lenin | SabrangIndia News Related to Human Rights Fri, 09 Mar 2018 04:34:55 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 https://sabrangindia.in/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Favicon_0.png lenin | SabrangIndia 32 32 Why the Sangh Parivar Wants to Break Lenin’s Statues https://sabrangindia.in/why-sangh-parivar-wants-break-lenins-statues/ Fri, 09 Mar 2018 04:34:55 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/03/09/why-sangh-parivar-wants-break-lenins-statues/ They are afraid that his ideas will appeal more to Indian people and uproot their own retrogressive ideology.   Image Courtesy: Marxismo Crítico.com   Since the BJP-IPFT government has assumed power in Tripura dozens of CPI (M) offices have been vandalized and their cadre is being constantly attacked. The CPI (M) has claimed that more […]

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They are afraid that his ideas will appeal more to Indian people and uproot their own retrogressive ideology.

Image Courtesy: Marxismo Crítico.com
 
Since the BJP-IPFT government has assumed power in Tripura dozens of CPI (M) offices have been vandalized and their cadre is being constantly attacked. The CPI (M) has claimed that more than 500 cadres have been attacked till now and more than 200 hundred offices have been vandalized. In this complete breakdown of law and order, supporters of BJP broke Vladimir Lenin’s statue in south Tripura . A video of this incident shows how the goons wearing saffron caps are breaking down the statue using a bulldozer and others are shouting “Bharat Mata ki Jai”.

But we should understand here that it is not just about a statue. What is the Sangh Parivar trying to prove by pulling down Lenin’s statue? They have already declared that this is an ideological war. But then the question arises: what is the symbolic influence of Lenin which BJP and the Sangh want to destroy? Another question which is being raised by some Sangh supporters is what is a foreign leader’s statue doing in India?

Let us first understand the symbolic significance of Lenin. Lenin is one of the biggest pillars of the ideology of socialism. He not only gave the ideology new dimensions but also played an important role in building the first socialist state of the world. Socialism in very basic language is an ideology which says that capital should not rule the world, it should be ruled by the common people and it also shows the path for achieving this goal. If we state this in even more simpler terms then socialism aims for an equal and just society ultimately moving towards a classless society. Here it should be added that even the preamble of Indian constitution states that “WE, THE PEOPLE OF INDIA, having solemnly resolved to constitute India into a SOVEREIGN SOCIALIST SECULAR DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC and to secure to all its citizens…..”

The ideology of socialism was formulated in a scientific way by Marx and Engels, and Lenin took the flame forward. Socialists believe that whenever there is a change in modes of production new classes emerge, but it does not put an end to the exploitation of one class by the other. Socialism showed the world which was divided on the lines of religion, race and delusions that it was actually constantly being divided into two classes – capitalist and the working class. The capitalists have control over means of production and the working class sell their labor to live a miserable life. The world is ruled by the capitalists because they control the means of production and the working class have to lead a miserable life because they don’t have any other option but to sell their labor at a minimal price. The world for the first time in history got to know that poverty is not because of sheer chance or ones past sins but it is a result of exploitation of workers by the capitalists. The solution to this problem was that the workers of the world have to be united and break the chains of this unfair system to establish a fair and just system.

This beautiful idea was developed by Lenin to apply in conditions of countries like Russia. He gave the teaching of how to make a vanguard party for which revolution would be the sole purpose. He explained to the masses what revolution would actually mean and showed how it could be achieved.
In his book “State and Revolution” Lenin explains how all the states which exist in the world are representatives of the ruling class – mostly capitalist in today’s world – and hence they are used as a tool for exploiting the working class. How if workers and peasants gain control over the means of production they can end this exploitation and build an egalitarian society. One of his great contributions was also that he explained what imperialism is. Lenin taught that when capitalism develops to a very advanced stage, it is no longer able to get enough profit from one country and it economically (and often physically) captures and starts ruling over other countries. This is called imperialism and he also explained how to defeat it by breaking it at its weakest link.

