Wednesday, February 12, 2014

From The Marxist Archives -The Revolutionary History Journal-How the Bolshevik-Leninist Group of Romania was Founded

Markin comment:
Every once in a while it is beneficial to go back to the archives to see what our political forebears were up to. And since we are very much in a period where the study of Marxist classics, and socialist concepts in general, is on the order of the day Trotsky, a central leader of world socialism in the first half of the 20th century, has something to tell us about how to organize those inquiries.
********
Alfred Rosmer

THE PARIS MILITANT
Published: Fourth International, Autumn 1959

Trotsky stayed in France at various periods, but it was only during the two years he spent in Paris during the First World War that he could operate as a militant free to move about as well as to speak and write. That freedom was only relative, because it was that of the state of siege and censorship, but in that he was in the same boat as the French themselves, and what may here seem paradoxical is easily explained by reference to what the situation then was. In Vienna, where he had been living at that period, Russia’s entry into war had made him an enemy alien, whereas in France the “alliance” protected him, while at the same time Paris would be for him the best combat post in the hard struggle for the defense of socialism. Experience showed that this reasoning was correct: for nearly two years he was able to battle just as much among the French workers as in the emigré circles. If it all ended badly – by expulsion – there also Trotsky shared the fate of his French comrades at a time when the growth of opposition to war worried the government and led it to take open measures of repression. In his case, Petrograd was giving orders to Paris, for the expulsion, several times requested already, was finally demanded – in which Stalin was later to repeat Czarist policy, and on two occasions.

On his way toward France, Trotsky’s first stop-over was Zurich. He lingered there, staying three months, so warm and encouraging was the welcome he received from the section of the Socialist Party. In those first days of August, the Swiss socialists were, like those of all countries, overwhelmed by the collapse of the International; but, not being involved in mobilization, they were all there, especially the youth, discussing, trying to understand the meaning of the war amid the confusion created and maintained by rival propaganda. Trotsky brought them the stimulant they needed to keep clear heads. Like them he had gone through the German school of socialism: its Social-Democracy was not a party of the International but the party par excellence – one more reason for fighting mercilessly against the betrayal of its chiefs. Their collapse was a tragedy and, at first glance, the outlook was very sombre; that might lead to erroneous conclusions. But what was this war? A clash of imperialisms, of two great formations of antagonists. Of course, but there was a deeper and general meaning: the war marked the revolt of the forces of production against the outdated political form of the nation and the state; and, as the Socialist Parties were in fact national parties, they collapsed with it. Conclusion: all efforts to save the Second International would be useless; it was not socialism, however, that had collapsed, but its temporary external historic form.

An eyewitness, a member of the section and a participant in these discussions, Fritz Brupbacher, wrote later that, with Trotsky’s arrival at Zurich, life was renewed in the workers’ movement, and that his influence had such a power of attraction that they wanted to give him the mandate to represent the section at the next congress of the party. Though Switzerland. would have afforded him a less exposed place of refuge, it was in the heart of a France at war that Trotsky wanted to settle: he wrote in haste a pamphlet in which, under the title Der Krieg und die Internationale, he assembled and developed the ideas that he had just been setting forth to the Zurich socialists, a pamphlet that was so substantial and still so timely that in 1918 an enterprising American publisher made a whole book out of its translation into English.

In Paris there was another paradox: it was through the Vie Ouvière, a revolutionary syndicalist organ, that Trotsky’s liaison, neither ephemeral nor accidental, with the workers’ movement, functioned. Yet there was a Socialist Party there that persisted in calling itself the “French Section of the Workers’ International” but when Trotsky, for a specific purpose, went to the offices of the party’s daily newspaper, he there found its leaders, Cachin among others, going along with the current as usual, therefore ultra-chauvinist; after a few useless attempts at discussion, they made it clear to him that he was an undesirable: they expelled him from l’Humanité before rejoicing to see him later expelled from France by Briand.

As soon as he had found a possible boarding-house – in the Pare Montsouris neighborhood, one of the emigré quarters of Paris – he sent for his family, Natalia and the two sons Leon and Sergei, to join him; from then on he could organize his activity in such a way as to be able to carry out successfully what was going to be his triple task. The articles that he was sending to the Kievskaia Mysl obliged him to follow closely both French politics and military operations: he was a skilled newspaper-reader, and quickly understood what each represented and what must be expected of it. As for parliamentary life, it was then so limited, so non-existent, that the government had to be sought out rather at Chantilly (General Headquarters) than at Paris. But his articles also gave him the opportunity of making research field trips throughout France, of meeting socialist and trade-union militants, of sounding out the state of mind of the average Frenchman: conversations with a Liège anarchist had enabled him to learn about and give an exact description of the resistance movement that had set a notable part of the population – and even the anarchists – against the German troops.

The main work of the day was, naturally, Nashé Slovo, the newspaper, and the group that gravitated round it. The editors met every morning at the printshop in the rue des Feuillantines to discuss that day’s issue and prepare tomorrow’s, on the basis of information that came in, and of discussions about the conceptions defended by the various tendencies of Russian socialism, of polemics with the “defensists” and also with Lenin, who, from Geneva, was defending his own position with vigor and even brutality. Martov, right from the beginning, had been, before Trotsky’s arrival, a sort of editor-in-chief; his anti-war attitude had helped to bring him close to the other sectors of the opposition. It did not correspond however, to that of the majority of the Mensheviks whose representative to the International Socialist Bureau he was; he was embarrassed thereby, to the extent of being unable to accept having certain questions even raised and discussed such as that of a new International. The clashes with Trotsky grew gradually more frequent and sharp, and as it was evident that Trotsky better expressed the conceptions of the paper’s editorship, Martov resigned and left for Switzerland.

It was through him that the first contact had been made between the Russian socialists in Paris and the centre of opposition, then numerically tiny, represented by the Vie Ouvière; a letter he had written to Gustave Hervé, which the latter had published, had been the occasion for their meeting. And it was he also who announced to us the forthcoming arrival of Trotsky and who brought him around as soon as he did arrive. We used to meet in the evening, once a week, and when our little group was reinforced by these new allies, our horizon, until then sombre, lightened up. With Trotsky and Martov there came Dridzo-Losovsky, long settled in Paris, and a Polish socialist, Lapinsky. When, one evening, the Swiss socialist, Grimm, accompanied them, there could be conceived a rebirth of proletarian internationalism, and we already began arrangements which ensured us serious international liaisons, since, through the Swiss, it would he possible for us to remain in contact with the German opposition.

Of these meetings Raymond Lefebvre painted a faithful picture in the preface to L’Eponge de vinaigre. They were kept up all winter, but were abruptly ended when the government profited by a revision of draft exemptions to call up all known oppositionals who had escaped conscription and send them to the armies. At that moment the idea of an international conference had already taken sufficiently specific form so that practical preparations for holding it were being thought out. It was known that inside the French Socialist Party discontent was growing against the nationalist and pro-government policy which the leadership was integrally imposing on the party; a manifestation of this discontent and its importance was the position taken by one of the best provincial federations, that of the Haute-Vienne, and rendered public by a report signed by all the federations’ elected office-holders. The socialists of Nashé Slovo hastened to make contact with some of them who happened to be in Paris. Meetings were held at Dridzo’s place: they were not very encouraging, for the Limousins, though very firm in their criticism of the betrayal of socialism, shied away when we talked about the action that must be taken, obsessed by fear of a split, which they absolutely refused to face. The arrival in Paris of the Italian socialist Morgari, in search of participants in the future international conference, brought about the last meeting. Trotsky has amusingly described in My Life how, when Morgari suddenly spoke of underground activity, the worthy Limousins hastened to disappear. It was impossible to think of adding to the French delegation: Merrheim and Bourderon remained alone to represent the opposition, though, for that period, they represented it very well, even if they refused, despite Trotsky’s friendly insistence, to go further than their resolution at the confederal conference, which had, however, become insufficient, for it no longer corresponded to a situation that events were changing every day.

At Zimmerwald, the already known tendencies became specific. Lenin wanted acts: refusal of war credits by the Socialist parliamentarians; preparation of the new International; appeals to the workers for anti-war demonstrations. As against this clearly defined programme, the Italians set up a waiting policy: they refused to consider that the Second International was dead already; they wished for a rapprochement with the German centre (Kautsky-Bernstein) ; that was also the position of the Mensheviks. Trotsky was in agreement with Lenin (except on the question of defeatism), but he was in a position to understand better than Lenin what it was possible to ask of the conference at that stage: his Paris activity had permitted him to measure the strength of the opposition; in the same way, through his contacts with Grimm and Morgari, he knew exactly the current conceptions of the Swiss and Italian leaderships, of whom it could not be said that they did not represent the feelings of the rank and file. His speeches seemed so convincing that, at the end of the discussions, he was entrusted with the task of drafting the manifesto, which all the delegates approved. Lenin was not entirely satisfied, but that did not prevent him from considering that it was “a step forward,” and that one could be satisfied with that much for the moment.

