History vs. Vladimir Lenin Alex Gendler

He was one of the most influential figures

of the 20th century,

forever changing the course

of one of the world’s largest countries.

But was he a hero

who toppled an oppressive tyranny

or a villain who replaced it with another?

It’s time to put Lenin on the stand

in History vs. Lenin.

“Order, order, hmm.

Now, wasn’t it your fault that the band broke up?”

“Your honor, this is Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov,

AKA Lenin, the rabblerouser

who helped overthrow
the Russian tsar Nicholas II in 1917

and founded the Soviet Union,

one of the worst dictatorships of the 20th century.”

“Ohh.”

“The tsar was a bloody tyrant

under whom the masses toiled in slavery.”

“This is rubbish.

Serfdom had already been abolished in 1861.”

“And replaced by something worse.

The factory bosses treated the people

far worse than their former feudal landlords.

And unlike the landlords,

they were always there.

Russian workers toiled for eleven hours a day

and were the lowest paid in all of Europe.”

“But Tsar Nicholas made laws to protect the workers.”

“He reluctantly did the bare minimum to avert revolution,

and even there, he failed.

Remember what happened in 1905

after his troops fired on peaceful petitioners?”

“Yes, and the tsar ended the rebellion

by introducing a constitution

and an elected parliament, the Duma.”

“While retaining absolute power and dissolving them

whenever he wanted.”

“Perhaps there would’ve been more reforms in due time

if radicals, like Lenin,

weren’t always stirring up trouble.”

“Your Honor, Lenin had seen his older brother Aleksandr

executed by the previous tsar for revolutionary activity,

and even after the reforms,

Nicholas continued the same mass repression and executions,

as well as the unpopular involvement

in World War I,

that cost Russia so many lives and resources.”

“Hm, this tsar doesn’t sound like

such a capital fellow.”

“Your Honor, maybe Nicholas II did doom himself

with bad decisions,

but Lenin deserves no credit for this.

When the February 1917 uprisings

finally forced the tsar to abdicate,

Lenin was still exiled in Switzerland.”

“Hm, so who came to power?”

“The Duma formed a provisional government,

led by Alexander Kerensky,

an incompetent bourgeois failure.

He even launched another failed offensive in the war,

where Russia had already lost so much,

instead of ending it like the people wanted.”

“It was a constitutional social democratic government,

the most progressive of its time.

And it could have succeeded eventually

if Lenin hadn’t returned in April,

sent by the Germans to undermine the Russian war effort

and instigate riots.”

“Such slander!

The July Days were a spontaneous and justified reaction

against the government’s failures.

And Kerensky showed his true colors

when he blamed Lenin

and arrested and outlawed his Bolshevik party,

forcing him to flee into exile again.

Some democracy!

It’s a good thing the government collapsed

under their own incompetence and greed

when they tried to stage a military coup

then had to ask the Bolsheviks for help

when it backfired.

After that, all Lenin had to do

was return in October and take charge.

The government was peacefully overthrown overnight.”

“But what the Bolsheviks did

after gaining power

wasn’t very peaceful.

How many people did they execute without trial?

And was it really necessary

to murder the tsar’s entire family, even the children?”

“Russia was being attacked by foreign imperialists,

trying to restore the tsar.

Any royal heir that was rescued

would be recognized as ruler by foreign governments.

It would’ve been the end

of everything the people had fought so hard to achieve.

Besides, Lenin may not have given the order.”

“But it was not only imperialists

that the Bolsheviks killed.

What about the purges and executions

of other socialist and anarchist parties,

their old allies?

What about the Tambov Rebellion,

where peasants, resisting grain confiscation,

were killed with poison gas?

Or sending the army

to crush the workers in Kronstadt,

who were demanding democratic self-management?

Was this still fighting for the people?”

“Yes! The measures were difficult,

but it was a difficult time.

The new government needed to secure itself

while being attacked from all sides,

so that the socialist order could be established.”

“And what good came of this socialist order?

Even after the civil war was won,

there were famines, repression

and millions executed or sent to die in camps,

while Lenin’s successor Stalin established

a cult of personality and absolute power.”

“That wasn’t the plan.

Lenin never cared for personal gains,

even his enemies admitted

that he fully believed in his cause,

living modestly and working tirelessly

from his student days until his too early death.

He saw how power-hungry Stalin was

and tried to warn the party,

but it was too late.”

“And the decades of totalitarianism that followed after?”

“You could call it that,

but it was Lenin’s efforts that changed Russia

in a few decades

from a backward and undeveloped monarchy

full of illiterate peasants

to a modern, industrial superpower,

with one of the world’s best educated populations,

unprecedented opportunities for women,

and some of the most important scientific advancements

of the century.

Life may not have been luxurious,

but nearly everyone had a roof over their head

and food on their plate,

which few countries have achieved.”

“But these advances could still have happened,

even without Lenin

and the repressive regime he established.”

“Yes, and I could’ve been a famous rock and roll singer.

But how would I have sounded?”

We can never be sure how things could’ve unfolded

if different people were in power

or different decisions were made,

but to avoid the mistakes of the past,

we must always be willing

to put historical figures on trial.

他是 20 世纪最有影响力的人物

之一,

永远改变

了世界上最大国家之一的进程。

但他是

推翻暴政的英雄,

还是取而代之的恶棍?

