LENIN’S WIDOW TALKS
TO A WELSHMAN
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By GARETH JONES
Western Mail November 7th 1932
The 15th Anniversary of Bolshevik Revolution
Fifteen years ago to-day Lenin shook the world. As leader
of the Bolsheviks he seized power over one-sixth of the globe and installed
a dictatorship of the working class for the first time in history.
For many years he had worked out every detail of his
scheme. In the Reading Room of the British Museum in London his keen brain
bad penetrated the secrets of all the revolutions which had taken place. The
late Mr. Silyn Roberts remembered having seen him at work there, but he
little realised that the Asiatic-looking Russian with the narrow eyes
sitting next to him in the Reading Room would one day be master over the
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
There are probably many Welsh students who frequented the
British Museum who saw him preparing his philosophy and his plans of action
which were to lead to the first proletarian revolution, but remained unaware
that their fellow-student was one of the great figures of history.
"If only Lenin had lived!" is the cry which one bears on
all sides in Russia today, for he aroused the love of the peasants by his
practical nature and by his New Economic Policy in 1921, which restored
freedom of trade and abandoned Socialism in the villages.
In the towns Lenin is worshipped by millions, who cherish
his photograph just as they cherished the ikon. Thousands swarm each day in
the vast Red Square in Moscow, where in a red marble mausoleum his embalmed
body lies for all to see. There the maker of the Russian Revolution fifteen
years ago can be seen motionless in a glass coffin guarded by two Red
soldiers, who are almost as still as the corpse they defend. Workers
peasants, children with red kerchiefs shuffle past in the semi-darkness, not
whispering a word as they concentrate their looks on the dead Lenin.
"Russia’s Mother"
Almost as striking a personality as the Bolshevik leader
himself is his widow, who received me in the Commissariat of Education in
Moscow. She bravely accompanied her husband throughout all his exiles, in
Siberia, in London, in Switzerland, and elsewhere, and helped him in his
studies and in his plans.
She is a typical example of the driving power which wives
of great men have
inspired in their husbands like Lenin, who came from a
petty noble stock, she was not a working-class woman, although her whole
life was devoted to the workers. They had no children, but Lenin’s widow is
devoted to care of the children of the Soviet Union and she is known as
"Russia’s Mother."
Since Lenin died, in January, 1924, she has spent most of
her time in improving the education in the Soviet Union. She has, however,
been associated with the opposition to Stalin, and her real relation with
the present dictator are not so cordial as they are stated to be in the
official press. The anecdote is whispered in Moscow that Stalin and she had
a quarrel. Suddenly Stalin lost his temper, turned to her and shouted: "look
here, old woman, if you do not behave I’ll appoint another widow to Lenin!"
A Talk on Education
It would be better, therefore, I thought, as I mounted
the stone steps to her room not to talk about politics, but about education.
I was brought into a very small, very bare office, whose only decoration
‘was a large photograph of Lenin.
I recognised at the table the woman whose image I had
seen reproduced all over Russia. Over 60 years of age, she had greyish white
hair, which was brushed tightly back over her head, and she wore a very
simple check dress. Her manners indicated a person in whom kindness and
courtesy were natural. Her smile was full of sympathy, and she made an
impression upon me of complete unselfishness, of hard work, self-sacrifice,
and absolute absence of care for worldly comfort. Her facial features were
irregular, for she had big overhanging eyelids and her lips were slightly
twisted.
For an hour she talked in clear, simple Russian of the
educational aims of the Communists. She laid tremendous stress upon
production and upon the necessity of increasing production. She mentioned
the word "production" in the same tone as a Welsh minister might mention God
or religion.
The children must learn everything about production, she
stated. They must be able to understand machines, and in the way she said
"machines" I saw the worship of technical things which is typical of Russia
to-day. She told me that in order that the children might be able to learn
about machines and factories a new system of education, called "polytechnical
education," had been introduced, by which each school was attached to a
factory. The pupils were to visit the factory frequently and thus become
acquainted with the processes of production.
I Wondered
As she spoke I wondered whether she was not laying too
much stress upon the material and the technical in Russia and whether there
were not other things, such as liberty and literature and religious freedom,
which were infinitely more important.
Lenin’s widow then described the great advances which
have been made in education in Russia. There was a wave of enthusiasm among
the workers to study, and in some factories, she said, nearly all the
workers attended evening class after the day’s work was done. Factory
workers would go out to the villages to teach the peasants how to read and
write-and illiteracy was disappearing. Some people of 80 years of age were
now intent on studying the alphabet. Libraries had been spread right
throughout Russia.
She suddenly grew excited as she told me of a letter she
had received from a German teacher asking her whether it was true that the
Communists wished to take the children away from the parents and place them
in children’s towns. No, she exclaimed; this was certainly not true. The
child should have relations with its family, because it must learn about
life, about factories, about workers.
The Communal House
Her idea was to have large communal houses in which one
whole floor would be devoted to the children during the day-time. There they
would be under the care of trained psychologists. At night, however, the
child would sleep in the apartment of its parents.
Lenin’s widow was enthusiastic about the way women were
entering more into the factories and becoming active workers, and praised
the mothers of Russia because they were now nearly all at work in some
branch of production.
When I left her I felt that I had been face to face with
a great personality, but I doubted whether a system of education which had
no place for freedom of thought would succeed in raising a generation of
truly educated men who would think for themselves.
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