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the woman worker E.Saltykova described how women took part in bringing down telegraph poles to use them in constructing ibid, 511 S.Semanov, Peterburgskie rabochie nakanune pervoi russkoi revoliutsii, 31 116 barricades and how they enmeshed the entire surrounding area in wires. She performed the duties of a nurse tending to the wounded rebels while her husband was among the armed workers. They had to leave their two little children in the care of a young girl, not knowing whether they would ever see them again. The Saltykovs returned to their home in factory barracks two weeks later. During police reprisals her husband was arrested and shot, while her life was spared only because at the time of the arrest she was holding their baby. E.Saltykova was sacked from the factory and she had to rely on donations from other factory workers to bury her husband. Eventually she had to go to some friends in a village to support her two little children. Many more women workers were involved in the 1905 Revolution. For some it was a continuation of their previous political activities, like in the case of the Ivanovo female deputies or the Petersburg woman worker Iraida Karaseva. Born in 1891, she witnessed the arrests of her father and brother, both of whom were revolutionaries, prior to the events of 1905. She described what happened that year as giving her 'stimulus and more revolutionary tempering'.34 During the December uprising in Moscow in 1905 Karaseva was an active participant in the street demonstrations. In December that year her father became one of the victims of a punitive expedition, in a similar way to that of Saltykova's husband. Two months later Karaseva joined the RSDRP and became a party organiser at her factory. The years between 1909 and 1917 were spent in prisons and exile. When Karaseva was released after the February revolution she immediately returned to active party work in Moscow. In contrast to Karaseva's story, Praskov'ia Dmitrieva's revolutionary awakening was almost accidental. Born in 1880 in St. Petersburg, she was only a baby when her mother died. Her plumber father sent her to a distant relative, unable or unwilling to bring the child up himself. At the age of nine, having studied for two years in a parish school, she became an apprentice in a tailor's workshop where she stayed for the next seven years. By then Dmitrieva was sixteen and the year was 1905: One day in 1905 in Leningrad [sic] I had occasion to go out where I joined a passing demonstration. By the Vosstanie Bridge some students were organising groups to help the wounded. For the next three days I ;34 ibid., case 823 117 stayed out without going back home, going from street to street picking up the wounded. As a result I ended up with pneumonia, was found in a street and sent to the Obukhovo hospital. There was a separate wing for those found in the streets during the uprising where for the first time I met revolutionary workers. When I was finally released from the hospital I had to change my place of work.35 Dmitrieva joined an underground workers' circle where she stayed until 1908. She was a runner between the circle and the workers from the Pal' factory and the nearby army regiment. During the next three years she took part in mass meetings and workers' gatherings and distributed literature. In 1908 Praskov'ia joined the RSDRP. Shortly after she was arrested and exiled. On her return in 1910 to Petersburg she was unable to find a regular job. The years until 1917 were spent in commuting between Moscow and Petersburg, doing odd factory jobs and performing party tasks. In the February Revolution Dmitrieva was among the hundreds of women in the street and in October she joined her party comrades in following orders of their leaders. Not only factory workers became involved in the revolutionary events. Among Rostov female deputies were women domestic workers, laundresses and other service sector workers, precisely those women generally considered impossible to organise. Their participation was proof that not only factory women workers were able to show initiative and were capable of organising themselves without necessarily having to rely on directives from the largely intellectual party leadership. But of course, during those days it was not only women of the working class who were active participants, even if in some cases a woman's participation appeared to be almost accidental. Women of the intelligentsia, whether they were revolutionaries, feminists or philanthropists, also became involved in the conflict /between the democratic forces and the conservative government. Members of the All- Russian Union for Women's Equality, which has been mentioned at the beginning of : this chapter, took part in setting up and