The Classics, Development,
Part 10a
Hammer and Sickle = Worker-Peasant
Alliance
Report on the
National and Colonial Question
V I Lenin wrote constantly. Writing
and publishing his writing in newspapers, magazines, pamphlets and books was
Lenin’s main means of communication with the enormous movement that he led.
Lenin was a very good and skilled writer, was the leading theoretician of his
time, and was critically involved in world-shaping events. Marxists Internet
Archive (MIA) contains 4170 “of a potential 4500” Lenin-authored documents,
listed by date, and alphabetically by title.
MIA also has the Progress Publishers, Moscow 1963-64 “Lenin Selected Works” selection. Which of Lenin’s works should be included
among our choice of classics? We have taken a view, and have included a number
of them. Feedback is welcome, if you agree, or if you disagree.
Today we choose the crucial
document that launched National Democratic
Revolution (NDR) as the defining strategy and tactics of the struggle
against Imperialism. Lenin gave the report-back of the Commission on the
National and Colonial Question to the Second Congress of the Communist
International (often abbreviated as “2CCI”) on 26 July, 1920. This is the
document that is attached, and downloadable via the first link below.
Origin of South Africa’s National Democratic
Revolution
The following year, at the
third Comintern Congress (“3CCI”), the Communist Party of South Africa was
admitted and thereby originally constituted, not on its own terms but on the
Comintern’s terms, which since the previous year had included the NDR policy.
This is the true origin of South Africa’s National Democratic Revolution of
today.
Practical politics is always
a matter of alliance, and in different circumstances, different alliances are
called for. Communists commonly regard an alliance between workers and peasants
as normal (hence the hammer-and-sickle logo, which was adopted as “official” by
the communists in the same period). Proletarian parties have also, in the past,
attempted class alliances with the bourgeoisie against feudalism, or against
colonialism.
Tactical alliances -
unity-in-action - are normal and necessary, in order to isolate and thereby to
defeat an adversary, and equally to avoid being isolated and defeated by the
adversary. Therefore the question of the appropriate alliances in the
anti-colonial and anti-Imperialist struggle was bound to arise.
In his report to the 2CCI on
the National & Colonial Question, Lenin says: “We have discussed
whether it would be right or wrong, in principle and in theory, to state that
the Communist International and the Communist parties must support the
bourgeois-democratic movement in backward countries. As a result of our
discussion, we have arrived at the unanimous decision to speak of the national-revolutionary movement rather
than of the ‘bourgeois-democratic’ movement. It is beyond doubt that any national movement can only be a bourgeois-democratic
movement, since the overwhelming mass of the population in the backward
countries consist of peasants who
represent bourgeois-capitalist relationships… However, the objections have
been raised that, if we speak of the bourgeois-democratic movement, we shall be
obliterating all distinctions between the reformist and the revolutionary
movements. Yet that distinction has been very clearly revealed of late in the
backward and colonial countries…”
Here are all the makings of
the NDR, including the name, even if the words are not quite in their
present-day order. Lenin calls it “national-revolutionary”, but he makes it
absolutely clear that he is talking of a democratic class alliance with
anti-colonial, anti-Imperialist elements of the national bourgeoisie in
colonial countries.
The 2CCI was followed within
two months by the famous “Congress of the Peoples of the East”, in Baku,
in the southern part of what was soon to become the Soviet Union. This was
the first international anti-colonial conference, and what followed it during
the remainder of the 20th Century was the defeat of direct colonial
rule throughout the entire globe, based on the tactics laid down in Lenin’s
report.
Therefore Lenin’s report on
the National and Colonial Question is treated here as an undoubted classic.
·
The above is to
introduce the original reading-text: Report on
National and Colonial Question, 2CCI, 1920, Lenin.
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