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Title: The Kronstadt Uprising Author: Crimethinc. Language: en Topics: Kronstadt, Russian Revolution, rebellion, anarchism, Russia Source: Retrieved on March 9, 2021 from https://crimethinc.com/2021/03/03/the-kronstadt-uprising-a-full-chronology-and-archive-including-a-view-from-within-the-revolt
In March 1921, an uprising on the island fortress of Kronstadt shook
Russia, starkly illustrating the conflicts within the Russian
revolution. To observe the 100-year anniversary of the revolt, we
present an overview of the questions that were at stake in the struggle,
following by a full chronology of the events, illustrated by selections
from contemporary historical documentsâincluding the entire text of all
14 issues of the newspaper published by the Kronstadt rebels, the
Izvestia [news] of the Provisional Revolutionary Committee of Sailors,
Soldiers, and Workers of the Town of Kronstadt.1 Though many different
factions have attempted to portray the Kronstadt uprising according to
many different ideological frameworks, this is a rare opportunity to see
the rebellion from the vantage point of the rebels themselves.
While both anarchists and apologists for Lenin and Stalin often portray
the Kronstadt uprising as a conflict between anarchists and party
communists, this is a misunderstanding that has arisen as a result of
subsequent conflicts. Rather, the Kronstadt uprising represented the
final rupture between the autocratic dictatorship of the Russian
Communist Party (Bolsheviks) and every other communist and socialist
current in the country, as well as anarchists and other elements of the
working classâespecially those to the left of the Bolsheviks, as the
Bolsheviks had adopted many right-wing policies by that time.
Essentially, the conflict among Russian anti-capitalist revolutionaries
was about whether power should be vested in a one-party dictatorship, in
representative electoral politics, or in horizontally organized workersâ
councils [soviets].
From the perspective of Lenin and Trotsky, the great crime of the
Kronstadt rebels in 1921 was to call for âAll power to the soviets, and
not to parties.â The soviets, as the Kronstadt rebels understood them,
were meant to be decentralized workersâ councils, through which people
could practice self-determination directly, rather than attempting to
express their agency indirectly by voting for representatives to
participate in the Constituent Assembly or simply carrying out the
orders of a Party-controlled Central Committee.
The conflict between these three political models went back decades. In
1903, at the second party congress of the Russian Social Democratic
Labor Party, the Party split in two as the consequence of a debate over
how to define party membership. The Bolsheviks (âmajority,â though they
did not actually represent the majority of the participants in the
congress), headed by Vladimir Lenin, argued for a very strict definition
of the Party as a tight, centralized cadre. The Mensheviks (âminorityâ),
headed by Julius Martov, conceptualized the Party more broadly,
considering it to include everyone who identified with and supported its
program. Both saw the Party as the vehicle for revolutionary change, but
Lenin wished to build a tightly-controlled group capable of seizing
power, while Martov was more concerned with fostering a broad
working-class movement.
In 1904, following the division between the Bolsheviks and the
Mensheviks, Leon Trotsky warned that substituting âa âPartyâ placed
above the proletariat (at least as Comrade Lenin and his supporters
understand the term Party)â for the working class as a whole would
ultimately lead to a dictator substituting himself for the Party:
âIn the internal politics of the Party these methods lead, as we shall
see, to the Party organization âsubstitutingâ itself for the Party, the
Central Committee substituting itself for the Party organization, and
finally the dictator substituting himself for the Central Committee.â
-Leon Trotsky, Our Political Tasks, 1904
This fundamental conflict was never resolved. In 1912, the Bolsheviks
formally excluded the Mensheviks, establishing their own distinct party.
After the revolution of February 1917 pushed the Tsar out of power and
established representative democracy under a Provisional Government with
an elected Constituent Assembly, Trotsky and Lenin returned to Russia
from exile and participated in overthrowing the Provisional Government
in October 1917, ostensibly for the sake of vesting all power in the
soviets (i.e., grassroots workersâ councils). Despite his earlier
criticisms, Trotsky ended up working with the Bolsheviks.
At the Second Pan-Russian Congress of Soviets in November 1917, the
Bolsheviks took advantage of a temporary majority to transform the
Central Executive Committee into a largely independent government organ
acting over the heads of the delegates from the actual soviets. Over the
following months, the Bolsheviks began to consolidate power via the
Central Committee. Gaining control of the Cheka (the secret police),
they had their opponents arrested, including a rival socialist delegate
to the Congress. In early 1918, after they failed to win a majority in
the Constituent Assembly, they shut it down, seeking to assert the
primacy of the political organs they controlled.
Some anarchists joined them in this effort; indeed, the anarchist
Anatoli Zhelezniakov led the actions that broke up the Provisional
Government in October 1917 and the Constituent Assembly in January 1918.
The anarchists opposed the Constituent Assembly because they objected to
the centralization of power in any government, even a government run by
representative democracyânot because they sought to create a centralized
one-party dictatorship, like the Bolsheviks. Collaborating with the
Bolsheviks turned out to be a mistake: the Bolsheviks turned on the
anarchists as their next target after the end of the Constituent
Assembly, taking advantage of bourgeois hostility towards anarchists to
arrest and kill large numbers of anarchists in Moscow and St. Petersburg
starting in April 1918.2 It is never a good idea for anarchists to make
cause with authoritarians, even in the name of fighting capitalism and
the institutions of the state.
âThey [the Bolsheviks] have declared war on revolutionary anarchism. The
Bolsheviks want to purchase the good will of the bourgeoisie with the
heads of anarchists. The anarchists did not desire any clash. We
regarded you [Bolsheviks] as our revolutionary brothers. But you have
proved to be traitors. You are Cainsâyou have killed your brothers.â
-Burevestnik (âStormy Petrelâ), an anarchist publication in St.
Petersburg, April 13, 1918, responding to the raids of April 11; quoted
in Paul Avrichâs The Anarchists in the Russian Revolution
Throughout 1918 and 1919, the Bolsheviks concentrated more and more
power in their hands, suppressing other political parties and
organizations one after the other. In June 1918, Trotsky abolished
worker control in Russiaâs Red Army, suppressing the proletarian
tradition in which soldiers elected their officers, restoring the
military hierarchies of the Tsarist era, and recruiting Tsarist officers
to rejoin the army. In August 1918 and again in 1919, the Bolsheviks
used the military to carry out mass executions of workers who continued
to protest over labor conditions.
In this context, Julius Martov, Leninâs former friend and comrade in the
Russian Social Democratic Labor Party, argued that by proclaiming
themselves the representatives of âsoviet powerâ while sidelining the
actual soviets and abolishing the structures of representative
democracy, the Bolsheviks were retaining the authoritarian aspects of
the state while abolishing the desirable ones. In 1919, in
âDecomposition or Conquest of the State,â Martov arguedârightly or
wrongly!âthat Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels had never intended for the
establishment of a one-party dictatorship availing itself of the
authoritarian structures of the state, but rather had called for the
proletariat to abolish ââthe worst sidesâ of the democratic State (for
example: the police, permanent army, the bureaucracy as an independent
entity, exaggerated centralization, etc.)â so that the democratic state
could replace the âmilitary and bureaucratic state.â
By todayâs standards, Martov comes across as something akin to a
democratic confederalist, calling for the abolition of the police and
standing bureaucracies but seeing direct democracy as a way to
rehabilitate the state. This is far from the anarchist position that all
forms of centralized power should be abolishedâbut it illustrates the
breadth of socialist and communist perspectives in Russia at the time,
showing that the Bolsheviks represented the most authoritarian end of a
wide spectrum of thought regarding whether power should be vested in the
institutions of representative democracy, in self-organized workerâs
councils, or in an autocratic one-party dictatorship.
In âThe Ideology of âSovietism,ââ published the same year, Martov
elaborated his critique of the Bolsheviks. Itâs worth quoting the
following passage at length, because it shows that the authoritarianism
that some pro-Bolshevik apologists later blamed on Stalin was essential
to the Bolsheviksâ program from the very beginning, recognized by former
colleagues who knew them intimately:
The âSoviet Stateâ has not established in any instance electiveness and
recall of public officials and the commanding staff. It has not
suppressed the professional police. It has not assimilated the courts in
direct jurisdiction by the masses. It has not done away with social
hierarchy in production. It has not lessened the total subjection of the
local community to the power of the State. On the contrary, in
proportion to its evolution, the Soviet State shows a tendency in the
opposite direction. It shows a tendency toward intensified centralism of
the State, a tendency toward the utmost possible strengthening of the
principles of hierarchy and compulsion. It shows a tendency toward the
development of a more specialized apparatus of repression than before.
It shows a tendency toward the greater independence of the usually
elective functions and the annihilation of the control of these
functions by the elector masses. It shows a tendency toward the total
freedom of the executive organisms from the tutelage of the electors. In
the crucible of reality, the âpower of the sovietsâ has become the
âsoviet power,â a power that originally issued from the soviets but has
steadily become independent from the soviets.
We must believe that the Russian ideologists of the soviet system have
not renounced entirely their notion of a non-Statal social order, the
aim of the revolution. But as they see matters now, the road to this
non-Statal social order no longer lies in the progressive atrophy of the
functions and institutions that have been forged by the bourgeois State,
as they said they saw things in 1917. Now it appears that their way to a
social order that would be free from the State lies in the
hypertrophyâthe excessive developmentâof these functions and in time
resurrection, under an altered aspect, of most State institutions
typicaI of the bourgeois era. The shrewd people continue to repudiate
democratic parliamentarism. But they no longer repudiate, at the same
time, those instruments of State power to which parliamentarism is a
counterweight within bourgeois society: bureaucracy, police, a permanent
army with commanding cadres that are independent of the soldiers, courts
that are above control by the community, etc.
In contrast to the bourgeois State, the State of the transitional
revolutionary period ought to be an apparatus for the ârepression of the
minority by the majority.â Theoretically, it should be a governmental
apparatus resting in the hands of the majority. In reality, the Soviet
State continues to be, as the State of the past, a government apparatus
resting in the hands of a minority. (Of another minority, of course.)
Little by little, the âpower of the sovietsâ is being replaced with the
power of a certain party. Little by little, the party becomes the
essential State institution, the framework and axis of the entire system
of âsoviet republics.â
Later, Marxist-Leninists justified the Bolsheviksâ program by arguing
that it was necessary to force the abolition of capitalism upon the
capitalist class. On the contrary, we see here that the Bolsheviksâ
program was to expand the repressive institutions of Tsarist Russia in
order to suppress other socialists and communists as well as Tsarists
and capitalists, while concentrating control of capital in the hands of
an unaccountable Central Committee. The word for this is state
capitalism.
In 1920, after visiting Russia, Bertrand Russell published The Practice
and Theory of Bolshevism, arguing that the Bolsheviks had fulfilled the
dictatorship aspect of their promised proletarian dictatorship without
fulfilling their promise to put power in the hands of the proletariat:
Friends of Russia here think of the dictatorship of the proletariat as
merely a new form of representative government, in which only working
men and women have votes, and the constituencies are partly
occupational, not geographical. They think that âproletariatâ means
âproletariat,â but âdictatorshipâ does not quite mean âdictatorship.â
This is the opposite of the truth. When a Russian Communist speaks of
dictatorship, he means the word literally, but when he speaks of the
proletariat, he means the word in a Pickwickian sense. He means the
âclass-consciousâ part of the proletariat, i.e., the Communist Party. He
includes people by no means proletarian (such as Lenin and Tchicherin)
who have the right opinions, and he excludes such wage-earners as have
not the right opinions, whom he classifies as lackeys of the
bourgeoisie.
Another visitor, the Spanish anarchist Manuel Fernandez Alvar (aka
Vilkens), after meeting Lenin, briefly serving in the Red Army, and
spending some weeks in prison, summarized things thus in 1920:
âThere may have been a day when the Bolsheviks represented revolutionary
aspirations, but today all that is finished. It would be wrong to
believe that the Russian Revolution and the Bolsheviks are the same
thing. The Communist Party and those it endows are walking rapidly
towards the establishment of a class with interests opposed to the
interests of the revolutionary masses. The proletarian dictatorship is
an instrument of oppression in the hands of a new class; this class is
not controlled by the proletariat and is antagonistic towards it.â
âThe regime uses terror even more than the Tsarist regime,â he
continued, in an article that appeared in Le Libertaire on January 14,
1921, âbecause it finds it more difficult to suppress people who have
seen and recognized the light of revolution.â
This summarizes the substantive political differences within the Russian
revolution at the close of 1920. There were additional problemsâfamine,
social strife, and the repeated assaults of Tsarist forces backed by
capitalist nationsâand the various factions of the anti-capitalist
movement had different proposals for how to respond to these (for
example, anarchists like Nestor Makhno played a significant role in
countering the invasions of the White Army). But the fundamental
conflict hinged upon how power should be structured. For many of the
sailors in Kronstadt, the concentration of power in the hands of
bureaucrats in the Party hierarchy reminded them too much of the
disparities of Tsarist society and bourgeois capitalism.
This is not to say that those who rebelled at Kronstadt in March 1921
shared an ideology or values. Rather, the rebellion showed that, after
three and a half years in power, the Bolsheviks had failed to convince a
wide range of socialists, communists, anarchists, and other workers that
their autocratic approach was the best solution for the problems of the
Russian working class. Indeed, in the year leading up to the revolt,
Bolshevik Party membership on Kronstadt declined âfrom 5630 party
members in March 1920 to 2228 by the end of the year,â according to
Israel Getzlerâs Kronstadt 1917-1921, with many people simply quitting
the party outright.
If the uprising itself was limited to a single island, that was because
the Bolshevik government had already succeeded in crushing resistance
throughout the rest of the countryâfrom the urban anarchist social
centers they had raided in 1918 to the massive movements in Siberia,
Ukraine, and elsewhere. The Kronstadt rebels hoped that their protest
could give rise to what they called a âthird revolutionâ; they initiated
their revolt to express solidarity with workers in St. Petersburg
[Petrograd] who were protesting in response to Bolshevik crackdowns.
But the Bolshevik repressive apparatus had already outstripped the power
of the revolutionary movement. The crushing of the Kronstadt uprising
marked the definitive defeat of the Russian Revolution.
The Bolsheviks were assiduous students of previous revolutions. In the
original French Revolution, during the month of Thermidor (according to
the French revolutionary calendar), reactionary forces within the
revolutionary government took advantage of the excesses of Maximilien
Robespierre to arrest and execute the radicals. Likewise, in subsequent
revolutions, the victorious parties consolidated their success by
slaughtering the most radical participants. This was how the bourgeois
republics that came to power in February 1848 and September 1870 dealt
with the rebellious proletarians that revolted in June 1848 and March
1871.
âWeâll be our own Thermidor,â the ex-anarchist and Bolshevik apologist
Victor Serge recalls Lenin proclaiming as the Bolsheviks prepared to
butcher the rebels of Kronstadt. In other words, having crushed the
anarchists and everyone else to the left of them, the Bolsheviks would
survive the reaction by becoming the counterrevolution themselves.
A week after arranging the machine-gunning of the Kronstadt rebels,
Trotsky proclaimed that every socialist, communist, and anarchist who
did not toe the Bolshevik line was effectively in league with capitalist
imperialists:
âThe counter-revolutionary scoundrels, the SR [Socialist-Revolutionary]
windbags and simpletons, the Menshevik foxes and the Anarchist hooligans
all, consciously or unconsciously, from cunning or from craziness,
perform one and the same historical role: they cooperate with all
attempts made to establish the unrestricted rule of the bandits of world
imperialism over the working people and over all natural wealth.
Economic, political, and national independence is possible for Russia
only under the dictatorship of the Soviets. The spine of this
dictatorship is the Communist Party. There is no other, nor can there
be.â
-Leon Trotsky, Pravda, March 23, 1921
Trotsky had come full circle, from arguing against substituting the
Central Committee for the proletariat as a whole to asserting that the
dictatorship of the Bolsheviks was identical with the revolution and
anyone who suggested otherwise was in the pocket of the imperialists.
This makes it clear enough that the Kronstadt uprising and the bloodshed
with which it was suppressed were fundamentally about the question of
autocracy.
The most common excuse for the attack on Kronstadt is exemplified by
Dwight McDonaldâs article âKronstadt Againâ in New International.
McDonald cites the ex-anarchist Victor Serge as the author who convinced
him of the ânecessityâ of âmany of the stern and undemocratic measuresâ
of the Bolsheviks, arguing:
âTo see the Kronstadt uprising as flowing from the mistakes of War
Communism, and to criticize the severity with which the rebels were
punishedâthis is by no means to agree with the anarchists and the social
democrats that Kronstadt âexposes the fundamentally anti-democratic and
totalitarian nature of Bolshevism.â I think Kronstadt was a bad mistake,
but a mistake explained and, to some extent, justified by the terrible
social and economic difficulties of those early years of the
revolution.â
In fact, as Trotsky and Lenin made clear in their statements at the
timeâmany of which are provided belowâthe Bolshevik leaders were opposed
to electoral democracy and all other proposals that could threaten their
own autocratic rule. Lenin explicitly stated that in his view, the only
options for Russia were the government of a Tsar or his own authority.
There should be no controversy regarding âthe fundamentally
anti-democratic and totalitarian nature of Bolshevism.â
The notion that âthe terrible social and economic difficultiesâ of the
time could justify the Bolshevik concentration of power is based in the
assumption that dictatorial rule is the structure best suited for
dealing with crises. But this is hardly a foregone conclusion. It may be
that dictatorial rule is the structure best suited to enabling the Party
or the state to weather crises, but considering that autocracy has been
one of the chief causes of human suffering throughout the past 100
years, it remains to be proven that it is a better solution for crisis
than the alternatives that the Bolsheviks worked so hard to suppress.
Did the concentration of power in the party dictatorship benefit the
people living under the Russian government, or just the structures of
state tyranny? To answer this question, we could begin by considering
the fates of those who oversaw and excused the butchering of the
Kronstadt rebels, ostensibly the chief beneficiaries of this
concentration of power.
Leon Trotsky, who oversaw the military defeat of the Kronstadt uprising,
was exiled from Russia less than eight years later. On August 20, 1940,
he was assassinated on orders from Josef Stalin.
Lenin lived just long enough to help oversee the imprisonment,
execution, and exile of the leaders of the other socialist parties,
including the Mensheviks and SRs (Socialist-Revolutionaries). Less than
three years after the Kronstadt uprising, he died of health
complications exacerbated by the stress of maintaining powerâa merciful
fate compared to what awaited most Bolsheviks. In the years leading up
to his death, he unsuccessfully opposed Stalinâs efforts to gain
supremacy within the Party.
Grigory Zinoviev, the Bolshevik who suppressed the protests in St.
Petersburg that provoked the Kronstadt uprising and called for the
brutal suppression of the uprising, seemed poised to make out better at
first. After Leninâs death, he formed a troika (triumvirate) with fellow
Bolsheviks Lev Kamenev and Josef Stalin to force Trotsky from power. But
Stalin ultimately got the upper hand; Zinoviev and Kamenev were
subjected to a show trial and executed in August 1936.
Tukhachevsky, Dybenko, and other Bolshevik leaders who participated in
crushing the Kronstadt uprising were also killed in the Great Purge.
Victor Serge, the former anarchist who made excuses for the Bolshevik
centralization of power and the crushing of the Kronstadt revolt, was
nonetheless eventually expelled from the party and spent several years
in prison. Although he ultimately managed to leave the Soviet Union, his
sister, his mother-in-law, and two of his brothers-in-law all died in
prison.
As the saying goes, if you love a Bolshevik, the best thing you can do
for him is to prevent his party from coming to power, since he is
certain to be next up against the wall after you. The price of autocracy
is a ceaselessly brutal struggle for domination.
Worse, the legacy of totalitarianism in the Soviet Union has discredited
the idea that there could be emancipatory alternatives to capitalism for
hundreds of millions of people. Reactionary politics are rampant
throughout the former Eastern Bloc as a consequence of the failures of
the party dictatorship model. In retrospect, the Kronstadt rebels were
trying to save the authoritarian communists from themselves and to
rescue the idea of a world without capitalism.
It is one of the ironies of history that anarchists have become the
chief advocates for an uprising that involved so many socialists and
communists, including members of the Bolshevik Party who only renounced
their membership when they found themselves on the receiving end of its
bullets, bombs, and disinformation.
of Their Daily Paper
Below, interspersed with the events of each day of the uprising and
other archival materials, we present the text of every issue of the
newspaper published by the Kronstadt rebels, the Izvestia [News] of the
Provisional Revolutionary Committee of Sailors, Soldiers, and Workers of
the Town of Kronstadt, in order to offer a view of the events from the
rebelsâ perspective. History is written by the victors; for seven
decades after the uprising, it was much easier to hear the official
narrative of the Bolsheviks who suppressed it than the voices of the
rebels who were killed, imprisoned, or driven into exile. We owe it to
ourselves to hear what the ordinary sailors, soldiers, and workers who
participated in the Kronstadt uprising had to say about what they were
doing and why.
---
âIn February, 1921, the workers of several Petrograd factories went on
strike. The winter was an exceptionally hard one, and the people of the
capital suffered intensely from cold, hunger, and exhaustion. They asked
an increase of their food rations, some fuel and clothing. The
complaints of the strikers, ignored by the authorities, presently
assumed a political character. Here and there was also voiced a demand
for the Constituent Assembly and free trade. The attempted street
demonstration of the strikers was suppressed, the Government having
ordered out the military kursanti.â
-Emma Goldman, âMy Further Disillusionment in Russiaâ
In response to Soviet crackdowns on labor organizing and peasantsâ
autonomyâin particular, the suppression of protests in neighboring
Petrograd (St. Petersburg)âthe crews of two Russian battleships
stationed at the island naval fortress of Kronstadt, the Petropavlovsk
and the Sevastopol, held an emergency meeting. Some of these were the
same sailors who had been on the front lines of the revolution of 1917.
They agreed on fifteen demands. These later appeared in the first issue
of the Kronstadt Izvestia.
On March 1, between 15,000 and 16,000 sailors, soldiers, and workers
assembled at Kronstadt for an appearance by Kalinin, the President of
the Soviet Republic. The crowd shouted Kalinin down and seized the
rostrum, from which ordinary workers and sailors proclaimed their
grievances. In the end, the participants in the rally overwhelmingly
endorsed the fifteen demands, with the majority of rank-and-file
Communist Party members joining in. Only a few Bolshevik officials
objected. A conference of delegates from ships, military units,
workshops and trade unions met the next day, establishing a Provisional
Revolutionary Committee, and Kronstadt rose in revolt against the Soviet
authorities.
On March 2, the delegates of warships, military units, and unions met on
Kronstadt to prepare for reelection of the local soviet; they ended up
by electing a Provisional Revolutionary Committee over the objections
and threats of the Bolshevik leadership, three of whom they took
hostage. In the end, they arrested 326 Bolsheviks, roughly a fifth of
the total number of Bolsheviks on the island, the rest of whom were
permitted to remain at liberty.
At the same time, the Kremlin published allegations in Pravda that the
unrest at Kronstadt was a counterrevolutionary plot involving a
collaboration between a Tsarist general and the right wing of the
Socialist Revolutionary Party, claiming that the French press had given
the whole thing away by accidentally announcing the mutiny weeks ahead
of time:
Already on February 13, 1921 a telegram from Helsingfors, dated February
11, appeared in the Paris newspaper Le Matin, reporting that a sailorsâ
revolt against the Soviet power had broken out at Kronstadt. The French
counter-intelligence service [sic] had only slightly anticipated events.
Within a few days the events expected, and undoubtedly also prepared, by
the French counter-intelligence service actually began. White-Guard
leaflets appeared in Kronstadt and Petrograd. In the course of arrests
some notorious spies were detained. At the same time the Right SRs began
an intense agitation among the workers, exploiting the difficult
situation where food and fuel were concerned. On February 28,
disturbances began on the vessel Petropavlovsk, continued on March 1.
The same resolution was passed by a general meeting. On the morning of
March 2, the group of the former General Kozlovsky (commanding the
artillery) already appeared openly on the scene.
This was their excuse for declaring the city and province of Petrograd
to be placed under martial law.
Itâs worth reprinting the actual text of the article from Le Matin in
full, since it was the linchpin of early Bolshevik efforts to brand the
uprising as a reactionary endeavor.
HELSINKI, February 11. It is reported from Petrograd that following the
recent mutiny by the sailors from Kronstadt, the Bolshevik military
authorities have taken a series of measures with a view to isolating
Kronstadt and forbidding access to Petrograd to the Red soldiers and the
sailors of the garrison of the island. The supplying of Kronstadt was
interrupted until further notice. Hundreds of sailors were arrested and
transferred to Moscow, presumably to be shot there.
If this telegram is supposed to be evidence that the March uprising was
a Tsarist plot, what sense would it have made to declare the uprising to
have been defeated two weeks before it got underway? It seems, rather,
like an example of inaccurate journalism, presumably prompted by the
tensions that were already simmering in Kronstadt weeks before the
revolt.
Meanwhile, the Kronstadt rebels were hastening into action:
âActing with great dispatch, the [provisional revolutionary] committee
sent armed detachments to occupy the arsenals, telephone exchange, food
depots, water-pumping station, power plants, Cheka headquarters, and
other strategic points. By midnight, the city had been secured without
any resistance. Moreover, all the warships, forts, and batteries
recognized the authority of the Revolutionary Committee. Earlier in the
day, copies of the Petropavlovsk resolution had been taken by courier to
the mainland and distributed in Oranienbaum, Petrograd, and other towns
in the vicinity. That evening the Naval Air Squadron at Oranienbaum
recognized the Revolutionary Committee and sent representatives across
the ice to Kronstadt. The revolt had begun to spread.â
-Paul Avrich, Kronstadt 1921
At Oranienbaum, a town on the coast of the gulf of Finland, across the
ice from Kronstadt,
âthe rank and file of the First Naval Air Squadron held a meeting at
their club, unanimously endorsed the [15-point] resolution, and,
following Kronstadtâs example, proceeded to elect their own
Revolutionary Committee. Soon after this, they met again in a nearby
hangar and chose a three-man delegation to cross the ice and establish
direct contact with the Kronstadters. In the middle of the
nightâapparently after the delegates from the Air Squadron arrived with
their offer to join the movementâthe Kronstadt Revolutionary Committee
sent a party of 250 men to Oranienbaum, but they were met by machine-gun
fire and forced to withdraw. The three envoys of the Air Squadron were
arrested by the Cheka while attempting to return to their base.
Meanwhile, the commissar of the Oranienbaum garrison, having learned of
the incipient mutiny, called Zinovievâs Defense Committee with an urgent
request for reinforcements. All Communists at Oranienbaum were issued
arms and given extra rations to allay any discontent which they
themselves may have felt over the food situation. At 5 am on March 3, an
armored train with a detachment of kursanty and three batteries of light
artillery arrived from Petrograd. The barracks of the Air Squadron were
quickly surrounded and their occupants arrested. A few hours later,
after intensive questioning, 45 men were taken out and shot, among them
the chief of the Division of Red Naval Aviators and the chairman and
secretary of the newly formed Revolutionary Committee.
-Paul Avrich, Kronstadt 1921
Later that day, the first issue of the official newspaper of the
Kronstadt uprising appeared.
---
CITIZENS!
Our country is enduring a difficult moment. Hunger, cold, and economic
ruin have held us in an iron vice these three years already. The
Communist Party, which rules the country, has become separated from the
masses, and shown itself unable to lead her from her state of general
ruin. It has not faced the reality of the disturbances which in recent
times have occurred in Petrograd and Moscow. This unrest shows clearly
enough that the party has lost the faith of the working masses. Neither
has it recognized the demands presented by the workers. It considers
them plots of the counterrevolution. It is deeply mistaken.
This unrest, these demands, are the voice of the people in its entirety,
of all laborers. All workers, sailors, and soldiers see clearly at the
present moment that only through common effort, by the common will of
the laborers, is it possible to give the country bread, wood, and coal,
to dress the barefoot and naked, and to lead the Republic out of this
dead end.
This will of all laborers, soldiers and sailors was definitively
expressed at the Garrison Meeting of our town on Tuesday, March 1. At
that meeting, the resolution of shipsâ crews of the 1st and 2nd Brigades
was passed unanimously. Among the decisions taken, it was decided to
immediately carry out new elections to the Soviet, for these elections
to be carried out on a fairer basis, and specifically, in such a way
that true representation of the laborers would be found in the Soviet,
and that the Soviet would be an active and energetic organ.
On March 2 of this year, delegates from all sailor, soldier and worker
organizations gathered in the House of Education. It was proposed to
form at this Conference a basis for new elections, in order to then
enter into peaceful work on redesigning the Soviet structure. But in
view of the fact that there were grounds to fear repression, and also
due to threatening speeches by the representatives of authority, the
Conference decided to form a Provisional Revolutionary Committee, to
which to give all authority in governing the town and fortress.
The Provisional Revolutionary Committee is located on the battleship
PETROPAVLOVSK.
Comrades and citizens! The Provisional Committee is deeply concerned
that there should not be spilled a single drop of blood. It has taken
emergency measures for the establishment of revolutionary order in the
town and fortress, and at the forts.
Comrades and citizens! Do not stop work. Workers, remain at your
machines, sailors and soldiers in your units and at the forts. All
Soviet workers and organizations must continue their work. The
Provisional Revolutionary Committee calls all workersâ organizations,
all naval and trade unions, and all naval and military units and
individual citizens to give it universal support and aid. The task of
the Provisional Revolutionary Committee is a general, comradely effort
to organize in the town and fortress means for proper and fair elections
to a new Soviet.
And so, comrades, to order, to calm, to restraint, and to a new
Socialist construction for the good of all laborers.
Kronstadt, March 2, 1921
battleship Petropavlovsk
PETRICHENKO, President of the Provional Revolutionary Committee
TUKIN, Secretary
---
BATTLESHIP BRIGADES, OCCURRING 1 MARCH, 1921
Having heard the report of the crew representatives, sent to the City of
Petrograd by the General Meeting of shipsâ crews for clarification of
the situation there, we resolve:
of the workers and peasants, to immediately hold new elections to the
Soviets by secret ballot, with freedom of pre-election agitation for all
workers and peasants.
left socialist parties.
workers, soldiers, and sailors of the city of Petrograd, of Kronstadt,
and of Petrograd province.
workers and peasants, soldiers and sailors imprisoned in connection with
worker and peasant movements.
prisons and concentration camps.
since no single party should be able to have such privileges for the
propaganda of its ideas and receive from the state the means for these
ends. In their place must be established locally elected
cultural-educational commissions, for which the state must provide
resources.
towns and countryside.
in work injurious to health.
and also the various guards kept in factories and plants by the
communists, and if such guards or detachments are needed, they can be
chosen in military units from the companies, and in factories and plants
by the discretion of the workers.
wish, and also to keep cattle, which must be maintained and managed by
their own strength, that is, without using hired labor.
lend their support to our resolution.
not utilize wage labor.
The resolution was passed by the Brigade Meeting unanimously with two
abstentions.
PETRICHENKO, President of the Brigade Meeting
PEREPELKIN, Secretary
The resolution was passed by an overwhelming majority of the entire
Kronstadt garrison.
VASILIEV, President
Together with Comrade Kalinin, Vasiliev votes against the resolution.
---
By 9 pm on March 2, the majority of forts and all army units of the
fortress had given their support to the Provisional Revolutionary
Committee. All organizations and the Communications Service are occupied
by guards from the Revolutionary Committee. From Oranienbaum have
arrived representatives, who declared that the Oranienbaum garrison has
also given its support to the Provisional Revolutionary Committee.
---
Comrade Ia. Ilyin was called by the Provisional Revolutionary Committee,
and appointed to continue work on the provision of food to the populace.
The produce apparatus will work without break. Today, bread is issued
for two days, that is, for March 3 and 4.
---
The Oranienbaum Air Division has given its support to the Provisional
Revolutionary Committee, and is sending delegates. Our resolution was
sent to Petrograd. We await an answer.
---
At Fort Totleben, Novikov, Commissar of the Fortress, who had been
making his way toward the Finnish border on horseback, was restrained by
the crew of the 6th Battery.
---
Emma Goldman attended the March 4 meeting of the Petrograd Soviet, which
voted to accept Bolshevik Party boss Zinovievâs proposal to force the
surrender of Krondstadt sailors upon penalty of death. Nonetheless, she
did not get the impression that Zinoviev believed his own narrative
about the sailors being led astray by an old Tsarist general.
âWhen the meeting was opened for discussion, a workingman from the
Petrograd Arsenal demanded to be heard. He spoke with deep emotion and,
ignoring the constant interruptions, he fearlessly declared that the
workers had been driven to strike because of the Governmentâs
indifference to their complaints; the Kronstadt sailors, far from being
counter-revolutionists, were devoted to the Revolution. Facing Zinoviev
he reminded him that the Bolshevik authorities were now acting toward
the workers and sailors just as the Kerensky Government had acted toward
the Bolsheviki. âThen you were denounced as counter-revolutionists and
German agents,â he said; âwe, the workers and sailors, protected you and
helped you to power. Now you denounce us and are ready to attack us with
arms. Remember, you are playing with fire.â
âThen a sailor spoke. He referred to the glorious revolutionary past of
Kronstadt, appealed to the Communists not to engage in fratricide, and
read the Kronstadt resolution to prove the peaceful attitude of the
sailors. But the voice of these sons of the people fell on deaf ears.
The Petro-Soviet, its passions roused by Bolshevik demagoguery, passed
the Zinoviev resolution ordering Kronstadt to surrender on pain of
extermination.
-Emma Goldman, My Further Disillusionment in Russia
Meanwhile, at Kronstadt, another meeting took place, with a very
different atmosphere:
âDuring the session of 4 March, at which 202 delegates were present (had
the Communist delegates present on 2 March been asked to stay away?), it
was decided at the suggestion of Petrichenko to enlarge the
Revolutionary Committee to fifteen members, and ten new members were
then elected by an overwhelming majority from among twenty who stood for
election. Petrichenko went on to report on the activities of the
Revolutionary Committee, the state of military preparedness of the
shipsâ crews and the garrison, the high morale of the population, and
the satisfactory state of food and fuel reserves (which he certainly
assessed too optimistically). The Conference then resolved that all
workers be armed and assume responsibility for the security and defense
of the inner town, so that sailors and soldiers could be free to man the
outer defenses. It was also decided that elections should be held within
three days to the governing bodies of the trade unions and to a newly
founded Council of Trade Unions. Next came reports from sailors who had
managed to break through the blockade and to return from Petrograd,
Strelnyi, Peterhof, and Oranienbaum, all of them unanimous in saying
that the local population âis kept by the Communists in complete
ignorance of what is happening in Kronstadt,â while rumors were being
spread that âa gang of White Guards and generalsâ was in control. This
sad news is reported to have âprovoked general laughterâ in the audience
and a back-bencherâs sarcastic comment: âWe have only one general here -
the commissar of the Baltic Fleet Kuzmin â and he has been arrested.â On
adjourning, the Conference adopted the watchword âTo Win or Dieâ, which
is reported to have characterized the general mood.â
-Kronstadt 1917-21: The Fate of a Soviet Democracy, by Israel Getzler
Kronstadt already had a garrison of 13,000. In addition to this, 2000
more civilian volunteers joined up.
---
---
KRONSTADT
No 1
March 3, 1921, battleship PETROPAVLOVSK
The Provisional Revolutionary Committee of the Town of Kronstadt orders
all organizations in the town and fortress to strictly carry out all
decrees of the Committee. All heads of organizations and their workers
are to remain in their places and continue work.
No 2
March 3, 1921, battleship PETROPAVLOVSK
The Provisional Revolutionary Committee of the Town of Kronstadt forbids
leaving the town. In exceptional cases, apply to the Commander of the
Town. The Department of Fleet Staff Registration in Kronstadt is
instructed to halt any and all leaves.
No 3
March 3, 1921
The Provisional Revolutionary Committee forbids any and all arbitrary
searches in the town, and brings to the general attention that
certificates for the right of search are issued with the signature of
the President and Secretary of the Provisional Revolutionary Committee,
and are invalid without the seal of the battleship Petropavlovsk. It is
ordered that during searches of organizations, of whatever party,
nothing is to be removed, nor stolen. All must be preserved entire, as
the peopleâs property.
No 4
March 3, 1921, battleship PETROPAVLOVSK
The Provisional Revolutionary Committee of the Town of Kronstadt, in
view of the the events currently being endured, forewarns all citizens,
seamen, and soldiers that, after 11 pm, any and all movement about the
town is absolutely forbidden without special documents issued by the
Provisional Revolutionary Committee.
PETRICHENKO, President of the Provisional Revolutionary Committee
KILGAST, for the Secretary
---
The Provisional Revolutionary Committee considers it necessary to refute
all rumors that the arrested Communists are threatened with violence.
The arrested Communists are located in complete security.
