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Lenin Collected Works:
Volume 42
Preface by
Progress Publishers
Volume Forty-Two contains items written after the October
Revolution, which were first published in the Complete Russian
Edition of Lenin’s Collected Works or which were
published in Lenin Miscellanies, magazines and
newspapers. These documents form an important supplement to the
works included in the various volumes of this edition.
The first group of documents dates to the period from November 1917
to July 1918—the period of continued development of the
socialist revolution and consolidation of Soviet power. Mention
should be made first of all of “Theses on the Tasks of the
Party + the Present Situation”, the article “Plekhanov
on Terror”, the “Draft Resolution for the C.C.,
R.S.D.L.P.(B.) Concerning the Expulsion from the Party of
S. A. Lozovsky”, the “Outline of a Programme of Economic
Measures” and a number of chapters of the original version of
the article “The Immediate Tasks of the Soviet
Government”. These deal with the tasks that faced the working
class after the conquest of power, stress the necessity for
strengthening the dictatorship of the proletariat and suppressing
the resistance of the overthrown exploiting classes, and sharply
criticise the Right-opportunist elements within the Party.
Several documents relate to Lenin’s fight to get Russia out of
the war, to conclude the Brest peace treaty ("Speech at a Joint
Meeting of the Bolshevik and Left S.R. Groups in the All-Russia
Central Executive Committee, February 19, 1918", “Speech to
the Lettish Riflemen, February 20, 1918” and others). The
numerous decisions for the Council of People’s Commissars
drafted by Lenin reflect the first steps of the Communist Party and
the Soviet Government in the field of political, economic and
cultural activities.
A large part of the materials relate to the period of foreign
military intervention and the civil war, among them: notes on
“The Tasks and Organisation of the Work of the Council of
Defence”, “Notes at a Meeting of the Commission on
Cartridges”, “Draft Resolution for the C.C., R.C.P.(B.)
on Sending Groups of Workers Out on Food Transportation Jobs”,
“Draft Decision for the Council of Defence on the Mobilisation
of Soviet Employees”, “Draft Decisions for the
C.C. Politbureau on Measures to Fight Mamontov”,
“Proposals on Military Questions”, “Decisions of
the Politbureau of the C.C., R.C.P.(B.) on the Order of the
Revolutionary Military Council of the Western Front” and
Lenin’s speeches: “Speech to Ivanovo-Voznesensk
Communist Workers Leaving for the Front, October 24, 1919",
“Speech at the Eleventh Issue of Red Commanders of the First
Moscow Machine-Gunners Training Courses, May 12, 1920",
“Report on the Internal and External Position of the Republic
at a Meeting of Activists of the Moscow Organisation of the
R.C.P.(B.), October 9, 1920". These and many other documents
strikingly illustrate the gigantic activities of the Central
Committee and the Soviet Government, headed by Lenin, in organising
the defeat of the interventionists and whiteguards.
A considerable part of the volume is made up of items and documents
written after the war, when the problems of economic rehabilitation
and socialist construction bulked large. Industry, agriculture,
science and technology, public education, improvement of the
machinery of state, the national question, foreign policy—all
these problems were dealt with daily by Lenin, who directed the
activities of the Party and the Government.
The items included in this volume contain important supplementary
material showing how Lenin worked on the plan of socialist
construction.
Of great significance are the chapters of the original version of
“The Immediate Tasks of the Soviet Government” (the end
of Chapter IV, chapters V-IX and the beginning of Chapter X) which
were first published in 1962. In these chapters Lenin sets forth in
greater detail than in the final text a number of questions relating
to the task of starting construction of a new society and reveals
the importance
of solving economic problems and the need for proper management of
the national economy during the period of transition from capitalism
to socialism. In interviews given to Lincoln Eyre, correspondent of
the American newspaper The World, and to the correspondent
of the Japanese newspaper Osaka Asahi and in his
“Notes on Electrification” Lenin characterises the role
of electrification in building the economic foundation of socialism
and developing the productive forces. Questions of the New Economic
Policy are dealt with in the “Reply to the Debate on the
Report on Concessions” at the meeting of the Communist group
of the All-Russia Central Council of Trade Unions on April 11, 1921,
in speeches made at the Tenth All-Russia Conference of the
R.C.P.(B.) during the debate on the resolution on questions of the
New Economic Policy, and in a letter “To the Russian Colony in
North America”.
Consistent application of democratic centralism in running the
economy, scientific planning, rational and efficient management,
proper organisation of labour, the introduction of cost accounting,
the running of enterprises on a paying basis, and the use of moral
and material incentives for developing production were considered by
Lenin to be the most vital principles and methods of socialist
management. Mention can here be made of such documents as the
“Speech at a Meeting of the Presidium of the S.E.C., April 1,
1918", “Comments on the Draft 'Regulations for the Management
of the Nationalised Enterprises"', “Salaries for
Specialists”, “Addendum to the Draft Regulations on
Subbotniks”, “Draft of the Main Point of the
C.L.D. Decision on the General Planning Commission”,
“Plan of an Article 'Commercial Organisation' ",
“Motion to the Politbureau of the C.C., R.C.P.(B.) on Bonuses
for Enterprises” and others.
