Workers Vanguard No. 1060
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23 January 2015
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From the Archives of Marxism-Honor The Three Ls-Honor Rosa Luxemburg!
From Lenin, Liebknecht, Luxemburg
by Max Shachtman
“Today the bourgeoisie and the
social-traitors are jubilating in Berlin—they have succeeded in murdering Karl
Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg. Ebert and Scheidemann, who for four years led
the workers to the slaughter for the sake of depredation, have now assumed the
role of butchers of the proletarian leaders. The example of the German
revolution proves that ‘democracy’ is only a camouflage for bourgeois robbery
and the most savage violence.
“Death to the butchers!”
— “Speech at a Protest Rally
Following the Murder of Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg,” 19 January 1919
This was Bolshevik leader V.I.
Lenin’s cry of rage after the assassination of two revered Marxist leaders of
the German proletariat. They were murdered by the fascistic Freikorps at the
behest of the Social Democratic Party (SPD) government of Friedrich Ebert and
Philipp Scheidemann as it moved to crush the unfolding workers revolution in
that country. German Social Democracy had proved its rottenness on
4 August 1914, when SPD deputies in parliament voted to fund the German
military in World War I. Against the social-traitors Ebert & Co.,
Liebknecht and Luxemburg fought for revolutionary proletarian internationalism.
In the tradition of the early Communist International, every January we honor
the memory of these revolutionary fighters, the “Three Ls”—Luxemburg,
Liebknecht and Lenin himself, who died on 21 January 1924.
The appreciation of Luxemburg
reprinted below comes from the undated pamphlet Lenin, Liebknecht, Luxemburg
published by the Young Workers (Communist) League of America sometime between
1924 and 1928. The pamphlet’s author, Max Shachtman, was expelled in 1928 from
the U.S. Communist Party for supporting the Left Opposition led internationally
by Leon Trotsky. The Trotskyists fought down the line against the
Stalinist degeneration of the Soviet workers state and the Communist
International. Although Shachtman would break from Trotskyism during World War
II and eventually become an open supporter of U.S. imperialism, he was for a
time a revolutionary leader and talented proponent of Marxism.
The excerpt below erroneously states
that Berlin police chief Emil Eichhorn was removed from office a year after the
founding of the German Communist Party. In fact, it was only a few days later,
as the article on the facing page lays out in greater detail.
August 4, 1914. The world was
astounded by the social democratic vote on war credits. But Rosa wasted not a
moment. Declaring the social democracy a whited sepulchre, a foul corpse, she
grouped around herself the cream of the revolutionary wing of the old party.
With her came Karl Liebknecht, Leo Jogiches, Franz Mehring, Wilhelm Pieck,
Clara Zetkin, [Ernst] Meyer and others. A small band they were, but immediately
they proceeded to their task. Illegal literature was spread at every
opportunity. Flaming appeals against the imperialist war were the order of the
day. Rosa Luxemburg, who had written her famous open letter to [French social
democrat] Jean Jaures six years before, arguing against his declaration that
the alliance between France, England and Russia was a step towards peace, was
being confronted by the truth of her own prophetic words.
The workers were beginning to come
out of the stupor resulting from the first shock at the socialist betrayal.
Within six months the small handful of revolutionists had grown to greater
proportions despite its illegality and the hindrances in its way. In February
of the year following the declaration of war, representatives from many cities
gathered to found the group of “The International.” To combine legal with illegal
work they proposed to issue a magazine with the name of their group at its head
and with Red Rosa as its editor. This brilliant organ was declared illegal
after the publication of the first number.
And now the sentence against Rosa
for her Frankfurt speech [in 1914 against the imperialist war] was confirmed
and she was once more imprisoned for a year. Surrounded by stone and iron she
continued to carry on her agitation as though she were free. With the
cooperation of the faithful Leo Tyszka [Jogiches], her oldest friend and
co-worker, she issued numbers of Die Internationale, which stands today as the
official theoretical organ of the party she founded, the German Communist
Party, a monument to her work. From prison, also, she wrote her famous pamphlet,
“The Crisis in the German Social Democracy,” which became known far and wide as
the Junius brochure, since she was unable to sign her own name to it and was
therefore obliged to use the pseudonym Junius.
