Revolutions - 10.74- The Great October Socialist Revolution
Episode Date: November 9, 2021We made it....
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And welcome to revolutions.
Episode 10.74, the Great October Socialist Revolution.
So here we are, everything we've been building to for the last, I don't know, zillion episodes.
On the list of great moments in revolutionary history, the Bolshevik uprising of October
1917 is right there with the fall of the Bastille in July 1789 at the center of the inner circle.
And those two events certainly serve as temporal bookends defining what, in retrospect, this here Revolution's podcast has been all about.
But it's not like we're anywhere close to being finished, because just as with the fall of the Bastille in 1789,
the October Revolution only becomes recognized as the epicenter of a historical earthquake because of what came after.
Lots of times throughout history, a capital city has been rocked by riots, uprisings, and street violence to no great permanence.
in effect. The existing government refines its footing, and life goes on. But sometimes, tumultuous events
spanning just a few calendar days changed the course of human history, as happened both in July
1789 and October 1917. So while we have been building to this moment, the rest of the Revolution's
podcast will chronicle the struggle of the Bolsheviks to make October 1917 the beginning of a
world historical earthquake rather than a forgotten flash in the pan. But it will also chronicle
those revolutionaries who struggled against the Bolshevik vision of revolution, because that too
is the story of the Russian Revolution. In the last week of October 1917, the Aaron Petrograd was
thick with anticipation. As we discussed at length last time, everyone knew the Bolsheviks were planning
an uprising to coincide with the convening of the second all-Russian Congress of Soviets on October 25th.
it was really just a matter how events were going to play out, whether the Bolsheviks would win or lose,
not whether they would try. And a leading Menshevik told American journalist John Reid,
well, perhaps the Bolsheviks can seize power, but they won't be able to hold it for more than three days.
They haven't the men to run a government. Perhaps it's a good thing to let them try. That will finish them.
Alexander Kerensky, meanwhile, didn't think they'd even make it that far. When he got word,
on the night of October 23rd that the Bolshevik dominated military revolutionary committee had backed
down from its claim to veto power over all military orders in Petrograd. Kerensky took it as a sign
that he could safely launch a preemptive strike and snuff out the Bolshevik coup before it even began.
Kerensky ordered a loyal detachment of soldiers, mostly cadets from a military academy,
to seize and destroy the Bolshevik presses. In the pre-dawn hours of October 24, 1917,
these soldiers pushed their way into the Bolshevik newspaper offices, smashed up the joint,
and placed a standing guard at the front door.
To give this attack the veneer of legitimacy,
Kerensky also ordered two extreme right-wing newspaper shutdown.
But given the timing, it was obvious to everyone that this was aimed squarely at the left
and squarely at the Bolsheviks.
Kerensky's decision to strike first gave the Bolshevik leaders exactly the pretence they needed to frame their actions
as a defense of the revolution.
In October 1917, Bolshevik leaders owned many different hats that they could take on and off
as the situation necessitated.
Trotsky, for example, was simultaneously a member of the Bolshevik Central Committee,
president of the Petrograd Soviet, and a leading member of the Military Revolutionary Committee.
With his political party under attack, he could dawn the cap of the leader of the Petrograd
Soviet and frame Kerenzky's actions as an attack on free speech.
When guards were dispatched to open the Bolshevik presses, Trotsky said it was because,
quote, the Soviet workers and soldiers' deputies cannot tolerate suppression of the free word.
Then, donning the cap of leader of the MRC, he sent out orders to everyone recently incorporated
into their chain of command.
Directive number one, the order read, the Petrograd Soviet is in direct danger.
You are hereby directed to bring your regiment to battle readiness.
Any procrastination or interference in executing this order will be considered a betrayal of the revolution.
Across the city, soldiers started mobilizing.
The detachment sent to the Bolshevik newspaper offices easily pushed aside the cadet standing guard,
and by 9 a.m., the Bolshevik newspaper was back up and running.
It should come as no surprise to any of you out there that no soldiers were sent to reopen the two right-wing paper,
in the name of freedom of speech.
As all of this unfolded,
Kerensky hustled over to the Marinsky Palace,
where the pre-parliament was holding a session.