Many of them were arrested, and a part then released. A member of the
Communist Party will take part in the commission for investigation of
the reasons for the Communistsâ arrest. To Comrades Ilyin, Kabanov, and
Pervushin, who appeared before the Revolutionary Committee, was given
the right to see those located under arrest on the Petropavlovsk, and
they, with their signatures, personally affirm that declared above.
Ilyin, Kabanov, Pervushin.
Certified true:
N. ARKHIPOV, authorized member of the Prov. Rev. Com.
P. BOGDANOV, for the Secretary
---
Finally, the Communists themselves have admitted that it is necessary to
restructure life, and that it does not follow to hold power by force
which falls from your hands by the will of the laboring masses. Evidence
of this is the appeal of the Provisional Bureau of the Kronstadt
Organization of the RCP [Communist Party of Russia], printed below.
PETRICHENKO, President of the Revolutionary Committee
---
THE RCP [Communist Party of Russia]
Comrade Communists, working in all Soviet departments, trade
organizations, and factory committees, all economic organs, and also in
the military units of the garrison, the PROVISIONAL BUREAU OF THE RCP
addresses you with a comradely appeal and urgent call of the following
substance:
The moment currently being endured demands of us special caution,
restraint and tact. Our party has not betrayed, and is not betraying,
the working class, in the defense of which it has stood for many years.
The historic course of political events requires us, in the interests of
all laborers, to be at our places, and to carry on our daily work
without any stoppages. We must remember that the smallest weakening or
break in work, in any section of our economic life, brings about worse
living conditions for the working class and peasantry.
May every comrade of our party be imbued with an understanding of the
moment being endured. Do not believe the absurd rumors that Communist
leaders are supposedly being shot, and that Communists are preparing for
armed action in Kronstadt. They are spread by a clearly provocative
element, which wishes to provoke bloodshed. These are lies and
absurdities, and it is on such as these that the agents of the Entente,
working to achieve the overthrow of Soviet power, wish to play.
We openly declare that our party, with weapon in hand, has and will
defend all the achievements of the working class against the open and
secret White Guards who wish the destruction of the Soviet power of
workers and peasants.
The Provisional Bureau of the RCP recognizes new elections to the Soviet
as necessary, and calls on all members of the R.C.P to take part in
these new elections.
The Provisional Bureau of the RCP calls on all members of the party to
be at their places, and not to cause any obstruction to the measures
being carried out by the Provisional Revolutionary Committee. Restraint,
discipline, calm and unity are the price of victory for the workers and
peasants of the entire world against all the secret and open plots of
the Entente.
Long live Soviet power!
Long live the Worldwide Union of Laborers!
Provisional Bureau of the Kronst. Organ. of the RCP.
IA. ILYIN, F. PERVUSHIN, A. KABANOV
---
Kronstadt is now enduring a moment of tense struggle for freedom. An
attack by the Communists can be expected any minute, with the goal of
seizing Kronstadt, and again fastening us to their authority, which
brings us only to hunger, cold and ruin. We all, to the last man, will
staunchly defend the freedom achieved by us. We shall not allow them to
seize Kronstadt, and if they should attempt to do so by force of arms,
we will give them a worthy repulse.
Therefore, the Provisional Revolutionary Committee forewarns citizens
not to give in to panic and fear if it becomes necessary to hear
shooting. Only calm and restraint will give us victory.
THE PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY COMMITTEE
We print the following, broadcast on Rosta from Moscow, full of blatant
lies and deceptions by the Communist Party, which calls itself the
Soviet Government. The broadcast was picked up by the radio station on
the Petropavlovsk.
Several sections werenât picked up, as another station interfered. This
broadcast does not require commentary. The laborers of Kronstadt will
understand its provocative nature.
Broadcast. To all, To all, To all.
Radio messenger Rosta Moscow, March 3.
âTo Battle With White Guard Conspiracy.â
That the mutiny by former General Kozlovsky and the ship Petropavlovsk
was prepared by the spies of the Entente, like so many earlier White
Guard rebellions, is visible from the report of the bourgeois French
newspaper Matin, which two weeks before the mutiny printed a telegram
from Helsingfors of the following substance.
âOf Petrograd they report that as a result of a recent revolt in
Kronstadt, Bolshevik military authorities have taken a whole set of
measures to isolate Kronstadt, and to forbid the soldiers and sailors of
the Kronstadt garrison access to Petrograd. Supply of provisions to
Kronstadt is forbidden in the future, until special decree. It is clear
that the mutiny in Kronstadt was directed by Paris⊠and that French
counterintelligence is mixed up here.â
The same old story is repeated. The SRs, led from Paris, prepared the
soil for a rebellion against Soviet Power, and just when theyâd gotten
it ready, the real boss, a tsarist general, appeared from cover behind
their backs. The story of Kolchak, establishing his power in exchange
for that of the SRs, is now repeated. All enemies of the laborers, from
tsarist generals to SRs inclusive, try to speculate on hunger and cold.
Of course, this general/SR revolt will be put down very quickly, and
General Kozlovsky and his associates risk the fate of Kolchak.
But the Ententeâs spy net is undoubtably spread not only in Kronstadt
alone. Workers and soldiers, tear apart that net, and fish out informers
and provocateurs! Composure, restraint, vigilance and unity are needed.
Remember that we will leave these temporary, if difficult, food and
heating problems with tight, comradely labor, and not by the path of
insane exhibitions which can only increase the hunger still more, and
play into the hands of the damned enemies of laborers.
radio station Moskva
---
From Gorkommuna3
Today salted butter is issued from the meat stores: for letter A, 3/4
lb. and letter B, 1/2 lb. for produce coupon No 2. Table butter for
children of series A, 1 pound for produce coupon No 3, series B, 1/2 lb.
for produce coupon No 3, and series C, 1/2 lb. for produce coupon No 2.
Salt is issued from all stores to adults for produce coupon No 3, to
children of series B for produce coupon No 4 and series C for produce
coupon No 3, at 1 lb. for all.
Coffee: to boarders and non-boarders for bread coupon No 5, to children
of series B for bread coupon No 53 and series C for bread coupon No 5,
at 1/4 lb. for all.
2 boxes of matches are issued from all stores, by adult cards for bread
coupon No 6, the same for boarders and non-boarders.
1 pound of dried potatoes is issued to children of series B for produce
coupon No 6 and series C for produce coupon No 5.
Today 1/2 pound of first grade tobacco is issued from the writing paper
store (formerly of Rakovskaya) and the store (formerly of Molchanov) by
registered tobacco cards, with the cutting of coupon No 4.
The responsible clerks in the stores are instructed to cut control
coupon No 1 on the tobacco cards.
---
Today kerosine is issued by cards up to No 7000.
In accordance with Peopleâs Commisariat of Social Security circular No
2495 of September 8, 1920, the Administration of Gorkommuna instructs
Uchkoms [District Election Committees] and Building Representatives, on
their own responsibility, not later than March 5th to take âRed Starâ
cards from childless wives of soldiers and sailors who are occupied with
work and service in organizations and who therefore receive produce card
letter A-reserved.
Fruit drops are issued by childrenâs cafeteria cards of series C for
bread coupon No 54 from the same stores as to non-boarders, and in the
same quantity.
CHASNOV, Member of the Administration for Distribution
All military units, workersâ associations, and organizations may receive
âIzvestiia of the Provisional Revolutionary Committeeâ and pamphlets at
Sevtsentropechat [North Central Publishing], in accordance with the set
norm.
---
On March 5, Emma Goldman, Alexander Berkman, and others sent a letter of
protest to Zinoviev, proposing a commission to settle the dispute with
the Krondstadt sailors peacefully:
To The Petrograd Soviet of Labour and Defense, Chairman Zinoviev:
To remain silent now is impossible, even criminal. Recent events impel
us Anarchists to speak out and to declare our attitude in the present
situation.
The spirit of ferment and dissatisfaction manifest among the workers and
sailors is the result of causes that demand our serious attention. Cold
and hunger have produced dissatisfaction, and the absence of any
opportunity for discussion and criticism is forcing the workers and
sailors to air their grievances in the open.
White-guardist bands wish and may try to exploit this dissatisfaction in
their own class interests. Hiding behind the workers and sailors they
throw out slogans of the Constituent Assembly, of free trade, and
similar demands.
We Anarchists have long since exposed the fiction of these slogans, and
we declare to the whole world that we will fight with arms against any
counter-revolutionary attempt, in cooperation with all friends of the
Social Revolution and hand in hand with the Bolsheviki.
Concerning the conflict between the Soviet Government and the workers
and sailors, we hold that it must be settled not by force of arms but by
means of comradely, fraternal revolutionary agreement. Resort to
bloodshed on the part of the Soviet Government will notâin the given
situationâintimidate or quiet the workers. On the contrary, it will
serve only to aggravate matters and will strengthen the bands of the
Entente and of internal counter-revolution.
More important still, the use of force by the Workersâ and Peasantsâ
Government against workers and sailors will have a reactionary effect
upon the international revolutionary movement and will everywhere result
in incalculable harm to the Social Revolution.
Comrades Bolsheviki, bethink yourselves before it is too late. Do not
play with fire: you are about to make a most serious and decisive step.
We hereby submit to you the following proposition: Let a Commission he
selected to consist of five persons, inclusive of two Anarchists. The
Commission is to go to Kronstadt to settle the dispute by peaceful
means. In the given situation this is the most radical method. It will
be of international revolutionary significance.
Petrograd, March 5, 1921.
Alexander Berkman, Emma Goldman, Perkus, Petrovsky.
Meanwhile, Trotsky sent a last warning to the rebels:
Mutinous Forts
The Workersâ and Peasantsâ Government has decreed that Kronstadt and the
mutinous ships must immediately submit to the authority of the Soviet
Republic.
I therefore order all who have lifted their hands against the socialist
fatherland to lay down their arms at once. Those who resist will be
disarmed and turned over to the Soviet authorities. The arrested
commissars and other representatives of the Government must be released
forthwith.
Only those who surrender unconditionally may count on the mercy of the
Soviet Republic.
At the same time I am giving orders for everything to be made ready for
crushing the mutiny and the mutineers by armed force.
Responsibility for the harm that may consequently be suffered by the
peaceful population will fall entirely upon the heads of the
counter-revolutionary mutineers.
This warning is final.
March 5, 1921, 1400 hours
Petrograd
It is brought to the general attention that the Provisional
Revolutionary Committee has moved from the battleship Petropavlovsk to
quarters in the âHouse of the People,â Lenin Prospekt No 39 (fourth
floor), and it is instructed to apply there for all certificates and
instructions.
It is three days since Kronstadt threw from itself the nightmarish power
of the Communists, just as 4 years ago it threw off the power of the
Tsar, and of the tsarist generals. For three days, the citizens of
Kronstadt have breathed free of the party dictatorship. The Kronstadt
Communistsâ âgreat leadersâ ran away disgracefully, like guilty little
children. They saved their skins from the danger that the Provisional
Revolutionary Committee would resort to that beloved means of
extremists, the firing squad.
It was a vain fear. The Provisional Revolutionary Committee takes
revenge against no one, threatens no one. All the Kronstadt Communists
are at liberty, and are unthreatened by any danger. Only those are
restrained who tried to flee and were taken by the patrols. But even
they are located in complete security, in a security which guarantees
them against revenge by the populace for the âred terror.â The
Communistsâ families are inviolate, just as all citizens are inviolate.
And how have the Communists answered this? From the leaflets which they
threw from an airplane yesterday, it is seen that a whole group of
people, completely non-participant in the Kronstadt events, have been
arrested in Petrograd. Moreover, their families have also been arrested.
âThe Defense Committee,â it says in the leaflet, âdeclares all those
arrested to be hostages for those comrades restrained by the mutineers
in Kronstadt, and in particular for N. N. Kuzmin, Commissar of Baltflot,
for Comrade Vasiliev, President of the Kronstadt Soviet, and for other
Communists. If even one hair falls from the heads of the restrained
comrades, the named hostages will answer for it with their heads.â
Thus does the Defense Committee end its proclamation. This is the spite
of the powerless⊠Jeering over innocent families will not add new
laurels to the comrade Communists. Certainly, in any case, not by this
path will they hold on to the power which is being torn from their hands
by the workers, sailors, and soldiers of Kronstadt.
Yesterday, March 4, at 6 pm, an assembly of the Conference of Delegates
from military units of the garrison and from trade unions took place at
the Garrison Club. Its purpose was to hold by-elections to the
membership of the Provisional Revolutionary Committee, to hear reports
on the current moment from various locations, etc. 202 delegates took
part in the Conference, the majority arriving straight from work.
The sailor Petrichenko, President of the Conference, announced that the
Prov. Rev. Com. was overloaded with work, and that it was necessary to
add to its forces. The addition of at least ten more people to the five
current members of the Committee was required. Twenty candidates were
nominated, and the Conference elected the following comrades by an
overwhelming majority of votes: Vershinin, Perepelkin, Kupolov, Ososov,
Valk, Romanenko, Pavlov, Boikov, Patrushev and Kilgast. After the
election, the new members of the Committee took places in the Presidium.
After this, the Conference heard the detailed report of the President of
the Provisional Revolutionary Committee, the sailor Petrichenko, on the
Committeeâs actions from the moment of its election up to the previous
day. Comrade Petrichenko underscored the full battle readiness of the
entire garrison of the fortress, and of the ships, and the enthusiasm
which filled all together and each individually, from the workers to the
soldiers and sailors. The meeting greeted the newly elected members of
the Committee and the Presidentâs concluding words with stormy applause.
Moving on to business, the Conference considered first of all the
question of produce and heating material. It was made clear that the
town and garrison are fully provided for both produce and heating
material.
On the question of arming the workers, the Conference mandated the
arming of the working masses. This was completed to the loud approval of
the workers themselves, and cries of âvictory or death.â The workers
were assigned the internal guard of the town, since the sailors and
soldiers are bursting for active work in the combat detachments.
Further, it was decided to newly elect within three days the
administrations of all unions, and also the Soviet of Unions. This is
the leading organ of the workers, and will be in constant contact with
the Provisional Revolutionary Committee.
Then reports from various places were given by comrade sailors who had
broken through to Kronstadt from Petrograd, Strelna, Peterhof, and
Oranienbaum. From their information it is seen that the populace and
workers of these towns are being kept by the Communists in total
unawareness of what is being done in Kronstadt. Provocative rumors are
being let out to the effect that some kind of gang of White Guards and
generals is running things in Kronstadt.
This last information called forth the general laughter of the sailors
and workers at the assembly. It reached an even more comical mood during
the reading of a âCommunist manifesto,â tossed on Kronstadt from an
airplane.
âWe just have one general, Kuzmin, Commissar of Baltflot,â and âYeah,
and heâs under arrest,â were heard from the back rows.
The assembly ended with a number of greetings, wishes, and an expression
of full and single-hearted preparedness for victory or death.
The entire assembly took place under this slogan, âVictory or Death.â
The radio station of the battleship Petropavlovsk received a broadcast
from Reval [Tallinn, Estonia], sent to the Provisional Revolutionary
Committee. âGreetings to the valiant garrison of revolutionary
Kronstadt, which has overthrown the tyrantsâ power.â
Zinoviev arrived in Oranienbaum on a special train, and has just now
come to Krasnaya Gorka. His visit is due to unrest among the local
garrison, which has spoken out at spontaneous meetings in favor of
giving support to the Kronstadt movement.
By order of the Defense Committee of Petrograd, movement of trains to
Oranienbaum has been halted. Trains set out in exceptional cases, and
with the special allowance of the Defense Committee. There are increased
guards of railroad police and cadets at all stations.
From Sestroretsk
Batis, head of the Politotdel of Baltflot, was restrained by our patrol
while attempting to break through to fort Totleben, and was returned to
Kronstadt. Several other Communists were restrained along with him.
Mass worker arrests have been carried out at the Sestroretsk Weapons
Factory. Heartbreaking scenes are being played out in the town. The
wives and children of the workers appear sobbing in the streets and
demand freedom for their husbands and fathers.
According to reports, meetings are being held at all factories in
Petrograd, at which the events in Kronstadt are discussed. The workersâ
attitude is on the side of Revolutionary Kronstadt, and they are trying
in every way to make contact with us. The Communists are preventing
this, throwing all their forces into observation of and spying on the
workers, soldiers, and sailors.
The course of arrests has intensified, especially among the sailors.
Sailors are forbidden to be absent from the ships. Commissars and
Communists are occupied with intensified spying. Street gatherings are
broken up by armed detachments of Communists.
The bread ration for the populace has been decreased; 3/4 pound is
issued for two days.
âJust now, there has been report that the gigantic Brick Plant No 1 has
gone on strike.
âThe workers of the Baltic Factory have refused to come to work.
âIncreased guards of Communist combat detachments and cadets have been
placed near the moorages of the battleships Gangut and Poltava.
âSailors who succeed in breaking through to Oranienbaum are arrested at
the station.
âAll sailors living in private apartments are ordered to move to the
vessels.
There is complete order in Kronstadt, unbroken since the moment of the
transfer of power to the Provisional Revolutionary Committee. All
organizations are working normally, and there has not been a single hour
of work stoppage. The streets are lively. In all three days not a single
round has been fired. The Provisional Revolutionary Committee, in order
to be closer to the populace, has moved from the Petropavlovsk to the
âHouse of the People.â
The following declaration arrived at the Provisional Revolutionary
Committee:
âI recognize that the policy of the Communist Party has led the country
to a dead end because the party has become bureaucratized, learned
nothing, and not wanted to learn and to listen to the voice of the
masses, whom it has tried to tie to its own will. We remember the at
least 150 million peasantry, that freedom of speech, and an expanded
call to construction of the country by means of changed electoral
methods will bring the country from hibernation, they entirely give
their support at the present critical moment when the future of the
reconstruction of Russia which has been begun by the Revolutionary
Soviet depends only on its vigilance and energy, and I no longer
consider myself a member of the RCP, but entirely give my support to the
resolution taken at the general town meeting of the 1st of March, and
ask that my strength and knowledge be used.
âI ask that the present be published in the local newspaper.â
GERMAN KANAEV, red commander, son of a political exile in the Matter of
the 193, 3/3-21 [âThe Trial of the 193â was a well-known trial of
Narodniks in 1877-78.]
II
At the end of 1919, official reports were published in âIzvestiia of the
Central Executive Committeeâ that Maximalists participated in organizing
the blowing up of the Moscow Department of the R.C.P., and in armed
expropriations in the South, including the murder of collective farmers.
I, considering terror against Socialist Parties to be unacceptable, left
the ranks of the Socialist-Revolutionaries Maximalists because of these
reports.
Recently I received information from a completely trustworthy source
that this was all one of the means of party struggle by the Communists,
and that the court was forced to acquit the Maximalists. The press,
located in the partisan hands of the Communists, was studiously silent
about this.
In strength of the above, I ask that I no longer be considered a
candidate member of the Communist Party. I am returning to the ranks of
the Union of SR-Maximalists, the slogan of which has always been, is and
shall be, âPower to Soviets, and not Parties.â
A. LAMANOV
March 4, 1921
III
I, a soldier of the 4th Artillery Division, was deluded and became a
sympathizer with the Communist Party. Now I am leaving that delusion,
and giving my support to the mass. I do this in order to move ahead hand
in hand with the Revolutionary Committee.
DONAT SEMENOVICH VAG
March 4, 1921
All military units, workers associations and organizations may receive
âIzvestiia of the Provisional Revolutionary Committeeâ and pamphlets at
Sevtsentropechat, in accordance with the set norm.
âOn March 6th, Trotsky completed the preparations for the attack. The
most loyal divisions were brought from all the fronts, the regiments of
kursanti, the detachments of the Cheka, and the military units composed
of Communists were concentrated in the forts of Sestroretsk, Lissy Noss,
and Krasnaia Gorka, as well as in nearby fortified positions. The best
military technicians were sent to the theater of operations to work out
the plans for the blockade and attack on Kronstadt. Tuchachevsky was
designated commander-in-chief of the troops.â
-Voline, âThe Unknown Revolutionâ
The Kronstadt seamen, and the workers with their toil-hardened hands,
have torn the helm from the hands of the Communists, and taken their
place at the wheel. With assurance and good cheer, they will lead the
ship of Soviet power to Petrograd, whence the power of toil-hardened
hands must surely capture long-suffering Russia.
But be on guard comrades. Increase your vigilance tenfold, for the path
leading you to the clear channel is strewn with submerged rocks. One
careless turn of the wheel, and the ship, with its cargo of social
construction which you value so greatly, may founder on the cliffs.
Guard the helmsmanâs bridge vigilantly, comrades, for enemies already
skulk near. A single negligence by you, and they will tear the wheel
away. The Soviet ship may go to the bottom, to the malicious laughter of
tsarist lackeys and servitors of the bourgeoisie.
You, comrades, now celebrate a great and bloodless victory over the
Communist dictatorship, and your enemies celebrate with you. But your
motives for joy and theirs are completely opposed. You are inspired with
a burning desire to build true Soviet power, and by the noble hope of
granting the worker freedom of labor, and the peasant the right to
control his own land and the produce of his work. They are driven by the
hope of raising anew the tsarist whip, and the privilege of generals.
Your interests are not the same, and you and they do not walk the same
path. You needed to overthrow Communist authority for the goal of
peaceful construction, and for constructive work. They need this for the
enslavement of the workers and peasants. You search for freedom; they
wish to once again throw onto you the chains of slavery. Be vigilant. Do
not allow wolves in sheepâs clothing close to the helmsmanâs bridge.
Below, we print word for word the text of a proclamation thrown out of
an airplane over Kronstadt by the Communists.
The citizens regard this provocative slander with total contempt. The
people of Kronstadt know how, and by whom, the hated power of the
Communists was overturned. They know that at the head of the Provisional
Revolutionary Committee stand elected, selfless martyrs, the best sons
of the laboring people: soldiers, sailors, and workers. They will not
allow anyone to seat himself on their neck. Much less will they allow
tsarist generals or White Guards. The Communists issue the threat, âA
few more hours will pass, and you will be forced to surrender.â
Despicable hypocrites! Who do you want to deceive?
The Kronstadt garrison did not surrender to tsarist admirals, and will
not surrender to Bolshevist generals. Do not lie and attempt to deceive
the people, cowards! You know our strength, and our readiness to either
be victorious, or to die with honor. You know that we will never bolt,
like your commissars, loaded down with âtsaristâ money, and gold
extracted by the blood of the workers.
To the Deceived People of Kronstadt
Now do you see where the scoundrels have led you? Youâve gotten what you
asked for! From behind the cover of the SRs and Mensheviks, former
tsarist generals have already peered out with bared teeth. Kozlovsky,
the tsarist general, Captain Burkser, Kostromitinov, Shirkanovsky [sic],
and other notorious White Guards control all these Petrichenkos and
Turins [sic] like puppets on strings. They are deceiving you! They have
told you that you are struggling for âdemocracy.â Not even two days have
passed and you see that, in fact, you struggle not for democracy, but
for tsarist generals. You have placed a new Viren on your own necks.
They tell you fairy tales, speaking as if Petrograd stood behind you, as
if Siberia and the Ukraine supported you. All this is a shameless lie!
In Petrograd the last sailor turned from you when it became known that
tsarist General Kozlovsky was running things. Siberia and the Ukraine
stand firmly for Soviet power. Red Petrograd laughs at the pathetic
labors of a little bunch of SRs and White Guards.
You are completely surrounded. A few more hours will pass, and you will
be forced to surrender. There is no bread and no heat in Kronstadt. If
you are stubborn, you will be shot down like grouse. All these General
Kozlovskys and Burksers, all these scoundrel Petrichenkos and Turins,
will run away at the last minute, of course. And you, the deceived rank
and file sailors and soldiers, where will you go? If they promise that
Finland will feed you, then they are deceiving you! Can you really have
not heard how they took the former soldiers of Wrangel away to
Constantinople, and how they died there from disease by the thousands,
like flies? Just such a fate awaits you too, if you do not come to your
senses right now!
Surrender now, not losing a single minute!
Lay down your weapons, and come over to us!
Disarm and arrest the criminal ring leaders, and especially the tsarist
generals!
The one who surrenders immediately will be forgiven his guilt.
Surrender immediately!
THE PETROGRAD DEFENSE COMMITTEE
The broadcast below, received by the radio station of the Petropavlovsk,
confirms yet again that the Communists continue to deceive not only
workers and soldiers, but also the members of the Petrograd Soviet.
But they will not succeed in deceiving the revolutionary garrison of
Kronstadt and its workers.
Passed at an expanded session of the Petrograd Soviet, with the
attendance, besides the members of the Soviet, of representatives from
factory-plant committees and from the administrations of all trade
unions. With the attendance, also, of commissions and delegations
elected at factories and plants, among whom were hundreds of non-party
workingmen, workingwomen, sailors, and soldiers.
A little bunch of adventurers and counter-revolutionaries has led
Kronstadt astray. Under cover of the Petropavlovsk sailors, spies sent
by French counterintelligence have unquestionably been active. They tell
the sailors that the whole matter is a struggle for âdemocracy,â that
they do not want the shedding of blood, and that the mutiny is passing
without a single shot, for some kind of âdemocracy.â French capitalistsâ
spies, tsarist generals, and their faithful helpers the Mensheviks and
SRs can struggle for such democracy.
If it had ever been fated for them to achieve success, the exploits of
this gang of thieves and traitors would inescapably have led to the
reestablishment of bourgeois power, and to bloody reprisal against the
workers and peasants.
The Mensheviks and SRs, pointing to the difficult economic situation of
the Soviet Republic, say that the Communists have been incapable of
economic construction. But who, for three years, did not allow the
Russian workers and peasants the possibility of peaceful economic
construction?
If anyone worked to create hunger and economic ruin, then it was the
Mensheviks and SRs. They have supported every counterrevolutionary
rebellion, tirelessly fanned the flames of civil war in the name of
re-establishing the power of landlords and capitalists, and directed
international imperialists against Soviet Russia.
The leaders of the conspiracy say that they captured power in Kronstadt
without a shot. But this occurred only because Soviet power wished to
overcome this conflict by peaceful means. It cannot continue thus. The
international bourgeoisie is raising its head. There is exultation in
the camp of the enemies of the working class, exultation which may any
day pour out in a new campaign against Soviet Russia.
This danger threatens all our attainments. The adventurers yell that the
Communists cannot handle economic construction. With this they are
pushing Soviet Russia into the embrace of a new war.
The Petrograd Soviet and central Soviet power cannot, and do not have
the right to, allow things to come to that. The work of the
counterrevolutionaries who have been planted in Kronstadt is hopeless.
They are powerless in a dispute with Soviet Russia. The mutiny must be
liquidated in the very shortest period.
Comrade workers, sailors, and soldiers, understand that you are
deceived. Understand that on you depends the bloody outcome of the
adventurism into which the White Guards have drawn you. On you depends
whether these White Guard scribblers escape their deserved punishment.
Comrades, immediately arrest the ringleaders of the
counter-revolutionary conspiracy. Immediately reestablish the Kronstadt
Soviet. Soviet power is able to distinguish unknowing, mistaken toilers
from intentional counterrevolutionaries.
Comrades, once again the Petrograd Soviet states that on you depends
whether fraternal blood does or does not spill. By the base will of
enemies of the working class, their bloody scheme will collapse on the
heads of the working class alone.
This is our last warning; time does not wait. Decide immediately, either
you are with us against the common enemy, or you will perish shamefully
and infamously together with the counterrevolutionaries.
The Petrograd Soviet of Workersâ, Peasantsâ, and Soldiersâ Deputies
Radio station Novaia Golandiia
To all⊠To all⊠To allâŠ
Comrade workers, soldiers, and sailors! We in Kronstadt know very well
how you and your half starved children and wives suffer under the yoke
of the Communist dictatorship. We have overthrown the Communist Soviet
here. The Provisional Revolutionary Committee is currently preparing to
carry out new elections, to a new, freely elected Soviet, which will
express the will of the entire laboring populace and garrison, and not
of a little bunch of insane Communists.
Our struggle is rightful. We stand for power of Soviets, and not
parties. We stand for freely elected representatives of laborers. The
current Soviets, seized and subverted by the Communists, have always
been deaf to all our needs and demands. In answer we received only
executions. Now, when the limit to the laborersâ patience has been
reached, they want to shut your mouths with miserable pittances. By
Zinovievâs decree, anti-profiteer roadblock detachments in Petrograd
Province are being removed. Moscow is assigning ten million in gold for
the purchase abroad of provisions and items of the first necessity. But
we know that you cannot buy the Peter proletariat with these pittances.
We extend the hand of fraternal aid to you from Revolutionary Kronstadt,
past the heads of the Communists.
Comrades! They not only deceive you, but purposely obscure the truth,
resorting to base slander. Comrades, do not be taken in! All entirety of
power in Kronstadt is in the hands of revolutionary sailors, soldiers,
and workers alone, and not of White Guards with some General Kozlovsky
at head, as the slanderous broadcasts from Moscow would have you
believe.
PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY COMMITTEE
The following comrades are included in the composition of the
Provisional Revolutionary Committee: Arkhipov, Boikov, Valk, Vershinin,
Kilgast, Kupolov, Oreshin, Ososov, Pavlov, Patrushev, Perepelkin,
Petrichenko, Romanenko, Tukin, and Yakimenko [sic].
From them were chosen: Comrade Petrichenko as President of the Prov.
Rev. Com., Comrades Yakimenko and Arkhipov as Comrades of the President,
Comrade Kilgast as Secretary of the Prov. Rev. Com. (he was also
appointed the management of information); the management of civilian
matters was appointed to Comrades Valk and Romanenko, of transport
resources to Comrade Boikov, of the Investigative Unit to Comrade
Pavlov, and of the Produce Department to Comrade Tukin.
A special courier from Petrograd has now arrived in Kronstadt with
notification that the delegation sent by Kronstadt organizations arrived
there safely. The delegation informed the capitolâs workers and sailors
of the events in Kronstadt, distributed the orders and leaflets issued
by the Provisional Revolutionary Committee, and departed for other
missions, in a direction which it knows.
We, soldiers of fort Rif, have heard the report of representatives of
the comrade sailors, regarding the current moment, about events in
Kronstadt, and have resolved: to express full faith in the Provisional
Revolutionary Committee, and to stay at our posts and fight until there
isnât a single soldier left in the fort.
Long live the freedom of the workers and peasants.
Long live the Provisional Revolutionary Committee.
RIABOV, President of the Assembly
ANDREEV, Secretary
Comrade rank and file Communists, look about, and you will see that we
have entered a terrible swamp, led by a little bunch of Communist
bureaucrats. Under a Communist mask, they have built warm nests for
themselves in our Republic. I, as a Communist, call on you to drive from
us those false Communists who incite us to fratricide. We rank and file
Communists, in no way guilty, suffer the rebukes of our comrade
non-party workers and peasants because of them. I look with horror on
the situation which has been created.
Will the blood of our brothers really be spilled for the interests of
those Communist bureaucrats? Comrades, come to your senses, and do not
submit to the provocations of those Communist bureaucrats who push us to
slaughter. Drive them away, for a true Communist must not limit his
ideas. He must walk hand in hand with the entire laboring mass.
ROZHKALI [sic] of the minelayer Narov, member of the RCP (Bolsheviks)
THE BUREAU OF TRADE UNIONS
In accord with the resolution of the General Conference of
representatives of seamen, soldiers, and workers of March 4, the
Provisional Revolutionary Committee instructs the Revtroika
[Revolutionary Tribunal] of the Bureau of Unions to carry out not later
than Monday new elections to Raikoms [Regional Committees] and union
administrations, and on Tuesday the 8th to carry out new elections to
the Soviet of Trade Unions.
THE PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY COMMITTEE
Do not delay, comrades. Lend your support, and enter into firm contact
with us. Demand that your non-party representatives be allowed through
to Kronstadt. Only they will tell you the entire truth, and dispel the
provocative rumors of bread from Finland and plots by the Entente.
Long live the revolutionary proletariat and peasantry!
Long live the power of freely elected Soviets!â
THE PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY COMMITTEE OF KRONSTADT
March 6, 1921, radio station of the battleship Petropavlovsk
On March 7, Trotsky ordered the artillery bombardment of Krondstadt.
âMilitary operations began on March 7. At 6:45 in the evening, the
Communist batteries at Sestroretsk and Lisy Nos on the northern shore
opened fire on Kronstadt. The barrage, directed chiefly at the outlying
forts, was intended to soften up the rebel defenses for an infantry
assault. When the forts replied in kind, the cannon of Krasnaya Gorka on
the opposite coast chimed in, answered in turn by the 12-inch guns of
the Sevastopol. A full-scale artillery duel was under way. In Petrograd,
Alexander Berkman was crossing the Nevsky Prospect when he heard the
distant rumble of gunfire rolling towards him. Kronstadt was under
attack! The sounds had a shattering effect on the anarchist leader,
destroying the last remnants of his faith in the Bolshevik regime. âDays
of anguish and cannonading,â he recorded in his diary. âMy heart is numb
with despair; something has died within me. The people on the street
look bowed with grief, bewildered. No one trusts himself to speak. The
thunder of heavy guns rends the air.ââ
-Paul Avrich, âKronstadt 1921â
âOn March 7, 1921, at 6:45 pm, a storm of artillery fire was unleashed
against Kronstadt. As was only natural and inevitable, Kronstadt fought
back. Fought back, not just on behalf of their demands, but also on
behalf of the other toilers of the country who were struggling from
their revolutionary rights, arbitrarily trampled underfoot by the
Bolshevik authorities.â
-Nestor Makhno, writing in Delo Truda, March 1926
âMarch 7âDistant rumbling reaches my ears as I cross the Nevsky. It
sounds again, stronger and nearer, as if rolling toward me. All at once
I realize that artillery is being fired. It is 6 pm. Kronstadt has been
attacked!â
-Alexander Berkman, diary
Field marshal Trotsky is issuing threats against Free Kronstadt, risen
up against the three year autocracy of Communist commissars. This newly
appeared Trepov threatens the toilers who have thrown off the shameful
yoke of the Communist Partyâs dictatorship with armed destruction. He
threatens the murder of the peaceful populace of Kronstadt. He gives the
order âdonât spare the bullets.â
But he will not have enough of them for the revolutionary sailors,
soldiers, and workers.
Naturally, he, dictator of a Russia raped by the Communists, does not
care what becomes of the laboring masses, so long as power is in the
hands of the RCP [Communist Party of Russia]. He has the shamelessness
to speak in the name of long-suffering Russia, and promise mercy. This
is he, bloodthirsty Trotsky, Marshal of the Communist oprichnina,
extinguisher of the spirit of freedom, spiller of rivers of blood for
the autocracy of the RCP, who dares speak so to those who are strongly
and boldly holding aloft the red banner of Kronstadt.
The Communists hope to renew their despotic rule at the price of the
blood of toilers, and of the sufferings of their arrested families. They
hope to force the sailors, soldiers, and workers to again profer their
neck so that the Communists may seat themselves the better. With this
they hope to continue their stinking policies, which have plunged all
Laboring Russia into the abyss of total destruction, hunger and cold.
Enough! You will deceive the laborers no more! Your hopes are futile,
Communists, and your threats powerless.
The ninth wave [according to tradition, the ninth wave was held to be
the highest in a series] of the Laborersâ Revolution has arisen, and
will wash the stinking slanderers and tyrants, with the defilement
brought by their actions, from the face of Soviet Russia. We will not be
needing your mercy, Lord Trotsky!
The Communists have well mastered the old Jesuit tactic, âslander and
slander, and with luck something will stick.â
And they slander.
In powerless spite, pathetic and confused, they spread the most
outlandish rumors about events in Kronstadt among the workers and
soldiers of Petrograd. At work here, as radio messenger Rosta would have
you believe, are the Entente, and French spies, and White Guards, and
tsarist generals, and Mensheviks, and SRâs, and the Estonian
bourgeoisie, and Finnish bankers, and the Ententeâs counterintelligence.
In a word, the entire world has taken up arms against the poor
Communists. Moreover, they assure the Petrograd workers that âFrench
agents and former tsarist officers sneaked into Kronstadt, and, using
gold, corrupted elements lacking class consciousness.â
Well imagine that! And we, the Kronstadters, didnât know a thing about
it!
And just in case these âfactsâ didnât convince the Peter workers, Rosta
reports such horrors. âBy coincidence at the very moment when a new
Republican government is coming into administration in America, and
displaying a bent to enter into trade relations with Soviet Russia, the
spread of provocative rumors and rigging of disorders in Kronstadt
clearly works toward influencing the new American President, and
preventing change in American policy relative to Russia. At the same
time, the London Conference is conferring, and these provocative rumors
must certainly act on the Turkish delegation, making it obedient to the
Ententeâs demands.â
This then is what the Communists, confused by an unexpected blow, agreed
upon: French agents brought gold to Kronstadt, in order to influence the
American President and the pliability of the Turkish delegation! This
document of Communist idiocy is so comical, that we print it in full
below. This will give the people of Kronstadt a few minutes of comedy.
