TEDDPUKE!!!Thu May 8 00:14:53 200312.80.76.69Mark Weber Excerpts From Solzhenitsyn's New Book On The Jews 2 May 2003 A Russian friend recently sent the URL to Alexander Solzhenitsyn's newbook on the role of Jews in Communism, Dvesti let vmeste - Two HundredYears Together — available on the internet in Russian at http://sila.by.ru/ .Using Altavista's Babelfish, we've translated someof it into English, and then cleaned up the English somewhat, so as topresent to you the first English-language excerptsfrom the book available anywhere. Here are some excerpts from Chapter15, "The Bolsheviks." This is our rough, and possibly in some placesimperfect, translation. -- LSN Staff ( lsn@overthrow.com ), April 23, 2003 [ For more on this subject, see "The Jewish Role in theBolshevik Revolution and Russia's Early Soviet Regime": http://64.143.9.197/jhr/v14/v14n1p-4_Weber.html ] PART II - In THE SOVIET TIME Chapter 15 -- THE BOLSHEVIKS This is not a new theme: the Jewish role in Bolshevism. On it, much hasalready been written. Those who try to prove that the revolution wasnon-Russian indicate the Jewish names and pseudonyms in an attempt toremove from the Russian people the blame of the revolution of 1917. ButJews, who began by similarly denying the role of Jews in positions Bolshevikauthority, have now been forced to admit participation, but claim thatthose Jews were not Jews in spirit, but otshchepentsy (renegades). Let us agree with this statement and admit we are unable to judgepeople's spirits. Yes, these were otshchepentsy . However, by that logic, the leading Russian Bolsheviks were also notRussians in spirit, but were frequently both anti-Russian andanti-Orthodox, and in their minds Russian culture was refracted throughthe lenses of political doctrines and calculations. But a question is raised: How much evidence must there be of theparticipation of random otshchepentsev before acknowledges a patternthat defies random distribution? What fraction of the Jewish nation isrequired? We know about the Russian otshchepentsakh: the depressingnumber that joined the Bolsheviks -- an unpardonable number. But howwidely and actively did Jews participate in strengthening Bolshevik authority? And another question: what was the reaction of each group's people toits otshchepentsam. The reactions of people to otshchepentsev can bedifferent -- they can curse them or praise them, ostracize them or jointhem. And the manifestations of this -- the reactions of the masses ofthe people, whether Russian, Jewish or Latvian -- have been given verylittle consideration by historians. The question is one of whether the people renounced theirotshchepentsev, and whether the renunciation that did occur reflectedthe sense of the people. Did a people choose to remember or not toremember it otshchepentsev? In answer to this question, there must notbe doubt: The Jews choose to remember. Not just to remember theindividual people, but to remember them as Jews, so that their names maynever disappear. There is perhaps no more clear example of otshchepentsa than Lenin: onecannot fail to recognize Lenin as Russian. To Lenin Russian antiquity wasdisgusting and loathsome; in all of Russian History he seems only to havemastered Chernishevsky and Saltykov-Schedrin. Yes, he frolicked with theliberal views of Turgenev and Tolstoy. But in him there appeared noattachment even to the Volga, where he passed his youth. To thecontrary, he pitilessly brought terrifying hunger there in 1921.Everything with him was thus -- everything Russian among which he grewgenerated inside him hatred. That Orthodox faith in which he could havegrown, he strove instead to weaken and destroy. Even in youth he wasotshchepenets. But nevertheless he was Russian, and we Russians mustaccept criticism for it. But if we speak of the ethnic origin of Lenin,we must not change our method of judgment, when we recognize that hewas a cross-breed of the most different bloodlines: his grandfatheraccording to the father, Nikolai Vasilyevich, was of the blood of aKalmik woman Anna Alekseyevna Smirnova; another grandfather Israel[baptized Aleksandr] Davidovich was a Jew; another grandmother, AnnaIogannovna (Ivanovna) Grosshopf, the daughter of a German and a Swede.But all of this cross-breeding does not give us the right to reject himas a Russian. We must accept him as a creation completely Russian sincehis national character -- that which infused his spirit -- wasintertwined with the history of the Russian Empire. But to the creationsof Russia, that country which erected us, and its culture, his was aspirit alienated and at times sharply anti-Russian, but nevertheless wecan in no way renounce him. But the Jewish otshchepentsa? As we saw, in 1917, the Jews had not allbeen drawn to Bolshevism. Instead, they had been drawn to a myriad ofrevolutionary movements. at the last conference of the RSDRP -- theRUSSIAN SOCIAL DEMOCRATIC WORKER'S PARTY (London 1907) -- the Mensheviks-- of the 302-305 delegates the number of Jews exceeded 160, that is,more than half. As a result of the April conference of 1917, among ninemembers of the new Central Committee of the Bolsheviks we see G.Zinoviev, L Kameneva, and Sverdlova. In the summer of the congress ofthe rKPb (renamed from the RSDRP) to the TSCK