He delivered a speech to ensure their support for his actions against the Bolsheviks.
He got up and addressed them, saying,
I will cite here the most characteristic passage from a whole series of articles
published by Ulyanov Lenin,
a state criminal who is in hiding and who we are trying to find.
The state criminal.
has invited the proletariat in the Petrograd garrison to repeat the experience of July and insists
upon the immediate necessity of an armed uprising. Corensky then quoted from Lenin's open letter
to his comrades that we talked about last week that very much advocated immediate armed insurrection.
Having made a pretty clear-cut case that the Bolsheviks were planning to overthrow the government,
Kerenzky left the pre-parliament to debate the exact wording of their support for him.
then he headed back to the Winter Palace to orchestrate what he believed would be the final blows against Lenin and his gang of criminals.
But before we go on, let's just remember that Kerensky's government and this pre-parliament are not exactly paradigms of sovereign legitimacy.
As we discussed two episodes back, the hastily arranged Democratic Conference in mid-September,
itself not particularly legitimate, had explicitly rejected the formation of the present government.
Facing this rejection, a self-appointed committee of Mensheviks, SRs, progressives, and liberals
had then engaged in freelance negotiations with each other to select a slate of ministers of their choosing.
The pre-parliament, meanwhile, was an assembly of leaders from various parties also self-appointed,
and which Kerensky's newly inaugurated government then proceeded to reject the authority of anyway.
So, for all the quite accurate accounts of the Bolsheviks using the Soviet to claim popular sovereignty they didn't really deserve,
it's not like Kerensky, his government, or this pre-parliament, were that much different.
And this, I think, is something Lenin understood very very,
well, that the contest of October 1917 should not be understood as a legitimate government
being attacked by an illegitimate usurper, but instead as two irreconcilable political
factions making equally contrived claims to popular sovereignty locked in a death match that only one
could emerge from. And moreover, this was a contest that could only be won by force.
Later in the day on October 24th, Lenin hastily scrawled a note to his comrades saying,
The situation is critical in the extreme.
To delay the uprising would be fatal.
With all my might, I urge my comrades to realize that everything now hangs by a thread,
that we are confronted by problems which are not to be solved by conferences or congresses,
even congresses of Soviets, but exclusively by the struggle of armed people.
We must at all cost this very evening, this very night, arrest the government.
We must not wait.
We may lose everything.
The government is tottering.
It must be given the death blow at all costs.
Kerenzky certainly understood the contest in these terms.
He absolutely believed he commanded a vastly superior force to the Bolsheviks,
which is why he welcomed such a confrontation.
After leaving the pre-parliament, he ordered his loyal forces to secure the four critical
bridges across the Neva River linking the Bolshevik stronghold in the Vborg district in the north
to the center of the city where all the key government buildings sat. At his immediate disposal were the
cadets from an officer school, a regiment of soldiers mounted on bicycles, a few Cossacks, and the
Women's Death Battalion, a unit of hyper-patriotic women formed at the outset of the June
offensive. They had been meant to simply be a showpiece of Kerenzky's new Democratic Army,
But they had fought with notable commitment during his failed offensive,
even as the men mostly sat on their hands, got drunk, or deserted.
Detachments from the women's death battalion set up pickets at the Winter Palace
and around key bridges in Petrograd.
But right from the outset, it became clear Kerensky had dramatically underestimated his strength.
The great poet, playwright, and novelist Zinaida Gibbius, noted in her diary on October 24th,
Nobody wants the Bolsheviks, but nobody is prepared to fight for Kerenzky either.
The small number of forces loyal to the government could only secure two of the bridges across the Neva.
Companies loyal to the MRC, on the other hand, cheered on by angry crowds, one control of the other two.
But mostly, most people were just neutral.
The vast majority of soldiers, sailors and civilians in Petrograd took no part whatsoever in the showdown between the government and the Bolshevik.
They merely observed events with detached curiosity and waited to find out who won.
To help turn curious onlookers into active supporters, the Bolsheviks did everything in their power to frame their actions as a defense of Petrograd and of the revolution.
