V. I.   Lenin

Apropos of One Untruth

(LETTER TO THE EDITORS)


Published: Pravda No. 136, June 15, 1913. Signed: V. Ilyin. Published according to the Pravda text.
Source: Lenin Collected Works, Progress Publishers, 1977, Moscow, Volume 19, pages 233-234.
Translated: The Late George Hanna
Transcription\Markup: R. Cymbala
Public Domain: Lenin Internet Archive (2004). You may freely copy, distribute, display and perform this work; as well as make derivative and commercial works. Please credit “Marxists Internet Archive” as your source.
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We should have welcomed, from all points of view, the appearance of L. Martov’s articles in Luch, promising an analysis of the question of “the tactical essence of the present dispute”, if the very first article had not contained a blatant untruth. My words to the effect that the dispute with the liquidators had nothing to do with the organisational question[1] were declared to be “unexpected” by L. Martov. “Just look at this!” he exclaimed. “All of a sudden, with the help of God, we have a change”, and so on.

Yet L. Martov knows full well that there has been no change at all, that nothing whatever unexpected has happened. In May 1910, over three years ago, I wrote in a Paris publication, which Martov knows quite well, “about a group of legalist-independents” (the ideas of Nasha Zarya and Vozrozhdeniye) and said that it had “definitely rallied together and definitely broken with the Party”.[2]

It is obvious that here, too, the dispute does not concern the organisational question (how to organise the Party?) but the question of the existence of the Party, of the secession of the liquidators from the Party, of their complete breakaway from the Party. Martov must realise that this is not a dispute on the question of organisation.

In October 1911, in a publication equally well known to Martov, signed also by me, it was said: “In reality, it is by no means the organisational question that is now in the forefront”, but of the “existence” of the Party.[3]

The affairs of the liquidators must be in a bad way if Martov, to evade an examination of the Party’s precise decisions, is telling fairy-tales and publishing a blatant untruth.


Notes

[1] See p. 109 of this volume.—Ed.

[2] See present edition, Vol. 16, p. 244.—Ed.

[3] See present edition, Vol. 17. p. 260.—Ed.


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