Ninety years
ago, the Great October Socialist Revolution of 1917 gave birth
to a new society in which humanity’s most advanced dreams
of peace, equality and democracy began to flourish and become
reality. The revolution signalled the opening of the epoch of
the transition to socialism, a society which would end exploitation,
plunder and war, and construct a whole new kind of social relations
based on cooperation, not competition, and based on social justice,
not social, national or gender inequalities and oppression. Capitalism’s
unchallenged rule over the world was over.
The October Revolution was
one of the rare, truly liberating social upheavals in human history.
It made a sharp break with thousands of years of class divided,
exploitative societies, pointing the way for the international
working class’s liberation from the chains of imperialism,
the highest and final stage of capitalism.
Under the slogan “Peace,
Land, Bread” and with the support of the overwhelming majority
of the working class and poor peasants, the Russian Social Democratic
Labour Party (as the Communist Party of the Soviet Union was
then called) began the long, arduous trek to build such a new ‘system
of civilized co-operators’, as the great revolutionary
Vladimir Lenin came to describe the essence of socialism.
The new revolutionary Soviet
government immediately set to work to help birth that truly new
society. With his famous “decree on peace”, Lenin
and the Bolsheviks took Russia out of the First World War, an
imperialist slaughter of nations by the leading capitalist countries
for the re-division of wealth and colonial possession they had
plundered from the world’s peoples. Land rights were transferred
to millions upon millions of landless and impoverished peasants.
All industrial, financial and other capitalist companies were
nationalized. Workers were guaranteed employment. Education and
health care became universal and free. Nations were guaranteed
equality and self-determination including political secession.
And for the first time in history, bold steps towards the emancipation
of women were enacted.
The imperialist countries,
including Canada, reacted in horror to the fledgling revolution,
and immediately sent armies to crush the young Soviet state while
the ‘baby as still in its cradle’. Far weaker than
the invading imperialist armies, the Soviet government and peoples
nevertheless triumphed, with the support of millions of workers
around the world who acted under the slogan “Hands off
Russia!” Instead, the example of Russia sparked working
class struggles and insurrections throughout the Russian empire
and around the world.
The Soviet revolution shook
the imperialist world as never before. Yet it stood on the shoulders
of more than one hundred years of working class struggles. Millions
of workers supported the First and Second Internationals ? workers’ political
parties whose goal was world peace and socialism, in sharp contrast
to the imperialist strivings of the leading capitalist countries.
The Internationals were inspired
by the slogan “Workers of all lands, unite!” and
by revolutionaries such as Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels who
declared that the working class was the agent of socialist revolution.
They were steeled by heavy persecutions of workers’ organizations
throughout the advanced capitalist world. They were educated
by the bloody vengeance of the French and Prussian capitalists
in 1871 against the heroic but defeated Paris Commune ? the world’s
first working class state.
Nearly fifty years after the
Paris Commune, the
October Revolution gave a new impetus, new content, reference
points and energy to the world revolutionary movement.
Great October holds a unique
and honoured place in the entire history of the international
working class movement because it was the first socialist revolution
to achieve and retain political power, to withstand both internal
counter‑revolution and foreign intervention.
Because it dramatically changed
world politics for most of the balance of the century, breaking
the hegemony of imperialism, and establishing a new and fundamentally
different approach to relations between peoples, nations and
states.
Because it gave a powerful
impulse to the working people internationally to fight for their
class interests, and awakened and gave real momentum and practical
support to the anti‑colonial and ant‑imperialist
struggles of peoples everywhere, and to the movement for women’s
equality everywhere.
And, perhaps most important
of all, because it showed that socialism could be more than just
a good idea; that it could become an achievable reality; that
the working class and its allies could move beyond sporadic resistance
to capitalism, could challenge the system as a whole, and could
achieve social emancipation; that the exploited and oppressed,
through conscious and united struggle, could shape their future
and become the real masters of their own destiny.
It was this truth about the
Russian Revolution that more than anything else rattled the privileged
classes around the world, filling them with a fear and hatred
of socialism which began from the earliest days of the Soviet
state and continued ever since.
And yet despite
an unremitting campaign of imperialist hostility and subversion,
the Soviet Union endured for over seven decades, scoring many
great social achievements, overcoming unemployment, illiteracy,
and social deprivation. Socialism in the Soviet Union transformed
an economically and culturally “backward” country
into one of the world’s leading powers, and made great
advances in culture and science.
Internationally,
the Soviet Union played the decisive role in the defeat of fascism
in World War II, championed the cause of decolonization, supported
liberation movements throughout the Third World, and provided
vital assistance to the newly emergent states. Its peace policy
also restricted ? though it could not entirely suppress ? imperialism’s
tendency to military aggression.
Socialism also
benefited the working class in the advanced capitalist countries,
greatly strengthening the pressure on the ruling classes to grant
substantial concessions to working people in the form of labour
rights, the forty-hour work week, unemployment insurance, women’s
rights, health care, public education, and pensions.
Ultimately however,
the first workers’ state was overturned and capitalism
restored, due to a combination of interrelated internal and external
circumstances and contradictions which culminated in the temporary
victory of counterrevolution.
The defeat of
socialism in the USSR has become a powerful ideological weapon
in the hands of monopoly capitalism, which it uses to convince
workers and progressive-minded people that socialism does not
work. We categorically reject the bourgeois contention that the
internal causes of the crisis and defeat of socialism in the
Soviet Union were rooted in the intrinsic nature of socialism.
Rather, that historic setback resulted from distortions and outright
departures from Marxist-Leninist theory and practice, and arose
in part from the extremely difficult conditions under which socialism
was being built.
Whatever the failures, mistakes
or even gross distortions and departures which occurred during
that first great experiment in building a new, higher form of
society, this does not detract one iota from the enduring significance
of Great October or the historical balance-sheet of the Soviet
Union which it spawned, a composite record which was overwhelmingly
positive, not only for the people of the Soviet Union but indeed
for all humanity.
The misery and impoverishment
which have befallen the vast majority of working people in the
former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe since the early 1990s
is a painful reminder of what happens when counter-revolution
succeeds.
Everything we see around us
today, confirms that it is precisely capitalism itself which
is in profound systemic crisis ? economic, structural, political,
social and environmental. Capitalism is proving in life that
it cannot meet the fundamental needs and interests of the people,
neither in Canada nor around the world. Rather, the system is
increasingly undermining those needs and interests in pursuit
of its own internal “logic” ? its drive for personal
and corporate greed, regardless of the social cost.
As capitalism brings humanity
ever closer to catastrophe, people are yearning for freedom.
Socialism and working class resistance to imperialism are growing
around the world, especially in Venezuela, Bolivia and throughout
South America, resulting in fresh victories which are breathing
new life into the international working class, adding to the
already powerful example of Cuba’s revolution.
Imperialism is responding
to the growing resistance with growing reaction, militarism and
war. In Canada, the far right-wing forces are trying to smother
the demands for change by workers and their allies. But despite
their momentary advantage, the forces of imperialism cannot hold
back the force of history, the irresistible power and attraction
of socialist ideas, the growth of the international working class,
and the striving of the vast majority of humanity for social
progress and a better world.
Nothing can erase the accomplishments
of the Russian Revolution. The Communist Party of Canada will
celebrate Great October for its great achievements, for its historic
lessons and for the unequalled inspiration it has created for
the future of humanity ? a socialist future.
Central Executive Committee
Communist Party of Canada
October 17, 2007
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