*HONOR THE THREE L’S-LENIN, LUXEMBURG,
LIEBKNECHT-HONOR ROSA LUXEMBURG-THE ROSE OF THE REVOLUTION
HONOR ROSA LUXEMBURG-THE ROSE OF
THE REVOLUTION
Every January leftists honor three
revolutionaries who died in that month, V.I. Lenin of Russia in 1924, Karl
Liebknecht of Germany and Rosa Luxemburg of Poland in 1919 murdered after
leading the defeated Spartacist uprising in Berlin. Lenin needs no special
commendation. I will make my political points about the heroic Karl
Liebknecht and his parliamentary fight against the German war budget in World
War I in this space tomorrow so I would like to make some points here
about the life of Rosa Luxemburg. These comments come at a time when the
question of a woman President is the buzz in the political atmosphere in the
United States in the lead up to the upcoming 2016 elections. Rosa, who died
almost a century ago, puts all such pretenders to so-called ‘progressive’
political leadership in the shade.
The early Marxist movement, like
virtually all progressive political movements in the past, was heavily
dominated by men. I say this as a statement of fact and not as something that
was necessarily intentional or good. It is only fairly late in the 20th
century that the political emancipation of women, mainly through the granting
of the vote earlier in the century, led to mass participation of women in
politics as voters or politicians. Although, socialists, particularly
revolutionary socialists, have placed the social, political and economic
emancipation of women at the center of their various programs from the early
days that fact had been honored more in the breech than the observance.
All of this is by way of saying that
the political career of the physically frail but intellectually robust Rosa
Luxemburg was all the more remarkable because she had the capacity to hold her
own politically and theoretically with the male leadership of the international
social democratic movement in the pre-World War I period. While the writings of
the likes of then leading German Social Democratic theoretician Karl Kautsky
are safely left in the basket Rosa’s writings today still retain a freshness,
insightfulness and vigor that anti-imperialist militants can benefit from by
reading. Her book Accumulation of Capital , whatever its
shortfalls alone would place her in the select company of important
Marxist thinkers.
But Rosa Luxemburg was more than a
Marxist thinker. She was also deeply involved in the daily political struggles
pushing for left-wing solutions. Yes, the more bureaucratic types, comfortable
in their party and trade union niches, hated her for it (and she, in turn,
hated them) but she fought hard for her positions on an anti-class
collaborationist, anti-militarist and anti-imperialist left-wing of the
International of the social democratic movement throughout this period. And she
did this not merely as an adjunct leader of a women’s section of a social
democratic party but as a fully established leader of left-wing men and women,
as a fully socialist leader. One of the interesting facts about her life is how
little she wrote on the women question as a separate issue from the broader
socialist question of the emancipation of women. Militant leftist, socialist
and feminist women today take note.
One of the easy ways for leftists,
particularly later leftists influenced by Stalinist ideology, to denigrate the
importance of Rosa Luxemburg’s thought and theoretical contributions to Marxism
was to write her off as too soft on the question of the necessity of a hard
vanguard revolutionary organization to lead the socialist revolution.
Underpinning that theme was the accusation that she relied too much on the
spontaneous upsurge of the masses as a corrective to the lack of hard
organization or the impediments that reformist socialist elements threw
up to derail the revolutionary process. A close examination of her own
organization, The Socialist Party of the Kingdom of Poland and Lithuania, shows
that this was not the case; this was a small replica of a Bolshevik-type
organization. That organization, moreover, made several important political
blocs with the Bolsheviks in the aftermath of the defeat of the Russian
revolution of 1905. Yes, there were political differences between the
organizations, particularly over the critical question for both the Polish and
Russian parties of the correct approach to the right of national
self-determination, but the need for a hard organization does not appear to be
one of them.
Furthermore, no less a stalwart
Bolshevik revolutionary than Leon Trotsky, writing in her defense in the
1930’s, dismissed charges of Rosa’s supposed ‘spontaneous uprising’ fetish as
so much hot air. Her tragic fate, murdered with the complicity of her former
Social Democratic comrades, after the defeated Spartacist uprising in Berlin in
1919 (at the same time as her comrade, Karl Liebknecht), had causes related to
the smallness of the group, its political immaturity and indecisiveness
than in its spontaneousness. If one is to accuse Rosa Luxemburg of any
political mistake it is in not pulling the Spartacist group out of Kautsky’s
Independent Social Democrats (itself a split from the main Social Democratic
party during the war, over the war issue) sooner than late 1918. However, as
the future history of the communist movement would painfully demonstrate
revolutionaries have to take advantage of the revolutionary opportunities that
come their way, even if not the most opportune or of their own making.
All of the above controversies aside,
let me be clear, Rosa Luxemburg did not then need nor does she now need a
certificate of revolutionary good conduct from today’s leftists, from any
reader of this space or from this writer. For her revolutionary opposition to
World War I when it counted, at a time when many supposed socialists had
capitulated to their respective ruling classes including her comrades in the German
Social Democratic Party, she holds a place of honor. Today, as we face the
endless wars of imperialist intervention in the Middle East and
elsewhere in Iraq we could use a few more Rosas, and a few less tepid,
timid parliamentary opponents. For this revolutionary opposition she went
to jail like her comrade Karl Liebknecht. For revolutionaries it goes with the
territory. And in jail she wrote, she always wrote, about the fight against the
ongoing imperialist war (especially in the Junius pamphlets about the
need for a Third International). Yes, Rosa was at her post then. And she
died at her post later in the Spartacist fight doing her internationalist duty
trying to lead the German socialist revolution the success of which would
have gone a long way to saving the Russian Revolution. This is a woman
leader I could follow who, moreover, places today’s bourgeois women
parliamentary politicians in the shade. As the political atmosphere gets heated
up over the next couple years, remember what a real fighting revolutionary
woman politician looked like. Remember Rosa Luxemburg, the Rose of the
Revolution.
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