The historical importance of Lenin is so big because under his leadership a truly peoples’ state was established for the first time in the world. The people of Russia breaking the chains of oppression created a state, the USSR, which gave women economic and social rights and for the first time in history gave them voting rights. Apart from this it gave free health care, it achieved 100% literacy in a small period of time and made huge advances in the area of science and technology which included sending the first man in space. According to the famous economist Angus Maddison “Soviet economic growth per capita between 1913 and 1965 was the fastest in the world, of all the major or developed countries – faster, that is than in Japan”. Apart from this, Soviet Union became the first state in the world which made employment a fundamental right and ended unemployment till 1936.
After the Russian revolution it was the ideology of Marxism Leninism which inspired the Cuban, Vietnamese, North Korean and Chinese socialist revolutions.

For all those who ask the question that why have a statue of Lenin in India, the answer comes here. The taking down of the Tsarist regime in Russia inspired all the third world to break the shackles of colonialism which resulted in the liberation of India and other third world countries. Lenin had been a supporter of national liberation struggles and also extended his support for Indian independence.

Our country’s biggest revolutionary Bhagat Singh was also inspired by Lenin as is very evident from his writings. In his article “To young political workers” Bhagat Singh has urged the youth of India to learn from Lenin and to work for a socialist revolution. He writes “We require — to use the term so dear to Lenin — the “professional revolutionaries”. The whole-time workers who have no other ambitions or life-work except the revolution. The greater the number of such workers organized into a party, the great the chances of your success.”

On 21st January 1931 Bhagat Singh and his comrades wrote a Telegram on Lenin’s Day which they read out in the court, it read “On Lenin Day, we send hearty greetings to those who are doing something for carrying forward the ideas of the great Lenin. We wish success to the great experiment Russia is carrying out. We join our voice to that of the international working class movement.” It is a historical fact that just before his death Bhagat Singh was reading Lenin’s Biography.

Apart from Bhagat Singh the Gadar revolutionaries and Chittagong revolutionaries also joined the socialist movement. Bhagat Singh’s comrades like Shiv Verma, Ajoy Ghosh and Yashpal all became important figures of the socialist movement. Not just socialists but when the Russian Revolution happened, even the radicals in the Congress like Bipin Chandrapal , Bal Gandhadhar Tilak and Lala Lajpat Rai welcomed the event and drew inspiration from it. The workers movement of India got a massive boost after the 1917 revolution and between 1919 and 1921 the country witnessed massive workers strikes. From Jawaharlal Nehru, Periyaar to Ravindranath Tagore all praised the Soviet Union when they visited the country in 1930s.

This is the answer to all those who ask what is the impact of Lenin on Indian freedom struggle. As far as the question of a foreign ideology is concerned, socialism shows the way ahead for ending poverty and exploitation which can be applied in all the countries but in different ways. Socialism is an international ideology because capitalism has been established across the world. The economic recession of 2008 this became evident as the crisis affected ever country on the globe. In these times of huge income inequality where we see 1% of people in India control 73% of the wealth the ideas of Lenin become even more important. Also, all those so called nationalists who are saying his is a foreign ideology, take lessons of nationalism from Hitler and Mussolini. One look at the texts of the “Guruji” of RSS Golwarkar shows that.

It is clear that the BJP and Sangh are scared of the ideas of Lenin and that is why they broke the statue. They along with the Congress represent the capitalist class which has the control over all resources of the country and are creating this income inequality. The Sangh Parivar knows that only the torch bearers of Leninism can demolish their rule of tyranny. In Lenin’s own words “fascism is the decay of capitalism” and hence they are scared. But they are forgetting that just breaking his statue can’t kill his ideas. Till there is exploitation in the world his ideas will keep on giving strength to the people who are fighting against exploitation. This reminds me of these lines of the revolutionary poet Pash “mai ghaas hun mai apke har kiye dhaare par ug jaunga” [I am grass, I will grow on all that you have ever done]