This fortunate outcome of the conference was going to permit Trotsky to find in France a base for his activity. The manifesto restored confidence, and the opposition, till then skeletonic and dispersed, penetrated into the workers’ movement. A committee had been created for the revival of international relations; its plenary meetings brought together a growing number of militants; one of its most active members was Trotsky, who soon dominated it. Its secretary was Merrheim; with the Metal-Workers’ Federation behind him, he had, right from the beginning, courageously carried on the fight against the confederation’s leadership; now he became too prudent, already disturbed at seeing the committee drive further than he had decided to go. And so he opposed all proposals made by Trotsky to carry the activity of the committee out into public, taking up again at every session his suggestion for creating a Bulletin, indispensable for the committee’s own life, for circulating information verbally communicated during the meetings which it was important to take down and make known to all those who, in the trade unions and in the Socialist sections, were beginning to break away from the lies and illusions by which they had been lulled in order to drag them into the war. Merrheim resisted, grew impatient when he saw the ascendancy that Trotsky was winning over the assembly, but he could do nothing against his clear comments on events, fed by an exceptional experience, against a well-reasoned revolutionary optimism that carried conviction. At the end of the meetings, militants of all tendencies, socialists, anarchists, syndicalists, approached Trotsky, questioning him about points which were not yet clear to them; dates were arranged to permit continuing such fruitful conversations. One of them, F. Loriot, a member of the Socialist Party, definitively won over to the opposition, whose leadership he was to take within the party, wrote a pamphlet whose contents he had studied out with Trotsky, Les socialistes de Zimmerwald et la guerre, which took its place among the clandestine publications of the committee.

The Czarist government could not understand how an ally could allow a newspaper like Nashé Slovo to he published on its territory. On several occasions it had asked that the paper be suppressed and its editors imprisoned. The operation was difficult, being contrary to the policy of the French government at that period, when the Socialist ministers were explaining that persecution of the opposition could only aid it by making it better known – much better to stifle it by censorship. A grave incident that took place among the Russian detachments brought to France at the request of the French government was to he the occasion of an intervention that was this time decisive. The soldiers of this detachment were subjected, in France, to a regime that the surroundings rendered unbearable; the officers treated them like brute beasts. A soldier, slapped in the face by a colonel, retorted with such ardour that death ensued. Nashé Slovo, declared responsible, was immediately prohibited, and an order of expulsion announced to Trotsky. Different interventions enabled him to gain a little time and to try to choose the place to which he was to be deported. All was in vain. The family was then living in the Gobelins quarter, quite close to the hall of the Reine-Blanche, where there had taken place the deeply moving August 1914 meeting at which the various Russian parties tore one another apart, the “defensists” signing enlistment papers in the French army. It was here that two policemen came to take him and conduct him to the Spanish border. But even from Cadiz, where he was stopping temporarily, Trotsky found the means of participating once more in the committee for the revival of international relations, and precisely on the occasion of the pamphlet that he had prepared with Loriot. The growing influence of Zimmerwald had led the minorityites in the Socialist Party to organize themselves on an extremely moderate basis, their position not being essentially differenciable from that of the chauvinists of the leadership, of which they denounced only the “excesses.” This semiopposition represented a danger; there was a risk that it would get some Zimmerwaldists to make a bloc with it against the leadership – which the pamphlet had foreseen. And so complaints arose from the minorityite members, accusing the Zimmerwaldists of “dividing” the opposition. One of these criticisms was communicated to Trotsky, who replied immediately: “Political forces are not ‘divided’ by clarity any more than they are added together by confusion. Three viewpoints, three motions: clarity is political honesty.” And so ended, in an exceptional prolongation, his career as a Paris militant.

 


Click below to link to the Revolutionary History Journal index.

http://www.marxists.org/history/etol/revhist/backissu.htm


Peter Paul Markin comment on this series:

This is an excellent documentary source for today’s leftist militants to “discover” the work of our forebears, particularly the bewildering myriad of tendencies which have historically flown under the flag of the great Russian revolutionary, Leon Trotsky and his Fourth International, whether one agrees with their programs or not. But also other laborite, semi-anarchist, ant-Stalinist and just plain garden-variety old school social democrat groupings and individual pro-socialist proponents.

Some, maybe most of the material presented here, cast as weak-kneed programs for struggle in many cases tend to be anti-Leninist as screened through the Stalinist monstrosities and/or support groups and individuals who have no intention of making a revolution. Or in the case of examining past revolutionary efforts either declare that no revolutionary possibilities existed (most notably Germany in 1923) or alibi, there is no other word for it, those who failed to make a revolution when it was possible.

The Spanish Civil War can serve as something of litmus test for this latter proposition, most infamously around attitudes toward the Party Of Marxist Unification's (POUM) role in not keeping step with revolutionary developments there, especially the Barcelona days in 1937 and by acting as political lawyers for every non-revolutionary impulse of those forebears. While we all honor the memory of the POUM militants, according to even Trotsky the most honest band of militants in Spain then, and decry the murder of their leader, Andreas Nin, by the bloody Stalinists they were rudderless in the storm of revolution. But those present political disagreements do not negate the value of researching the POUM’s (and others) work, work moreover done under the pressure of revolutionary times. Hopefully we will do better when our time comes.

Finally, I place some material in this space which may be of interest to the radical public that I do not necessarily agree with or support. Off hand, as I have mentioned before, I think it would be easier, infinitely easier, to fight for the socialist revolution straight up than some of the “remedies” provided by the commentators in these entries from the Revolutionary History journal in which they have post hoc attempted to rehabilitate some pretty hoary politics and politicians, most notably August Thalheimer and Paul Levy of the early post Liebknecht-Luxemburg German Communist Party. But part of that struggle for the socialist revolution is to sort out the “real” stuff from the fluff as we struggle for that more just world that animates our efforts. So read, learn, and try to figure out the
wheat from the chaff. 

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Romania

How the Bolshevik-Leninist Group of Romania was Founded

The following article appeared over the pseudonym of ‘Barta’ in the French language internal bulletin of the International Communist League, the name of the Trotskyist movement at that time (number 5, which bears the date November 1935, although in fact it was not issued by the International Secretariat until January 1936). It bears the caption “Only for members of the International Communist League”.
The author of the article was David Korner (pseudonyms Barta, Albert, A Mathieu). Born in Romania on 19 October 1914, he was a member of the Romanian Communist Party in 1932-33. He joined the French Trotskyist organisation whilst a student in Paris in 1934. He returned to Romania in 1934, where he was one of the founders of the Romanian Bolshevik-Leninist Group in April 1935. He was again in Paris after 1936, where he was a member of the Parts Ouvrier Internationalists. He entered the Pivert-led Parti Socialists Ouvrier et Paysan in February 1939 as a member of the POI minority around jean Rous and Yvan Craipeau.
He broke from the French Section of the Fourth International after the outbreak of the Second World War, and launched a duplicated bulletin L'Ouvrier (October 1939 January 1940). In November 1940 he wrote a pamphlet, La lutte contre la deuxieme guerre imperialiste mondiale, in which he criticised the ‘nationalist deviations’ of the French Section, which he considered as ‘petty bourgeois’.
After that, under conditions of clandestinity, he set up a small Trotskyist group, which took the names of the Groupe Communiste (Quatrième Internationale) from November 1942 to September 1944, Union Communiste (Quatrième Internationale) from October 1944 to March 1946, and Union Communiste (trotskyste) from May 1946 to March 1950. They published both La Lutte de classes (1942-57) and La Voix des travailleurs (1945-46), which later became La Voix des travailleurs de chez Renault. The Barta-led group played a prominent role in the Renault strike of April-May 1947 (see Revolutionary History, Volume 2, no.1 , Spring 1989), and in May-June 1947, urged by Renault workers, they set up a union, the Syndicat Democratique Renault, thus virtually dissolving their organisation into the latter. The disappearance of the SDR towards the end of 1949 provoked a crisis in the Union Communiste. Barta tried to revive the organisation in 1950 and again in 1956, but with no success. He then retired from active politics, and died on 6 September 1976.
This article on the origins of the Romanian Bolshevik-Leninist Group is from the archives of the Centro Studi Pietro Tresso in Foligno, Italy. It is interesting for the evidence it provides for Barta’s early views about the training of Communist militants and of internationalist opposition to social-patriotism, which were to become the distinguishing marks of the organisation he founded in France, from which the modern Lutte Ouvrière group traces its origins.
Stalin’s declarations [1] provoked great disquiet, even among the most backward Stalinists. In spite of the statements of more or less highly placed functionaries, according to which Stalin had been talking ‘diplomatically’, and that the Communist Parties of France and Czechoslovakia would continue a policy of defeatism as regards their own bourgeoisie, in no way did they succeed in reassuring those elements that had begun to have doubts about the Third International.
Unfortunately the Bolshevik-Leninist group that had been formed in April 1935, whose links to begin with had been confined solely to the Romanian Communist Party, for a number of reasons was for a long time cut off from outside and without any information. That is why we were not able to counterpose any precise fact proving the social-patriotic position of these parties to the lies poured out by the Stalinists, according to which those who had assumed a social patriotic position, like Vaillant Couturier, for example [2] had been expelled from the Communist Parties of France and Czechoslovakia. We also lacked Comrade LT’s [Leon Trotsky’s] An Open Letter to the Workers of France. [3]
In these circumstances in June 1935 we published the pamphlet War and the Fourth International with a short preface. [4] And since we were accused by the Stalinists of aiming at a civil war in the Soviet Union we printed The Fourth International and the Soviet Union by LT [Trotsky]. [5]
Being a very young small group, with many difficulties to contend with [in illegality] we felt all the weight of the Stalinist apparatus, which created an intolerable and isolating atmosphere around us by all means: lies, threats, and insults (‘Hitler’s agents’, ‘provocateurs’ ... ‘syphilitics’!). [6]
Moreover, for a country so backward from the political point of view, with militants who had never thought for themselves, the two pamphlets were too dry, and despite their fairly extensive diffusion, they were only read and understood by a very few militants, but they did help to make our group and its position known.
The policy of the Romanian Communist Party at the present time is aiming for the creation of a great ‘Popular Front’ to defend ... democratic liberties! (An unheard-of terror reigns in Romania!) In order to counter the concept of the Popular Front, as well as other theoretical and tactical questions, in October 1935 we wrote and published the pamphlet Popular Front or Workers’ United Front? as well as the Theses on the Workers' United Front (Fourth Congress of the Communist International). [7]
The distribution of these pamphlets was much better than that of the two former, thanks to the fact that the ‘Unitary’ Party of Romania [8] (which stands to the left of the SAP) pretends to defend the same ‘principled’ positions as ourselves, but clings to bourgeois legality at all costs and does nothing to spread its ‘principles’ (their journal has been banned by the government). We were able to distribute our pamphlets amongst its militants, to which we owe some recruitment.
Then we published Comrade Trotsky’s An Open Letter to the Workers of France, as well as reproducing the article Who Defends Russia? Who Helps Hitler? [9], the distribution of which was very good (in this country, where the working class movement is illegal, every publication passes from one hand to another).
In the meantime our group became numerically larger and was clarified. We were organised in cells that carried on the regular work of education and activity.
The most urgent task is to form ideologically well trained cadres and a firm nucleus. In particular we must study the history of the Romanian workers’ movement in the light of Marxism, a task that has never been undertaken in Romania, and elaborate an analysis and perspective for Romania, closely linked to the international situation.
It is necessary for us to be clearly demarcated from all other tendencies, above all the ‘Unitaries’, who create much confusion, especially by their centrist position (‘total unity’) in relation to the new International.
The objective conditions within which our group must struggle are very hard: to the police persecutions should be added those of the Social Democrats and the Stalinists, who employ the same methods as the former. But we will surmount all obstacles, because the positions we are defending are the only way for the emancipation of the working class: the world revolution.
Forward for the Fourth International!
Barta

