V. I.   Lenin

Letter to the Secretary of the Socialist Propaganda League[2]


Published: First published in 1924 in Lenin Miscellany II. Written in English before November 9 (23), 1915. Published according to the manuscript.
Source: Lenin Collected Works, Progress Publishers, [197[4]], Moscow, Volume 21, pages 423-428.
Translated:
Transcription\Markup: D. Walters and R. Cymbala
Public Domain: Lenin Internet Archive 2003 (2005). You may freely copy, distribute, display and perform this work; as well as make derivative and commercial works. Please credit “Marxists Internet Archive” as your source.


Dear Comrades![1]

We are extremely glad to get your leaflet. Your appeal to the members of the Socialist Party to struggle for a new International, for clear-cut revolutionary socialism as taught by Marx and Engels, and against the opportunism, especially against those who are in favor of working class participation in a war of defence, corresponds fully with the position our party (Social-Democratic Labor Party of Russia, Central Committee) has taken from the beginning of this war and has always taken during more than ten years.

We send you our sincerest greetings & best wishes of success in our fight for true internationalism.

In our press & in our propaganda we differ from your programme in several points & we think it is quite necessary that we expose you briefly these points in order to make immediate & serious steps for the coordination of the international strife of the incompromisingly revolutionary Socialists especially Marxists in all countries.

We criticise in the most severe manner the old, Second (1889-1914) International, we declare it dead & not worth to be restored on old basis. But we never say in our press that too great emphasis has been heretofore placed upon so-called “Immediate Demands”, and that thereby the socialism can be diluted  we say & we prove that all bourgeois parties, all parties except the working-class revolutionary Party, are liars & hypocrites when they speak about reforms. We try to help the working class to get the smallest possible but   real improvement (economic & political) in their situation & we add always that no reform can be durable, sincere, serious if not seconded by revolutionary methods of struggle of the masses. We preach always that a socialist party not uniting this struggle for reforms with the revolutionary methods of working-class movement can become a sect, can be severed from the masses, & that that is the most pernicious menace to the success of the clear-cut revolutionary socialism.

We defend always in our press the democracy in the party. But we never speak against the centralization of the party. We are for the democratic centralism. We say that the centralization of the German Labor movement is not a feeble but a strong and good feature of it. The vice of the present Social-Democratic Party of Germany consists not in the centralization but in the preponderance of the opportunists, which should be excluded from the party especially now after their treacherous conduct in the war. If in any given crisis the small group (for instance our Central Committee is a small group) can act for directing the mighty mass in a revolutionary direction, it would be very good. And in all crises the masses can not act immediately, the masses want to be helped by the small groups of the central institutions of the parties. Our Central Committee quite at the beginning of this war, in September 1914, has directed the masses not to accept the lie about “the war of defence” & to break off with the opportunists & the “would-be-socialists jingoes” (we call so the “Socialists” who are now in favor of the war of defence). We think that this centralistic measure of our Central Committee was useful & necessary.

We agree with you that we must be against craft Unionism & in favor of industrial Unionism, i.e. of big, centralized Trade Unions & in favor of the most active participation of all members of party in all economic struggles & in all trade union & cooperative organizations of the working class. But we consider that such people as Mr. Legien in Germany & Mr. Gompers in the U. S. are bourgeois and that their policy is not a socialist but a nationalistic, middle class policy. Mr. Legien, Mr. Gompers & similar persons are not the representatives of working class, they represent the aristocracy & bureaucracy of the working class.

 

We entirely sympathize with you when in political action you claim the “mass action” of the workers. The German revolutionary & internationalist Socialists claim it also. In our press we try to define with more details what must be understood by political mass action, as f. i. political strikes (very usual in Russia), street demonstrations and civil war prepared by the present imperialist war between nations.

We do not preach unity in the present (prevailing in the Second International) socialist parties. On the contrary we preach secession with the opportunists. The war is the best object-lesson. In all countries the opportunists, their leaders, their most influential dailies & reviews are for the war, in other words, they have in reality united with “their” national bourgeoisie (middle class, capitalists) against the proletarian masses. You say, that in America there are also Socialists who have expressed themselves in favor of the participation in a war of defence. We are convinced, that unity with such men is an evil. Such unity is unity with the national middle class & capitalists, and a division with the international revolutionary working class. And we are for secession with nationalistic opportunists and unity with international revolutionary Marxists & working-class parties.

