Comrades from Red Youth yesterday gave a presentation to the Stalin Society, discussing what the vital lessons of the Russian revolution, Stalin’s role in building socialism, and what it means to us today.

The presentation by comrade Corinne is reproduced below.

Before I express what Stalin means to me, I would first like to discuss what Stalin meant to the peoples of Russia at a time where oppression was much more glaring in its mercilessness, and the emancipation of a nation from wage-slavery and exploitation was considered impossible.

As is always the case when the relations of production are hostile to, and inherently conflict with, the character of the productive forces, revolt inevitably occurs and spreads wildly. It was Lenin who lit the beacon that shone on Marx’s theories, and Lenin who further developed them; this strenuous task was continued forth by his disciple, Josef Stalin. For Stalin, a strong economy needed a strong country: and rightly so!

Industrialisation was key to achieving this strength, namely because, in the least dramatic manner possible, the future for socialist revolution in the Soviet Union was at stake. Stalin himself summed up the conditions of the USSR at the time when he correctly stated that “If we are backward and weak, we may be beaten and enslaved. But if we are powerful, people must beware of us. We are 50 to 100 years behind the advanced countries of the West. We must make up this gap in 10 years. Either we do this or they crush us.”

How right he was. In less than 10 years the Nazis invaded the Soviet Union, and were it not for his plans of collectivisation and industrialisation, the USSR would have been dealt a vicious blow that would surely have left her severely wounded, and easy prey for the jaws of Western imperialism. Against all odds, Stalin and the Soviet peoples revolutionised a largely agrarian backwater into a powerful Socialist state, and in doing so, in accordance with the tenets of socialism, transformed the limited role of the woman to that of the highest calibre.

At the time, in 1923, Stalin pronounced “The women worker stands shoulder to shoulder with the man worker. She works with him on the common task of building our industry. She can help the common cause if she is politically conscious and politically educated. But she can ruin the common cause if she is downtrodden and backward, not, of course, as a result of her ill-will, but because of her backwardness. The peasant woman stands shoulder to shoulder with the peasant. She advances, together with him, the common cause of the development of our agriculture, its successes and its flourishing…”

Stalin continues, “Women workers and peasants are free citizens on an equal footing with men workers and peasants. The women elect our Soviets and our co-operatives and can be elected to these organs. Women workers and peasants can improve our Soviets and cooperatives, strengthen and develop them if they are politically literate.

That is why the political education of women workers and peasants is a task of primary importance, a most important task for real victory over the bourgeoisie today, when the workers and peasants have set about the building of a new life. That is why the importance of the first women workers’ and peasants’ congress, which laid the foundations for the task of politically educating working women, is really quite inestimable.”

This briefly leads me first onto the topic of the Soviet Union before the building of socialism.

Though most of the world would like to dispute this fact, we Marxist-Leninists know the truth: that without Stalin, the healthcare system as we know it, the various social reforms that have given millions of oppressed, silenced people a voice and, more importantly, the abolition of fascism would not be in existence today.

Tsarist Russia, as Stalin knew it before the revolution, was a nation of misery and mass corruption. To say that “these most aristocratic of aristocrats fell from glory” as the Daily Mail described the Imperial family in 2008 is an absolute insult to the life of the working class then, along with 80% of the population that made up the peasantry. Workers living under Tsarist rule would have no choice but to sell their labour for fourteen to fifteen hours every day, and no less than twelve and a half.

Insurance, much less workers’ rights in general, was non-existent. No regulation, no protection, and no regard for the working people resulted in droves of workers being killed, maimed and left seriously injured on a regular basis. Women and children were undoubtedly the main objects of exploitation. Children of astoundingly young ages were forced into unbearably long hours of labour, the same as adults, and yet, like women, received diabolically low wages. In particular, women living under tsardom could not even fathom the idea of village day nurseries, working homes for destitute mothers, consulting institutions for pregnant women, no legal and no village consulting stations: there were none. The women of smaller nationalities belonging to the eastern regions of Tsarist Russia were deprived of their most basic human rights.

Before the October revolution, it would be most usual to find as many as ten to twelve workers crowded into a small cell in barracks belonging to the factory they worked in. In concern with the living conditions of the peasantry, whom until 1861 were serfs, or in other words slaves to their landlord, they were subjugated to constant malicious exploitation over portions of land for cultivation, extortionate rent fees, fines, and excessive taxation, after excessive taxation, after excessive taxation. Further, the life of a peasant woman was just as dismal, working from dawn till dusk, entirely alienated from her labour like the worker. Further still, in the case of women living in pre-revolutionary Russia, all doors to government, civic and other political activities were barred shut. These are a few example of the predetermined conditions that were set out for working women and men.

