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Comrade:PuzzledFox99: Difference between revisions

109 editsJoined 26 August 2024
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FIRST SET:
Discord: puzzledfox99_32168
 
My [[Special:Contributions/PuzzledFox99|contributions]].
 
For my convenience: [[Template:Citation]], [[Template:Video citation]], [[Template:Web citation]].
 
=Questionnaire answers=
{| role="presentation" class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"
|Questionnaire answers
|-
|FIRST SET:
1. I found ProleWiki on a list of partisan wikis (I forget exactly where that list was). I was in the middle of studying Marxism when I first heard of the wiki, and when I first found it, a number of articles were helpful in clearing up the meanings of terms. Ever since then I have read a number of articles here. I would be interested in contributing to articles on various social movements and political parties on this wiki. I got the idea to join because I noticed that there were a number of red links that could be turned into articles.
1. I found ProleWiki on a list of partisan wikis (I forget exactly where that list was). I was in the middle of studying Marxism when I first heard of the wiki, and when I first found it, a number of articles were helpful in clearing up the meanings of terms. Ever since then I have read a number of articles here. I would be interested in contributing to articles on various social movements and political parties on this wiki. I got the idea to join because I noticed that there were a number of red links that could be turned into articles.
2. While my education on Marxist theory is ongoing, the current that I find to be the most coherent would be Marxism-Leninism. As a kid, I (like many others) absorbed liberal ideology from my surroundings, but when I first took interest in political theory as a teenager, I became an isolationist conservative, mostly due to my poor understanding of what Marxism was. Things started to change when I joined an online debate group, and (despite my rightism) I consistently found myself arguing against right-wing "libertarians" more often than against socialists, due to the sheer refusal of "libertarian" rightists to understand the nature of political power; I even found myself taking the side of the socialists despite not being one at the time. In my early adulthood, I started reading the works of Marx, Engels, and Lenin to understand the theory better, and the more I read, the more I realized that I had already agreed with a lot of Marxism, I just didn't know it until then. This process of reading would've happened over the past five or so years, and it is currently ongoing. (I should note that I am not a "MAGA Communist" or class reductionist; my past "conservatism" was mostly shallow).
2. While my education on Marxist theory is ongoing, the current that I find to be the most coherent would be Marxism-Leninism. As a kid, I (like many others) absorbed liberal ideology from my surroundings, but when I first took interest in political theory as a teenager, I became an isolationist conservative, mostly due to my poor understanding of what Marxism was. Things started to change when I joined an online debate group, and (despite my rightism) I consistently found myself arguing against right-wing "libertarians" more often than against socialists, due to the sheer refusal of "libertarian" rightists to understand the nature of political power; I even found myself taking the side of the socialists despite not being one at the time. In my early adulthood, I started reading the works of Marx, Engels, and Lenin to understand the theory better, and the more I read, the more I realized that I had already agreed with a lot of Marxism, I just didn't know it until then. This process of reading would've happened over the past five or so years, and it is currently ongoing. (I should note that I am not a "MAGA Communist" or class reductionist; my past "conservatism" was mostly shallow).
Line 19: Line 29:
1. I'm curious if this criteria is updated based on current events. I ask because you include a mention of the ongoing Palestinian crisis following October 2023, which is a relatively recent event.
1. I'm curious if this criteria is updated based on current events. I ask because you include a mention of the ongoing Palestinian crisis following October 2023, which is a relatively recent event.
