In accordance with a decision of the ninth congress of the r
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p. 466 Lenin refers to the Eighth All- Russia Congress of Soviets, held December 22- 29, 1920, at which Krzhizhanovsky delivered a report on the plan for the electrification of Russia. The resolution on the electrification report was drafted by Lenin. p. 469
The letter was written on a memorandum which P. A. Ostryakov, the construction chief of the first radio-telephone station in Moscow, sent to Lenin on January 26, 1921. Ostryakov reported that he was encountering difficulties and asked Lenin to help remove them and endorse the decree Ostryakov had drafted. On January 27, 1921 the C.P.C. passed a decree on organising full- scale radio-telephone construction. It instructed the People’s Commissar iat of Posts and Telegraphs to build stations for two- way radio-telephone communication in Moscow and other centres.
(1888-1940)—outstanding Soviet radio engineer. In 1916- 19 he did research on electronic valves. In 1918 he took charge of the Nizhni-Novgorod Radio Laboratory. p. 473
Reference is to V. P. Milyutin’s report “On Methods of Drawing up an Integrated Economic Plan”, which he delivered at the Social- ist Academy on February 17, 1921. An account of the report and its theses were published in the newspaper Ekonomicheskaya Zhizn No. 37, on February 19, 1921. Lenin criticised Milyutin’s theses in his article “An Integrated Economic Plan” (see present edition, Vol. 32, pp. 137- 45). p. 475
Reference is to the State Planning Commission of the Council of Labour and Defence of the R.S.F.S.R. It was organised on Feb- ruary 21, 1921. p. 476
The speech delivered by Krzhizhanovsky at the first session of the State Planning Commission (Gosplan) on April 5, 1921. p. 480 618 NOTES
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401 This refers to the book Plan elektrifikatsii R.S.F.S.R. Doklad vosmomu syezdu Sovetov Gosudarstvennoi Komissii po elektrifika- tsil Rossii (Plan for the Electrification of the R.S.F.S.H. Report of the State Commission for the Electrification of Russia to the Eighth Congress of Soviets) published in December 1920. Lenin spoke of the importance of this book in his report on the work of the Council of People’s Commissars at the Eighth All- Russia Congress of Soviets (see present edition, Vol. 31, pp. 513- 18) and in the article “An Integrated Economic Plan” (ibid., Vol. 32, pp. 137- 41). p. 480
In 1917 he was a member of the internationalist Mensheviks’ Central Committee; in 1919 entered the R.C.P.(B.). Deputy Man- ager of the Chief Committee for Political Education, 1920; Deputy Commissar for Education of the R.S.F.S.R., from 1921 on. p. 482
Reference is to NEP (New Economic Policy)—the policy of the proletarian state during the period of transition from capitalism to socialism. This policy was “new” in contrast to the economic pol- icy which had been conducted in Soviet Russia in the period of foreign military intervention and the Civil War, known in histo- ry as the policy of War Communism (1918-20). The latter was made necessary by war- time conditions, and its characteristic fea- tures were extreme centralisation of production and distribution of goods, prohibition of free trading, and food requisitioning which compelled the peasants to turn in all surplus produce to the state. When the New Economic Policy was adopted, commodity- money relations became the basic form of relations between social- ist industry and the small-peasant economy. When food requisi- tioning was abolished and replaced by the tax in kind, the peasants were able to dispose of their surplus produce as they chose, i.e., sell them at the market, and through the market obtain the indus- trial goods they required. The New Economic Policy was calculated to achieve a firm eco- nomic and political alliance between the working class and the peasantry for the building of socialism, for the development of the productive forces along socialist lines. It provided for a certain measure of capitalism while the basic economic positions remained in the hands of the proletarian state. It assumed the struggle of the socialist elements against the capitalist elements, the victory of the socialist elements, the elimination of the exploiting classes, and the building of socialism in the U.S.S.R. p. 483
(Latest News)—whiteguard émigré daily paper, organ of the counter-revolutionary Constitutional- Demo- cratic Party (Cadets); published in Paris from April 1920 to July 1940. Its editor was P. N. Milyukov. p. 490
Reference is to the co-report by Sokolov “On the Tax in Kind and 619 NOTES
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the Change in the Policy of Soviet Power” at the general meeting of the R.C.P.(B.) group at the People’s Commissariat of Foreign Affairs, May 18, 1921. Sokolov sent it to Lenin requesting him to read it and reply to a number of questions which it raised. p. 491 In the draft of his co-report Sokolov quoted the following passage from Engels: “The worst thing that can befall a leader of an extreme party is to be compelled to take over a government at a time when society is not yet ripe for the domination of the class he represents and for the measures which that domination implies” (Engels, The Peasant War in Germany, Moscow, 1965, p. 112).