Everything they did was in the name of the Soviet, carried out by its military defense force, the Military Revolutionary Committee.
Operating out of the Smolny Institute, home of the Petrograd Soviet,
Trotsky drove this point home over and over again, telling everyone, this is defense, comrades, this is defense.
Left SR members of the MRC issued a press release saying, contrary to all rumors and reports,
this was not a proactive insurrection.
All actions were instead exclusively for defense.
The Bolsheviks newspaper, now back up and running, flooded the streets with proclamations.
soldiers, workers, citizens. A stroke of high treason is being contemplated against the Petrograd Soviet.
The campaign of the counter-revolutionists is being directed against the all-Russian Congress of Soviets on the eve of its opening, against the constituent assembly, against the people.
The Petrograd Soviet is guarding the revolution. The military revolutionary committee is directing the repulse of the conspirators' attack.
This was then followed by a further decree from the MRC telling everybody to be on high alert and follow orders.
This defensive operation then moved to take key strategic locations in Petrograd.
A unit under MRC orders took the main telegraph office.
Later that evening, MRC units took over the main newswire of the city,
allowing them to control information coming into and going out of the capital.
The Bolsheviks also had lots of partisan comrades in the ranks of the Baltic fleet stationed in Helsinki.
Word came over the wire to launch ships to Petrograd to defend the Soviet and the revolution.
These sailors began preparing at once.
There was not really any act of fighting on October 24th, and the political leaders in Petrograd argued over how to resolve the crisis.
At 8.30 that night, the pre-parliament reconvened for a turbulent session.
S.Rs and Mensheviks managed to carry emotion.
to create a committee of public safety,
composing leaders of all parties
to try to avert open war between the Bolsheviks and the government.
But when two Menshevik leaders hustled over to the Winter Palace
to work out the details with Kerenzky,
they found him consumed in a rapid cycle, manic depressive episode.
He alternated rapidly between doom-laden fatalism
and defiant optimism that he was about to achieve his most brilliant triumph.
Kerenzky's boasting that he alone could save the revolution
did not fill anyone else with a great deal of confidence.
At the Smolny Institute,
all the socialist and revolutionary parties convened for a massive non-stop debate.
The riotous assembly was frequently interrupted by catcalls,
heckling, cheering, booing,
and sometimes there were so much noise speakers could not be heard over the din.
These debates pitted Trotsky and the Bolsheviks against the Menshevik
and SR leaders who were still on the executive committee of the Soviet, who everyone knew would
be replaced as soon as the second Congress of Soviets formally convened the following afternoon.
The arguments of these right-leaning Mensheviks and SRs was that launching an insurrection was
disastrously premature and would invite fatal counter-revolution. The masses are sick and exhausted,
one Menshevik leader said. They have no interest in the revolution. If the Bolsheviks start anything,
that will be the end of the revolution.
The counter-revolutionists are waiting for the Bolsheviks to begin riots and massacres.
Another invoked the Marxist theories that they were all ostensibly adherence of.
Engels and Marx said the proletariat had no right to take power until it was ready for it, he said.
In a bourgeois revolution like this, the seizure of power by the masses means the tragic end of the revolution.
Trotsky, as a social democratic theorist, is himself opposed to what he is.
he is now advocating.
But what we know is that Trotsky has by now a well-developed theory of permanent revolution
and no longer has any truck with the kind of fastidiously pedantic readings of historical
materialism the Mensheviks were now insisting on.
The Mensheviks and the socialist revolutionaries conquered the cadets, Trotsky replied,
and then when they got power they gave it to the cadets.
They tell you that you have no right to make an insurrection.
insurrection is the right of all revolutionists. When the downtrodden masses revolt,
it is their right. Old Julius Martoff, meanwhile, leading his handful of left-leaning
Menshevik internationalists, was not explicitly hostile to Bolshevik goals, but instead to Bolshevik
tactics. Martov rose and said,
The internationalists are not opposed to the transmission of power to the democracy,
and by that he meant the Soviets, but they disapprove of the methods of the Bolsheviks.
This is not the moment to seize power.