2. I am not deeply familiar with coding, but I am generally familiar with MediaWiki, and I have edited wikis that use MediaWiki such as Wikipedia in the past.
2. I am not deeply familiar with coding, but I am generally familiar with MediaWiki, and I have edited wikis that use MediaWiki such as Wikipedia in the past.
|}
=[[Great Soviet Encyclopedia|GSE]] 3rd ed.=
{| class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"
|+ class="nowrap" | Links to online versions of the GSE, 3rd ed.
! Volume !! Link to Russian original !! Link to English translation
|-
|ALL VOLS.
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-033-601-30vols <br> https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-507-748-ALL
|
|-
|1<br>А — Ангоб
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-728-ALL
|
|-
|2<br>Ангола — Барзас
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-735-ALL
|
|-
|3<br>Бари — Браслет
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-591-ALL
|
|-
|4<br>Брасос — Веш
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-581-ALL
|
|-
|5<br>Вешин — Газли
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-746-ALL
|https://archive.org/details/lccn_73-10680_5
|-
|6<br>Газлифт — Гоголево
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-518-ALL
|
|-
|7<br>Гоголь — Дебит
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-603-ALL
|
|-
|8<br>Дебитор — Евкалипт
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-517-ALL
|
|-
|9<br>Евклид — Ибсен
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-741-ALL
|
|-
|10<br>Ива — Италики
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-748-ALL
|
|-
|11<br>Италия — Кваркуш
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-738-ALL
|
|-
|12<br>Кварнер — Конгур
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-727-ALL
|
|-
|13<br>Конда — Кун
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-739-ALL
|https://archive.org/details/lccn_73-10680_13
|-
|14<br>Куна — Ломами
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-731-ALL
|
|-
|15<br>Ломбард — Мезитол
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-605-ALL
|
|-
|16<br>Мезия — Моршанск
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-588-ALL
|
|-
|17<br>Моршин — Никиш
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-554-ALL
|https://archive.org/details/greatsovietencyc0017unse
|-
|18<br>Никко — Отолиты
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-744-ALL
|
|-
|19<br>Отоми — Пластырь
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-602-ALL
|
|-
|20<br>Плата — Проб
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-569-ALL
|https://archive.org/details/greatsovietencyc0020unse
|-
|21<br>Проба — Ременсы
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-740-ALL
|https://archive.org/details/greatsovietencyc0021unse
|-
|22<br>Ремень — Сафи
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-747-ALL
|
|-
|23<br>Сафлор — Соан
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-587-ALL
|https://archive.org/details/greatsovietencyc0023unse
|-
|24.1<br>Собаки — Струна
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-582-ALL
|
|-
|24.2 <br><small>(31 in English)</small><br>''СССР''
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-508-ALL
|https://archive.org/details/greatsovietencyc0031unse
|-
|25<br>Струнино — Тихорецк
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-507-ALL
|
|-
|26<br>Тихоходки — Ульяново
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-745-ALL
|
|-
|27<br>Ульяновск — Франкфорт
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-604-ALL
|https://archive.org/details/greatsovietencyc0027unse
|-
|28<br>Франкфурт — Чага
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-584-ALL
|https://archive.org/details/greatsovietencyc0028unse
|-
|29<br>Чаган — Экс-ле-Бен
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-743-ALL
|https://archive.org/details/greatsovietencyc0029unse
|-
|30<br>Экслибрис — Яя
|https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-742-ALL
|
|-
|colspan="3" | Other ways to read the GSE online include:
* ''' http://bse.sci-lib.com/ ''' (full articles of the 3rd ed. in the original Russian available for free)
* ''' https://enc.ras.ru/ ''' (PDFs of all volumes of all eds., not just 3rd, in original Russian for free)
* ''' https://prussia.online/books/bolshaya-sovetskaya-entsiklopediya ''' (free and full Russian text of 3rd ed.)