“Shamed, dishonored, wading in blood
and dripping with filth, thus capitalist society stands. Not as we usually see
it, playing the roles of peace and righteousness, of order, of philosophy, of
ethics—as a roaring beast, as an orgy of anarchy, as a pestilential breath,
devastating culture and humanity—so it appears in all its hideous nakedness.
And in the midst of this orgy a world tragedy has occured: the capitulation of
the social democracy.... It forgot all its principles, its pledges, the
decision of international congresses, just at the moment when they should have
found their application.”
Bitterly did she scourge the social
democratic traitors; scornfully she lashed to tatters their false arguments of
national defense; and skilfully she exposed the imperialist roots of the war.
Yet here also she relied too greatly upon the spontaneous action of the masses.
Unlike Lenin she did not raise the inspiring slogan: Turn the imperialist war
into a civil war of the proletariat against its oppressors! And Lenin, while
greeting joyously this noble revolutionary voice crying in the sterile desert
of shameless betrayal, did not fail to criticize this omission in his own book,
“Against the Stream,” which he collected together with other articles written
by Zinoviev.
Against the stream! “It is never
easy to swim against the current, and when the stream rushes on with the
rapidity and the power of a Niagara it does not become easier!” said the older
Liebknecht [Karl’s father Wilhelm]. And yet Rosa swam bravely with her comrades
against the streams of blood which were being shed in the imperialist
slaughter. Released from prison just before Liebknecht’s arrest [for speaking
against the war in 1916] at the famous May Day demonstration, she was soon
rearrested to be released only by the first revolution in Germany [in November
1918]. Again there flowed from prison a constant stream of propaganda from her
fertile pen. From her prison cell were written the famous Spartacus Letters.
There also she replied to the critics of her “Accumulation of Capital” which
had been published before the war, in which she attempted to set forth a
Marxist theory of imperialist political economy. From that cell, too, came the
letters to the wife of Karl Liebknecht which portrayed the sensitive and
lovable soul of this uncompromising rebel, her love for life and struggle.
There also her pamphlet on the Russian revolution, unfortunately composed on
the basis of misinformation, the errors of which she later partially corrected,
and which was triumphantly published by the renegade Paul Levi [after his
departure from the Communist Party] who attempted to use it to justify his own
cowardice and to attack the first working class republic.
“This madness will not stop, and
this bloody nightmare of hell will not cease until the workers of Germany, of
France, of Russia and of England will wake up out of their drunken sleep; will
clasp each other’s hands in brotherhood and will drown the bestial chorus of
war agitators and the hoarse cry of capitalist hyenas with the mighty cry of
labor, ‘Proletarians of all countries, unite!’”
Thus had she ended her Junius
brochure. And when the German revolution followed the successful uprising in
Russia she was freed, together with Liebknecht, again to take up her incessant
struggle for the workers’ cause. With new hopes the two Spartacans renewed
their labors to build up a Communist Party in Germany. Battle-scarred,
undaunted, they proceeded to unite the revolutionary forces of Germany: the
Spartakusbund and the revolutionary groups of Hamburg and Bremen which were led
by Paul Frölich, [Johann] Knief, and Karl Radek. At the end of the year of 1918
the first congress of the Communist Party of Germany was completed. The party
was as yet weak; it was dominated by leftist elements. Despite the opposition
of Rosa and Karl, the congress voted to oppose participation in elections or
parliaments of any kind, as well as for the boycotting of the trade unions and
appeals to the workers to leave them. Rosa argued, with little avail. Yet, in
the program she wrote and which was adopted by the congress, the aims of the
young Communist movement are clearly stated:
“The proletarian revolution is the
death-bed of slavery and oppression. For this reason all capitalists, Junkers
[landed nobility], members of the petty middle class, officers, and all those
who live on exploitation and class hegemony, will rise against it to a man in a
struggle for life and death. It is madness to believe that the capitalist class
will, with good will, subordinate itself to the verdict of a socialist majority
in parliament; and that it will voluntarily renounce its proprietary rights and
its privileges of exploitation. Every ruling class has, to the very end, fought
for its privileges with the most stubborn energy. The class of capitalist
imperialists exceeds all its predecessors in undisguised cynicism, brutality,
and meanness.... Against the threatening danger of the counter-revolution must
come the arming of the workers and the disarming of the hitherto ruling class.