We never object in our press to the unity of S. P. & S.L.P. in America.[3] We always quote letters from Marx & Engels (especially to Sorge, active member of American socialist movement), where both condemn the sectarian character of the S.L.P.

We fully agree with you in your criticism of the old International. We have participated in the conference of Zimmerwald (Switzerland) 5-8.IX. 1915. We have formed there a left wing, and have proposed our resolution & our draught of a manifesto. We have just published these documents in German & I send them to you (with the German translation of our small book about “Socialism & War”), hoping that in your League there are probably comrades, that know German. If you could help us to publish these things in English (it is possible only in America and later on we should send it to England), we would gladly accept your help.

In our struggle for true internationalism & against “jingo-socialism” we always quote in our press the example of the opportunist leaders of the S.P. in America, who are in favor of restrictions of the immigration of Chinese and Japanese workers (especially after the Congress of Stuttgart, 1907, & against the decisions of Stuttgart). We think that one can not be internationalist & be at the same time in favor of such restrictions. And we assert that Socialists in America, especially English Socialists, belonging to the ruling, and oppressing nation, who are not against any restrictions of immigration, against the possession of colonies (Hawaii) and for the entire freedom of colonies, that such Socialists are in reality jingoes.

For conclusion I repeat once more best greetings & wishes for your League. We should be very glad to have a further information from you & to unite our struggle against opportunism & for the true internationalism.

Yours N. Lenin

N. B. There are two Soc.-Dem. parties in Russia. Our party (“Central Committee”) is against opportunism. The other party (“Organization Committee”) is opportunist. We are against the unity with them.

You can write to our official address (Bibliothèque russe. For the C. K. 7 rue Hugo de Senger. 7. Genève. Switzerland). But better write to my personal address: Wl. Ulianow. Seidenweg 4a, III Berne. Switzerland.


Notes

[1] This letter was written by Lenin in English.—Ed.

[2] The letter is a reply to the league’s leaflet received by Lenin in November 1915. The letter is published in full for the first time.

[3] The Socialist Party of America was formed in July 1901 at the congress in Indianapolis as a result of a merger of groups that had broken away from the Socialist Labour Party and the Social-Democratic Party in the U.S.A., among whose founders was Eugene Debs, the popular American labour leader. He was one of the founders of the new party. The social composition of the party was motley: native-born and immigrant workers, small farmers, and people with a petty-bourgeois background. The Centrist and Right-opportunist leaders of the party (V.-L. Berger, Morris Hillquit and others) denied the necessity of the dictatorship of the proletariat, refrained from revolutionary methods of struggle and confined the Party’s activities to participation in elections. During World War I three trends formed within the Socialist Party: the social-chauvinists, who supported the government’s imperialist policy, the Centrists, who opposed the imperialist war only in word, and the revolutionary minority, who held an internationalist stand and fought against the war. Led by Charles Ruthenberg, William Foster, Bill Haywood and others and with the support of proletarian elements, the Left wing of the Socialist Party waged a struggle against the opportunist leadership of the party, for the workers’ independent political activity, and for the formation of industrial trade unions based on the principles of the class struggle. In 1919 the Left-wing split away from the S.P., initiated the formation of the American Communist Party, and became its core.

At present the Socialist Party is a small sectarian organisation.

The Socialist Labour Party of America was formed in 1876 at a congress in Philadelphia, as a result of a merger of the American Sections of the First International and other socialist organisations. The work of the congress was guided by F. A. Sorge, an associate of Marx and Engels. Most of the Party’s members were immigrants who had weak links with the American workers. During the first years its leadership was dominated by Lassalleans, who made mistakes of a sectarian and dogmatic nature. Some of the party’s leaders considered parliamentary activity the main party task, and underestimated the significance of party guidance of the economic struggle of the masses, while others fell into trade-unionism and anarchism. The ideological and tactical vacillations of its leader ship resulted in a number of groups splitting away from the party. Marx and Engels severely criticised the sectarian tactics of American socialists.

In the nineties the leadership of the S.L.P. was taken over by its Left wing under D. De Leon who committed anarcho-syndicalist errors. The S.L.P. refused to fight for working-class partial demands, refused to work in the reformist trade unions, and continued losing its ties with the mass working-class movement, weak as they were. During World War I the Socialist Labour Party inclined towards internationalism. Under the influence of the Great October Socialist Revolution its more revolutionary section actively participated in forming the Communist Party of the U.S.A. At present the S.L.P. is a small organisation without any influence on the U.S. labour movement in the U.S.A.

