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  Wikipedia: Bolshevik

Wikipedia: Bolshevik
Bolshevik
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


Party meeting.

Bolshevik ("Большевик", derived from Russian word for "majority") is the name given to the faction of the Russian Social Democratic Labor Party (RSDLP) led by Vladimir Lenin, formed at the Second Party Congress in 1903. The other faction was known as the Mensheviks, derived from "minority". Shortly after the Bolsheviks seized power during the Russian Revolution of 1917, they changed their name to the All-Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks), and then at the 1936 Party Congress to the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.

The word "Bolshevik" is sometimes used as a synonym of Communist. It was often used by right-wingers outside the Soviet Union as a derogatory term for left-wingers, not all of whom were necessarily Communists. The Bolshevik political platform has often been referred to as Bolshevism.

Origins

At the Second Congress of the RSDLP, held in Belgium in 1903, Lenin was able to persuade the majority of the party elite to support him as leader of the party. Many commentators point out the difficulties presented to the Menshevik faction by getting lumbered with this name. In fact, the Mensheviks were actually the numerically larger faction among rank-and-file party members, but the majority of the party leadership supported Lenin; hence, Lenin's faction took the name "Bolshevik".


The Central Committee.
Bolsheviks believed in limiting the Party membership to professional full-time revolutionaries, organized in a strongly centralised hierarchy which sought to achieve power. Although the Bolsheviks were not completely monolithic, they were characterized by a rigid adherence to the leadership of Lenin, based on the notion of democratic centralism. The Mensheviks favored open party membership and espoused cooperation with the other socialist and some non-socialist groups in Russia. Bolsheviks generally refused to co-operate with non-extremist parties or democratic governments (which they labelled "bourgeois") or even eventually other socialist organizations, although Lenin sometimes made temporary alliances to deal with some ideological enemies.


Left to right: Trotsky, Lenin, and Kamenev at the 1919 Party Congress.

Leon Trotsky was initially a Menshevik, but in one of the key defections from that wing of the party, he lined up behind Lenin and became a Bolshevik after the First Russian Revolution.

During the First World War, the Bolsheviks initially took an anti-nationalist stance that emphasized solidarity between the workers of Russia and Germany, and the world - they considered that the Russian revolution was just the start of a world revolution. In the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, signed on March 3, 1918, independence was granted to a number of ethnically non-Russian provinces which were placed under the protection of Germany and Austria-Hungary, although Russian military weakness undoubtedly played a major part in convincing the Bolsheviks to give up these territories.

After the revolution the Bolsheviks banned Mensheviks and all other political organizations, establishing the "dictatorship of the proletariat". They also reversed some of the territorial losses suffered at Brest-Litovsk, re-annexing Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan in 1921.

Dealing with political enemies

The Bolsheviks gained a reputation for dealing harshly with those they regarded as "enemies of the revolution", although it has to be said that their counter-revolutionary opponents also used equally violent methods against suspected Bolsheviks and their partisans. The execution of the ex-Tsar Nicholas II and his family on July 16, 1918 caused a particularly strong reaction internationally. It was widely regarded as an unjustified murder, especially the murder of Nicholas's daughters, the Grand Duchesses Olga, Tatiana, Maria and Anastasia. The Bolsheviks appear to have believed that killing Nicholas and his family would decapitate the resistence to their takeover of Russia, but it took another three years of bitter civil war before they were finally able to secure their rule over most of the former Russian Empire.

Although in combating their enemies the Bolsheviks re-used many of the aspects of the Tsarist security and penal system, they elevated the level of repression and simplified the mecahnism of prosecution considerably. In December 1917, the Bolshevik government established a security force, the Cheka, which took over the role of the former Tsarist Okhranka. In 1918, the Bolsheviks began to send political opponents to forced labor campss, typically in Siberia and the extreme North of Russia. These labor camps had replaced the Tsarist penal system of forced labour (katorga). The labor camps were later expanded into the infamous Gulag system and the purges proved a precursor of Stalin's later and much more comprehensive annihilation of so-called "class enemies". Stalin also undertook massive resettlements of Kulaks, similarly to Tsarist penal system of ssylka (resettlement in remote areas) - which had been established to deal with political dissidents and common criminals without executing them.

Many political opponents were executed without trial during the Red Terror, decreed after the the attempt of the assassination of Vladimir Lenin by Fanya Kaplan, and during the Russian Civil War. Later, Andrey Vyshinsky, while being Stalin's Prosecutor General, put a "theoretical" legal base under the Bolshevik ways of prosecution.

Jews and Bolshevism

Many members of the Bolshevik party were Jewish, especially in the leadership of the party. The idea of overthrowing the Tsarist regime was attractive to many members of the Jewish intelligentsia because of the oppression of non-Russian nations within the Russian Empire. For much the same reason, many other non-Russians, notably Latvians or Poles, were disproportionately represented in the party leadership. This was abused by the Tsarist secret police, the Okhranka, which used anti-Semitism and xenophobia as a weapon against the party.

The Jewish origins of leading Bolsheviks and their support for a policy of "World Revolution" - most notably in the case of Trotsky - led many enemies of Bolshevism to draw a picture of Communism as a political idea pursued to benefit Jewish interests. In Germany, the Nazi regime of Adolf Hitler used this theory to paint a picture of a supposed "Jewish-Bolshevik conspiracy". Even today, many anti-Semites continue to promote the idea of a link between Judaism and Communism. However, the concept that an entire ethnic group can be held responsible for the actions of a few is very widely rejected. The Bolsheviks seem to have been personally rather atheistic, and more concerned with the plight of the working classes in general rather than with any ethnicity or religious group.

Most of the Jewish "Old Bolsheviks", along with their Gentile counterparts, were purged by Stalin during the 1930s. However, Stalin's ambitions to undertake a more general purge of "cosmopolites" (a euphenism for Jews), expressed in the preparation of the trial of the Doctors' plot, were never realised due to his death in 1953.

See List of socialists - Bolsheviks for a list of prominent Bolsheviks.

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