As this rowdy and turbulent assembly unfolded,
Lenin himself arrived at the Smolny Institute
to make sure his comrades did not listen to his old friend Martov
or abandoned the tactics that were going to see this thing through to the end.
Arriving in disguise, because he was, after all, a state criminal and a wanted man,
Lenin arrived to find a whirling cacophony of activity.
Soldiers, sailors, workers, onlookers, red guards, and parts,
party delegates, all running around shouting at each other. Out in front of the building,
crowds gathered, and various armed units attempted to maintain order on a very chilly night,
lit and heated by perpetual bonfires. Lenin was briefly refused admittance to the Smolny
Institute because he had no pass, but the general unmanageability of the growing crowd allowed him
to slip his way in. Once inside the building, he made a B-line for room 36, where the Bolsheviks
made their party headquarters.
Once inside the room, he pushed his comrades to stand firm.
This was their moment.
A failure to see this thing through would have far more fatal consequences than backing down.
Trotsky thoroughly agreed, and he, Lennon, and other members of the Central Committee,
made plans to move decisively from defense to offense.
They poured over maps of the city, making plans to seize more strategic points,
culminating with the capture of the Winter Palace and arrest of the provisional government.
According to Lenin, this had to be done by noon the following day,
as the Second Congress of Soviets was set to convene at 2 o'clock.
This Congress needed to be presented with a fate accompli,
not a possible course of action to be debated.
They also drafted a list for a new government to take the place of the old provisional government,
full Bolsheviks, of course.
As they got to work on this, they decided they didn't want to call
call themselves ministers anymore, as it carried the taint of the old regime, the old ways,
and the old world. Trotsky suggested they call themselves people's commissars, and Lenin said,
yes, that's very good. It smells terribly of revolution. In the small hours of October 25th,
1917, MRC units fanned out across the city, easily capturing the Palace of Engineers,
the Central Post Office, several train stations, the telegraph exchange, and the electrical station,
whereupon they cut power to all government buildings but the Smolny Institute.
They also took over the state bank.
The regiment guarding the bank had previously voted to remain neutral in any political conflict,
and so when the MRC showed up and said, why don't you guys take off, those guys just took off.
When you tally up the raw numbers, it's true that only a faction of the Petrograd garrison was committed to the Bolsheviks.
But that fraction positively dwarfed those willing to fight.
and die for Kerensky's government. And that was really all that mattered.
Adding to this Bolshevik force, excuse me, MRC force, sailors at the Kronstadt Naval Base
received orders to depart for the city center at once. But even more dramatically,
the battleship Aurora, crewed by radicals and docked at the Petrograd Shipyard,
sailed their ship up the Neva River to put it in position to fire on the Winter Palace.
with everyone and everything set to converge on the Winter Palace at noon.
Around mid-morning, the Bolsheviks flooded the streets of Petrograd
with an explosive and somewhat premature declaration addressed to the citizens of Russia.
It announced in big, bold letters.
The provisional government has been deposed.
State power has passed into the hands of the organ of the Petrograd Soviet of workers and soldiers' deputies,
the military revolutionary committee, which heads the Petrograd proletariat,
and the garrison. The cause for which the people have fought, namely the immediate offer of
a democratic peace, the abolition of landed proprietorship, workers control overproduction,
and the establishment of Soviet power, this cause has been secured. Long live the revolution
of workers, soldiers, and peasants. By this point, Korensky realized how badly he had
overestimated his strength in Petrograd and arranged to get the heck out of town. He remained undaunted,
wars, and, like Nicholas and Alexandra before him,
remain convinced that while this handful of malcontents may have the upper hand in the capital,
the Bolsheviks hardly commanded the entire army, navy, or resources of the Russian Empire.
But further establishing his very thin base of support in Petrograd,
Korenski's staff could not immediately deliver vehicles to get him out of town.
They had to scrounge around and procure two automobiles,
one of which they jacked from the American embassy.
When Kerenzky sped out of Petrograd around 11 a.m., he was in a car waving the American flag and boasting diplomatic plates,
blowing through checkpoints without even bothering to slow down.