Courtesy: Newsclick.in

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Lenin Today, Periyar Tomorrow, who’s next on the Fascist radar? https://sabrangindia.in/lenin-today-periyar-tomorrow-whos-next-fascist-radar/ Tue, 06 Mar 2018 11:46:22 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/03/06/lenin-today-periyar-tomorrow-whos-next-fascist-radar/           Abraham Thomas on Facebook says, “The bifurcation of Andhra Pradesh (AP) was preceded a series of desecration’s and decapitations of statues of prominent Telugu scholars and freedom fighters on Tank Bund in Hyderabad during the million march. Statues of several prominent historical figures hailing from Andhra, including king Krishna Devaraya, Ranik Rudramma Devi, […]

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Abraham Thomas on Facebook says, “The bifurcation of Andhra Pradesh (AP) was preceded a series of desecration’s and decapitations of statues of prominent Telugu scholars and freedom fighters on Tank Bund in Hyderabad during the million march. Statues of several prominent historical figures hailing from Andhra, including king Krishna Devaraya, Ranik Rudramma Devi, Sri Sri, Joshua, Annamayya, Siddhendra Yogi Prakasham Pantulu were damaged by some of the participants of the Million March.” (sic)

Lenin in Tripura today, Gandhi tomorrow and who else will we bulldoze for crony capitalism and goondaism!?

India must stand up, now or never!

India did not have long to wait. Hours after a statue of communist icon Lenin was pulled down by BJP supporters in South Tripura’s Belonia district, Tamil Nadu BJP leader H Raja and BJYM  Vice President SG Suryah threatened to raze the statues of Periyar, the founder of  Dravidian movement, across the state. A sophisticated crane was used for the act of bringing down the statue. BJP National General Sectretary and Member of RSS National Executive, Ram Madhav reportedly appreciated the act in a tweet that was later deleted. The governor of Tripura, Tathagata Roy, a ‘pracharak’ of the RSS, sworn to its fascist views, has applauded the act. Days after the Left Front was voted out of power in the state, Tripura CPI(M) district secretary Tapas Datta said the five-feet tall fibre glass statue, which was unveiled by the party’s politburo member Prakash Karat a few months ago, was pulled down allegedly by BJP workers on Monday at College Square in Belonia, about 110 kilometre from Agartala.

In another Facebook post, which was later deleted, Raja called Erode Venkatappa Ramasamy Naicker, commonly known as Periyar, a “caste fanatic”, while Suryah tweeted saying “Can’t wait for the fall of EV Ramasamy statues in Tamil Nadu”. Raja said, “Who is Lenin and what is the connection between Lenin and India? What connection has India with Communists? Lenin’s statue has been removed in Tripura. Today it is Lenin’s statue in Tripura, tomorrow it will be the statue of caste fanatic EVR Ramasamy.”

Outlook reported that, reacting to Raja’s post, DMK working president MK Stalin said the BJP leader should not be allowed to touch Periyar’s statue and if he does so, the state government should jail him.

Periyar was a rationalist, one who believed that caste should be eradicated, and advocated for women’s rights. He is also credited with starting the Self-Respect Movement, in order to achieve a society where disadvantaged castes had equal rights. Both the main political parties in Tamil Nadu, the DMK and the AIADMK owe their origins to this movement. He launched the idea of a separate Dravida Nadu, an idea that was later modified to Tamil Nadu.

In October last year, Raja drew flak for posting a photo of actor Vijay’s voter ID card and official letterhead on Twitter, attributing the success of his film, Mersal, to his being Christian as his full name is C Vijay Joseph. Mersal contained dialogues critical of new national tax GST, introduced by the BJP government at the Centre in July 2017. Another rabid follower has appreciated Raja’s now deleted tweet.

