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Vol. 81/No. 10 March 13, 2017
100th anniversary of Bolshevik Revolution discussed at Havana event
BY JONATHAN SILBERMAN
AND MARTÍN KOPPEL
HAVANA — A program on the 100th anniversary of the October 1917
Bolshevik Revolution in Russia’s former czarist empire was one of the
special events at the Havana International Book Fair this year.
“Something that’s sometimes forgotten today,” said Isabel Monal, who
chaired the panel, is “the extraordinary influence of Lenin, of Marxism,
on Fidel and the Cuban Revolution.”
Monal, former longtime director of the Philosophy Institute in Havana,
is today the editor of the magazine Marx Ahora (Marx Today). She began
her history of revolutionary activity in the 1950s as part of the
underground struggle against the U.S.-backed Batista dictatorship. In
late 1958 she was arrested in the United States for transporting guns
destined for the July 26 Movement and Rebel Army, which under Fidel
Castro’s leadership brought the revolutionary struggle to victory here
in January 1959.
In October 1917, guided by the Bolshevik Party under Vladimir Lenin’s
leadership, working people in their millions overthrew the state power
of the capitalists and landlords in Russia and across the fallen
monarchy’s prison house of nations, stretching from eastern Europe,
through central Asia, to the Pacific. They established a workers and
peasants republic and opened the door to the world’s first socialist
revolution.
The panel discussion on lessons of that profound revolutionary upheaval
was organized by Ciencias Sociales publishing house. Ciencias Sociales
released a new Spanish-language edition of John Reed’s classic, Ten Days
That Shook the World, which was on sale throughout the 10-day book fair.
First published in English in 1919, the book is a vivid eyewitness
account of the Bolshevik-led revolution. Reed was one of the founders of
the Communist Party in the United States that same year.
The panelists were Dagoberto Rodríguez and Thalía Fung, professors at
the University of Havana, and Mary-Alice Waters, a leader of the
Socialist Workers Party in the United States and president of Pathfinder
Press.
“With the coming to power of Lenin and the Bolsheviks, the Russian
events grew in influence in the United States,” said Rodríguez in his
talk on the revolution’s impact in the U.S. For the first time ever,
there was “a government representing the interests of the broad majority
of the population.”
Attracted by the Bolshevik example, the revolutionary left wing of the
Socialist Party in the United States broke with the party’s reformist
leadership, Rodríguez said, and founded the Communist Party. It joined
the Communist International, a worldwide organization of revolutionary
workers parties launched in 1919 at the initiative of the Bolshevik
leadership.
Rodríguez focused on the reaction of the U.S. capitalist rulers, whose
fear of the revolution’s spreading example led them to launch a “red
scare,” arresting thousands of militant workers and deporting more than
500.
Two great socialist revolutions
Mary-Alice Waters spoke on “Lenin, Fidel, and the Role of the Individual
in History.” She drew on a message that Jack Barnes, national secretary
of the Socialist Workers Party, sent Raúl Castro, first secretary of the
Communist Party and Cuba’s president, after the death in November of
Fidel Castro, the central leader of the Cuban Revolution for six decades.
“There were two great socialist revolutions in the 20th century, one in
Russia, the other in Cuba,” Barnes said in the message. Without the
presence and political leadership of Lenin and Fidel at decisive
moments, “there is no reason to believe either revolution would have
been victorious.”
Fidel Castro’s highest achievement, Barnes wrote, “was forging in
struggle a revolutionary cadre, a communist cadre” that led the working
class in Cuba, their toiling allies, and youth attracted to their
leadership to take power and defend that power for more than half a
century.
Waters said that Fidel, “like Lenin and Che [Guevara], believed in the
capacity of ordinary human beings to accomplish what others believed to
be impossible, and, above all, to transform themselves in the process.”
She noted that “Lenin’s presence on the front lines of the revolutionary
struggle — sheltered by workers in the proletarian districts of
Petrograd — was necessary to the success of the proletarian revolution.
As was Fidel’s leadership in the Sierras, protected by peasants and
rural toilers among whom the Rebel Army began laying the foundations of
the new social order.”
And, just as it was Lenin who politically led the leaders of the Russian
Revolution, Waters said, it was Fidel’s “steady moral, political and
military leadership of the leadership” that was decisive in the Cuban
Revolution.
Waters stressed her agreement with Fidel Castro’s remarks last year that
it will not another century before “another event like the Russian
Revolution occurs.” (See Waters’ talk, p. 8.)