Most people didn't even know Kerenzky had left the Capitol, and they spent the whole day believing the looming showdown at the Winter Palace was going to end with his arrest.
But just as everything looked like it was going to be settled decisively in the next 60 to 90 minutes,
a somewhat absurd comedy of errors unfolded that dragged out events for more than 12 hours.
The commander of the Peter and Paul Fortress,
situated just across the river from the Winter Palace,
was supposed to issue an ultimatum to the provisional government inside the Winter Palace,
saying surrender or face artillery bombardment.
But when the soldiers prepared this artillery bombardment,
they discovered the guns on the side of the fortress facing the palace were in complete disrepresent.
pair. So, the noon deadline came and went without ultimatum or incident. It took several hours for the
garrison to haul up new guns, and it was only after these guns were put into position that the soldiers
realized these guns took a different kind of ammunition, a kind of ammunition they did not have.
This led to several more hours of delay. Meanwhile, the battleship Aurora sat anchored menacingly,
but it didn't have any ammunition at all. The ship had been undergoing repair,
and all they had on hand were blanks.
So hours just ticked by without anything happening.
One Bolshevik in the Smolny Institute recalled Lenin was beside himself with agitated rage
and said he was like, a lion in a cage.
He was ready to shoot us.
The delays at the Winter Palace necessitated stalling the official opening of the Second Congress of Soviets,
originally scheduled for 2 p.m.
Lenin was terrified that if the Congress convened before the provisional government was
arrested, the Congress would start debating the issue, which would be fatal for his plans.
So, with more than 650 delegates just kind of milling around the building, Trotsky preempted access
to the main assembly room by calling an emergency session of the Petrograd Soviet.
Once gaveled into session, Trotsky rose and declared,
On behalf of the Military Revolutionary Committee, I declared that the provisional government
no longer exists. Someone in the audience shouted,
you are anticipating the will of the Second Congress of Soviets.
Trotsky retorted,
The will of the Second Congress of Soviets has already been predetermined
by the fact of the workers and soldiers' uprising.
Now we have only to develop this triumph.
Now this is hardly what was going on out there in the streets.
At that moment, the workers were mostly either at home or at work,
while the vast majority of soldiers were standing around
unconsciously chosen neutrality.
But then Lenin came out into the assembly to a mix of wild applause and angry cat calls.
It was his first public appearance since that brief and unenthusiastic speech he had given in the midst of the July days.
Lenin announced the beginning of a new era for Russia and ended by calling out,
Long live the World Socialist Revolution.
The Mensheviks and the SRs in the hall were furious at the sheer audacity of the Bolsheviks,
making these wildly outrageous claims.
They were nakedly stalling the opening of the Second Congress,
a Congress the Bolsheviks themselves had so relentlessly demanded.
They were claiming the government was overthrown when in point of fact the government
was sitting untouched in the Winter Palace.
The Bolshevik coup on behalf of the Soviet was proclaimed,
but it was not achieved, not by a long shot.
To the credit of the remaining ministers in the Winter Palace,
they refused to just surrender.
Even after they belatedly discovered, Karenski had ditched them,
they understood his departure to be in the name of raising reinforcements to come save them.
So despite the frequent demands that they surrender,
each time they replied they would rather die than give in.
But this was really not the case for their would-be defenders.
At the outset of October 25th,
there were perhaps 3,000 armed guards in and around the Winter Palace,
artillery school cadets, some Cossack horsemen,
the women of the women's death battalion,
but over the course of the day, guards had been deserting left and right, some individually,
some in whole groups.
The ministers of the provisional government may have been ready to die, but there were very
few people willing to die for them.
By the end, there were maybe 300 armed guards left inside.
Security at the palace was not tight, and famously, John Reed, Louise Bryant, and a handful of
others, just kind of walked through an open door. And during the long afternoon of waiting,
they wandered around the palace, checking things out, interviewed people, tried to get an interview
with Kerensky, but couldn't because Kerensky wasn't there. After they left, they walked around
the city center and witnessed the reality of the day. On this most auspicious of days, what would in
the future be dubbed the Great October Socialist Revolution, most of the population of Petrogram,
Brad was just kind of going about its business.