And how can you relate the, ârigging of disorders in Kronstadt,â on the
one hand, and the nervousness which has driven the Communists to
threaten the shoot the people of Kronstadt âlike grouse?â Why so
nervous, when all is calm in Kronstadt, and the only thing happening is
ârigging of disorders?â
(radio messenger Rosta)
The French newspaper Matin reported, from the words of its Helsingfors
correspondent, that an uprising against Soviet power had begun in
Kronstadt. On February 14, there was report of a rebellion in the Baltic
Fleet, and of the arrest of the commissars of the Baltic Fleet. The
Soviet Government supposed, based on previous experience, that agents of
French capitalists in league with former tsarist generals were preparing
a mutiny in Kronstadt.
As has now become clear, French agents and former tsarist officers
sneaked into Kronstadt, and, using gold, corrupted elements lacking
class consciousness. The fantastic reports by counterintelligence,
spreading legends three weeks ago about an uprising in Kronstadt, were
simply ahead of events. Recently, White Guard leaflets have appeared in
Kronstadt and Petrograd, and known French spies have been captured
during the arrests. At the same time, the SRs began an increased
agitation among the workers and sailors in Kronstadt and Petrograd,
using the difficult situation with produce and heat.
On February 28, a reactionary resolution was passed on the ship
Petropavlovsk. However, by demand of the sailors it was reworked, and
passed on the following day in a new edition. In this was included the
demand for new elections to the Soviet. Our comrades did not object, and
proposed to form a Commission of sailorsâ and workersâ representatives
at the House of Education, to decide the question finally. Elections
began, but counterrevolutionary elements decided to ruin this
Commission, and demanded before all else that it take place on the
Petropavlovsk.
On March 2, open action against Soviet power was already occurring on
the Petropavlovsk, with the participation of Mensheviks and SRs, who hid
under the non-party banner. The official president of the mutineersâ
organization is the former clerk Petrichenko, and the secretary is
Tukin, a sailor, but in fact everything is run by Captain Burkser, and
General Kozlovsky is a prominent figure among the former tsarist
officers. The tsarist officers Kostromitinov and Shimanovsky [sic] also
appeared as leaders of the movement.
On March 2, the Soviet of Labor and Defense, decided to declare former
general Kozlovsky and his co-conspirators outlawed, to declare the city
of Petrograd and Petrograd province under martial law, and to hand over
all power in the Petrograd consolidated region to the Defense Committee
of the City of Petrograd.
The following day, demoralization began to show among the supporters of
the mutinous organization on the Petropavlovsk. The organizationâs
leaders, in order to raise the spirits of their supporters, announced
that in the end it would be possible to leave for the Finnish shore. At
the same time, the White Guard press spread lying reports, talking as if
the Estonian bourgeoisie supported the insurgents.
On March 4, at an expanded session of the Petrograd Soviet, Comrade
Zinoviev gave a thorough report on the events in Kronstadt, after which
the meeting unanimously passed an appeal to the workers, sailors, and
soldiers of Kronstadt. [This appeal appears in full in the previous
issue of the Kronstadt Izvestia, #4.]. This exposed the dirty work of
the spies sent by French counterintelligence, and of the Mensheviks and
SRs who had worked on the events which were occurring. The appeal notes
that Soviet Power is able to differentiate unknowing, mistaken toilers
from intentional counterrevolutionaries. In a military sense, Kronstadt
does not present a danger to Petrograd, for the fort of Krasnaya Gorka
has command over Kronstadt, and can crush it at any moment. The entire
Krasnaya Gorka garrison curses the mutineers, and is bursting for
battle.
There is complete calm in Petrograd, and even those small factories
where gatherings with attacks on Soviet power by individuals occurred
earlier, have recognized the provocation. They have understood what the
agents of the Entente and counterrevolution are pushing them to do. An 8
thousand person meeting of Peter seamen unanimously passed a resolution
supporting Soviet power, and the Petrograd garrison has not wavered for
a moment. Demoralization grows among the sailors, and a meaningful
number of the sailors have a dislike for General Kozlovsky and the
officers. The number of those deserting to us grows.
Radiograms and newspapers received from abroad show that, simultaneous
with the events in Kronstadt, the enemies of Soviet Russia are spreading
the most fantastic fabrications abroad, saying that there are disorders
in Russia. They say that the Soviet Government has supposedly fled to
the Crimea, that Moscow supposedly is in the hands of the rebels, that
blood pours in torrents through the streets of Petrograd, and so on.
The SR organization abroad has received from somewhere a huge quantity
of tsarist banknotes, and is letting out rumors in order, among other
reasons, to raise the rate for tsarist money, and dump it more
profitably.
By coincidence at the very moment when a new Republican government is
coming into administration in America, and displaying a bent to enter
into trade relations with Soviet Russia, the spread of provocative
rumors and rigging of disorders in Kronstadt clearly works toward
influencing the new American President, and preventing change in
American policy relative to Russia. At the same time, the London
Conference is conferring, and these provocative rumors must certainly
act on the Turkish delegation, making it obedient to the Ententeâs
demands.
There is no doubt that the actions taking place on the Petropavlovsk are
merely a component part of a grandiose plan of provocation. This plan,
besides creating internal difficulties for Soviet Russia, is intended to
shatter her international standing.
Before us in the case at hand is the provocation work of the world
reaction of Entente stockbrokers, and of agents of Entente
counterintelligence agencies working by their orders. In Russia itself,
the main figures carrying out these policies are a tsarist general and
former officers, whose activities are supported by Mensheviks and SRs.
No 373 radio station Novaia Golandiia
By order of Commissar of the Oranienbaum garrison Sergeev, the following
have been executed: Kolesov, Commander of the Division of Red Naval
Pilots, and President of the recently formed Oranienbaum Provisional
Revolutionary Committee; Balabanov, Secretary of the Committee;
Committee members Romanov, Vladimirov, and others.
Damnation to the murderers, and eternal glory to the combatants for the
true freedom of the people.
The Communist ravens, Trotsky, Dybenko, Gribov, and others, have
gathered in Krasnaya Gorka.
âIn Petrograd and Petrograd Province, a state of emergency/seige has
been introduced. Movement in the streets is allowed only until 7 pm.
âMass arrests and executions of workers and seamen continue.
âThe situation is very uneasy. All the laboring masses expect a
revolution at any minute.
âThere are continuous meetings of the Defense Committee.
âAll theatrical entertainments and assemblies are forbidden.
âPassenger trains are stopped. Only military trains are moving.
âThe Petrograd newspapers do not print our broadcasts.
The following broadcast was sent to the Petrosoviet [Petrograd Soviet].
In the name of the Kronstadt garrison, the Provisional Revolutionary
Committee of Kronstadt demands that all families of workers, soldiers,
and sailors imprisoned as hostages by the Petrosoviet be freed within 24
hours. The Kronstadt garrison states that Communists in Kronstadt enjoy
complete freedom, and their families absolute inviolability. It does not
wish to take an example from the Petrosoviet, since it considers that
such methods, even if in desperate anger, are the most shameful and base
whatever your beliefs. History has never seen such methods.
seaman PETRICHENKO, President of the Provisional Revolutionary Committee
KILGAST, Secretary
A curious order by Trotsky was broadcast by radio to the Kronstadt
populace, and the garrison of the mutinied fronts.
âThe Worker-Peasant Government has resolved to immediately return
Kronstadt and the mutinous vessels to the command of the Soviet
Republic. Therefore, I order all who have raised their hands against the
Socialist Fatherland to immediately lay down their arms. Disarm those
who resist, and give them into the hands of the Soviet authorities. Free
the arrested commissars and other representatives of authority
immediately. Only those surrendering unconditionally may count on the
mercy of the Soviet Republic. Simultaneously, I am giving the order to
prepare for the defeat of the mutiny, and the mutineers, by armed force.
Responsibility for the distress which this has brought down on a
peaceful populace lies wholly on the heads of the White Guard mutineers.
The present warning is the last.â
TROTSKY, President of the Revolutionary War Council of the Republic
KAMENEV, for the Chief Directorate
The Provisional Revolutionary Committee received the following
radiotelegram from Petrograd.
âSend a broadcast to Petrograd, is it possible to send from Petrograd
several persons from the Soviet, non-party and party, to Kronstadt, to
find out what is what.â
That broadcast was immediately followed by this answer from the Prov.
Rev. Com.
âHaving received the broadcast from the Petrosoviet, âis it possible to
send from Petrograd several persons from the Soviet, non-party and
party, to Kronstadt, to find out what is what,â we inform you that we do
not trust the non-party status of your non-party delegates. We propose
that representatives be chosen from factories, soldiers and sailors,
from among the non-party, in the presence of our delegates.
âAbove the number of non-party representatives chosen by the given
method, you may add to the delegation up to fifteen percent Communards.
It is desirable to receive an answer, with a declared time to send
representatives of Kronstadt to Petrograd and representatives of
Petrograd to Kronstadt, on March 6 at 18:00 hours. In event of the
impossibility of giving an answer at the given time, we ask that you
declare your time, and the cause of the delay.
âMeans of transport must be supplied to the Kronstadt delegates.â
PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY COMMITTEE
We the soldiers of fort Krasnoarmeets, turn to you, comrades of
Krasnoflotskii. We inform you that in Kronstadt, and likewise in the
forts and the Provisional Revolutionary Committee, we have not a single
general. There is none of the gentry of which the proclamations thrown
from airplanes speak so much and so loudly. We say to you that, as
Kronstadt was a town of the workers and peasants, so it has remained.
The generals are found in service to the Communists.
You say that we have become traitors for some kind of spies. That is a
shameless lie. As we were defenders of the freedoms won by the
Revolution, so we have remained. We appeal to you not to believe the
lies which the bureaucrat Communists drone at you. If you want to learn
the truth in this, send to us, to Kronstadt, your own delegation. It
will learn the truth, and learn of all that is being done here. It will
learn what kind of generals and Entente spies we have.
âThe Crew of fort Krasnoarmeetsâ
The soldiers of fort Krasnoarmeets, having heard the report of a
representative of the Prov. Rev. Com, Comrade Vershinin, on the current
moment, resolved:
âWe the soldiers of the above named fort, stand in entirety on guard for
the Revolutionary Committee. We will stand, that is defend ourselves, to
the final moment, for the Prov. Rev. Com. and for the workers and
peasants.
âWe once again ask the Rev. Com. to widely distribute, by means of print
and radiotelegram, our resolution passed at the general Garrison Meeting
of Kronstadt, in order to avoid the futile bloodletting to which the
Communists call us. This must be done so that the working masses of the
town of Petrograd, and of other towns, may learn what is being done
here, and what we are fighting for.
âWe send greetings to the Prov. Rev. Com., as the representatives
elected from the broad masses of the entire working class. Standing on
guard of the rights won by the laborers, we place ourselves and the fort
under the Committeeâs full command.â
DEMIDOV, President
SMIRNOV, Secretary
II
By the General Meeting of the crew of the 4th Division and the Training
Crew.
Having heard the report of a representative of the 4th Division Crew,
Karpov, and of a representative of the Revolutionary Committee, Eveltis,
the following resolution was passed:
âIn the current moment, when the fate of the country is being decided,
we, having taken power into our own hands, have entrusted military
leadership to the Revolutionary Committee. We declare to the entire
garrison, and to the workers, that we are prepared to die for the
freedom of the laboring people, and for liberation from the three-year
Communist yoke and terror. We will die, but will not take a single step
back. Long live Free Russia of the laboring people.â
The resolution was passed unanimously by the Meeting.
The long oppression of the Communist dictatorship over the laborers has
called forth the completely natural indignation of the masses. As a
result of this, the boycott or removal from service of Communistsâ
relatives has been adopted in several places. This must not be. We are
not taking revenge, but defending our laboring interests. It is
necessary to act with restraint, and to remove only those who strive
through sabotage or slanderous agitation to interfere with restoration
of the power and rights of the laborers.
It has been noticed that some part of the populace is leaving the
electricity on all night, or is not extinguishing the light upon
departure from the room. Comrades, remember that we carry on a struggle
for our laboring interests. It has become vital, to the degree of
emergency, to conserve heating material, which is so necessary to us
with the approaching opening of navigation. Conserve electrical energy.
Declarations of departure from the Communist Party continue to arrive at
the Provisional Revolutionary Committee.
We the undersigned, servicemen in the Departmental Fines Company,
entered the RCP considering it to express the will of the laboring
masses. In fact, however, it has shown itself to be a butcher of workers
and peasants. The recent events in Peter have demonstrated this,
pointing out the complete falsehood of the party leaders, who use all
means to hold onto power. The broadcasts of the Moscow Soviet of
Peopleâs Commissars serve as a shining example of this. We request
henceforth that we not be considered members of the RCP We wholly give
our support to the resolution of the Garrison Meeting of Kronstadt of
March 2 [sic] of this year. We also ask other comrades recognizing their
mistake not to be ashamed to admit it.
I. GUTMAN, I. EFIMOV, V. KUDRIAVTSEV, ANDREEV.
II
Being a candidate member of the R.C.P. from August of 1920, I have found
no good in any of its aspirations. Seeing that the Communist Party has
become separated from the masses, and does not express the peopleâs
will, I leave it. In this difficult time which we are suffering, I wish
to work for the benefit of the entire laboring people.
P. ANANIEV, former candidate member of the RCP
III
Also arrived the declarations of departure from the R.C.P. of 1) D.
Pisarenko, soldier of the 4th Artillery Division, 2) N. Pusmo, worker in
the Naval Artillery Laboratory, 3) O. Kuzmin, guard of the Kronstadt
Port, 4) P. Lebedev, serviceman in the Produce Base, 5) N. Kartashev,
member of the R.C.P. since 1918.
We, Communists of fort Rif, having discussed the current moment, and
having heard the call of the Provisional Bureau of the RCP in Kronstadt,
have reached the following conclusion. For three whole years, great
numbers of opportunists and careerists have poured into our party. As a
result of this, bureaucratism and a criminal attitude toward the
struggle with collapse have developed.
Our party has always placed before itself the work of struggling against
all enemies of the proletariat and working class, and we now declare
openly that we will also in the future, as honest sons of the people,
defend the victories of the laborers. We will not allow a single secret
or open White Guard to use the temporary, difficult situation of our
Soviet Republic. At the first attempt to raise a hand against Soviet
power we will be able to repulse to the counterrevolutionaries as
necessary. We have already declared, and declare once again, that we are
under the command of the Provisional Revolutionary Committee, which has
given itself the goal of creating Soviets of the laboring and
proletariat class.
Long live Soviet Power, the true defender of the rights of laborers!
(signature), President of the meeting of Communists of fort Rif
(signature), Secretary of the meeting
For the period from March 8 through 14 inclusive, the land and naval
garrison of the fortress will receive daily, in place of the previous
bread ration: a half pound of bread, half a can of preserved meat and a
quarter pound of meat.
The civilian populace will receive produce according to the following
norms:
Letter A daily: one pound of oats, half a can of preserved meat, a
quarter pound of meat and a one time additional half pound of sugar and
quarter pound of vegetable oil.
Letter C daily: one pound of oats, half a can of preserved meat, a
quarter pound of meat and a one time additional half pound of sugar and
quarter pound of vegetable oil.
For children:
Series A daily: half a pound of wheat, barley or dried bread, half a can
of preserved meat and a one time additional can of preserved milk, half
pound of sugar and quarter pound of table butter.
Series B and C daily: half a pound of barley, wheat or dried bread, half
a can of preserved meat, a quarter pound of meat and a one time
additional half pound of sugar and quarter pound of table butter.
Today bread will be issued for one day, with the appropriate coupon
being cut.
N. KAPUSTIN, member of the Rev. Com.
The Town Health Department brings to the attention of all doctors,
doctorsâ assistants, and citizens, that under issuance of prescriptions
for additional food, the following rules must be followed: in the
prescription must be specified the first and family names of the
patient, the exact diagnosis, and the address.
First in order of fullfillment are prescriptions issued to children
suffering from infectious diseases, and then from pulmonary and renal
diseases, and then adults with infectious diseases.
Prescriptions are given to the selection commission at the Town Hospital
from 10 to 12 am daily. Return issue takes place on the following day
from 11 to 12 am, with prescriptions not picked up in 3 days being
considered annulled. All prescriptions issued before March 5 are also
annulled.
The present rules were worked out in consultation with doctors, doctorsâ
assistants, a representative of the Town Hospital and the Gorkommuna of
the City Health Department. This consultation requests all comrade
doctors and doctorâs assistants to view the issuance of prescriptions
with the highest degree of care, keeping in memory the produce
difficulties being suffered by the Republic.
PLUME, Head of the City Health Department
1) The Administration Department instructs all Uchkoms to take measures
to clean the footpaths of the town of snow, and also to bring the
courtyards into order, involving the broad masses of the populace in the
work. The Audit Commission is instructed to take active part in the
completion of the works.
2) All Uchkoms having gathered passports from citizens are instructed to
return such to the citizens into their own hands.
All military units, workersâ associations and organizations may receive
âIzvestiia of the Provisional Revolutionary Committeeâ and pamphlets at
Sevtsentropechat in accordance with the set norm.
The initial Red Army infantry attack on Kronstadt was a disaster. In the
midst of a blinding snowstorm, Tukhachevskyâs units attacked from the
north and south with cadets at the forefront, followed by select Red
Army units and Cheka machine gunners who had orders to shoot defectors.
Shells from Kronstadt tore holes in the frozen Gulf of Finland; scores
of Red Army soldiers drowned beneath the ice. Others defected or refused
to advance. The Red Army suffered hundreds of casualties and defections.
Those few troops who reached Kronstradt were forced to withdraw.
Artillery attacks resumed when the storm subsided. In the afternoon,
Bolshevik aircraft began bombarding the island. Yet throughout the
revolt, this did not cause much damage.
âThe assault of March 8 proved an unmitigated failure. The Communists
lost hundreds of men without even breaching Kronstadtâs defenses. In
their haste to suppress the revolt, they had deployed an insufficient
forceâperhaps 20,000 in allâand had made inadequate preparations for a
successful storming of the powerful fortress. Troops chosen for their
reliability had faltered at the crucial moment, partly out of reluctance
to fire on ordinary sailors and soldiers like themselves, but mainly for
fear of crossing the open ice without protection of any kind, exposed to
the devastating crossfire of Kronstadtâs batteries and forts.
-Paul Avrich, Kronstadt 1921
At 6:45 pm, the Communist batteries in Sestroretsk and Lisy Nos opened
fire first on the Kronstadt forts.
The forts accepted the challenge, and quickly forced the batteries to
become silent. Following this, Krasnaya Gorka opened fire, receiving
worthy answer from the battleship Sevastopol.
Occasional artillery duelling continues.
Two of our soldiers were wounded, and taken to the hospital.
There is no damage anywhere.
They began the bombardment of Kronstadt. Well, so be it; weâre ready. We
will measure our strengths.
They rush to act, and yes, they are forced to hurry. The laborers of
Russia, despite all the Communist lies, understand what a great endeavor
of liberation from three yearsâ slavery is being created in
Revolutionary Kronstadt. The butchers are unnerved. The victim of their
shameless bestiality, Soviet Russia, is slipping from their torture
chamber, and with her, dominion over the laboring people is slipping
finally from their criminal hands.
The Communist government will send an SOS. The weeklong existence of
Free Kronstadt is proof of their powerlessness. One moment more and the
worthy answer of our glorious revolutionary ships and forts will sink
the ships of the Soviet pirates. They are forced into battle with
Revolutionary Kronstadt, which has raised the banner, âPower to Soviets,
and not Parties.â
Not knowing how to retain the power which is falling from their hands,
the Communists are resorting to the most putrid, provocative methods.
Their base newspapers have mobilized all forces to set fire to the
peopleâs masses, and to paint the Kronstadt as a White Guard movement.
Now the gang of âpatentedâ scoundrels has thrown out the slogan,
âKronstadt has sold out to Finland.â Their shameless press is already
spattering poisonous spit, and now that there has been no success in
convincing the proletariat that White Guards were working in Kronstadt,
they are attempting to play on national feelings.
All the world already knows from our broadcasts what the Kronstadt
garrison and workers are fighting for, but the Communists attempt to
twist the meanings of events before the Peter brothers. The Communist
oprichnina has surrounded the people of Peter with a tight ring of cadet
bayonets and the party âguard,â and Maliuta Skuratov (Trotsky) [Maliuta
Skuratov, also known as G. L. Skuratov-Belsky, was a leader of the
Oprichnina under Ivan the Terrible] does not allow delegates from the
non-party workers and soldiers to enter Kronstadt. He fears the danger
that they will learn the entire truth, and that that truth in one
instant will sweep the Communists away. He fears that the laboring
people, with newly restored sight, will take power in their own
work-hardened hands.
That is why the Petrosoviet did not answer our radiotelegram requesting
the dispatch to Kronstadt of actual non-party comrades. Fearing for
their skins, the Communist leaders hide the truth. They let out rumors
that White Guards are at work in Kronstadt, that the Kronstadt
proletariat has sold out to Finland and to French spies, and that the
Finns have already organized an army, in order, together with the
Kronstadt mutineers, to occupy Petrograd, and so on.
To all this we can answer only one way: all power to the Soviets! Away
from that power, hands stained with the blood of those perished for the
cause of freedom, for the battle with White Guardism, landed gentry and
the bourgeoisie! Peasant, calmly work your land; worker, to your bench!
Today is a worldwide holiday, the Day of Working Women. We the people of
Kronstadt, under the thunder of cannons, under the explosions of shells
sent at us by the enemies of the laboring people, the Communists, send
our fraternal greetings to you, the working women of the world. We send
greetings from Red Kronstadt, from the Kingdom of Liberty. Let our
enemies try to destroy us. We are strong; we are undefeatable.
We wish you fortune, to all the sooner win freedom from all oppression
and coercion.
Long live the Free Revolutionary Working Woman.
Long live the Worldwide Social Revolution.
THE PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY COMMITTEE OF KRONSTADT
March 8, 1921
And so, the first shot has rung out. Bloody Fieldmarshal Trotsky,
standing to his waist in the fraternal blood of laborers, opened first
fire on Revolutionary Kronstadt, risen against the Communist government
for the establishment of true Soviet power. Without a single shot,
without a drop of blood, we, soldiers, seamen, and workers of Kronstadt,
threw down the Communist dominion, and even spared their lives. They
desire to once again, under threat of bombardment, tie their authority
to us.
Not wanting bloodshed, we proposed that non-party delegates be sent from
the Petrograd proletariat, that they might learn that there is a
struggle for power in Kronstadt. But the Communists hid this from the
Petrograd workers, and opened fire, the usual answer of the sham
worker-peasant government to the demands of the laboring people.
May all the world of workers know that we, protectors of Soviet power,
stand guard over the victories of the Social Revolution. We will be
victorious, or die under the ruins of Kronstadt, struggling for the
bloody cause of the laboring people. The workers of all the world will
judge. The blood of innocents is on the heads of the Communist beasts,
who are drunk with power.
Long live Soviet power!
THE PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY COMMITTEE OF KRONSTADT.
Carrying out the October Revolution, the working class hoped to achieve
its emancipation. The result, however, was the creation of a still
greater enslavement of the human personality.
The power of police-gendarme monarchism passed into the hands of
usurpers, the Communists, who brought to the laborers, instead of
freedom, the fear every minute of falling into the torture chamber of
the Cheka. With their horrors, they have many times exceeded the
gendarme government of the tsarist regime.
Bayonets, bullets and the harsh cries of the oprichniks from the Cheka,
there is what the toiler in Soviet Russia gained after many battles and
sufferings. The Communist authorities have replaced the hammer and
sickle, glorious arms of the laboring state, in fact with the bayonet
and prison bars. They have done this for the sake of preserving a calm,
unsaddened life for the new bureaucracy of Communist commissars and
bureaucrats.
But what is most putrid and criminal of all is the creation by the
Communists of a moral cabal. They have laid hand even on the laborersâ
internal world, forcing them to think in their way alone.
With the aid of the bureaucratic trade unions, they have tied the
workers to their benches, having made labor not a joy, but a new
serfdom. To protests by peasants, expressed in spontaneous uprisings,
and by workers, forced into strikes by the very condition of life, they
answer with mass executions, and with such bloodthirstiness that they
donât have to borrow any from the tsarist generals.
Laboring Russia, first to raise the red banner of laborâs liberation, is
soaked through with the blood of those tortured for the glory of the
Communist dominion. In this sea of the blood, the Communists drown all
the great and light voices and slogans of the laboring revolution.
It has become ever more sharply visible, and now is completely apparent,
that the RCP is not defender of the laborers, as it has presented
itself. Rather, the interests of the laboring mass are foreign to it.
Having achieved power, it fears only to lose it, and for this end all
means are allowable: slander, violence, fraud, murder, and revenge on
the families of rebels.
The long patience of the laborers has come to an end.
The country, in battle with oppression and violence, is lit here and
there with the glow of uprisings. Worker stoppages have flared up, but
the Bolshevist okhranniks have not slept, and have taken all measures to
avoid and repress the unavoidable 3rd Revolution. [Okhranniks were
agents of the tsarist secret police, which was popularly referred to as
the Okhrana or Okhranka.]
But it has arrived all the same, and is being carried out by the hands
of laborers. The Communist generals see clearly that this is the people,
convinced of those generalsâ betrayal of the ideas of socialism, who
have arisen. They shake in their skins, knowing that there is no place
for them to hide from the toilersâ anger. All the same, they try, with
the help of their oprichniks, to frighten the rebels with prisons,
executions, and other bestialities. But life itself under the yoke of
the Communist dictatorship has become more terrible than death.
The rebellious laboring mass has come to understand that in battle with
the Communists, and with the renewed serfdom they have given, there can
be no middle ground. It is necessary to carry through to the end. They
pretend to make concessions: in Petrograd Province they remove the
anti-profiteer roadblock detachments, 10 million in gold is assigned for
purchase of produce abroad. But it is necessary to point out that behind
this bait is hidden the iron hand of the master. This is the hand of a
dictator who desires, having waited out the unrests, to compensate his
concessions a hundred-fold.
No, there can be no middle ground. Victory or Death!
This is exemplified by Red Kronstadt, terror of counterrevolutionaries
of right and left.
Here a great new revolutionary step has been taken. Here has been raised
the banner of a rebellion for liberation from the three year violence
and oppression of Communist dominion, which has eclipsed the
three-hundred year yoke of monarchism. Here in Kronstadt has been laid
the first stone of the Third Revolution, which is breaking the last
fetters from the laboring masses, and opening a wide new path for
socialist creativity. This new revolution stirs the laboring masses of
both East and West, being an example of the new socialist construction,
opposed to the bureaucratic Communist âcreativity.â It convinces the
laboring masses abroad, by the testimony of their own eyes, that
everything created here until now by the will of workers and peasants
was not socialism.
Without a single shot, without a drop of blood, the first step has been
completed. The laborers do not need blood. They spill it only in moments
of self defense. We have enough restraint, despite all the disgraceful
acts of the Communists, to not be limited by their isolation from the
life of society. We do this in order that they would not obstruct the
revolutionary work with false and spiteful agitation.
The workers and peasants advance unstoppably, leaving behind themselves
both the Uchredilka with its bourgeois structure, and the Communist
Party dictatorship with its Cheka and state capitalism, a deadly noose
which has snared the neck of the laboring masses, and threatens to
strangle them absolutely.
The present Revolution gives the laborers the possibility of having,
finally, their own freely elected Soviets, working without any and all
violent party pressure, and to reform the bureaucratic trade unions into
free organizations of workers, peasants and the laboring intelligentsia.
At last, the police stick of the Communist autocracy is broken.
Workers are shock troops! Kronstadt is enduring a serious moment of
struggle for the liberation of Soviet Russia from the Communist yoke.
We the people of Kronstadt, recognizing this, must all show unflagging
fortitude, and show that in the struggle, no sacrifices are too terrible
for us. We have become each otherâs family, unified by a single striving
for victory or death. We will share with each other the last tiny
morsel. So that the populace would not hunger, the garrison shares its
own allowances. All must be even, and not some hungry and some full.
Would that it were not so, but we will not leave our work. On the
contrary, we will take after it all the more firmly. Our revolution is
the Revolution of Labor, and its name, all to the benches, all to the
hammer! All for free labor! You are shock troops at work. Be also thus
the shock troops of the Revolution. Forge the Revolution, supporting the
free Socialist economy. Remember that on you first is laid the shock
work of saving Soviet Russia from the Communist yoke.
SOVIET POWER WILL FREE THE LABORING PEASANTRY FROM THE COMMUNIST YOKE
The Helsingfors newspaper Hufvudstadsbladet, in No 60, reports the
following news from Petrograd.
âThe Petrograd workers are on strike, and are demonstratively leaving
the factories. With red banners they are demanding a change of
government and the overthrow of the Communists.
Sailors are joining the demonstrators.
The garrison shares the feelings of the masses, but for now is remaining
passive.
âRed units from the Korelian [Karelian] Isthmus have been rushed across
to Petrograd. As it was clarified, the cadets have been recalled.
âAt the Laferme tobacco factory, the Secretary of the RCP [Communist
Party of Russia] called for order among the workers, but was whistled
down and driven off.
âAt the Putilovsky Factory, several persons, Communist members of the
factory committee, have been killed.
Due to the present moment, the purposes of the department of
Worker-Peasant Inspection being what they are, since control is always a
necessity in the interests of all citizens, independent of the situation
which has formed, and since the majority of the workers in the
Inspection were Communists, a number of whom are currently isolated, and
the remaining Communists may also be isolated, the work of control may
stop.
Now, as earlier, an unconscious element may carry out various thefts of
the peopleâs property in a period without control. Therefore, the
Revolutionary Troika of the Worker-Peasant Inspection appeals to all
employees formerly working in control to come help temporarily, until
the new elections. In this way, you may preserve the necessary and
normal order in all Soviet organizations.
A. GALKIN, President
(One of the Communist methods of party propaganda.)
The editors are swamped with declarations by soldiers, sailors, and
workers of departure from the RCP. Therefore, we are printing only the
family names of those leaving the party, and the most characteristic
declarations. Today, we are given the opportunity to impart a historic
document, testifying how this criminal party enlisted members.
In mid-July, 1919 began the attack by Rodzianko on Petrograd. In
connection with this, unrest began in the Red Army. This unrest spread
to Krasnaya Gorka and Kronstadt. Trotsky gave the order to liquidate it,
whatever that might require. The Communists mobilized their butchers,
and a bloody reprisal began.
On July 13, a steamship came to fort Krasnoarmeiskii, carrying a
Communist detachment, with Commissars Razin, Medvedev and Sotnikov in
command. Razin ordered the bugler to play assembly. The crew of the fort
left their barracks, and were ordered to form up in a single line. Razin
came forward and addressed the men of the fort with the following words.
âComrades! I have brought you reinforcements, and replacements for the
tired. It is, of course, impossibile to free everyone, but a fifth part
may go on leave.â
After this, Razin began to count out every fifth man, who was then led
away to the left flank. In all, 55 people were counted out. âPlay
retreat,â Razin commanded, and ordered the remaining soldiers to go up
into the fort tower, and to form up in one rank facing the newly arrived
detachment.
Following that, Razin took the 55 people who had been counted out to a
given location at the south shore, and formed them up in one rank,
opposite which the newly arrived unit arranged itself.
When all these preparations were completed, Razin read them a death
sentence. Three volleys rang out, and the 55 soldiers, before the eyes
of their comrades standing in the fort tower, fell as victims to the
unquenchable bloodthirst of the insane Communists.
Three comrades remained alive (one of them was wounded), and the butcher
Razin spared them.
The second act of the tragedy began. By order of the butchers, a pit was
dug, the not yet cold corpses dumped in and covered with carbolic acid,
the earth was evened, and the fraternal grave was covered with cement.
[Carbolic acid (phenol) was put in graves to avoid the spread of typhus
and other diseases.]
Finally, Razin ordered the remaining crew to enroll in the party, and
for those not wishing to do so to go out to the fence, forewarning them
that the fate of those just executed awaited them.
What was there left to do?
Thus did they recruit these new Communists.
Somewhat later, the commander of a machine gun crew arrived at the fort.
The commissars suspected that he had come to Kronstadt for propaganda
andïżœïżœ yet another innocent victim washed the fortâs assembly ground with
his blood.
And the next day was issued a calm order âon removal from rations.â
We print it in full on the next page.
§ 10.
The soldiers named below, of the 5th, 6th, and 7th Batteries, and the
11th Squad of the Machine Gun Crew, killed by the authority of the
Provisional Revolutionary Court of Baltflot, are to be removed from the
divisional, battery, and crew rosters, and from all types of rations and
allowances, as of June 20 this year.
SOURCE: report of the Commander of fort OBRUCHEV, No 624, of June 2,
1919.
Truly signed: KARPOV, Commander of the 2nd Division
NEVEROVSKY, Commissar
Attested: MAKSIMENKO, clerk of the construction unit.
No explanations are necessary.
Comrade Soldiers! There is the kind of freedom which the Communists have
given you. There is the kind of authority against which we arose, and
the people against whom the Provisional Revolutionary Committee gives
the call to arms. Yesterday, a handfull of witnesses to this execution,
being in service until this time at fort Krasnoarmeiskii, passed the
following resolution at their meeting.
We, Communists of fort Krasnoarmeiskii, 6th Battery, give our support to
the worker-peasant power. We swear before representatives of our troika
who are carrying on joint work with the Provisional Revolutionary
Committee of the Town of Kronstadt, that we will stand to the last at
our posts, and achieve true liberation for workers and peasants. We
swear that we will not walk the path of lies by which the Communistsâ
bureaucrat representatives drove us into the RCP with falsehood,
violence, and the threat of execution.
A. Polunichev, A. Remin, D. Bukanov, G. Ivanov, I. Moshnikov, P. Pavlov,
N. Yulin, M. Tretiakov, V. Poliakov, I. Ivanov, F. Mikhailov, M.
Aksenov, M. Balabanov, N. Ivanov, A. Kondratiev, V. Tsvetoshin,
Bogdanov, O. Potapov, Novozhilov.
We all, workers and peasants, are striving to achieve a free and
unoppressed life, and therefore request that we not be considered
members of the RCP, but as non-party comrades.
Yesterday, March 7, the laborersâ enemies, Communists, opened fire on
Kronstadt. The populace met the bombardment with spirit. Workers
expressed a comradely desire to take up arms. It is clearly seen that
the laboring populace of Kronstadt lives with exactly the same interests
and aspirations as the Provisional Revolutionary Committee elected by
it.
Despite the opening of military action, the Provisional Revolutionary
Committee did not even find it necessary to declare a state of siege.
Who need it fear? Not its own soldiers, sailors, workers, and laboring
intelligentsia.
It is a different matter in Petrograd. There, due to the emergency
situation which has been declared, movement about the city is only
allowed until 7 pm. Tyrants, of course, must fear their own laboring
populace.
Passed by the general meeting of the united crews and garrison of fort
Konstantin, March 7, 1921
We the seamen and soldiers of the united military crews and garrison of
fort Konstantin, having heard the report of Comrade Nikolaev on the
current moment, find: that all the actions and measures of the
Provisional Revolutionary Committee are completely fair. We further find
that these actions fully express the opinions of the honest laboring
proletariat and laboring peasantry, which is presently striving with all
its strength to liberate itself from the damned Communist yoke. There
has been enough of the Communists riding on the peopleâs neck without
accountability or responsibility. May the murderer Trotsky know that all
his proclamations thrown out over Kronstadt represent nothing to us,
revolutionary seamen, soldiers, and workers, except the free provision
of besieged Kronstadt with paper. Their pogrom calls and threats are not
worrisome to us, and neither is their stinking slander. For we well know
that behind us will come the entire honest laboring masses of our dear
free Motherland, terribly tortured and robbed by traitorous Communism.
We have all sworn as one to carry through to the end with our holy cause
of liberating the laboring masses, which we have begun. May all those
Communal [sic] scarecrows know that only by crossing over our corpses
will they be able to take control of free Kronstadt. We have decided one
thing, either to die, or to exit honorably as victors.
Long live the Revolutionary Committee of Kronstadt!
Long live the revolutionary seamen, soldiers, and workers of free
Kronstadt!
Down with the bankrupt commune!
Down with bloodthirsty Trotsky and his cohorts!
(signature), President of the meeting
(signature), Secretary
Today, bread is issued for March 3rd: by cards of letter A, half a pound
for bread coupon No 27.
By cards of letter B, in place of bread, four pounds of oats is issued
for four days, March 8th, 9th and 11th, for bread coupon No 27.
By cards of series A, for produce coupon No 4, a one pound can of
preserved milk, is issued from stores No 5 and 14.
By childrenâs cards of series B and C, in place of bread, two pounds of
wheat is issued for four days, through March 11; by series B for bread
coupon No 4, and C for bread coupon No 27.