Notes

1. This refers to the statement issued to the press after the signing of the Franco-Soviet Pact of May 1935: “In this respect Monsieur Stalin understands and fully approves the policy of national defence followed by France, in order to maintain her armed forces at the level required by her security”. Both powers also agreed to support Czechoslovakia if attacked. See Max Beloff, The Foreign Policy of Soviet Russia, Volume 1, London 1947, p.156.
2. Paul Vaillant-Couturier (1892-1937) was a founder of the French Communist Party and editor of its newspaper L’Humanité. He was the main protagonist for the Popular Front in France.
3. L.D. Trotsky, An Open Letter to the Workers of France, 10 June 1935, Writings of Leon Trotsky 1934-35, New York 1971, pp.305-14.
4. L.D. Trotsky, War and the Fourth International, 10 June 1934, Writings of Leon Trotsky 1933-34, New York, 1975, pp.299-329.
5. L.D. Trotsky, The Fourth International and the Soviet Union, 8 July 1936, Writings of Leon Trotsky 1935-36, New York, 1977, pp.354-60.
6. A certain ‘BS’ of Bucharest had the following to say in the official organ of the Communist International, International Press Correspondence, Volume 17, no.35, 23 October 1937:
... the Siguranza [special branch of the police] permits the Ghelertar party (which still includes among its membership many honest workers) to publish a paper again which continually repeats all the slanders against the Soviet Union, the Comintern and the Communist Party, which the Trotskyists reiterate day by day in every country. The Siguranza has already succeeded in rallying Trotskyist elements (camouflaged as Communists) around this newspaper Lumea Rumaneasca, a 16 page daily, and through this medium is able to carry on a campaign against the leaders of the General Confederation of Labour, on the ostensible grounds that the leadership is hindering united action and the unity of the trade union movement. Therefore, such unity could only be established in the struggle against this leadership – a policy which in practice would really mean the postponement of trade union unity for several years ...
Not content with the publication of Lumea Rumaneasca, that ‘truly Communistic’ newspaper, the Siguranza, at the end of July, commissioned its agent, Barbu Erftimiu, to publish a weekly paper, Saptamana Sociale, around which it attempts to gather all the individuals expelled from the Communist Party and the working clan movement for their treacherous, wrecking, Trotskyist activities. In this paper the police conduct a sort of press campaign against the leaders of the General Conference of Workers, allegedly with the object of facilitating the establishment of trade union unity, but in reality with the object of hindering at all cost the creation of such unity, and to sow confusion in the ranks of the working class ...
Further, the Tatarescu government and the reactionary forces standing behind it are very skilfully sending well-camouflaged Trotskyist elements into the ranks of the Social Democratic Party, the trade union: affiliated to the General Conference of Workers, and other working class organisations. These Trotskyist cells are very dangerous, because they are well covered by the membership card of the party or of some other democratic working class organisation. Even more dangerous are the Trotskyist elements which have succeeded in penetrating into the editorial office of Lumea Noua, the newspaper of the Social Democratic Party, and of the General Conference of Workers, and who heap the vilest abuse on the Soviet Union ...
It is therefore all the more dangerous and regrettable that the trade union secretary of the Social Democratic Party instead of pointing out the tremendous growth of the danger of war and Fascism and hence the necessity of anti-Fascist unity, has in a leading article published by Lumea Noua, under the heading A Few Words to the Communists, again pronounced himself against the unity of the trade union movement, and attacked not the Trotskyists of Lumea Rumaneasa (who in his opinion are the true Communists), but the CP, thus facilitating the activities of the Trotskyists and of international Fascism, of whom they are the agents.
7. L.D. Trotsky, On the United Front, February 1922, The First Five Years of the Communist International, Volume 2, London, 1974, pp.9lff.
8. The Unitary Party to which Barta refers was the Romanian Partidul Socialist Unitar (PSU), the result of a fusion between the left wing of the Romanian Social Democratic Party and the Independent Socialist Party. The latter was a member of the Two-and-a-Half International which had refused to join the Second Internnational in May 1923, and was one of the founders of the International Information Bureau of Revolutionary Socialist Parties set up in December 1924, later known as the Paris Bureau (cf. Academia Stefa Gheorghiu, Dictionar politic, Editura Politica Bucharest, 1975). The fusion had taken place a short time before the conference of left parties in Paris in August 1933, which was attended by a PSU delegation.
9. L.D. Trotsky, Who Defends Russia? Who Helps Hitler?, 29 July 1935, Writings of Leon Trotsky 1935-36, op. cit., pp.58-64.

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

***Out In The Film Noir Night- The Library Of America’s Dashiell Hammett

 

From The Pen Of Frank Jackman-with kudos to Dashiell Hammett

 

Book Review  

 

Dashiell Hammett: The Crime Novels, Library Of America  

 
In a recent review of the Library of America’s volume of later crime novels of the other great developer of the modern detective story, Raymond Chandler, I noted that if you wanted to get one thing right in this wicked old world, or the literary segment of the beast, or better, the crime novel sub-segment (okay, okay genre) you know that every detective’s business was mopping up everybody’s trouble, trouble pure and simple. I also noted that while you were getting that right you best put it down that trouble, trouble with a capital T, was Raymond Chandler’s classic hard-boiled private detective Philip Marlowe’s business. And I would argue that our brother Dashiell Hammett with Sam Spade, Nick Charles and the ubiquitous Continental Op had the same professional problem as witness the collection of crime novels all places under one roof in this Library of America volume of Dashiell Hammett’s major works.     

Our intrepid Hammett private eyes, private dicks, shamuses, gumshoes or whatever you call guys that, privately, and for too little dough scraped off other peoples’ dirt, and did it not badly at that, in your neighborhood. And kept their code of honor intact, well mostly intact, as Sam Spade, for example, tried to do after coming up against a come hither femme fatale in The Maltese Falcon, Nick Charles tried to separate the wheat from the chaff in The Thin Man or as the Continental Op try to almost single-handedly clean up a town that needed some serious cleaning up in The Red Harvest.  And on it went.

 

Oh yah, about Dashiell Hammett, about the guy who wrote this selection of crime novels with memorable protagonists. Like I said in that review mentioned above he, along with Brother Raymond Chandler turned the dreary gentile drawing-room sleuth by-the-numbers crime novels that dominated the reading market back in the pre-World War II day on its head and gave us tough guy blood and guts detectives we could admire, could get behind, warts and all. Thanks, guys, thanks twice.

[Chandler the author of The Big Sleep and creator of Philip Marlowe, after Sam Spade, maybe the most famous tough guy detective of them all. Marlowe, who come to think of it like Sam, also had a judgment problem when it came to women, women wearing that damn perfume that stops a man, even a hard-boiled detective man cold, although in Marlowe’s case not some femme fatale working out of Frisco town but an assortment of Hollywood women with that same come hither look.]