 

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‘Revolution against Das Kapital’ and the ‘Lonely Hour of the Economy’ https://sabrangindia.in/revolution-against-das-kapital-and-lonely-hour-economy/ Wed, 08 Nov 2017 05:56:28 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2017/11/08/revolution-against-das-kapital-and-lonely-hour-economy/ This is a modified version of the article that was published earlier in The Wire   (T)he economic dialectic is never active in the pure state; in History, these instances, the superstructures etc – are never seen to step respectfully aside when their work is done or, when the Time comes, as his pure phenomena, […]

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This is a modified version of the article that was published earlier in The Wire
 

(T)he economic dialectic is never active in the pure state; in History, these instances, the superstructures etc – are never seen to step respectfully aside when their work is done or, when the Time comes, as his pure phenomena, to scatter before His Majesty the Economy as he strides along the royal road of the Dialectic. From the first moment to the last, the lonely hour of the ‘last instance’ never comes. – Louis Althusser, For Marx, London: Verso 1979, p. 113

The event known to the world as the ‘October’ revolution in Russia – or simply as the ‘Russian revolution’ – took place on 7-8 November, a hundred years ago. But then why call it the October revolution? Thereby hangs a tale – the tale of modernity, myth-making and of a new imagination of Time.

The moment of revolution, image courtesy libcom.org
The moment of revolution, image courtesy libcom.org

As a matter of fact, the Revolution occurred on 25-26 October, according to the Julian calendar (so called because it had been promulgated by Julius Caesar), which Russia, along with a large part of the Western world, followed at that time. It was only in January 1918 that the Soviet government decreed the shift to the Gregorian calendar. The reason was that Russia should join ‘all cultured nations in counting time’, as a decree cited by historian Mark Steinberg put it. Accordingly, the first anniversary of the revolution was celebrated on 7 November 1918 throughout the Soviet Union.

What is interesting here is not so much the shift but the reason assigned for it – joining other ‘cultured nations’ of the world, which in the language of the early twentieth century meant only one thing – the modern West, which had long been setting the norm for everything desirable. Ways of ‘counting time’ too had to be aligned with Europe, lest one be considered insufficiently modern. Spatially, the Czarist Russian empire straddled both Europe and Asia, which had already, in the new reckoning of Time, been cast as ‘advanced’ and ‘backward’ respectively. The desire to become modern and join the ‘cultured nations’ was to run through the history of the revolution and its consolidation into the new Stalinist state. This desire was to be manifested in its deep distrust of the peasantry and rural life on the one hand, and in the frenetic drive to ‘catch up’ with Western Europe. As Stalin would say, he wanted to accomplish in a couple of decades what Europe had in a few centuries, compressing time, as it were, into one dizzying experience for entire society. The continuing ‘past’ had to be annihilated.

The continuing ‘past’, often referred to as survivals, has not quite been taken head on, theoretically speaking, by Marxists in general. Many have been horrified at the violence that has often been meted out to forms of life associated with them, both by the processes of capitalist industrialization in Europe as well as by the Stalinist state in its forced collectivization and industrialization drives – and yet they have not quite cared to look at what Louis Althusser called the ‘theoretical status’ of these survivals. Althusser happens to be perhaps the lone Marxist thinker in the West to have squarely posed this question, given his deep engagement with Lenin and Mao’s thought. Thus his poser,
 

What is a ‘survival‘? …Is it essentially social or ‘psychological’? Can it be reduced to the survival of certain economic structures which the Revolution was unable to destroy with its first decrees: for example, the small scale production (primarily peasant production in Russia) which so preoccupied Lenin? Or does it refer as much to other structures, political, ideological structures, etc customs, habits, even ‘traditions‘ such as the ‘national tradition‘ with its specific traits?

Althusser went on to suggest that perhaps, ‘the new society produced by the Revolution may itself ensure the survival, that is, reactivation of older elements‘ in a variety of ways. These could have to do, precisely with the ways in which ordinary people may react to the various initiatives and steps undertaken by the revolutionary regime, as we can glimpse in the instances below.

