Below and attached is an edited and corrected version, with links to
promary-source documents.
  _____




What does “Red October” have to do with South Africa?





The “October Revolution” in Russia - called “Red October” because it was
a communist, working-class revolution - took place on 7 November 1917,
equivalent to 25 October in the old-style Russian calendar, then still in
use in that country.



One writer (John Reed) called it “Ten Days that Shook the World
<https://www.marxists.org/archive/reed/1919/10days/10days/index.htm> ”. It
was a revolution that changed everything. No part of the world was
unaffected by it.



The effects are still felt in South Africa, to such an extent that it is not
possible to fully understand South African reality without having knowledge
of the October 1917 Russian Revolution, what preceded it, and what followed
it.



This year, 2014, is the Centenary of the start of the Great War, also called
the First World War, and more correctly called the inter-Imperialist War, in
1914. This is the right starting-point for our purposes.



The Second International



At the beginning of the year 1914, there existed an international
working-class people’s organisation known as “The Second International
<https://www.marxists.org/history/international/social-democracy/index.htm>
”. Great working-class parties existed in the Western European countries.
They were supposed to be following Karl Marx and Frederick Engels’ idea, in
the Communist Manifesto
<https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1848/communist-manifesto/index.
htm> , of “Workers of All Countries, Unite!”



But in 1914, most of these parties betrayed their working-class
internationalism, and “sided with their national bourgeoisies in waging a
war that would see working people dying in their millions for a cause that
was not their own”. These words are quoted from “The Red Flag in South
Africa”*, which begins the official account of our Communist Party at this
historical moment.



Not only did workers die in that war, in their millions, but the
organisation of the workers assisted in producing the means of human
slaughter: weapons, ammunition, ships, tanks, aeroplanes and all the rest,
on a scale never before known. The worst of the traitors was the “Renegade
<https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1918/prrk/index.htm> ” - Karl
Kautsky, who had previously been regarded as the “Pope of Marxism”.



If the organised working class had not abandoned its working-class
solidarity in 1914, then there was not going to be any “World War”
(inter-Imperialist war).



There were three principal exceptions to this betrayal. One exception was
the Russian Bolshevik organisation, led by Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov: Great
Lenin. The Bolsheviks steadfastly refused to support the war, and they
survived to make their revolution.



Another exception was the German Spartacus League, including Rosa Luxemburg
and Karl Liebknecht. They were heroes. But their fate was to be suppressed
by the Nazi fascists.



The third exception was the group of comrades who split from the South
African Labour Party, which supported the war, to form, in the following
year of 1915, the International Socialist League. The ISL contained Sidney
Percival Bunting, David Ivon Jones, and Bill Andrews, all later prominent in
the CPSA, among others.



The ISL was the immediate forerunner of the Communist Party of South Africa.
So the story of how our Communist Party was formed is linked, right from the
start, with the same history that generated the October Revolution, and
which in particular gave that revolution its internationalist orientation.



It is one and the same history that gave birth to the struggle for universal
voting rights for black as well as white people in South Africa - a struggle
first championed by our Communist Party. It is the same history that laid
down the strategy and tactics of National Democratic Revolution, and of
unity-in-action, which are still followed by South Africans today.



Let us follow the events of this history in a little more detail.



The April Theses



In 1917, hardly a month after the February (bourgeois) Revolution of that
year, Lenin arrived in St. Petersburg, Russia, and delivered his famous
“April Theses
<https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1917/apr/04.htm> ” from the
train.



Thesis 10 was called “A new International”. Lenin said: “We must take the
initiative in creating a revolutionary International, an International
against the social‐chauvinists and against the ‘Centre’.”



Under the stimulus of the war and the betrayal that had made the war
possible, Lenin had been studying Imperialism
<https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1916/imp-hsc/index.htm> . What
followed was the roll-out of a plan to deal with Imperialism across the
world. South Africa was quickly made part of that process, and it continued
in an unbroken line until today.



The October Revolution



But first, the actual proletarian revolution had to take place in Russia,
which happened in October, according to the Russian Orthodox calendar of the
time. The date according to the calendar used in other countries was 7
November. This event was the pivot around which all else turns: The Great
October Soviet Socialist Revolution.



The Comintern



First Congress



Less than two years later, in the northern summer of 1919, and in spite of
counter-revolutionary warfare that was still continuing, the Bolsheviks
convened the First Congress
<https://www.marxists.org/glossary/events/c/comintern.htm#first-congress>
of the Third (Communist) International.



Second Congress



The Second Congress
<https://www.marxists.org/history/international/comintern/2nd-congress/index
.htm>  of the Third International was convened one year later, in 1920, with
many more delegates, and it had a major Commission called the Commission on
the National and Colonial Question. Lenin was the rapporteur. His
report-back from this commission is a classic. In it, he introduces the idea
of the National Democratic Revolution as a set of strategy and tactics that
could (and did) be used to liberate the world. Most of the world at that
time was under the dominance of Imperialism. This National Democratic
Revolution of Lenin’s is the very same NDR that we South African Communists
have practised and continue to practise.



Third Congress



The Third Congress
<https://www.marxists.org/history/international/comintern/3rd-congress/index
.htm>  convened in 1921. It admitted the Communist Party of South Africa,
and the Communist Party of China, to membership, of course on the
Comintern’s terms.



Hence it is the case that our South African Communist Party was created as
part of the same series of events that included as its most crucial single
item, the Great October Soviet Socialist Revolution. And this is why we
celebrate on the day of its anniversary.



Sixth Congress



But this is not the last of the reasons. There were altogether seven
Congresses of the Comintern. At the Sixth Congress
<https://www.marxists.org/history/international/comintern/index.htm> , in
1928, one of the main resolutions was on “The South African Question
<https://www.marxists.org/history/international/comintern/sections/sacp/1928
/comintern.htm> ”. In it, the Comintern insisted that the CPSA take up the
struggle for a native republic, or in other words, black majority rule. Thus
the CPSA became the first Party in South Africa to demand the full universal
franchise, which was finally achieved in the Democratic Breakthrough of
1994.



Summary



These few notes are put down to assist comrades who may be called upon to
make inputs to events at any level, during the commemoration of the 97th
Anniversary of the Great October Proletarian Revolution.



Please feel free to make your suggestions as to what could be included, that
has so far been omitted.













* “The Red Flag in South Africa” has been converted to PDF, and the SACP
has it, but it is not yet on the SACP web site



















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