In Hammett’s case he drew strength from his startling use of language to describe his detectives’ environment much in the way a working detective would use his heightened powers of observation during an investigation, missing nothing. They were able to size up, let’s say, a sizzling blonde, as a statuesque, full-bodied and ravishing dame and then pick her apart as nothing but a low-rent gold-digger. Of course that never stopped them from taking a run at one or two of them himself and then sending them off into the night, or to the clink, to fend for themselves. They also knew how to blow off a small time chiseler, a grifter, as so much flamboyance and hot air not neglecting to notice that said grifter had moisture above his upper lip indicating that he stood in fear of something if only his shadow as he attempted to pull some caper, or tried to pull the wool over their eyes.

The list of such descriptive language goes on and on -sullen bartenders wiping a random whisky glass, flighty chorus girls arm in arm with wrong gee gangsters, femmes fatales wannabes displaying their wares a little too openly, old time geezers, toothless, melting away in some thankless no account job, guys working out of small-time airless no front cheap- jack offices in rundown buildings on the wrong side of town doing, well, doing the best they can. And cops, good cops, bad cops, all with that cop air about them of seen it all, done it all blasé, and by the way spill your guts before the billy- club comes down on your fragile head. (That spill your guts thing, by the way a trait that our detectives seemed organically incapable of doing, except when it suited their purposes. No cop or gangster could force anything out of them, and they tried, believe me they tried. )

 

At the same time Hammett was a master of setting the details of the space his detectives had to work in- the high hill mansions and the back alley rooming houses (although usually not the burgeoning ranchero middle class locales since apparently that segment of society has not need of his services and therefore no need of a description of their endless sameness and faux gentility). But where Hammett made his mark was in his descriptions of the gentile seedy places, rooming houses with that faint smell of urine, that strong smell of liquor, that loud noise that comes with people living too close together, too close to breath their simple dreams. Or the descriptions of the back alley offices in the rundown buildings that had seen better days populated by the failed dentists, the sly repo men, the penny- ante insurance brokers, the con artists, the flotsam and jetsam of the losers in the great American West night (mainly) just trying to hang on from rent payment to rent payment. Those denizens of these quarters usually had a walk on role, or wound up with two slugs to the head, but Hammett like Chandler knew the type, had the type down solid.

Nor was Chandler above putting a little social commentary in the mouths of his detectives (after all he was very close to various left-wing causes and the American Communist Party and when the red scare night descended in America he paid the price). Reflections on such topics as that very real change after World War I in the kind of swarms that were heading west to populate the American Western shore night. The restless mobsters for broken back east looking to bake out in the southern California sun and other points west while taking over the vast crime markets. The old California money (the gold rush, gold coast, golden era money) befuddled by the all new waves coming in. Above all a strong sense of the rootlessness, the living in the moment, the grabbing while the grabbing was good mentality that offended our old-fashioned detectives’ code of honor.

And while Chandler built his reputation on Marlowe’s fortunes Hammett gives us several all under one roof here to feast on. Enough said.

 
***Poet’s Corner- Langston Hughes 





From The Pen Of Frank Jackman

February is Black History Month


50-50

50-50
I’m all alone in this world, she said,
Ain’t got nobody to share my bed,
Ain’t got nobody to hold my hand—
The truth of the matter’s
I ain’t got no man.

Big Boy opened his mouth and said,
Trouble with you is
You ain’t got no head!
If you had a head and used your mind
You could have me with you
All the time.

She answered, Babe, what must I do?

He said, Share your bed—
And your money, too.


Langston Hughes
The whole world knew, or at least the important parts of that world, that summer of 2012 downtown Boston world (near the Common say from the Public Gardens to Newbury Street but also near birth place Columbus Avenue), knew that Larry Johnson was Ms. Loretta Lawrence’s every day man (and it goes without saying her every night man too). Make no mistake, girls, women, even though they didn’t hold hands in public or throw public kisses at each other, and Loretta at five-ten and rail thin, fashion model day thin didn’t look like trouble, keep your hands off. And they did, those in the fashion industry, mostly her fellow models, and maybe a few longing sidewinder guy designers too. But somebody had Larry’s attention and Loretta was going to get to the bottom of it.

It all started back in February when Larry asked her for a hundred dollars one night, out of the blue. Now Larry had been on a tough stretch ever since the financial collapse in 2008 (although it only bagged him in early 2010) when the markets went crazy and he got caught short, and since business was bad he eventually got that old dreaded pink slip. And nobody was hiring so he had just been kind of living off his old time bonuses, and a little of this and that. Funny they had met at a bar down in the financial district where he had stopped off for a drink after passing his resume around for about the umpteenth time and she had just finished a shoot (for a cosmetic company that had keyed on her for her ravishing dark looks, brown hair, brown eyes, brownish high cheek-boned skin as they were trying to expand their markets) down near the water at International Place and her photographer had offered to buy her a drink. His eyes met hers, her eyes met his in return and before anyone really knew it he had moved in on her like something out of one of those old time novels that you read and at the end both can’t believe that you spent your good hard-earned rest reading and cannot believe that the “she” of the story would be so stupid in the end to have gotten mixed-up with a wacko like that.
Larry had moved in on her too, literally, after a few weeks of downy billow talk and his argument (which she was okay with, she wasn’t saying she wasn’t) that two could live as cheaply as one (which isn’t true but close enough) and he could cut down on expenses during his rough patch. And it was nice, nice to have a man around, with man’s things, a man’s scent, and a man’s silly little vanities that she had not experienced since Phil (she would not use a last name because Phil was well known, too well-known) had left her a few years back. Every once in a while though she would notice a ten here or a twenty there missing from her pocketbook but figured that either she, spendthrift she, had spent it on some forgotten bobble or Larry had taken it for some household thing and didn’t report the fact (although she, they, had insisted on a collective counting of expenses). Then came the night of Larry’s official request. And she gave it to him, a loan, a loan was all it was. The first time.

After a few more requests for dough, and the granting of those requests, Loretta started to try to figure out what the heck he was doing with the dough (he said it was to help get a job, or he needed new shirts, or something, something different each time). Then she thought about Phil, not about the money part (Jesus, he had thrown his dough at her when he was strong for her, called her his little money-machine and laughed) but as he started losing interest in her he stopped showering the money because he was seeing another woman on the side and showering it on her (that “her” being a friend of hers, and not even beautiful, just smart). And so she started thinking that Larry, Larry the guy who was sharing her bed every night (every night so it had to be a daytime dalliance), was having another affair. She resolved that Larry would get no more money, no more loans, as he called them and if she found out that he was two-timing her that woman had better leave town because, two-timer or not, bum-of-the-mouth or not, he was her man and she had told one and all hands off. And she meant it.

 


From The Marxist Archives -The Revolutionary History Journal-
 The Bolshevik Leninist (Fourth International) Movement in Poland up to 1945

Markin comment:
Every once in a while it is beneficial to go back to the archives to see what our political forebears were up to. And since we are very much in a period where the study of Marxist classics, and socialist concepts in general, is on the order of the day Trotsky, a central leader of world socialism in the first half of the 20th century, has something to tell us about how to organize those inquiries.
********
Alfred Rosmer

THE PARIS MILITANT
Published: Fourth International, Autumn 1959

Trotsky stayed in France at various periods, but it was only during the two years he spent in Paris during the First World War that he could operate as a militant free to move about as well as to speak and write. That freedom was only relative, because it was that of the state of siege and censorship, but in that he was in the same boat as the French themselves, and what may here seem paradoxical is easily explained by reference to what the situation then was. In Vienna, where he had been living at that period, Russia’s entry into war had made him an enemy alien, whereas in France the “alliance” protected him, while at the same time Paris would be for him the best combat post in the hard struggle for the defense of socialism. Experience showed that this reasoning was correct: for nearly two years he was able to battle just as much among the French workers as in the emigré circles. If it all ended badly – by expulsion – there also Trotsky shared the fate of his French comrades at a time when the growth of opposition to war worried the government and led it to take open measures of repression. In his case, Petrograd was giving orders to Paris, for the expulsion, several times requested already, was finally demanded – in which Stalin was later to repeat Czarist policy, and on two occasions.

On his way toward France, Trotsky’s first stop-over was Zurich. He lingered there, staying three months, so warm and encouraging was the welcome he received from the section of the Socialist Party. In those first days of August, the Swiss socialists were, like those of all countries, overwhelmed by the collapse of the International; but, not being involved in mobilization, they were all there, especially the youth, discussing, trying to understand the meaning of the war amid the confusion created and maintained by rival propaganda. Trotsky brought them the stimulant they needed to keep clear heads. Like them he had gone through the German school of socialism: its Social-Democracy was not a party of the International but the party par excellence – one more reason for fighting mercilessly against the betrayal of its chiefs. Their collapse was a tragedy and, at first glance, the outlook was very sombre; that might lead to erroneous conclusions. But what was this war? A clash of imperialisms, of two great formations of antagonists. Of course, but there was a deeper and general meaning: the war marked the revolt of the forces of production against the outdated political form of the nation and the state; and, as the Socialist Parties were in fact national parties, they collapsed with it. Conclusion: all efforts to save the Second International would be useless; it was not socialism, however, that had collapsed, but its temporary external historic form.

