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Trudovaya Pravda No. 25, |
Published according to |
From V. I. Lenin, Collected Works, 4th English Edition,
Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1964
Vol. 20, pp. 381-87.
Translated from the Russian
by Bernard Isaacs
and Joe Fineberg
Edited by Julius Katzer
page 381
There can be no more important duty for class-conscious workers than that of getting to know their class movement, its nature, its aims and objects, its conditions and practical forms. That is because the strength of the working-class movement lies entirely in its political consciousness, and its mass character. At each step in its development, capitalism increases the number of proletarians, wage-workers; it rallies, organises and enlightens them, and in this way moulds a class force that must inevitably march towards its goal.
The Marxists' programme and their decisions on tactics, as constantly expounded in the press, help the masses of the workers to understand the nature, aims and objects of the movement.
The struggle between the various trends in the working-class movement of Russia has deep class roots. The two "trends" which are fighting Marxism (Pravdism) in the working-class movement of Russia and which, because of their mass form and their roots in history, deserve to be called "trends", i.e., Narodism and liquidationism, express the bourgeoisie's influence on the proletariat. This has been explained many times by the Marxists and acknowledged in a number of decisions adopted by them in regard to the Narodniks (the fight against whom has been going on for thirty years) and in regard to the liquidators (the history of liquidationism goes back about twenty years, for liquidationism is the direct continuation of Economism and Menshevism).
page 382
More objective data on the strength of the different trends in Russia's working-class movement are now steadily accumulating. Every effort must be made to collect, verify and study these objective data concerning the behaviour and moods, not of individuals or groups, but of the masses, data taken from different and hostile newspapers, data that are verifiable by any literate person.
Only from such data can one learn and study the movement of one's class. One of the greatest, if not the greatest, faults (or crimes against the working class) of the Narodniks and liquidators, as well as of the various groups of intellectuals such as the Vperyodists, Plekhanovites and Trotskyists, is their subjectivism. At every step they try to pass off their desires, their "views", their appraisals of the situation and their "plans", as the will of the workers, the needs of the working-class movement. When they talk about "unity", for example, they majestically ignore the experience acquired in creating the genuine unity of the majority of Russia's class-conscious workers in the course of two-and-a-half years, from the beginning of 1912 to the middle of 1914.
Let us then tabulate the available objective data on the strength of the various trends in the working-class movement. Those who believe in subjective appraisals and promises are free to go to the "groups". We invite only those who desire to study objective figures. Here they are:
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Prav- |
Liqui- |
Per cent |
Left | |
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Prav- |
Liqui- | ||||
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1. Number of deputies elected by
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page 383
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Prav- |
Liqui- |
Per cent |
Left | |
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Prav- |
Liqui- | ||||
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page 601
[171] The article "Objective Data on the Strength of the Various Trends in the Working-Class Movement " was written by Lenin on the basis of a wide range of facts and figures, carefully collected and analysed, concerning money collections for the workers' press, which served as objective evidence of the strength of the various trends in the working-class movement in Russia. The Central Party Archive of the Institute of Marxism-Leninism under the Central Committee the C.P.S.U. has in its possession the manuscripts of Lenin's computations of the collections made by the newspaper Pravda number of workers' groups united by the newspaper Zeit and their contributions, the computations to the table given in the article (See pp. 382-85 of this volume), and tabulated figures showing what collections were made for the various newspapers and where they were made. The original draft conspectus and a synopsis of the article are also to be found in the Archive. The figures quoted in this article were used by Lenin in subsequent articles. [p. 381]
[172]
This refers to Töö Hääl (The Voice of Labour ), an Estonian newspaper of a Pravdist trend, which appeared in Narva three times a
week from January to May 1914, and the Lithuanian weekly Vilnis (The Wave ), published in Riga in 1913-14.
[p. 385]
[173]
This refers to the legal workers' newspaper Nash Put (Our Way ) published in Moscow, the first issue appearing on August 25 (September 7), 1913. Lenin took an active part in the newspaper, sending his articles simultaneously to Pravda and Nash Put. The latter published a number of articles by Lenin, namely: "The Russian Bourgeoisie and Russian Reformism", "The Role of Social Estates and Classes in the Liberation Movement", "Class War in Dublin", "A Week After the Dublin Massacre", "Questions of Principle in Politics", "Harry Quelch" and others.
[174] The newspaper Trudovaya Pravda No. 12 for June 11, 1914, published a paragraph entitled "How Does It Happen?", in which it quoted a number of instances of Nasha Rabochaya Gazeta, the organ of the liquidators, reprinting, under the guise of workers, correspondence, information from the bourgeois newspapers which distorted the facts of reality in working-class life. [p. 387] [175] Sputnik Rabochego for 1914 (Worker's Companion for 1914 ) -- a pocket calendar issued by the Priboi Party Publishes in December 1913, and sold out in a single day. A second revised edition was issued in February 1914. The calendar contained the article by Lenin "Strikes in Russia". (See present edition, Vol. 19, p. 385.) [p. 387] | |||||