Defining the tasks of economic construction in his “Plan of a
Speech at the Trade Union Congress”, Lenin wrote:
"Work discipline, higher labour productivity, work
organisation, increased output, relentless fight against slipshod
work and red tape. By this sign shall ye conquer” (p. 308).
Materials such as: “Addendum to the Draft Decision for the
C.P.C. 'On the Distribution of Agricultural Machines' ",
“Draft Decision for the C.L.D. on Fowler Ploughs”, the
draft decision on “Measures for Improving the Organisation
of State Farms” and others show Lenin’s concern for the
revival of agriculture, for the supply of the peasants with
machines, for the development of the state farms, for support of the
co-operatives on the part of the state and for the creation of
conditions for the socialist transformation of the village.
A number of materials deal with questions of cultural development:
the draft decision for the C.P.C. on “Library
Organisation”, “Instructions for Compiling a Reading
Book for Workers and Peasants”, “Draft Decision for the
Politbureau of the C.C., R.C.P.(B.) on the Chief Committee for
Political Education”, “Rough Draft of a Resolution on
Proletarian Culture”, “Addendum to the Draft Decision
for the C.P.C. on an Obligatory Science Minimum in the Higher
Schools”, “Draft Decision for the Plenum of the C.C.,
R.C.P.(B.) on the Reorganisation of the People’s Commissariat
for Education”, “Directives on the Film
Business”. These and other documents contain important
propositions regarding the substance and ways of effecting a
cultural revolution, the communist education of the working people,
the political enlightenment of the masses.
Of exceptionally great significance. is the letter “On the
Establishment of the U.S.S.R.” in which Lenin put forward the
idea of creating a Union of Soviet Socialist Republics as a single
multinational socialist state based on a voluntary association of
equal and sovereign Soviet Republics. Questions concerning the
national policy of the Communist Party and the Soviet Government are
dealt with also in the “Notes at a Meeting of Delegates to the
Second All-Russia Congress of Communist Organisations of the Peoples
of the East”, “Draft Decision for the Politbureau of the
C.C., R.C.P.(B.) on the Tasks of the R.C.P.(B.) in
Turkestan”, “Draft Decision for the Politbureau of the
C.C., R.C.P.(B.) on the Tasks of the R.C.P.(B.) in Localities
Inhabited by Eastern Peoples” and other items, in which Lenin
urges the need for unity and fraternal co-operation among all the
nationalities of the Soviet land and for waging a vigorous fight
against chauvinism and nationalism.
The speech winding up the debate on the report on concessions at the
meeting of the R.C.P.(B.) group at the Eighth Congress of Soviets
contains Lenin’s important thesis on
Soviet patriotism: “The patriotism of a person who is prepared
to go hungry for three years rather than surrender Russia to
foreigners is genuine patriotism, without which we could not hold
out for three years. Without this patriotism we would not have
succeeded in defending the Soviet Republic, in doing away with
private property.... This is the finest revolutionary
patriotism” (p. 245).
In his note “The Democratism and Socialist Nature of Soviet
Power” and his “Speech at a Meeting in Presnya District,
July 26, 1918", Lenin characterises the Soviets and reveals the
genuine democratism of the Soviet Constitution.
Many documents reflect Lenin’s efforts to improve the working
of the machinery of state, and strengthen state, Party and public
control: “Proposals for the Distribution of Functions Between
the Deputy Chairmen of the C.P.C. and the C.L.D.", “Proposals
Concerning the Work Routine of the Deputy Chairmen and the Chairman
of the C. P.C.", “Letter to L. B. Kamenev, A. I. Rykov and
A. D. Tsyurupa on the Distribution of Work Between the Deputy
Chairmen of the C.P.C. and the C.L.D.", "Politbureau of the C.C.,
R.C.P.(B.) Directives on a Workers' Inspection”,
“Materials to the Article 'How We Should Reorganise the
Workers' and Peasants' Inspection"', etc. A number of documents are
devoted to the strengthening of socialist Legality: “Rough
Theses of a Decision on the Strict Observance of the Laws”,
“Proposals Concerning the Work of the Vecheka”,
“Speech at the Fourth Conference of Gubernia Extraordinary
Commissions, February 6. 1920” and others.
Lenin regarded the Communist Party as the guiding and directing
force of Soviet society. He never relaxed his efforts to strengthen
the ideological and organisational unity of the Party, he urged the
need for doing everything to develop inner-Party democracy, to
rigidly adhere to the principle of collective leadership and to
strengthen the Party’s ties with the masses. These questions
are dealt with in many documents included in this volume:
“Speech on the Immediate Tasks of Party Development” at
the Ninth All-Russia Conference of the R.C.P.(B.), draft resolution
and proposals for the resolution on this question, speech to the
R.C.P.(B.) group at the Eighth Congress of
Soviets during the debate on the report of the All-Russia C.E.C. and
C.P.C. concerning home and foreign policies, “Speech at a
Meeting of Moscow Party Activists, February 24, 1921", “Draft
of a Letter of the C.C., R.C.P.(B.) on the Attitude to Non-Party
Workers”, “Outline of a Speech at a Meeting of
Supporters of the 'Platform of Ten"'—delegates to the Tenth
Congress of the R.C.P.(B.), “Remarks Concerning the Work Plan
of the C.C., R.C.P.(B.)".