* ''' https://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/ ''' (has English translations of 3rd ed. articles, plus articles from other encyclopedias; may be hard to navigate)
* ''' https://greatsovietencyclopedia.fandom.com/ ''' (work-in-progress copying of English translation of 3rd ed.)
|}
My template for GSE citations:
<nowiki>{{Citation|author=[    ]|year=[    ]|chapter=[    ]|chapter-url=https://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/[    ]|title=[[Great Soviet Encyclopedia]] (3rd ed.)|volume=[  ]|page=[  ]|city=Moscow|pdf=https://ia804601.us.archive.org/2/items/B-001-032-507-748-ALL/[    ].pdf|trans-title=Boljšaja sovjetskaja enciklopjedija|trans-lang=Russian}}</nowiki>
="Bonapartism" draft=
In Marxist thought, '''Bonapartism''' refers to a system where a counter-revolutionary [[dictatorship]] attempts to mediate between antagonistic class interests.<ref>{{Citation|year=1971|chapter=Bonapartism|chapter-url=https://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/Bonapartism|title=Great Soviet Encyclopedia (3rd ed.)|volume=3|page=551|city=Moscow|pdf=https://ia804601.us.archive.org/2/items/B-001-032-507-748-ALL/БСЭ_3изд_т03_591.pdf|trans-title=Boljšaja sovjetskaja enciklopjedija|trans-lang=Russian}}</ref> Bonapartist regimes typically come into existence during times of revolution, where they appropriate revolutionary symbols while actually having [[reactionary]] goals. For this reason, Bonapartist regimes tend to characterize themselves as "neither [[Left–right political spectrum|left nor right]]," despite actually serving the right in practice.<ref>{{Video citation|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9TYK9Mu_dzA|channel=Second Thought|title=Why "Neither Left Nor Right" Just Means Right Wing|date=2022-03-18}}</ref> According to Vladimir Lenin, "Bonapartism is a form of government which grows out of the counter-revolutionary nature of the bourgeoisie, in the conditions of democratic changes and a democratic revolution."<ref>{{Citation|author=Vladimir Lenin|year=1917|title=They Do Not See the Wood for the Trees|mia=https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1917/sep/01.htm}}</ref>
The name of Bonapartism derives from the Bonaparte dynasty, which ruled France twice, first under [[Napoleon Bonaparte]] and then under his nephew [[Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte]]. It was on Louis-Napoleon that [[Karl Marx]], a contemporary, wrote ''The 18th Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte'', which described the nature of Bonapartism in detail. Marx described how, when Louis-Napoleon became emperor, the [[Bourgeoisie|bourgeois class]] surrendered some of its political power to the emperor so that it may continue to have social power, for "in order to save its purse it must forfeit the crown."<ref>{{Citation|author=Karl Marx|year=1852|title=The 18th Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte|chapter=Rise of Louis Bonaparte|mia=https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1852/18th-brumaire/}}</ref>
Outside of Marxist circles, "Bonapartism" also refers more specifically to the belief that the Bonaparte dynasty should rule France.<ref>''Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary'', s.v. "Bonapartism," accessed August 30, 2024, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/Bonapartism.</ref> "Bonapartism" in this sense would be a sub-category of [[Monarchism]].
==Examples==
Notable examples of Bonapartism include:
* The [[First French Empire (1804 – 1815)|First French Empire]] under [[Napoleon Bonaparte]]
* The [[Second French Empire (1852 – 1870)|Second French Empire]] under [[Napoleon III]]
* The [[German Empire (1871–1918)|German Empire]] under [[Otto von Bismarck]]<ref>{{Citation|author=Friedrich Engels|year=1866|title=Friedrich Engels to Karl Marx in Margate, 13 April 1866|mia=https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1866/letters/66_04_13.htm}}</ref>
* The [[Republic of China]] under [[Chiang Kai-shek]]<ref>{{Web citation|author=Parson Young|newspaper=New Bloom Magazine|title=How is the KMT Still a Thing?|date=2015-05-13|url=https://newbloommag.net/2015/05/13/how-is-the-kmt-still-a-thing/}}</ref>
* The [[Republic of Singapore]] under [[Lee Kuan Yew]]
* The [[Russian Federation]] under [[Vladimir Putin]]<ref name="1DimePutin">{{Video citation|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o8d6Vzi7zYg|channel=1Dime|title=Post-Soviet Russia: From Gangster Capitalism to Bonapartism (Documentary)|date=2022-08-21}}</ref>