Counted toward the bread norm for the four days through March 11, two
cans of preserved meat are issued to all categories from all stores; by
cards of letter A and B and series C for bread coupon No 26, of series A
for produce coupon No 5 and of series C for bread coupon No 5.
Issue of all produce noted is limited to the amount delivered to the
stores.
LEVAKOV, for the President of Gorprodkom
âOn March 9, the day after the abortive assault on the rebel stronghold,
the Bolshevik leader Kamenev addressed the Tenth Party Congress in
Moscow. The military situation in Kronstadt, he said, had become âmore
protractedâ than anyone had expected, so that the liquidation of the
mutiny would not be accomplished âat an early hour.â The first attack
had been premature. In their anxiety to crush the rebellion before it
could receive outside help or spread to the mainland, the authorities
had acted too hastily, making faulty preparations and using an
insufficient quantity of troops and equipment, with the result that the
assault was repulsed with heavy losses.
But now time was even more pressing, for before long the ice would begin
to melt. Thus Tukhachevsky, the Bolshevik commander, urgently prepared
for a second attack in much greater strength than before.â
-Paul Avrich, Kronstadt 1921
the people have become convinced that Bolshevist Communism is
commissarocracy plus executions.
Our artillery destroyed the railroad line near Martyshkino.
In Oranienbaum, fire broke out in the region of Kitaisky Dvorets.
Our artillery bombarded the northern and southern shores of the gulf.
The adversary took heavy losses.
In the town, not a single building suffered from the adversaryâs
bombardment. Windows in several houses were broken by concussion.
Gromov, former Commissar of the Kronstadt Fortress, was killed in a
skirmish with our forward posts.
They donât have to get used to spilling the blood of innocents. They
have already begun throwing bombs from airplanes over the dwellings of
peaceful residents of Kronstadt. The first bomb was thrown March 8, at a
few minutes before six. It fell in the eaves of a house, and the whole
matter ended with the ruin of the houseâs facade, and the breaking of
glass in nearby houses. Wounded, fortunately lightly, was a boy of 13
years.
With the adversaryâs first shots, the restraint and determination of our
revolutionary garrison has all the more clearly appeared. It is bursting
for battle, but it strikes its blows not just as they chance to fall,
but where they are needed.
All are bursting to be armed, not excluding old men and young boys. The
show of spirit is remarkable. The laboring populace and garrison have
decided to fight to the end. All are inspired by the single thought of
breaking up the last remains of the Communist yoke. There is no turning
back. There is only the path forwardâto Free Labor and Soviet power. The
rebelsâ enthusiasm and restraint ensure our victory.
Kronstadtâs red eagles are writing a bright new page in the history of
Soviet Russia. Certainty in ourselves and selfless devotion to the
laborersâ interestsâthese are the strengths which guarantee our victory
over Communist field marshal Trotsky.
It is different in the adversaryâs camp. As deserters and prisoners
report, Trotsky employs the usual Communist means of convincing the
laborers, he places machine guns in the rear of their attacking troops.
Against the rebelsâ enthusiasm, the adversary has placed the enthusiasm
of the whip and firing squad.
In their broadcasts, the Communists have slung tubs of mud at the
leaders of the Third Revolution, who stand for true Soviet power and
against the outrages committed by the commissars.
We have not hidden this from the Kronstadt populace, and have fully
printed all their slanderous attacks in our Izvestiia.
We have nothing to fear. The citizens know how the revolution took
place, and who made it. The workers and peasants know that among the
garrison there are neither tsarist generals nor White Guards.
For its own part, the Provisional Revolutionary Committee sent a
broadcast to Petrograd demanding that the hostages taken by the
Communistsâworkers, sailors, and their families, and also political
prisonersâbe freed from the overfilled prisons. In a second broadcast,
we proposed that non-party delegates be sent to us in Kronstadt. They,
being convinced on the spot of the true course of events, could open the
eyes of Peterâs laboring populace.
And what did the Communists do? They hid these broadcasts from the
workers and soldiers. Units of field marshal Trotskyâs troops which have
crossed to our side brought us Petrograd newspapers, and there is not a
word about our broadcasts in them!
Was it that long ago that these hucksters, used to playing with marked
cards, were yelling that there shouldnât be any secrets from the people,
even diplomatic?
Hear this, Trotsky! As long as you are still running the peopleâs court,
you can shoot innocents in whole droves, but you canât shoot the truth.
It will come out, and then you and your oprichnina will be forced to
answer.
Under the Communist dictatorship, the mission of the trade unions, and
of their administrations in particular, was reduced to a minimum. In
four years of the revolutionary trade union movement in Socialist
Russia, our trade unions had no chance to be purely class organizations.
This situation came about not by their fault, but purely thanks to the
policy of the ruling party, which strived for a centralized, âCommunistâ
development of the masses. Therefore, the work of the trade unions came
down to nothing but completely unnecessary correspondence, for the
compilation of information about the number of members of one or another
industrial union, specialization, party status, and so on.
Relative to the economic-cooperative construction of the Republic and
the cultural development of the trade union workers, nothing was
undertaken. And that is completely understandable, since if the unions
had been given the right of broad independent action, then the entire
order of centralized Communist construction would have been destroyed,
and together with it would have collapsed the need for commissars and
politotdels.
These are undoubtably the situations which have made the working masses
forsake the unions, since the latter had become a Communist gendarme
yoke, holding down the laboring classes.
With the overthrow of the RCP [Communist Party of Russia] dictatorship,
the role of the Trade Unions must fundamentally change. Therefore, the
newly elected unions and administrations in the trade movement must
fulfill the great combat mission of educating the masses in the
cultural-economic construction of the country. They must pour a new,
invigorating stream into their activity, and become the expressers of
the peopleâs interests.
The Soviet Socialist Republic may only be strong when its administration
belongs to the laboring classes in the form of renewed trade unions.
We will undertake this cause, comrade workers! We will form new unions,
free from all oppression. In them is our strength.
S. FOKIN
(About the executions in Oranienbaum)
On March 2, a rumor was passed in Oranienbaum that Kronstadt had driven
away Kalinin.
Sailors from Kronstadt had been arrested at the train station.
The First Aeronautic Naval Division has always stood on guard of the
Revolution, and sensitively listened to the voice of the laboring
people.
The Kronstadt resolution was delivered. In a moment, the news passed to
all the seamen of the Aero. Div., and at 6 pm. they gathered in their
club to discuss the new situation. The Communists got nervous and called
the Politodel, from which the RCP organizer Perekhov and other
Communists arrived. The division commissar was horrified when we elected
Comrade Kolesov, Commander of the Aero. Nav. Division, as President,
Comrade Balobanov as Secretary, and Comrade Romanov as Assistant
Secretary of a Revolutionary Committee, and especially when the entire
division unanimously supported the Kronstadt resolution.
The sailors rejoiced that power had passed into the hands of the
laboring people. The Communists vainly attempted to provoke us, saying
that we did not have the right to revolt against Communist Soviet power.
The sailors, in revolutionary ecstasy, replied to this that death was
better than the Communist yoke, and with the cry, âLong live the
Kronstadt sailors, soldiers, and workers,â went to the hangar where the
seaplanes were located.
In the hangar, we gathered for a second time. Comrade Balabanov [sic]
instructed that all seamen should be armed, but several, afraid of
spilling blood, did not agree with this order, and as we will see below,
paid cruelly for their love of peace and their trusting natures.
The seamen chose three delegates for communication with Kronstadt, and
decided to set a division watch of 20 persons. At this time, the
Communists were listening in on us, and reported everything to the
Politodel, where a Communist committee of defense was gathered. Its
president, commissar Sergeev, ordered military units to capture the
rebel sailors, who had clearly crossed to the side of the White Guards.
We went to our separate homes, since the Communists assured us that they
wouldnât use any armed force or arrests against us.
Our delegates, sent to neighboring units with the Kronstadt fortressâ
resolution, were arrested by chekists on the way. Comrade Kolesov wasnât
able to use the telephone (central reported that it was out of order) to
communicate with Kronstadt and with other units. In fact, Sergeev,
commissar of the Oranienbaum garrison, called the Petrograd Defense
Committee and asked them to send an armored train with an echelon of
cadets as quickly as possible, and urgently called for 3 batteries of
light artillery, and a squadron of cavalry cadets. They armed all the
Communists from head to toe, supplied them with revolvers and machine
guns, issued each soldier 2 lb. of bread and 1 lb. of meat, and then
sent them to the brigade headquarters. Then the Communists set about
disarming the young seamen and the escort crew. They arrested the most
untrustworthy, and sent them to the Cheka. Some who escaped from under
arrest informed Comrade Kolesov of what was happening. He answered, âLet
them make their arrests. We donât fear them, and wonât make any
opposition, since our forces are too small, just a 30 person guard.â
At 5 am on March 3, the armored train Chernomorets and an echelon of
cadets arrived from Petrograd. At 7 am, just as it had begun to get
light, the armored train came up to the building of the Naval Aeronautic
Division and aimed its cannons and machine guns point blank. Cadets
rushed at the seamen from all sides, and disarmed them. The infamous
beast Dulkis, from the Kronstadt Cheka, pointed his revolver at Comrade
Kolesov with the animal scream, âDonât move White Guard, or I shoot.â
After this, they arrested our commander and took him under guard to the
Cheka, where they began to bring the sailors arrested in private
apartments.
After several hours, the chekists set about the interrogations. After
the interrogation of Comrade Kolesov and 44 seamen of the Aeronautic
Naval Division, at 4 oâclock on March 3 a company of cadets took them
past Martyshkino for execution. Soon, the crack of small arms volleys
was heard.
The Communists of the Aero. Nav. Division made sure to immediately
arrest the wives and relatives of the comrades who had been saved from
the terrible clutches of the Cheka.
Cadets arrived from Orel, Nizhni Novgorod and Moscow. Three more armored
trains came, and were put on the reserve tracks of the town of
Oranienbaum. After this, heavy artillery and the Moscow Cheka arrived.
For whom were these armed forces and oprichniki? Clearly, for the
workers, peasants, sailors and soldiers who had begun to want freedom
for labor and fairness.
Execution did not scare us. We decided to be victorious, or to die the
glorious death of a revolutionary seaman, who has proved that he is not
a gendarme, and not a servant of the Cheka which protects the Communist
Party autocracy which torments our wives and children in its torture
chambers.
Down with the Communist oppressors, who rob our fathers!
Long live Soviet power!
A white flag raised during military action means a temporary ceasefire,
to carry out negotiations between the adversaries. Thus it has always
been, among all nations.
But it is not so with the Communists. They turn the flag of peace into a
sign of betrayal, and under its cover carry out their stinking works.
Yesterday, March 8, soldiers with a white flag set out from Oranienbaum
in the direction of Kronstadt. Taking the advancing soldiers as truce
envoys, two of our comrades went out on horseback to meet them, having
beforehand removed from themselves all weapons. One of them rode right
up to the adversaryâs group, and the second stopped at a small distance.
Barely had our truce envoy said a few words when the Communists threw
themselves on him, pulled him from the horse, and carried him away with
themselves. The second comrade managed to ride away back to Kronstadt.
The example is worthy of attention, to once more be convinced of the
methods which the Communists use in their struggle against the laboring
masses.
âTukhachevsky, commander of the army operating against Kronstadt, told a
reporter from Kransnyi Komandir, âWe have received reports that the
civilian population of Kronstadt is receiving almost no produce.â
âThe infantry regiment quartered in Kronstadt has refused to join the
mutineers, and not allowed itself to be disarmed.
âThe main instigators of the mutiny are planning to escape to Finland.
âA non-party sailor who escaped from Kronstadt reports that on March 4,
General Kozlovsky spoke at a sailorsâ meeting in Kronstadt. In his
speech he called for strong authority, and decisive action against
supporters of the Soviets.
âThe mood in Kronstadt is one of demoralization. The masses of the
populace impatiently await the end of the mutiny, and demand that the
White Guard leaders be surrendered to the Soviet government.
This is what the Communists write about us. These are the means to which
they resort, tring to blacken our movement before the laboring people,
and by the same means to lengthen their own existence, if only by an
hour.
A March 7 issue of Krasnyi Komandir, provided to us by prisoners,
reports, âthe Commander in Chief of all armed forces of the Republic,
Comrade S. Kamenev, having arrived in Petrograd in connection with the
events in Kronstadt, has returned to Moscow.â
On March 6, Comrade Afanasiev came to Comrade Ballot, a Communist, for
some books. The latter attempted to convince him to escape from fort Rif
to the Oranienbaum shore. In preparation, he had found out where the
guards and machine guns were placed, and where crossing the sea would be
least unpleasant.
He proposed that they dress all in white, since the night was light.
(The conversation took place at two oâclock in the morning.) But of
course, Comrade Afanasiev did not agree with him, arrested him and took
him to the Provisional Revolutionary Committee.
Under interrogation, Comrade Ballot admitted that he wanted to escape to
the Oranienbaum shore, and was searching for a companion so that it
wouldnât be so boring. He says that he wanted to escape because he was
afraid of execution. On him were found 28 thousand rubles, and
identification papers.
On March 6, a General Meeting of the crew occurred at fort
Krasnoarmeiskii, at which Communists were in attendance along with the
others. After a report by Comrade Vershinin on the current moment and
how things stand in Kronstadt, demoralization was noticed among the
crew, since the Communists located there were zealously carrying on
their malicious agitation. They were making the crew feel that they were
still their lords, and did not intend to give up their place. After the
slogan proposed by Comrade Vershinin, âVictory or Death,â the crew came
to the point of view, better death than surrender.
Then the Communists, 50 persons in number, attempted to escape from the
fort, but were caught in a searchlight, restrained, disarmed, and turned
over to the authority of the Provisional Revolutionary Committee of
Kronstadt.
At the present time, a cheerful and excited atmosphere and complete
support for revolutionary Kronstadt are noted at fort Krasnoarmeiskii.
The truth about Kronstadt has already broken through all the obstacles
set up by the high-handed Communists, and units of the adversaryâs
troops surrender to us in droves. They are now being convinced that the
soldiers, seamen, and workers of Kronstadt are fighting against
oppressors, fighting for true Soviet power. They see that it was not
generals (of which, by the way, there are none here) but the tortured
laboring people itself that overthrew the oprichnik-Communists.
We print below a resolution passed unanimously by 700 deserters.
âWe, soldiers, peasants, workers, cadets, and officers, having heard a
report on the situation of Kronstadt, entirely give our support to the
resolution of the Garrison Assembly of the town of Kronstadt, and
express our faith in the Provisional Revolutionary Committee. We wish to
go hand in hand with it, and at its first call we will enter anew into
the ranks of the laboring masses, and will struggle against all Soviet
bureaucratism and unfairness.
SKEPKO, President
IVLEV, Secretary
I
We, candidate members of the RCP of the Union of Workers of the Peopleâs
Communications, having discussed the current moment, arrived at the
following conclusion: we entered the party with the goal of working for
the good of the people, and stand entirely in defense of the interests
of the worker and peasant masses. Therefore, at the present difficult
time being suffered by the Republic, when all our strivings must be
turned to the battle with destruction, cold and hunger, we unanimously
declare that we do not stand for the authorities, but entirely for the
rightful cause of the laborers. Therefore we, as honest workers,
standing in defense of the interests and rights of the laborers,
unanimously declare that we are under the command of the Provisional
Revolutionary Committee, which has placed before itself the goal of
forming Soviets of the purely laboring proletarian masses.
Long live Sovet power, true defender of the laborers!
town of Kronstadt, March 8, 1921
PETROV, President of the Meeting
II
We, workersâ representatives, at the General Meeting of the 6th Raikom
of the Union of Metal Workers, having heard the truthful speech of a
deputy from the Prov. Rev. Com. of the Fortress of Kronstadt, say, âWe
believe in you, we are with you. Go boldly forward on the shining path
which you have marked. We will not leave you, and if necessary, we will
die together with you for the good of our brothers the laborers.â
ROMASHEV, President
(signature), Secretary
At the General Meeting of the workers of the Worker-Peasant Inspection,
it was decided that since there are 4 sub-departments in Rabkrin
[Worker-Peasant Inspection], just such a number of members should be
elected, that is, 4 persons: Galkin, Morozov, Neveikin, and Soloviev.
Three of those elected, Comrades Galkin, Morozov, and Neveikin, are to
remain at the Rabkrin Department, and Comrade Soloviev is to be located
at the Soviet of the Peopleâs Economy sub-department. Comrade Galkin was
elected President of the Revtroika, and Neveikin Secretary.
Comrade Communists, come to your senses! Admit your unforgivable error
before the non-party comrades. I too was a Communist, of the battleship
Sevastopolâs collective, and have now understood how we were deceived by
our torture chamber bureaucrats. Comrade Communists, it is time to come
to your senses! Enough of shooting our own fathers and executing brother
peasants and workers by the order of some kind of Trotskies. We will
throw away our deceiving slogan, âThe dictatorship of the proletariat.â
We will join in a comradely family together with our Rev. Com., for the
rightful cause.
Down with the oppressorsâ party!
Long live the worker and peasant!
KOSKIN, a Communist
Declarations of departure from the RCP arrive unceasingly at the
editorial offices, but in view of their great quantity and the
insufficiency of space, the editors are unable to publish them
immediately, and will include them as possible in following editions of
the newspaper.
In view of the fact that in answer to the the comrade Kronstadtersâ
proposal for delegates to be sent from Petrograd, Trotsky and the
Communist leaders began to spill blood by firing the first rounds, I ask
that from today I no longer be considered a member of the RCP. The
speeches of Communist orators fogged my head, but todayâs practices of
the bureaucrat-Communists have cleared it.
I ask that this declaration be printed in the press, and also ask the
crew to accept me into its close family, that I may share in its sorrows
and joys.
I bless the bureaucrat-Communists for the fact that they have uncovered
their face, and in that way brought me out of delusion. I was a blind
tool in their hands.
Former RCP member No 537,575
ANDREI BRATASHEV
Recognizing the critical situation which has been created by the actions
of a shameless little bunch of Communists, who have woven themselves a
thick nest at the top of the Communist party, and having entered the
Communist party under pressure, as a rank and file working man, I look
with horror on the fruits of their handsâ work. The country, brought to
ruin, can be rebuilt only by the worker and peasant, whom the Communist
party, as ruler, has plucked to the last feather. Therefore, I am
leaving the party, and will give my knowledge for the defense of the
laboring mass.
L. KOROLEV, Commander of the 5th Battalion, 4th Division
The bloody horror of Nikolai
We had not been able yet to forget,
When the communeâs âholyâ party
Began to spill our blood anew.
She promised us liberty,
She promised us the gift of fortune,
But this her own gift she changed
To bloody terror and nightmare.
Executions, torments, tortures,
Blood poured from under swords.
She gave us three years of suffering
Worse than the Tsarâs butchers.
It has come true⊠By the Will of the people
The nightmare of oppression is broken,
Liberty has been returned
The mighty fire of uprising burns.
Grey Kronstadt, in past days
Moved ahead as a revolutionary.
It threw down Nikolaiâs weight
And will throw down the Communist yoke.
Seaman K. KOLODOCHKIN
We, Communists of the battleship Sevastopol, having discussed the
current moment, arrived at the following conclusion: during the last
three years of our partyâs existence, many self-seekers and careerists
have poured into our ranks. Because of the above, these careerists have
created a powerful bureaucratism in the country, and thereby have raised
the workers and peasants against the party.
Our party has always placed as its purpose the struggle against all
enemies of the proletariat and laboring class, and we now openly declare
that we, as honest sons of the workers and peasants, will stand also in
the future for the laborersâ victories. We will not allow a single White
Guard, either secret or open, to use the temporary, difficult situation
of our Soviet Republic, and at the first attempt to raise a hand against
Soviet power, we will know how the give the necessary repulse to the
counterrevolutionary hydra of the Entente.
We have already declared and declare once again that we are under the
command of the Kronstadt Provisional-Revolutionary Committee, which has
given itself the goal of forming Soviets of the laboring and proletarian
class.
Long live Soviet power, true defender of the rights of laborers!
We ask that this resolution be widely advertised in the press.
I. Petrov, Turk, G. Babanov, E. Soloviev, F. Bobor, Tikhomirov, A.
Agafonov, Dialensky, G. Moshuanov, Kornoniushkin, Iu. Kentok,
Kolomychenko, Chernov, I. Naumov, V. Ianishus, I. Semenov, N. Kitto, V.
Lubkov, O. Svetlov, V. Tuzov, A. Etikson, S. Fetrovin, Fedorov, Busybin,
Gant, Gavrilov
Declarations of departure from the RCP also arrived from the
following: 1) N. Ermolenko, seaman of the battleship Petropavlovsk, 2)
P. Tolbaev, candidate member of the R.C.P., 3) Zhukovsky, seaman of the
battleship Petropavlovsk, 8th Company, 4) I. Mischenkov, worker in the
Port Galvanoplastics Workshop, 5) M. Petrov, member of the RCP, 6) G.
Ivanov, soldier of battery No 5, 7) A. Buivolov, soldier of 3rd
Division, 8) also A. Krutikov, 9) also T. Timoshin, 10) also P. Moiseev,
11) also V. Sapogov, 12) also B. Dziubinsky, 13) also A. Sokovtsev, 14)
also I. Grishin, 15) also G. Semenov, 16) also E. Perezhogin, 17) G.
Rebon, seaman of the Company of Seamen Specialists, 18) D. Chizhov,
seaman of the Academic Mining Detachment, 19) A. Tuzov, artisan of fort
Petr I, 20) G. Zharov, member of the RCP, 21) I. Manziar, artisan of the
Mine Laboratory, 22) I. Petrov, worker of the Support Crew of 3rd
Division, 23) S. Savin, seaman of the Academic Mining Detachment, 24) G.
Kurakin, clerk of the Support Crew of the 3rd Artillery Division.
Today, a quarter pound of biscuit is issued by adult cards of letter A,
for bread coupon No 24, counted against the bread norm for March 9.
2 pounds of wheat is issued from stores No 5 and 14 by childrenâs cards
of series A, for produce coupon No 6, counted against the bread norm for
March 8 through 11.
One pound of fresh meat by adult cards of letters A and B and childrenâs
of series C for bread coupon No 25, and by childrenâs cards of series B
for bread coupon No 6, counted against the bread norm for March 8
through 11.
1/16 lb. of yeast is issued by Rudkevich the yeast maker (corner of
Lenin Blvd. and Saidashnaia) for bread coupon No 4 by childrenâs cards
of series C, for payment.
It is announced for the information of Uchkoms and building
representatives, that citizens on naval rations must not be provided
with goods.
LEVAKOV, member of the Revtroika, for the President of Gorprodkom
POZDNIAKOV, Head of the Subdepartment of Distribution
âDays of anguish and cannonading. My heart is numb with despair;
something has died within me. The people on the streets look bowed with
grief, bewildered. No one trusts himself to speak. The thunder of heavy
guns rends the air. â
-Alexander Berkman, Kronstadt diary
âDuring the whole day of March 10th, the Communist artillery incessantly
shelled the whole island from south to north.â
-Voline, The Unknown Revolution
âSo far, despite the intensive bombardment, casualties were remarkably
light; outsiders who visited Kronstadt reported little injury and only
minor damage to buildings and installations. Through March 10, by the
defendersâ own reckoning, only 14 persons had been killed and 4 wounded
(2 sailors, a soldier, and a civilian).â
-Paul Avrich, Kronstadt 1921
So far, the chief effect of the Bolshevik offensive had been to isolate
the Kronstadt rebels and prevent their message from spreading. The radio
and press were running nonstop disinformation against them.
âIn Moscow, the rebellion was a matter of growing concern. On March 10,
Trotsky returned with a grim report on the situation and presented it to
a closed session of the Tenth Party Congress. That evening, some 300
delegates volunteered for the front, over a quarter of the total
attendance and a dramatic measure of the gravity with which the rising
was viewed ten days after its outbreak.â
-Paul Avrich, Kronstadt 1921
CAMP
1921
In connection with the military situation, the populace of the town is
directed to hang all windows with something thick at night, before
striking the light.
KILGAST, for the President of the Provisional Revolutionary Committee
TUKIN, for the Secretary
1921
I order all Communists resident in the town of Kronstadt to surrender to
the Administration of the Commandant of the Town (Roshal Square) within
two days from the publication of this order all weaponry in their
possession, that is: revolvers, rifles, their ammunition, and also
sabres, dirks, and accumulator (electrical) lamps.
Those not carrying out this order will be considered to be acting
against the authority of the Provisional Revolutionary Committee, and if
weaponry is discovered in their possession, they will be liable to
severe consequences.
ZEMSKOV, Provisional and Acting Commandant of the Town of Kronstadt
Attempts by the adversary to attack from the North and South were
repulsed, with large losses for the attackers.
There were no losses on our side.
We didnât want blood. They started it, and the battle is on.
The sailors, soldiers, and workers of Kronstadt, true to the laboring
Revolution, are forging fortune for Soviet Russia. The chains of the
three year Communist slavery are being broken with an iron hammer.
The Communist throne has begun to tremble, and in a blind rage they
choke themselves in the blood of laborers. They shoot workers and
peasants right and left. They jeer over and repress the rebelsâ
defenseless families.
One more blow and the bloodthirsty Moloch, which has lulled the laboring
people to sleep with sweet speeches, will be thrown down in ruins.
May the fraternal blood which waters the face of tormented Soviet
Russia, wrung from the workers and peasants by the criminal Communists,
be like cement; may it bind those who fight the hated yoke of the
traitors into a unified host. At the moment of decisive combat with the
hydra of the Bolshevik autocracy, we must be composed.
Our call to battle has already been heard.
Reserves are already approaching. Before the Bolsheviksâ eyes, our
brothers the workers and peasants are extending us a helping hand in our
battle with the maddened horde.
We must destroy the commissarocracy. With flaming hate in our heart and
a sober head, holding back those who burst for battle and thereby
preserving our living forces, we will strike the final decisive blow to
the enemy.
We will carry to success the titanic battle with those who have betrayed
the laboring people.
Calm and restraint.
The Provisional Revolutionary Committee, not following the Communist
example, left both them and their families at liberty. At the present
time it has been established that in an attempt at provocation, wanting
to sow panic among the populace, they have spread the most foolish
rumors. They talk of Krasnaya Gorka surrendering, of Trotsky promising
not to leave one stone of Kronstadt on another, and so on. All this
makes the civilian populace worry needlessly.
If there are several reports that the Prov. Rev. Com. is not now making
public, it is demanded by the military situation, since there are still
not a few spy-Communists among the populace. Citizens! Everything
possible is made public in Izvestiia. Do not believe whisperersâ rumors.
Try to restrain the culprits and hand them over to the Prov. Rev. Com.
The Prov. Rev. Com. warns that decisive measures, dictated by the
circumstances of the military period, will be taken against those sowing
lying rumors.
PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY COMMITTEE
The following broadcast was sent on March 8:
To all⊠to all⊠to allâŠ
Comrades, workers of the world! The Communists have declared our
uprising for true Soviet power a mutiny. But it is not we who are the
mutineers, but they.
The laboring masses have demanded free new elections to the stacked
Soviets. But the Bolshevik authorities, with bloody field marshal
Trostky at the head, have decided to repress the will of the laboring
people whatever may come of it. They defend the party autocracy with
executions of toilers and with violence against their families.
The Communists slander us, saying that our leaders are White Guard
generals. They say that we have sold out to Finland, and that it has
promised us support.
Before the world proletariat, we swear that no kind of White Guard
generals lead us, and that no kind of negotiations with Finland either
about military or produce support have there been, and none can there
be. We are supplied with military equipment and produce for the time
necessary to overthrow the Communists.
If, however, our struggle were to be drawn out, it is possible that we
would be forced to turn to external produce aid, for the good of our
wounded heroes, children and the civilian populace.
The Communists mask their weakness with claims that they are giving us a
period of grace. In actual fact, they cannot collect the forces
necessary to strangle the Third Revolution of laborers.
It has been three days since they fired the first shot, and first
spilled fraternal blood. Fighting for the rightful cause, we have
accepted the challenge. The garrison and laboring populace of Kronstadt,
having thrown off the shameful Communist yoke, have decided to fight to
the end.
With comradely greetings,
THE PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY COMMITTEE OF KRONSTADT
For three and a half years, a little bunch of usurpers have made a
reality of their own thieving will. At last, the Kronstadt sons of
laboring Russia, horrified by the Communist oppression, came on March 1
to decide the fate of the deceived and robbed Russian people. With a
single voice, we of Kronstadt said to the Communist leaders, Kalinin and
the rest, âenough of oppression, and enough of deception. Off the road!
Let us breathe free and share our painful needs with all the workers,
peasants, sailors, and soldiers of the boundless Russian land.â
They, traitors, are frightened of the deceived Russian laboring people
coming to understand everything.
In 3 1/2 years of their reign, they have still not drunk their fill of
the innocent blood of toilers.
The executions of our brothers are still too few for them. They have
taken to torturing defenseless women and children. And where are our
representatives? Why can they not intercede for us, and liberate our
brothers who are languishing in prisons?
No, deceivers, we have heard enough of your fancy speech. No one
believes you any more. Donât try to scare us either. No one fears you.
The laboring people itself, and not generals, is leading the struggle
against you, you blood-drinkers.
Long live the Russian proletariat, tortured, long-suffering all
adversities, and now in rebellion to gain its rights!
Long live the Provisional Revolutionary Committee of the Town of
Kronstadt, chosen by us, the laborers! Only it do we trust.
Off, hands stained with brotherly blood, stinking oppressors of Laboring
Russia!
THE REVTROIKA OF THE ENGINEER WORKING BATTALION
Comrades! March 7, by order of Trotsky, butcher of worker-peasant
Russia, fire was opened on Free Kronstadt from the batteries of Lisy Nos
and Sestroretsk because Kronstadt no longer wants to dance to the piping
of the Communist party, which has betrayed the laboring worker and
peasant folk in order to gain power.
We did not want to spill fraternal blood, and we did not fire a single
shot until they forced us to do so. We were forced to defend the
rightful cause of the laboring people, and to fire. We were forced to
fire at our own brothers, sent to a certain death by Communists, who
feast on the peopleâs bill.
And at that time, their ringleaders, Trotsky, Zinoviev, and the rest,
were sitting on soft chairs in the warm, lit rooms of tsarist palaces,
discussing how the quicker and better to cover rebel Kronstadt in blood.
To your misfortune, a snowstorm arose and an impenetrable night
approached. Nonetheless, taking nothing into consideration, the
Communist butchers pushed you across the ice. They drove you from behind
with detachments of machine gun armed Communists.
Many of you perished that night, on the huge, icy expanse of the Gulf of
Finland. At sunrise, when the snowstorm had quieted, only pathetic
remnants reached us, hungry and exhausted, barely moving your feet,
dressed in white shrouds.
By early morning, nearly a thousand of you had been gathered, and by
afternoon a countless number. You paid dearly with your blood and
suffering for this venture. And after your failure, Trotsky rolled off
back to Petrograd, to once again drive new sufferers to the slaughter.
Our worker-peasant blood is obtained for him cheaply enough.
And once again, the regiments will set out, driven by well-dressed and
well-fed Communists who hide behind your backs, farther from our rounds,
in order to treat you to machine gun fire if you waver or if you donât
want to give your body for the defense of these brigands. We donât treat
the Communists like that. All the commissars, and even the butchers from
the Cheka, we feed with the exact same rations which we eat ourselves.
We refused butter to Kuzmin, Commissar of Baltflot, when he declared
that itâs impossible to live without it; we give butter only to children
and the sick. That is how matters stand in Kronstadt, and not like the
Communist deceivers tell you: that White officers and Finnish White
Guards have captured Kronstadt. No, Kronstadt is controlled only by
seamen, soldiers, and workers, who have given an oath to liberate you
and all Russia from the power of those who have betrayed the laboring
people.
Comrades, realize what you are doing and where you are going!
Look and see what awaits you, and what you are spilling your blood for!
The Communist administration has led Russia to unheard of destitution,
hunger, cold, and other disasters. Factories and plants have closed, and
railroads are almost at a stop. The countryside has been stripped to the
bone. There is neither bread, nor beast, nor tool to work the land.
There is no clothing, no shoes, no heat. Every day, hungry and cold
workers, peasants and city folk move toward a certain death, having lost
all hope for improvement in their lives.
And the traitorous Communist party brought you to this. For three and a
half years, they sang into your ears that there, there everything will
be arranged and it will be good, but in fact they have pulled the wool
over your eyes in the most base way, flayed the last bit from you and
now are sending you to the slaughter. The Communists donât need you, but
only power over you so that they can continue to oppress the people for
their own pleasure.
So enough of bearing the oppressors and their power on our own necks.
Rise up, all as one, and with the comradely blow of a bayonet, throw the
base traitors into the grave. Join us, so that shoulder to shoulder we
may attack the common enemy, for the liberation of Soviet Russia and of
our brothers the peasants and workers from the pack of robbers with the
blood-drinkers Trotsky and Zinoviev at its head.
To arms, comrades!
As comrades, forward against the enemy!
Victory is ours!
The struggle for Soviet power ties us ever closer together Every person
strives to somehow aid the common cause. The 1st Raikom of metalworkers
has unanimously decided to hand over to the common kettle the entire
horsemeat ration due them.
The General Meeting of the 6th Regional Committee of the Union of
Metalworkers of the Kronstadt Port Construction Unit, after reports on
the events of the day by Comrades Kilgast and Perepelkin, passed the
following resolution, âWe trust you, we are with you. Go boldly forward
on the holy path you have marked. We will not leave you, and if
necessary, will die together with you for the good of our brothers, the
laborers and workers.â
Comrade Kostenko was elected as Raikom representative to the Troika.
Comrade Boiarinov was elected President of the Regional Committee,
Comrade Parychev Secretary and Comrade Kupriianov a member.
I ask to correct a mistake which I noticed in yesterdayâs March 9 number
of Kronshtadtskie Izvestiia, where it reports on my leaving the RCP. I
was never in the party, and hate the supporters of the party of those
who have deceived us with their lying slogans, under the mask of the
laboring people.
Down with the Communist blood-drinkers!
Long live the Power of Laborers!
G. REBONE, seaman of the Company of Seaman-Specialists
All those leaving the ranks of the RCP are directed to turn in their
party booklets and identifications at their electoral troikas. Those
leaving the party in the future and giving declarations are directed to
do so right now.
Declarations of departure from the RCP arrive unceasingly at the
editorial offices, but in view of their great quantity and the
insufficiency of space, the editors are unable to publish them
immediately, and will include them as possible in following editions of
the newspaper.
I have lived for almost thirty years with a deep love for the people. I
have carried light and knowledge, as well as I was able, wherever it was
awaited, and wherever needed for the present moment. The Revolution of
1917 increased my strengths by giving my work free range, and I
continued to serve my ideal with great energy. The teachings of
Communism, with its slogan, âAll for the people,â captured me with their
purity and beauty. Thus, in February of 1920, I became a candidate
member of the RCP. But with the âfirst shotâ I was shaken by the thought
that I might be considered a participant in spilling the blood of
innocent victims. They have fired at a peaceful populace, at my deeply
beloved children, of whom there are 6 or 7 thousand in Kronstadt. I came
to feel that it is not within my strength to hold faith in, and profess
to a party which has disgraced itself by a bestial act. Therefore, with
this first shot I ceased to consider myself a candidate member of the
RCP.â
MARIIA NIKOLAEVNA SHATEL, teacher
March 8, 1921
I request that you no longer consider me a member of the RCP, since I
have become convinced that the Communists are oppressors. Like
bloodthirsty animals they do not feel sorry for their kills, and hunger
for the peopleâs blood. I greet the Provisional Revolutionary Committee,
which is leading the laboring people by a true and honest path.
SHISHELOVA, manual laborer of the Artillery Workshop
We, rank and file Communists of the Electrical Unit of the Third Region
have seen that when the comrade Kronstadters proposed that delegates be
sent from Petrograd, Trotsky sent an airplane filled with bombs. The
Communists started throwing bombs out on women and children who are in
no way guilty, and barely missed taking a boy of 13 years as their
victim. Because of this, and because executions of honest workers are
raging everywhere, we are constantly tortured by the actions and bestial
works of Trotsky and his champions, and are leaving the Communist party
in order to join all honest workers in the mutual struggle for
liberation of the laborers from oppression. We ask that we be considered
non-party comrades.
Anton Kovtun, Andrei Luts, Iuna, Starovevki, Otu, Smark, Eduard Pokrov,
Stepan Galiantcheev, Georgii Egorov, Andrei Filippov, Ivan Nikolaev,
Ivan Filippov, Nikolai Baksheev, Aleksei Bostalev, Filimonov, Petr
Pavlov and one illegible signature
Declarations also arrived from:
25) F. Andreev, machinist of fort Konstantin, 26) M. Logunov, sldr. of
the 4th Artillery Division, 27) also A. Sergeev, 28) V. Kondrashikhin,
sldr. of the Fortress Communications Service, 29) L. Savkovsky, seaman
of the Academic Mining Detachment, 30) also S. Yakovlev, 31) also V.
