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Open Letter to an Open Enemy
Scots SFF author Ken MacLeod has written science fiction novels
which make frequent passing reference to the Soviet Union, Lenin,
Trotsky, and communism. But he does not regard Lenin as a mass murderer,
any more than he regards Cromwell, Napoleon, Lincoln, Roosevelt or
Churchill as mass murderers. Read why here ...
Give me back the Berlin Wall, give me Stalin and
St. Paul, I've seen the future, brother: it is murder.
- Leonard Cohen, The Future, 1992
I've
written novels which make frequent passing reference to the Soviet
Union, Lenin, Trotsky, and communism. These references, however
critical, are never wholly condemnatory. I've been a member, albeit
a bad one, of Trotskyist sects and of the Communist Party.
I'm still a socialist, albeit a bad one. I don't regard this as
equivalent to having been a Nazi, or still being a fascist. There
are some who say it is. Not even they believe it. They'll say: 'Hitler
was a socialist!' and think they've made a point. They don't say:
'Stalin was a socialist!' and think they've made a point.
This was written in anger, in response to a former opponent who
has called me the moral equivalent of a Holocaust denier, but I'll
let it stand:
My reference to 'the great scandal' of Lenin was not meant as a
criticism of Lenin. I do not regard Lenin as a mass murderer, any
more than I regard Cromwell, William of Orange, Robespierre, Napoleon,
Lincoln, Roosevelt or Churchill as mass murderers.
The word 'kulak' is in no way equivalent to 'untermenshch': 'kulak'
means, literally, 'fist', and descriptively 'rich peasant'. 'Untermensch'
means 'sub-human'. Even used pejoratively, 'kulak' is a million
miles from 'untermensch'. Nevertheless, I'll not defend my indefensibly
flippant use of it, albeit in a clearly over-the-top rant.
I find your parallel world argument as ignorant as it is offensive.
You have studied the intellectual precursors of fascism, but you
show no evidence of having more than glanced at those of communism.
The relationship between Marxism and 'actually existing socialism'
is not at all like that between the proto-fascists and 'actually
existing fascism'. Fascism was not a good idea badly implemented,
or implemented in heinously inclement conditions.
Fascism was a bad idea well implemented, in (for it) ideal conditions.
It made vile promises, most of which it kept. And in the world I
live in, 'actually existing fascism' has its respectable dupes and
defenders. They are called, and rightly call themselves, conservatives
and libertarians.
But that's not the main point. I wholly reject the premises of
your argument: that Stalin was comparable to Hitler, that the Ukraine
famine (or the many other Stalinist and communist crimes) was a
crime comparable to the Holocaust, and that people who misguidedly
minimise or defend the terror under Stalin are comparable to Holocaust
deniers.
In fact, I would claim that this position is itself the subtle
and respectable face of Holocaust denial: Holocaust relativisation.
'So Hitler killed six million? Stalin killed sixty (or forty, or
twenty) million!' It's the great lie of our time, conclusively refuted
by the Soviet archives - though the truth, God knows, is horrifying
enough.
To tell you the truth, I am personally more anguished by the raw
numbers from the archives than by the many speculative and wildly
inflated figures I have read over the years. I'm not, however, going
to argue over numbers or details.
Here is a statistically insignificant personal detail. Of the five
or six Jews I happen to know personally, three or four have huge
gaps in their families - blood-lines that ended in German-occupied
Poland. I by chance know one Russian personally, a man of my own
age. He is a liberal, never a communist, a man who went to the barricades
for Yeltsin in 1993. He does not remember the Soviet Union in his
own lifetime as a regime of horror. Far from it: 'Brezhnev was -
what do you call it? Yes - an enlightened despot. Not totalitarian!'
And before his lifetime?
His wife's mother was deported to Kazakhstan as a kulak. 'They
were dumped on the steppe with nothing,' my friend said. 'Nobody
cared if you lived or died - better that you died. But they built
a place to live from nothing. And you know what she says? She remembers
it as a good time, all of us from all over the Soviet Union working
together ...'
Show me a Jew who remembers the Holocaust like that. The great
Israeli civil libertarian Israel Shahak called Solzhenitsyn practically
a Nazi for claiming Stalin's labour camps were like Hitler's death
camps. Nicolas Werth, a contributor to The Black Book of Communism,
flatly stated: 'Death camps did not exist in the Soviet Union.'
I will admit to one hatred: for the Germans of the wartime generations.
For them I have no pity whatsoever. Dresden, Hamburg, the expulsions,
the camps emptied of Jews and filled with Germans after the war?
Cry me a river. A Jewish pacifist friend of mine remarked recently
that she'd heard a radio programme about the sufferings and mass
deaths of the millions of ethnic Germans expelled from Eastern Europe
after the war. She switched it off, she couldn't bear to listen
to it - not because she was moved by their suffering, but because
she vehemently rejected any appeal for sympathy with them. And I
agree with her.
Another Jewish friend, twenty-three years ago, so hated and feared
'the Polacks' that she was eager to march against Solidarnosc. And
I agreed with her. I still do, [that is, I still restrospectively
sympathise with her fears and my own suspicions, wrong though they
were] for all that I have sincerely given a warm description of
what I saw in post-counter-revolution Poland, and a sympathetic
account of conversations with counter-revolutionary Poles ('I had
seen a better world'). But still.
