# Solzhenitsyn - Words of Warning to the Western World.doc

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Aleksandr I.Solzhenitsyn.

Words of Warning to the Western World

 

 

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Translation: Unknown

Copyright: A. Solzhenitsyn  1975/1976/1979

OCR: EEN, 08/14/2002

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Russian   exile    Aleksandr    Solzhenitsyn,   in

Washington, D.C., on June 30, delivered a dramatic

warning  to  all  the  world - and to Americans in

particular. The Nobel Prize winning author, in his

first  major  public  address  since his expulsion

from  the  Soviet Union in 1974, stripped bare the

crimes  and  excesses  of the Communist masters in

his  native  land. And he denounced the West for a

"senseless   process   of   endless concessions to

aggressors"  in  the  Kremlin.  The  text  of  the

90-minute address that follows is the  translation

approved by the author,  reprinted with permission

of the AFL-CIO, which invited him to speak.

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     Most of those present here today are workers.

Creative  workers. And I myself, having spent many

years  of  my  life  as  a  stone  cutter,  as   a

foundryman, as a manual worker, in the name of all

who  have  shared  this forced labor with me, like

the two Gulag prisoners whom you just saw, and  on

behalf of those who are doing  forced labor in our

country,  I  can  start  my  speech today with the

greeting "Brothers!" "Brothers in Labor."

     And not to forget,  also,  the  many  honored

guests present here tonight, let me  add:  "Ladies

and Gentlemen."

     "Workers of the world unite!" Who of  us  has

not  heard  this  slogan,  which has been sounding

through  the  world  for  125 years? Today you can

find it in any Soviet pamphlet as well as in every

issue of Pravda. But never have the leaders of the

Communist  revolution  in  the  Soviet  Union made

application  of these words sincerely and in their

full meaning. When many lies have accumulated over

the decades, we forget  the  radical and basic lie

which is not on the leaves of the tree, but at its

very roots.

     Now, it's almost impossible to remember or to

believe.. For instance, I recently published - had

reprinted  -  a  pamphlet from the year 1918. This

was  a   precise   record  of  a  meeting  of  all

representatives  of  the Petrograd factories, that

being the city known in our country as the "cradle

of the Revolution."

     I  repeat,  this  was  March 1918 - only four

months after the October  Revolution - and all the

representatives  of  the  Petrograd factories were

cursing  the  Communists, who had deceived them in

all of their promises.  What is more, not only had

they  abandoned  Petrograd  to  cold  and  hunger,

themselves  having  fled from Petrograd to Moscow,

but had given  orders  to  machine-gun  the crowds

of workers in the courtyards of the  factories who

were demanding the election of independent factory

committees.

     Let  me  remind  you,  this  was  March 1918.

Scarcely  anyone  now  can recall the crushing  of

the Petrograd strikes in 1921, or the shooting  of

workers in Kolpino in the same year.

     Among  the  leadership, the Central Committee

of the Communist Party,  at the  beginning  of the

Revolution, all were emigre intellectuals who  had

returned,  after  the uprisings had already broken

out  in  Russia,  in  order  to  carry through the

Communist  Revolution.  One  of them was a genuine

worker, a highly skilled lathe operator  until the

last  day  of  his  life.   This   was   Alexander

Shliapnikov.  Who knows that name today? Precisely

because  he  expressed  the  true interests of the

workers within the Communist  leadership.  In  the

years before the Revolution it was Shliapnikov who

ran  the  whole  Communist  Party  in Russia - not

Lenin,  who  was an emigre. In 1921, he headed the

Workers'  Opposition  which   was   charging   the

Communist leadership with betraying  the  workers'

interests,  with  crushing  and   oppressing   the

proletariat  and   transforming   itself   into  a

bureaucracy.

     Shliapnikov  disappeared  from  sight. He was

arrested  somewhat later and since he firmly stood

his  ground  he was shot in prison and his name is

perhaps unknown  to  most people here today. But I

remind you: before the Revolution the head  of the

Communist  Party  of  Russia was Shliapnikov - not

Lenin.

     Since  that time, the working class has never

been  able  to  stand  up  for  its rights, and in

distinction  from  all  the  western countries our

working  class only receives what they hand out to

it.  It  only  gets handouts. It cannot defend its

simplest, everyday interests, and the least strike

for pay or for better living conditions is  viewed

as  counter-revolutionary.  Thanks  to  the closed

nature  of  the  Soviet  system, you have probably

never  heard  of  the  textile  strikes in 1930 in

Ivanovo, or of the 1961 worker unrest in Murom and

Alexandrovo, or of the major workers' uprising  in

Novocherkassk  in  1962  -  this  in  the  time of

Khrushchev, after the thaw.