An eyewitness, a member of the section and a participant in these discussions, Fritz Brupbacher, wrote later that, with Trotsky’s arrival at Zurich, life was renewed in the workers’ movement, and that his influence had such a power of attraction that they wanted to give him the mandate to represent the section at the next congress of the party. Though Switzerland. would have afforded him a less exposed place of refuge, it was in the heart of a France at war that Trotsky wanted to settle: he wrote in haste a pamphlet in which, under the title Der Krieg und die Internationale, he assembled and developed the ideas that he had just been setting forth to the Zurich socialists, a pamphlet that was so substantial and still so timely that in 1918 an enterprising American publisher made a whole book out of its translation into English.

In Paris there was another paradox: it was through the Vie Ouvière, a revolutionary syndicalist organ, that Trotsky’s liaison, neither ephemeral nor accidental, with the workers’ movement, functioned. Yet there was a Socialist Party there that persisted in calling itself the “French Section of the Workers’ International” but when Trotsky, for a specific purpose, went to the offices of the party’s daily newspaper, he there found its leaders, Cachin among others, going along with the current as usual, therefore ultra-chauvinist; after a few useless attempts at discussion, they made it clear to him that he was an undesirable: they expelled him from l’Humanité before rejoicing to see him later expelled from France by Briand.

As soon as he had found a possible boarding-house – in the Pare Montsouris neighborhood, one of the emigré quarters of Paris – he sent for his family, Natalia and the two sons Leon and Sergei, to join him; from then on he could organize his activity in such a way as to be able to carry out successfully what was going to be his triple task. The articles that he was sending to the Kievskaia Mysl obliged him to follow closely both French politics and military operations: he was a skilled newspaper-reader, and quickly understood what each represented and what must be expected of it. As for parliamentary life, it was then so limited, so non-existent, that the government had to be sought out rather at Chantilly (General Headquarters) than at Paris. But his articles also gave him the opportunity of making research field trips throughout France, of meeting socialist and trade-union militants, of sounding out the state of mind of the average Frenchman: conversations with a Liège anarchist had enabled him to learn about and give an exact description of the resistance movement that had set a notable part of the population – and even the anarchists – against the German troops.

The main work of the day was, naturally, Nashé Slovo, the newspaper, and the group that gravitated round it. The editors met every morning at the printshop in the rue des Feuillantines to discuss that day’s issue and prepare tomorrow’s, on the basis of information that came in, and of discussions about the conceptions defended by the various tendencies of Russian socialism, of polemics with the “defensists” and also with Lenin, who, from Geneva, was defending his own position with vigor and even brutality. Martov, right from the beginning, had been, before Trotsky’s arrival, a sort of editor-in-chief; his anti-war attitude had helped to bring him close to the other sectors of the opposition. It did not correspond however, to that of the majority of the Mensheviks whose representative to the International Socialist Bureau he was; he was embarrassed thereby, to the extent of being unable to accept having certain questions even raised and discussed such as that of a new International. The clashes with Trotsky grew gradually more frequent and sharp, and as it was evident that Trotsky better expressed the conceptions of the paper’s editorship, Martov resigned and left for Switzerland.

It was through him that the first contact had been made between the Russian socialists in Paris and the centre of opposition, then numerically tiny, represented by the Vie Ouvière; a letter he had written to Gustave Hervé, which the latter had published, had been the occasion for their meeting. And it was he also who announced to us the forthcoming arrival of Trotsky and who brought him around as soon as he did arrive. We used to meet in the evening, once a week, and when our little group was reinforced by these new allies, our horizon, until then sombre, lightened up. With Trotsky and Martov there came Dridzo-Losovsky, long settled in Paris, and a Polish socialist, Lapinsky. When, one evening, the Swiss socialist, Grimm, accompanied them, there could be conceived a rebirth of proletarian internationalism, and we already began arrangements which ensured us serious international liaisons, since, through the Swiss, it would he possible for us to remain in contact with the German opposition.

Of these meetings Raymond Lefebvre painted a faithful picture in the preface to L’Eponge de vinaigre. They were kept up all winter, but were abruptly ended when the government profited by a revision of draft exemptions to call up all known oppositionals who had escaped conscription and send them to the armies. At that moment the idea of an international conference had already taken sufficiently specific form so that practical preparations for holding it were being thought out. It was known that inside the French Socialist Party discontent was growing against the nationalist and pro-government policy which the leadership was integrally imposing on the party; a manifestation of this discontent and its importance was the position taken by one of the best provincial federations, that of the Haute-Vienne, and rendered public by a report signed by all the federations’ elected office-holders. The socialists of Nashé Slovo hastened to make contact with some of them who happened to be in Paris. Meetings were held at Dridzo’s place: they were not very encouraging, for the Limousins, though very firm in their criticism of the betrayal of socialism, shied away when we talked about the action that must be taken, obsessed by fear of a split, which they absolutely refused to face. The arrival in Paris of the Italian socialist Morgari, in search of participants in the future international conference, brought about the last meeting. Trotsky has amusingly described in My Life how, when Morgari suddenly spoke of underground activity, the worthy Limousins hastened to disappear. It was impossible to think of adding to the French delegation: Merrheim and Bourderon remained alone to represent the opposition, though, for that period, they represented it very well, even if they refused, despite Trotsky’s friendly insistence, to go further than their resolution at the confederal conference, which had, however, become insufficient, for it no longer corresponded to a situation that events were changing every day.

At Zimmerwald, the already known tendencies became specific. Lenin wanted acts: refusal of war credits by the Socialist parliamentarians; preparation of the new International; appeals to the workers for anti-war demonstrations. As against this clearly defined programme, the Italians set up a waiting policy: they refused to consider that the Second International was dead already; they wished for a rapprochement with the German centre (Kautsky-Bernstein) ; that was also the position of the Mensheviks. Trotsky was in agreement with Lenin (except on the question of defeatism), but he was in a position to understand better than Lenin what it was possible to ask of the conference at that stage: his Paris activity had permitted him to measure the strength of the opposition; in the same way, through his contacts with Grimm and Morgari, he knew exactly the current conceptions of the Swiss and Italian leaderships, of whom it could not be said that they did not represent the feelings of the rank and file. His speeches seemed so convincing that, at the end of the discussions, he was entrusted with the task of drafting the manifesto, which all the delegates approved. Lenin was not entirely satisfied, but that did not prevent him from considering that it was “a step forward,” and that one could be satisfied with that much for the moment.

This fortunate outcome of the conference was going to permit Trotsky to find in France a base for his activity. The manifesto restored confidence, and the opposition, till then skeletonic and dispersed, penetrated into the workers’ movement. A committee had been created for the revival of international relations; its plenary meetings brought together a growing number of militants; one of its most active members was Trotsky, who soon dominated it. Its secretary was Merrheim; with the Metal-Workers’ Federation behind him, he had, right from the beginning, courageously carried on the fight against the confederation’s leadership; now he became too prudent, already disturbed at seeing the committee drive further than he had decided to go. And so he opposed all proposals made by Trotsky to carry the activity of the committee out into public, taking up again at every session his suggestion for creating a Bulletin, indispensable for the committee’s own life, for circulating information verbally communicated during the meetings which it was important to take down and make known to all those who, in the trade unions and in the Socialist sections, were beginning to break away from the lies and illusions by which they had been lulled in order to drag them into the war. Merrheim resisted, grew impatient when he saw the ascendancy that Trotsky was winning over the assembly, but he could do nothing against his clear comments on events, fed by an exceptional experience, against a well-reasoned revolutionary optimism that carried conviction. At the end of the meetings, militants of all tendencies, socialists, anarchists, syndicalists, approached Trotsky, questioning him about points which were not yet clear to them; dates were arranged to permit continuing such fruitful conversations. One of them, F. Loriot, a member of the Socialist Party, definitively won over to the opposition, whose leadership he was to take within the party, wrote a pamphlet whose contents he had studied out with Trotsky, Les socialistes de Zimmerwald et la guerre, which took its place among the clandestine publications of the committee.

The Czarist government could not understand how an ally could allow a newspaper like Nashé Slovo to he published on its territory. On several occasions it had asked that the paper be suppressed and its editors imprisoned. The operation was difficult, being contrary to the policy of the French government at that period, when the Socialist ministers were explaining that persecution of the opposition could only aid it by making it better known – much better to stifle it by censorship. A grave incident that took place among the Russian detachments brought to France at the request of the French government was to he the occasion of an intervention that was this time decisive. The soldiers of this detachment were subjected, in France, to a regime that the surroundings rendered unbearable; the officers treated them like brute beasts. A soldier, slapped in the face by a colonel, retorted with such ardour that death ensued. Nashé Slovo, declared responsible, was immediately prohibited, and an order of expulsion announced to Trotsky. Different interventions enabled him to gain a little time and to try to choose the place to which he was to be deported. All was in vain. The family was then living in the Gobelins quarter, quite close to the hall of the Reine-Blanche, where there had taken place the deeply moving August 1914 meeting at which the various Russian parties tore one another apart, the “defensists” signing enlistment papers in the French army. It was here that two policemen came to take him and conduct him to the Spanish border. But even from Cadiz, where he was stopping temporarily, Trotsky found the means of participating once more in the committee for the revival of international relations, and precisely on the occasion of the pamphlet that he had prepared with Loriot. The growing influence of Zimmerwald had led the minorityites in the Socialist Party to organize themselves on an extremely moderate basis, their position not being essentially differenciable from that of the chauvinists of the leadership, of which they denounced only the “excesses.” This semiopposition represented a danger; there was a risk that it would get some Zimmerwaldists to make a bloc with it against the leadership – which the pamphlet had foreseen. And so complaints arose from the minorityite members, accusing the Zimmerwaldists of “dividing” the opposition. One of these criticisms was communicated to Trotsky, who replied immediately: “Political forces are not ‘divided’ by clarity any more than they are added together by confusion. Three viewpoints, three motions: clarity is political honesty.” And so ended, in an exceptional prolongation, his career as a Paris militant.
 