The restaurants weren't closed, so they grabbed some dinner.
The only notice taken of the Great October Socialist Revolution
was the waiter moving them to an inner ballroom away from the front windows,
in case of gunfire.
Other than that, dinner was fine.
When they got out, Reed and Bryant and the others wandered around.
A few blocks away, Reed said,
We could see the trams, the crowds, the lighted shop windows,
and the electric signs of the moving picture shows.
Life going on as usual.
We had tickets to the ballet at the Marinsky Theater.
All the theaters were open, but it was too exciting out of doors.
But it's not that people were ignorant of what was happening.
Just they weren't really participating.
Up the Nevsky, he reported, the whole city seemed to be out promenading.
On every corner, immense crowds were massed around a core of hot discussion.
Pickets of a dozen soldiers with fixed bayonets lounged at street crossings.
red-faced old men in fur coats shook their fists at them,
smartly dressed women screamed epitets.
The soldiers argued feebly with embarrassed grins.
Meanwhile, at the Peter and Paul Fortress, there was one final debacle.
They were supposed to signal the final assault to the Winter Palace by raising a red lantern.
The problem was, they couldn't find a red lantern.
The commander had to go digging around in the basement,
and even when he found one, he and his men found it nearly impossible to fit it
to the flagpole as instructed.
But finally, at about 9.40 p.m., one of the guns of the Aurora blasted a deafening roar.
The entire city heard it.
But almost nobody knew it was only a blank, least of all the ministers inside the Winter Palace
who dove for cover.
After the blast from the Aurora, the guns from the Peter and Paul Fortress opened up,
firing maybe 30 to 35 shots.
Most of these shots fell harmlessly in the river or exploded before impact.
but it made for quite a show, despite doing very little damage.
With shelling now finally audible at the Smolny Institute, signaling the imminent arrest of the provisional government,
the Bolsheviks finally allowed the opening of the second All-Russian Congress of Soviets.
There were 670 delegates assembled for this Congress, 300 of them Bolsheviks, 193 SRs,
with more than half of those being left SRs ready to caucus with the Bolsheviks,
68 Mensheviks and 14 Menshevik internationalists like Julius Martoff.
The rest of the delegates were unaffiliated with any party.
Now it goes without saying that the Bolshevik proportion of delegates in the room that night
was not a reflection of how much support they actually commanded throughout the Russian Empire.
But even their outsized proportions only netted them a strong plurality rather than an outright majority,
and they still needed the left SRs to support them.
The previous executive committee, which had been in place since June,
now gave way to a new executive reflecting the number of delegates in the room that night.
Fourteen Bolsheviks, including Trotsky, Zinoviev, and Alexandra Colentai,
plus seven left SRs, including their leader, Maria Spirudunov.
The Mensheviks were allotted seats, but refused them.
They refused to cooperate with what they said was an illegitimate power grab.
But though there was a lot of anger at business,
Bolshevik tactics in the room. Bolshevik objectives were actually commanding quite a bit of support.
Practically everyone in the room agreed the provisional government was not legitimate. They agreed the
Soviet needed to claim power and use it as a base of an all-socialist government who would govern
until the constituent assembly was called. The policies of that government would be immediate peace,
immediate land transfers to the peasants, immediate worker control of the factories. This is basically
just the Bolshevik program. The only subtle distinction is that most delegates, including
most of the rank-and-file Bolshevik delegates, assume that this government would be a unity coalition
representing all the socialist parties, Bolsheviks, Mensheviks, and S-Rs. Martov put forward a motion
calling for exactly that, and despite some very vocal pushback from the Bolshevik leadership,
this motion carried nearly unanimously. The sense of this second Congress of Soviets,
was that the government needed to be a government of all the socialist parties, not just the Bolsheviks.
But rather than go into coalition with the Bolsheviks, the right SRs and Mensheviks, still furious at their behavior,
and honestly believing that the Bolsheviks were leading the revolution to its destruction,
announced their intention to leave the Congress and marched down to the Winter Palace,
where they would intervene to save the provisional government.
But this walkout simply guaranteed ultimate Bolshevik victory.
