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From the Writings of Raya Dunayevskaya: Marxist-Humanist Archives
August-September 1998


"Recollecting the legacy of 'Socialism with a human face'"

Editor's Note: August 20 marks 30 years since the Russianled invasion of Czechoslovakia by some 660,000 Warsaw Pact troops crushed the democratization movement that came to be known as "Socialism with a human face." "Prague Spring," as it was also called, was one of the revolutionary events of that momentous year 1968; the Soviet Union's invasion was one of the counterrevolutionary events that year that signaled a terrible foreboding that the epoch had come to an end. There have been few commemorations of Prague Spring, or retrospectives on the Russian invasion, nearly a decade after the collapse of "Communism." For that reason we print the August 1960 Editorial Statement Raya Dunayevskaya wrote for NEWS & LETTERS two weeks before Russian tanks rolled into Prague, entitled "All Eyes on Czechoslovakia, All Hands Off!" The editorial was reprinted in the News and Letters pamphlet CZECHOSLOVAKIA: REVOLUTION AND COUNTER-REVOLUTION. The pamphlet contained an extensive inperson report from a Czech Marxist-Humanist dissident, Stephen Steiger, whose retrospective written this month can be found in the NEWS & LETTERS web site under "Forgotten Heritage of 1968" by Stephen Steiger. The pamphlet can be found in THE RAYA DUNAYEVSKAYA COLLECTION, #399397.

A new page in the history of freedom is being written in Czechoslovakia. It is vividly described in the report, "At the Crossroads of Two Worlds," by a participant in the dramatic events. We ask all our readers, here and in Europe, in Latin America and in the Middle East, in Asia as well as in Africa, to spread this analysis of events far and wide.

This is not just a report of what the Czechoslovak press calls "democratization," and the New Left here would describe as "participatory democracy." This is not only a description of the sudden birth of a genuine public opinion (expressed almost totally without censorship in the mass media) in a Communist land which is situated strategically at the crossroads of two worlds. NOR IS IT ONLY AN EXCITING DRAMA OF A PEOPLE STRIVING FOR NATIONAL INDEPENDENCE WHILE THE "FRATERNAL COMMUNIST NATIONS" OF THE WARSAW PACT ARE ENGAGED IN A GAME OF RUSSIAN ROULETTE AS THEY CONDUCT THEIR MILITARY MANEUVERS ALL ALONG THE CZECH FRONTIER. THIS IS ALSO, AND ABOVE ALL, THE DEPICTION OF A FLOOD OF IDEAS EMANATING FROM A PEOPLE WHO HAVE "FOUND THEIR TONGUES."

Workers are openly questioning their conditions of labor and life. The student youth are expressing their solidarity with East European youth like the Polish, against whom the Communist rulers have struck out with slanders interlaced with a strong anti-Semitic flavor, with firings and outright arrests. And the youth are also expressing their solidarity with the rebels in West Germany and the revolutionaries in France. The intellectuals are demanding not only freedom of the press, but freedom to act, to create, to build opposition parties.

Should anyone in the United States be so obtuse as to imagine that this applies only to lands bound by a single party system, LET HIM TAKE A SECOND LOOK NOT ONLY AT THE TWEEDLEDUM-TWEEDLEDEE CHARACTER OF THE AMERICAN TWO-PARTY SYSTEM, WHICH IS OBVIOUS ENOUGH, BUT AT THE NOT SO OBVIOUS--AND WHEN IT COMES TO THE FIELD OF IDEAS, FOR MORE IMPORTANT--FENCED-IN PRAGMATISM AND ARROGANCE THAT IS SUMMED UP IN THE AMERICAN INTELLECTUAL CONCEPT OF "THE END OF IDEOLOGY."

Now compare this ideological barrenness with the concepts of the Czech historian, Milan Hubel, to whom a demand for a plurality of parties signifies a demand for "a plurality which grants freedom to a flow of ideas, competition of concepts, and an outline to get out of quagmireŠ" We are in two different worlds.

It is all the more necessary, therefore, to emphasize that, in expressing our solidarity with the Czechoslovak people, we are not doing something "for" them; we have a lot to learn from them. In calling for all eyes to be on Czechoslovakia, and all hands off, Marxist-Humanists have in mind not only Russian state-capitalism calling itself Communism that had dominated Czechoslovakia for the past 20 years. WE ARE ALSO EXPRESSING OUR TOTAL DISTRUST OF AND OPPOSITION TO AMERICAN CAPITALISM WHICH HAS SEEN FIT TO NURTURE THE MOST NOTORIOUS CZECH STALINIST GENERAL WHO FLED THE COUNTRY THE MOMENT OF BIRTH OF DEMOCRATIZATION.

It is not, however, the escape of one general with secrets of the Warsaw Pact that throws fear into the heart of the Russian ruling class. On the whole, they know how to play those kinds of games better than "the West," as is evident from all the secrets they pried loose from NATO. What they fear most of all are masses in motion.

MASSES IN MOTION

The Russians, for example, have learned well enough how to get along with Rumania. Yet Rumania has officially questioned the whole concept of the Warsaw Pact, which Czechoslovakia has not. Rumania is also flirting with China, which again, is not the way of the Czechoslovak leaders. Rumania displayed its dissidence before Czechoslovakia embarked on her democratization experiment. Yet none of the threats against the latter have ever been pronounced against the Rumanians. THEREIN LIES THE TRUE TALE WHICH ILLUMINATES THE CAPITALIST CLASS NATURE OF PRESENT-DAY COMMUNISM.