running canteens for the striking workers. Basically an urban organisation, it campaigned to recruit more members and set up branches in other towns. One such attempt in Voronezh failed after only 30 women 35 VOSB, Fond 124, case 598 118 female office workers came to the first meeting. At the meeting E. Nagurskaia, a Bolshevik, severely criticised the Union's aims and branded them as incompatible with the interests of women workers.36 Another organisation dealing primarily with women's issues was the Women's Progressive Party, whose chairperson was the feminist physician Mariia Pokrovskaia. Unlike the Union it was a women-only organisation with a close interest in the position of working class women. This party too was campaigning for social reform in the country that would lead to equal pay for men and women and more protective legislation. The last large women's organisation that worked actively on behalf of women's issues had already been in existence for the previous ten years. In 1905 its leader was Anna Shabanova. Unwilling to be associated with other political groups it used lobbying as its main weapon. All three of them, however, failed to secure electoral rights for women, when the first Russian Duma assembled in 1906. The women's response came not only from towns but also from the countryside. A group of peasant women from Voronezh guberniia sent a letter to the Duma deputies protesting their exclusion from the new assembly: We have learned from the newspapers that the Voronezh deputy Kruglikov stated in the Duma that a peasant recognised only one type of work for a woman - the one in the family. Kruglikov insists that peasant women themselves do not wish to have any rights. There is not a single elected woman to the Duma who could speak for all womenfolk, so how does he know? He is wrong in saying that a peasant woman does not wish to have any rights; did he ask us? We, the women from Voronezh uyezd of Voronezh guberniia, understand only too well that rights and land will not interfere with our work in the family and if some land could be allocated to each woman then many women's tears and reproaches aimed at them will be eliminated! A woman will no longer be a burden to a family... we want rights not simply for our own sake: those rights will allow us to stand up for our v T.Sevast'ianova, Revoliutsionerki Voronezha, 10 119 husbands and children... We grieve for the lack of elected women in the Duma.37 The April elections to the Duma were boycotted by the two revolutionary parties, the Socialist Revolutionaries (PSR) and the Social Democrats (RSDRP). Established in 1901 the PSR is seen as the heir to the People's Will of the 1880s and is best known through the actions of its militant wing, the Combat Organisation that had unleashed a terror campaign on the country which lasted for the next ten years. Indeed, a whole number of former Narodniki joined it. One of the PSR's founding members and the force behind its theoretical teachings was Ekaterina Breshko-Breshkovskaia. A. Iakimova-Dikovskaia was a PSR member between 1905 and 1907. Among Breshkovskaia's other former comrades-in-arms who decided to join the PSR was Praskov'ia Voloshenko (nee Ivanovskaia) who turned to the SR movement in the early 1900s. After serving a twenty-year sentence in a penal colony Voloshenko was instrumental in setting up an SR printing house in Chita. She absconded from the colony in 1903 and on arrival in Petersburg joined the SR Combat Organisation. There, Voloshenko took part in organising the assassinations of the Minister of the Interior, Pleve (1904) and of the Governor General of Petersburg, Trepov. She was re¬ arrested in March of 1905 but released by a royal decree of 17th October. She continued to play an active role in the SR party though between 1906 and 1913 she was living abroad. Some scholars believe that by 1905 half of the PSR membership was working class.38 Unlike its predecessor, the SR movement appealed more to urban workers. In 1905 the Moscow Prokhorovskaia paper mill was described as an 'SR citadel' during the highest point in the revolution because its workers had close links with the countryside. In his memoirs one of the SR leaders, Chernov, referred to the Prokhorovskaia paper mill as a 'centre of SR agitation... that chose only SR members to its Soviet of Workers' deputies'.39 Unfortunately, with the PSR party being the loser in 1917 any factual material on its members, and specifically the rank and file members with working-class and peasant backgrounds, is virtually non-existent. No |7 ibid., 8 38 C.Rice, Russian Workers and the Socialist Revolutionary Party through the Revolution of 1905-07, 195 9 Partita Sotsialistov-revoliutsionerov, Dokumenty i materialy, 1900-1922, vol. 1, 193 and 658 120 the senior leadership focuses more on the SR