Shutov, 32) also P. Semeniuk, 33) also P. Kanatov, 34) also S. Ageev,
35) also F. Zhuravsky, 36) also Lebedev, 37) also Lavrov, 38) also V.
Golber, 39) also I. Karavaev, 40) also A. Malashenkov, 42) S. Artamonov,
seaman of the Kronstadt Naval Prodbaza, 43) F. Shlakis, artisan of the
Naval Artillery Laboratory, 44) M. Glukhov, seaman of the Worker-Escort
Detachment.
75) A. Suslov, sailor of the steamship Izhor, 76) P. Ivanov, seaman of
the Port Tugboats, 77) S. Artemov, sldr. of 5th Company of the infantry
regiment, 78) I. Ilyin, artisan of the Naval Artillery Laboratory, 79)
V. Shirmov, sldr. of the 13th Battery, 80) V. Prokopov, seaman, 81) P.
Zimin, seaman of the Academic Mining Detachment, 82) A. Tarasov, sldr.
of Battery No 4, 83) I. Morkin, sldr. of the 9th Battery of fort
Totleben, of the 4th Artillery Division, 84) also Ia. Malevansky, 85)
also V. Smirnov, 86) also V. Afanasiev, 87) also F. Litvinov, 88) also
K. Deviatkin, 89) also P. Kuzmin, 90) also N. Loginov, 91) also A.
Semionov, 92) also Shuagenkov, 93) V. Nekipelov, artisan of the
Ust-Kanal Substation, 94) D. Spiridonov, seaman of the Academic Mining
Detachment, 95) also V. Stepanov, 96) also A. Gorodinsky, 97) also V.
Burmatov, 98) also N. Kulikov, 99) also I. Petushkovsky, 100) also B.
Maksimovsky, 101) also M. Chernyshev, 102) also P. Zimin, 103) also N.
Steniaev, 104) also G. Vikhorev, 105) also D. Moshensky, 106) also A.
Saveliev, 107) also V. Spiridonov, 108) G. Zaitsev, member of the
R.C.P., 109) P. Kolosov, artisan of the Steamship Plant, 110) V.
Spiridonov, sldr. of the Second Artillery Division, 111) D. Sedlov,
sldr. of the 7th Artillery Division, 112) I. Melnikov, seaman of the
Mine Casting Workshop, 113) I. Vorobiov, cashier of the Town Finance
Department, 114) N. Kuriashev, baker of the Army Bakery, 115) also T.
Platonov, 116) M. Sysoev, militiaman, 117) also Breiner, 118) also I.
Dmitriev, 119) M. Fomin, sldr. of the 3rd Artillery Division, 120) S.
Rois, sldr. of the 4th Anti-Aircraft Battery of the Fortress Air
Defense, 121) K. Borovikov, sldr., 122) A. Rusakov, seaman, 123) P.
Kulikov, member of the R.C.P., 124) M. Trofinov, lithographer of the
Administration of the Artillery Commander, 125) A. Maiorov, seaman, 126)
V. Kappo, artisan of the Steamship Plant, 127) also A. Selivanov, 128)
G. Iosifov, 129) Ia. Tiulin, candidate member of the R.C.P.,130) A.
Vasiliev, sldr. 131) I. Chekulaev, artisan of fort Petr I.
Comrades, I ask that you accept me into your family, since I too am a
peasant and village toiler. My family, like yours, was destroyed by the
back-breaking and oppressive yoke of the RCP. Comrades, seeing all this
filth, seeing that the RCP has become bureaucratized and that all its
declarations and decisions have stayed on paper and not been brought to
life, I leave its ranks and give my support to the resolution which was
passed at the General Town Meeting of March 1, and for which I too
voted.
Once more comrades, I ask you to accept me into your ranks and to use my
work.
IUSHKOV, serviceman of the 3rd Division
We the undersigned, members of the RCP, declare that, finding the
partyâs tactics to be fundamentally incorrect, and that it is completely
bureaucratized and absolutely separated from the masses, we are leaving
its ranks. Before all the laboring people, we brand those who remain in
its ranks with the shame of criminals and murderers.
We the undersigned call on all honest members of the RCP to give full
support to the Provisional Revolutionary Committee as the single organ
which expresses the will of the laboring people at the present time.
Follow us to honorable battle against the insane fanatics, and tell
yourself, âVictory or death for the glory of the laborers.â
M. Arkhipov, V. Trapezniakov, A. Rekhov, Shitov, Ia. Filippov, Ustinov,
Alekseev, Rumiantsev, P. Filippov, I. Ovchinnikov, A. Kniaginin, K.
Ilyin and I. Balashev, soldiers of the Air Defense of the Kronstadt
Naval Fortress
Seeing clearly that the RCP not only is not in agreement with the will
of the entire laboring people, but that it is attempting to hold power
for itself by all means in its command, up to and including threats and
false reports from the center of power, I declare to the Revolutionary
Committee that I consider myself to have left the ranks of the RCP. I
will exert all my reason, strength and two years of battle experience in
the last war for the good of the entire laboring people. I give my
entire support to the resolution of the garrison of the town of
Kronstadt.
I. SHAFRIN, seaman.
Today, 1/4 lb. of salted butter is issued from the meat stores by adult
cards of letters A and B, for produce coupon No 4.
1/4 lb. of table butter is issued to children of all series: by series A
for produce coupon No 7, by series B for produce coupon No 5, and by
series C for produce coupon No 4.
1/2 lb. of sugar is issued from all stores by all adult and childrenâs
cards. To adults of letters A and B and to children of series C for
bread coupon No 7, to children of series A for produce coupon No 8 and
of series B for bread coupon No 7.
The Presidium of Gorprodkom directs Uchkoms and house representatives,
on their personal responsibility, to take cards from those under arrest,
since the latter receive produce at their place of imprisonment, and to
present these to the Statistics sub-department no later than March 11.
All orders and writs issued by Gorkommuna before March 7 are declared
annulled.
Issues of produce declared by Gorkommuna until March 6 inclusive are
considered ended, and unused coupons in citizensâ possesion are
annulled.
From March 9 the following are the following norms are established for
the foddering of horses in the possession of Soviet institutions: 12
lbs. of oats in 24 hours and 4 lbs of hay in 24 hours. The
Administration of Gorprodkom directs that these norms be followed.
AL. OKOLOTKOV, for the president of Gorprodkom
An attack on Kronstadt from the southeast on the morning of March 11
failed, resulting in a large number of government casualties. Fog
prevented operations for the rest of the day.
âVisibility was so poor that a Communist pilot, flying from Oranienbaum
to Petrograd, mistakenly landed at Kronstadt. Seeing his error, he
revved up his engines and managed to take off amid heavy gunfire, making
it safely to Petrograd.â
-Paul Avrich, Kronstadt 1921
The Provisional Revolutionary Committee reports that today at 4 pm, in
the Garrison Club, there will be a meeting of the representatives
elected on March 2, for the organization of new elections to the
Soviets.
It is announced for your information that only those documents, giving
the right of passage about the town after 11 pm, are valid which have
the seal of the battleship Petropavlovsk, âCommander of the Town of
Kronstadt,â or âStaff of the Kronstadt Naval Fortress.â All other
documents issued by whatever kind of unit or institution are considered
invalid without the presence of the seals declared above.
ZEMSKOV, Commandant of the Town of Kronstadt
Over the entire course of the night of March 10, the Communist artillery
bombarded the fortress and forts with intensive artillery fire from the
southern and northern shores, meeting an energetic repulse from our
side. About 4 am, Communist infantry made the first attack attempt, from
the southern shore, but was repulsed. Communist attempts to attack
continued until 8 am, but all were repulsed by the artillery and small
arms fire of our batteries and garrison units.
Kronstadt began a struggle with the Communist usurpers of power, who
have taken for themselves the right to punish and pardon the peasants
and workers, like grand lords. We have thrown out a call to all the
laborers of Russia to struggle for freely elected Soviets. Our cry has
been heard. The revolutionary sailors, soldiers, and workers of
Petrograd are already coming to our aid.
We have learned from deserters that in Petrograd field marshal Trotsky
is already unable to raise a single combat detachment. He is forced to
make do with gangs of chekists, murderers from the anti-profiteer
detachments, and other scum.
We also learn that for the Communist staff, simple Communists are
already not enough for the attack on Kronstadt. They are calling for
select berserkers.
The Bolshevik authorities feel the ground slipping from under their
feet, and give the order in Petrograd to shoot any group of 5 people
gathered in the street. The authorities are scared. They are beginning
to act nervously, making mistake after mistake, and finally coming to
the point where they shoot cannons at sparrows.
The people of Petrograd are putting on pressure from the rear. One more
blow and the oppressorsâ power will fall.
On the first of March at two oâclock, by permission of the Ispolkom and
not arbitrarily, a meeting of seamen, soldiers and workers gathered on
Revolution Square. As many as 15 thousand people were present at the
meeting. It occured under the presidency of Comrade Vasiliev, a
Communist and President of the Ispolkom, and with the participation of
Comrade Kalinin, President of the All-Russian Central Executive
Committee and Kuzmin, Commissar of Baltflot, who had arrived from
Petrograd.
The object of the meeting was to discuss a resolution passed previously
at the General Meeting of the shipsâ crews of the 1st and 2nd Brigades.
This resolution was on the current moment, and the question of how to
lead the country out of the difficult state of general collapse and
ruin. This resolution is now well known to all, and does not include
anything that would hurt Soviet power.
In fact, it was the expression of true Soviet power, of the power of
workers and peasants. But Comrades Kalinin and Kuzmin, who gave
speeches, did not want to understand this. Their speeches were not
successful. They did not know how to speak to the masses, who were
tortured to despair. And so, the meeting unanimously passed the
resolution of the shipsâ crews.
The next day, by the permission and authority of the Ispolkom, in
accordance with a decree published in Izvestiia, delegates from ships,
military units, workshops and trade unions, two per organization,
gathered at the House of Education (formerly the Engineering Academy).
In all, more than three hundred people were gathered.
The representatives of authority had lost their heads, and several of
them left town. Because of this it is completely understandable that the
protection of both the delegates and the building itself from excesses
from anyoneâs side had to be taken on by the crew of the battleship
Petropavlovsk.
The Conference of Delegates was opened by Comrade Petrichenko. After the
selection of a 5 person Presidium, he gave the floor to Kuzmin,
Commissar of Baltflot. Despite the sharp definition of the garrisonâs
and workersâ attitude toward the representatives of power and the
Communists, Comrade Kuzmin did not want to take it into consideration.
The object of the Conference was to find an exit, to settle by peaceful
means the situation which had formed. Specifically, the object was to
create an organ, with the aid of which it would be possible to cary out
new elections to the Soviets on a more fair basis, as outlined by the
resolution.
And this was all the more necessary since the authority of the old
Soviet, which was almost entirely filled with Communists, and had shown
itself incapable of carrying out vitally urgent tasks, had in effect
already ended. But instead of trying to calm the Conference, Comrade
Kuzmin stirred it up. He spoke of the dual situation which Kronstadt
occupied, of patrols, dual power, danger from Poland, of the fact that
all Europe is watching us. He assured us that all was calm in Petrograd,
pointed out that he was in the delegatesâ hands, and that if they wished
they could shoot him, and concluded his speech with the declaration that
if the delegates wanted open armed struggle, then it would happen; the
Communists would not leave power voluntarily, and would struggle to
their last forces.
After Kuzminâs speech, tactless and not bringing a single drop of calm
to the agitated mass of delegates but just inciting it more, was a
colorless speech by Comrade Vasiliev, President of the Ispolkom. This
speech had a very undefined composition, and lacked purpose. The
overwhelming majority of the Conference was clearly opposed to the
Communists.
But none the less, the Conference did not lose the certainty that it was
possible to reach agreement with the representatives of authority. This
is supported best of all by the fact that the Conference Presidentâs
call to enter into substantive work and make an agenda found unanimous
support among the delegates.
It was decided to begin working out an agenda, but at the same time it
became clear to everyone that it was impossible to trust Comrades Kuzmin
and Vasiliev. It was necessary to temporarily restrain them, since the
order to take the Communistsâ weapons away had not yet been issued, it
was not advisable to use the telephones, and the soldiers, as was later
shown by a letter divulged at the Conference, were afraid that the
commissars would not allow meetings in the units and such.
Although the Conference did not hide its negative attitude toward the
Communists, all the same when the question was raised after Comrades
Kuzmin and Vasiliev and the Fortress Commander had been removed, it was
decided to allow the Communists among the delegates to remain in the
Conference, and to continue in the general work along with the non-party
comrades. The Conference, despite the individual protests of several
members who proposed restraining the Communists, found it possible to
recognize them as the very same empowered representatives of units and
organizations as the other members.
This too supports the fact that the non-party delegates of the laborers,
soldiers, sailors, and workers believed that the resolution which had
been passed the previous day at the Garrison Meeting would not lead to a
break with the Communists, like it had with their party. They believed
that a common language could be found, and that they could understand
one another.
After this, at the suggestion of Comrade Petrichenko, the resolution
which had been passed the previous day at the Garrison Meeting was read,
and also passed by the Conference with an overwhelming majority of
votes.
And then, at that moment when it seemed the Conference would be able to
enter into substantive work, there came the out of order declaration of
a comrade delegate from the battleship Sevastopol saying that 15 carts
of rifles and machine guns were moving toward the building.
This report, completely unexpected by the Conference, was later shown to
be false, and was put out by the Communists in the hope of breaking up
the Conference. But at the moment when it was made, the tense
atmosphere, the clearly ill-disposed attitude of the representatives of
authority, and the entire situation had well prepared the Conference to
believe that it was actually so.
Nevertheless, the Conference supported the Presidentâs proposal to enter
into discussion of the current moment on the basis of the resolution
which had been passed. The Conference began discussing measures which
would serve to actually carry out the resolution. A proposal to send a
delegation to Petrograd was laid aside, in view of the possibility of
its arrest. After this, proposals arrived from a large number of comrade
delegates, suggesting that a Provisional Revolutionary Committee be
formed from the Conference Presidium, and that it be appointed to attend
to carrying out new elections to the Soviet.
At the very last moment, the comrade President reported that a
detachment of two-thousand persons was moving toward the Conference.
After this, the Conference, unrestful and upset, broke up in alarm and
left the building of the House of Education.
With the closing of the Conference, and in connection with the report
which had just been made, the Provisional Revolutionary Committee set
off for the battleship Petropavlovsk with the object of finding
protection. It had its residence there until the Committeeâs efforts had
ensured order in the town in the interests of all laborers, seamen,
soldiers and workers.
(Voice of a Communist)
The spontaneous striving of the broad laboring masses to make a reality
of the bright ideals of the October revolution and of Soviet power has
called forth an amazing rise in the spirits of those involved in the
current revolutionary movement. From those few reports which make it
through to Kronstadt, it is possible to think that several of the
Petrograd Communist comrades, maybe because they donât know the
situation in Kronstadt, or maybe deliberately, are drawing the Kronstadt
events in a completely different light.
To me personally, as a Communist, it is painful to hear my own party
members repeat this slander, this fantasy, which the Petrograd papers
write.
They are saying there that everything happening in Kronstadt is the work
of White Guards and Entente spies with General Kozlovsky as head, and
that Kronstadt has made an agreement with Finland and is ready to make
war on Peter.
The movement which began in the Peter factories was unquestionably
called out by lack of faith in the subverted Soviets, by the closing of
factories and plants due to lack of heating material and the produce
difficulties, and by the worker arrests connected with the movement. At
that time, however, it was unnoticed in Kronstadt, which is better
provided with heating material and produce, although there were rumors
passed about what was happening in Petrograd.
These rumors took root on the Petropavlovsk. Her crew took up the demand
to end arrests and release those already arrested, and added other
demands.
Because of this, on March 1, at the Garrison Meeting at Anchor Square,
in the presence of Comrade Kalinin, President of the All-Russian Central
Executive Committee, Comrade Kuzmin, Commissar of Baltflot, and almost
the entire populace and garrison of the fortress, a resolution which had
been worked out earlier was proposed, and passed unanimously (with the
exception of Comrades Kalinin, Kuzmin and Vasiliev) without any kind of
change at all.
The most fundamental and important point of this resolution was the
demand for new elections to the Soviets, so that representatives from
all left political parties, and anarchists also, could take part in
them. This would have been done so that the Soviets would represent the
actual power of the laborers themselves.
As for the other points of the resolution, like removing the
anti-profiteer detachments, liberating political prisoners, and so on,
some of these demands have already been fulfilled under pressure from
the masses. For example, there is an order by the Petrosoviet on
removing the anti-profiteer detachments from all of Petrograd Province.
Based on this resolution, which had been affirmed by the entire populace
and garrison of the fortress, the sailors of the Petropavlovsk proposed
to the Presidium of the Soviet that it should be newly elected in the
next couple of days. The next day, March 2 that is, in accordance with
an announcement by the Presidium of the Soviet, two delegates were
chosen from each union and raikom, who were supposed to elect from among
themselves a commission to hold new elections to the Soviet.
But in view of the fact that fully believable suspicions appeared among
the gathered delegates, about a supposed threat of oppression by the
Communists, and also in view of the threatening speeches by several
delegates on the Communistsâ behalf, the Conference decided to elect a
Provisional Revolutionary Committee, and to also appoint it to organize
the elections to the Soviet and the protection of the town.
From all this, we see that there was no kind of White Guard organization
in this case, and that there couldnât be any, because everything that
happened unfolded on grounds of the dissatisfaction of the broad masses
with the existing Soviets, the majority of the representatives in which
are Communists.
And once this is so, once we see that they no longer trust us, we have
to say right away, not losing a day, âCitizens! Take state control in
your own hands, but give us the right to take part in this work also, on
the same basis as others.â We have to do this in order to not earn still
greater hatred from the peopleâs masses, whose representatives we called
ourselves.
All the repressions, executions and destruction which are brought by the
war which the Communists have set up lead only to anger.
I am certain that comrade Communists who entered the party not because
of a desire for power, careerism or any other self interest will agree
with me.
PALANOV, candidate member of the RCP [Communist Party of Russia]
Kronstadt has started a heroic struggle with the hated Bolshevik
authorities for the liberation of the workers and peasants. But it was
not Kronstadt who first spilled comradely blood.
Our enemies are deceiving you. They say that the Kronstadt uprising was
organized by Mensheviks, SRs, spies of the Entente, and tsarist
generals. They assign the leading role to Paris! Idiocy! Our uprising
was made in Paris like the moon was made in Berlin. It is all a blatant
lie.
That which is now happening was prepared by the Communists themselves,
by their three year work of blood and destruction. Letters from the
villages are full of complaints and damnations of the Communists. Our
comrades have returned from leave full of hate and anguish, and informed
us of the horrors which the Bolsheviks have created across the entire
face of the Russian land. And finally, we ourselves felt, saw and heard
what was being done all around. From every direction, a great and
terrible scream came from the villages and town of unbounded Russia. It
lit a fire of indignation in our hearts, and caused us to raise our
hands against the Communists.
We donât want to return to the old way. We are not servants of the
bourgeoisie or hirelings of the Entente. We are defenders of the power
of all laborers, against the unbridled, tyrannical power of some single
party.
In Kronstadt, there is neither Kolchak, nor Denikin, nor Yudenich. In
Kronstadt are laboring folk.
The reason and conscience of simple Kronstadt seamen, soldiers, and
workers has at last found the path and the words which will lead us out
of the dead end, and which tsarist generals could not find.
The Communists have taken this well into account. Wanting to sow discord
and to save their skins, they try to pin an image of White Guardism on
our uprising. They will not succeed.
In the beginning, we wanted to settle everything by peaceful means, but
the Communists didnât want to concede. They cling to power more than
Nikolai, and are ready to drown all Russia in blood in order to keep
their autocratic power.
And now bloodthirsty Trotsky, that evil genius of Russia, drives against
us our children and your brothers, who cover the ice before the
strongholds of Kronstadt with hundreds of corpses. For four days already
the battle has seethed, the cannons have thundered and fraternal blood
has poured. For four days the Kronstadt heroes have triumphantly
repulsed all the enemyâs onslaughts.
Kronstadt stands firm. One and all are prepared to sooner die than
concede. Trotsky hovers like a kestrel over our heroic town, but he will
not take it. His arms are too short. Our enemies act with only cadets,
Communist fighting detachments and deceived troops, brought from far
away and driven forward with machine guns.
The soldiers are agitated and cross over to us. Only the Communists
remain. They are forced to select units from the butcher chekists,
heroes of the anti-profiteer detachments and other such villains.
The people of Peter are already renouncing them, and soon the Judases
will run off to hang themselves.
Comrade workers! Kronstadt is fighting for you, the hungry, cold, and
bare.
While the Bolsheviks rule, it will never be your lot to see anything
better. For three years they have fed you on frozen potatoes, spoiled
herring, and promises, and life is getting worse and worse.
But you put up with it all.
So tell us, in the name of what? Can it really be just so that the
Communists might flourish and the commissars get fat? Or do you still
believe them?
At an expanded session of the Petrosoviet, Zinoviev reported on the
millions in gold which are being issued to buy produce, and figured that
for every worker 50 rubles will arrive. So, if an old lord-land owner
would sell his serfs for a thousand ruble banknote, Zinoviev wants to
buy the Peter workers for 50 rubles. That, comrades, is the kind of
price which the Bolshevik market puts on you.
But we believe that our enemies will attract only unaware and backwards
workers with that kind of dodge. No kind of gold will be enough for them
to buy the honest and daring toilers.
Do not be slow!
Break the hated chains of the new serfdom.
Comrade peasants, the Bolsheviks deceived and fleeced you most of all.
Where is the land which you took from the land owners, and of which you
dreamed for hundreds of years? It has been given away to communards or
put under Soviet collectives, and you watch and lick your lips.
Everything has been taken from you that it was possible to take. You
have been subjected to wholesale pillage. You have been worked to
exhaustion by the Bolshevik serfdom. They force you to do the will of
the new lords with a hungry stomach, a pinched mouth, barefoot and
naked, and without a whisper.
Comrades, the people of Kronstadt have raised the banner of rebellion,
and are certain that tens of millions of workers and peasants will
answer their call.
It cannot be that the dawn which has appeared here has not become clear
for all Russia. It cannot be that the Kronstadt explosion has not made
all Russia, and first of all Petrograd, shake and arise.
Our enemies have filled the prisons with workers, but there are still
many daring and honest ones at liberty.
Arise comrades, to battle with the Communist autocracy!
âAn order by the Defense Committee has been published in Petrograd
forbidding street gatherings of more than five people under threat of
being fired on.
âThe mood in the city is one of depression.
âThere are no complete garrison units. Rather, small detachments are
formed from chekists, Communists, and cadets.
âGarrison units are rebelling.
âA round fell on the Communist headquarters on the Oranienbaum shore,
and destroyed a corner of the building.
â18 echelons have been hastily sent to the Polish border.
10 (UNTIL 12 NOON)
1) FROM KRONSTADT UNITS:
1) Aleksandrov, Mikhail, 2) Danilov, Aleksandr, 3) Klimenkov, Zakhar, 4)
Mischenko, Stepan, 5) Pospelov, Aleksandr, 6) Pakhtonov, Ivan, 7)
Kovshin, Stepan, 8) Shaposhnikov, Foma, and also 1 seaman, 1 worker, and
four soldiers whose names were not discovered.
2) FROM ATTACKING UNITS:
1) Cadets: Viasev, Semen, 2) Shamritsky, Ivan, 3 and 4) two cadets whose
names were not made clear, and 5) Bachev, Aleksandr.
During the same period 2 seamen, 1 civilian, and 31 soldiers were
wounded.
The following apportionment of produce has been confirmed for the
arrested Communists and war prisoners, until the improvement of the
produce situation in the fortress.
BREAD ALLOWANCE: 1/4 lb. of bread or 1/8 lb. of biscuit; 1/4 lb. of
meat. HOT FOOD ALLOWANCE: 12 zol. [1 zolotnik is about 4.62 grams] of
meat, 12 zol. of fish, 12 zol. of cabbage, 4 zol. of potato, 2 zol. of
fats, 4 zol. of sugar, .72 zol. of coffee.
Tobaccoâ3 zol. of makhorka [low-grade tobacco] and two boxes of matches
per month.
In view of the fact that the provisionally arrested Communists arenât
now in need of shoes, theirs have been taken, 280 pairs in all, and
given for distribution to the troop units defending the approaches to
Kronstadt. The Communists have been given bast sandals in exchange.
This is as it should be.
For the month of March it is decided to additionally issue to the troop
units of the garrison: 1/2 lb. of sugar, 2 lb. of cabbage, 1 1/3 lb. of
potato, 50 cigarettes, 1/2 lb. of makhorka and 1 box of matches.
The Provisional Revolutionary Committee and the editors of Izvestiia are
swamped by Communistsâ declarations of departure from the party. There
is such a mass of these declarations that due to the insufficiency of
space in the newspaper, it is necessary to print them in small bunches
in the order of arrival.
Those quitting the party are sailors, soldiers, deceived workers and
that part of the intelligentsia which was foolish enough to believe in
garish slogans and inflammatory speeches. What does this flight mean?
Fear of revenge from the laboring people who have torn power from the
bolsheviks? No. A thousand times no.
When it was noted to a woman worker appearing today with a declaration
of departure from the party that there were many such as herself fleeing
the party, she answered with indignation, âOur eyes have been uncovered,
but we arenât fleeing.â The bright red blood of laborers, coloring the
icy cover of the Gulf of Finland for the benefit of some insane leaders
who are defending their own power, has opened the peopleâs eyes.
The bright red blood of laborers, coloring cover of the Gulf of Finland
for the pleasure of the insane Communists, clinging to their power,
opened the peopleâs eyes. All who still possess even a spark of
integrity, even a grain of truth in a tortured soul, are fleeing. They
flee the gang of demagogues without looking back.
All that remains is the criminal. Commissars of all ranks, chekists and
the âbigshotsâ who have fed well on the bill of the hungering worker and
peasant, remain, with their pockets bulging from gold. They rob museums
and palaces, the property which the people won with their own blood.
They still hope for something, but in vain. The people which in one
instant dared to throw from itself the yoke of tsarism and the gendarmes
dares to also throw from itself the feudal chains of the Communists.
The laboring people has recovered its sight.
In connection with the situation which has been created in Kronstadt I
consider it imperative to declare (in particular to the crew of the
battleship Petropavlovsk) that I have not taken part in the RCP since
August of 1920. Therefore, I ask that I not be counted as a member since
the declared time, and that it not be assumed that I am among the
usurpers of power who, instead of trying to come to well known
compromises and avoid spilling human blood, are throwing bombs at
children who are in no way guilty.
Comrade T. IA. BRATISHEVSKY,
seaman of the battleship Petropavlovsk, 8th Company
A half pound of bread is issued for March 11 by adult cards of letter A,
for bread coupon No 22.
Today, March 11, is the last day of issue of canned foods, meat, oats
and wheat.
TUKIN, President of the Administration of Gorprodkom
Various letters are arriving at the Secretariat of the Provisional
Revolutionary Committee without the signatures of their authors. The
Secretariat brings to the general attention that such declarations will
absolutely not be considered.
Late payment of the 40 ruble fee is slowing payment of salaries to the
presidents and secretaries of uchkoms, and therefore the Department of
Administration instructs all control commissions to make certain that
the noted fee arrives at the Department not earlier than the 15th and
not later than the 25th. If this is not done, the commissions also,
besides their presidents and secretaries, will be held responsible.
KASUKHIN, assistant to the head of the Department of Administration
The General Meeting of presidents and secretaries of uchkoms will take
place on Friday at 1 pm, in the House of Unions. Attendance is
mandatory. New mandates will be issued.
The Union of Workers of the Commission of the Economy directs members of
the union to receive their onions within a 2 day period, after which
time no kind of issue will take place.
The Committee of the Union of Metal Workers and the Revtroika jointly
direct all comrades free from guard duty to be at work at the whistle,
so that the number of free comrades in the workshops will be known.
Lists of those not showing up at work without good cause should be sent
to the union.
The Committee of the Union of Water Transport workers brings to the
attention of all members of the union that issue of onions ends March
13.
Issue of cigarette papers will occur at the union until March 18.
According to Za Narodnoe Delo, air and artillery bombardment resumed on
March 12, but the fighters at Kronstadt succeeded in shooting down one
plane, which crashed through the ice and disappeared into the Gulf of
Finland.
But despite continuing small victories like this, the future looked
increasingly bleak for the rebels. Their uprising had failed to spread.
It was not superior military force that had won the day for the
Bolsheviks, but rather, superior command of the flows of information.
OF THE FALL OF COMMISSAROCRACY
The Provisional Revolutionary Committee directs all military units of
the Kronstadt Fortress and Naval Base and Soviet departments and
institutions to present exact information to the Transport Department of
the Provisional Revolutionary Committee by March 13 for wagon and
automobile transport, having divided it into light or dray, and suited
or unsuited for carrying burdens.
V. BAIKOV, Director of the Transport Department of the Prov. Rev. Com.
The day passed calmly.
Thick fog interfered with firing. About six pm Krasnaya Gorka opened
occasional and resultless fire on the town.
Our northern forts were subjected to increased shelling by Sestroretsk
and Lisy Nos.
The batteries of the adversary were silenced by the fire of our guns.
Observations were made by intelligence.
In Oranienbaum, a train carrying bread was destroyed by our fire. The
adversaryâs garrison was without bread the entire day.
Yesterday, Kronstadt was subjected to repeated raids by airplanes
throwing bombs over the town.
At 4 pm, the adversaryâs artillery opened fire from batteries located on
the Oranienbaum Shore and from Krasnoflotskii. Our artillery answered
energetically. Artillery fire subsided around 8 pm.
PETRICHENKO, President of the Prov. Rev. Com.
SOLOVIANOV, Head of the Defense of the Kronstadt Fortress
REPULSE OF COMMUNIST ATTACKS FROM MARCH 8 THROUGH 12
Dear comrades! Fate itself has layed on you the great mission of
liberating dear Soviet Russia from the Communist yoke. To you dear
comrades, defenders of Kronstadt, the citadel of the Soviets, has fallen
the most important and responsible lot of selfless struggle. Behind your
valiant chests, as behind a rock wall, your mothers, wives, and children
calmly await victory.
They have entrusted their lives to you, and look on you with pride and
faith as the saviors of laboring Russia, and the defenders of a great
truth. Prove to the entire [sic] world of laborers, dear warriors, that
however difficult may the great struggle for freely elected Soviets
become, Kronstadt has always stood, and stands now, a vigilant watch on
guard of the laborersâ interests.
THE PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY COMMITTEE
It is already four years since the three-hundred-year yoke of autocracy
fell. The repressed people who had been guarded by the gendarmes and
police of Nikolai threw down the rotting throne of the tsar. All rich
and poor Russia rejoiced in freedom. Capitalists and landowners were
satisfied because they could finally put more in their own pockets,
stealing labor as before from the worker and peasant, without sharing
with the tsar and his champions. They hoped to seat themselves firmly on
the toilersâ neck, having duped the latter in the Constituent Assembly
to which Kerensky was slowly but surely leading.
The bourgeoisie was certain that it would be be able to continue
fleecing the peasant and worker. The unexperienced peasants and workers
were also pulled toward the Uchredilka, not knowing what it would
promise the toiler. The slogan of the Constituent Assembly ruled over
all Russia.
Temporarily. But the peasant continued to be in the same fix that he had
always been, waiting for when the Uchredilka would decide the question
of land. The worker was universally exploited. As before he didnât have
the right to the produce of his own labor.
The toilers of Russia finally understood that they were not escaping the
cabal of the landowner and capitalist, and that this cabal was preparing
them a new serfdom, bourgeois power.
Patience broke, and in October of 1917 the bourgeoisie was thrown aside
by a comradely blow by the seamen, army, workers and peasants. It seemed
that the laboring people had entered into their rights.
But the Communist party, filled with self-seekers and having become
seperated from the peasants and workers in whose name it acted, seized
power into its own hands. It decided to govern the country with the aid
of its commissars, by the example of landowner Russia.
For 3 years, the toilers of Soviet Russia groaned in the torture
chambers of the Cheka. Everywhere, the Communist ruled over the worker
and peasant. A new Communist serfdom arose. The peasant became a hired
hand on Soviet farms, and the worker a hireling at a bureaucratic
factory. The laboring intelligentsia came to nothing. Those who tried to
protest were dragged off to the Cheka. They wasted no time with those
who continued to agitate⊠they put them against the wall.
It became stifling. Soviet Russia had turned into all-Russian katorga.
Worker unrest and peasant uprising testified that patience had come to
an end. A toilersâ uprising approached. The time to throw down the
commissarocracy arrived.
Kronstadt, vigilant guard of the Social Revolution, has not overslept.
It was in the first ranks of February and October. It first raised the
flag of rebellion for the Third Revolution of Laborers.
Autocracy fell. The Uchredilka has passed into the land of legend.
Commissarocracy too will collapse. The time has come for true power of
laborers, for Soviet power.
You fell as sacrifices to the great struggle.
Your unforgettable names shall not die in the noble memory of the
laboring
people, for whose fortune you laid down your wild heads.
In the battleâs roar you did not think of yourselves.
Warriors for an idea, you did not tremble before the pack of tyrants.
You, the first sacrifices of the Third Revolution, of the Revolution of
Labor,
gave an example of steadfast firmness in battle for your rights.
You went forward under the slogan Victory or Death.
You died.
We who are alive shall carry the battle to its end.
We vow on your fresh graves to be victorious or to lie next to you.
Already, the light of the Great Liberation of Laborers has begun to
shine.
We hide nothing, and hide from no one.
Everything we do, we do openly because our cause is rightful. It is to
realize the common desire of the laboring people, to realize true Soviet
power. No one can stop us from doing this.
And truly, in any case, bands of chekists and other murderers wonât stop
us. Heroism, the garrisonâs morale and the populaceâs calm certainty can
serve to guarantee this.
And what is being done at the same time in the camp of the adversary?
Interesting newspapers from March 9 which we recently received serve as
the best answer. We have hung these newspapers in the windows of
Sovtsentropechat [âSoviet Central Pressâ?]] so that citizens can
personally convince themselves of the unbounded, blatant lies with which
the newspapers, by orders from Smolny, try to hide the truth the truth
from the workers and soldiers.
Krasnaia Gazeta has come to the point that they are claiming that,
âcadets broke into the town. Vershinin, a member of the Provisional
Revolutionary Committee, was captured in the streetsâŠâ
Pathetic lackeys of the Communists, whom do you want to deceive?
Comrade Vershinin has been captured, this is true. But do you want to
know, citizens, under what circumstances Comrade Vershinin was taken?
Allow me. On March 8 a group of the opponentâs troops, with a white flag
in front, set out toward our patrols. Trusting in the flag, presuming
that a delegation was coming to us for negotiations, Comrade Vershinin
threw a revolver from himself and went out unarmed to meet the truce
envoys.
But what does one more Judas kiss mean to traitors? They captured the
unarmed truce envoy and carried him away with them..
That, citizens, is the entire truth for you! The lackeys from Krasnaia
Gazeta did not even succeed in agreeing with the lackeys from Pravda. At
the same time when the first was reporting that two thousand âgold
epauletsâ [tsarist officers] had snuck into Kronstadt, Pravda says they
were only âhundreds of White Guard Russian officers.â
The newspapers are before you citizens. Read and learn how the
Communists deceive the people.
We hide nothing. Their lies are our best agitator.
Delegates gathered at five oâclock in the Hall of Assemblies. Before the
beginning of the session, Comrade Petrichenko distributed the Bolshevist
Pravda and Krasnaia to the delegates. It was easily felt that
Revolutionary Kronstadt does not fear the lying Communist press. The
session opened at 4:55 under the roar of the bombardment of our glorious
floating fortresses. The Conference stands to honor the memory of the
fallen red eagles of Kronstadt.
The produce question was discussed first. The report of the Prov. Rev.
Com. was heard with deep attention. As was clarified after a short
debate, Kronstadtâs produce situation is completely fine. The Conference
decided to consider the actions of the Rev. Com. to be correct, and
proper for the current situation.
Current affairs were discussed next.
A report on the requisitioning of boots from the arrested Communists for
soldiersâ use was met with thunderous applause and calls of, âRight!
Take their winter coats!!!â
It was decided to celebrate the fall of autocracy at the same time as
the overthrow of commissarocracy, since there is no time now to take
away from military action. A representative of the workers of the sewing
workshop of the Soviet of the Peopleâs Economy reported on the
preparation of 3000 sets of underwear, which it was decided to use for
those at the front line.
