|
|
THE STUDY GUIDE
EABJM TERMINALE: HISTORY AND GEOGRAPHY REVISION
DOCUMENT:
STALIN'S PURGES: OFFICIAL EXPLANATION
You can use this
as a document or as a starting point for your own
explanations
From History
of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
(Bolsheviks): Short Course
(Moscow,1948),pp.324-327,329.
Stalin's
Purges, 1935
"In 1936,
Stalin began to attack his political
opponents in a series of" purges" aimed at
destroying the vestiges of political
opposition to him. What follows is the
official explanation from textbooks published
before Stalin's excesses were repudiated by
his successors.
The achievements of Socialism in our country
were a cause of rejoicing not only to the
Party, and not only to the workers and
collective farmers, but also to our Soviet
intelligentsia, and to all honest citizens of
the Soviet Union.
But they were no cause of rejoicing to the
remnants of the defeated exploiting classes;
on the contrary, they only enraged them the
more as time went on.
They infuriated the lickspittles of the
defeated classes - the puny remnants of the
following of Bukharin and Trotsky.
These gentry were guided in their evaluation
of the achievements of the workers and
collective farmers not by the interests of
the people, who applauded every such
achievement, but by the interests of their
own wretched and putrid faction, which had
lost all contact with the realities of life.
Since the achievements of Socialism in our
country meant the victory of the policy of
the Party and the utter bankruptcy of their
own policy, these gentry, instead of
admitting the obvious facts and joining the
common cause, began to revenge themselves on
the Party and the people for their own
failure, for their own bankruptcy; they began
to resort to foul play and sabotage against
the cause of the workers and collective
farmers, to blow up pits, set fire to
factories, and commit acts of wrecking in
collective and state farms, with the object
of undoing the achievements of the workers
and collective farmers and evoking popular
discontent against the Soviet Government. And
in order, while doing so, to shield their
puny group from exposure and destruction,
they simulated loyalty to the Party, fawned
upon it, eulogized it, cringed before it more
and more, while in reality continuing their
underhand. subversive activities against the
workers and peasants.
At the Seventeenth Party Congress, Bukharin,
Rykov and Tomsky made repentant speeches,
praising the Party and extolling its
achievements to the skies. But the congress
detected a ring of insincerity and duplicity
in their speeches; for what the Party expects
from its members is not eulogies and
rhapsodies over its achievements, but
conscientious work on the Socialist front.
And this was what the Bukharinites had showed
no signs of for a long time. The Party saw
that the hollow speeches of these gentry were
in reality meant for their supporters outside
the congress, to serve as a lesson to them in
duplicity, and a call to them not to lay down
their arms.
Speeches were also made at the Seventeenth
Congress by the Trotskyites, Zinoviev and
Kamenev, who lashed themselves extravagantly
for their mistakes, and eulogized the Party
no less extravagantly for its achievements.
But the congress could not help seeing that
both their nauseating self-castigation and
their fulsome praise of the party were only
meant to hide an uneasy and unclean
conscience. However, the Party did not yet
know or suspect that while these gentry were
making their cloying speeches at the congress
they were hatching a villainous plot against
the life of S. M. Kirov.
On December 1, 1934, S. M. Kirov was foully
murdered in the Smolny, in Leningrad, by a
shot from a revolver.
The assassin was caught red-handed and turned
out to be a member of a secret
counter-revolutionary group made up of
members of an anti-Soviet group of
Zinovievites in Leningrad.
S. M. Kirov was loved by the Party and the
working class, and his murder stirred the
people profoundly, sending a wave of wrath
and deep sorrow through the country.
The investigation established that in 1933
and 1934 an underground counter-revolutionary
terrorist group had been formed in Leningrad
consisting of former members of the Zinoviev
opposition and headed by a so-called
"Leningrad Centre." The purpose of this group
was to murder leaders of the Communist Party.
S. M. Kirov was chosen as the first victim.
The testimony of the members of this
counter-revolutionary group showed that they
were connected with representatives of
foreign capitalist states and were receiving
funds from them.
The exposed members of this organization were
sentenced by the Military Collegium of the
Supreme Soviet of the U.S.S.R. to the supreme
penalty - to be shot.
Soon afterwards the existence of an
underground counter-revolutionary
organization called the "Moscow Centre" was
discovered. The preliminary investigation and
the trial revealed the villainous part played
by Zinoviev, Kamenev, Yevdokimo and other
leaders of this organization in cultivating
the terrorist mentality among their
followers, and in plotting the murder of
members of the Party Central Committee and of
the Soviet Government.
To such depths of duplicity and villainy had
these people sunk that Zinoviev, who was one
of the organizers and instigators of the
assassination of S. M. Kirov, and who had
urged the murderer to hasten the crime, wrote
an obituary of Kirov speaking of him in terms
of eulogy, and demanded that it be published.
The Zinovievites simulated remorse in court;
but they persisted in their duplicity even in
the dock. They concealed their connection
with Trotsky. They concealed the fact that
together with the Trotskyites they had sold
themselves to fascist espionage services.
They concealed their spying and wrecking
activities. They concealed from the court
their connections with the Bukharinites, and
the existence of a united Trotsky-Bukharin
gang of fascist hirelings.
As it later transpired, the murder of Comrade
Kirov was the work of this united
Trotsky-Bukharin gang.... The chief
instigator and ringleader of this gang of
assassins and spies was Judas Trotsky.
Trotsky's assistants and agents in carrying
out his counter-revolutionary instructions
were Zinoviev, Kamenev and their Trotskyite
underlings. They were preparing to bring
about the defeat of the U.S.S.R. in the event
of attack by imperialist countries; they had
become defeatists with regard to the workers'
and peasants' state; they had become
despicable tools and agents of the German and
Japanese fascists.
The main lesson which the Party organizations
had to draw from the trials of the persons
implicated in the foul murder of S. M. Kirov
was that they must put an end to their own
political blindness and political
heedlessness, and must increase their
vigilance and the vigilance of all Party
members....
Purging and consolidating its ranks,
destroying the enemies of the Party and
relentlessly combating distortions of the
Party line, the Bolshevik Party rallied
closer than ever around its Central
Committee, under whose leadership the Party
and the Soviet land now passed to a new stage
- the completion of the construction of a
classless, Socialist society." |
|
©
Nicholas Bunch
2007 |