 


Click below to link to the Revolutionary History Journal index.

http://www.marxists.org/history/etol/revhist/backissu.htm


Peter Paul Markin comment on this series:

This is an excellent documentary source for today’s leftist militants to “discover” the work of our forebears, particularly the bewildering myriad of tendencies which have historically flown under the flag of the great Russian revolutionary, Leon Trotsky and his Fourth International, whether one agrees with their programs or not. But also other laborite, semi-anarchist, ant-Stalinist and just plain garden-variety old school social democrat groupings and individual pro-socialist proponents.

Some, maybe most of the material presented here, cast as weak-kneed programs for struggle in many cases tend to be anti-Leninist as screened through the Stalinist monstrosities and/or support groups and individuals who have no intention of making a revolution. Or in the case of examining past revolutionary efforts either declare that no revolutionary possibilities existed (most notably Germany in 1923) or alibi, there is no other word for it, those who failed to make a revolution when it was possible.

The Spanish Civil War can serve as something of litmus test for this latter proposition, most infamously around attitudes toward the Party Of Marxist Unification's (POUM) role in not keeping step with revolutionary developments there, especially the Barcelona days in 1937 and by acting as political lawyers for every non-revolutionary impulse of those forebears. While we all honor the memory of the POUM militants, according to even Trotsky the most honest band of militants in Spain then, and decry the murder of their leader, Andreas Nin, by the bloody Stalinists they were rudderless in the storm of revolution. But those present political disagreements do not negate the value of researching the POUM’s (and others) work, work moreover done under the pressure of revolutionary times. Hopefully we will do better when our time comes.

Finally, I place some material in this space which may be of interest to the radical public that I do not necessarily agree with or support. Off hand, as I have mentioned before, I think it would be easier, infinitely easier, to fight for the socialist revolution straight up than some of the “remedies” provided by the commentators in these entries from the Revolutionary History journal in which they have post hoc attempted to rehabilitate some pretty hoary politics and politicians, most notably August Thalheimer and Paul Levy of the early post Liebknecht-Luxemburg German Communist Party. But part of that struggle for the socialist revolution is to sort out the “real” stuff from the fluff as we struggle for that more just world that animates our efforts. So read, learn, and try to figure out the
wheat from the chaff. 

******** 
 The Bolshevik Leninist (Fourth International) Movement in Poland up to 1945

The first contacts of the Polish workers’ movement with Leon Trotsky lay far in the past. A group from the Social Democratic Party of the Kingdom of Poland and Lithuania (SDKPiL) [1] met him in Siberia at the end of the nineteenth and the beginning of the twentieth century. In 1908 Przeglad Socjaldemocratyczny, the theoretical magazine of the Polish Social Democrats, published an article by Leon Trotsky with a broad discussion of the views within the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP), in which, for the first time, the theory of Permanent Revolution was formulated in regard to Russian conditions. [2] After the years of extensive political contact a strong factional struggle developed within the Russian Communist Party (CPSU) in 1923, Trotsky leading one of the factions and Stalin, supported by Zinoviev and Kamenev, leading the other. On 23 December 1923 a plenum of the Central Committee of the Communist Workers Party of Poland (after 1925, the Communist Party of Poland – KPP) wrote a naive letter, saying, among other things, that “one thing is certain for us, however, that for our party, the entire International, and the whole of the revolutionary proletariat of the world the name of comrade Trotsky is identified with the success of the October Revolution, with the Red Army, and with the world Communist revolution. [We will not permit the possibility] of Trotsky finding himself outside the ranks of the leaders of the Russian Communist Party and of the International” (Nowy Przeglad, no.3/13, December 1924). [3] This statement did not reflect the views of the then leadership of the Polish Communist Party, A. Warski (Warszawski), W. Kostrzewa (Koszucka) and H. Walecki (Horwitz). [4] It was withdrawn at the following plenum on 3 March 1924. The following plenum, not wishing to cause a conflict with the leadership of the Communist International, withdrew this position and criticised Trotsky’s conduct.
The ideological and organisational involvement of the Polish Communist movement with the Left Opposition of the Russian Communist Party, to use the original terminology, came at a later date. In the autumn of 1927 two of the Polish Communist Party’s leading activists, Stein (Kamienski, Domski) and Zofia Unschlicht, who had been opponents of the Warski group in 1923, but who had been for nearly two years in the USSR on the directives of the Comintern, signed the Platform of the anti-Stalinist Opposition (i.e. of the United Opposition – it was a union of the Left Opposition with the new opposition of Zinoviev and Kamenev). [5] Both had been activists of the SDKPiL in the past, and inside the Polish Communist Party they were the leaders of the faction that was considered as ‘ultra left’. During the years 1923 to 1925 Stein was the General Secretary of the Polish Communist Party and had been removed from that position for criticising the opportunist moves of the leadership of the Comintern. In an explicit article entitled The Polish Section of the International Opposition in Pravda (Moscow) no.276, p.3, of 2 December 1927, he was attacked by the aforementioned Comintern leader Horwitz (Walecki) for signing the Platform, for his original opposition to the advance of the Red Army on Warsaw in 1920, as well as on many questions of the politics of the Comintern. It was then reproduced in Inprecorr (no.119, 2 December 1927, pp.2703-2704), the press service of the Comintern, which came out in various languages as well as in the illegal party publications in Polish and Ukrainian. However, the Bolshevik-Leninist movement in Poland did not come into existence on the initiative of these two activists.
The beginnings of this movement are connected with the first oppositional groups that began to form inside the Polish Communist Party shortly after the Sixth Plenum of the Central Committee of the KPP in June 1929, as a result of the accession of the minority faction to power in the party. [6] The victory of this minority faction was only possible thanks to the considerable pressure put on the Central Committee by the Stalinist leadership of the Comintern. The successful faction carried out without question all the directives received from Moscow, without paying the slightest attention to the real situation inside Poland. This faction also supported an adventurist political line whilst on the other hand strangling all opposition to it. The members of the emerging oppositional groups were usually supporters of the A. Warski group that had been removed from the leadership in 1929, who represented an independent current of thought that criticised the strike tactics of the new leadership, which practically every few days called for general strikes ‘up to complete victory’, and expected the imminent arrival of the workers’ revolution in Poland and Europe. Within the working class movement it propagated only the ‘United Front from Below’, i.e. of uniting workers of all tendencies whilst excluding from it all non-Communist activists, even if they were of the lowest rank. It counterposed its own ‘Red’ trade unions to the working class organisatio and described all the Socialist parties ‘Social Fascist’, and hence helping Fascism.
One of the groups emerging from the, politics was known as the ‘Memorialowcy’, members of the Polish Communist Party including top functionaries who in May 1931 had introduced a memorandum (hence the group’s name) into the Political Bureau of the Central Committee of the Polish Communist Party, whose ideas can be divided into three points: (1) A United Front of the Polish Communist Party with the Social Democratic PPS and Bund, (2) A joint struggle against reaction and Fascism, and (3) A united workers’ movement, and a restoration of inner-party democracy. The authors of the memorandum were expelled for their views from the Polish Communist Party in the middle of 1931. However, as a result of their activities a wider Communist Opposition arose under the name of the Members and Former Members of the Polish Communist Party and the KZMP, a newly-organised faction in solidarity with the criticism of the activity of the Polish Communist Party. This emerged in the spring of 1932. One of its leaders, Hersh Sztokfisch, a revolutionary activist for many year among the top functionaries of the Polish Communist Party, had been an eyewitness of the forced collectivisation in the USSR, which he had opposed, and then returned to Poland to involve himself with the opposition. [7] Similar views were formulated at more or less the same time by oppositional workers inside the Polish Communist Party. These two groups were described by the leadership of the Polish Communist Party as ‘Right-Trotskyism’ and ‘Kostrzewa-Trotskyism’. And the) had essentially similar views to the Bolshevik-Leninist movement led by Trotsky who had been expelled from the USSR, but there were no organisational contacts with the movement developing on the international plane. The Polish Bolshevik-Leninist centre somehow came into existence separately from these political formations.
In 1930 one small group from this movement founded a legal publishing house, Babylon, which printed Trotsky’s autobiography, My Life (Warsaw, 1930) and two years later his three-part History of the Russian Revolution in two volumes. [8] Some of his collected article and other articles from the Left Opposition were already known, and had been printed in Poland in 1929. They had been published in an anti-Communist journal under the title of The Truth about Soviet Russia (Agency Press, Warsaw, Poland, pp238). [9] This collection had not been authorised by Trotsky, and included various changes from the originals rendered in translation from the German and Russian. In 1932 the first illegal Polish paper of this group appeared, called Proletariusz. The typeset for this paper had been prepared in Belgium and then smuggled into Poland by Kazimierz Badowski [10], a Communist activist since 1925. The paper was printed from the typeset over here. It was then decided to develop a wider agitation by the aid of legal journals, mainly from pamphlets with articles by Leon Trotsky. An important part in this group was played by Szlama Ehrlich (pseudonym Sewar) [11], previously an important functionary of the Polish Communist Party, who had spent some time in France. The proceeds from the publication of the legal magazine were to be used to finance the illegal publications, as well as supporting members of the group. However, Babylon became insolvent in 1932, and in its place arose Era, which was closed down by the police in 1933, but soon New Era emerged which went on until the middle of 1934. Obviously these problems did not allow the original financial arrangements to work.
From the standpoint of later years most important was the adherence, in 1932 or at the beginning of 1933, of Isaac Deutscher to the Members and Former Members group. This took place after he had published an article in the Literarisze Tribune (Literary Tribune), a legal periodical of the Polish Communist Party in the Yiddish language, entitled The Twelfth Hour, in which he proposed that the German Communist Party should form an immediate United Front with the Social Democratic Party in order to prevent the rise of Hitler to power. [12]