The Menshevik Nikolai Sukhanov, who wrote one of the vital revolutionary memoirs, later lamented,
We completely untied the Bolsheviks hands, making them ministers of the whole situation and yielding to them the whole arena of the revolution.
A struggle at the Congress for a united Democratic front might have had some success.
But by leaving the Congress, we ourselves gave the Bolsheviks a monopoly of the Soviet, of the masses, and of the revolution.
By our own irrational decision, we assured the victory of Lenin's whole line.
And to add insult to injury, their dramatic demonstration at the Winter Palace never happened.
The delegates who quit the Congress joined representatives from the Petrograd Municipal Duma,
including the Mayor of Petrograd, and formed a column of about 300 people heading towards the Winter Palace.
John Wreath, Louise Bryant, and their group happened to encounter this procession about a block away
from the Smolny Institute. There, they ran into an MRC checkpoint manned by some armed sailors,
and Reed recorded one of the most infamous incidents of October 25th. One of the soldiers yelled
at these demonstrators, I have orders not to let anybody go to the Winter Palace. Then the
mayor of Petrograd stepped up and said, we are unarmed, but we are going to the Winter Palace.
He dramatically said, shoot us if you want to, we're ready to die. The soldiers said, no, I can't allow you to pass.
So another demonstrator said,
What will you do if we go forward?
Will you shoot?
The sailor said, no, I'm not going to shoot people who haven't any guns.
We won't shoot Russian people.
So the mayor said, we will go forward and what can you do?
At this point, another sailor, very irritated, took over negotiations.
He said, we will spank you.
And then, if necessary, we will shoot you too.
Go home now and leave us in peace.
flummoxed, but not willing to force the issue, this processional march to the Winter Palace was called off.
All the demonstrators turned around and left.
Back in the Smolny Institute, Martoff was still trying to affect a compromise.
He put forward a motion criticizing the Bolsheviks for preempting the will of the Congress
before it had a chance to decide for itself what it wanted to do,
but he still called for an inter-party negotiation to form a broadly inclusive socialist government.
But after the walkout of the Mensheviks and the SRs, his call for compromise and coalition
landed with far less enthusiasm than it had just a few hours earlier.
In response to Martov's motion, Trotsky mounted the Tribune and eviscerated the compromise position.
A rising of the masses of the people requires no justification.
What has happened is an insurrection, not a conspiracy.
We hardened the revolutionary energy of the Petersburg workers and soldiers.
We openly forged the will of the masses for an insurrection and not a conspiracy.
The masses of the people followed our banner, and our insurrection was victorious.
Now all of this is extremely debatable, but his last point really landed home.
Now we are told, renounce your victory, make concessions, compromise.
With whom? I asked, with whom are we to compromise?
With those wretched groups which have left us, or who are making this proposal?
But after all, we had a full view of them. No one in Russia is with them any longer. A compromise is supposed to be made, as between two equal sides, by the millions of workers and peasants represented in this Congress, whom they are ready, not for the first time or the last, to barter away as the bourgeoisie see fit. No, here no compromise is possible. To those who have left and to those who tell us to do this, we must say, you are miserable bankrupts. Your role is.
is played out. Go where you want to go into the dustbin of history. At this, Martoff stood up and said,
well, then I will leave. A delegate blocked his way and said, and we had thought that Martoff at least
would remain with us. Martoff said, one day you will understand the crime in which you are taking part.
And then he left. Now, this is a pretty heavy moment. Remember, Lenin and Martoff go back more than 20 years
to when they were just baby revolutionaries together.
They had stayed up all night talking on their last night
before being exiled to Siberia in 1896.
They had started Iskra together
to fight against the economists and revisionists and reformists
who would turn revolutionary Marxism into mere trade unionism.
Their feud, which was at the heart
of the original Bolshevik-Menshevik split,
was as much personal as it was ideological.
Martov was initially more upset
at Lenin's callous personality than his political tactics.
