https://morningstaronline.co.uk/article/c/merit-taking-stalin-seriously

The life of the young Stalin in every conceivable context
Stalin emerges from this book as unremarkable, but his discipline and aptitude 
as a practical worker commended him to Lenin, who was repaid with unflinching 
political loyalty, writes ANDREW MURRAY

Sunday 08th Nov 2020

Stalin – Passage to Revolution
by Ronald Grigor Suny,
Princeton Press £30.59

THE problem besetting any author writing about Stalin is set out plainly by 
Ronald Suny on page two of this enormous book. “The drama of his life, the 
achievements and tragedies, are so morally and emotionally charged that they 
challenge the usual practices of historical objectivity and scholarly 
neutrality.”

Stalin’s life, Suny writes, “is the story of the making of the Soviet Union and 
a particular vision of what he called socialism.” It is one of the most 
emotionally charged stories of the last century. 

The Italian historian of communism Aldo Agosti called it “the greatest paradox 
of the 20th century, the phenomenon of communism, capable of mobilising the 
hopes and energies of millions of human beings in the struggle for their own 
emancipation, and at the same time sacrificing the dignity and the lives of 
just as many.”

Stalin embodies the paradox more than any other figure. Some – indeed, most – 
of his biographers from Leon Trotsky onwards tend to resolve it not merely by 
painting their subject in the bleakest colours, but by using it as an exercise 
in establishing their own moral superiority. 

For example, Donald Rayfield, a rather less distinguished figure than Trotsky 
and author of the lurid Stalin and his Hangmen, criticised another Stalin 
biographer, Simon Sebag Montefiore, for allowing “the reader to forget for 
whole pages what an unremitting demon Stalin really was.”

Small enlightenment can be expected from such an approach. Happily, it is not 
Suny’s – although since his work focuses exclusively on Stalin in the years up 
to and including but not beyond the revolution of 1917, he does not have to 
address the crimes and controversies of Stalin in power.

But within that self-imposed limitation – and the text dealing with the young 
Stalin runs to more than 700 pages as it is – this is an outstanding work of 
scholarship. Indeed, it is hard to imagine that anything further needs to be 
written about this part of Stalin’s life in future.

Eschewing the sensationalist approach of Montefiore in his Young Stalin – 
basically, Stalin as womaniser – Suny sets the subject within every conceivable 
context: Russian state politics, life in the Caucasian borderlands, the 
emergent labour movement in Tblisi and Baku where Stalin first cut his 
revolutionary teeth, the political divisions within the Russian social 
democrats, the exhilarating advance and enervating ebb of revolution.

Suny is especially strong on the internal politics of the socialists, dealing 
exhaustively with the rift between Bolsheviks and Mensheviks both at the level 
of high theory and in terms of its impact on the ground, in the milieu where 
activists like Stalin operated. 

The differences in political perspective and about party organisation are 
rendered more comprehensible by this approach, rather than by referring 
exclusively to the classical Leninist texts. Suny has troubled himself to 
master these topics, something Montefiore and Rayfield would doubtless regard 
as a waste of time.

A vivid picture is painted of society and life in Stalin’s native Georgia, and 
adjacent Azerbaijan, of tsarist oppression and the elemental nature of the 
struggle of the embryonic working class. This was marked by violence, hideous 
exploitation and a continuing struggle for both personal survival and the 
preservation of any form of workers’ organisation.

This was the environment within which Stalin was forged. It was criss-crossed 
by fractures of nationality and religion. Suny details at some length Stalin’s 
emergence as an authority on the national question in the years before the 
revolution, laying down principles which profoundly shaped subsequent Soviet 
policy and, indeed, the worldwide Marxist approach to the question.

Inevitably, readers scour books about Stalin’s early years for clues as to what 
made him what he subsequently became. Suny does not set that as his explicit 
task, yet he leaves many clues. “In the Georgia in which he grew up violence 
was an everyday occurrence – in the family, from the state, against the state. 
There was arbitrary, unjustified violence... and violence sanctified by 
tradition,” he writes.

Likewise, he dwells on Stalin’s close friendship with Roman Malinovsky, the 
working-class Bolshevik leader subsequently unmasked as a tsarist spy. Such an 
experience doubtless made it easier in the years ahead to see the potential for 
treachery among close comrades, including where it did not exist.

“Chronically suspicious and prone to doubt others, Stalin learned a bitter 
lesson: traitors can be concealed within the ranks of the party itself.”

The coarsening and hardening effect of long passages of Siberian exile, scarred 
by privation, boredom and interminable squabbling, must have had an impact too.

None of this can explain the whole, though. Others had similar experiences yet 
were shaped differently. In some respects, Stalin emerges from this book as 
unremarkable. His discipline and aptitude as a practical worker clearly 
commended him to Lenin, who was repaid by the younger man’s unflinching 
political loyalty. There were better orators, writers and theorists but few who 
cleaved so close to the leader.

Stalin attached himself to Lenin politically early on and indeed regarded 
himself as a disciple of Lenin until the end of his life. In the pivotal year 
of 1917 he was staunchly “Leninist” at least after his wobble towards support 
for the provisional government in the aftermath of the February revolution and 
before Lenin’s return from exile.

While his role in the successful insurrection was clearly far inferior to that 
of Trotsky or Lenin, Stalin was by no means a secondary figure in the Bolshevik 
Party. Indeed, he had been added to the party’s central committee in 1912, when 
the body had only nine members. Lenin found his “wonderful Georgian” a reliable 
ally, in Suny’s telling.

Perhaps the overriding merit of this book is that it takes Stalin seriously. It 
explains his life and development without feeling the need to impose a value 
judgement on the reader on every page.

Of course, that would be harder if the story did not end in 1917. The best and 
worst was yet to come, and socialism still lives in its shadow. The last 
thirty-eight years of Stalin’s life deserve similar sober and scholarly 
treatment.


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