The fight for socialism is the most gigantic civil war in history, and the
proletarian revolution must prepare the necessary defense for this war. It must
learn to use it, to fight and to conquer. This defence of the compact masses of
the workers, this arming of them with the full political power for the
accomplishment of the revolution, is what is known as the dictatorship of the
proletariat. This, and only this, is the true democracy.”
The young party was soon to receive
its baptism in blood. The social democrats were placed at the head of the
so-called revolutionary government to head off the real revolution which would
place power actually into the hands of the working class. Traitorous, they
quaked at the idea of a proletarian revolution. Growing up by their side, like
the Soviets alongside of the decaying Russian Constituent Assembly, were the
Workmen’s Councils and the Communist Party. The social democrats did not
hesitate to choose between revolution and suppression of revolutionary forces.
A year after the founding of the Communist Party, the Workmen’s Councils were
maliciously provoked by the social democratic government which removed the
popular police president of Berlin, Emil Eichhorn, a member of the Independent
Socialist Party. Rosa knew that the situation was not yet developed for an uprising.
She realized that the masses had not yet been rallied to the support of the
Communist Party; that they had not, in the words of the program she had
written, gained “the consent of the clear, unanimous will of the majority of
the proletarian masses of Germany and...conscious agreement with the aims and
methods of the Spartakusbund.” But less clear heads prevailed and instantly the
battle was on.
Together with a group of independent
socialists, the Communists seized the building of the social democratic
Vorwärts [newspaper] and issued a manifesto deposing the national government.
Barricades were thrown up overnight. Workers armed themselves and prepared to
give battle. Red Rosa did not hesitate. Marx, before her, had disapproved of
the action of the revolutionaries of Paris in proclaiming the Commune [in
1870]; but as soon as the revolt was on he placed himself in line with the
rebels—uncompromisingly; and after their terrible defeat he wrote the most
brilliant declaration in its defense that the world has yet seen. And Rosa, in
the same dilemma of being obliged to take a position in favor of an action
which had been taken against her best judgment, showed the same revolutionary
spirit as Karl Marx.
Unhesitatingly, the young party
threw itself into the battle. With historic heroism they fought the troops of
the social democrat [Gustav] Noske. With sabers and machine guns their
proletarian lives were cut down to the ground. Rosa led in the battles.
Liebknecht was everywhere, in the front ranks, among the youth who defended
buildings that were being held by the Spartacans, in the barricades,
indefatigably working among the inexperienced troops, giving encouragement and
good cheer to all.
A general strike is declared; the
factories stand gaunt and silent. The Berliner Tageblatt [newspaper] is taken
over by the Berlin youth; the paper rolls are used for barricades, the books of
the concern to bolster up the windows; a Red Cross station is established and
guards are placed. On a number of churches, machine guns are lashed to command
the streets. In front of the Vorwärts building a huge bonfire of the social
democratic leaflets which have insulted the working class. The Bötzow brewery
is held by the armed workers.
The government marshalls its forces:
social democratic workers who have been poisoned against the revolutionaries.
Workers against workers.
Saturday sees the end of the brave
battle. The Vorwärts building is surrounded and surrendered. Whoever is caught
with arms is forthwith shot. A sixteen year old fighter is called upon to shout
“Long live the republic!”; he shouts instead “Long live Liebknecht!”; he is
killed. The historic January days are over. They have seen heroic sacrifice and
base betrayal.
