Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 12 – One hundred
years ago today, Vladimir Lenin moved the Soviet government from Peter the
Great’s window on Europe to Moscow, a move taken because of the threat German
forces represented to Petrograd but one that Lenin and the senior Bolsheviks
recognized was and remains freighted with meaning,
Accompanying Lenin and Krupskaya in
their car from the railroad station to the Kremlin was the Soviet leader’s
secretary, Vladimir Bonch-Bruyevich, a highly educated specialist on religious
minorities and on Marxism, and in a pamphlet describing their entry into the
Kremlin, he noted that “all were silent” because they recognized “a new
Muscovite period” had begun.
For Marxists as the Bolsheviks
professed themselves to be, that was no small thing given Karl Marx’
observation that “the bloody mire of Mongolian slavery, not the rude glory of
the Norman epoch, forms the cradle of Muscovy,” Marx wrote, adding that “modern
Russia is but a metamorphosis of Muscovy”
(marxists.anu.edu.au/archive/marx/works/1857/russia/ch04.htm).
On this anniversary, most Russian commentators,
of course, are focusing on Lenin’s desire to put his government beyond the
reach of German forces – see for example profile.ru/culture/item/125183-ot-pitera-do-moskvy.
But as the Muscovite state approaches its pseudo-elections, the historiosophical
meaning of the transfer of capitals may be more important.
An important contribution to
understanding that meaning is provided by an article on the Nationalities Accent portal by Yuliya
Bobkova on “how the peoples of Russia chose their fates,” that is, in her view,
equivalent to their choice of leaders (nazaccent.ru/content/26748-vybor-raznyh.html).
She begins by noting that “honest
and just elections are the main sign of democracy, but democracy as is
well-known, is ‘the worst form of government except for all the others.’ Over
its more than a thousand-year history, the Russian state has known various
types of rule, and with elections, some of our peoples were acquainted much
earlier than residents of Western Europe.”
Bobkova points to Novgorod Veliki
whose veche was more representative of the adult population for most of its
existence between 862 and 1478 than was the city government of London, to the
Setu who have elected a king for centuries, the peoples of the North Caucasus
who have chosen councils of elders, and the Cossacks who also elected their
atamans.
Sadly, she can’t point to any
democratic tradition in Muscovy and she doesn’t point to the obvious: all of
these democratic experiments were killed off not by their own people but by the
centralized Russian state, most often in Moscow – yet another indication that
the problem in this regard is not Russia but rather Moscow. That was something even
Marx understood.
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