Thalía Fung spoke on “Lenin and the October Revolution.” As a young
lawyer in Santiago de Cuba in the 1950s, Fung defended some 30 members
of the July 26 Movement captured by the Batista dictatorship during the
November 1956 uprising in that city and participated in other
revolutionary activity the next two years in Bayamo, Manzanillo, and
Guantánamo. A graduate of Lomonosov University in Moscow, she was for
many years a leading figure in the School of Philosophy and History at
the University of Havana.
Fung focused on “Lenin’s role in the field of political philosophy and
political science.” Stating that “Rosa Luxemburg was more Marxist than
Lenin,” she pointed to differences between Luxemburg and Lenin over the
character of the working class and peasantry as “historical subjects,”
differences that have been part of debates over revolutionary strategy
since the founding of the international workers movement.
Those seeking social change in the world, Fung said, need to orient to
“our South,” referring to radical political currents and governments
today in Venezuela, Bolivia, Ecuador and elsewhere in Latin America.
A panelist invited to speak on the Russian Revolution’s impact in Latin
America was unable to attend at the last minute, so Isabel Monal took up
that theme as she introduced other speakers.
October Revolution: a beacon
“A central part of Lenin’s work was the effort to spread Marxism and
communist ideas throughout the world,” Monal said. “And the October
Revolution was a beacon for all of Latin America, for the revolutionary
popular movements that swept the continent in the 1920s.”
During the discussion, Rubén Zardoya, a University of Havana professor
who also works at the Center for Hemispheric and U.S. Studies, spoke
about Lenin’s political leadership in the first five years after the
revolution’s victory. Workers and peasants took power in October 1917 in
a country with a relatively low level of economic development, Zardoya
said. Lenin charted a course to broaden access to culture in order to
strengthen working people in the fight to transform social and economic
relations.
Zardoya urged participants to read Lenin’s 1922-23 speeches and writings
on these questions in the book Lenin’s Final Fight, published by
Pathfinder Press. Several years ago Zardoya, who was then rector of the
University of Havana, invited communists from the U.S. and other
countries to present that and other Pathfinder books to students there.
Martín Koppel, part of a group of communist workers from the Socialist
Workers Party and other countries who volunteered to staff the
Pathfinder stand at the book fair, spoke about the watershed the October
Revolution represented for the working-class movement in the United
States. During its early years the U.S. Communist Party led strikes,
defense campaigns, and other workers struggles, he said.
Koppel pointed to The First Ten Years of American Communism by James P.
Cannon, a founding leader of the Communist Party and later the Socialist
Workers Party. Cannon explains the decisive lessons the young CP learned
from the Bolshevik leaders of the Communist International, including the
necessity for the party to shed its underground existence and to
champion the struggles by African-Americans against racist
discrimination and for national self-determination. After the panel
discussion, several participants bought copies of that Pathfinder book
as well as Malcolm X, Black Liberation, and the Road to Workers Power by
Jack Barnes, which also takes up these questions.
Can’t ignore class struggle
In her remarks on Latin America, Monal pointed to political developments
in Brazil, Venezuela, and other countries in recent years with
governments claiming to represent working people.
“One of the big mistakes is that in a number of countries, movements
leading these processes threw the class struggle out the window,” she
said. “How can you understand the world if you don’t see social classes
and the class struggle? Sometimes you have to make alliances with
reformist groups on joint projects, but you can’t have too many
illusions in them.” The result is that little is done to meet the needs
of the working population.
Monal said she had been in Brazil when big demonstrations were held
demanding improvements in health care and other urgent needs. The
government later claimed credit for reforms, but the people knew these
measures had been carried out “because they went into the streets to
demand them.”
Today there’s a counteroffensive by the right and by imperialism against
these governments, Monal said. “And nobody should be surprised they’re
making gains. … When the counteroffensive begins, the masses of people
don’t take to the streets against it, because the governments promised
and could have done a number of things but didn’t do them.”
Monal recalled that as a young woman during the first years of the Cuban
Revolution, she had read the account of the Bolshevik-led insurrection
in Ten Days That Shook the World. “The book had a huge impact on me,”
she said. What is describes “remains relevant for today. And it has a
special relevance given the conditions in Latin America today.”
Related articles:
Lenin, Fidel and the role of the individual in history
Socialist revolutions in Russia and Cuba based on the liberating
capacities of working people
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