Ten Days That Shook the World by John Reed (booksvooks .TXT) đ
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(3.) Any damage whatever done to the confiscated property which from now on belongs to the whole People, is regarded as a serious crime, punishable by the revolutionary tribunals. The district Soviets of Peasantsâ Deputies shall take all necessary measures for the observance of the strictest order during the taking over of the landownersâ estates, for the determination of the dimensions of the plots of land and which of them are subject to confiscation, for the drawing up of an inventory of the entire confiscated property, and for the strictest revolutionary protection of all the farming property on the land, with all buildings, implements, cattle, supplies of products, etc., passing into the hands of the People.
(4.) For guidance during the realisation of the great land reforms until their final resolution by the Constituent Assembly, shall serve the following peasant nakaz (See App. V, Sect. 3) (instructions), drawn up on the basis of 242 local peasant nakazi by the editorial board of the âIzviestia of the All-Russian Soviet of Peasantsâ Deputies,â and published in No.88 of said âIzviestiaâ (Petrograd, No.88, August 19th, 1917).
The lands of peasants and of Cossacks serving in the Army shall not be confiscated.
âThis is not,â explained Lenin, âthe project of former Minister Tchernov, who spoke of âerecting a frame-workâ and tried to realise reforms from above. From below, on the spot, will be decided the questions of division of the land. The amount of land received by each peasant will vary according to the localityâŠ.
âUnder the Provisional Government, the pomieshtchiki flatly refused to obey the orders of the Land Committees-those Land Committees projected by Lvov, brought into existence by Shingariov, and administered by Kerensky!â
Before the debates could begin a man forced his way violently through the crowd in the aisle and climbed upon the platform. It was Pianikh, member of the Executive Committee of the Peasantsâ Soviets, and he was mad clean through.
âThe Executive Committee of the All-Russian Soviets of Peasantsâ Deputies protests against the arrest of our comrades, the Ministers Salazkin and Mazlov!â he flung harshly in the faces of the crowd, âWe demand their instant release! They are now in Peter-Paul fortress. We must have immediate action! There is not a moment to lose!â
Another followed him, a soldier with disordered beard and flaming eyes. âYou sit here and talk about giving the land to the peasants, and you commit an act of tyrants and usurpers against the peasantsâ chosen representatives! I tell you-â he raised his fist, âIf one hair of their heads is harmed, youâll have a revolt on your hands!â The crowd stirred confusedly.
Then up rose Trotzky, calm and venomous, conscious of power, greeted with a roar. âYesterday the Military Revolutionary Committee decided to release the Socialist Revolutionary and Menshevik Ministers, Mazlov, Salazkin, Gvozdov and Maliantovitch-on principle. That they are still in Peter-Paul is only because we have had so much to doâŠ. They will, however, be detained at their homes under arrest until we have investigated their complicity in the treacherous acts of Kerensky during the Kornilov affair!â
âNever,â shouted Pianikh, âin any revolution have such things been seen as go on here!â
âYou are mistaken,â responded Trotzky. âSuch things have been seen even in this revolution. Hundreds of our comrades were arrested in the July daysâŠ. When Comrade Kollontai was released from prison by the doctorâs orders, Avksentiev placed at her door two former agents of the Tsarâs secret police!â The peasants withdrew, muttering, followed by ironical hoots.
The representative of the Left Socialist Revolutionaries spoke on the Land Decree. While agreeing in principle, his faction could not vote on the question until after discussion. The Peasantsâ Soviets should be consultedâŠ.
The Mensheviki Internationalists, too, insisted on a party caucus.
Then the leader of the Maximalists, the Anarchist wing of the peasants: âWe must do honour to a political party which puts such an act into effect the first day, without jawing about it!â
A typical peasant was in the tribune, long hair, boots and sheep-skin coat, bowing to all corners of the hall. âI wish you well, comrades and citizens,â he said. âThere are some Cadets walking around outside. You arrested our Socialist peasants-why not arrest them?â
This was the signal for a debate of excited peasants. It was precisely like the debate of soldiers of the night before. Here were the real proletarians of the landâŠ.
âThose members of our Executive Committee, Avksentiev and the rest, whom we thought were the peasantsâ protectors-they are only Cadets too! Arrest them! Arrest them!â
Another, âWho are these Pianikhs, these Avksentievs? They are not peasants at all! They only wag their tails!â
How the crowd rose to them, recognising brothers!
The Left Socialist Revolutionaries proposed a half-hour intermission. As the delegates streamed out, Lenin stood up in his place.
âWe must not lose time, comrades! News all-important to Russia must be on the press tomorrow morning. No delay!â
And above the hot discussion, argument, shuffling of feet could be heard the voice of an emissary of the Military Revolutionary Committee, crying, âFifteen agitators wanted in room 17 at once! To go to the Front!âhellip;
It was almost two hours and a half later that the delegates came straggling back, the presidium mounted the platform, and the session recommenced by the reading of telegrams from regiment after regiment, announcing their adhesion to the Military Revolutionary Committee.
In leisurely manner the meeting gathered momentum. A delegate from the Russian troops on the Macedonian front spoke bitterly of their situation. âWe suffer there more from the friendship of our âAlliesâ than from the enemy,â he said. Representatives of the Tenth and Twelfth Armies, just arrived in hot haste, reported, âWe support you with all our strength!â A peasant-soldier protested against the release of âthe traitor Socialists, Mazlov and Salazkinâ; as for the Executive Committee of the Peasantsâ Soviets, it should be arrested en masse!Here was real revolutionary talkâŠ. A deputy from the Russian Army in Persia declared he was instructed to demand all power to the SovietsâŠ. A Ukrainean officer, speaking in his native tongue: âThere is no nationalism in this crisisâŠ. Da zdravstvuyet the proletarian dictatorship of all lands!â Such a deluge of high and hot thoughts that surely Russia would never again be dumb!
