056 Letter from afar
PS: The collection is not great! It explodes, updates are added to the evening! I beg for collection!!!
While a certain immortal and a princess were deliberately trying to build a granary, Derrensky, who had just played with a certain immortal, was worried.
The letter I received at the meeting was quite long and heavy. It was not only because of the name of the letter signed - Vladimir Ilych Ulyanov, who was the great Comrade Lenin. It was also because the main content of the letter was a wake-up call for the Petrograd Party Committee and the Russian Central Bureau, who had just suppressed a storm and were still in the midst of the storm.
The letters were forwarded by Ganetsky, based in Stockholm, and are columns.
Ning published "Letters to the Bolsheviks who set off for their return" and "Letters from Far (1)" on March 19 and March 20. Whether it is "Letters from Far" or "Letters to the Bolsheviks", his tough and radical attitude was something Derzhinsky did not expect.
Even if the forwarder was not an old comrade like Kanetsky, Derrensky would have suspected that the letter was forged. These two things almost completely negated the revolutionary line determined by Lenin himself in 1905, which was equivalent to denying the line that he and Kamenev had just confirmed:
"Our strategy is to: completely distrust the new government and not give any support to the new government; especially doubt Kerensky; arm the proletariat - this is the only guarantee; hold the Petrograd Duma election immediately; be nowhere near to other parties..."
Derrensky looked at the signature of the letter again carefully and confirmed that it was not Andrei Petrovic Sbelosky. Think about what that little guy has been planning for this period of time, resisting the provisional government, seeking to establish an armed party force, and disdain for other parties. Well, except for the different signatures, the opinions of the two are almost highly consistent. Someone has become the spokesperson for Comrade Lenin!
Derrensky couldn't help but wonder, could that little guy have a look at him
Comrade Ning is as long as possible? He immediately shook his head and immediately kicked this unrealistic and even almost absurd idea out of his mind. Because as long as he is a man with a normal mind, he would not think that a little guy who is not yet graduated from university and who is only 17 years old can be compared with Comrade Lenin. This is really a cold joke that cannot be colder.
However, Derrensky couldn't help but compare this. It was really that these two people were full of incredible power. Needless to mention Lenin's personal charm, many old comrades in the party were infected by him, and then they devoted themselves to the revolution without hesitation, including Kamenev, who was sitting in front of him with a gray face and trembling all over.
And the other little guy, although he can't tell anything about his personal appeal, he often wins surprisingly, whether it's the bold and unscrupulous jailbreak, or the just inciting workers and grassroots party members to siege the editorial department of Pravda. Yes, for Derrensky, who has been working underground for a lifetime, it's too simple to find the "behind the scenes".
Although he resolved the latter action, Derrensky did not deny that the little guy really made him passive. If it weren't for the lack of some experience and skills, maybe the Pravda had already changed the world at this time.
Derrensky originally thought that someone was very difficult, but he didn't expect that this little guy would be so simple. His opinions were completely affirmed by Lenin. Although Lenin certainly did not know this inconspicuous little guy, it was precisely because he didn't know him that the little guy's insimplicity could better reflect the little guy's insimplicity. If he had known Lenin for a long time, then these opinions would not be very surprising.
But no matter how surprised it is, for Derzhinsky, the current situation is a bottomless pit. He can still deal with someone who has no foundation or reputation in the party, but he has no confidence in the face of the Bolshevik spiritual leader and chief mentor. The destructive power of the two is completely incomparable. Li Xiaofeng is at best a second kicker, and Lenin is at the level of nuclear weapons.
Derzhinsky felt that this letter had come too badly. He had just experienced a storm and was at the right time when people were in a state of mind. He could not withstand Comrade Lenin's bombardment. I was afraid that the content of this letter would mean the great division of the Bolsheviks once it was published!
Where should we go?
Derzhinsky fell into deep thought, and from the bottom of his heart, he disagreed with the line
Ning's opinion, even though Lenin was the leader of the party and a spiritual symbol, he just couldn't fully agree with the other party's opinions. As stated in "Letters from afar", the first phase of the Russian revolution had been victorious, but for the second phase of the revolution, he believed that the conditions were far from mature, and the Russian workers were weak and ignorant, and were not enough to bear the burden of the second phase of the revolution. Moreover, in the moment of the great enemy, hasty revolution did not seem to be a responsible attitude. It may cause immeasurable damage to Russia.
At this time, Derrensky wanted to communicate with Lenin in person and ask him what you thought about the future of Russia. But this was just a luxury. As far as he received recently, both the French and the British refused to pass by Russian political exiles living in Switzerland. It was almost impossible for foreign comrades including Lenin to return to their country.