And even now, at this late hour, on the moment of achieving what they had both been aiming for
their whole lives, a socialist revolution in Russia, Martoff ultimately could not abide
Lenin's personality or his methods or his tactics, and he quit. He walked out of the Congress
and into the dustbin of history. Lenin made no effort to stop Martoff, or turn him around or make
him change his mind. But in the thick of the coming chaos, he would do everything he could to ensure
Martov survived, and from his position as chairman of the Council of People's commissars of the Russian
Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, Lenin made sure Martoff's medical bills were paid after
Martoff resigned himself to a life of bitter exile. In the summer of 1921, Lenin reflected on his
regrets. The biggest, it is a pity Martoff is not with us.
What an amazing comrade he was, such a pure man.
At 2 o'clock in the morning on what was now technically October 26th, 1917,
MRC forces stormed the Winter Palace.
Well, stormed is a bit of an overstatement.
A mix of red guards, regular soldiers, armed sailors, and some random angry bystanders
entered the palace while blasting away with their guns.
Bullets ricocheted off walls and shattered the last remaining windows,
but nobody was really fighting back, so there were very few casualties.
To the extent that anything of note took place during the storming of the Winter Palace,
it was simply that people started looting the palace,
and were only stopped when officers at the MRC called out that this was the people's palace now,
stop looting from the people.
Vladimir Antonoff, Secretary of the Bolshevik military organization,
led a detachment of armed men into the room where the last remaining members of the provisional government sat waiting.
When he entered, he said,
I inform all of you members of the provisional government, you are under arrest.
Whether they were actually willing to die or not is irrelevant.
Antonov was not there to kill them.
Then he led the ministers out of the palace and threw an angry crowd who very nearly lynched them,
but Antonov refused to let any harm come to them,
and they were safely deposited in cells in the Peter and Paul fortress.
Where they would wait for what?
no one knew. By three o'clock in the morning word had come back to the Smolny Institute that the
Winter Palace had fallen and the government was under arrest. This news set off absolute bedlam.
Practically everyone who opposed the insurrection had long since departed. A few Menshevik
internationals tried to insist on a coalition of government of socialists, but what had been possible
a few hours earlier, even unanimously supported, was now rejected out of hand. At 5 a.m., they approved
a proclamation Lenin drafted to the Russian people in the name of the Soviet,
announcing grandiosely and somewhat aspirationally,
backed by the will of the vast majority of the workers, soldiers, and peasants,
backed by the victorious uprising of the workers and the garrison,
which has taken place in Petrograd,
the Congress takes power into its own hands.
The provisional government has been overthrown.
The majority of the members of the provisional government are already under arrest.
They further announced the policies they hoped would give this narrow insurrectionary coup a broad
base of support. The Soviet government will propose an immediate democratic peace to all nations
and an immediate armistice on all fronts. It will secure the transfer of the land of the landed
proprietors, the crown, and the monasteries to the peasant communities without compensation.
It will protect the rights of the soldiers by introducing complete democracy in the army.
It will establish workers' control over production.
It will ensure the convocation of the Constituent Assembly at the time appointed.
It will see to it that bread is supplied to the cities and prime necessities to the villages.
It will guarantee all the nations inhabiting Russia the genuine right to self-determination.
This was the basis of the Bolshevik Revolutionary Program.
The proclamation ended by calling on the people to remain ever vigilant against the forces of counter-revolution
who were now surely gathering in strength.
It said,
The Cornelof men, Kerenzky, and others,
are attempting to bring troops against Petrograd.
Several detachments,
whom Kerenzky has moved by deceiving them,
have come over to the side of the insurgent people.
Soldiers, actively resist Karenski the Kornilofite.
Be on your guard.
Railwaymen, hold up all troop trains
dispatched by Kerenzky against Petrograd.
Soldiers, workers in factory and office,
the fate of the revolution and the fate of the democratic peace is in your hands.
Long live the revolution.
Then the Congress of Soviets adjourned this session.
Only time would tell if these tumultuous days in October 1917 were the epicenter of a historical earthquake or a flash in the pan.
I think the fact that I'm sitting here talking to you about it, and you're sitting there listening to me talk about it more than a hundred years later is maybe all the answer we need.
it's pretty well proof that whatever else it was or was not,
the October Revolution was quite a historical earthquake.
