-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the Aug. 05, 2004
issue of Workers World newspaper
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LESBIAN, GAY, BI AND TRANS PRIDE SERIES, PART 10:
"PEOPLE OF THE MOONLIGHT" IN THE DAWN OF REVOLUTION

By Leslie Feinberg

The Bolshevik Party did not merely scrap anti-homosexual tsarist laws.
Sexologist Wilhelm Reich, in "The Sexual Revolution," described the
intent of the Bolsheviks' political position. They felt it was necessary
to tear down the walls that divided homosexuals--also known in Russia as
"people of the moonlight"--from the rest of society.

The revolutionaries tried to examine sexuality and gender as they did
all social and economic relations--through a scientific lens. Reich
explained that the Bolsheviks believed same-sex love harmed no one and
that it was wrong to punish anyone because of their sexuality.

And as Lenin and his party won over segments of the middle classes to
the goals of the socialist revolution, the young workers' state drew
strong support from prominent homosexuals. Russian literary historian
Simon Karlinsky, no friend to socialist revolution, admits that, "With
remarkable unanimity, all male gay and bisexual writers welcomed the
October takeover." That included Mikhail Kuzmin, author of "Wings," and
Nikolai Kliusev, considered the unofficial poet laureate of the Russian
peasantry.

Historian Dan Healey puts this accomplishment in a larger historical
context. "Soviet Russia was by far the most significant power since the
French Revolution to decriminalize male same-sex relations, while
Britain and Weimar Germany continued to prosecute homosexuals. Soviet
health authorities courted the left-leaning sex reform movement headed
by Berlin sexologist and homosexual rights campaigner Magnus Hirschfeld.

"Biologists and doctors chiefly sponsored by the Commissariat of Health
began to investigate homosexuality as a scientific and medical
phenomenon, often from sympathetic perspectives that were in comparative
terms markedly advanced."

The weight of material suffering during those years was unbearable. By
early 1918, after nearly four years of devastating imperialist war, the
urban food ration was four ounces of bread a day--and nothing else.
("Soviet Women")

During the years of "war communism"--the civil war of 1918 to 1921--when
the workers' state was surrounded and under siege, internally and
externally, there is little record of any "gay life."

The revolution had occurred in the weakest link of the capitalist chain.
Russia was semi-feudal and profoundly under-developed technologically,
making the task of raising production to meet the needs of all more
onerous. And the workers' state was an island in a sea of raging
imperialism, determined to engulf the first successful socialist
revolution.

NEW ECONOMIC POLICY

In order to rebuild the productive apparatus, Lenin called for a partial
and temporary return to a market economy in 1921 with the adoption of
the New Economic Policy. His arguments for the NEP included frank
warnings of the dangers inherent in reintroducing capitalist relations
in a planned economy.

Healey has produced valuable accounts on this period. "Surprisingly,
despite the seven-year hiatus of war, revolution, and civil war that
concluded in 1921," he writes, "much of the male homosexual underworld
that existed before 1914 reconstituted itself in the early years of the
New Economic Policy. Street cruising and male prostitution returned to
Moscow and Petrograd, with the same toilets, parks, and boulevards
providing arenas for the market in both paid and unpaid sex between
men." ("Russian Queen")

He emphasizes that the homosexual male "subculture" under tsarism had
relied in part on privately owned commercial spaces like bathhouses and
restaurants. These small-scale capitalist enterprises were closed down
by the reorganization of a planned economy, which impacted on patterns
of the "commercialization" of same-sex relations.

"Despite homosexuals' increasing difficulty under Soviet rule in
controlling private spaces," Healey adds, "they occasionally managed to
use domestic or other semiprivate venues (halls, cabarets) to gather.
... The relative openness of homosexual entertainments tapered off
rapidly after the civil war, but a few sources hint at their more
discreet continuation. Many of the best records of gatherings come from
the Petrograd-Leningrad subculture, where a tradition of popular private
homosexual assemblies was well established."

During the NEP, he documents, "Antinoi (Antinous), a private arts circle
devoted to the appreciation of 'male beauty' in prose, verse, drama, and
music, functioned in Moscow during the early 1920s, staging readings of
consciously homosexual poetry, recitals of music by 'our own' composers,
and even an all-male ballet. The group made plans to publish an
anthology of homosexual verse from ancient to modern times, an attempt
to construct an ennobling past."

However, the group seemed to have disbanded after finding it difficult
to rent meeting space or publicize its events.

"But it would be misleading to claim that Soviet policies alone 'drove
people into the toilets,'" Healey concludes. "Marginal public spaces
were well-established sexualized territories, geographic expressions of
a lively urban male homosexual subculture. After 1917, male homosexuals
and their male sexual partners continued resorting to public lavatories
and other civic amenities like parks and boulevards because they were
spaces where participants could recognize and meet each other according
to familiar rituals."

The position of the Bolsheviks in the 1920s was very clear. They opposed
the economic exploitation of women, men and children represented by
prostitution, but they were not for penalizing the prostitutes. And they
did not believe that sexuality was a matter for state intervention.

[Next: 1920s: Scientific, not utopian]

- END -

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