是时候让列宁站在历史与列宁的立场上了

“命令,命令,嗯。

现在,乐队解散不是你的错吗?”

“法官大人,我是弗拉基米尔·伊里奇·乌里扬诺夫,

又名列宁,


是 1917 年帮助推翻俄罗斯沙皇尼古拉二世

并建立

了 20 世纪最糟糕的独裁政权之一的苏联的暴徒。”

“哦。”

“沙皇是一个血腥的暴君

,群众在奴隶制下辛勤劳作。”

“这是垃圾。

农奴制早在1861年就被废除了。”

“取而代之的是更糟糕的事情

。工厂老板对人民的待遇

比他们以前的封建地主糟糕得多。

而且与地主不同,

他们总是在那里。

俄罗斯工人每天工作 11 个小时

,是全欧洲工资最低的。”

“但沙皇尼古拉斯制定了保护工人的法律。”

“他不情愿地做了最低限度的革命来避免革命

,即使在那里,他也失败了。

还记得 1905

年他的部队向和平上访者开火后发生的事情吗?”

“是的,沙皇

通过制定宪法

和选举产生的议会杜马结束了叛乱。”

“同时保留绝对权力,

随时解散。”

如果像列宁这样的激进分子

不总是挑起事端,也许在适当的时候会有更多的改革。”

“法官大人,列宁亲眼目睹了他的哥哥亚历山大

因革命活动而被前沙皇处决

,即使在改革之后,

尼古拉斯继续进行同样的大规模镇压和处决,

以及不受欢迎地

卷入第一次世界大战,

这让俄罗斯付出了如此多的代价 许多生命和资源。”

“嗯,这个沙皇听起来不像

是那种资本家。”

“法官大人,也许尼古拉斯二世确实

做出了错误的决定,

但列宁不值得为此付出代价。

当 1917 年 2 月的起义

最终迫使沙皇退位时,

列宁仍被流放到瑞士。”

“嗯,那谁上台了?”

“杜马组建了一个临时政府,

由亚历山大·克伦斯基领导,

一个无能的资产阶级失败者。

他甚至在俄罗斯已经损失惨重的战争中发动了又一次失败的攻势

而不是像人民想要的那样结束它。”

“这是一个宪政社会民主政府,是

当时最进步的政府。

如果列宁没有在 4 月返回,

德国人派来破坏俄罗斯的战争努力

并煽动骚乱,它最终可能会成功。”

“如此诽谤

!七月日是对政府失败的自发和正当反应

。克伦斯基

在指责列宁

并逮捕并取缔他的布尔什维克政党时表现出他的真面目,

迫使他再次流亡。

一些民主!

这是一个很好的 政府

在企图发动军事政变时因自己的无能和贪婪而垮台

,事与愿违,只好向布尔什维克求助。

此后,列宁只需要

10月归来掌权

。政府和平 一夜之间被推翻。”

“但

布尔什维克掌权

后的所作所为并不十分和平。

他们未经审判就处决了多少人

?真的有

必要谋杀沙皇的全家,甚至是孩子吗?”

“俄罗斯受到外国帝国主义的攻击,

试图恢复沙皇。

任何获救的王室继承人都

将被外国政府承认为统治者。

这将

是人民为之奋斗的一切的终结。

此外, 列宁可能没有下达命令。”

“但

布尔什维克杀害的不仅仅是帝国主义者。

其他社会主义和无政府主义政党,

他们的老盟友的清洗和处决呢

?坦波夫起义呢

,农民抵抗粮食没收,

被毒气杀死?

或者派遣

军队镇压喀琅

施塔得要求民主自治的工人?

这还是为人民而战吗?

“是啊!措施是困难的,

但那是一个艰难的时期

。新政府需要在

四面八方的攻击中保护自己,

这样才能建立社会主义秩序。”

“而这种社会主义秩序有什么好处呢?

即使在内战胜利之后,

仍有饥荒、镇压

和数百万人被处决或送入集中营,

而列宁的继任者斯大林则建立

了个人崇拜和绝对权力崇拜。”

“那不是计划。

列宁从不关心个人利益,

甚至他的敌人也

承认他完全相信自己的事业,

从学生时代到过早去世,他过着谦虚的生活,孜孜不倦地工作。

他看到了斯大林对权力的渴望。

并试图警告党,

但为时已晚。”

“那之后几十年的极权主义呢?”

“你可以这么说,

但正是列宁的努力

在几十年内将俄罗斯

从一个充满文盲农民的落后和不发达的君主制

变成了一个现代的工业超级大国,

拥有世界上受过最好教育的人口之一,

为妇女提供了前所未有的机会,

以及本世纪一些最重要的科学

进步。

生活可能并不奢侈,

但几乎每个人都有一个屋顶

和盘子里的食物

,很少有国家能做到这一点。”

“但

即使没有列宁

和他建立的专制政权,这些进步仍然可能发生。”

“是的,我本来可以成为著名的摇滚歌手。

但我的声音会怎么样?”

如果不同的人掌权

或做出不同的决定,我们永远无法确定事情会如何发展,

但为了避免过去的错误,

我们必须始终愿意

接受历史人物的审判。