| Stalin, a
political name adopted when he was 34, meaning Man of Steel, studied for the
priesthood under his real name, Dzhugashvili. Son of a shoe maker, he joined
the Social Democratic party after being expelled from a theological school
for insubordination. After the RSDLP split in 1903, Stalin became a member
of the Bolshevik party.
In Stalin's early years he was continually
in trouble with the local authorities. During this period he took the
nickname Koba, after the famous Georgian outlaw and the name of a character
in the romance "Nunu", by the Georgian author Kazbek. The celebrated brigand
Koba was known as a fighter for the the rights of the people, while the
fictional Koba was depicted as sacrificing everything in his struggle
against the Tsarist authorities on behalf of his people, but unsuccessful,
freedom was lost.
Koba escaped prison exile several times, at
his last escape he fled to St. Petersburg, where he became a member of the
editorial staff of Pravda in 1912. Within a year, Stalin was arrested again
and exiled to Siberia. He was released from exile by general amnesty after
the February Revolution of 1917, and went back to the editorial staff of
Pravda in Petrograd.
After the October Revolution Stalin was
elected to the post of commissar for nationalities.
Throughout the following civil war, Stalin
ascended the ranks of the government through extensive bureaucratic
manoeuvring and in 1922, received the majority vote to become the General
Secretary of the Communist party. In the same year Lenin called for his
removal, explaining that Stalin had amassed to much power, in what was to
become known as Lenin's last testament.
Following Lenin's death in 1924, a wave of
reaction swept through the Soviet government. Stalin introduced his theory
of socialism in one country, where he explained that Socialism could be
achieved by a single country.
Unlike former inner-party debates, where
the positions of either side were written in newspapers, talked about in
public meetings and soviets; the reaction and practices of the long and
devastating civil war, caused a 'debate' that was completely hidden from the
public, in order to 'establish the appearance' of a healthy, stable,
government.
In 1927, after years of bureaucratic
manoeuvring, the members in the government that were part of the Left
Opposition were deported on a wide scale. Immediately following, Stalin
announced his theory of social fascism, describing that the theories of
Social-Democracy and Fascism were essentially the same. Following this new
theory, members of Social-Democratic organisations (of which Bolsheviks were
once a part) were arrested or deported. In 1929 the right-wing of the
Communist party, led by Bukharin, was removed from the so-called "soviet"
government by the Stalinists.
In late 1928, Stalin introduced methods of
productively advancing the Soviet Union via forced industrialisation and
collectivisation. These efforts were tasked out in five year plans, the
first of which included a wide scale campaign of mass executions, arrests,
and deportations of the kulak class.
Russia advanced tremendously from the
draconian measures implemented to ensure that "socialism in one country"
could survive. Russia moved from complete devastation and destruction after
WWI and the Civil War, to become a nation that was one of the most powerful
in the world: achieving such goals that 30 years previous would have been
viewed as wholly impossible.
From 1934 to 1939 Stalin ordered a series
of executions and imprisonments, largely directed towards people within the
Soviet government. Half of the members of the first Council of Peoples
Commissars were executed in 1938 (A quarter of them had died natural deaths
before hand, of the remaining quarter only Stalin lived past 1942). Some
government officials executed were thought to be Nazi agents or
sympathisers, while others were accused for planning to overthrow the Soviet
government. Members of the Left Opposition who were allowed to return to the
party after accepting Stalinism were soon executed, those who remained
abroad were hunted down and killed. Also executed were people belonging to
the right-wing of the party (Bukharin and others). The exact number of
people executed is not known, estimates range from thousands to millions.
During WWII Stalin organised and lead the
Soviet Union to victory over the invading Nazi armies.
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