male leaders than its female ones, with only a few notable exceptions, like Breshko-Breshkovskaia and Mariia Spiridonova. Such reference books as Uchastniki russkogo revoliutsionnogo dvizheniia epokhi bor 'by s tsarismom (a biographical dictionary of Russian revolutionaries, former exiles and penal colony prisoners) provide readers with only short sketches for each individual. (See Appendix Two) Among those included are several dozen of female SRs: Vera Anan'eva, a Tambov peasant born in 1885 and exiled in 1905 for her membership of the SR party; Nina Babakshvili, a daughter of Tiflis unskilled worker, was born in 1889 and arrested in 1909 after six years in the PSR; Ekaterina Babakina, a peasant from Samara guberniia, born in 1884, she was arrested after only one year in the party. All three women were sentenced to lengthy imprisonment and hard labour. We learn nothing about the indiviual's deeds, the reasons behind their harsh punishment or the reasons that put them on the road of terror. We have to rely on the information about those male, and occasionally female, revolutionaries, who did make it into the history books and were rewarded with the laurels of glory. Between the Two Revolutions The years that followed 1905 saw a gradual abatement of revolutionary activities in the country and the increasing intensity in the reactionary policies of the tsarist government. Many of the participants in the 1905 revolutionary upheaval and strike movement were either in prison, Siberian exile, underground or in the case of many < leading party members in political emigration abroad. The terrorist acts carried out mainly by the members or supporters of the PSR persisted well into 1907. Anna Geifman in her study of revolutionary terrorism in Russia estimates that between 1905 and 1907 there were more than 9,000 victims and casualties of terrorist atrocities in the country.40 These figures do not include the economic damage caused by expropriations or robberies. The most radical element of the PSR was its Combat Organisation (CO), which operated between 1901 and 1911. Appendix One contains a table with biographical information on the female members of the group. During that ^period there were 72 male and 19 female (20.8% of the total membership) members in :40 A.Geifman, Thou Shalt Kill. Revolutionary Terrorism in Russia, 1894-1917, 21. 121 the CO.41 As has been pointed out above primary source information is much less readily available for female Socialist Revolutionaries. Only very few left written memoirs about their past. Moreover, some scholars suggest that even those should be treated with great caution, not unlike the memoirs of some social democratic revolutionaries. Mariia Spiridonova became a legendary figure in SR folklore. She was born in 1884 into an upper middle-class family in Tambov. At school she stood out not only because of her academic abilities but also because of her critical outspokenness and strong-willed nature. Like for many other revolutionaries Mariia's introduction to radical causes and eventual terrorist actions began from a study circle. Similar to other smaller places of the Russian Empire, representatives of Social Democrats and Socialist Revolutionaries worked together in agitating among workers and students. Spiridonova became more attracted to the latter. When a decision was taken in 1906 to revenge the high number of atrocities committed by Cossacks under General Luzhenovskii who led them in stamping out peasant revolts, the group did not have to appoint a member who could carry out the assassination: Spiridonova volunteered to do it. Mariia made no attempt to escape and was severely beaten by the General's guards. During the trial Spiridonova explained her action in a defiant way: Yes. I killed Luzhenovskii and I want to explain why. I am a member of the Socialist Revolutionary Party and my action is explained by the party's ideals. ... I shall not speak of the attempts to 'calm down' peasants with reference to ... [many] guberniias ...; I shall give you just one example of an uezd and what one blood-thirsty 'worker', Luzhenovskii, did in it. I shall remind you of several villages, which he had visited. In the village of Pavlodar ten people were killed. They were tortured to death. They were tortured for four days. ... in the same village 40 people were wounded. In the village of Berezovka Karp Klemanov, a peasant went crazy after being tortured; in the village of Peski, two went mad... R.Gorodnitskii, Boevaia organizatsiiapartii sotsialistov-revoliutsionerov v 1901-1911 gg., 235 122 As commander he covered himself with glory. The trophies he laid at the feet of the bureaucracy were murdered peasants, ruined Download 88.01 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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