#16 - JRL 2007 - 211 - JRL Home
Russia Profile
www.russiaprofile.org
October 8, 2007
In Memory of a Lost Chance
The Cost of Unfreedom
Comment by Alexander Arkhangelsky
For me and many other observers, the image of the recent United Russia party
congress overlapped with personal memories of the 26th Congress of the Communist
Party of the Soviet Union. A weaver and a disabled man beg the leader to stay,
and then a storm of applause turns into a wild ovation. Of course, any analogy
is weak: if such a capable cabinet of ministers had possibly been appointed
before the start of the 26th Congress, then maybe the collapse of the Soviet
Union would not have been so violent and destructive. But the handwriting seems
very similar.
One is somehow reminded of an episode that happened 85 years ago. Towards the
end of perestroika, a legend emerged of the philosophers' ship. Allegedly, in
the fall of 1922, Lenin gathered the philosophical leaders of the intelligentsia
he hated so much, put them on a steamship and sent them off to Constantinople.
The steamship did exist, of course. It was called the Oberbürgermeister Haken,
and it left Petrograd for Stettin on Sept. 29, 1922. Nikolai Berdyaev strolled
on the ship's deck with philosophers Semyon Frank and Sergei Trubetskoy. So this
ship can, at a stretch, be called a philosophers' ship.
That summer, however, the Cheka exiled the leaders of Pomgol, an organization
that helped feed the starving during the famine of 1921. On Sept. 23, 1922, the
thinkers Pitirim Sorokin and Fyodor Stepun were sent to Latvia on the
Moscow-Riga train. Later, on Nov. 16, another steamship, the Preussen, sailed
from Russia, carrying Lev Karsavin, Vladimir Lossky and Ivan Lapshin. At the
beginning of 1923, the Bulgakovs - Sergei, a future priest, and Valentin,
director of Tolstoy Museum and a follower of Tolstoy, were exiled along with
intellectuals from Odessa and Kharkov, Nizhny Novgorod and Tiflis.
Based on different calculations, a total of 240 intellectuals were exiled
from the Soviet Union: at different times, in different ways, but systematically
and methodically, the way only the Cheka, the state security service, could do
it.
There were many philosophers on the lists of individuals to be exiled, and
many priests, including Eastern Rite Catholics, but most were professors, those
who wanted and knew how to communicate with young people. Those who, due to
their high professional status, wanted and knew how to say a quiet, firm "no" to
the authorities. They were people whose beliefs did not coincide with the
interests of the regime, including its scientific beliefs. Cynics were not
touched then, but their time would come.
To understand the true meaning of those events, it is important to remember
this was 1922.The NEP (the New Economic Policy) had just started to yield first
results; the country started breathing and coming back to life. The Bolshevik
fear of a popular revolt driven by material hardships sharply declined.
Another threat arose, however - the threat of being overthrown for spiritual
and ideological reasons. If economic life had returned, many reasoned it would
be possible to go back to the kind of political life they had previously
enjoyed, a life with opinions, personal views, choices and freedom of speech.
The professors wanted to educate the next generation of students in the
traditions of the Russian academic environment, not in the spirit of militant
communism.
At the end of May 1922, Lenin suffered a severe apoplectic stroke, after
which the self-proclaimed genius ended up looking like a quiet idiot with the
expression of permanent fear on his childish face. Of course, he knew nothing
about the future, but he was terribly alarmed by the present. It would be wrong
to terminate the NEP, but it was impossible to leave things as they were. He
decided to exile the troublemakers, at the same time instituting execution as
punishment for any attempt of the deportees to come back to the country without
permission. At this, he let loose the Cheka hounds.
The Cheka was only happy to oblige, of course. Instead of troubling
themselves with the disobedient intellectuals, it seemed so much easier to force
them out of the country. Who knows, maybe many of them will not live happily
abroad, and some of them could be recruited as spies without much risk or any
serious suspicions.
The smartest and most far-sighted, however, understood something else, too,
something that even Lenin failed to see. If you cut the older intellectual layer
off the new Russia, tomorrow you'll have to close the NEP program, too. Of
course the professors and academicians were disgusted by the fat NEP men, while
the NEP men did not care about their legal, scientific and especially
philosophical stuff. But if there is no dissident community of professionals who
are able to despise the idiotic authorities, there will be no free economic
relations - if only because after forcing out the disobedient leaders, you have
to put obedient scoundrels in their place and the latter are rarely talented.
Mediocrity in science, press and ideology then contradicts a policy of trade
relations and competition. In real life, it never happens so that the weakest
survive in one place, and the strongest grow in the other. The Soviets could
either have the NEP and at least relative freedom, or exile the professors and
eliminate NEP. What comes after is a totalitarian regime of
government-controlled economy.
And, strictly speaking, this is exactly what happened. The professors were
forced out, the NEP was cancelled; the owners of the most successful businesses
were kept in place, as a compromise. This liberal notion was later rejected,
too, and we know only too well what happened next.
But that, for some reason, is being doubted again today- for example, in the
notorious Russian history textbook, written by Alexander Filippov and Pavel
Danilin. The textbook, which ends with a chapter on sovereign democracy, was
bluntly supported by the party of power.
The authors seriously explain that "terror was an instrument of management
and a component of the strategy for the country's rapid modernization. This is
why it attacked all levels of the society, including the ruling clique. The
result of "purging" of this clique was the formation of a new administrative
layer, unconditionally loyal to the supreme authorities and impeccable from the
point of view of discipline. Roughly speaking, the stock phrase from the
perestroika magazine Ogonyok about the "senseless brutality" is false - it was a
very sensible and carefully calculated brutality.
It might have well been calculated, but what does it have to do with "rapid
modernization"? And the bureaucratically accurate phrase about the appearance of
the "new administrative layer, which was appropriate for the objective of
modernization" sounds like a pragmatic pardon of Stalinism. Why would this layer
with its "rapid modernization" even be necessary if NEP hadn't been stopped
short? Freedom - both commercial and intellectual - would have achieved
everything much faster, much more naturally and without violence.
Incidentally, the language used in the textbook gives the authors away
completely: they also belong to this "new layer," which would have been
impossible and unthinkable without the exile of the true intellectual elite in
that fateful year 1922. It was impossible to speak Russian this way while a
dignified intellectual tradition still existed; it became possible to speak and
think this way after the disappearance of the layer that could arrogantly raise
an eyebrow at the Soviet speeches and say: "Go, my boy; here's some money, buy
yourself some vodka."
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