A short few days pass. Liebknecht
and Luxemburg are discovered. They are taken to the Eden Hotel, the
headquarters of the troopers. Karl is spirited away and murdered by these
“heroes.” As Rosa is leaving the hotel entrance, the trooper Runge is standing
at the door. Commander Petri has given the order that she is not to reach the
prison alive. The obliging Runge strikes her heavily on the head twice, so
heavily that the blows are heard in the lobby of the hotel. Rosa sinks to the
ground. She is lifted and thrown into the vehicle, one man on each side of her and
Lieutenant Vogel in the rear. As the truck drives off, a soldier springs up
from behind and delivers another sharp blow to the unconscious martyr;
Lieutenant Vogel levels his revolver and shoots her in the back of the head;
the frail, broken body quivers for the last time. They drive between the
Landwehr Canal and the Zoological Gardens. No one is in sight. At the exit of
the gardens near the canal, a group of soldiers are standing. The auto halts
and the corpse is heaved into the canal at the order of Lieutenant Vogel. A few
days later the watersoaked body is recovered and interred by the side of
Liebknecht. The assassinated Jogiches finds his resting place by their side a
short time later.
The social democratic Vorwärts has
very humorous writers of jingles. On the eve of the murders they publish a
little song:
“Five hundred corpses in a row,
Liebknecht, Rosa, Radek & Co.:
Are they not there also?”
The workers mourn and plan their
vengeance. The murderers walk the streets today: they are free men.
* * *
It is said that were Red Rosa living
today she would be among the best leaders of the iron regiments of the powerful
Communist Party of Germany. Of that there can be little doubt. The attempts of
renegades and unscrupulous scoundrels to darken the sacred memory of Rosa
Luxemburg by spreading the tale that she opposed the Russian revolution and the
Russian Bolsheviks have already been brought to nought. Rosa had many
shortcomings. Perhaps only in her last days did she begin to understand that
her attitude towards the question of the peasantry was incorrect. In the
question of the attitude of revolutionaries towards national independence and
the right of self-determination to the point of separation she also held the
wrong position. She erred in certain respects in her estimation of the Russian
party conflicts, and later in her understanding of the Bolshevik revolution and
its tactics. She was wrong in her book “The Accumulation of Capital” and
unconsciously, in fighting so vigorously for the principles of Marxism against
the opportunist revisionists, herself deviated from those basic economic
principles. She had too much confidence in the spontaneous action of the masses
irrespective of preparatory organizational work and of the leading role of the
party.
And yet she will remain a cherished,
beloved memory; yet her spirit will continue to be embodied in the world’s
revolutionary movement; yet her name will continue to grow in the hearts of the
masses for whom she fought when those who betrayed her will have cheated
oblivion only by obloquy.
The Paul Levis who seek to
capitalize her errors and forget her glorious history of revolutionary struggle
have best been answered by Lenin, who often took issue with Red Rosa, but who
appreciated her work as few men do:
“An eagle may descend lower than a
chicken, but the chicken can never rise like an eagle. Rosa Luxemburg was
mistaken on the question of the independence of Poland, she was mistaken in
1903 in her estimate of the Mensheviki; she was mistaken in her theory of the
accumulation of capital; she was mistaken in defending the union of the
Bolsheviks and Mensheviks in 1914 along with Plekhanov, Vandervelde, Kautsky
and others; she was mistaken in her prison writings in 1918 (on coming out of
prison, however, at the end of 1918, she corrected a large number of these
mistakes herself). But notwithstanding all her mistakes she was and remains an
eagle; and not only will her memory always be highly esteemed by the Communists
of all the world, but her biography and the complete collection of her writings
will be useful for the instruction of many generations of Communists in all
countries. As for the German social democrats after the 4th of August, 1914,—‘a
foul corpse’ is the appellation which Rosa Luxemburg gave them, and with which
their name will go down in the history of the international labor movement. But
in the backyard of the labor movement, among the manure piles, chickens like
Paul Levi, Scheidemann, Kautsky and all that fraternity, will be especially
enraptured by the mistakes of the great Communist.”
Rosa Luxemburg died like the bravest
soldier of the revolution at his post. She died after the defeat of a
revolution, after “order” had been established. The last words she is known to
have written are her best epitaph:
“Order reigns in Berlin! You
senseless thugs! Your ‘order’ is built on sand. The Revolution will rise
tomorrow, bristling to the heights, and will to your terror sound forth the
trumpet call: ‘I was, I am, I am to be!’”
These words are the muted song of
the grim regiments of the proletariat who march in the final struggle and for
the final victory.