	
From: 
Date: Thu, 7 Jul 2005 16:40:51 EDT
Subject: Re: [MIA] LENIN & SOCIALIST PROPAGANDA LEAGUE
To: 
Reply-To: MIA Steering Committee 
`
This is a Lenin scholarship question dealing with the MIA document:
`
http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1915/nov/09.htm
`
Transcription was by David Walters and Robert Cymbala and I would be 
particularly interested in hearing their views.
`
This document, a letter to C.W. Fitzgerald of the (American) Socialist 
Propaganda League reprinted from the MECW (v. 21, pp. 423-428) states that it was 
written "before Nov. 9 (22), 1915." I am curious what, if any, contextual 
reasons would lead to this particular date attribution by the Marx-Engels-Lenin 
Institute.
`
I've just come across (and transcribed much of) a first issue of the organ of 
the SPLA, which indicates the manifesto was adopted in Boston at a meeting 
held "Nov. 26, 1916." The issue, dated Jan. 6, 1917, contains an organizational 
constitution and provisional list of officers of what is clearly a new group. 
I find it a touch hard to believe that an organization by the same name with 
the same provisional National Secretary was in existence and issuing leaflets 
for a full year prior to that date.
`
I suspect an error in dating of the Lenin document by MEL Institute, which 
was probably arrived at based upon the mailing address which Lenin provided, or 
some such.
`
Any alternate theories -- or support of the date listed in MECW -- would also 
be appreciated.
`
`
Tim Davenport
Corvallis, OR
`
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
`
`
From: 
Date: Thu, 7 Jul 2005 18:17:11 EDT
Subject: Re: [MIA] LENIN & SOCIALIST PROPAGANDA LEAGUE
To: 
Reply-To: MIA Steering Committee
`
{{ It could also be that the MELI, which assembled these documents well 
after Lenin's death, got a smudged copy, retranscribed incorrectly, 
etc. It would also make sense that the copy recieved by Lenin in Zurich 
(I think he as there then) took months and months to get there, and the 
letter/magazine was marked *by Lenin* from the date he received it, 
thus providing the MELI, 10 years or more later, with a false 
indication of the date. }}
`
It's something of a puzzle. Lenin speaks of the Sept. 1915 Zimmerwald 
congress as an event in the recent past, which lends some weight to the Nov. 1915 
attribution for the letter. I pulled the Russian Lenin PSS (v. 27, pp. 69-75 and 
footnotes on pp. 496-498) which indicates Lenin is replying to a letter of 
Nov. 13, 1915, and lists a range of dates for the Lenin letter of "Nov. 13-22, 
1915." (NS).  The footnotes speak of the emergence of the Socialist Propaganda 
League as a membership organization within the Socialist Party as an event 
which took place in 1915. My belief is that this actually happened in the waning 
days of 1916, not 1915.
`
This MEL date still strikes me as wrong by a year, but it's really hard to 
put my gut feeling against the microscopic Lenin study which took place in the 
USSR from the first publication of the letter in 1924... On the other hand, at 
no point in either the 4th English or the 5th Russian edition is C.W. 
Fitzgerald mentioned as Lenin's correspondent in question, even though the published 
facsimile of the first page of the letter makes this abundantly clear. So the 
scholarship isn't flawless here; sloppy even.
`
I think a close reading of International Socialist Review (Kerr) for the 
second half of 1915 and all of 1916 might hold the answer. I think I have many but 
not all of those issues around, I will dig a little. (If anyone has 1916 
complete, please let me know.)
`
This isn't merely an academic exercise, the Socialist Propaganda League of 
America was the direct, lineal forerunner of the Left Wing Section of the 
Socialist Party, which emerged as the two Communist Parties in 1919. At issue is at 
exactly what historical moment the American communist movement gained 
organizational consciousness. In the ideological realm revolutionary socialism
always existed as an opposition movement within the SPA, but at a certain moment -- 
either HERE or THERE -- it began formally organizing itself and collecting 
dues. That's what I'm trying to suss out, it's a fairly gigantic question of 
history...
`
tim

      

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