p. 492 Dzerzhinsky, F. E. (1877-1926)—Party member from 1895. After the October Socialist Revolution he became Chairman of the All- Russia Extraordinary Commission to Combat Counter-Revolu- tion and Sabotage (known as the Cheka). In 1921 he was appoint- ed People’s Commissar for Railways, while remaining Chairman of the Cheka and People’s Commissar for Internal Affairs. Member of the C.C. of the R.C.P.(B.). p. 499
Pavlovich, M. P. (Veltman, M. L.) (1871-1929)—Social- Demo- crat, Menshevik. He became a Communist after 1917, and from 1921 was a member of the Collegium of the Commissariat for Affairs of Nationalities. p. 501 Reference is to the preparations for the publication of the Vsemir- ny geografichesky atlas (Geographical Atlas of the World), launched on Lenin’s initiative. The project was not realised. p. 501
he became a member of the Presidium of the All- Russia C.E.C.; in 1920-24, Deputy People’s Commissar of the Workers’ and Peasants’ Inspection, member of the Collegium of the Cheka, and later Deputy People’s Commissar for Foreign Trade. p. 504
Workers’ and Peasants’ Inspection (Rabkrin) was set up in Feb- ruary 1920 on Lenin’s initiative, on the basis of the reorganised People’s Commissariat of State Control, which had been formed in the early months of Soviet power. Lenin attached great impor- tance to control and verification at all levels. He worked out in detail the principles of organising control in the Soviet state, kept an eye on Rabkrin’s activity, criticised its shortcomings and did his best to make it more efficient. In his last articles, “How We Should Reorganise the Workers’ and Peasants’ Inspection” and “Better Fewer, but Better”, Lenin outlined a plan for reor- ganising Rabkrin. The basic principles of Lenin’s plan were to merge Party and state control and to enlist more workers and peasants in its activities. p. 504
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416 When the Regulations on the Council of Labour and Defence’s Commission for Utilising the Material Resources of the R.S.F.S.R. were
being drawn
up, differences of opinion
concerning the functions of the commission arose between A. B. Khalatov (People’s Commissar for Food), G. M. Krzhizhanovsky (State Planning Commission), P. A. Bogdanov (Supreme Economic Council) and L. N. Kritsman (Commission for Utilising Material Resources). On June 14, 1921, the Council of People’s Commissars endorsed the amended draft Regulations drawn up by the State Planning Commission. On June 29, the Regulations, which on the instruc- tions of the Council of People’s Commissars had been edited by a commission composed of Bogdanov, Krzhizhanovsky, Krits- man and Khalatov, were signed by Lenin. p. 506 On July 9, 1921, the Political Bureau of the C.C. of the R.C.P.(B.) passed a decision “On Intensifying Food Work”. It stated: “The Organising Bureau should confirm the need to take the maximum number of Communists and, in exceptional cases, other particu- larly valuable comrades, from their present work and transfer them to food work, even at the cost of causing a temporary dos- ing- down of nine- tenths of departments in some institutions and even whole People’s Commissariats that are not absolutely essen- tial.”
p. 509 Reference is to the commission for assisting economic bodies. p. 511 Reference is to the introduction Adoratsky wrote for the book which Lenin had asked him to prepare, K. Marks i F. Engels. Pisma. Teoriya i politika v perepiske Marksa i Engelsa (Letters. Theory and Policy in the Correspondence of Marx and Engels). The book appeared in 1922. p. 516
See Karl Marx, Capital, Vol. 1, Moscow, pp. 59- 60, 126- 27. p. 516
Adoratsky was preparing for the press the book Programma po osnovnym voprosam Marksizma (Programme on the Basic Problems of Marxism), published in 1922. p. 516 Reference is to Safarov’s pamphlet Ocheredniye voprosy naisional- noi politiki (Current Questions of the Nationalities Policy), published in 1921. p. 518
personifying sluggishness, stagnation and inertia. p. 519 Professor G. O. Graftio, Chief Engineer at the Construction of the Volkhov Hydro- Power Station, had stated that some insti- tutions were taking a bureaucratic attitude to the project. p. 521 621 NOTES
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COMMERCIAL DISTRIBUTION 417 418
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427 Reference is apparently to the transfer of Store No. 11 from the People’s Commissariat of Railways to the Supreme Economic Council.
p. 523 This refers to the decision of the Narrow Council of People’s Commissars on the allocation of 2,000 million rubles for repair- ing houses in Moscow, passed on October 21, 1921. p. 528 Reference is to Krzhizhanovsky’s book Khozyaistvenniye pro- blemy R.S.F.S.R. i raboty Gosudarstvennoi obshcheplanovoi komissii (Gosplana) (The Economic Problems of the R.S.F.S.R. and the Work of the State General Planning Commission [Gos- plan]), Part I. The book appeared in December 1921 with the addition, of which Lenin writes in this letter. p. 530 On December 1, 1921, the Political Bureau of the C.C. of the R.C.P.(B.), having heard Lenin’s report on the work of Tsyurupa, endorsed his appointment as Second Deputy Chairman of the Coun- cil of Labour and Defence. On December 5, by decision of the Political Bureau Tsyurupa was appointed Deputy Chairman of the Council of People’s Commissars. p. 535
Bednota (The Poor)—daily peasant newspaper published in Moscow from March 27, 1918, to February 1, 1931, when it was merged with Sotsialisticheskoye Zemledeliye (Socialist Agricul- ture).