Truly, tsardom was a quality of life nasty, brutish and short for the proletariat. From the moment they were brought into the world, until their very last breath, life for the working class and then peasantry in Tsarist Russia was nothing short of a prison sentence.

In contrast to life under the Tsar, women could now take an active part in administration, various aspects of socialist culture and in state building; also playing an important part in socialist industry, with women mastering highly skilled trades such as engineering, technician work and factory labour.

In a speech made at the first Pan-Russian conference of female communist militants, by the ‘Eastern Women’ to the Soviet women workers and peasants, the Soviet Union’s influence on women’s emancipation was expressed like so:

“We were born as slaves and used to die as slaves. That is how thousands, millions of women lived their lives, and it seemed that was to be their eternal destiny, that never a hand would be raised to break their chains. But then in October 1917 a red star appeared, that had never been seen before, and thus the working women and peasant women joined the Revolution which changed their lives. News of those events got to us late and in a confused and partial manner. For this news to reach us women of the East, it had to get through the walls, the iron bars and our parandjà.”

Under Stalin, the Soviet Union was an unquestionable inspiration to women’s liberation movements the world over, including International Women’s Day, which though in recent years became a celebration of women’s achievements, originally had socialist roots.

So with that in consideration, why does Stalin continue to suffer from such outlandish lies that are seldom grounded in reality?

Essentially, Stalin has not been continuously vilified because he was a mass murderous dictator who exercised total control over the population, while strangely simultaneously giving full rights to all citizens, eradicating illiteracy, drastically expanding life expectancy, but because he posed a rightful threat to Western imperialism.

The Daily Mail, who I’m almost certain have hired someone whose purpose it is to plug anti-Stalin clickbait articles, couldn’t resist adding cliché, baseless accusations of engineered famines and executions of 20 million (it’s 20 million for definite this time, not 60 or 5) people even in a poll taken in Russia, in which Stalin was voted third best Russian leader, narrowly missing the top spot by 5,500 votes.

Despite the ruthless propaganda war that was propelled against Stalin and continues to the present day, a war that has, tragically, severely damaged relations with our international comrades, surprising amounts public perception of Stalin that is indoctrinated to us doesn’t correspond with what’s propagated, perhaps partly owing to Putin since approving a textbook used in schools across the country, one highlighting Stalin’s achievements. The view often held, at least by the older generation, is nostalgic. Many people regard him as a leader who leader who led the defeat of Nazi Germany.

In Georgia, they have a more traditional reason for liking Stalin: He was born there. The Carnegie poll found that 68 percent of Georgians agreed that “Stalin was a wise leader who brought the Soviet Union to might and prosperity.” According to the BBC, his birthplace of Gori features a Stalin museum and has voted to erect a huge statue of the dictator. One tour guide summed up the country’s feelings towards the man by saying “In Georgia, most of the old generation like Stalin. They think he was a great statesman, with his small mistakes. Young people don’t like Stalin, of course. Our young people are not interested in history and they don’t like Stalin.”

Across international waters, Mao Zedong and the Chinese communists held Stalin in extremely high regard, which is shown by the following words of Mao Zedong on the occasion of Stalin’s 60th birthday:

“Stalin is the leader of world revolution. This is of paramount importance. It is a great event that mankind is blessed with Stalin. Since we have him, things can go well. As you all know, Marx is dead and so are Engels and Lenin. Had there been no Stalin, who would be there to give directions? But having him – this is really a blessing. Now there exist in the world a Soviet Union, a Communist Party and also a Stalin. Thus, the affairs of the world can go well. We must hail him, we must support him, and we must learn from him. We must learn from him in two respects: his theory and his work.”

Stalin to me

To me Stalin stands as a man of diligence and determination. His life-long commitment to Marxism-Leninism, to socialism, provides inspiration to me and his achievement of implementing socialism serves as a daily affirmation that the struggle to overthrow capitalism is, though arduous, possible. Not only is it possible, Stalin reassures us that it is inevitable. And with that, I leave you with this last quote: “Either place yourself at the mercy of capital, eke out a wretched existence as of old and sink lower and lower, or adopt a new weapon-this is the alternative imperialism puts before the vast masses of the proletariat. Imperialism brings the working class to revolution.”