Lenin’s draft resolution for the Politbureau of the
C.C. concerning Maxim Gorky’s articles in the magazine
Communist International is a striking illustration of his
high-principled attitude, his intolerance towards the cult of
personality.
Of great importance is the series of documents dealing with the
Soviet state’s foreign policy: the interviews with foreign
correspondents, the “Draft Directives to the Deputy Chairman
and All Members of the Genoa Delegation”, “Draft
Directives of the C.C., R.C.P.(B.) for the Soviet Delegation to the
Genoa Conference”, “Draft Decision for the C.C.,
R.C.P.(B.) on the Tasks of the Soviet Delegation at Genoa”,
“Amendments and Remarks to the Draft Declaration of the Soviet
Delegation at the Genoa Conference” and others, which
formulate the fundamental principles of the Soviet Republic’s
foreign policy and the aims and methods of Soviet diplomacy.
These documents show how consistently the Soviet Government, headed
by Lenin, pursued its policy of peace and establishment of business
relations with the capitalist countries. In his interview given to
an American correspondent, Lenin said: “I know of no reason
why a socialistic commonwealth like ours cannot do business
indefinitely with capitalistic countries” (p. 177). At the
same time the Soviet Government strongly rebuffed all attempts of
the imperialist powers to interfere in the internal affairs of the
Soviet Republic or to impose upon it fettering terms of an economic
agreement. Lenin said: “We have reiterated and reiterated our
desire for peace.... But we do not propose to be strangled to death
for the sake of peace” (ibid.).
Notable items in this volume are the documents which reveal the
friendly fraternal relations between the Soviet State and the
countries where the people had come to power. This volume contains
the draft decisions for the C.P.C.
concerning a treaty with the Socialist Workers' Republic of
Finland. This was the first treaty in history to be signed between
two socialist republics, and represented a new type of international
relations between equal sovereign states. The text of Lenin’s
“Talk With a Delegation of the Mongolian People’s
Republic” contains important guidelines on the paths of
development towards socialism for countries with a pre-capitalist
social system, and on the specific features of the tactics which the
revolutionary parties in these countries should adopt.
The writings included in this volume are a valuable supplement to
the well-known works of Lenin dealing with the international labour
and communist movements. Mention should first of all be made of
Lenin’s letter to Chicherin (at the end of December 1918)
outlining the basic ideological platform and organisational
principles of the Communist International. Of considerable interest
are the materials relating to the Second Congress of the
Comintern—the “Plan of a Resolution Concerning the
Meaning of the Concept 'Dictatorship of the Proletariat' and the
Fight Against the 'Fashionable' Distortion of This Slogan”,
“Remarks on the Report of A. Sultan-Zade Concerning the
Prospects of a Social Revolution in the East” and others. A
number of documents deal with the Third Congress of the Comintern
and show what a tremendous job Lenin performed in preparing the
basic decisions of the Congress and guiding its proceedings. These
include: “Letter to 0. W. Kuusinen and Remarks on the Draft
'Theses on the Organisational Activities of the Communist Parties,
on the Methods and Content of Their Work"', “Remarks on the
Draft Theses on Tactics for the Third Congress of the Communist
International”, “Speeches at a Meeting of Members of the
German, Polish, Czechoslovak, Hungarian and Italian
Delegations”.
These documents reflect the irreconcilable struggle which Lenin
carried on against Right-wing opportunism, reformism and
revisionism, and at the same time against Leftism, adventurism,
dogmatism and sectarianism in the international communist
movement. They contain very important guidelines on questions of the
strategy and tactics of the international communist movement. The
Communist Parties, Lenin emphasised, should focus their attention on
the task
of winning over the majority of the working class, the bulk of the
working masses, and prepare them for the socialist revolution. In a
number of documents—"Draft Decision of the Politbureau of the
C.C., R.C.P.(B.) on the Tactics of the United Front”,
“Letter to Members of the Politbureau of the C.C., R.C.P.(B.)
with Remarks to the Draft Resolution for the First Extended Plenary
Meeting of the Comintern Executive on Participation in a Conference
of the Three Internationals”, “Proposal to the Draft
Resolution for the Eleventh Party Congress on the Report of the
R.C.P.(B.) Delegation in the Comintern"—Lenin argues the case
for the tactics of a united front, the adoption of a united action
by the working class.
The Appendix to the volume contains questionnaires filled in by
Lenin in the capacity of delegate to Communist Party congresses and
conferences, in the course of reregistration of members of the
Moscow organisation of the R.C.P. and under the All-Russia census of
the R.C.P. members.
Of considerable interest are the records of Lenin’s official
orders and instructions, reception of visitors and other facts
entered in the Journal of Lenin’s Duty Secretaries. This
document reveals how manfully Lenin fought his illness, giving all
his strength to the cause of the Party, the cause of the working
class.
Institute of Marxism-Leninism of the C.C. of the C.P.S.U.
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