==See also==
* [[Napoleon Bonaparte]]
* [[Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte]]
* [[Fascism]]
==References==
<references />
= Evidence against "Judeo-Bolshevism" =
Thomas Henry Rigby (historian, unknown background but probably Gentile, unknown ideology)<ref>{{Citation|author=Thomas Henry Rigby|year=2019|title=Communist Party Membership in the U.S.S.R.|page=366|city=Princeton, NJ|publisher=Princeton University Press|title-url=https://books.google.com/books/about/Communist_Party_Membership_in_the_U_S_S.html?id=VVmYDwAAQBAJ}}</ref>:
{| class="wikitable"
|+ class="nowrap" | TABLE 32: NATIONAL COMPOSITION OF THE CPSU, 1922-1927
! Nationality !! Percent of party<br>1922 !! <br>1927 !! Percent of population 1926
|-
|Great Russians
|72.0
|65.0
|52.9
|-
|Ukrainians
|5.9
|11.7
|21.2
|-
|Belorussians
|1.5
|3.2
|3.2
|-
|Poles, Latvians, and other Baltic peoples
|4.6
|2.6
|0.7
|-
|Jews
|5.2
|4.3
|1.8
|-
|Minority peoples in R.S.F.S.R.
|2.0
|2.3
|4.3
|-
|Transcaucasian peoples
|3.4
|3.6
|2.5
|-
|Central Asians (incl. Kazakhs)
|2.5
|3.5
|7.0
|-
|Others
|2.9
|3.8
|6.4
|-
|colspan="4" |3 SOURCES: ''Izv Ts K'', Nos. 7-8, August-September 1923, p. 61, ''Sotsial'nyi i natsional'nyi sostav VKP(b)'', p. 114, Lorimer, ''op.cit.'', pp. 55-61. The 1922 figures cover members and candidates, the 1927 figures, members only. For additional details on national representa- tion at this period, see Fainsod, ''How Russia Is Ruled'', p. 219. On the growth of party organizations in minority areas between 1922 and 1927, see ''Sotsial'nyi i natsional'nyi sostav VKP(b)'', p. 117.
|}
Jeffrey Herf (Jewish liberal/Zionist historian, would probably be dismissed by antisemites but whatever)<ref>{{Citation|author=Jeffrey Herf|year=2006|title=The Jewish Enemy: Nazi Propaganda during World War II and the Holocaust|page=95-96|city=Cambridge, MA|publisher=Harvard University Press|title-url=https://books.google.com/books/about/The_Jewish_Enemy.html?id=T3EZ50uDlSoC}}</ref>:
: Given Nazi claims about "Jewish Bolshevism," it is important to take note of the actual role of Jews in Soviet political life. Drawing on data gathered at the annual party congresses of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, the historian Benjamin Pinkus has assessed the statistical and organizational representation of Jews within the power institutions of the party-the Central Committee, Politburo, Secretariat, and government bureaucracies. He concludes that there was "no historical basis" for claims that the Bolshevik regime was the work of the Jews. As of 1917, roughly 1,000, or about 5 percent, of the 23,000 members of the Bolshevik party were Jewish. By August 1917, 6 of 21 members of the Central Committee were Jews: Lev Kamenev, Grigory Sokolnikov, Jakov Sverdlov, Grigory Zinoviev, Leon Trotsky, and Moisei Uritsky. The party census of 1922 showed 19,564 Jewish members, 5.21 percent of the total. By 1927, the 49,627 Jewish members comprised 4.34 percent of all party members. Pinkus estimated no Jews remained in the Politburo. In the Stalin era in the 1930s, Lazar tral Executive Committee, the party Central Committee, the Presidium. the ministers, and the chairman of the Executive Committee), 27, or 6 percent, were Jewish. This proportion decreased radically in the 1930s, partly owing to the purge trials, which had strong anti-Semitic overtones. During the Holocaust, the Stalin regime said very little about Nazi policies aimed specifically at Jews. By fall 1943, and perhaps earlier, the Nazi death camps were within range of the Soviet air force. Yet Stalin did not order it to destroy the gas chambers and crematoria. the percentage of Jewish members of the party in 1940 at 4.3 percent or less. By 1939, only 10 percent of the Central Committee was composed of Jews. After Trotsky, Kamenev, and Zinoviev had been ousted from the leadership in 1926, Kaganovich became the only Jewish member of the Politburo-the exception that proved the rule. Of the 417 people who constituted the ruling elite of the Soviet Union in the mid-1920s (members of the Cen- of the Executive of the Soviets of the USSR and the Russian Republic, Thus, Nazi propaganda about Jewish domination of the Soviet regime had no basis in reality. It was a complete fantasy.
== References ==
<references />
----