But that too is perhaps only one aspect of the problem. The larger question, indeed, relates to the very philosophy of history that underlies the attribution of the status of ‘backwardness’ and ‘pastness’ to life forms that are our contemporaries.

Writing in December 1917, Antonio Gramsci, the Italian Marxist leader, welcomed the Russian revolution as a revolution against Das Kapital. ‘In Russia’, he wrote, ‘Marx’s Capital was more a book of the bourgeoisie than of the proletariat. It stood as a critical demonstration of how events should follow a predetermined course: how in Russia a bourgeoisie had to develop, and a capitalist era had to open, with the setting-up of a Western-type civilization, before the proletariat could even think of…its own revolution.’

Gramsci was writing long before the story was known of the Marx’s later troubled engagement with the Russian peasant communes and Eastern societies like India. That story was excavated decades later by the Japanese scholar Haruki Wada in the 1960s, and brought before the English-speaking world only in the 1980s. Wada brought before us the strange story of the suppression by his followers, of Marx’s four drafts of a reply to Vera Zasulich, precisely on the peasant commune. Very briefly, Zasulich, a former ‘populist’ (Narodnik) when she turned Marxist, had internalized the entire story of capitalism as narrated by Marx. Like most Marxists, she had begun to believe that in Russia too, a bourgeoisie and Western-style capitalism had to develop before any proletarian revolution could take place. But the Narodniks argued that in Russia this was not necessary, for the traditional peasant commune could actually form the basis of a future socialism based on common property. Zasulich’s question to Marx was about this difference of opinion, to which he wrote four drafts of a reply, but ended up not sending them. These drafts indicate he was rethinking.

Later, in the ‘Preface’ to the 1882 Russian Edition of the Communist Manifesto that Marx and Engels jointly wrote, the duo conceded that indeed, ‘the present Russian common ownership of land may serve as the starting point for communist development.’

While Gramsci hailed the Russian revolution as ‘the revolution against Das Kapital’, because of its not following the blueprint laid down in that text, he erred seriously in believing that the Bolsheviks had a very different understanding regarding the ‘inescapability’ of capitalist development.

As a matter of fact, the entire Bolshevik imagination – and Stalinism as its most virulent form – was predicated upon a fascination with capitalism and large-scale industry. The inescapable violence of large-scale industrialization, founded almost always on mass dispossession of agrarian and artisanal communities, that was spread over a few centuries in England, for example, was sought to be accomplished within a few decades in the USSR. Even though, for Lenin and his followers, ‘worker-peasant unity’ constituted an apparent article of faith, the peasant really was required only for the Bolsheviks to capture state power.

The war on the peasantry began immediately after the revolution. Lynn Viola, in her fascinating study Peasant Rebels under Stalin, brings to light a long suppressed story of the revolution, where it becomes apparent that in dealing the with the peasant as an exclusively economic category, the Bolsheviks erred from the very beginning. As the civil war raged, communists formed committees of the village poor to requisition and forcibly seize grain from the rich peasants, in order to feed the cities. But the poor peasants too considered themselves peasants, and were unwilling to turn in all their grain to those committees. As early as in May 1918, Lenin declared that ‘owners of grain who possess surplus grain’ but refuse to turn it in, regardless of social status, ‘will be declared enemies of the people’, against whom a ruthless war would be launched.

Undoubtedly, the exigencies of the civil war forced a certain ‘war communism’ on the peasantry in particular, but the roots of the idea lay deep in the philosophy itself: the peasants as a class, with their attachment to land and crop, had to be eliminated and transformed into propertyless workers. However, by March 1921, the communists had to retreat. A New Economic Policy was introduced that replaced forcible grain requisition with a ‘tax in kind’ and eventually, ‘money tax’. The peasant question, so to speak, was at the centre of this retreat.

