Iskra
"Из искры возгорится пламя" ("From a spark a flame will flare up") | ||
Founder(s) |
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Staff writers |
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Founded | 1900 | |
Political alignment | Circulation | 8,000 |
Iskra (Russian: Искра, IPA:
History
Iskra was published in exile and then smuggled into Russia.
Iskra quickly became the most successful underground Russian newspaper in 50 years.[6] It was smuggled into Russia via Romania, and reprinted on secret presses in Kishinev and the Caucasus.[1] Using the networks created to write for and distribute the paper, Lenin and Martov prepared organisationally for the Second Congress of the RSDLP.[1]
In 1903, following the split of the RSDLP, Chairman Georgi Plekhanov chose to seek reconciliation with dissident party members who had walked out on the vote to reduce the number of seats on the editorial board from six to three. He chose to nominate three members, all Mensheviks. Lenin resigned shortly before the nominations were finalized, leaving Iskra firmly in Menshevik hands.[7]
Political viewpoint
Iskra's motto was "Из искры возгорится пламя" (Iz iskry vozgoritsya plamya — "From a spark a flame will flare up") — a line from the reply Alexander Odoevsky wrote to the poem by Alexander Pushkin addressed to the anti-tsar Decembrists imprisoned in Siberia. The editorial line championed the battle for political freedom as well as the cause of socialist revolution.[2] The paper also ran a number of notable polemics against "economists", who argued against political struggle in favour of pure trade-union activity for the worker's economic interests, as well as the Socialist Revolutionaries, who advocated terror tactics.[8] In the book What Is to Be Done?, Lenin argues that trade-union activity, although being a good starting point for revolution, would only stay at the level of trade-unionist politics and would not be capable, in itself, of challenging the aristocracy or capitalism. Lenin, on the other hand, argues for a vanguard party, made up of professional revolutionaries, to lead the political struggle and raise the average worker to the level of revolutionaries.[9]
As outlined by Lenin in What Is to Be Done?, Iskra took the place of a central project to cohere the RSDLP nationally.[2] As one of the editors of Iskra, Lenin was:
"allowed a virtual monopoly over communications with party workers in Russia and could count on the acquiescence of his colleagues in his endeavours to put his organizational program into practice"[1]
Staff
Initial staff members:
- Vladimir Lenin (Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov)
- Dmitri Ilyich Ulyanov, his younger brother
- Georgi Plekhanov
- Vera Zasulich
- Pavel Axelrod (Pinchas Borutsch)
- Julius Martov (Ilija Cederbaum)
- Aleksandr Potresov
Later:
- Leon Trotsky (Lev Davidovich Bronstein)
Some of the staff were later involved in the
Blumenfeld did the printing. Leo Deutsch was the administrator of Iskra but did not share in the editorial work.[10]
See also
Footnotes
- ^ a b c d Wildman, Allan K. (1964). "Lenin's Battle with Kustarnichestvo: The Iskra Organization in Russia". Slavic Review. 23 (3): 479–503 – via JSTOR.
- ^ ISBN 978-90-04-13120-0.
- ISBN 978-0-465-02859-7.
- ^ Glancey, Jonathan. G2: Architecture, The Guardian, 21 June 2004
- ^ John Saville, "Quelch, Henry [Harry] (1858–1913)", rev. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004.
- ISBN 978-0-304-31814-8.
- ISBN 978-0393301953.
- ^ Miliukov, Paul (1962). Russia and its Crisis. Collier-Macmillan Ltd. pp. 353–4.
- ISBN 1900007924.
- ^ Lenin and the Old Iskra; Part II in Lenin, (1925) by Leon Trotsky
Further reading
- Allan K. Wildman, "Lenin's Battle with Kustarnichestvo: The Iskra Organization in Russia," Slavic Review, vol. 23, no. 3 (Sept. 1964), pp. 479–503. In JSTOR.