[[Category:Comrades from North America]]
[[Category:Comrades from North America]]

Latest revision as of 18:33, 16 November 2024

Discord: puzzledfox99_32168

My contributions.

For my convenience: Template:Citation, Template:Video citation, Template:Web citation.

Questionnaire answers[edit | edit source]

GSE 3rd ed.[edit | edit source]

Links to online versions of the GSE, 3rd ed.
Volume Link to Russian original Link to English translation
ALL VOLS. https://archive.org/details/B-001-033-601-30vols
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-507-748-ALL
1
А — Ангоб
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-728-ALL
2
Ангола — Барзас
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-735-ALL
3
Бари — Браслет
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-591-ALL
4
Брасос — Веш
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-581-ALL
5
Вешин — Газли
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-746-ALL https://archive.org/details/lccn_73-10680_5
6
Газлифт — Гоголево
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-518-ALL
7
Гоголь — Дебит
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-603-ALL
8
Дебитор — Евкалипт
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-517-ALL
9
Евклид — Ибсен
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-741-ALL
10
Ива — Италики
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-748-ALL
11
Италия — Кваркуш
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-738-ALL
12
Кварнер — Конгур
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-727-ALL
13
Конда — Кун
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-739-ALL https://archive.org/details/lccn_73-10680_13
14
Куна — Ломами
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-731-ALL
15
Ломбард — Мезитол
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-605-ALL
16
Мезия — Моршанск
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-588-ALL
17
Моршин — Никиш
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-554-ALL https://archive.org/details/greatsovietencyc0017unse
18
Никко — Отолиты
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-744-ALL
19
Отоми — Пластырь
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-602-ALL
20
Плата — Проб
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-569-ALL https://archive.org/details/greatsovietencyc0020unse
21
Проба — Ременсы
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-740-ALL https://archive.org/details/greatsovietencyc0021unse
22
Ремень — Сафи
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-747-ALL
23
Сафлор — Соан
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-587-ALL https://archive.org/details/greatsovietencyc0023unse
24.1
Собаки — Струна
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-582-ALL
24.2
(31 in English)
СССР
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-508-ALL https://archive.org/details/greatsovietencyc0031unse
25
Струнино — Тихорецк
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-507-ALL
26
Тихоходки — Ульяново
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-745-ALL
27
Ульяновск — Франкфорт
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-604-ALL https://archive.org/details/greatsovietencyc0027unse
28
Франкфурт — Чага
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-584-ALL https://archive.org/details/greatsovietencyc0028unse
29
Чаган — Экс-ле-Бен
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-743-ALL https://archive.org/details/greatsovietencyc0029unse
30
Экслибрис — Яя
https://archive.org/details/B-001-032-742-ALL
Other ways to read the GSE online include:

My template for GSE citations:

{{Citation|author=[ ]|year=[ ]|chapter=[ ]|chapter-url=https://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/[ ]|title=[[Great Soviet Encyclopedia]] (3rd ed.)|volume=[ ]|page=[ ]|city=Moscow|pdf=https://ia804601.us.archive.org/2/items/B-001-032-507-748-ALL/[ ].pdf|trans-title=Boljšaja sovjetskaja enciklopjedija|trans-lang=Russian}}

"Bonapartism" draft[edit | edit source]

In Marxist thought, Bonapartism refers to a system where a counter-revolutionary dictatorship attempts to mediate between antagonistic class interests.[1] Bonapartist regimes typically come into existence during times of revolution, where they appropriate revolutionary symbols while actually having reactionary goals. For this reason, Bonapartist regimes tend to characterize themselves as "neither left nor right," despite actually serving the right in practice.[2] According to Vladimir Lenin, "Bonapartism is a form of government which grows out of the counter-revolutionary nature of the bourgeoisie, in the conditions of democratic changes and a democratic revolution."[3]

The name of Bonapartism derives from the Bonaparte dynasty, which ruled France twice, first under Napoleon Bonaparte and then under his nephew Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte. It was on Louis-Napoleon that Karl Marx, a contemporary, wrote The 18th Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte, which described the nature of Bonapartism in detail. Marx described how, when Louis-Napoleon became emperor, the bourgeois class surrendered some of its political power to the emperor so that it may continue to have social power, for "in order to save its purse it must forfeit the crown."[4]

Outside of Marxist circles, "Bonapartism" also refers more specifically to the belief that the Bonaparte dynasty should rule France.[5] "Bonapartism" in this sense would be a sub-category of Monarchism.

Examples[edit | edit source]

Notable examples of Bonapartism include:

See also[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]

  1. Great Soviet Encyclopedia (3rd ed.), vol. 3: 'Bonapartism' (1971) (Russian: Boljšaja sovjetskaja enciklopjedija). [PDF] Moscow.
  2. Second Thought (2022-03-18). "Why "Neither Left Nor Right" Just Means Right Wing". YouTube.
  3. Vladimir Lenin (1917). They Do Not See the Wood for the Trees. [MIA]
  4. Karl Marx (1852). The 18th Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte: 'Rise of Louis Bonaparte'. [MIA]
  5. Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, s.v. "Bonapartism," accessed August 30, 2024, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/Bonapartism.
  6. Friedrich Engels (1866). Friedrich Engels to Karl Marx in Margate, 13 April 1866. [MIA]
  7. Parson Young (2015-05-13). "How is the KMT Still a Thing?" New Bloom Magazine.
  8. 1Dime (2022-08-21). "Post-Soviet Russia: From Gangster Capitalism to Bonapartism (Documentary)". YouTube.