The Rumanian "deviations" have all been handed down from above. No freedom has been allowed the masses. The lid is kept firmly down on any free expression. Though the Rumanian nationalists, like the Russians themselves, no longer bow to the name of Stalin, as China does, Rumania remains completely totalitarian. Hence, the Russians and the Rumanians understand each other perfectly. They can horse trade in capitalistic fashion, practice class compromise and can turn the full state-military fury against intellectuals who would demand freedom of expression and workers who would demand control of production.

Czechoslovakia, on the other hand, though it is a long distance from allowing the exercise of workers' control of production, has released public opinion from censorship. The result has been that not only are intellectuals raising existential questions, and returning to their origin in the Humanism of Marxism, but masses also are in motion. The Russian and East European hard-liners' attacks on the Czechoslovak leadership have only solidified the nation, including those far to the left of the [Alexander] Dubcek leadership.

TWO DECADES: PHILOSOPHY AND REVOLUTION

East Germany is vying with Russia as to who can be most Stalinist in its vitriolic attacks on Czechoslovakia. With its Berlin Wall and unchanged Stalinist leaders, it has reason to fear the fresh air of Czechoslovak democracy. By contrast, Yugoslavia, which was the first to break from Stalin's empire in East Europe, seems the model of "democracy" and that, indeed, is the most the present moderate Czechoslovak leadership plans to allow.

It is all the more essential to remember the true facts. One is that Yugoslavia remains a single party system that continues to jail Left opponents. The other relevant fact is that it was not the nationalist breakaway of Yugoslavia in 1948 which inspired serious rebellions against Stalin's Russia. RATHER IT WAS THE PROLETARIAN REVOLT IN EAST GERMANY IN 1953, SHORTLY AFTER STALIN'S DEATH. THE GENERAL STRIKE ON JUNE 17, 1953, AGAINST SPEED-UP AND LOW WAGES, AND FOR "BREAD AND FREEDOM," PUT AN END TO THE TWIN MYTHS OF THE INVINCIBILITY OF STALINIST TOTALITARIANISM AND THE ALLEGED INCAPACITY OF THE WORKING CLASS TO RISE IN REVOLUTION IN A COMMUNIST LAND. AT THE SAME TIME IT INSPIRED THE REVOLT IN THE VORKUTA FORCED LABOR CAMPS IN RUSSIA ITSELF.

It is against similar inspiration emanating from Czechoslovakia today that Russia and East Germany are trying to insulate the masses. All in vain. Already there is clandestinely circulating in Russia a 10,000 word essay by the Nobel prize-winning Russian physicist, Prof. Andrei D. Sakharov, which states: "We must, without doubt, support their (Czechoslovak) bold initiative, which is very important for the fate of socialism and the whole of mankind." Furthermore, Prof. Sakharov condemns the imprisonment of Russian writers who oppose the regime, Andrei Sinyavsky and Yuli Daniels, and others. The latest group of rebellious writers who were sentenced to labor camps include Yuri Galanskov, Alexander Ginzburg, Aleksei Dobrovolsky and Vera Lashkova.

No wonder the Russian ruling clique worries about the consequences, FOR RUSSIA, of Czechoslovak democratization. No doubt Brezhnev and Kosygin remember that de-Stalinization did not begin in Russia from above, but in East Germany, from below. Moreover, Bertolt Brecht's winged phrase, "to think is to change" notwithstanding, the intellectuals did not lead, and at first were in no hurry to follow, the spontaneous revolt of the East German proletariat. For the most part, the intellectuals then stood on the sidelines.

IT TOOK ANOTHER THREE YEARS PLUS KHRUSCHEV'S OPEN DECLARATION FOR DE-STALINIZATION BEFORE THE INTELLECTUALS IN COMMUNIST LANDS WOULD REBEL IN SUCH MASSIVE NUMBERS AS TO BRING ABOUT NOT ONLY A REVOLUTION IN PHILOSOPHY, BUT A PHILOSOPHY OF REVOLUTION. BUT ONCE THE INTELLECTUALS AND WORKERS DID FINALLY UNITE INA STRUGGLE AGAINST REPRESSIVE COMMUNISM, THEY DID INDEED INITIATE THE BEGINNING OF COMMUNISM, THEY DID INDEED INITIATE THE BEGINNING OF THE END OF THE RUSSIAN EMPIRE IN EAST EUROPE. What the Polish intellectuals and youth pioneered in 1956 as they turned from purely economic to existential questions-and with it the humanist character of genuine Marxism-the Hungarian Freedom Fighters brought onto the historic stage in open revolution.

THE PARTY, THE PARTY

Without engaging in revolution, the Czechoslovak New Left did touch the raw nerve of Communism-in this case, Czechoslovakian as well as Russian Communism. They did this by questioning the concept of the vanguard, not to mention omniscient, role of the Communist Party. Here Dubcek refused to budge. On the contrary. He was not only adamant about the "leading role" of the Party. He not only claimed total credit for the new road of "democratization." And he not only opposed the creation of new opposition parties. He also staked out the claim that "the greatest majority of the best creative minds in the country is in the Party."

This, then, defines the next battleground of ideas. Hence, the importance of the fact that the philosopher, Ivan Svitak, and others, who raised the question of opposition parties, the role of the Communist Party, raised them as inseparable from their philosophic foundation, on the one hand, and the needed unity of worker and intellectual, on the other hand.

In raising the fundamental question of philosophy and revolution, the party and spontaneity, the unity of worker and intellectual, they have indeed laid the foundation of a new relationship of theory to practice. Thereby they have gone far beyond anything raised by the New Left in "the West."

The reporter from Prague whom we print in this special issue of NEWS & LETTERS rightly stresses that the events he describes are but the first act of a live drama whose ending cannot possibly be known in advance. Show your solidarity with Czechoslovakia!

August 4, 1968

Raya Dunayevskaya



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