     This  story  will  shortly  be  published  in

detail  in  your  country  in  Gulag  Archipelago,

volume  3.  It is a story of how workers went in a

peaceful demonstration to the Party City Committee,

carrying  portraits  of Lenin, to request a change

in  economic  conditions.  They fired at them with

machine  guns and dispersed the crowds with tanks.

No  family  dared  even to collect its wounded and

dead,  but  all  were  taken away in secret by the

authorities.

     Precisely to those present here I don't  have

to  explain  that  in  our   country,   since  the

Revolution,  there's  never been such a thing as a

free trade union.

     The  leaders  of the British trade unions are

free  to  play  the  unworthy  game  of   visiting

Russia's  so-called  trade  unions  and  receiving

visits in return. But the AFL-CIO has never  given

in to these illusions.

     The  American  workers'  movement  has  never

allowed  itself  to  be  blinded  and  to  mistake

slavery  for  freedom.  And I, today, on behalf of

all of our oppressed people, thank you for this!

     When  liberal  thinkers  and  wise men of the

West,  who  had  forgotten the meaning of the word

"liberty," were swearing that in the Soviet  Union

there  were  no  concentration  camps  at all, the

American Federation of Labor, published in 1947, a

map  of  our concentration camps, and on behalf of

all of the prisoners of those  times,  I  want  to

thank the American workers' movement for this.

     But  just  as  we  feel ourselves your allies

here, there also  exists  another  alliance  -  at

first glance a strange one, a surprising one - but

if  you  think  about  it,  in  fact, one which is

well-grounded  and  easy to understand this is the

alliance  between  our  Communist leaders and your

capitalists.

     This  alliance  is  not  new. The very famous

Armand Hammer, who is flourishing here today, laid

the   basis  for  this  when  he  made  the  first

exploratory  trip  into  Russia,  still in Lenin's

time, in the very first years  of the  Revolution.

He  was extremely successful in this  intelligence

mission  and  since  that  time  for  all these 50

years, we observe continuous and steady support by

the  businessmen  of  the  West   of   the  Soviet

Communist leaders.

     Their clumsy and awkward economy, which could

never overcome  its own difficulties by itself, is

continually  getting  material  and  technological

assistance. The major construction projects in the

initial five-year plan were built exclusively with

American  technology  and  materials.  Even Stalin

recognized that two-thirds of  what was needed was

obtained  from  the  West. And if today the Soviet

Union has powerful military and police forces - in

a country which is by contemporary standards  poor

- they are used to crush our movement for  freedom

in the Soviet Union - and  we have western capital

to thank for this also.

 

     Let me remind you of a recent incident  which

some  of  you  may  have  seen  in the newspapers,

although  others  might have missed it: Certain of

your  businessmen,  on   their   own   initiative,

established  an   exhibition   of   criminological

technology in Moscow. This was the most recent and

elaborate technology, which here, in your country,

is used to catch criminals, to bug them, to spy on

them,  to  photograph   them,  to  tail  them,  to

identify criminals. This was taken to Moscow to an

exhibition  in  order  that  the Soviet KGB agents

could study it, as if not understanding what  sort

of criminals, who would be hunted by the KGB.

     The   Soviet   government    was    extremely

interested  in  this  technology,  and  decided to

purchase  it.  And  your  businessmen  were  quite

willing  to  sell it. Only when a few sober voices

here  raised  an  uproar  against it was this deal

blocked.  Only  for  this  reason  it  didn't take

place.  But you have to realize how clever the KGB

is.  This  technology  didn't  have to stay two or

three  weeks  in  a  Soviet  building under Soviet

guard. Two or three nights were enough for the KGB

there to look through it and copy it. And if today,

persons are being hunted down by the best and most

advanced  technology,  for  this, I can also thank

your western capitalists.

     This   is   something   which    is    almost

incomprehensible  to  the human mind: that burning

greed for profit which goes beyond all reason, all

self-control, all conscience, only to get money.

     I  must  say  that  Lenin foretold this whole

process.  Lenin, who spent most of his life in the

West  and  not  in  Russia, who knew the West much

better than Russia, always wrote and said that the

western   capitalists   would   do   anything   to

strengthen  the  economy  of  the  USSR. They will

compete with each other to sell  us goods  cheaper

and sell them quicker, so that  the  Soviets  will

buy from one rather than from the other. He  said:

They will bring  it  themselves  without  thinking

about their future. And, in a difficult moment, at

a  party  meeting  in  Moscow, he said: "Comrades,

don't  panic,  when things go very hard for us, we

will  give  a  rope  to  the  bourgeoisie, and the

bourgeoisie will hang itself."

