unit 3: vce history

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Unit 3: VCE History Critical Year, 1921

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Unit 3: VCE History. Critical Year, 1921. Although the Bolshevik’s won the Civil War and restored peace, they paid a high price. Many of the best workers died in battle and the communist vision of a proletarian utopia was fading. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Unit 3: VCE History

Unit 3: VCE HistoryCritical Year, 1921

Page 2: Unit 3: VCE History

Russia in ruins

• Although the Bolshevik’s won the Civil War and restored peace, they paid a high price.

• Many of the best workers died in battle and the communist vision of a proletarian utopia was fading.

• There was still only one communist group for every 1200 square kilometres of Russian countryside.

• To deal with this crisis Lenin and the Bolshevik’s developed an approach known as War Communism.

The First Red Cavalry

Page 3: Unit 3: VCE History

Impact of War Communism

The War Communism during the Civil War included:• Forced confiscation of man power to the

Red Army and industry.• Requisitioning of grain and food.• ‘Soviet’ farms on large estates and

nationalisation of industry.• The rationing of food and a grain tax.• Forced volunteering on ‘Communist

Sunday’s’

Requisitioning of grain

Page 4: Unit 3: VCE History

The Price of Civil War

• 10 million deaths – 9.5 million by famine and disease.

• Industrial output dropping to 15% of pre-war output and agricultural to 60% of pre-war output.

• Half the number of industrial workers.• Drops in coal (30%) and electrical energy

(25%) production.• Corruption… bribes, lots of bribes.• Savagery including cannibalism.

Children in famine

Page 5: Unit 3: VCE History

International support

• The Russian famine was acknowledged worldwide as a humanitarian disaster.

• Opponents Britain supported a ‘Save the Children’ fund in Russia, as did the American’s.

Help!

Page 6: Unit 3: VCE History

Kill the Kulaks

• Richer peasants, labelled ‘kulaks’ by the Communist Party, were blamed for rising high prices during the food shortage.

• They were accused of hoarding grain, which is something that Historians debate.

• Lenin sent the Cheka to coerce kulaks to give up their grain, so they produced only enough grain to feed their families.

Scapegoats?

Page 7: Unit 3: VCE History

The Kronstadt Uprising

• The economic crisis sparked peasant wars against the government and general industrial strikes in Petrograd and Moscow were compounded when sailors from Kronstadt challenged the new regime.

• Uprising in March 1921 came in two forms:- a political attack through a civil rights petition;- a military attack, very dangerous because the sailors were highly trained military and former Bolsheviks.• Figes described Russia as being on the brink of a

third revolution.• Lenin unleashed the Red Army and Cheka to

defeat the Kronstadt garrison on March 1917.

Page 8: Unit 3: VCE History

Kronstadt demands

• New elections• Freedom of speech and press• Freedom of assembly• Liberation of political prisoners (particularly those of socialist parties and working-

class movements)• Abolition of political departments (no propaganda)• Equalisation of rations for workers• Abolition of communist fighting detachments and guards in factories.• Peasant land rights… do you notice any similarities to the past?

It was comical

Page 9: Unit 3: VCE History

The Enemy Within

• Kronstadt rebellion showed the unhappiness amongst those who the Bolshevik’s claimed to represent… ‘you have nothing to lose but your chains!’

• Also challenges to Lenin’s leadership from Alexandra Kollantai who led a ‘Workers Opposition’ movement.

• Figes claimed that the Kronstadt Uprising revealed the Bolshevik’s as ‘tyrants’.

Kollantai – ‘I’m against this’

Page 10: Unit 3: VCE History

New Economic Policy

• At the Tenth Congress of the Communist Party in Moscow from March 8 to 16 in 1921, responded to some of the Kronstadt demands as they were fighting.

• Lenin considered the NEP, like the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk – an ‘unfortunate but necessary step’ of ‘bridled capitalism’ that represented a ‘strategic retreat’.

This is a Glavpolitprosvet poster…Just in case you was wondering

Page 11: Unit 3: VCE History

War Communism > NEP

• All resources to winning Civil War > Provide food for a starving population.

• Discriminated against peasants through requisitioning and state control, led to reduced production > favoured peasants with less tax and greater rewards.

• An attack of the interests of the peasants and workers > A success, reducing famine and increasing stability.

• From failure to success... but a compromise ideologically.

• For traditional communists the NEP was ‘treason’.

‘Socialist Communism will Come from the NEP’