Comrade Kilgast requested that the delegates spread the request for
comrades to donate shoes for the soldiers.
The question was raised of liberating Communists on bail. After a
debate, in which Comrade Petrichenko noted the worth of a Bolshevikâs
word and that in general those arrested are only the most unrestful, it
was decided to leave the Communists under arrest so long as events have
not been wrapped up and military actions not come to an end. (Ilyin,
Galapov, Guriev, and others who were left at liberty continued to carry
on agitation and to gather secretly. Ilyin had the gall to phone
Krasnaya Gorka and give it information on how things stood in
Kronstadt.)
It was decreed that further arrests could be carried out by the Rev.
Com. only upon an inquiry into the question by the revtroikas.
One of the comrades related a fact which showed that there are also
honest Communists, who are fulfilling military assignments selflessly
and in an exemplary way.
At the end of the session, Comrade Petrichenko proposed that the
Conference thank the defenders of the approaches to Kronstadt. This was
met with long, unceasing, stormy applause.
The Communists are spreading rumors that there are White Guard generals,
officers and priests included in the composition of the Provisional
Revolutionary Committee. In order to stop this once and for all, we
bring to their attention that the Committee consists of the following
fifteen members:
1) PETRICHENKOâa senior clerk on the battleship Petropavlovsk;
2) YAKOVENKOâa telephone operator of the Kronstadt Regional
Communications Service;
3) OSOSOVâa machinist on the battleship Sevastopol;
4) ARKHIPOVâa machinist foreman;
5) PEREPELKINâan electrician on the battleship Sevastopol;
6) PATRUSHEVâan electrician foreman on the Petropavlovsk;
7) KUPOLOVâa senior doctorâs assistant;
8) VERSHININâa seaman/combatant on the battleship Sevastopol;
9) TUKINâan artisan in the Electro-Mechanical Factory;
10) ROMANENKOâa watchman in the Repair Docks;
11) ORESHINâDirector of the 3rd Labor School;
12) VALKâa master in the Sawmill;
13) PAVLOVâa worker in the Mine Workshops;
14) BAIKOVâDirector of Transport String of the Administration of
Contruction of the Fortress;
15) KILGASTâan ocean navigator.
These are our generals: the Brusilovs, Kamenevs, and the rest.
âPravda reports that, âin connection with the situation which has been
created, the Celebration of the Womenâs Proletariat in Petrograd is
temporarily postponed.â
What kind of honest working woman would go to this celebration when
stranglers of freedom and chekists are in power?
How could anyone think of holidays?
The General Meeting of soldiers who have crossed over to us, having
first elected a revtroika consisting of Comrades Azarenko, Kuznetsov and
Davydenko, passed the following resolution: âWe, deserters, of a newly
formed battalion, express our complete faith in the battalion commander,
Comrade Gribov. We are ready, at the first call of the Rev. Com. of the
Town of Kronstadt, to go to the next life defending the repressed.
seaman TROFIMOV, President of the Meeting
KUZNETSOV, Secretary
STRONGHOLD
The 14-year-old lad Podriadchikov has thrust himself into one of the
reconnaissance detachments. However they tried to convince him to give
it up, he persisted.
âYou have to give me a rifle, and thatâs it!â
They were forced to give in.
At night, the detachment set out on reconnaissance. Podriadchikov did
not lag behind the other comrades.
In the dark, they stumbled on an outpost of the adversary, and a
crossfire began. A stray bullet hit Podriadchikov in the leg at the very
moment when the outpost gave up and retreated.
âCut the leg off or bind it up, but I wonât lag behind,â cried the young
hero. They quickly made a dressing, and Podriadchikov walked on. He is
now lying in the hospital, and cannot wait to heal from his wound so
that he can once more dash forward.
Last year, the Communists executed his father in a village.
All those leaving the ranks of the RCP [Communist Party of Russia] are
directed to turn in their party booklets and identifications to their
electoral troikas. Those leaving the party in the future and giving
declarations are directed to do so right now.
Declarations of departure from the RCP arrive unceasingly at the
editorial offices, but in view of their great quantity and the
insufficiency of space, the editors are unable to publish them
immediately, and will include them as possible in following editions of
the newspaper.
Working in Kronstadt for three years as a teacher at the Labor School,
and also being active in the army and naval units, I have moved ahead
honestly, leg to leg with the laborers of free Kronstadt. I have given
them all my strengths in the field of peopleâs education. The broad
sweep of the wave of enlightenment which the Communists began, Soviet
construction and the laborerâs class struggle with the exploiters all
drew me into the Communist party, of which I have been a member since
February 1, 1921. During the time that I have been in the party, a great
number of fundamental failings in the party âheightsâ have been opened
before me, spattering the beautiful idea of Communism with muck. Among
these, bureaucratism, separation from the masses, dictatorship and the
large number of so called âhangers onâ, careerist and the like have
acted to repel the masses. All these things have given birth to a deep
chasm between the masses and the party. They have turned it into an
organization which is powerless in the struggle against the countryâs
internal ruin.
The present moment has opened peopleâs eyes to the most terrible facts.
When the many thousand person populace of Kronstadt proposed a number of
fair demands to the âdefenders of the laborerâs interests,â the
bureaucratized heights of the RCP rejected them. Instead of dealing
freely with the laborers of the town of Kronstadt, they opened
fratricidal fire on the workers, sailors, and soldiers of the
revolutionary town. As if that wasnât enough, they throw bombs from
airplanes on the defenseless women and children of Kronstadt. This has
pleated even more thorns in the Communist Partyâs crown.
I do not want to be a supporter of the comrade Communistsâ barbarous
excesses, and I also donât believe in the tactics of the party
âheights,â which have called for the spilling of blood and for great
distress among the peopleâs masses. Therefore, I openly declare before
the Provisional Revolutionary Committee that since the moment of the
first shot at Kronstadt I no longer consider myself a candidate member
of the RCP, and give my entire support to the slogan taken by the
laborers of Kronstadt, âAll Power to Soviets, and not Parties!â
T. DENISOV, teacher in the 2nd Labor School
I ask that you no longer consider me a member of the RCP. Seeing the
tactics of the butcher Trotsky, I consider it a disgrace to be in its
ranks. I have been and will be with the people, and will die the death
of the honorable with them.
N. ALEKSANDROV, artisan of the Steamship Factory
We have watched the course of unfolding events in order to find out the
truth behind all the loud words which authority, in the person of
Trotsky and the rest from the camp of the evil kestrels, spoke and
suggested to us, preaching the ideas of the RCP. With their first shot
at the workers and peasants, in the person of the Kronstadt proletariat
which has arisen to fight for a rightful cause, we understood that it
was time for us to throw the shroud from our eyes, put there by those
who call themselves warriors for the peopleâs liberation. We decided
that it was time to say for all to hear, âbetrayers of the people,
spillers of innocent blood, hands off power, and eternal damnation to
you.â
We ask that from the present moment you no longer consider us to be
members of the RCP. We ask that you accept us into your midst as honest
toilers who are prepared to stand at any time in defense of the
Provisional Revolutionary Committee of the Town of Kronstadt, and even,
if it should be necessary, to lay down our lives for the workers and
peasants, and for the power of free Soviets.
I. GUROV, A. YAKUSHIN, seamen of the Predbaza [sic]
The Communist party has lost the faith of the laboring masses, and its
power has passed without any violence or blood into the hands of the
revolutionary laboring masses of Kronstadt. Nonetheless, the Central
Authorities are blockading Kronstadt and sending out provocative
broadcasts and proclamations, trying to anchor its power with hunger,
cold, treachery and force. Considering such a policy a betrayal of the
fundamental slogan of the Socialist Revolution, âAll Power to the
Laborers,â I think that the Communists have put themselves in the ranks
of the enemies of all labor. There is only one exit, to stay at your
post to the end, and battle mercilessly with all who try to tie the
laboring masses to their authority with force, treachery and
provocation. We break all connection with the party.
MILORADOVICH, BEZSONOV AND MARKOV,
former members of the RCP fort TOTLEBEN (MORSKOI)
At the General Meeting of the RCP of the crew of the Transport String of
the Naval Fortress of Kronstadt, in the presence of the secretary of the
Revtroika, a resolution of departure from the party was passed by the
following members: P. Goriachev, I. Iakovlev, Vasilii Likhrov, Nikolai
Shubin, N. Scharov, P. Veselov, B. Belov, I. Makarov, Vasilii Kolosov,
I. Khapov, Smorodinov, A. Arkhipov, Smirnov, Novikov, N. M. Kovkin, G.
Mikhailov, K. Krylov, A. Smirnov, N. Chertkov, Ukhlin, V. Serikov, A.
Khrul, A. Okunev, I. Andreev, N. Ivanov, A. Egorov. 26 persons in all.
Because of the slogan held by the RCP, âAll power to the Soviets,â and
because of the one-sided party agitation, and also not wishing to just
remain a witness to the building of Soviet power, I entered the RCP in
June of 1920. However, I have been convinced that the party does not
express the will of the broad layers of the populace, the workers and
peasants. This is in part supported by letters received from the
provinces about the difficulties and oppression which the party directs
at the village peasantry in the localities. Because of this, I ask that
you no longer consider me a member of the RCP, and I give my support to
the resolution passed at the meeting on March 1. I place myself entirely
under the authority of the actions and decisions of the Provisional
Revolutionary Committee of the Town of Kronstadt.
P. BARANOV, Head of the Watch of the Kronstadt Port
Having discussed the current situation, we, Communists of the collective
of the Communications Service of the Naval Fortress of Kronstadt, have
arrived at the unanimous conclusion that the Communist Party, having
torn away from the broad masses, has set out on the path of
bureaucratism and repression against the laborersâ freedom. In three
years in power, the party has brought the country to the wild raging of
the Cheka, which has widely carried out executions and used all means to
strangle and mock the laborers, and covered itself with their name. The
Republic writhes in agony, brought to beggary by the policies of the
bloodthirsty and power-blinded leaders. We greet the Provisional
Revolutionary Committee, which is courageously raising rebellion against
the party dictatorship and oligarchy. We give our support to the slogan,
âPower to Soviets of Laborers, and not to Parties.â
Down with the party dictatorship!
Long live the true power of laborers!
We the undersigned to this resolution declare our departure from the
Communist Party, and ask that you accept us into the midst of the
non-party comrades, to carry out joint work for the good of the
Republic.
V. Remizov, V. Gromov, A. Elesin, P. Arsentiev, F. Kozyrev, V. Zinoviev,
N. Vasiliev, V. Nikolaev, P. Blintsov, L. Semukov, P. Trubochistov, I.
Starostin, V. Andreev, N. King, E. Grigoriev, P. Kiprushkin, A.
Sedelkin, I. Sheremet.
I, a telephonist of the central station of fort Shants, being by nature
a person of weak character, was not strong enough to stand against the
force of the bloody Communists who recruited me into their party during
party week. [âParty weeksâ were periods of reduced or eliminated
requirements for party membership. There were two in Petrograd in 1919.]
Having made myself, or, more truthfully, when the Communists had made me
a blind weapon in their hands, my beliefs about their actions had not
changed. In my soul, I realized that the bureaucrat Communists would
never achieve the prosperity of the laboring masses by way of violence,
base deceit, spilling blood, and the other acts of our authority.
But fear! Only fear for my own life did not let me denounce my party
colleagues, bloody Communists.
And I was silent, staying on the edges.
But then arose the hour of repayment. Communist power, until then
seemingly undefeatable, was overturned. The rabble of criminals, in the
person of the Communists, was arrested. The laboring people breathed
free, having thrown down the heavy burdenâŠ
And I? I am a Communist. The bloody document, the party booklet which
remained with me, and which has now been turned in to the Revtroika of
fort Shants, says so.
Comrades, forgive me for my unwilling stay in the RCP, and I will try to
justify your faith. I recognize the Prov. Rev. Com., and cry together
with you, âHoorah!â
N. ROMANOV, telephonist of fort Shants
Finding the methods to which Lord Trotsky has resorted extremely
horrifying, staining the party with the blood of its own brother
workers, I consider it a moral obligation to leave the party. I ask that
this be announced in the press.
V. GRABEZHEV, President of the Union of Construction Workers,
candidate member of the party
Declarations have also arrived at the editorial offices from the
following:
131) I. Petrushkovsky, seaman of the Academic Mining Detachment, 132)
also Maksimovsky, 133) also Chernyshev, 134) also Burmashev, 135) also
Kulikov, 136) also D. Vorobiev, 137) also V. Pushkin, 138) V. Galonin,
seaman of the battleship Petropavlovsk, 139) also F. Zaitsev, 140) also
Shpinev, 141) also P. Samokhin, 142) also Iudin, 143) also N. Butuzov,
144) also F. Zhbirov, 145) also P. Orekhov, 146) also Olshevsky, 147)
also Kudriashev, 148) also Misiuk, 149) also O. Rykov, 150) also D.
Pavlov, 151) also Lobanov, 152) also A. Zuev, 153) also N. Kolosov, 154)
also I. Pavlik-Linker, 155) also A. Svitin, 156) also F. Tkachuk, 157)
also Sholopaev, 158) also S. Makarov, 159) also Klimin, 160) P. Chernin,
161) also M. Gusev, 162) also M. Lazarenko, 163) also A. Shilov, 164)
also I. Eremeev, 165) also F. Izhek, 166) also Makrezhetsky, 167) also
Smetanin, 168) also A. Gordykov, 169) also M. Grigoriev, 170) also A.
Dronin, 171) also S. Shavanov, 172) also I. Ershov, 173) also M. Flerov,
174) also S. Soloviev, 175) also S. Kozlov, 176) also I. Diakonov, 177)
also K. Zhukin, 178) also Shpinov, 179) also I. Matiukhin, 180) also A.
Kocherin, 181) also T. Bychkov, 182) also N. Ermakov, 183) also
Zhevenin, 184) also Zhukovsky, 185) O. Stepur, artisan of the Mine
Laboratory, 186) F. Strelkov, employee of the Prodbaza, 187) also A.
Petukhov, 188) also I. Reshetnikov, Peopleâs Investigator of the II
District, 189) F. Matulik, employee of the Naval Bakery, 190) M.
Malafeev, seaman of the crew of the Guard Headquarters, 191) V. Gogolev,
serviceman of the Communications Service of the Administration of the
Artillery, 192) S. Afanasiev, sldr. of the 4th Division of the
Artillery, 193) S. Kurenev, employee of the Water Transport, 194) Lauve,
employee of the Internal Guard Ship, 195) also G. Grinshtein, 196) also
S. Shcherbo, 197) A. Sushilnikov, soldier, 198) V. Trepetsky, member of
the RCP, 199) also Danchenko, 200) also A. Esenovsky, 201) A. Egorov,
doctorsâ assistant of the Internal Guard Ship, 202) also E. Belozerov,
203) A. Serkov, worker of the Steamship Plant, 204) also K. Nikolaev,
205) also A. Belikov, 206) also A. Lysov, 207) also Bezzubikov, 208)
also Vladkmerov, 209) also Voronin.
On the basis of a telephonogram from the Provisional Revolutionary
Committee of March 11, in view of the military standing of the town, the
March 12 holiday is moved to an unspecified date, and it is therefore
instructed to consider SATURDAY a normal (working) day.
MATVEEV, Provisional and Acting Director of the Department of Labor
A. FEDOROV, member of the Central Troika
The Union of Printers brings to the attention of members of the union
that issue of buttons, cigarette papers and âBakerâ brand powder ends
March 15.
In an interview with the New York Herald correspondent in Moscow, Lenin
derided the uprising as doomed and asserted that the only possible
alternative to his own government would be the return of the Tsar,
proclaiming that the demands of the Kronstadt rebels for democracy were
impossible:
âWhat can they (the revolutionists) do if they take Petrograd? Only one
thingâstarve. They will have a big, foodless city on their hands, and we
shall have more food for Moscow, as more supplies are coming in from
Kuban and Siberia, and for a short time we will no longer have to feed
Petrograd, which has of late been a strain on our resources, owing to
its remoteness from the grain districtsâŠ
âThis shortage of bread and fuel and the transport difficulties are due
to the fuel famine. Despite all our efforts, Petrogradâs food position
became acute recently, and there is genuine starvation in the suburbs of
that city.
âAn advance on Moscow (by the revolutionists) over the melting snow and
swampy ground, and because of the torn up railroads and devastated
country, is impossible. The sailors at the head of this foolish mutiny
at Kronstadt will be out of their element as soon as they lose sight of
the Gulf of Finland. How can they provision themselves for such hard
march through districts affording them no food? And we shall see that
there is no food there.
âIf they accept supplies from foreign Powers they brand themselves at
once as traitors to Russia and the whole country will rise against them,
just as it rose against Denikine and Kolchak.
âI believe that there are only two kinds of government possible in
Russiaâa Government by the Soviets or a Government headed by a Czar.
Some fools or traitors in Kronstadt talked of a Constituent Assembly,
but does any man in his senses believe for a moment that a Constituent
Assembly at this critical abnormal stage would be anything but a bear
garden.
âSome people in America have come to think of the Bolsheviki as a small
clique of very bad men who are tyrannizing over a vast number of highly
intellectual people who would form an admirable Government among
themselves the moment the Bolshevist regime was overthrown. This is a
mistake, for there is nobody to take our place save butcher Generals and
bureaucrats who have already displayed their total incapacity for rule.
Lenin stated that if the uprising in Kronstadt had been planned by
counterrevolutionary forces, it was an extremely poor plan. His claim
could just as easily be used to argue that it was not a plot, but a
legitimateâif untimelyârevolt of the oppressed:
âI canât say much for the common sense of the people who fabricated this
particular plot. To seize an ice-bound island, containing very little
food and absolutely dependent for all its supplies on Russia, was a
foolish thing to do, although, to be sure, it was only a part of a much
larger plot which missed fire everywhere else.â
At the close of the article, the journalist reported that
Leninâapparently wandering from the subject at handâdirected readers to
a text he had written in praise of bourgeois engineers and other
specialists, showing his hand:
âThe bourgeois specialist who knows his job is ten times more useful to
us than the conceited Communist who is only able to shout slogans and
write twaddle.â
In Kronstadt, it had always been popular for the revolutionaries to
oppose themselves to the bourgeoisie. We can imagine how they must have
felt to see Lenin side with the bourgeoisie over them in the capitalist
press.
Left at liberty, the Communists are abusing the trust which the
Provisional Revolutionary Committee has shown them. They have been
discovered attempting to send light signals to the enemy.
Because of this, the Prov. Rev. Com. asks all Kronstadt citizens to
vigilantly watch for enemies of the people, to urgently bring to the
attention of the Rev. Com. all occurrences of signals being sent, and to
restrain the guilty parties until authorities arrive.
Traitors and spies are warned that they will be dealt with on the spot,
without any court, by the laws dictated by the moment.
THE PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY COMMITTEE
(COMBAT)
March 11, 1921, Fortress of Kronstadt § 1
I order that the adversaryâs airplanes not be fired upon from small arms
and machine guns, either by individuals or crews. Such fire, being
completely without purpose, cannot cause damage to the airplanes and is
a useless waste of bullets.
OSOSOV, for the President of the Prov. Rev. Com.
SOLOVIANOV, Head of the Defense of the Kronstadt Fortress
From 24:00, March 11 until 12:00, March 12
There was calm until 10 am.
From 10 am on there were occasional artillery exchanges and raids by the
adversaryâs airplanes, which threw out several bombs.
The bombs caused no damage in the town.
From 12:00 through 24:00, March 12
Around 1 pm, raids by the adversaryâs airplanes began, with bombs being
thrown on the town. There was artillery fire by the adversary until 7
pm, to which the artillery of the fortress responded energetically.
PETRICHENKO, President of the Military Revolutionary Committee
SOLOVIANOV, Head of the Defense
The Bolsheviks continue to throw bombs from airplanes. They think that
they will intimidate the populace. Their only means of action is lead.
They have nothing else left. They are washed out. The blood of peaceful
citizens, women, and even children they obviously donât value at all.
All the citizens of Kronstadt have been welded into a single mass by
their anger. Just one feeling burns in their souls, a feeling of hate
for the oppressor Communists. The residents of the town do not face
current events passively, as the Bolshevik newspapers slander, but with
a great enthusiasm. All citizens divide the burden of the struggle which
which has been raised by the garrison and workers of the rebellious
town. They all await a new, bright life, free from any yoke.
You canât intimidate them with airplanes.
The innocent victims lie on the heads of the Communists. But the
populace remains calm, and doesnât give in to outbursts of purposeless
anger against the insane oppressors. The populace bears itself
heroically and selflessly.
Airplanes wonât intimidate them!
The Communist Party has swelled greatly in numbers since it took power
in its own hands, but it was lost a great deal in quality because of
this. It sucked in a huge mass of people who entered it with the goal of
receiving a cushy job. Self-seekers among the hangers-on finally brought
us to the point where the ideological element in the party, which
sincerely wanted to serve the laborers, became powerless to do anything.
Besides that, during these 3 years the party leaders have become
separated from the working masses, and long ago brought corruption and
ideological confusion into the party.
The Tenth Party Congress, which was to have gathered in March, would
undoubtably have recognized these differences of belief. The party might
have split if its upper reaches wouldnât change their policies, which
have led to complete contradiction with the entire worker and peasant
masses. But events donât wait. The long muffled dissatisfaction of the
masses has burst out, and has taken the character of a peopleâs
movement.
Besides that, in order to come to deal with with the massesâ demands for
new elections to the Soviets, which do not now express the will of the
laborers, and about changing the policy toward the peasantry, the
Communist bureaucrats decided to put the movement down with martial law
and with executions of workers and peasants. Such a situation among the
upper reaches of the party, which have placed in motion every possible
repression and lie to hold on to power, cannot be made right by a lone
person devoted to the ideal of Communism. Every honest Communist must
break away from those who cannot find any other language for the workers
and peasants than the language of cannons and bombs.
And how should this breaking away be done? Some comrades have done this
by leaving the party completely, and becoming non-party comrades. But
there are those who are tied strongly to the idea of the Communist
Revolution, and who have drawn the Marxist worldview deeply into
themselves. Such comrades, maintaining their party membership, must
loudly declare that they will not take moral responsibility for that
which the upper reaches of the party have done against the workers and
peasants. The must honestly help in making right those deficiencies with
which our Soviet Russia is so rich. Comrade Palanov has already acted in
this way. I add my voice to his. May other comrade Communists also speak
out like this.
M. KOPILOVICH, candidate member of the RCP (Communist Party of Russia).
The following broadcast was sent by the Provisional Revolutionary
Committee:
Kronstadt.
To all⊠to all⊠to allâŠ
to the Workers of the world!
The airborn Communist predators have begun to envy Wilhelmâs laurels.
They hover over Kronstadt like kestrels, throwing bombs and killing the
peaceful populace, our wives and children. But this will not stop us
from fighting to the end for the holy interests of the laboring masses.
May the workers of the world know that we are struggling for the true
power of the laboring people, while bloody Trotsky and well-fed Zinoviev
with their champions are struggling for the power of the Communist
oppressor Party.
May the workers of the world know that these criminals are hiding the
truth from the people, and putting out the slanderous lie that tsarist
generals lead us. It has been twelve days now since this handful of true
hero proletarians, these workers, sailors, and soldiers, isolated from
the whole world, took on themselves the whole weight of the blow struck
by the Communist Party butchers. But we are cheerful. We will bring the
cause which we have begun to a victorious end, or die with the cry,
âLong live freely elected Soviets.â
May the workers of the world know this.
Comrades, we need your moral support. Protest against the oppressor
commissarocrats. Remember the innocent victims of Louvain [Belgium] and
Reims [France]. Then, Imperialism was defending its power over the
people, and now that same power over the people is being defended by the
Communist Party, which has raised its hand against revolutionary
Kronstadt!
We send damnation to the butchers!
With comradely greetings,â
THE PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY COMMITTEE
I, an old seaman of the 1904 recruitment, having suffered all the bitter
parts of life and currently an insignificant workingman for the good of
the laborers, pass through the current moment with deep sorrow in my
heart. For three years, the suffering worker, peasant and every kind of
honest toiler believed in a bright future, believed in the leaders of
the Communist Party who stand at the front.
But a split is occurring in the heights of the party, and it is echoing
everywhere. The party has occupied itself with politics at the time when
the end of the Civil War demands that it direct its work only into the
channel of economic life, the channel of reconstructing the economy of
the destroyed country.
In the localities, outrages have been committed by the proteges of the
commissars and of other responsible workers. Complaints have been
brought from far and wide against individual members of the party. The
grumbling got stronger, and finally the suffering worker and peasant
would not put up with it and revolted openly. The ruling party did not
justify the faith of the masses, and Kronstadt broke away first.
Away with you, torture chambers and tortures! Enough of spilled blood;
honest citizens donât want it! These are practices of butchers from the
tsarist time of the past. In a free country they must not be. The
peasant will understand that it is necessary to give the city bread even
without commissars, and the worker in turn will strive to give the
peasant everything necessary from his own production. The power which
the laboring class has won for itself wonât be given away to anyone. The
laboring class will make it stronger, and direct it into a new channel
of life.
Soviet power must be the expression of the will of all the laboring
masses, without the rulership of any kind of political party. A great
cause is being carried out, and Kronstadt has made the start, as
vanguard of the Revolution. It let all the Republic understand that it
is impossible to continue like this. There are no stinking plots against
Soviet power here. All the laboring masses of Kronstadt see this. There
are no White Guards at the head of the movement here, but only selfless
citizens who have taken on their own shoulders the responsibility of
carrying the cause to the end, with the slogan, âVictory or Death.â
No one wanted blood, and all the rumors let out by the Communists that
this is an open uprising against Soviet power arenât founded on
anything. Life goes on normally. The call to bloodletting is being made
by the upper reaches of the party in the person of Trotsky.
Blood has been spilled.
For what? For the dominion of the party?! No, enough of politics and
blood. Leaders of the Communist Party, realize what you are doing! If
you havenât come to an understanding among yourselves, fight however you
want, but leave us in peace. We, the lowly, donât want that. We want to
build our lives, to set right the countryâs destroyed economy so that
the children wonât be able to say of their fathers that they didnât do
anything for the good of the younger generation.
Let us build our lives!
And you must give up your position to the laboring people without any
bloodletting. Give your place at the wheel of government to the
laborers. I openly declare, as a rank and file Communist, that our
children must not perish under bombs thrown from airplanes by Trotskyâs
order.
Having respect for the idea of Communism, like every other pure idea, I
as a rank and file member of the party, given to the service of the
entire laboring class since a young age, openly say, âlet all laborers
breathe free.â
There must not be any more of the dominion of any kind of party. Our
Soviets must be the expressors of the will not of parties, but of the
electors. It is necessary to create the will of the laboring masses.
They seek truth, freedom, and a better life, without oppression, torture
chambers, executions, and tortures.
I remain in spirit with the pure idea of Communism, since every pure
idea is faith in a better future, and no on has the power to kill it. At
the same time, I declare that after three years in the party, I have
seen the entire unfairness of the upper reaches of the party, which have
contracted the disease of bureaucratism and become separated from the
masses. Therefore, I take the stamp of party membership from myself, and
in general do not intend to enter any other party from this time on. I
worked, and want to continue to freely and honestly work, for the good
of all the laborers of Soviet Russia, like every honest citizen.
KURASHEV, Director of the Town Finance Department,
former worker in the Naval Artillery Laboratory
At the Tenth Congress of the RCP, now taking place in Moscow, the
Control Commission made a report on its activity. Of 200 cases
investigated by the Commission, 50 turned out to be of criminal
character. The cases involved occurred due to the workers responsible
using their position for personal comfort. The Commission raised the
question before the Central Committee of the necessity of carrying out
the most merciless struggle with the unbelievable excesses which
responsible figures are allowing themselves.
What a great group, thereâs nothing to say!
The following order was issued by the Commander of the Baltic Fleet in
connection with presently occurring events.
âA strict revolutionary order is to be enforced on all ships, and in all
units and institutions of Baltflot. A decisive struggle is to be carried
out against any and all instances of violating order and discipline. No
kind of assembly is to take place in ships, units and institutions.
Access by outside persons to ships, units and institutions without
permission of the commissar is categorically forbidden.â
âAll commanders and commissars are ordered to be at their places. The
Revolutionary Tribunal of Baltflot is ordered to punish those guilty of
violating this order with all the severity of wartime law.â
In relation to the arrest of Russian gold located on the steamship
Ankon), the news agency Gavas reports that 160,000 rubles in gold were
hidden in the cabin of a member of the Russian trade mission. After the
arrest, the gold was handed over to the care of an Italian bank.
It is impossible to find the words to suitably thank those kind
Kronstadters who, despite the meaningless ration received both earlier
and now, are tearing the last crumbs from themselves every day and
bringing us at the forward outposts a dinner of soup and even bread.
There have even been occurrences when bread received by coupons in the
stores was given to soldiers on their way to the forts, at the same time
blessing them, making the cross and giving them the very best wishes.
We bless the kind Kronstadters, and believe that the great holy cause
will be taken to its end.
You, and with you also we, must show the laborers of Russia and the
entire world that Kronstadters are able to fight not only against the
bourgeoisie but also against any and all enslavers of the laborerâs
will, even if they come from the left.
Long live the power of true Soviets, and not parties!
ANDREEV, soldier of the 560th Infantry Battalion
The people of Kronstadt are trying in all ways to come to the aid of the
comrade soldiers who are defending the rights of the laboring people.
Yesterday, Boris Scheglov, clerk of the Port Transport String, gave the
manager of the building of the Prov. Rev. Com. two pairs of boots for
the brother warriors.
We, revolutionary seamen, soldiers and workers of Kronstadt have swept
the hated Communist yoke away with a comradely blow, and have sworn to
be victorious or die. There can be no compromise with the oppressors.
We will keep our vow. The much suffering Russian laboring people,
tortured by the Cheka, starved, carrying more than four years of cruel
war, await us as deliverers, holding out their dry and calloused hands.
We see that the Communist authorities deal cruelly with anyone who
speaks a word of sympathy toward us. We did not only decide to struggle
with our enemies with bayonets and cannons, but also with the word. We
are dedicating all our strengths so that our word, our press, might
freely uncover all the crimes of the Communist Party and all the horrors
of the torture chambers of the Cheka. We want to uncover everything that
the oppressors resorted to in trying to seat themselves securely and
safely on the throne.
But the Bolshevik authorities, the power of sticks and bayonets, does
not allow us to speak freely with our deceived brothers. In defending
ourselves, we all remember that it is our fraternal blood, the blood of
deceived toilers which is pouring, and not that of commissars and party
leaders. They are far away, separated from the carnage they have made.
On soft couches, they discuss how to better deceive the whole laboring
people, and choose which military unit to send to certain death against
Kronstadt.
In answering their cannons, we did not abandon the matter of propaganda,
and we have taken all measures so that our press might be spread not
only in Kronstadt but also among the adversaryâs troops. Comrade seamen,
sacrificing themselves, cross the firing lines. So that there would be
less blood spilled, and so that not a single confused soldier would
remain with the deceiver Trotsky, it is necessary to expand agitation
even more. It is necessary to increase the the number of cadres in the
army which propagandizes the idea of the power of laboring people.
Everyone in whoâs heart burns a holy hatred against the crimes committed
by the Communists, come with identification from the revolutionary
troikas to the Agitation Center of the Provisional Revolutionary
Committee (House of the People). Come speak to Comrade Perepelkin, to be
enlisted in the ranks of the agitators.
We believe that our call will receive a warm answer.
PEREPELKIN, Director of the Agitation Center of the Prov. Rev. Com.
Comrade young proletarians!
Comrade members of the Communist Youth League, each of us well knows the
situation which has formed in the Republic, and in particular in
Kronstadt. Each of us has seen and heard everything.
Comrades! After the October Revolution, when power fell into the hands
of the now bankrupt Communist Party, many of us with our passionate
youthful hearts, as is always the case with youth, aspired to something
bright and new, to something which was to give us and our fathers and
mothers a bright laboring life. We thought that the Communist Party
would bring us to that bright future, and we strived for the party. For
three years, we with our fathers and brothers spilled our young blood
for the Communist Soviets.
For three years, we lived in expectation of an improvement in our lives.
But after all three years of struggle, cold, and hunger we saw that our
lives were not improving but worsening. We were convinced once and for
all that the Communist Party, with all its commissars who feast during
plague, chekists, and anti-profiteer troops, would lead us to certain
death.
Every aware comrade cannot and must not blame the Communist Party, as
such. They will blame those Communists who, being in power, abused the
peopleâs faith, and who, seeing their distress, mercilessly robbed them.
The patience of the laboring masses has been exhausted. The workers and
sailors of Peter raised the banner of revolt against the oppressors, the
Communists and chekists who have been set up by the Communist Soviets.
This uprising was put down by cadets and Communist forces, and hidden
from us. We fed only on rumors. But these rumors, speaking of base acts
by the Communist Party, which considers itself the expression of the
peopleâs will while at the same time executing masses of hungry and cold
workers who have rebelled, were, as we all know, confirmed by our
delegation of seaman. And Kronstadt arose.
At our giant meeting of the garrison and workers, and afterwards at the
Conference of Delegates, the banner of uprising was lifted not by
generals but by seamen, sailors, and workers. Only sailors, workers, and
soldiers sit in our Revolutionary Committee.
Kronstadt will again be âRed,â the Communists write in their base and
lying organs. We answer that our heroic Kronstadt was, is, and will
always be Red.
With their endless lying leaflets and articles, they havenât closed but
just still more opened our eyes to their crimes.
Comrades! The author of these lines, although not having joined the
party, was and remains a Communist by conviction. But the acts of our
Communist Party: executions of workers; murder of peaceful residents
with bombs; deception of the people with words and press, are shameful
and it is time to put an end to them!
To a unification of strengths. We must all, from the smallest to the
greatest, rise in a comradely way to the defense of our dear freedom
against the strong paws of the bureaucrat Communists.
Comrades, young proletarians, and in particular members of the Communist
Youth League, whose eyes the Communist Party has closed for three years,
all as one to the aid of the Provisional Revolutionary Committee!
All for free Red Soviets!
I. DVORIAN, long-time worker in the Russian Communist Youth Organization
Comrade women! Your brothers, husbands and sons, our great warriors for
liberation from the Communist yoke, are selflessly standing in defense
of Kronstadt, risking their life every minute.
Comrade women! Support our warriors. Be ready to lighten the sufferings
of the wounded, which there isnât a single armed struggle without, with
female sensitivity and a caring female hand.
Enlist in the Red Sisters of Compassion. May our defenders feel once
more time that they are not forgotten, that the thankful people of
Kronstadt remember and care for them.
Forward to the defense of Red Kronstadt, warriors with the red banner of
Labor, women with the red cross.
It is possible to enlist at the Department of Health.
âHello hello! Comrade, give me Petrograd, Smolny⊠Smolny?⊠This is
Trotsky.â
âHello comrade, this is Zinoviev. How are things?â
âGreat⊠Weâve succeeded in duping a whole herd of soldiers to believe
that Kronstadt is destroyed, and that all thatâs left for them is to
occupy the outposts and guard positions.â
âThey went?â
âThey went. Oh, but the traitors from the Krasnogorsk bakery refused to
give them bread for the road⊠They say they need it themselvesâŠâ
âAnd what of it?â
âNothing⊠I convinced them; issued them each 2 pounds of unground wheat.
They broke, and I sent Dulkis and Razin with them, in the rear with
machine guns.â
âStupendous⊠When do you think youâll take Kronstadt?â
âDevil only knows. Our detachments surrender, but for some reason the
Petropavlovsk doesnât want to, even though I asked them to very
strongly. Thereâs just no kind of mutuality⊠even out of conscience.â
âWhatâs this, comrade, talking about conscience? Look, a pig gets
conscience after its been hit with a nice thick stick, doesnât it?â
âOh, theyâre devils, but seriously⊠and not with a stick, but with
twelve-inchers [cannons]⊠Whatâs up with you?â
âIts all right with us. The workers are striking, the seamen and
soldiers are unrestful, the populace is starving⊠In any case, the
Tsarâs train is at the ready, in case we have to make a quick get away.â
With that, the conversation was cut off.
A TELEPHONE OPERATOR
All those leaving the ranks of the RCP are directed to turn in their
party booklets and identifications to their electoral troikas. Those
leaving the party in the future and giving declarations are directed to
do so right now.
Declarations of departure from the RCP arrive unceasingly at the
editorial offices, but in view of their great quantity and the
insufficiency of space, the editors are unable to publish them
immediately, and will include them as possible in following editions of
the newspaper.
We, Communists of the collective of the Naval Hospital, ask that you no
longer consider us members of the RCP. It has bred bureaucratism and
careerism anew, and doesnât want to listen to the voice of the people,
but has sent deceived sons of the Republic against Kronstadt, saying
that bands of White Guards are bossing us. But we ourselves see who
specifically overturned the communeâs power. It was our own comrade
sailors, soldiers, and workers.