Evidence against "Judeo-Bolshevism"[edit | edit source]

Thomas Henry Rigby (historian, unknown background but probably Gentile, unknown ideology)[1]:

TABLE 32: NATIONAL COMPOSITION OF THE CPSU, 1922-1927
Nationality Percent of party
1922

1927
Percent of population 1926
Great Russians 72.0 65.0 52.9
Ukrainians 5.9 11.7 21.2
Belorussians 1.5 3.2 3.2
Poles, Latvians, and other Baltic peoples 4.6 2.6 0.7
Jews 5.2 4.3 1.8
Minority peoples in R.S.F.S.R. 2.0 2.3 4.3
Transcaucasian peoples 3.4 3.6 2.5
Central Asians (incl. Kazakhs) 2.5 3.5 7.0
Others 2.9 3.8 6.4
3 SOURCES: Izv Ts K, Nos. 7-8, August-September 1923, p. 61, Sotsial'nyi i natsional'nyi sostav VKP(b), p. 114, Lorimer, op.cit., pp. 55-61. The 1922 figures cover members and candidates, the 1927 figures, members only. For additional details on national representa- tion at this period, see Fainsod, How Russia Is Ruled, p. 219. On the growth of party organizations in minority areas between 1922 and 1927, see Sotsial'nyi i natsional'nyi sostav VKP(b), p. 117.

Jeffrey Herf (Jewish liberal/Zionist historian, would probably be dismissed by antisemites but whatever)[2]:

Given Nazi claims about "Jewish Bolshevism," it is important to take note of the actual role of Jews in Soviet political life. Drawing on data gathered at the annual party congresses of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, the historian Benjamin Pinkus has assessed the statistical and organizational representation of Jews within the power institutions of the party-the Central Committee, Politburo, Secretariat, and government bureaucracies. He concludes that there was "no historical basis" for claims that the Bolshevik regime was the work of the Jews. As of 1917, roughly 1,000, or about 5 percent, of the 23,000 members of the Bolshevik party were Jewish. By August 1917, 6 of 21 members of the Central Committee were Jews: Lev Kamenev, Grigory Sokolnikov, Jakov Sverdlov, Grigory Zinoviev, Leon Trotsky, and Moisei Uritsky. The party census of 1922 showed 19,564 Jewish members, 5.21 percent of the total. By 1927, the 49,627 Jewish members comprised 4.34 percent of all party members. Pinkus estimated no Jews remained in the Politburo. In the Stalin era in the 1930s, Lazar tral Executive Committee, the party Central Committee, the Presidium. the ministers, and the chairman of the Executive Committee), 27, or 6 percent, were Jewish. This proportion decreased radically in the 1930s, partly owing to the purge trials, which had strong anti-Semitic overtones. During the Holocaust, the Stalin regime said very little about Nazi policies aimed specifically at Jews. By fall 1943, and perhaps earlier, the Nazi death camps were within range of the Soviet air force. Yet Stalin did not order it to destroy the gas chambers and crematoria. the percentage of Jewish members of the party in 1940 at 4.3 percent or less. By 1939, only 10 percent of the Central Committee was composed of Jews. After Trotsky, Kamenev, and Zinoviev had been ousted from the leadership in 1926, Kaganovich became the only Jewish member of the Politburo-the exception that proved the rule. Of the 417 people who constituted the ruling elite of the Soviet Union in the mid-1920s (members of the Cen- of the Executive of the Soviets of the USSR and the Russian Republic, Thus, Nazi propaganda about Jewish domination of the Soviet regime had no basis in reality. It was a complete fantasy.

References[edit | edit source]

  1. Thomas Henry Rigby (2019). Communist Party Membership in the U.S.S.R. (p. 366). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
  2. Jeffrey Herf (2006). The Jewish Enemy: Nazi Propaganda during World War II and the Holocaust (pp. 95-96). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.