p. 543 Reference is to Gorev’s pamphlet Elektrifikatsia Frantsii (The Electrification of France). It was published in 1922. p. 544
Lenin refers to the book by Karl Ballod Der Zukunftsstaat (The State of the Future), a Russian translation of which appeared in 1920. Lenin writes of Ballod’s book in his article “An Integrat- ed Economic Plan” (see present edition, Vol. 32, p. 140). p. 544 The introduction to A. Gorev’s pamphlet Elektrifikatsia Frantsii (The Electrification of France) was not written by Lenin. p. 545 GUM—a state department store in Moscow, of which Belov was director at the time. p. 547
In 1921 he was member of the Presidium of the Supreme Eco- nomic Council. p. 551
Pletnyov, V. F. (1886- 1942)—one of the leaders of the Proletcult. He and A. Bogdanov spread anti- Marxist reactionary ideas on culture and art claiming that such ideas represented “proletarian culture”. For a criticism of the views of the Proletcult supporters see present edition, Vol. 29, p. 336 and Vol. 31, pp. 316-17. p. 554
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430 Lenin refers to the article by I. I. Skvortsov-Stepanov “Chto takoye spets i kak yego delayut” (“What a Specialist Is and How He Is Made”), published in Pravda No. 244, October 28, 1922. p. 557
Reference is to the following passage from the article by Skvor- tsov-Stepanov: “Here, too, the class struggle must develop, the struggle between socialism and ‘capitalist craftsmanship’ or ‘craftsmen’s capitalism’, more likely the latter. After what has been said the reader will not be surprised by the abnormality of this phrase. It is no more abnormal than the real relations which it expresses.” p. 557
International Workers’ Aid—an international proletarian organ- isation, set up in 1921 to help the population of the parts of Soviet Russia which in 1921 were struck by famine because of the bad harvest. Its chairman was Clara Zetkin, and its General Secretary, Willi Münzenberg. International Workers’ Aid was active in collecting money, provisions and medical supplies, organising children’s homes, etc. In 1922 the I.W.A. launched a number of industrial and agricultural projects in Soviet Russia to promote her economic rehabilitation. The I.W.A. later grew into a powerful organisation, which rendered great assistance to the international working-class movement. p. 559
623 A. Alexander—Shlyapnikov, A. G. A . M . , A l . M . , A l . M a x . — Gorky, A. M. A. M.—Kollontai, Alexandra A n — A n a n u n ,
D .
A. P.—Pannekoek, A. Andrei—Sverdlov, Y. M. Antonov—Popov, A. (Britman) Bezrabotny—Manuilsky, D. Z. Belenin—Shlyapnikov, A. G. Bonch—Bonch—Bruyevich, V. D. Chuzhak—Nasimovich, N. F. Dnevnitsky—Tsederbaum, F. O. E. B., Eug. B.—Bosh, Eugène Foma-Piterests—Smirnov, A. P. Franz—Koritschoner, F. Frey—Lenin, V. I. Friend—Chernomazov, M. Galyorka—Olminsky, M. S. Galina—Rozmirovich, E. F. Grigory, Gr—y—Zinoviev, G. Y. Grisha—Belenky, G. Gylka, I.—Melenevsky, M. Ilyin, V.—Lenin, V. I. Inessa—Armand, Inessa Isaac—Raskin Ivanovich—Stalin, J. V. J. K.—Marchlewski, Julian James—Yelizarova, Anna Jan—Savinov, I. T. Junius—Luxemburg, Rosa K., Kam.—Kamenev, L. B. Kamsky—Vladimirsky, M. F. Kievsky P., Kii—Pyatakov, G. L. Koba—Stalin, J. V. Kostrov—Jordania, N. Kuba—Hanecki, J. S. Lyudmila—Stahl, L. N. M. F., Maria Fyodorovna—An- dreyeva, M. F. Makar—Nogin, V. P. Meshkovsky—Goldenberg, I. P. Mikhalchi—Nakhimson, S. M. N. I., N. Iv., Nik. Iv. —Bukharin, N. I. N. K., Nadya, N a d e z h d a K o n s t a n t i n o v n a — Krupskaya, N. K. N i k . V a s . — K u z n e t s o v , N . V . (Sapozhkov) Nikolai—Orjonikidze, G. K. Noah—Buachidze, S. G. Nota Bene—Bukharin, N. I. Olga—Ravich, S. N. Pavel Vasilyevich, Pavlov—Berzin, Y. Paragraph—Stu0ka, P. I. Rosa—Luxemburg, R. IDENTIFICATION OF PSEUDONYMS, NICKNAMES AND INITIALS USED IN THE TEXT
IDENTIFICATION OF PSEUDONYMS 624
Ropshin-Savinkov, B. V. Rude—Rudis-Gipslis, I. S., Sergo—Orjonikidze, G. K. Sima—Mikhailova, S. A. Tria—Mgeladze, V. D. V. I—Lenin, V. I. Varin—Fridolin, V. Vasily—Stalin, J. V. Vetrov—Savelyev, M. A. Vitimsky—Olminsky, M. S. Volsky—Sokolov, A. V. Yuri—Pyatakov, G. L. Download 4.26 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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