Comrade Communists, it is time to come to your senses!
Enough of being passive about the current moment. In a comradely way,
work together with our Revolutionary Committee.
Long live Soviet Power!
Long live the real fraternal union of workers and peasants!
A. IUNKER, A. ILYIN, former members of the RCP.
Declarations have also arrived from the following:
210) V. Zaitsev, serviceman, 211) also V. Kashabin, 212) Zhazhmorskaya,
employee of the Naval Hospital, 213) also Zavodchikova, 214) also V.
Baranov, 215) O. Vinogradov, sldr, 216) A. Skorodkov, sldr., 217) M.
Lavrov, sldr., 218) A. Berezkin, member of the Union of Water
Transporters, 219) V. Montiev, member of the R.C.P., 220) N. Starshinov,
seaman, 221) also M. Maksimov, 222) N. Omelchuk, member of the RCP, 223)
also V. Velikanov, 224) also Ia. Miagkov, 225) also Ermolaev, 226) G.
Katachev, sldr., 227) E. Nikolaev, sldr. 228) V. Zakharov, artisan of
the Galvano-Plastics Workshop of the Kronstadt Port, 229) N.
Savelchikov, employee of the Department of the Peopleâs Education, 230)
A. Borodavsky, telegraph operator; military seamen of the Machinists
School: 231) Bogdanov, Ivan.
Yeast is issued by Rudkevich the yeast maker by childrenâs cards of
series B, for bread coupon No 11.
Citizens who have registered their cards at store No 18 must receive
meat and fatty products at store No 19.
LEVAKOV, for the President of the Administration of Gorprodkom
The Central Troika of the Bureau of Trade Unions directs that the 8 hour
working day be reinstituted, since the 6 hour working day was introduced
only because of lack of heating material. The moment we are living
through urgently demands that all forces be strained for the fulfillment
of works of military character. Therefore, the Central Troika of the
Bureau of Trade Unions directs that from March 14, work is to be carried
on from 9 am until 5 pm.
A. FEDOROV, President of the Revtroika
A. SKVORTSOV, Secretary
âThe Revtroika requests that representatives and secretaries from the
uchkoms assemble by 2 pm on March 13 at the trade union offices to
receive new identifications. Attendance is mandatory for all.
âThe Union Vsemediksantrud [All Medical and Sanitation Labor] announces
that the last day of issue of onions to members of the union will be the
16th.
âThe Housing subdepartment instructs all uchkoms to give exact
information to the subdepartment within a week on all free apartments
and rooms, and also on apartments subject to consolidation.
ROSCHIN, Director of the Housing subdepartment
Lost: produce card letter B, No 36802, belonging to citizen Stepanova.
âOn the morning of the 14th, under cover of darkness, fresh Bolshevik
detachments advanced into a hurricane of artillery and machine-gun fire
and were forced to withdraw, leaving scores of dead and wounded on the
ice. This, however, was the last of the small-scale attacks. For the
next 72 hours, though air and artillery operations continued as before,
all ground activity ceased as the Communists prepared an all-out effort
to take the rebel citadel by storm.:
Paul Avrich, Kronstadt 1921
The Revtroika of the Naval Hospital informs citizens that March 14 at 8
pm, in the hospital chapel
REQUIEM SERVICES WILL BE PERFORMED FOR THE FALLEN DEFENDERS OF THE
APPROACHES TO KRONSTADT.
BODRY, President of the Revtroika of the Naval Hospital
from 24:00, March 12 until 24:00 March 13
About 3 am, a party of the adversary tried to attack from the South, but
was driven off by our fire.
From 3:30 am there was calm.
About the 12th hour, an adversary flying machine flew over the town and
threw out bombs.
From 12 am until 9 pm, the adversary carried an artillery fire on our
batteries.
Krasnoflotskii fired several heavy rounds at the town, but thanks to the
fire of our artillery, it was soon forced to cease fire.
Over the course of the entire day, the adversaryâs airplanes flew over
Kotlin [the island on which Kronstadt is located] and threw bombs at the
town. Thanks to the energetic work of our anti-aircraft batteries
against the airplanes, substantial harm was not inflicted on the town.
PETRICHENKO, President of the Rev. Com.
SOLOVIANOV, Head of the Defense of the Kronstadt Fortress
It was reasonable to expect that at the great moment of the laborerâs
struggle for their violated rights, Lenin would not be a hypocrite, and
would speak the truth. Somehow, in the opinion of the workers and
peasants, the concept of Lenin on the one hand and Trotsky and Zinoviev
on the other came to be different. If they didnât believe a single word
from Zinoviev and Trotsky, faith in Lenin was still not lost.
ButâŠ
On March 8, the 10th Congress of the RCP [Communist Party of Russia]
opened, and Lenin is repeating the usual Communist lies about rebel
Kronstadt. He declared that the movement is occuring under the slogan of
âfree trade,â and then added, âit was for Soviets, and against only the
dictatorship of the Bolsheviks,â not forgetting to implicate, âWhite
generals and petty bourgeois anarchist elements.â
We see that Lenin, speaking filth, has become confused, and lets slip
the truth that at its root the movement is a struggle for Soviet power
and against the party dictatorship. In his nervousness he declared,
âthis is a counterrevolution of a different type. It is extremely
dangerous, no matter how insignificant their corrections in our policy
seem at first glance.â
And there is something to fear. The blow of the revolutionary people of
Kronstadt is strong, and the ringleaders of the arrogant party feel that
their autocracy has come to an end.
Leninâs unlimited nervousness slips through all through his speech on
Kronstadt. The words âdangerousâ and âdangerâ are repeated over and
over. He says, âin order to end this petty bourgeois danger, incredibly
dangerous to us since it doesnât unify the proletariat but divides it,
we need maximum solidarity.â
Yes, it has become necessary for the head Communist to tremble, and to
call for âmaximum solidarity,â since not only the Communist dictatorship
but also the party itself have shown signs of breaking.
Could Lenin have spoken the truth in general? Not so long ago at a
discussion meeting about trade unions he said, âI am deathly fed up with
this, and apart from my disease I would be glad to quit it all and run
away wherever I could.â
But his confederates do not allow him to run away. He is held as their
prisoner, and must slander just like they do. And also, the party policy
is such that its realization is prevented by Kronstadt, which is
demanding not âfree tradeâ but true Soviet power.
The Petrograd Pravda for March 11 prints a letter from Zinoviev to the
non-party comrades. This unrestrained boor expresses his sorrow that
there have come to be few worker-Communists in Petrograd factories, and
that therefore, âit is necessary to the Communists, come of it what may,
to draw honest non-party workingmen and women into Soviet work.â That
Communists have become few in the factories is understandable; everyone
flees from the party of traitors. It is also understandable that the
chekists want to shut the non-party workersâ mouths with every kind of
truth and untruth, by involving them in join work.
This provocateur writes, âLetâs, in an organized way, arrive at a
systematic method of drawing non-party comrades to work.â But what
honest worker will join that gang of thieves, commissars, and chekists?
The workers well understand that these new gendarmes need to choke their
grumbling with any concessions, to lull them from their vigilance, in
order to squeeze them still stronger afterwards with their iron tongs.
The workers see how they are revenging themselves on their non-party
comrades in Kronstadt.
âRecently,â Zinoviev sobs on, âthere was a major misunderstanding
between us and the Baltic Factory. But if the Baltic Factory were to be
first to carry out the given plan, and showed an example to the others,
then many mistakes would be forgiven it.â
Here again speaks the provocateur. Of course, in those days the
Communists assured us in their broadcasts to the Kronstadt workers that
all was well in Peter, and that the Baltic factory was working. Now,
suddenly, there are âmajor misunderstandings,â and invitations to show
an example âto other factories.â Unrest has begun in other factories
too. So when was Zinoviev trying to deceive us, then or now?
In order to obtain the Baltic workers for their use, the Communists
promise them all the blessings of the world.âWe will assign the workers
to the jobs most important at the current moment: produce, heating,
control over Soviet institutions and the like. We will give non-party
workers the opportunity, through their representatives, to take the most
active part in the purchase abroad, for gold, of produce for the Peter
workers, in order to make it through the difficult months. We will put
the question of the struggle with bureaucratism in our institutions on a
practical footing. We will scold and criticize each other, and come to a
full and fundamental understanding.
This is how sweetly Zinoviev sings, lulling the workers, drawing their
attention away from the sound of the bombardment directed against their
Kronstadt brothers. Why have the Communists been silent up to now? Why
havenât they done this during their almost four year rule?
Very simply, they couldnât do this before, and they canât do it now
either. We know the value of their promises, and not just promises but
agreements (a bunch of paper). No, the worker wonât sell his freedom and
his brothersâ blood for all the gold in the world. Let Zinoviev give up
this empty fancy of, âcoming to an understanding.â Now, when the
Kronstadt brothers have risen to the defense of true freedom, the
workers can give the Communists only one answer. âGet out of power as
quickly as possible, you butchers and provocateurs, while itâs still
possible to run away, and donât fool yourselves with vain hopes.â
At the March 13 meeting of the Provisional Revolutionary Committee, the
report of the General Meeting of Communists imprisoned in the Naval
Investigative Prison was heard. It included a request to the Prov. Rev.
Com. to allow Zosimov, former Commissar of the Battleship Brigade, to
leave for Moscow to attend the meeting of the regular session of the
V.Ts.I.K. [All-Russian Central Executive Committee], in order to
illuminate the true lay of matters in Kronstadt.
After an exchange of opinions and a discussion from all sides, the Prov.
Rev. Com. decided to consider Zosimovâs trip to Moscow unnecessary,
since the truth about the events happening in Kronstadt should be well
known to the government of the R.S.F.S.R. and the V.Ts.I.K. from our
broadcasts. Because of their fear of the peopleâs masses, the Communists
have not been publicizing these.
Also, Zosimovâs release might be interpreted by the government of the
R.S.F.S.R. as a sign of weakness by the Prov. Rev. Com., and of a desire
to come to a compromise. There canât even be talk of this, in view of
the strongly expressed desire of the laboring masses of Kronstadt to
forever liberate Russia from the power of the Communists.
We print word for word a group of notices printed in the March 11 number
of Petrogradskaia Pravda.
Internal War in Kronstadt
At 8 pm, the Committee of Defense received the following report from
Tukhachevsky, Commander of the Army, in Oranienbaum. âHeavy small arms
and machine gun fire is heard from Kronstadt. In Oranienbaum, columns
are seen making an attack from Kronstadt toward the Mine Casting
Workshops, which are located somewhat northeast of fort Konstantin. The
attack is apparently being made either against fort Konstantin or
against independent units which have risen against the Kronstadt White
Guards, and are fortified in the region of the Mine Casting Workshops.
Fire in Kronstadt
During our capture of one of the numbered forts, a strong fire was
noticed in Kronstadt. The town was cloaked in thick smoke.
An Attack by Cadets
On March 8, one of the cadet detachments made an attack on one of the
forts located on Kronstadtâs northern side. The cadets, first stuck to
their knees in snow, then splashing through the water which covers the
ice in places, moved forward daringly and decisively. The officers,
commissars and Communists were in front. Fire from the forts could not
stop the attackers, despite cruel machine gun and artillery fire from
the neighboring forts.
The fort was taken so swiftly, and so unexpectedly for its defenders,
that they abandoned the fort leaving completely loaded weapons and a
half-cooked meal. During our control of three of the mutineersâ forts, a
great quantity of cannon-wadding, 40 cases of munitions and other
military property was captured in one of them.
More on the Leaders and Inspirers of the Mutiny
One of the deserters who left Kronstadt on the night of March 7 reports
on the attitude and carriage of the White Guard officers as follows.
âTheir attitude is highly âplayful.â It doesnât, of course, bother them
that they have started a bloody affair. They dream of the blessings
which will fall to their part in the event that they control Petrograd.
âWe will take Petrograd. Weâll get no less than half a pood [1 pood is
equal to 16.38 kg.] of gold to a mug. If it doesnâât come off, weâll go
to Finland. Theyâll take us in there with pleasure,â these lords
declare.â
They feel like they are lords of the situation, and in fact they are.
They carry themselves with the âfree seamenâ like in the old, tsarist
times. âThe present tone is one of command, completely unlike with the
Communists,â the sailors say on this account. The only thing lacking is
the gold epaulets.
We bring to the attention of the lord White Guard officers that they
will hardly be successful in running off to Finland, and instead of gold
they will each receive a nice portion of lead.
And Krasnaia Gazeta reports, âtwo sailors arriving in Reval report that
150 Bolsheviks have been killed in Kronstadt.
ORANIENBAUM. A store of provisions was destroyed by successful strikes
of our artillery.
ORANIENBAUM. The sailors on the ships are isolated from the shore, and
suppressed by the White officership. Increasingly, notices of
approaching aid, printed several times a day in different forms, are
spread about the town.â
Even better is the report of Makhovik.
The Union of Printers has received the following letter in response to
gifts taken by working women, members of the union, to the comrade
soldiers who are defending the Peter proletarians from the White Guard
adventurers.
Dear friends!
Universal thanks to you for the presents to your red units, who have
already taken three forts. I send you greetings in all our names. Today
was heated. I think that everything will be liquidated tomorrow.
Warm greetings to all unions.
DURMASHKIN, Secretary of the Politotdel of the Military District 3/9/21
This is how history is written. This is how the Communists think to hide
the truth from the people with slander and deceit.
A little fartherâŠ
We are at the threshold.
Without stormy days
In bloody drunkeness
We move toward the goalâ
The lighthouse is seen.
Manacles are off,
Armor is on
Ice is melted.
Roar of the storm
And banner of purpleâ
The people have risen.
From the gloom of the crypt,
Where we rotted blindly
Until these days
We went out to the light,
Set fire to the rocketâ
The mutiny of fires.
A little fartherâŠ
We are at the threshold
Without stormy days
Passing the shoals
We move toward the goal
The lighthouse is seen.
GLEB VERZHBITSKY
The Helsingfors newspaper Hufvudstadsbladet reports:
âMarch 9, a broadcast from Kronstadt was captured in Reval, saying that
Kronstadt is not now in need of produce aid, and refuting the
provocative rumors that it has turned to Finland for support.â
By direction of the Prov. Rev. Com., searches were carried out in the
apartments of several commissars. Large reserves of produce were found
in each of them. These were taken away, and given to the Produce
Committee for distribution among the populace.
In this way, from the wife of commissar Ilyin (Shirokaia Street 19) were
taken: 1 pood of meat, 1 pood of dried bread, 30 pounds of salt, and 10
lb. of fish. The following was left her: 1 1/2 pood of flour, 4 poods of
potatoes, 2 poods of liver, 15 pounds of meat and other produce. Items
taken were: 12 pairs of new shoes, a jacket, and a leather skirt. 2
jackets were left her.
From Dulin, Commissar of the Detachment of Special Purpose, the
following were taken: 1 pood 9 lbs. of meat., 1 pood 28 lbs. of salt,
165 boxes of matches, 14 1/2 lbs. of loose tea, 1 pound of brick tea,
and 4 poods 33 lbs. of dried bread. Also taken were: buckwheat, oat
flour, millet, wheat, wheat flour, soap, kerosine, and even 1 pood 3
lbs. of nails.
Dulin was arrested.
Life was pretty good for the lord commissars.
The following donations have arrived for the warriors at the front: from
E. Zavgorodin, a two day ration of bread and a pack of makhorka; from S.
Ivanov, a stoker on the Sevastopol, a soldierâs overcoat; from O.
Tsimmerman, a woman employee of the Rev. Com., cigarettes; from S.
Putilin, one pair of boots; from A.L., clerk of the Port Chemical
Laboratory, one pair of boots.
It is now three years that the populace of Soviet Russia has languished
under the Communist yoke. These arrogant beastsâ bloodthirsty leaders
have pitilessly poured, and pour now, the blood of the laborers. The
servitors of the Communist autocracy, hiding under the traitorous mask,
âPower of the Laboring People,â have deceived, and try to still deceive,
the workers and peasants with their lying slanderous speeches. And
besides that, the blood of deceived toilers pours on endless fronts.
Everyone knows how they take almost the last chicken from a soldierâs
family, but the fattened commissars, having fortified themselves with a
solid ration, look out for themselves, and do their stinking business in
the rear. They yell from their bloody scaffolds, âall land to the
peasants, and the factories and plants to the workers.â But at the same
time, the Communists have built communal farms, occupying the best
pieces of land, and put a still heavier and stronger land-owner on the
neck of the most impoverished peasant.
The worker has become a night animal instead of a factory owner. He
cannot work where he wants, and cannot refuse to work beyond his
strength. Anyone who speaks a word of truth they shoot, leave in prison
to rot, or torture in the Communist torture chambers.
Worker and peasant, languishing under the Bolshevik yoke, it is time for
you to wake from your lethargy! Form true Soviets.
Look, with one blow, revolutionary Kronstadt has knocked down the
stranglers of the will of the laboring people. Power has truly passed
into the hands of the laborers.
When the rebellious proletariat demanded the liberation of its brothers
who were languishing in the prisons, bloody Trotsky opened fire on Red
Kronstadt. Having dressed deceived soldiers in white shrouds, he sent
them with rifles in their hands to strangle our truth. But truth is not
for Trotsky to strangle. All laboring Russia and all the world knows
that we struggle for the laborersâ liberation from the despotic power of
the usurper Communists.
All the world knows that Kronstadt canât bear to listen anymore to the
moans of its repressed and ruined brothers. However Trotsky might try to
strangle the free idea of Kronstadt, he will soon be forced to dress
himself in the same white shroud in which he dressed the unfortunate
soldiers whom he deceived and drove out with machine guns to die without
glory on the ice at the approaches to Kronstadt.
We have decided to be victorious or to die under the ruins of glorious
Kronstadt. May we be judged by the workers of the world. We stand firmly
at our posts, and having raised the banner of liberty, we are certain of
victory.
Long live the Soviets!
Damnation to the stranglers of liberty, the Communists!
seaman KOPTELOV
On March 2, we, the people of Kronstadt, threw off the damned Communist
yoke and raised the red flag of the Third Revolution of Laborers.
Soldiers, seamen and workers, revolutionary Kronstadt calls you. We know
that they lead you into delusion and donât tell the truth about events
here, where we are all ready to give our lives for the holy cause of
liberating the worker and peasant. They try to convince you that white
generals and priests are with us. In order to put an end to this once
and for all, we bring to your attention that the Provisional
Revolutionary Committee consists of the following fifteen members.
Communications Service;
of the Fortress;
These are our generals: the Brusilovs, Kamenevs, and the rest, and it is
the gendarmes Trotsky and Zinoviev who hide the truth from you.
Comrades, look about and see what they have done to you, what they are
doing to your wives, brothers, and children. Are you really going to
suffer and perish under the yoke of the oppressors?
Capturing power, the Communist Party promised you all the blessings of
the laboring masses. And what do we see in fact? Three years ago, they
told us, âWhen you want, you can recall your representatives. You can
newly elect the Soviets.â But when we, the people of Kronstadt, called
for new elections to the Soviets, free of party pressure, Trotsky the
newly appeared Trepov gave the order, âdonât spare the bullets.â
Soldiers, you see how valuable your lives are to the Communists. They
send you across the ice barehanded to take Red Kronstadt, stronghold of
the Laboring Revolution. They send you to take impregnable forts and
ships, whose armor twelve inch shells canât pierce.
What treachery!
We called for a delegation of Petrograd toilers to be sent, so that you
might learn what kind of generals are with us, and who commands us. But
there is no such delegation. The Communists fear that a delegation would
learn the truth and tell it to you. They tremble, feeling the earth
shake under them.
But the hour has rung. Off dirty paws, stained with the blood of our
brothers and fathers! The laborersâ spirit of freedom is still strong.
They wonât let the vampire Communists enslave them again, sucking out
the last drop of blood from the tortured proletariat.
Toiler, did you really overthrow tsarism and throw down Kerensky in
order to put the Maliuta Skuratov oprichniks, with Fieldmarshal Trotsky
in the lead, on your own neck?
No! A thousand times no!
The work hardened hand is heavy, and the base oppressors who have
destroyed millions of toilersâ lives to capture power will not withstand
it.
Damnation to the hated Communist yoke!
Down with the party yoke!
Long live the power of workers and peasants!
Long live freely elected Soviets!
THE PROVISIONAL REVOLUTIONARY COMMITTEE OF KRONSTADT Kronstadt, March
13, 1921
Passed March 12 by the General Meeting of soldiers of the Transport
String of the Naval Fortress of Kronstadt.
We, the soldiers of the Transport String of the Naval Fortress of
Kronstadt, having listened with attention to the report of Comrade
Perepelkin, member of the Prov. Rev. Com., about the current moment,
find all the actions and measures taken by the Prov. Rev. Com. to be
correct, and appropriate for the state of war.
We give our entire support to the defense of the interests of the
laboring peasantry and workers, and detach 50 people from our crew to
carry out combat service under the complete command of the Prov. Rev.
Com. This will not sap the ability of the Transport String to do special
urgent work. At the first call by the Prov. Rev. Com., we will all
answer as one, and will be ready to go any time of day or night.
Long live the Revolutionary Committee of Kronstadt!
Long live the revolutionary seamen, soldiers, and workers of Kronstadt!
Down with commissarocracy!
Down with the predatory beast Trotsky!
FEDOROV, President of the Assembly
MAIER, member
A. IVANOV, Secretary
All those leaving the ranks of the RCP [Communist Party of Russia] are
directed to turn in their party booklets and identifications to their
electoral troikas. Those leaving the party in the future and giving
declarations are directed to do so right now.
Declarations of departure from the RCP arrive unceasingly at the
editorial offices, but in view of their great quantity and the
insufficiency of space, the editors are unable to publish them
immediately, and will include them as possible in following editions of
the newspaper.
In December of 1919, when Yudenich was approaching Petrograd, Sotnikov,
former Aide to the Commissar of Construction of the Fortress, gathered
all the comrades of fort Krasnoarmeiskii. After a lying speech, he
ordered all the non-party comrades to choose one of two things, either
the party or the left flank, where the 55 people executed by the butcher
Razin in the Krasnogorsk events were buried. Under such a threat, I was
forced to become a member of the RCP.
But as the saying goes, âyou wonât be nice by force.â Even though I was
counted on paper as being in the RCP, in spirit it wasnât so.
In 1920, I was thrown behind bars by the beast Sitnikov [sic] because I
dared to ask the truth, why the Finns were bringing every possible kind
of produce over the border to lord Gromov, the little Kronstadt tsar.
On leaving prison, I couldnât flee the party since everything was under
surveillance. But at last there has come a free time, when the yoke of
commissarocracy has fallen, and I may freely stand up in the ranks of
free workers and peasants.
The Communists told us that they were put in power by the people, and
that they stand for the people. But who really put them in power? They
told us that it is necessary to endure, and to carry on through hunger
and cold for the good of our past achievements. But just as soon as
these âapostlesâ had returned to their homes, everything appeared there,
except birdsâ milk.
Not so long ago they reminded us of the year 1905, when the hungry
workers who went to ask Nikolai for bread were fed with lead. But look
what they themselves gave the workers when they dared to ask for bread.
They treat them to bullets, prisons, and so on. It has become several
times worse than under Nikolai.
After the October Revolution, all these âapostlesâ with the souls of
traitors stripped everyone on the sidewalks of their fur coats, or stole
produce down to the very crumbs if they found someone with it. But now
look at these thieves. Each of them has several fur coats, all their
hands are hung about with gold, and their suitcases are stuffed with
toys from Nikolaiâs time, produce, and so on.
And all the same such scoundrels yelled, and still yell, that they are
struggling for the freedom which they are strangling with bullets and
prisons.
And so comrades, I am quitting this bloody traitorous party, and
joyfully entering into your free ranks.
Long live the free peasant and worker!
V. IAKOVLEV, sldr. of the Training Crew of the 4th Division
I make this declaration to the Provisional Revolutionary Committee and
the citizens of the town of Kronstadt so that you would not consider me
to be a sympathizer with the Communists. I have been on guard of the
just, Civilian Court since the 1st Revolution, as the Peopleâs Judge who
is elected independent of party membership. Due to the distortion of the
fundamental declaration of the Republic Constitution by the Communist
Party, in 1921 I was forced to secure âpolitical reliabilityâ and
support in my struggle for the peopleâs citizensâ rights against the
arbitrary rule of the chekists and other oprichniks, in order to have
the strength to repulse the dominance of criminal Communists over
individual private citizens who came for legal help.
Now, when this dominance threatens the entire peopleâs mass with bloody
horrors, and comes from the central Communist authorities, I am leaving
the party. It has not justified my faith, and I want to be in the ranks
of the first warriors of the 3rd Revolution.
ALLIK, Peopleâs Judge of the Third District of the Town of Kronstadt
Paul Avrich claims that on March 15, speaking at the the Tenth Party
Congress, Lenin acknowledged of the Kronstradt rebels that, Bolshevik
propaganda notwithstanding, âThey do not want the White Guards, and they
do not want our power either.â
The full significance of the âliquidationâ of Kronstadt was disclosed by
Lenin himself⊠At the Tenth Congress of the Communist Party, staged in
Moscow while the siege of Kronstadt was in progress, Lenin unexpectedly
changed his inspired Communist song to an equally inspired paean to the
New Economic Policy. Free trade, concessions to the capitalists, private
employment of farm and factory labor, all damned for over three years as
rank counter-revolution and punished by prison and even death, were now
written by Lenin on the glorious banner of the dictatorship. Brazenly as
ever he admitted what sincere and thoughtful persons in and out of the
party had known for seventeen days: that âthe Kronstadt men did not
really want the counter-revolutionists. But neither did they want us.â
The naive sailors had taken seriously the slogan of the Revolution: âAll
power to the Soviets,â by which Lenin and his party had solemnly
promised to abide. That had been their unforgivable offense. For that
they had to die. They had to be martyred to fertilize the soil for
Leninâs new crop of slogans, which completely reversed the old.â
-Emma Goldman, âLiving My Lifeâ
In view of the approaching thaw, due to which water has formed on the
streets, I direct all UCHKOMS to see to enlisting citizens to work on
cleaning ice from the sidewalks, and also cleaning the drainage gratings
in the middle of the street. Cleaning is to take place March 15, in the
morning.
KASUKHIN, Assistant Director of the Department of Administration
from 24:00, March 13 through 12:00, March 14
Over the course of the night, the adversaryâs parties tried to attack
twice, but were repulsed by our fire. After 4 am, there was a calm on
the front.
from 12:00 until 24:00
About 13:00 the adversary began artillery fire, to which our artillery
gave an energetic response. Firing continued with pauses until 18:30,
after which a calm set in.
The adversaryâs airplanes did not fly during the entire day.
PETRICHENKO, President of the Military Revolutionary Committee
SOLOVIANOV, Head of the Defense
The trading house of Lenin, Trotsky and Co. has done well. The criminal,
autocratic policies of the ruling Communist Party have led Soviet Russia
into the abyss of beggary and ruin.
Enough of this, itâs time to rest. But apparently the toilers still
havenât spilled enough blood and tears. This is a moment of historic
battle, daringly raised by Revolutionary Kronstadt for the rights of the
laboring people which have been desecrated and trampled by the
Communists. And now the flock of ravens has flown together for its 10th
Party Congress, and is reaching agreements on how to continue their
Cain-like business even more slyly and effectively.
Their shamelessness is complete. They speak of concessions with complete
calm. They have become used to it. Lenin even talks like this, âWe have
started to develop a beginning for concessions. The degree to which this
will be successful doesnât depend on us, but we must achieve it.â He
further admits that the Bolsheviks have brought Soviet Russia to ruin,
âfor we cannot reconstruct the country without technology from abroad,
to somewhat catch up with other countries in economic terms. The
situation has required us to buy abroad not only machines, but also
coal, which we have much of.â
Lenin consoles us, âSuch sacrifices will be necessary in the future
also, in obtaining items of broad use, and for the collective farms.â
Where is the economy made right, for the good of which the worker was
turned into a slave in a bureaucratic factory and the laboring peasantry
into hired hands on Soviet farms?!
But this is still not enough. Lenin, talking about agriculture, promises
even more âblessings,â under the further âownershipâ of the Communists,
as he himself puts it. âAnd if it is possible to sometimes reestablish
large scale farming and industry, then it will only be by the path of
placing new sacrifices on any producer, giving him nothing.â
That is the kind of âblessingâ which the head of the Bolsheviks promises
to all who will continue to submissively carry the yoke of
commissarocracy. The peasant was right who said at the Eighth Congress
of Soviets, âeverythingâs going all right, only⊠landâs ours, but
grainâs yours; waterâs ours, but fishâs yours; forestâs ours, but the
woodâs yours.â
But the toiler doesnât have to worry. Lenin promises, âto make a number
of concessions to the smallholder, to give him known limits of a free
economy.â Like the old âkindâ landowner, he intends to make a few petty
concessions in order to squeeze even harder later with the tongs of
party dictatorship. This is clearly visible from the phrase, âof course,
you wonât achieve it without compulsion, for the country is terribly
impoverished and tired.â
Itâs clear. You can take even the last shirt from the beggar.
The mission of peaceful construction Lenin understands to be, âwith
concessions at the top and taxes at the bottom.â
âComrades, we will build a beautiful new life,â the Communists said and
wrote. âWe will destroy the entire world of oppression, and build a
bright Socialist heaven,â they sang to the people.
But what in fact came of it? All the best houses and apartments are
taken by departments and subdepartments, and their bureaucrats have set
themselves up spaciously, comfortably, and warmly. The number of
available apartments was reduced, and workers live in the very same
places where they lived before, just more run-down and more crowded.
The houses are reaching old age, and the stoves are almost ruined.
Broken windows arenât fixed. Roofs are bursting and just about to begin
leaking. Fences are strewn about. Waterpipes are half ruined. Toilets
donât work. Apartments are flooded with refuse. Citizens see to their
needs in strangersâ courtyards. Stairways are unlit and filthy.
Courtyards are like pigsties. Garbage cans and cesspools are overfilled.
The streets are dirty; the sidewalks havenât been cleared and slippery.
Itâs dangerous to walk.
In order to receive an apartment it is necessary to have pull in the
housing department; otherwise, donât even think about it. Only the
select have spacious and comfortable apartments.
The matter of food is even worse. Irresponsible and incapable workers
have ruined hundreds of thousands of food items. They distribute nothing
but frozen potatoes. Meat is rotten in spring and summer. They didnât
used to give to swine what citizens have received from the builders of
âheavenlyâ life.
Honest Soviet fish (herring) saved the day, but recently there isnât
even that.
In order to receive these pathetic scraps it was necessary to serve
hours at the fronts.
Soviet stores turned out to be worse than the factory stores of
unpleasant memory, where the owner-manufacturers dumped every kind of
trash, and the enslaved workers couldnât say a word.
In order to destroy home life, our rulers introduced communal
cafeterias⊠And what came of it?
The food there was even worse! Produce was plundered, and the citizens
were given the remains. Childrenâs food was somewhat better. But what
was given to the children was still not enough, and most important,
there wasnât enough milk. In their time, the Communists took all the
milk cattle from the laboring populace to their farms. Half they
destroyed. Milk from the surviving cattle went first to administrators
and employees, and only the scraps to the children.
But the worst of all was the clothing and shoe situation. People wore
only what was stored away earlier. If anything came in for distribution,
then it was very little. (Now, for example, one of the unions is issuing
buttons, and they have to make it 1 1/2 buttons per person. Isnât it
funny?) Shoes were especially bad. The path to heaven may be short, but
all the same you wonât get there without soles on your shoes.
There were, however, channels in which all that was needed flowed
freely. People close to the Communist Party, and those with power, had
everything. They had their own cafeteria, special rations, and a special
orders table for their service, distributing blessings by the good will
of a woman commissar.
But people knew that the âcommuneâ sapped, and in the end destroyed,
productive labor. Any inclination and interest to work fell away.
Cobblers, tailors, water carriers and others who had earlier worked by
handicraft, quit and went away, someone here and someone there. They
became port guards and watchmen, joined the ranks of the departmental
workers, and so on.
This is the heaven which the Bolsheviks took on themselves to build. In
place of the former regime there arose a new regime of excess, vileness,
âcomradeship,â selfishness, thievery and speculation. It is a horrible
regime, where itâs necessary to hold out your hand to the authorities
for every little piece of bread and every button. Itâs a regime where
you donât even own yourself, and thereâs no way to be your own master.
Itâs a regime of slavery and humiliation.
This is the kind of hell we lived in for three years. But that was still
just the blossoms, and we will rescue ourselves from the berries.
Through March 12
A state of siege has been declared. Guards on the bridges have been
increased. Guard posts have been placed at busy crossings, controlling
the movement of automobiles and horses. Movement is forbidden after 9 pm
The theaters are closed.
âThe mood of the workers is one of sympathy toward the people of
Kronstadt. The workers are expectant. The electrical station and water
supply work industriously. All other factories are either striking or
âItalianingâ [sit-down striking, after the form of Italian labor
protestors].
âThe mood of the army units is not favorable to the authorities.
Therefore they arenât sent to the front, but are held in barracks and
not issued weapons. Due to the danger of active interference by the
sailors, a partial transfer has been begun to the Black Sea. To the
front are sent exclusively cadets, and independent units quickly thrown
together from members of regional and suburban soviets.
âProduce situation. The entire amount on hand in the Petrograd
storehouses at the beginning of March amounted to 23,000 poods (a
meaningful part being frozen meat). Of that, 22,000 poods have now been
requisitioned for the needs of the Petrograd garrison; 1000 poods are
left for high Soviet employees. There are no reserves for the populace.
The steam grainmill Mordukha stands empty.
âHostage arrests are being carried out in Petrograd and its surrounding
areas. About 20,000 persons have been arrested by now. (The figure is
not confirmed.)
âThe March 4 session of the Petrosoviet. The Kronstadt events are the
main issue of the day. Zinoviev calls for the presentation of two
ultimatums: 1) to the people of Kronstadt, 2) to the striking Petrograd
factories, and the Baltic in particular. (After a number of speakers
testified, the second ultimatum was not presented.) By far the most
conspicuous speech was that of Filippov. Its contents in short: âHaving
fought in the July and October days of 1917 for the dictatorship of the
working class, we got a dictatorship of the ruling party.â After
Filippovâs speech, time was limited to seven minutes, and about 20
speakers were deprived of speech. None the less, seaman Emelianov was
able to read the Kronstadt resolution. The disorders among the Petrograd
seaman and the unsucessful attack on [fort] Totleben were explained with
factual reports.
âWounded from the Kronstadt front are beginning to arrive in Petrograd.
Many of them are self inflicted. For example, of 100 people wounded in
Sestroretsk, 60 were self inflicted.
âOn the 10th, more than 100 people from the Naval Academy refused to go
to the front. They were sent to the tribunal [court].
In the empire Eresefeser [RSFSR]
There once appeared a strange SR
(a spy also, and Menshevik)
Who spoke with tongue both spry and quick,
And a former priest (and general)
Who quickly built a fine scandal.
Very nicely lived the folk:
In the baths washed without soap,
Warmed in winter without wood,
And fattened up on fatless food.
Never rushing, in good measure,
Folks would eat their frozen taters,
And with tasty âSoviet hamâ
Indulge themselves, just now and then.
For a pair of wooden soles,
Three whole years they worked their doles,
Though tied in knots like broken shoots,
They never did obtain the bootsâŠ
Life, that is, flowed beautifully,
Without grumbling, patiently.
But the terrible dream is broken,
Entire, the garrison has woken,
Holding meetings, shouting solutions,
Scribbling up resolutions.
Then arrived himself Kalinin,
Tongue as soft and slick as linen,
He sang to them like honeyed wine,
But success he didnât find.
Every heart was set aflame,
And the poor Communards, what a shameâŠ
The few remaining âhearty souls,â
Were just like crabs upon the shoals,
And running heels were all that was seen,
Of those from the feared Cheka machine.
Fearing terrible retribution,
Flightâs the commissarâs solution,
But the politruk [head of the politotdel] didnât have the chance,
And now he sits without his pants,
Right there down in the old cell block,
With the Communists, a regular flock.
And theyâve even, scandal of all scandals,
Dressed themselves in plain bast sandals.
Gotten all upset and glum,
Trotsky sends an ultimatum,
âIf this disorder you donât douse,
Then, like a bunch of foolish grouse,
A loyal host having gathered round,
Iâll give the order to shoot you down.â
But our boys, firm and plucky,
Select a Committee and revtroiki,
Shoulder to shoulder now they sit,
Before a fire they have litâŠ
So wait a bit, for the moment when
The âmighty leadersâ make their ends,
Like little bugs, on weapon pins.
Krasnaia Gazeta reports in the March 12 edition:
âOranienbaum, 11th. There are confirmed reports that there is a
rebellion by seamen in Kronstadt.