Kameniev remarked that the anti-Bolshevik forces were trying to stir up disorders everywhere, and read an appeal of the Congress to all the Soviets of Russia:
The All-Russian Congress of Soviets of Workersâ and Soldiersâ Deputies, including some Peasantsâ Deputies, calls upon the local Soviets to take immediate energetic measures to oppose all counter-revolutionary anti-Jewish action and all pogroms, whatever they may be. The honour of the Workersâ, Peasantsâ and Soldiersâ Revolution demands that no pogrom be tolerated.
The Red Guard of Petrograd, the revolutionary garrison and the sailors have maintained complete order in the capital.
Workers, soldiers and peasants, you should follow everywhere the example of the workers and soldiers of Petrograd.
Comrade soldiers and Cossacks, on us falls the duty of assuring real revolutionary order.
All revolutionary Russia and the entire world have their eyes on usâŠ.
At two oâclock the Land Decree was put to vote, with only one against and the peasant delegates wild with joyâŠ. So plunged the Bolsheviki ahead, irresistible, over-riding hesitation and opposition-the only people in Russia who had a definite programme of action while the others talked for eight long months.
Now arose a soldier, gaunt, ragged and eloquent, to protest against the clause of the nakaz tending to deprive military deserters from a share in village land allotments. Bawled at and hissed at first, his simple, moving speech finally made silence. âForced against his will into the butchery of the trenches,â he cried, âwhich you yourselves, in the Peace decree, have voted senseless as well as horrible, he greeted the Revolution with hope of peace and freedom. Peace? The Government of Kerensky forced him again to go forward into Galicia to slaughter and be slaughtered; to his pleas for peace, Terestchenko simply laughedâŠ. Freedom? Under Kerensky he found his Committees suppressed, his newspapers cut off, his party speakers put in prisonâŠ. At home in his village, the landlords were defying his Land Committees, jailing his comradesâŠ. In Petrograd the bourgeoisie, in alliance with the Germans, were sabotaging the food and ammunition for the ArmyâŠ. He was without boots, or clothesâŠ. Who forced him to desert? The Government of Kerensky, which you have overthrown!â At the end there was applause.
But another soldier hotly denounced it: âThe Government of Kerensky is not a screen behind which can be hidden dirty work like desertion! Deserters are scoundrels, who run away home and leave their comrades to die in the trenches alone! Every deserter is a traitor, and should be punishedâŠ.â Uproar, shouts of âDo volno! Teesche!â Kameniev hastily proposed to leave the matter to the Government for decision. (See App. V, Sect. 4)
At 2.30 A. M. fell a tense hush. Kameniev was reading the decree of the Constitution of Power:
Until the meeting of the Constituent Assembly, a provisional Workersâ and Peasantsâ Government is formed, which shall be named the Council of Peopleâs Commissars. (See App. V, Sect. 5)
The administration of the different branches of state activity shall be intrusted to commissions, whose composition shall be regulated to ensure the carrying out of the programme of the Congress, in close union with the mass-organisations of workingmen, working-women, sailors, soldiers, peasants and clerical employees. The governmental power is vested in a collegium made up of the chairmen of these commissions, that is to say, the Council of Peopleâs Commissars.
Control over the activities of the Peopleâs Commissars, and the right to replace them, shall belong to the All-Russian Congress of Soviets of Workersâ, Peasantsâ and Soldiersâ Deputies, and its Central Executive Committee.
Still silence; as he read the list of Commissars, bursts of applause after each name, Leninâs and Trotzkyâs especially.
President of the Council: Vladimir Ulianov (Lenin)
Interior: A. E. Rykov
Agriculture: V. P. Miliutin
Labour: A. G. Shliapnikov
Military and Naval Affairs-a committee composed of V. A.
Avseenko (Antonov), N. V. Krylenko, and F. M. Dybenko.
Commerce and Industry: V. P. Nogin
Popular Education: A. V. Lunatcharsky
Finance: E. E. Skvortsov (Stepanov)
Foreign Affairs: L. D. Bronstein (Trotzky)
Justice: G. E. Oppokov (Lomov)
Supplies: E. A. Teodorovitch
Post and Telegraph: N. P. Avilov (Gliebov)
Chairman for Nationalities: I. V. Djougashvili (Stalin)
Railroads: To be filled later.
There were bayonets at the edges of the room, bayonets pricking up among the delegates; the Military Revolutionary Committee was arming everybody, Bolshevism was arming for the decisive battle with Kerensky, the sound of whose trumpets came up the southwest windâŠ. In the meanwhile nobody went home; on the contrary hundreds of newcomers filtered in, filling the great room solid with stern-faced soldiers and workmen who stood for hours and hours, indefatigably intent. The air was thick with cigarette smoke, and human breathing, and the smell of coarse clothes and sweat.
Avilov of the staff of Novaya Zhizn was speaking in the name of the Social Democrat Internationalists and the remnant of the Mensheviki Internationalists; Avilov, with his young, intelligent face, looking out of place in his smart frock-coat.
âWe must ask ourselves where we are goingâŠ. The ease with which the Coalition Government was upset cannot be explained by the strength of the left wing of the democracy, but only by the incapacity of the Government to give the people peace and bread. And the left wing cannot maintain itself in power unless it can solve these questionsâŠ.
âCan it give bread to
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