Changed

The coming to power of the Nazis at the end of January 1933 and the subsequent establishment of Hitlerism in power changed the entire position of the European working class movement. Some people thought that this was the result of the wrong tactics of the Comintern, but others believed that because of the seriousness of the situation you should not criticise the leadership of the revolutionary movement at all. These kind of attitudes in the ranks of the Polish Communist opposition groups, along with the actions of the leadership, which not only systematically removed the oppositionists from the party, but slandered them and made conditions impossible for them in the working class communities that sympathised with the Polish Communist Party, led to a polarisation of attitudes within the ranks of the oppositionists. Some of the Members and Former Members group gave up all criticism and returned to the Polish Communist Party. In March the majority of the Workers Opposition of the Polish Communist Party decided to enter the Polish Socialist Party [13], as they were dubious about an improvement in the situation within the Polish Communist Party. However, the remaining members of both groups came closer to the nucleus of the Polish Bolshevik-Leninists in April 1934 and at a conference together they formed the International Communist League, an independent organisation that was a component part of the international Bolshevik-Leninist movement, which was widely active in the trade unions, taking part in mass actions and May Day demonstrations. Before they had been formally set up at the beginning of 1934 they tried to develop a legal press, printing the first issue of a weekly called Kuznia (The Fourrier) in Katowice, whose editor was a worker, Mendel Manele Landau. It was immediately confiscated by the authorities. Towards the end of the year a weekly paper was printed in Warsaw entitled Na Widnokregu (Encircling Light). This was also confiscated by the authorities. Starting from 30 November 1934 a weekly periodical appeared irregularly in Lodz with the title Co Dalej (What Next?), whose editor and printer was Stefan Golab, a satirist and an activist of the Polish Communist Party. This was also closed down.
In October 1935 the second national conference of the International Communist League, including members from Warsaw, Lodz, Cracow and other towns passed a resolution that its members should join the Polish Socialist Party or the Bund, depending upon their nationality. [14] This step was a result of the tactics of the international Bolshevik-Leninist movement of entry into mass working class movements to gain experience (mainly for the benefit of new members). Entry into these parties had to be officially undertaken with the agreement of their leadership. The meeting of the executive committee of the Polish Socialist Party on 23-24 November confirmed this entry. This was announced by the General Secretariat of the Polish Socialist Party in a circular of 29 November 1935. To this circular was added a declaration from the new entrants in which they stated that they had taken this step because the Polish Socialist Party was the largest workers’ party in Poland. They also declared that they would preserve their “particular views on tactical questions”. They agreed to abide by the party discipline of the Polish Socialist Party. The right of the entrants to form their own factions was agreed within the Bund. The actual entry took place at a party meeting in Warsaw. At similar meetings the new members in Warsaw and other towns read out political declarations similar to the one laid down in the Polish Socialist Party. One of the outstanding members now entering the Bund was ‘Artuski’ (a pseudonym). [15]
In addition to these two parties another small group was deliberately left out. Their task was to maintain contact between the sympathisers of the Bolshevik-Leninist movement, who were scattered all over the place in the Polish Socialist Party and the Bund, to print the publications of the movement, and to appear at various public meetings in order to represent it. This meant that the people who were in the open party had a certain amount of freedom independent of the other workers’ parties, particularly when it came to public criticism.

Renew

In the second half of 1936 a decision was made to renew independent organisational and political activity, not only in Poland. Most of the former members of the International-Communists returned to the newly formed Bolshevik-Leninist Party, but there were also attached to them those members who had joined the Polish Socialist Party and the Bund. Coinciding with the trials of the old Bolsheviks in Moscow (the Moscow Trials) at the end of 1936, an article by Isaac Deutscher, The Moscow Trial appeared in Swiatlo, the legal journal of the Polish Socialist Party. In an appendix they reprinted extracts from a speech made by Trotsky to a meeting of the Control Commission of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1927. [16] The speech outlined the basic differences between the Left Opposition (later the Bolshevik-Leninist movement) and Stalinism. These differences were such that they had logically and unavoidably led to the bloody dealings of the Stalinists with their own Communist oppositionists.
Fresh organisations of the Bolshevik-Leninists arose from 1936 to 1938. These groups developed in addition to those in the aforementioned towns in Lublin, Vilna, Lvov and Chestakova. In November 1936 a movement called the Marxist academics was formed among the students and high school pupils of Warsaw as a youth adjunct to the Bolshevik-Leninist movement. The same occurred in Lvov in the autumn of 1938, its leader being a philosophy student, a pupil of Professor Roman Ingardena, Michel Zawadowski, a former member of the Young Communist movement in the Ukraine (KZM ZU). In 1938 relations developed with members who had been expelled from the Polish Communist Party, the KPZU, and the Ukrainian Communist Party in Eastern Galicia. They printed a legal magazine, Zyttia i Slowo, of which only a few appeared altogether. Political conditions inside Poland at that time, in which authoritarian and Fascist tendencies had the upper hand in ruling class circles, did not allow any legal activities to be carried on, even of the slightest publishing activity. The members of the Bolshevik-Leninist group were also sharply attacked by the Stalinists, who denounced them in their own publications by revealing their names, even organising attacks upon them in working class districts and slandering them, etc. A description of the situation can be found in the personal memoirs published after the war by H. Sztokfisch (Hersh Mendel), Erinnerungen eines jüdischen Revolutionärs (Berlin 1979), which has also appeared in French. [17] Because of this, all political documents, articles and appeals could only be published illegally in clandestinity in duplicated form.