It is impossible not to say that the British and French are quite disgusting. In order to safeguard their own interests and to let the Russian Provisional Government, which obeys them, control the situation, they have used a trick to remove the fire. Whether it is the Bolsheviks or the Mensheviks, the leaders who tend to revolution are basically exiled abroad. In China, these groups are either Acamao and Agama, or Century and Rightist, with very few radicals. The group of people who dominate the political situation in Russia are satisfied with the current situation. It is impossible not to say that after the revolutionary situation in Russia is out of control, the British and French are very skilled in coping.
Of course, the British and French methods were more than that. Derzhinsky didn't know much, such as driving Russian radicals in exile out of Europe, and the unlucky Trotsky enjoyed this treatment.
The revolutionary mentor was first driven out of Paris and was rejected to Switzerland. After wandering to Spain, the Spanish government imprisoned him under pressure from France and Britain, and threw him to the United States like a god of plague. When the Mensheviks and the United Nations heard the news of the victory of the Russian February Revolution and set off to return to Russia from New York, the British intercepted him halfway and locked him up directly into the German prisoner of war camp in Canada.
Without the backbone of the revolution, the activities of radical parties in Russia were greatly affected, and at least the activities of the Bolsheviks were greatly disturbed and faced the danger of division. In fact, in Derzhinsky's view, they had already been divided.
"I will never agree with the letter!" Kamenev clearly stated his attitude. "Comrade Lenin's opinions are only of reference value. He has lived abroad for a long time and has completely deviated from the reality of the Russian Revolution. He made a conclusion without understanding the current situation of the Russian Revolution. Such conclusions are divorced from reality, separated from the masses, and are even more unscientific! We should stick to our correct opinions! And I also believe that Comrade Lenin will come to the correct conclusion after returning to the country and understanding the current situation!"
Derrensky did not agree with Kamenev's statement, even if he and Le were
Ning didn't have much contact, but he knew that it was a difficult person to convince. It is not difficult to see from "Letters from afar" that some of Lenin's statements seemed to be groundless, and his radical attitude could be said to have a good grasp of the workers' voices. It is better to say that he is separated from some of the high-level backbones who tend to be conservative in the party than to be separated from the masses.
"Will the "Letter from a Distant" and "Letters to the Bolsheviks who set off for the return of their country be published in Pravda?" Stalin, who had always rarely spoken, asked the question incisively.
To be honest, this is a very difficult problem, because the letters are inappropriate, and the meaning of such articles published on the party’s mouthpiece at such subtle moments may cause great ideological wavering. Such wavering is definitely what Kamenev is most reluctant to see, because such wavering is the most unfavorable for him.
"I think Comrade Lenin's letter should not be published for the time being!" Kamenev immediately made a decision, "First of all, this letter was the opinion of Comrade Lenin after he had just learned of the victory of the revolution. At that time, his view was probably a bit one-sided. Maybe Comrade Lenin had revised this view after learning about the real situation in the country. It is irresponsible for us to publish it hastily; secondly, Comrade Lenin does not understand the reality of the country and is very likely to make wrong judgments. Blind publishing may cause wrong understanding of the grassroots people and will have wrong orientations. Therefore, with a serious and responsible attitude, I suggest not publish such words before getting direct contact with Comrade Lenin, or before returning to China."
Does what Kamenev said make sense? It seems to be like that,
After all, Ning has been abroad for more than ten years, so it is normal not to understand the current situation in Russia. But then again, did he, Kamenev, understand the current situation in Russia?
Kamenev returned to Russia in 1914, and was arrested and exiled to the vicinity of the Siberian Circle. Although he was in Russia, in the environment where he was under the surveillance of the military police in the exile, his news was more closed than Lenin, who lived in Switzerland. He was not very familiar with the reality of Russia and had no right to say that Lenin did not understand the status quo. In fact, he was the one who did not understand the status quo the most, or he was the one who was most unwilling to see the current situation.
Moreover, starting from his own selfishness, publishing Lenin's "Letter from the Far" was a blow to Kamenev. After all, he started from the way back to Petrograd and shouted that he was supporting the provisional government. His prestige in the party was largely relied on Lenin's support. Although the loss of Comrade Lenin's sword of Shangfang would not ruin his prestige, it was obviously greatly affected. Therefore, whether it was for his political future or the revolutionary line he believed in, he had to deal with "Letter from the Far".
Chapter completed!