And yet, this was merely a ‘tactical’ retreat for what was now in the offing was the programme of large-scale industrialization. The only way this could be done was by turning the terms of trade against agriculture, in favour of industry – with higher prices for industrial goods and lower for agricultural. This led to the peasants once again trying to secure their existence by refusing to part with their grain. Indeed, Evgenii Preobrazhensky, a significant leader of the Left Opposition, ultimately propounded his thesis of ‘primitive socialist accumulation’ that made a theoretical argument for squeezing the peasantry in order to facilitate accumulation for industrialization. Then, and later during the forced collectivization drive of the early 1930s, Viola tells us, when hundreds and thousands of peasants were deported and dispossessed, the violence was seen as ‘revolutionary necessity’.

And equally interestingly, through these decades, peasants saw in the coming of the Bolshevik state ‘the reign of Antichrist on earth’. The key question that most political histories of the revolution overlook is that which pertains to the great disjunction between the virtually exclusively economic view of classes and the way these ‘classes’ actually see themselves. Viola claims therefore, that the ‘nightmare of apocalypse pervaded the rumours of collectivization. Antichrist and the four horsemen of the apocalypse became figurative symbols in rumours portending the end of traditional ways of life.’

In a sense, such notions of doom, fuelled by rumours, were nothing new: they have been noticed elsewhere in peasant societies under stress of rapid and inexplicable transformation, just as they had been seen in Russian society at large, during the time of the revolution. However, larger questions of popular consciousness are indicated here. Gossip and rumours tied to notions of the Jews and Germans as ‘the enemy’ had been important in what Orlando Figes and Boris Kolonitskii call the ‘desacralization of the monarchy’, just as much as they had figured in the delegitimization of Kerensky, the charismatic leader of the Provisional Revolutionary Government, formed after the February revolution.

Thus ‘dark forces’ of speculative traders, Germans and Jews, and corrupt officials were seen to be conspiring to profit from people’s hunger. Such a perception helped turn bread queues ‘into food riots and demonstrations against the monarchy’, suggest Figes and Kolonitskii. It is a fact often brushed under the carpet that anti-Semitism was a fairly widely prevalent sentiment even among the supposedly ‘revolutionary’ and ‘Bolshevized’ masses. Neither the February revolution nor the October revolution actually can be understood as purely class phenomena. What is more, there is no ‘pure’ revolutionary subjectivity in evidence anywhere: the revolutionary element always co-existed with elements like anti-Semitism in the same social groups and individuals.

Kerensky recalled that as he fled the Winter Palace on 25 October 1917, he saw, written on the wall ‘Down with the Jew Kerensky, Long Live Trotsky’. The graffiti, say Figes and Kolonitskii, was doubly ironic, for Kerensky was not Jewish and there were no Jews in the Provisional Government – although it was often referred to as the Jewish government because it had given equal civil and religious rights to the Jews. And on the other hand, ‘Leon Trotsky (a.k.a. Bronstein) was the best known Jew that Russia ever had.’

Figes and Kolonitskii explain that the terms ‘Jew’, ‘German’ and ‘burzhooi’ (bourgeois) had become confused and even interchangeable in the plebeian language of the streets. ‘Kerensky had become the metaphoric “Jew” – a symbol of the fears and prejudices which had won the Bolsheviks their militant support’, they conclude.

Unfortunately, a lot of celebratory writing on the hundredth anniversary of this game-changing event of the twentieth century continues to be problematic for two interrelated reasons. First, it makes no attempt to come to terms with the ‘past’ the socialist revolution sought to annihilate. For this ‘past’ was actually the predominant present of peasant existence. Despite the predominance of capitalist relations in urban Russia, its society taken as a whole, still embodied a coexistence of different times. Second, this writing skirts important questions of the revolution’s secret history that has much to tell us about the complex relations between classes and the traditions and culture they inhabit; about forms of popular consciousness with all its complex and messy dimensions. Revolutions and projects of social transformation invariably flounder because they pay insufficient attention to culture and tradition.

Courtesy: Kafila.online
 

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