there were eleven members,among them Zinoviev, Sverdlov, Sokolniks, Trotsky, and Uritsky. Then, on10 October 1917, in the apartment of Gimmera and Flakserman, where thedecision was made about the Bolshevik Revolution, among the 12participants were Trotsky, Zinoviev, Sverdlov, Uritskiy, Sokolniks [andone other Jewish name the translator won't give us properly]. And whowas chosen first for the Politburo? Of its seven members: Trotsky,Zinoviev, [another Jewish name], Sokolniks. That is in no way a smallproportion. There can be no doubt -- Jewish otshchepentsy were presentin the Bolshevik leadership in great disproportion to their numbers inthe population -- and they comprised too many of the Bolshevikcommissars for a relationship to be denied. It can be certain that the Jewish leadership of Bolshevism was notcompletely monolithic. Even the Jews in the Politburo did not act as aBloc. Some were against the revolution, believing that it was not theproper moment. Then, already, Trotsky was the autocratic genius of theOctober revolution; he did not exaggerate his role in his writings onthe subject. Lenin hid himself in a cowardly manner and played noessential role until after the revolution had been complete. Generally, Lenin was guided by a spirit of internationalism, and even inhis dispute with the bund in 1903, he adhered to the view nationalismdid not exist and must not exist, and that the question of nationalismdivided revolutionary from reactionary socialism. (In harmony with thisview Stalin declared that the Jews were [not?] a nation and thus prophesiedtheir eventual assimilation.) Accordingly, Lenin consideredanti-Semitism to be a tactic of capitalism, and saw in it not an organicexpression of the will of the people but a convenient method ofcounterrevolution. But Lenin also understood what a powerful mobilizingforce the Jewish question was in the ideological fight. He also saw toit that the special bitterness of the Jews to the Tsar was prepared forus in the Revolution. However, from the first days of the revolution Lenin found it necessaryto consider how the Jewish question would eventually be addressed. Likemuch he did not foresee in state questions, he did not see how theformation of Jewish power within the Bolsheviks would lead the Jews, asa result of war scattered throughout Russia, to take control of theapparatus of the Russian state during the decisive months and years -- aprocess that began with the replacements that occurred after theBolshevik mass strike against Russian clerks. That strike was organizedby the Jewish settlers in the Russian frontier and border regions, whodid not return to their relatives after the war. But the liquidation of permanent residency in 1917 particularly resultedin the great dispersion of Jews from the urban centers inside Russia, nolonger as refugees and settlers, but as migrants. Soviet information in1920 states that to Samara alone ten thousands Jews has settled inrecent years, in Irkutsk, the Jewish population grew to fifteenthousand. Large Jewish settlements were formed in central Russia and theUrals. This was performed in large part by Jewish social securityagencies and philanthropic organizations. A small pile of Bolsheviks having now come to power and taken authority,their control was still brittle: Whom could they trust in thegovernment? Whom could they call to aid? The seeds of the answer lay inthe creation in January 1918 of a special people's commissariat from themembers of the Jewish commissariat, whose reason was expressed inLenin's thought: The Bolshevik service in the revolution was possiblebecause of the role of the large Jewish intelligentsia in several Russiacities. These Jews engaged in general sabotage, which was directedagainst Russians after the October Revolution and which has beenextremely effective. Jewish elements, though certainly not the entiretyof the Jewish people, saved the Bolshevik Revolution through these actsof sabotage. Lenin took this into consideration, and emphasized it inthe press ... and he recognized that to master the state apparatus hecould succeed only because of this reserve of literate and more or lessintelligent, sober and new clerks. Thus the Bolsheviks, from the first days of their authority, called uponthe Jews to assume the bureaucratic work of the Soviet apparatus -- andmany, many Jews answered that call. They, in fact, respondedimmediately. The sharp need of the Bolsheviks for bureaucrats toexercise their authority met great enthusiasm among young Jews,pell-mell with the Slav and international brethren. And this was in no waycompulsory for these Jews, who were non-party members, and who had been previouslycompletely non revolutionary and apolitical. This phenomenon was notideological but a phenomenon of mass calculation by the Jews. And theJews in the previously forbidden and cherished rural provinces and theircapitals gushed out of their ghettos to join the Bolsheviks, seeing inthem the most decisive defenders of the revolution and the most reliableinternationalists, and these Jews flooded and abounded in the lowerlayers of the party structure. To every man who was not a member of the nobility, a priest or a Tsaristbureaucrat the promises of the new clan were extended. And to encourageJewish