A letter, written around 1880, to Karl Marx from the Executive Committee of the Russian Social Revolutionary Party of the People's Will. People's Will (or Narodnaya Volya) was a clandestine Narodnik socialist group that employed violence in its struggle against tsarist despotism. Both Marx and Engels regarded them more favorably than Georgi Plekhanov's more passive Geneva-based group Black Repartition (or General Redistribution), which was a predecessor to both the Emancipation of Labor group and the later Russian Social Democratic Labor Party. Black Repartition and People's Will had split from the earlier group Land and Liberty, with the majority of members joining People's Will.
![members_of_Narodnaya_Volya.jpg](https://files.libcom.org/files/styles/small_wide/public/2025-02/members_of_Narodnaya_Volya.jpg?itok=1avi0dqx)
Citizen,
The educated and progressive classes in Russia, always attentive to the development of ideas in Europe and always ready to respond to them, received the appearance of your scientific works with delight.
In them, the best principles of Russian life are recognized in the name of science. Capital has become the daily reading of educated people. But in our realm of Byzantine darkness and Asiatic despotism, any progress of social ideas is regarded as a revolutionary movement. It goes without saying that your name is associated with the internal political struggle in Russia. It has stimulated some to deep esteem and ardent sympathy, others—to prosecutions. Your works have been banned, and the very fact of studying them is now regarded as a sign of political unreliability.
So far as we are concerned, most esteemed citizen, we know with what interest you follow every manifestation of the Russian revolutionaries' activity, so we are happy to be able to inform you that this activity has by now reached the highest level of intensity. The earlier revolutionary struggle tempered our fighters, and not only established the revolutionaries' theoretical programme, but at the same time also set their practical revolutionary struggle onto the right path for its realization.
The various revolutionary [factions], inevitable in so new a movement, are coming together, fusing and by their common efforts striving to unite with the aspirations and hopes of the people, which in our country are just as ancient as servitude itself.
In such circumstances, the moment of victory is drawing nearer. Our task would be significantly easier for us, if the clearly expressed sympathies of the free peoples were on our side. For this only one thing is needed—knowledge of the true state of affairs in Russia.
To this end, we are giving our comrade Lev Hartmann the task of organizing, in England and America, a flow of information concerning the present development of our social life.
We are turning to you, esteemed citizen, with a quest to help him in fulfilling this mission.
Firmly resolved to break the fetters of servitude, we are convinced that the time is not far distant when our unhappy fatherland will occupy a place in Europe worthy of a free people.
We consider ourselves fortunate to have this chance of expressing to you, most esteemed citizen, the feelings of deep respect of the entire Russian social-revolutionary party.
Translation by Quintin Hoare taken from Teodor Shanin's Late Marx and the Russian Road (pp. 206-207)
Comments
adri, in 1880, would the…
One wonders what "the best principles of Russian life are recognized in the name of science" could allude to in the works of Marx? The peasant communes? If so, what a tragedy that social-democracy ("Marxism") was ultimately responsible for decimating them by means of collectivisation, i.e. capitalist accumulation.
It's a bit ambiguous, but I…
It's a bit ambiguous, but I believe they're mostly just praising Marx there. It's also worth noting that Marx and Engels were not in favor of violent means applied everywhere and indiscriminately. They instead thought that such means were justified specifically in Russia where tsarist tyranny was exceptionally bad and where there was, for the most part, no other avenues for effecting social change. Ian Angus discusses Marx's and Engels' views on violence in relation to tsarist autocracy in his rather informative article "Marx and Engels and Russia’s Peasant Communes":
I have a recollection of…
I have a recollection of Engels stating that Britain was unique in the possibility of the transformation to communism potentially having a peaceful course. If we think of high points of class struggle in Britain, such as the miners' strikes, although great physical force was exerted by both sides, deaths were minimal. So perhaps, if I'm recalling Engels' words correctly, there is a chance for relatively peaceful transformation in Britain, at least. Certainly, the Russian road, and that of the United States, has been a most bloody one.
Very informative article. Thank you for sharing. Some excerpts:
At present, globally, "a conspiracy of powerful interests" is definitely intent on incorporating into the capital vast tracts of farming land. This land grabbing, and resistance to it, is tentatively expressed by myself and Třídní Válka, here, whilst being denied by assorted spokespeople.