There is conflicting information about whether the Makhnovists allowed freedom of speech/press for Bolsheviks in the territory that Makhnovists held in the Ukraine.
Both these quotes are from the same source: "Nestor Makhno and Rural Anarchism in Ukraine, 1917–21" by Colin Darch https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/colin-darch-nestor-makhno-and-rural-anarchism-in-ukraine-1917-21
So on the one hand this quote indicates that there was freedom of the press for Bolsheviks / the Communist Party:
The makhnovtsy permitted Right and Left SRs as well as the Bolsheviks to publish newspapers, and even published a proclamation on socialist freedom of the press and of association:
"1. All socialist political parties, organisations and tendencies have the right to propagate their ideas, theories, views and opinions freely, both in speech and in writing. No restriction of socialist freedom of speech or of the press will be permitted, and no persecution may take place in this respect."
Original source:
Datelined Ekaterinoslav, 5 November 1919 (Arshinov, Istoriia makhnovskogo dvizheniia, pp. 151–2).
And this indicates the opposite:
Berkman was also busy making contacts with southern anarchists. In August he visited Iosif Gotman at the Vol’noe Bratstvo (Free Brotherhood) book shop in Khar’kov. Gotman was better known under his penname, Emigrant, with which he signed articles in Nabat, and had also worked as a teacher in Makhnovite camps. Gotman disliked the Bolsheviks: ‘I consider Makhno’s povstantsy movement as a most promising beginning of a great popular movement against the new tyranny’, he told Berkman, while another anarchist who was present added that ‘there isn’t enough left of the Revolution to make a fig-leaf for Bolshevik nakedness’.[882] Gotman believed that makhnovshchina represented ‘the real spirit of October’ and that kulaks were a minority in the movement.[883] While he admitted that there was no freedom of speech for Communists in Makhnovite-controlled areas, there certainly was for Maximalists and Left SRs.[884]
Original sources:
[882] Berkman, The Bolshevik Myth, pp. 184–85.
[883] The Bolshevik Myth, p. 187.
[884] The Bolshevik Myth, p. 188.
So which is true?
The seeming contradiction could merely be due to different policies at different points in time. I admit I've only read a few excerpts of this text so the question I'm asking may be found in the text but it's very long and I'm hoping someone here will already know the answer.
Fwiw, had a look around and
Fwiw, had a look around and the Berkman source seems to be here:
https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/alexander-berkman-the-bolshevik-myth-diary-1920-22#toc29
Looking at the dates, I think this visit must be from at least July 1920 (that conversation's Chapter 24, and Chapter 21 is dated July 1920). So yeah, could well be things souring as relationships between the Bolsheviks and Makhnovists deteriorated, plus I would be totally unsurprised if policies varied from one area of the Free Territory to another, since it's not like there was that much in the way of a central authority imposing unified standards?
Thanks for looking into this!
Thanks for looking into this! I'm not sure how decisions were made for the free speech/press issue. Perhaps through a congress of the various local soviets?
Skirda claims that Makhno
Skirda claims that Makhno "authorized the display of Bolshevik newspapers in Gulyai-Polye, Berdyansk and Mariupol" but when one of the papers "railed violently against the Makhnovist insurgents" it was suppressed. Azarov mentions that when the Bolshevik Novitsky was delegated to the Gulyai-Polye Military Revolutionary Soviet (RVS) he was "compelled to be cautious about expressing his own convictions." And Arshinov says that Bolsheviks who tried to set up revkoms (revolutionary committees) on territories controlled by Makhno were threatened with execution if they "undertook any authoritarian measures", and some revkoms were in fact dissolved. This is how Arshinov also justified the controversial execution of the Bolshevik Polonsky and his comrades - which contributed to the friction between the military (Makhno) and civilian (Volin) authorities, as the latter according to Malet "could not approve of the undemocratic and authoritarian manner in which the executions had been carried out behind the backs of the RVS, a body elected only a month before in Olexandrivske, and supposed to be the chief authority over the army."
I think all those examples are from 1919 - so at this point Bolsheviks were tolerated so long as they weren't deemed a potential threat (like the revkoms or the Bolshevik underground in the Makhnovist army). The breakdown in relations is clearly demonstrated by the fact that while the 1919 regional congress of soviets still allowed "district party organizations - the ones accepting the foundations of "soviet" rule - [to] return one delegate per organization", the call out for the 1920 congress instead declared that "representatives of political organizations have no place in workers' and peasants' soviets" (see also the 1920 Berkman source above). All of this of course raises the issue of what constitutes "authoritarian measures", or a "political organisation", etc. and who and how gets to define it and prohibit it in practice.
https://day.kyiv.ua/en/articl
https://day.kyiv.ua/en/article/history-and-i/destroy-makhno-movement
Thanks both of you for the
Thanks both of you for the info. Battlescarred the website that hosts the article you shared looks like the type that might be down in a few years, so I'm just going to drop the title, etc. here for anyone browsing this thread in the future who might need to find it elsewhere online.
Now in library here:
Now in library here: https://libcom.org/history/destroy-makhno-movement-bolsheviks-secret-war-against-nestor-makhno-his-insurgents-volod
I would suggest that
I would suggest that Bolshevik freedom of speech, etc. would vary very much based on whether the Bolsheviks were attacking the Makhnovists or not. As such, it would depend on the state of the civil war -- so allowed at times, not allowed when the Bolsheviks were trying to crush the Makhnovists in favour of their party dictatorship.
Hi Anarcho, that sounds
Hi Anarcho, that sounds plausible and sensible to me. I know it's been over a month since you posted this reply, but if you're still lurking around, do you have a source you could drop that verifies this? Many thanks!
I'm sure there's probably
I'm sure there's probably better primary source evidence, but the Red Army attacking the Makhnovists seems evidence enough for their intolerance toward Makhnovist freedom of speech. In terms of like general intolerance toward other socialists (not that some deserved tolerance, especially actual counter-revolutionaries, bandits etc.), you could also see stuff like the rebelling Kronstadt sailors' Petropavlovsk Resolution, where "freedom of speech and press to workers and peasants, to anarchists and left socialist parties"[1] was among their first demands. As Anarcho mentions the Red Army and Maknovists would at times fight together against the Whites, and Makhno himself actually met with Lenin and others in Moscow in June 1918 to discuss Ukraine and other matters. Makhno wrote an account of that meeting for his memoirs, where among other things he complained of the recent suppression of Moscow anarchists in April[2] and declared himself "an anarcho-communist of the Bakunin-Kropotkin stripe."[3] In any case, as far as Makhno's account goes, you can clearly get a sense of how hostile Lenin and co. were toward anarchists and other revolutionaries who did not join up with the Bolsheviks or Communist Party.
1. https://www.marxists.org/history/ussr/events/kronstadt/1921/resolution.htm
2. No Gods, No Masters, 513; this text by Nick Heath seems to discuss it some
3. ibid. 506
edit, oh I didn't realize we're talking about Makhnovists' toleration of Bolsheviks instead of vice versa, my bad!
Quote: edit, oh I didn't
No problem, still an informative comment on the broader topic