and improve living and working conditions was a break
with the core beliefs of both neuroticism and Bakuninist anarchism.
Those guys wanted to reject capitalism root and branch,
and not sap the revolution of its vitality by marginally improving the workers' lives in exchange for tacitly accepting this new capitalist system.
Putting padding on the chains does not break the chains.
But the southern groups were not closet Marxists.
In fact, they had more faith in the rural peasantry than the Northern Union did.
They still believe that the future of Russia was agrarian socialism,
and that the failure of the going to the people should not be taken as permanent proof that a revolutionary army would never come marching out of the rural countryside.
When they looked around in the mid-1890s, they noted that conditions had changed, and there were two new classes who provided an excellent opportunity to more efficiently and productively focus recruitment, propaganda, and education efforts on the peasants.
First, there was the so-called rural intelligentsia, and second, there was that large subset of the growing industrial working class who regularly returned home to their native villages.
Neither of those classes had really existed back in the 1870s, but now they did, and now they could be used.
As to the first class, this rural intelligentsia, the Zemstva wound up being the factory that produced them.
Remember, the Zemstva were focused on creating schools and hospitals and health services and improving local infrastructure.
So this drew out to more rural areas, educated professionals who used to be found only in the bigger cities, teachers, lawyers, engineers, doctors, and so forth.
And then especially thanks to the educational improvements of the 1870s and 1880s, you saw a new generation growing up much better educated than their parents.
Now obviously many people in this rural intelligentsia group are going to wind up mostly in political sympathy with the liberal Zemstva constitutionalist that we talked about last week, but there were plenty with more radical ambitions, especially among the teachers.
They would start their own little reading, discussion, and educational circles.
Partly this was to alleviate boredom, but partly it was out of real zeal.
And you would see things like little lending libraries get organized.
that allowed the increasingly literate local population to access new and interesting ideas.
And one of the great lessons learned of the failed going to the people
was that the people had not known or trusted the people who went to the people.
But the rural intelligentsia was engaged with far more permanent cohabitation,
and they were identified as the perfect bridge
between the elite revolutionary leadership still based in the capital cities
and the mass of peasants they hoped one day to organize and lead.
The other group that this elite revolutionary leadership realized had potential
was that semi-seasonal labor force that moved back and forth between industrial labor sites,
like factories and mines and railroad projects, and their home villages.
If you were a socialist revolutionary organizer,
you could maneuver your way into one of these mass concentrations of industrial workers
that we talked about at the end of episode 10.18 on the Vita system, and find a very receptive audience,
an audience whose minds had been opened by the general terribleness of their working conditions.
Then you could explain to them your theory of what socialist revolution would look like,
and they would carry that message back to their friends and families in the home villages.
Ideas that were now being delivered not by strangers who just showed up one day and started saying,
hey, you know what down with the czar?
they heard it from their cousin or their sister or their best friend.
And with a little luck, when those workers then returned to their factories,
the people left behind might find a radical member of the rural intelligentsia lurking around ready to talk more about
all of these interesting new ideas and further foster revolutionary consciousness.
So this was a pretty exciting realization,
and it made the southern groups more convinced that right now today they should think of the peasants as a force that could be mobilized.
Now, as I've said, these groups are not very big, and they would still have to be based in the cities,
focus mostly on the urban workers.
But they could create a social web that would spread ideas.
And when the time was right, a revolutionary army could come marching out of the rural countryside.
And this wasn't going to happen overnight, but the path was clear,
and the heart of what is going to become socialist revolutionary ideology started beating.
The third pillar of the future SRs grew out of a worker education circle in Minsk that was dubbed
the Workers' Party for the Political Emancipation of Russia. Founded in 1895, the Workers' Party for the
political emancipation of Russia was unique in that it was specifically focused on the Jewish
community, a community that held its own unique position inside the Russian Empire,
navigating as they did between the anti-Semitic assumptions of the Tsarist authorities
that the Jews did not really fit into a system of orthodoxy, autocracy, and nationality,
and the anti-Semitic assumptions of many revolutionary Marxists and populists and anarchists,
that the Jews were greedy parasites, adversaries, not allies, in the coming revolution.
But that said, this Jewish-centered Workers' Party operated a lot like the Northern Union did
in the tradition of terroristic neuroticism and anarchism.
They believe that first and foremost, the revolutionary task was to overthrow the Tsar.
What better way to fight the encroaching tyranny of capitalism than overthrowing the state,
which backed up those capitalists with the force of the police and the army and an array of anti-labor laws.
So the Workers' Party for the political emancipation of Russia and the Northern Union were largely in agreement about both the task and the
the methods of revolution. One of the key organizers of the Workers' Party was an old veteran of
the 1870s, who was among those leaders now returning from a long period of political exile.
They had, in fact, spent the last 20 years bouncing around between prisons, penal labor camps,
and supervised exile. I am speaking of Yakaterina Breskovskaya, a revolutionary stalwart on her way
to earning the nickname Babushka, the grandmother.
Born in 1844 into a well-to-do land and surf-owning family,
Praskyaya was 17 years old when the Emancipation Decree was issued in 1861.
She enthusiastically helped her father navigate the logistics of freeing the family serfs
and took it upon herself to organize education and literacy programs.
Two years later, she followed a normal social path by marrying a land-owning magistrate,
but that was a very short-lived experiment with normalcy.
She left her husband two years later and moved to Kiev with her sister and a friend named Maria Kolakina.
Upon arrival, the three of them set up house and got super into Bakuninist anarchism, meeting at this point a young 20-year-old named Pavel Axelrod.