participation, the Bolsheviks organized in St. Petersburg theJewish division of the nationalities commissariat. In 1918 it wasconverted into a separate commissariat of its own. And in March 1919, inthe eighth congress of the rKPb, with the proclamation of the CommunistUnion of Soviet Russia, it was made into an organic and special part ofthe rKPb, in order to integrate it into the Communist International, andit a special Jewish section was created in the Russian TelegraphicAgency. The statements made by Shub that Jewish young people joined thecommunist party in response to anti-Semitic pogroms conducted inWhite-controlled areas in 1919 has no basis in reality. The mass inflowof Jews into the Soviet apparatus occurred in 1917 and 1918. There is nodoubt that the pogroms of 1919 strengthened the allegiance of Jews tothe communist party, but it in no way created it. .... Rarely do authors deny the role of Jews in Bolshevism. While it is truethat the appearance of Bolshevism was the result of the special featuresof Russian history the organization of Bolshevism was created throughthe activity of Jewish commissars. The dynamic role of Jews inBolshevism was estimated by contemporary observers in America. Thetransfer of the Russian Revolution from the destructive phase into thebuilding phase was seen as an expression of the ability of the Jews tobuild elaborate systems based on their dissatisfactions. And after thesuccesses of October, how many Jews themselves spoke about their role inBolshevism with their heads held high! Let us recall that how, before the revolution, revolutionaries andradical-liberals were willing to oppose the restraints placed upon theJews not out of love for the Jews, but for political purposes. So in thefirst months and years after the October Revolution the Bolsheviks madea great effort to hunt down Jews for use in the state and partyapparati, not out of affinity for the Jewish people, but for theabilities they combined with their alienation and hatred of the Russianpopulation. In this manner they also approached the Latvians, theHungarians and the Chinese. Though the mass of the Jewish population initially viewed the Bolshevikswith alarm, thought not hostility, after finding that the revolutiongranted them complete freedom, and that it welcomed a bloom of Jewishactivity in the public, political and cultural spheres, the Jewishpopulation threw themselves into Bolshevism; and Bolshevik authorityparticularly attracted those whose character held a surplus of cruelty. The question then emerges of when Communist authority spread fromRussia, and came to engulf world Judaism. The stormy participation ofJews in the Communist revolution drew cautious statements of concernsabout world Jewry that were quieted, their evidence concealed, bycommunist and Jews worldwide, who attempted to silence it by denouncingit as extreme anti-Semitism. After 70 or 80 years has passed, and under the pressure of many factsand discoveries, the view of Jewish involvement in the revolutionaryyears had opened slightly. And already many Jewish voices have been todiscuss this publicly. For example, the Poet Naum Korzhavin has notedthat along as it is "taboo" to speak of the participation of the Jews inBolshevism, it will be impossible to properly discuss the revolutionaryperiod. There are even times now when Jews are proud of theirparticipation -- when Jews have said that they did participate in therevolution, and in disproportionately large numbers. M Argusky has notedthat Jews involved in the revolution and the civil war was not limitedto the revolutionary period but also continued in their considerable andwidespread involvement in running the state apparatus. Israeli socialistS. Tsiryul'nikov has stated that from the beginning of the revolutionJews served as the basis of the new communist regime, But most Jewish authors, today still deny the contribution of Jews toBolshevism, sweeping the evidence aside with anger, or, more frequently,with reference to the pain such evidence causes them. But despite their pain there is no doubt that these Jewish otshchepentsyfor several years after the revolution dominated Bolshevism, headed thebelligerent Red Army (Trotsky), the ALL-RUSSIAN CENTRAL EXECUTIVECOMMITTEE (Sverdlov), ran both capitals (Zinoviev), the Komintern(Zinoviev), the Profintern / Red Trade Union International(Dridzo-Lozovskiy) and the Komsomol (Oscar Ryvkin, after it LazarusShatskin, the very same and in the chapter of the Communistinternational of young people). In the first council of People's Commissars there was, true, only oneJew, but the influence of this one Jews, Trotsky, Lenin's second,exceeded that of all the rest. And from November 1917 through 1918 thereal government was not the Council of Peoples' Commissars but the inthe so-called "Malyy"[?] Council of People's Commissars: Lenin, Trotsky,Stalin, Karelin, Prosh'yan. After October, of no less importance thatthe Council of People's Commissars, was the presidium of VCTscIcK, theALL-RUSSIAN CENTRAL EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. Among its six chairman:Sverdlov, [unintelligible Jewish name], Volodarsky, and Glass. M. Agursky correctly notes that in the country, where on
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