Shootings

The organisation was very active in 1937 and 1938 producing a large amount of material. In March 1938 there appeared an open letter to the members of the Polish Communist Party concerning the arrests and shootings of some of the leaders of the Polish Communist Party in Russia. [18] From 1936 onwards the organisation’s publications were reaching Warsaw, Cracow, Lvov and other places, including various intellectual circles and even schools. A group of delegates represented their political line at a meeting of the Professional and Chemical Workers Union in April 1935. When the Bolshevik-Leninist internationalists declared their intention of forming a Fourth International in 1938, the Central Committee of the Polish organisation printed their proposals along with their own comments. These comments had reservations about the proposal to give birth to a new international, as they thought it would be premature. Two members of the Polish organisation took part in the conference about this which took place at Perigny, near Paris, on 3 September 1938. [19] It was decided to form a new international, the Leninist International as it was officially called, otherwise known as the Fourth International. Although the Polish organisation had previously had its reservations it went along with the formation of the Fourth International and published the Manifesto of the Conference of the Fourth International to the Workers of the World in Polish. A small group of the Polish Bolshevik-Leninists, of whom one was Isaac Deutscher, was opposed to this, and subsequently left the organisation. In this way this thinker and publicist broke his links with the organised revolutionary movement.
In January 1939 a national conference of the Bolshevik-Leninist movement had met conspiratorially in Warsaw. They had taken the decision to print the organisation’s journals illegally. But this did not take place. So long as the Polish Communist Party still existed, the police had not persecuted the opposition. But now that the Polish Communist Party had fallen apart [20] they decided to smash and liquidate the organisation. On 6 February 1939 widespread arrests of the Bolshevik-Leninists took place in Warsaw, Lublin and other places. They got rid of everything to do with the organisation that was kept in the home of Janusza Markowski. In April and May another wave of arrests took place. Altogether two hundred people were arrested. They managed to bring them to trial in Lublin before the war broke out and handed out severe sentences.
During the first years of Hitler’s occupation of Warsaw a group of Bolshevik-Leninists printed Przeglad Marksistowski (Marxist Review). In this cahier an article appeared entitled Poland and the international revolution. It clearly formulated the ideas of the movement as regards affairs in Poland. Concerning the demagogy and cynicism of the slogans about the independence of Poland we read:
We cannot talk about national Socialism in Poland. He who has subjugated his own people cannot liberate other nations. He who tramples upon social justice in his own land cannot introduce social justice anywhere else. But isn’t the hypocrisy of the ‘democracies’, the fighters against Fascism, any less then? The ‘holy disgust’ of the imperialist democracies of the west against German barbarism is relatively recent. One clear and indisputable fact about their lack of military preparation proves that they did not want, and were not prepared for, their war with Hitler, but rather that they had attempted to recreate a Germany responsive to their wishes, a Germany that would be the gendarme of counter-revolution in a revolutionary Europe, and attempted to direct its energy along anti-Soviet lines – not expecting that Hitler might do this independently of their wishes and at a time of his own choosing. We are not fighting for a change of masters - even though under the conditions of foreign occupation our ‘possessing classes’ have not renounced their right to exploit and oppress their own people – but for the overthrow of all servitude and oppression.
“For Poland to be Poland”, a true mother country for the working people, and not a bourgeois swindle and a capitalist country, “it needs a world revolution”, in the countries of imperialist democracy as well as of Fascist barbarism. These words of Mochnackiego from a hundred years ago, which are also our declaration of faith, also describe our feelings towards the Soviets. We are not waiting for any almighty visitations from the east. In this deformed, degenerated workers’ state the coming revolution will have to conduct many painful operations to heal the deep wounds of Stalin’s Thermidor. For this reason the Soviet toiling masses will have to renew their links with the Socialist brotherhood of the proletariat of the leading western countries that were broken by the counter-revolutionary policies of ‘Socialism in One Country’.
The Review also took up a position with regard to the coming Russo-German conflict. The article 1 May 1941 that appeared in issue no.7, April/May 1941 began by stating that:
The pact between Stalin and Hitler August 1939 is the ugliest atrocity that has ever been committed against the proletariat by a workers’ party. Hitler’s victories during the current war have only been possible because of this pact. Stalin is dripping with blood, and not only the blood of those murdered by him ... the Polish proletariat does not await freedom at the hands of Stalin. We do not want Stalinist ‘freedom’. We do not want to be joined to the Russia of today, the prison-house of all its nations and concentration camp for revolutionaries. We are fighting for a free Soviet Poland which will by its own volition take rightful place in the family of United European Soviet Republics.
Even so, when the hour of war sounds between Germany and Russia, the workers and peasants of Poland will stand united on the side of the Soviets. For the Soviet Union is not only Stalin and his butchers. The Russian bureaucracy has betrayed the Russian Revolution, but as long as there is no return to private ownership, the USSR remains a workers’ state, whose defence is the elementary duty of every conscious worker.
During the depressing occupation by Hitler almost all the members of the Bolshevik-Leninist organisation disappeared. The very few who survived found themselves abroad. Two of them took part in the international conference the took place immediately after the end of the Second World War to outline the orientation and activities of the Fourth International in the changed world.
Against all odds, the Polish section has to be built anew.
Ludwik Hass

Notes

1. The Social-Democratic Party of the Kingdom of Poland and Lithuania (SDKPiL) was the left party of Polish Socialism, as opposed to the Polish Socialist Party (PPS), which took a more nationalist line. It was founded in 1893, and counted among its leaders Julian Marchlewski, Leo Jogisches and Rosa Luxermburg. It united with the Left Socialist Party (the PPS-Lewica) in 1918 to form the Polish Communist Party (KPP). The other group, the PPS, at one time contained Jozef Pilsudski, the future dictator.
2. L.D. Trotsky, Results and Prospects, 1906 in The Permanent Revolution, New York 1972, pp.29-122.
3. Cf. Isaac Deutscher, The Prophet Armed, Oxford 1978, pp.140-1, and n1.
4. Adolf Warszawski, called Warski (1867-1937), Maria Koszucka, known a Wera Kostrzewa (1879-1939) and Max Horwitz, Maximilian Walecki (1877-1938) were the original leadership of the Polish Communist Party, and were known as ‘the three Ws’. Shortly after this they were dropped from the top leadership for a while on charges of ‘opportunism, right deviation and failure to exploit a revolutionary situation’ (Isaac Deutscher, The Tragedy of the Polish Communist Party, in Marxism in Our Time, p.123). They were restored to their positions a couple of years later, but were all murdered by Stalin during the purges in his general slaughter of the Polish exiles in the USSR (Robert Conquest, The Great Terror, Harmondsworth 1971, pp.584-5).
5. Henryk Stein (1883-1937), also known as L. Domski and H. Kamienski, and Zofia Unszlicht were supporters of the Left/Centre (or Leningrad) Opposition led by Zinoviev and Kamenev. As such they signed the platform of the joint opposition drawn up between this group and the Trotskyist Opposition in September 1927 (cf. L.D. Trotsky, The Challenge of the Left Opposition (1926-27), New York 1980, pp.301-94).
6. The ‘Majority’ faction of Warski and Kostrzewa sympathised with Bukharin, and so were removed as a result of the ‘Third Period’ policy imposed by Moscow. The ‘Minority’ of Julian Leszczynski (1889-1939), known as Lenski, and Henrykowski, now took over to implement the new policy. Lenski remained General Secretary throughout this phase and into the Popular Front. He was removed in 1937 and murdered by Stalin in 1939 (cf. Isaac Deutscher, op. cit., n4 above, pp.l44, 147-50).
7. Hersh Mendel, Sztokfisch (1890-1968). On his career, cf. note 17, below.
8. For further details, cf. Trotsky’s Writings in Poland During the Inter-War Years, cf. below, especially notes 3 and 4.
9. Cf. Trotsky’s Writings in Poland During the Inter-War Years, below, n1.
10. Kazimierz Badowski, an old docker, survived the camps of Hitler and Stalin and after the war in Poland gathered around him a group of young intellectuals, among whom were Jacek Kuron and Karol Modzelewski.
11. Schlomo Ehrlich (1907-1943), called Stein, along with Stella Mihlstein published the newspaper of the Polish Trotskyists, Czerwony Sztandar (Red Flag) during the war, and even had it smuggled into the Warsaw Ghetto during the famous uprising (cf. Hail Warsaw Ghetto Fighters, in Workers Vanguard, 6 May 1988), perishing heroically at that time.
12. Isaac Deutscher (1907-1967) had already turned down an offer to undertake theoretical work in Moscow in 1931. The true date of his expulsion from the Polish Communist party was June 1932, the so-called ‘Krakowski Affair’ (after the pseudonym he used at the time). Cf. Isaac Deutscher, op. cit., n.4 above, pp.13-4.
13. Cf. note 1 above. During the late 1930s the PPS was Poland’s largest workers’ party, involved in United Front actions fighting Fascism on the streets. The decision to enter the PPS was taken in accordance with the general policy of the international Trotskyist movement at that time (the so-called ‘French Turn’), which was to enter left or leftward-moving Social Democratic formations. This involved entry into the French SFIO, the British ILP, the American Socialist Party, etc. Among those who joined the Polish Socialist Party at this time was Isaac Deutscher. The propaganda of the group that worked inside it can be assessed by a study of D. Drobner, W. Kielecki and H. Swoboda, Projet du programme du Parti Socialiste Polonais, in the Cahiers Leon Trotsky, no.16, December 1983, pp.120-5.
14. The Jewish workers’ organisation, the Bund, moved into association with the PPS during the mid-thirties, running joint slates in local elections, etc. Cf. Clive Gilbert and Maier Bogdanski, A Revolution in Jewish Life: The History of the Jewish Workers’ Bund, London 1987, pp.24-5, 29.
15. ‘Artuski’ was the pseudonym of I. Eichenbaum, a former member of the Warsaw Committee of the Polish Communist Party. Cf. Hersh Mendel, note 17 below, p.276.
16. Cf. Trotsky’s Writings in Poland During the Inter-War Years below, and note 9.
17. Hersh Mendel, Memoirs of a Jewish Revolutionary, London 1989. Cf. Ellis Hillman’s review below.
18. This was co-authored by Ludwik Hass himself. Cf. above.
19. The two Polish delegates at the founding conference of the Fourth International were Hersh Mendel and Stefan Lamed, a young chemistry student, who had been expelled from university for his activity on behalf of the opposition. Cf Isaac Deutscher, The Prophet Outcast, Oxford 1970, p.421, n1; Hersh Mendel, op. cit., n17 above, pp.310-11 (misplaced in 1935). The actual arguments of the delegates appear in the English minutes in Documents of the Fourth International: The Formative Years (1933-40), New York 1973, pp.296-8, and in the French in Cahiers Leon Trotsky, no.1, January 1979, pp.45-50. Lamed now lives in Canada.
20. Apart from the repression that had already rained down upon the leaders of the Polish Communist Party in exile in Moscow in 1937-39, Stalin finally charged the entire party with being completely infiltrated by the agents of the Pilsudskyite regime, and closed it down (cf Deutscher, op. cit., n.4 above, pp.154ff.). Opinions still differ as to exactly when this was. Its last public statement was issued on 8 June 1938 (Conquest, op. cit., n.4 above, p.584).