I'm shocked and a little ashamed that you've so misunderstood my
position. I've never concealed it, and have often enough stated
or implied it.
I've often enough pointed out that there were Marxists and other
socialists who opposed Lenin, and others who opposed Stalin, and
others (including myself, back in the day) who opposed his successors,
and that they did so (contrary to your endlessly reiterated - no
matter how often corrected - false assertions) at the time and not
only after the fact. I've often enough pointed out that, on an arguably
Marxian definition of socialism, the Soviet Union and the other
Communist-ruled countries weren't socialist.
And that even if they were in some sense socialist, the undemocratic
means by which they were established had a great deal to do with
their subsequent dictatorial character. 'Socialism' with an always-revocable
popular mandate in a democratic state and developed society could
well be very different from 'socialism' in a one-party state and
a backward and shattered society. I've often enough made bitter
reference to the bloodier epochs or grubbier features of these societies,
in both my fiction and in my writing on the Net. I've often enough
criticised and lampooned socialism and communism, real and imagined,
as well as imagining other forms of socialism and communism.
But I've never concealed my view, and stated it often but evidently
not often enough, that in the Russian Civil War and in the Second
World War, I am glad the side that won did win. I am willing to
stand by everything that was necessary for these victories. In the
Russian Civil War, given the choice between the Reds and the Whites,
I take the Red side. And given the situation that the Soviet Union
faced from the end of the twenties, I side with the basic choice
of industrialization and collectivization. Furthermore, given that
treason and capitulation had their partisans, as they did and must
have done, I agree that they had to be crushed.
Given that basic choice, blunders and crimes on a horrendous scale
were inevitable. That does not mean they were excusable. 'It is
written that offences must come, but woe unto him from whom they
come.' I've held this view for about thirty years, whatever the
shifts in my mere opinions about socialism. I have said that even
in an anarcho-capitalist Galaxy, there could be statues of Stalin
under other suns. I have a very critical view about socialism, to
say nothing of Leninism and Stalinism, but I have a great love for
the Soviet Union. This is not revisionism.
This is mainstream historical orthodoxy. This not ideology. This
is elementary British, Soviet and European patriotism - and American
too, did you but know it. My father hated Communism, and was deeply
distressed at my identification with even a critical communism,
but he remembered with pride hearing a sermon of thanks after Stalingrad,
and he counted among his friends a deacon who in my hearing recalled
without regret a massacre of German prisoners by the Yugoslav Communist
partisans he had parachuted in to help. I am not going to spit on
the Red soldiers' and Red partisans' graves for the sake of 'civil
discourse' with you or anybody else.
For what was the situation the rulers of the Soviet Union faced
at the end of the twenties? The peoples of the Soviet Union were
the 'untermenschen' marked for extermination and enslavement. They
were for the most part backward and ignorant peasants. In modern
warfare they had not a chance in hell. Not only Hitler, but significant
and powerful sections of the German ruling class, saw the former
Russian empire as Germany's future colonial empire and 'lebensraum'.
And the rulers of the other empires, the good liberal democratic
colonial empires, were only too keen to point the Germans in that
direction, and away from their own. (That's why I hate the Tories,
by the way: for most them it was class before country, every time,
and for many of them it still is. Well then: 'It will go hard but
I will better the instruction.' Class before country.)
The rulers of the Soviet Union, that empire of untermenschen facing
extermination or enslavement, knew what was coming. They knew that,
in a decade or less, an army from the future would fill their horizon
with a storm of steel. There was no way of avoiding it. There was
no way of preparing for it without the most horrendous efforts,
the most drastic expedients, to drive and dragoon their empire into
the twentieth century.
As I've said elsewhere, they had to beat their ploughboys into
swordsmen. And if they chose that, there would be those who would
flinch, those who would panic, those who would revolt and those
who would betray. There was no way of knowing in advance who these
might be. There was no benefit of the doubt to be given doubters.
One slip could be fatal. There was not an inch to be given. The
costs would be horrific. The price was madness. The reward was infamy.
But it was that - or death.
As Stalin said in 1931:
'We are fifty or a hundred years behind the advanced countries.
We must make good this distance in ten years. Either we do it, or
they crush us.'
Everything that was defensible in Stalinism, and everything I would
defend about the Soviet Union, is in these three sentences. Everything
else was negotiable, was debatable, could have been done otherwise,
can be criticised, denounced, condemned. And I have done so often
enough, but not enough to satisfy you and your ilk. Nothing that
I say ever would be, and please God it never will.
Ken MacLeod
(c) 2004 Ken MacLeod - All Rights Reserved
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A Problem with Fear Mark sits down for this latest SF movie and discovers a quirky science fiction film with some odd approaches, including a man-made 'fear storm'. (FILM REVIEWS)
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Six Lost Worlds: The Dramatic Adaptations of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Novel Mark imagines a place so isolated from the world that it was beyond the reach even of the forces of evolution ... where on one plateau deep in the Amazon rain forest there is a land that has withstood the ravages of time. Bring on those dinosaurs and prehistoric proto-humans. (FILM REVIEWS)
Open Letter to an Open Enemy Scots SFF author Ken MacLeod has written science fiction novels which make frequent passing reference to the Soviet Union, Lenin, Trotsky, and communism. But he does not regard Lenin as a mass murderer, any more than he regards Cromwell, Napoleon, Lincoln, Roosevelt or Churchill as mass murderers. Read why here ... (COMMENT)
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