     Then, Karl Radek, whom you may have heard of,

who  was a very resourceful wit,  said:  "Vladimir

Ilyich, but where are we going to get enough  rope

to hang the whole bourgeoisie?"

     Lenin effortlessly  replied, "They'll  supply

us with it."

 

     Through the decades of the 1920s, the  1930s,

the  1940s,  the  1950s,  the  whole  Soviet press

wrote: Western capitalism, your end is near.

     But  it  was  as  if  the capitalists had not

heard,  could  not  understand,  could not believe

this.

     Nikita  Khrushchev  came  here  and said, "We

will bury you!" They didn't believe that,  either.

They took it as a joke.

     Now, of course, they have become  more clever

in  our  country. Now they don't say "we are going

to bury you" anymore, now they say "detente."

     Nothing  has  changed  in Communist ideology.

The  goals  are the same as they were, but instead

of  the  artless Khrushchev, who couldn't hold his

tongue, now they say "detente."

     In order to understand this, I will take  the

liberty  of  making  a short historic survey - the

history  of  such  relations,  which  in different

periods  have been called "trade,"  "stabilization

of the situation," "recognition of realities," and

now "detente." These relations 'now are  at  least

40 years old.

     Let me remind you with what  sort  of  system

they started.

     The system was installed by armed uprising.

     It dispersed the Constituent Assembly.

     It capitulated to Germany - the common enemy.

     It introduced execution without trial.

     It crushed workers' strikes.

     It  plundered   the   villagers  to  such  an

unbelievable  extent  that  the peasants revolted,

and when this happened it crushed the peasants  in

the bloodiest possible way.

     It shattered the Church.

     It reduced 20 provinces of our  country  to a

condition of famine.

     This was in 1921, the famous Volga  famine. A

very typical Communist technique: To  seize  power

without  thinking  of the fact that the productive

forces  will collapse, that the fields will not be

sown,  the  factories  will stop, that the country

will  decline  into  poverty and famine - but when

poverty  and  hunger  come,  then they request the

humanitarian world to help them.

     We see this in North Vietnam  today,  perhaps

Portugal  is  approaching  this also. And the same

thing  happened in Russia in 1921. When the three-

year  civil  war,  started by the Communists - and

"civil war" was a slogan of the Communists,  civil

war  was Lenin's purpose; read Lenin, this was his

aim and his slogan - when they had  ruined  Russia

by  this  civil  war,  then  they  asked  America,

"America,  feed  our hungry." And indeed, generous

and magnanimous America did feed our hungry.

     The so-called American Relief  Administration

was set up, headed by your future President Hoover,

and  indeed  many  millions  of Russian lives were

saved by this organization of yours.

     But  what sort of gratitude did  you  receive

for  this?  In  the  USSR not only did they try to

erase  this  whole event from the popular memory -

it's  almost impossible  today in the Soviet press

to  find  any  reference  to  the  American Relief

Administration  -  but  they even denounce it as a

clever  spy  organization,  a  clever  scheme   of

American  imperialism  to  set up a spy network in

Russia. I repeat, it was a system that  introduced

concentration  camps  for  the  first  time in the

history of the world.

 

     A system that, in the 20th Century,  was  the

first to introduce the use of hostages, that is to

say,  not  to  seize  the  person  whom  they were

seeking,  but  rather  a  member  of his family or

someone at random, and shoot that person.

     This  system  of  hostages and persecution of

the  family  exists  to  this day. It is still the

most  powerful  weapon of persecution, because the

bravest  person,  who  is  not afraid for himself,

still shivers at the threat to his family.

     It is a system which was  the  first  -  long

before Hitler - to employ false registration, that

is, to say: "Such and such people have to come  in

to register."  People  would  comply and then they

were taken away to be annihilated.

     We didn't have gas chambers in those days. We

used barges. A hundred or a thousand persons  were

put into a barge and then it was sunk.

     It was a system which deceived the workers in

all  of  its  decrees  -  the  decree on land, the

decree  on  peace,  the  decree  on factories, the

decree on freedom of the press.

     It  was  a  system  which   exterminated  all

additional  parties,  and  let me make it clear to

you  that  it not only disbanded the party itself,

but  destroyed  its  members. All members of every

other  party  were  exterminated.  It was a system

which  carried  out  genocide of the peasantry; 15

million peasants were sent off to extermination.

     It was a system which introduced serfdom, the

so-called "passport system."

     It  was  a  system  which,  in time of peace,

artificially  created  a famine, causing 6 million

persons to die in the Ukraine in  1932  and  1933.

They died on the very edge of Europe.  And  ...

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