âOranienbaum, 12th. Yesterday, individuals were noticed making their way
across the ice from Kronstadt to the Finnish shore. It was also noticed
that crossings were being made from Finland to Kronstadt. This all
points to an undoubtable connection with Finland.
âOranienbaum, 12th. Red pilots who were over Kronstadt yesterday report
that there are almost no people to be seen in the streets. There are no
guards or communications. Also, no communication with Finland is
visible.
âOranienbaum, 11th. Deserters from Kronstadt report that the sailorsâ
mood is one of demoralization. Faith in the sailors by the mutiny
leaders has fallen so low that they are no longer allowed to service the
artillery. The artillery is serviced exclusively by officers, in whose
hands actual power is located. The sailors have been removed from almost
all positions.
Firing in Kronstadt
By reports received today, frequent small arms and machine gun fire is
occurring in Kronstadt. This gives basis to think that there is an
uprising in Kronstadt.
The besieged condition of the town of Kronstadt forces our produce
organs to widely use stores of buckwheat and millet husks and oat chaff
for foraging horses. Feeding horses with substitutes can support the
horse and protect the transport we need if they are used especially
skillfully. Horses eat husks and chaff badly; they often sicken, and it
is not rare for them to die. In order that this doesnât happen, and that
the noted substitutes will be useful to us, the following is
recommended:
husks and oat chaff immediately, while stores of other forage are still
not exhausted. Changing one feed for another in a horseâs ration
requires time. The horse must be continuously prepared and accustomed to
the new feed.
starting the daily ration with 1/2, and only after several days (usually
two weeks) bringing it to the standard norm. The horse canât forget oats
and take to hulls quickly, and will be hungry and nervous for a long
time. Giving hulls immediately and in large quantity, without
preparation, will necessarily bring a dangerous colic in the horse.
form, and the dust which flies up irritates the horseâs nose and throat
and brings out a cough in the horse. Before giving the chaff and hulls
to the horse, it is absolutely necessary to moisten them in water for
12-18 hours, or to steam them with boiling water. It is possible to use
the method of Ăself-warmingâ, or fermentation, of the hulls and chaff.
That is done like this: Dig a pit of the size necessary, line it with
boards, and divide it into 4 sections with a partition. This is done
because the fermentation of the chaff usually takes 3 days, and
therefore if there are 4 sections it is possible to have a
self-fermenting fresh feed every day, readily eaten by horses. Before
lining the pit, the hulls and chaff are usually moistened with not
particularly cold water, and then are pressed thickly into the pit. A
bit of hay dust quickens the fermentation process, and a small amount of
salt improves the taste. The size of the pit is dependant on the daily
demand for chaff; 1 cubic arshin [1 arshin is equal to .71 meters] gives
around 100 pounds of self-fermented chaff.
remove earth and small stones, for if these are added, the horse gets a
sore mouth, eats it badly and often sickens.
such substitutes are used in case of special need, it is absolutely
necessary to add a small quantity of salt to the feed.
added oats, hay dust, twigs and a small quantity of salt.
Best of all in the morning is to give the horse a little hay, and only
then chaff and husks.
husks. This will protect the horse from sickness.
Donât keep it wet and in the wind. Increase the horseâs supervision and
care.
By following all the offered rules, you will meaningfully lighten the
effect of feed substitutes on the horse, and help us to preserve it for
our bright future, when economy and labor will develop without the
threat of cannons, and without substitutes for the peopleâs will and
power.
The veterinary doctor
In Petrograd, the entire militia has been placed on a barracks footing,
and is carrying out increased work to protect the city, the electrical
station, train stations, factories and other sites. As regards the
militia women, they are carrying out guard duties protecting
institutions and factories. Thus, on guard of the Putilovsky Factory
there are now exclusively women on duty.
The trial court of the Petrograd Revolutionary Military Tribunal heard
the matter of Mikhail Iakovlevich Bulanov, sldr. of âIâ Battalion, who
was accused of leaving his battalion without permission while it was
moving into attack, and of spreading rumors which might have brought
sedition and panic in the soldiersâ ranks.
Bulanov refused to fight against his brother Kronstadters. The tribunal
sentenced M. Ia. Bulanov, 20, to execution. The sentence was carried
into fulfillment.
The following donations have arrived for the defenders of the approaches
to Kronstadt: From I. Pervushin, 1/2 lb. of makhorka [cheap tobacco] and
2 boxes of matches; from Comrade Arkhipov, a pair of boots; from Comrade
Kiselnikov, 3 packs of cigarettes, 3 boxes of matches and 1 pair of
Russian high boots.
From Onisimov, 1 pair of old boots, 1 pair of underwear, 2 tobacco
pouches, 1/4 lb. of makhorka and 2 boxes of matches; from Tsiplenkov, 1
pair of green cloth trousers and 1/2 lb. of makhorka; from Ignatiev, 1
pair of boots, 3/8 lb. of makhorka and 2 boxes of matches; from
Mikhailov, 1 pair of underwear, 1 seamanâs duck blouse and 3/8 lb. of
makhorka; from Bekker 1 pair of boots, 3/8 lb. of makhorka and 1 box of
matches; from Yakushkin, 1/4 lb. of first quality tobacco; from Gurov,
1/4 lb. of makhorka; from Riumin, 1 pair of Russian uniform boots and
3/8 lb. of makhorka; from Grigoriev, 1 pair of boots; from Fadeev, 1/8
lb. of makhorka; from Bobyliev, 1 pair of trousers, 1 sailorâs flannel
blouse, 1 service cap, and 1/8 lb. of makhorka; from Veidekis, 1 pair of
Russian boots and 1/4 lb. of tobacco; from Stogov, 1 pair of underwear,
1 1/2 lb. of cereals and 1 can of pickled cabbage; from Bomkov, 1 pair
of old boots and 1 quilted skirt; from Komarov, 1/4 lb. of makhorka and
1 box of matches; from Okosov, 1/8 lb. of makhorka; from Scherbakov, 1/8
lb. of makhorka; from Kulgas, 1/8 lb. of makhorka; from Romanov, 1/4 lb.
of makhorka and 1 box of matches.
For issue to the garrison units and town residents of the fortress of
Kronstadt.
A. Bread issue to army units, the fleet and workers from March 15
through 21 inclusive.
meat a day. 3. 3/8 pound of meat a day.
To the civilian populace:
To children of series A.
through April 1. 3. 1 lb. of wildfowl through April 1. 4. 3 eggs through
April 1.
To children of series B.
A quarter pound of meat a day. 4. A quarter pound of cheese through
April first.
To children of series C.
pound of caviar, one time.
To adults of letter B.
caviar, with a quarter pound one time.
Besides this, to children of all series is additionally issued a quarter
lb. of table butter, and a half pound of sugar, and to adults a quarter
pound of salted butter, and a half pound of sugar.
PETRICHENKO, President of the Rev. Com.
SOLOVIANOV, Head of the Defense of the Fortress of Kronstadt
It is announced that bread for March 14 was issued from stores No 1, 4,
25, 11, 12, 14, 19 and 31. Those who didnât receive any are directed to
receive it today at those same stores.
For March 15, a half pound of bread is issued by adult cards of letter A
for bread coupon No 18.
âToday, 3 lbs. of oats are issued by adult B cards for bread coupon No
22, counted against the bread norm for March 15, 16, and 17.
â3 pounds of barley is issued by childrenâs B and C cards, counted
against the bread norm for the six days from March 15 through 20: by B
cards for bread coupon No 12, and C for bread coupon No 22.
Issue of the declared produce will take place for 4 days.
Issue of remaining produce counted against the bread norm will be
announced specially.
Due to the new allotment, today is the last day for all old issues,
announced before March 14, with the exception of meat. The last day of
meat issue is Wednesday, 3/16.
TUKIN, President of the Administration of Gorprodkom
âThe Committee of the Union of Metal Workers notifies comrade workers
that cigarette papers and âBakerâ brand powder are issued to members
from the union store.
âA purse with the documents of citizen Natalia Bunakova has been lost.
Personal identification and a night pass are in it.
âThe Administration of the Union of Workers in Education and Socialist
Culture informs that there will be a General Meeting of members of the
union at 4 pm on March 15 at the 3rd Labor School. Attendance is
mandatory.
âPersonal identification No 44 in the name of seaman M. Kreinin has been
lost. Please consider it invalid.
All military units, workerâs associations and institutions can receive
âIzvestiia of the Revolutionary Committeeâ and pamphlets at
Sevtsentropechat, in accordance with the worked out norm.
On March 16, a meeting of the Congress of the Russian Communist Party
(Bolsheviks) passed a Resolution On Party Unity addressing the uprising:
The fact that the enemies of the proletariat take advantage of all
deviations from a strictly consistent communist line was seen most
clearly in the example of the Kronstadt uprising, when the bourgeois
counterrevolution and White Guards in all the worldâs countries
immediately manifested their readiness to accept even slogans favouring
a Soviet system, if only the dictatorship of the proletariat could be
overthrown in Russia; when the Socialist Revolutionaries and the
bourgeois counterrevolution in general made use, in Kronstadt, of
slogans allegedly favoring an uprising in favor of a Soviet system but
opposed to the Soviet government in Russia. Such instances fully prove
that the White Guardists are strivingâand are ableâto assume the guise
of communists and even to assume positions to the âleftâ of communism,
if only they can weaken and overthrow the bulwark of the proletarian
revolution in Russia.
This resolution concluded by further centralizing power in the Central
Committee to expel any member from the Party on any pretext:
âIn order to ensure strict discipline within the party and in all Soviet
work, and to achieve maximum unity while eliminating all factionalism,
the Congress gives the Central Committee full powers to apply all
measures of party punishment up to and including expulsion from the
party in cases of violation of discipline or of a revival or toleration
of factionalism.â
At the same time, Trotsky made a statement to the London Daily Herald,
repeating the previous allegations that the uprising was simply the work
of âcounter-revolutionary generals.â
âIf the liquidation of the Kronstadt mutiny is taking some time, this is
because, in the measures we are adopting, we have had and are having not
only to spare our units unnecessary losses but also to spare in every
way possible the peaceful population and the garrison of Kronstadt,
which is not participating in the mutiny. Our losses due to the guns of
Kronstadt have so far been insignificant.â
In fact, the Bolsheviks had already suffered a large number of
casualties.
Trotsky concluded by asserting that âThe historical assignment of the
SRs and Mensheviks consists in trying to put the Russian
counter-revolution in the saddle, as the agent of world imperialism.â
Any communist or socialist who was not a Bolshevik was effectively an
accomplice of world imperialism.
At the same time, Red Army shells were falling in Kronstadt near the
cemetery where the rebels were performing burial rites for their fallen
comrades.
Today, March 16, at 4 pm, after a burial service in the Naval Cathedral,
THE FIRST SACRIFICES IN THE STRUGGLE
FOR FREEDOM OF THE LABORERS
will be committeed to earth in a fraternal grave on Revolution Square.
Killed on March 8: Aleksandr Kapralov, Mikhail Aleksandrov, Aleksandr
Danilov, Zakhar Klimenkov, Stepan Mischenko, and one worker and four
soldiers whose names have not been discovered.
Died from wounds: Foma Shaposhnikov, Petr Fedorov, Iakov Arkhipov, Semen
Drozdov, Feodosii Khatko, Sergei Nechaev, Mikhail Bystrov, Aleksandr
Pospelov, Ivan Pakhtalov and Stepan Kevshin.
From 24:00, March 14 through 12:00, March 15
Around 6 am, the adversaryâs intelligence made an attempt to approach
our guard line, but was dispersed by fire. Prisoners were taken by us.
Around 11 am, the adversary began occasional artillery fire.
For the time from 12:00 noon until 12:00 midnight, March 15
From 2 pm on, there was occasional artillery firing. Around 5 pm, firing
ceased. After 6:30 pm, the enemy apparatuses [airplanes] carried out
three raids. One bomb was thrown, but didnât cause any harm. The
apparatuses flew away after the very first shots by our anti-aircraft
batteries.
OSOSOV, Vice President of the Prov. Rev. Com.
SOLOVIANOV, Head of the Defense
Carrying out the October Revolution, the seamen, soldiers, workers, and
peasants spilled their blood for Soviet power, for the construction of a
Republic of labor.
The Communist Party well understood the mood of the masses. Having
written deceitful slogans that stirred the masses on its banner, it drew
them along behind it, and promised to bring them to a bright Kingdom of
Socialism which only the Bolsheviks could build.
Naturally, limitless joy filled the workers and peasants. âAt last,
slavery under the yoke of land owners and capitalists would pass into
the realm of legend,â they thought. It seemed that the time of free
labor on the land and in the factories had come. It seemed that all
power had passed into the laborersâ hands.
The children of the laboring people were drawn into the partyâs ranks by
sly propaganda, and held there with the chain of severe discipline.
Feeling their strength, the Communists first removed from power the
socialists of other movements. Then they shoved the workers and peasants
themselves from the helm of the ship of state. At the same time, they
continued to rule the country in their name.
The Communists exchanged the stolen power for the authority of
commissars, and for arbitrary rule over the body and soul of the
citizens of Soviet Russia. Contrary to common sense, and in defiance of
the will of the laborers, there began the persistent construction of
bureaucratic socialism with its slaves, instead of a free kingdom of
labor.
Having let production fall into disarray under âworkersâ control,â the
Bolsheviks carried out nationalization of the plants and factories. From
a slave of the capitalist, the worker became a slave of the bureaucratic
institutions. Even that became too little. They planned to bring in the
Taylor sweatshop system.
The entire laboring peasantry was counted with the kulaks, declared an
enemy of the people. The enterprising Communists occupied themselves
with destruction, and took to setting up Soviet farms, the estates of a
new land owner, the state. That is what the peasantry received under
Bolshevik socialism instead of free labor with liberated land.
In exchange for grain requisitioned almost bare, and cows and horses
taken away, there were Cheka raids and executions. Thereâs a good
exchange of products in the labor state: in exchange for bread, lead and
bayonets.
A citizenâs life became impossibly boring and bureaucratic. It was life
drawn by the powers that be. Instead of a free development of
personality and a free laboring life, there arose a completely
unprecedented slavery. Any free thought, any fair criticism of the
actions of the criminal rulers was made a crime, punishable by
imprisonment, and not rarely even by execution.
The death sentence, a desecration of human dignity, began to flourish
âin the socialist fatherland.â This is that bright Kingdom of Socialism
which the Communist Party brought us to. We have received bureaucratic
socialism with Soviets full of bureaucrats, who obediently vote by the
orders of a committee of the party of infallable commissars.
The slogan, âhe who doesnât work, doesnât eat,â was turned inside out
under the new, âSovietâ order to be, âall for the commissars.â And for
the workers, peasants and laboring intelligentsia there remained labor,
continuous and unenlightening, in prisonlike conditions.
It became unbearable, and Revolutionary Kronstadt first broke the
manacles, and broke the prison bars, fighting for Socialism of another
kind. It is fighting for a laboring Soviet Republic, where the producer
will find himself the fully empowered master and commander of the
produce of his own labor.
In the proud knowledge of its power and with the strong desire to
rebuild desecrated freedoms, Kronstadt threw off the Communist yoke. It
refused to pay tribute in the lives, fortunes and welfare of its people
to a bunch of lunatics.
Tortured Russia was forced to bear the nightmare of the All-Russian
Cheka, the rivers of blood shed by innocents, sobs and moans in the
village hut, thefts, and oppressions in the cities, and strangling of
any thought or any living word, all for the good of the unbothered
existence of the Kremlin khans.
But at the same time, these sufferings increased the fortressâs
strengths ten fold from the very first moment of the formation of the
Provisional Revolutionary Committee. When Kronstadt, that veteran of
freedom, answered the first shot of the socialist autocrats, there was a
feeling as if along with a round from a gun barrel there shot out
indignation and revulsion. It was felt that there will not be an end to
this revulsion until the time when the chains of âCommunist freedomâ
which entangle the laboring people have been torn away.
Kronstadt, in calm certainty that it was correct, said to its enemies,
âCome and get it.â The jackals of the Communist pack bared their teeth,
the leaders began to howl, and the ravens, smelling the kill beforehand,
flew down from all sides to the Oranienbaum and Sestroretsk shores.
Loyal communards by good will, and the remaining soldiers deceived with
tales of what is being created here and driven with machine guns, were
expected to obtain the head of grey Kronstadt for the red headquarters
at Krasnoflotskii in two shakes, as it was said in Petrogradskaia
Pravda.
The quick accounting was not successful. Neither tsarist methods of
repression using contemporary junker-cadets, nor the napoleonic heads of
the central commands of all the fronts could help the situation.
In powerless spite, the jackals ran away with their tails between their
legs. The ravens have flown off with wild croaking to the familiar nests
of their secret police, sowing slander and lies in their Communist
press, and shooting or putting in prison those who didnât want and do
not want to believe in Petrogradskaia Pravda.
Powerless spite: to hide the truth of free Kronstadt from you at the
price of blood and lies.
Every new shot from the fortress brings closer the liberation of all the
countryâs laborers from the shameful Communist yoke.
THE REVTROIKA OF THE AIR DEFENSE
Today, one more grave mound rose on Kronstadtâs Anchor Square. The
beginnings of the 3rd Revolution were laid in this square, and in it
will be committed to earth the first warrior heroes for its slogans.
Brothers in spirit, they will lie in a fraternal grave. Twenty red
coffins with our defendersâ bodies will be lowered into the earth. These
red coffins are the symbol the the blood spilled in battle for the good
of the laborers, and a symbol of the fire of Revolution, sweeping from
its path all who raise their hand against the will of the laboring
people, and lighting the torch of freedom.
Therefore, may their murderers know that in burying our red heroes, we
have also dug a grave for them. We will bury the butchers there without
a feeling of sorrow or sadness, but with damnation.
The shadow of Protopopov crowns the insane heads of the bloodthirsty
stranglers with Trepovâs laurels. Raising bridges, counting on
starvationâOh gendarmeâs of Nikolai, you turn white before them. Lies in
newspapers, provocation by FinlandâOh Gapon, how far they are ahead of
you. Bands of chekists, cadet detachmentsâOh berserkers of the Turkish
sultans, you have risen from the dead.
There are machine guns at the crossroads; an icebreaker has passed down
the Neva [in order to make the river uncrossable]. Workers of Petrograd!
You have all been arrested. You are all being watched by the butcher
Trotsky. Seaman and soldiers are locked in their barracks. This is a new
kind of concentration camp for the proletariat.
When we, through our authorities, proposed that a delegation be sent to
Kronstadt and impartially convinced that there are neither generals nor
epaulets with us, but only the laboring mass, which has taken power in
its own hands, we agreed that to the impartial non-party comrades would
be added Communists, chosen by your authorities, they opened fire.
Why did they do this? The leaders of the authorities cannot not know the
truth, and because they know, they are committing a crime. Their power
is being destroyed. It slips from them. They must choke and strangle
their adversaries, and the stronger they do so, the longer they will
exist.
These political corpses have outlived themselves. They have died in
Russia, for Russia, apart from Russia, but they still hold on, and in
order to hold on they raise the bridges, send an icebreaker down the
Neva, set up machine guns, arrest 20,000 people⊠But will they be able
to arrest all of Russia?
And with all of this, they call themselves the power of workers and
peasants.
Break the chains, brothers. The dawn of the 3rd Revolution is rising.
The bright sun of freedom shines here in Kronstadt. The oppressors power
tumbled down like a house of cards, and we, free, are building our
Revolutionary Soviet.
Lend a hand, brothers, and forward for freedom and fortune, for power to
Soviets, and not parties.
EVINKTIS, seaman of the battleship Sevastopol
Brought to the Naval Hospital from March 10 through 14
KILLED: soldiersâSergei NECHAEV and Feodosii KHATKO
DIED OF WOUNDS: Iakov ARKHIPOV
LIGHTLY WOUNDED: sldrs. - Fedor SHITEL, Andrei KOLIASA, Pantelei
KARELIN, Georgii CHALENKO, and sailor Dmitrii CHERIUKANOV
HEAVILY WOUNDED: Iosif ERMOLAEV, Mikhail SOVRASOV
Yesterday, it was possible to see an interesting sight in the town. A
directive was given by the Department of Administration, through the
uchkoms, on cleaning the sidewalks of ice and snow. Under the thunder of
cannons, citizens poured into the streets and took after the work in a
comradely way. The necessary tools were found: shovels, crowbars, axes
and the like. The populace answered in a comradely way to the laboring
duty, which under the commissarocracy they did under the lash.
March 14, a meeting of the Prov. Rev. Com. took place. Among other
things, the following resolution was made.
1). About the Worker-Peasant Inspection;
Having heard the report of Comrade Romanenko about the unclear and
undefined condition of the existing apparatus of inspection and control,
it being an organ chosen by the former Soviet, and not answering to the
spirit of the time, after an exchange of opinions it is resolved:
The Worker-Peasant Inspection of the former Kronstadt Soviet Department
is to be eliminated. Worker control over civilian institutions is to be
placed with the Soviet of Trade Unions, which is assigned to chose a set
number of people from the memberships of all the unions. It also must
take control of all matters left by the former Worker-Peasant
Inspection.
2). About the Cultural-Educational Section of the former Politotdel;
It is resolved: The Revtroika is to be eliminated. All
cultural-educational work is to be given into the authority of the
Garrison Club.
All property and resources of the former Politotdel and its sections and
sub-departments are to be transferred to the Garrison Club. The Garrison
Club Revtroika is to take charge of all this, and to make a report on it
to the Prov. Rev. Com.
3). About shock work on the repair of the water transport and liquid
resources of the Kronstadt Port and Fortress.
It is resolved:
The Soviet of Unions is assigned to immediately call a Technical
Conference of representatives from interested institutions. This
Conference is assigned to urgently find out, jointly with a
representative of the Prov. Rev. Com.: 1) the necessary number of
working hands, 2) the amount of material needed, and 3) the amount of
time need for completion of the shock work.
The following donations have arrived at the Fleet Department of Produce
Distribution for the use of the defenders of true freedom:
March 14, from employees of the Prodbaza: Comrade Voevutsky, a new
summer soldierâs blouse, 1/4 lb. of tobacco, and 1/4 lb. of makhorka
[i.e., cheap tobacco]; Comrade Filippov, 1/8 of makhorka and one box of
matches; from Comrade Mikhailov, 1/2 lb. of makhorka; from Comrade
Alekseev, a new jacket, a pair of puttees, 1/4 of tobacco, and 3 boxes
of matches; from Comrade Kuvaldin, high boots, wide summer trousers, 250
cigarette papers, 1/4 of tobacco, and 3/8 of makhorka; from Comrade
Nikitin, 1 pair of underwear, 1 shirt, 1/8 lb. of makhorka, and a piece
of gray soap; from Comrade Buman, a soldierâs blouse, a new sheet, wide
trousers, a shirt, 1 pair of socks, 1/2 lb. of tobacco, 1/2 lb. of
makhorka, 500 cigarette papers, and 10 boxes of matches.
March 15, from the employees of the Prodbaza of the Fleet Produce
Administration: from Comrade Mokhov, 3/4 lb. of makhorka; from Comrade
Kondrashev, 1 underwear, 1 shirt, 1/2 lb. of high grade tobacco, 3/8 lb.
of makhorka, and 250 cigarette papers; from Comrade Baikov, 1 pair of
boots, 1 pair of new pants, 1/3 lb. of makhorka, and 2 boxes of matches;
Onuchin, 1 pair of boots, 1 pair of cloth trousers, and 1/4 lb. of
makhorka; Poplavsky, 1 pair of boots, 2 sailorsâ striped vests, 1 pair
of underwear, 1 puttees, 1/8 of makhorka, 25 cigarettes, 2 boxes of
matches, and 1 cloth sailorâs blouse; Artamonov, 1 pair of boots, 1
underwear, 1 black pants, and 1/2 of tobacco; Manivmon, 1 quilted
trousers, 1 flannel sailorâs blouse, 1 sailorâs striped vest, and 3/8
lb. of makhorka; Ilyin, 1 set of workerâs clothing, 1 soldierâs hat, 1
pair of foot bindings, and 1/4 lb. of makhorka; Svirshevsky, 10,000
rubles, and 1/4 lb. of makhorka; Bek, 1 flannel sailorâs blouse and 1
second hand trousers; Shipelev, summer trousers, 1 set of workerâs
clothing, 2 soldierâs hats, and 1/4 lb. of makhorka; Maltsev, 1/4 lb. of
makhorka; Telenkov, 2000 rubles, 1 army soldierâs hat. and 1/4 lb. of
makhorka.
The General Meeting of servicemen of the Administration of the 4th
Division of Artillery unanimously resolved to extend a fraternal hand of
aid to the defenders of free Kronstadt, and share an extra pair of
boots. In the same day, the following made donations:
Nikitin B., Karpov I., Dvoinikov I., Sumin F., Sidorov V., Osipov V.,
Naumovich K., Panov V., Malyshev I., Uvarov M., Zubarev V., Veselov V.,
Kriuchkov M., Morokhin I., Elesin I., Vasiliev I., Vorobiev I., Mazul
A., Ostaschev I., Povoliaev A., Parenkov N., Kirilov A., Govorlivykh A.,
Emelianov Kh., Ankudinov F., Stopin N., Zakharov V.
Donations continue to arrive.
On March 14, an unknown female citizen gave about 5-6 pounds of meat
into the command of the President of the Revtroika of the Naval Crew of
the First Command of Baltflot. At that time, the seamen had just set off
for one of the numbered forts, and the meat was placed in their hands.
The seamen give their heartfelt gratitude to the conscientious citizen.
It is now known to all that this great-spirited, unknown woman shared
this so valuable and tasty morsel with the seamen.
May the party of traitorous liars know this, may they tremble
pathetically before the single, fraternal family of Kronstadt.
Crew of the First Command of Baltflot
The all-Russian commune
Razed us to the ground,
The Communist dictatorship
Brought us to ruin.
We drove the landowners out,
And waited for freedom, land,
We shook off all the Romanovs,
And were blessed with Communists.
Instead of freedom and land
They gave us the Cheka
And planted Soviet farms
Hither and yon.
They take away bread and beast,
The peasant bloats from hunger,
They took a gray horse from Erema,
And a ploughshare from Makar.
There are no matches, nor kerosine,
Everyone sits with a torch,
Under the Bolshevist commune,
They only eat potatoes.
They sent to the village
Five arshins of red calico,
The commissars took it all away,
Not an inch for the middle peasant.
And throughout Russia
The peasant rose for land,
But everyone writes in Izvestiia,
âThe kulaks have rebelled.â
The chekist rides out
Like a tsarist general,
Floods the land with blood,
Heâs fleeced everything to the bone.
Theyâre bringing serfdom for us anew,
Hey, wake up peasants!
Only the Bolsheviks alone,
Eat and drink like the barons before.
Arise peasant folk!
A new dawn is risingâ
Weâll throw off Trotskyâs fetters,
Weâll throw off Lenin the tsar.
Weâll overthrow the dictatorship,
Weâll give freedom to labor,
Weâll allot for labor
The land, factories and plants.
Labor will establish equality,
And with labor free forever
Fraternity of all people will come,
And otherwise never.
At a general meeting of 240 prisoners of war, being cadets, officers,
and soldiers, taking place in the Army Stables, the following resolution
was passed unanimously.
âOn March 8, we, Moscow and Petrograd cadets, officers and soldiers,
received an order to attack the town of Kronstadt. They told us that
White Guards had raised a mutiny in the town of Kronstadt. When we came
without a shot to the shores of the Town of Kronstadt, and having met
the forward units of sailors and workers, we became convinced that there
was no kind of White Guard mutiny in Kronstadt. On the contrary, the
soldiers and workers had overturned the power of the commissarocracy.
Right there, we voluntarily crossed to the side of the people of
Kronstadt. We now ask the Rev. Com. of the Town of Kronstadt to add our
strength to its army units, since we want to stand up as defenders of
the workers and peasants, not just of Kronstadt but of all Russia also.
We consider that the Prov. Rev. Com. of the Town of Kronstadt has really
taken the true path in the cause of liberation of all laborers, and that
only with this slogan, âAll power to Soviets, and not Parties,â is it
possible to bring to an end the work which has been begun.
We promise to tell of anyone noticed propagandizing against the actions
and orders of the Prov. Rev. Com. of the Town of Kronstadt, and to send
them on the the Rev. Com.
(signature), President
(signature), Secretary
At the General Meeting of the crew of fort Totleben Morskoi, taking
place March 15, after the report of delegates from the Prov. Rev. Com.,
the following resolution was passed: âWe the garrison of fort Totleben
Morskoi greet you, comrade seamen, workers and soldiers of the town of
Kronstadt, in the great difficult hour of our glorious struggle against
the hated Communist yoke. We are all ready as one to die for the
liberation of our suffering brothers, the peasants and workers of all
Russia, who are held in chains of damned slavery by deceipt and
oppression. Protecting the approaches to Kronstadt, we will be faithful
to our word to the end. We believe that soon we will smash to bits the
circle of enemies around the fortress with a decisive attack, and bring
freedom to every person of the suffering motherland, real truth and
freedom.â
All those leaving the ranks of the RCP are directed to turn in their
party booklets and identifications to their electoral troikas. Those
leaving the party in the future and giving declarations are directed to
do so right now.
Declarations of departure from the RCP arrive unceasingly at the
editorial offices, but in view of their great quantity and the
insufficiency of space, the editors are unable to publish them
immediately, and will include them as possible in following editions of
the newspaper.
Having discussed the current situation, we, members of the RCP, are
disgusted by the shameless actions of the little bunch of Communist
bureaucrats who strive to protect their power with arms, and to build
prosperity for themselves on othersâ misfortune. We openly declare that
we did not enter the party in order to drown the world of laborers in
blood, but to give all our strength and knowledge for the good of the
laborers. This gang used our trust and wove itself a waspsâ nest. We
consider such oppressors to be outside the law, and we will, equally
with the toilers of the town of Kronstadt, defend the true path on which
the revolutionary seamen, soldiers, and workers stand. As of this date,
we do not consider ourselves to be members of the party, and give
ourselves entirely into the command of the Revolutionary Committee.
Fedorov, Efimov, Berendakov, Kurochkin, Tikhomirov, Esh, Kuznetsov,
Vishnevsky, Efimov, Storkhberg, Tmota and Tsepaev, employees of the
Worker-Peasant Inspection
Declarations have also arrived from the following:
Seamen: 232) Kulakov Mikhail, 233) Burmistrov Aleksandr, 234) Lugovskoi
Mikhail, 235) Dudkevich Arkadii, 236) Shabariv Ivan, 237) Romanov
Sergei, 238) Mamchenko Pavel, 239) Baranon Kuzma, 240) Kotenkov Ivan,
241) Sviiazev Sergei, 242) Brauk Karl, 243) Vokovets Ivan, 244)
Vinogradov Mikhail, 245) Senni Maksim, 246) Bogdanov Vasilii, 247)
Terentiev Stepan, 248) Grafov Aleksei, 249) Krasnoshevsky Iosif, 250)
Cheridnichenko Mark, 251) Lisitsyn Nikolai, 252) Sorokin Semion, 253)
Diak Anton, 254) Bykov Grigorii, 255) Vlasov Dmitrii, 256) Sereda
Andrei, 257) Buluev Andrei, 258) Ekimov Mikhail, 259) Morozov Aleksei,
260) Korliakov Grigorii, 261) Malaukhov Vasilii, 262) Prasolov Grigorii,
263) Butin Ivan, 264) Poliakov Gerasim, 265) Shatokhin Mikhail, 266)
Saltykov Mikhail, 267) Iurchenko Mark, 268) Raskatov Vasilii, 269)
Gusarov Mikhail, 270) Zhitnikov Aleksandr, [sic] 272) Protasov Ivan,
273) Sovolev Mikhail, 274) Markov Mikhail, 275) Kholodov Ivan, 276)
Marinov G., 277) Sitnikov Andrei.
Candidate members of the RCP: I. Marklev; A. Utrimov, soldier of the
10th Battery; also N. Malafeev; Kondratenko, member of the RCP; S.
Gorlov, sldr. of 4th Division; I. Kivikhin, employee of the Prodbaza; I.
Grigoriev, sldr. of the Fortress Fire Crew; also I. Korotov; N. Andreev,
member of the Admin. of the Union of Sewing Production; N. Tikhomirov,
employee of the Watch Crew of the Kronstadt Port; Zavialov, sldr. of
fort Totleben; also P. Ivanov; N. Platonov, seaman; F. Zhilin, master in
the Naval Artillery Laboratory; Angileiko, Aide to the Commander of the
Engineer. Work. Battalion; Nikiforov, Aide to the Director of the
Transport String of the Admin. of Construction; I. Panfilov, sldr. of
560th Battalion; also D. Piskarev; N. Vinogradov; also Korshinov; A.
Solonschikov, soldier of the Watch Crew of the Kronstadt Port; also I.
Maksimov; K. Grigoriev, seaman; E. Khromov, member of the RCP; A.
Krasikov, Head of the Admin. of the Commander of the Town of Kronstadt;
E. Tikhomirov, seaman; Gamzov, employee of the Ship Department; also
Leonenko; also Korotkevich; also Galakhov; also Blashek; also Bortnikov;
also A. Beliaev; also E. Balaev; also I. Petrov; also Sterling; also
Iampoltsev; also Petkevich; also E. Nikitin; also V. Egorov; also
Karpovich; also Shulgin; also Vnukov, also I. Bykhov, sldr. of the
Kotlin Railroad; also Brynsky; also Volkov; also Baranovsky; also M.
Fedorov; also Grushechevich; also Kuzmin; also V. Romanov; also V.
Zembal; also S. Afanasenko, militiaman; also N. Kraubner, serviceman of
the Admin of Construct. of the Fortress; P. Ukhnalevich, member of the
RCP; also 334) Popov.
Today, half a pound of bread is issued by adult cards of letter A for
coupon No 17. March 16, 17, and 18, 2 lbs. of white flour is issued by
childrenâs cards of series A from stores No 1, 5, 10, 13, 14 ,15, 25,
and 30 (independent of registration) for produce coupon No 11, and a one
pound tin on canned milk from stores No 5 and 14 for produce coupon No
12. Flour and milk will be issued for three days.
March 16 and 17, the haberdashery store (formerly belonging to Schukin)
will be open from 2 to 7. It is incumbent on institutions and citizens
having orders for good from the above named store to register them in
the Department of Distribution of Gorprodkom, room No 19, and to receive
the goods during the announced period.
AL. OKOLOTKOV, for the President of Gorprodkom
âThe handicraft workshop of the Soviet of the Peopleâs Economy accepts
orders for bed linen and clothes, with trimmings supplied by the
orderer.
âThe Department of Social Security announces to citizens that textiles
in the possession of the Department have all been distributed. Others
who have turned in applications will be supplied first, upon receipt of
textiles.
âWarrant No 12 of Comrade Nikitin, member of the Revtroika of the
battleship Petropavlovsk has been lost. We ask that it be considered
invalid.
The Administration of the Central Garrison Club brings to the attention
of club members that lessons have resumed in all studios. It therefore
addresses a request to all teachers, and also to club members to attend
lessons as possible.
The Revtroika of the Prodbaza asks military units and the civilian
populace to not throw away tins from preserves, since they can be used a
second time for the same purpose. Please turn them in at the following
addresses.
At Big Port, to Aramonov, the overseer of the warehouses, or on former
Kniazheskaya Street at the Oprodkomflot Store. Receipt will take place
from 10 am until 4 pm.
Before dawn on March 17, the final attack on Kronstadt got underway,
involving fully 50,000 Red Army troops. The Kronstadt sailors fought
valiantly, but they were dramatically outnumbered and the Red Army was
willing to absorb a large number of deaths to recapture the outpost and
put an end to the standoff. According to Paul Avrich, the American
consul estimated Red Army casualties as high as 10,000. The fighting
lasted all day and into the evening.
The next day, March 18, was the anniversary of the beginning of the
Paris Commune.
Over 8000 of the rebelsâincluding Petrichenko and ten other members of
the Revolutionary Committeeâescaped across the ice to Finland, more than
half of the total number of fighters at Kronstadt. Others were not so
lucky.
Ask by the chairman of the Revolutionary Tribunal why he had opposed
himself to Soviet power, one defendant answered ironically: âWhat
difference does it make to us ignorant people what kind of power?â
On March 31, 1921, having crushed their own equivalent of the Paris
Commune, the Bolshevik authorities renamed both of the best-known ships
that had participated in the Kronstadt uprising. Without a trace of
irony, they renamed the Sevastopol, which had sustained Red Army strikes
from three 12-inch shells that killed or wounded 102 rebel sailors, the
Parizhskaya Kommuna (âParis Communeâ). Likewise, they renamed the
Petropavlovsk the Marat after the murdered French revolutionary leader,
Jean-Paul Marat.
Wherever you see a monument, you can be sure a slaughter took place.