Now her sister appears to have died young, but in 1874, Breskovskaya and Maria Kolakina, of course, went to the people.
They were, however soon tipped off that they might be arrested and Kolakina went home.
But Brechkoskaya simply bounced to other villages.
Eventually, though, she was arrested.
While trying to pass a checkpoint dressed as a peasant,
she failed to act apart and show the instinctive deference expected from a peasant woman.
She blew her own cover and was arrested.
So now she's in jail.
And then she wound up as one of the 193 in the famous trial of the 193.
When it was her turn to stand accused, she gave a defiant speech declaring that
she did not recognize the court's authority over her and that yes, she was a socialist and that
yes, she was a revolutionary and she was damn proud of it. The court, of course, recognized its own
authority over her. And unlike most other arrested women who were acquitted and set free,
Praskovskaya was given five years penal labor in Siberia. And I have seen it claim that she
was the first woman in Russia sentenced to prison labor for political crimes. And now I must
break this story so that we can tie ourselves back to some big drama from previous episodes,
because after the sentencing, Breschkovsky's old friend, Maria Kolakina, resolved on a plan to
murder the prosecutor in revenge. And Maria got together with one of her new friends to plot a
double assassination. And that new friend was Vera Zasulich. So yes, when I talked about Zazulich's
comrade in the murder conspiracy, that was Maria Kolakina. This is a very small world we're talking about
here. Anyway, while Zasulich was able to get her shot off, Kolakina was not, and instead she was
arrested and sentenced herself to 10 years in Siberia. But getting back to Brechkovskaya,
after a couple years, her sentence was reduced from penal labor to mere exile, and she immediately
attempted to flee the country. But the attempt failed, and so she got formed.
more years hard labor. After completing that sentence, she was back to living in mere exile again
when an American journalist came through in 1885, and Breschkovskaya gave an interview,
where she said that maybe she would die in exile, maybe her children would die in exile,
maybe her grandchildren would die in exile, but someday it would all be worth it.
This interview made her a minor celebrity among unionists and radicals and progressive liberals
in the English-speaking world, though, as it turned out,
neither she nor her children nor her grandchildren died in exile. In 1896, she was released
as part of a general amnesty that accompanied the formal coronation of Nicholas II.
Now well past 50 years old, she returned home so full of thankfulness at the amnesty that
she went right back to organizing for a socialist revolution, this time in Minsk.
Her partner in crime during this period was future Inner Circle SR leader Grigory Gershuni.
Gershuni was 25 years younger than Breschkoskaya, but they formed a working revolutionary partnership,
with Breschkofskaya as the dynamic, charismatic, passionate, living witness to the indomitable spirit of revolutionary will.
Then, once the audience was fired up, Gershune would follow in her wake and handle the practical logistics of organizing.
and establishing groups and communication between them.
Their partnership made the Workers' Party
for the Political Emancipation of Russia
one of the most dedicated and well-organized inside Russia,
and though even at its peak there were never more than 60 full-time members.
They would be one of the backbones of the coming SR coalition.
The fourth and final group we need to talk about today
are those not in Russia at all.
Because if you had been in people's will
when the reactionary hammer came down in 1881 and you managed to escape arrest and execution or exile,
you invariably wound up fleeing abroad and settling in Russian emigrate enclaves, usually in Switzerland or Paris or London.
As so often happens with communities of exiled radicals, as we've seen going all the way back to the post-1848 emigree waters that Marx and Angles and Bakunin swam in,
These exile groups continued to publish pamphlets and newspapers that focused as much on prosecuting beefs and rivalries amongst themselves as the larger project of socialist revolution.
Everyone was pushing their own idiosyncratic vision for the revolutionary future, even as that revolutionary future seemed further away than ever.
The most important of these groups came together in Paris, where one of the old deans of Russian populism, Piotr Lavrov, had moved after.
his time in Switzerland. Lavrov, remember, had been an influential neurotic theorist going all the way
back before the going to the people, and he was as old and old-timer as they came. In the mid-1890s,
he was enjoying something of a personal renaissance after the failure of people's will-style quick
terrorism made Lavrov's pitch for slow and steady education seem much wiser in retrospect.
So in the early 1890s, Lavrov and a few other old exiled luminaries form their own group of veterans.
Now that conditions in Russia seem to be improving, they hoped to form a kind of neurotic senior leadership in exile
who could observe and direct their younger comrades who were making good headway back home.
But though their voices were listened to and their service was respected,
they suffered from the same delusion that many emigre groups abroad suffer in all times in place.
places, namely that while they consider themselves to be the leaders of the movement, the people
on the ground back home didn't know them, and certainly weren't going to take orders from them.
The leaders in Russia saw themselves as the leaders, and they saw the emigreys serving merely
as ambassadors and fundraisers, not as like the Central Committee of the Revolution.
This disconnect is shown clearly in that one of the principal preoccupations of those leaders
inside Russia was how to get their own printing presses and newspapers going, because the literature
being smuggled in from abroad was so thoroughly out of touch and disconnected from realities
in Russia, it was just all around unhelpful. So the emigres are going to form the fourth group,
the fourth pillar of what becomes the SRs. And by the late 1890s, our future socialist revolutionaries
are coming back to life, like budding little shoots after a long winter.
But as they came back to life, they would find themselves in direct competition with a new species of revolutionary that they had not had to contend with back in the 1870s.
And that was Marxist Social Democrats.
And next week will be a very important episode in the Revolution's podcast, because we will be introducing two of the most important members of the energetic younger generation of Russian Marxists.
So join me next week.
when I finally introduce you to Lennon and Krupskaya.
