On The Contradictions In The Young Communist League
Speech at the C.C., R.C.P.(B.) Conference on Work Among the Youth1 April 3, 1924
April 3, 1924
On the Young Communist League Moscow,
I must first of all say something about the attitude
of the Central Committee of the Russian Young Communist League to the Party
discussion. It was a mistake for the Central Committee of the League to
continue its stubborn silence after the local organisations had stated their
views. But it would be wrong to attribute this silence of the League's Central
Committee to a policy of neutrality. They were just over-cautious.
Now a few words about the debate. I think that among you there are no disagreements based on principles. I have studied your theses and articles and have failed to find any such disagreements. But there is confusion and a heap of imaginary "irreconcilable" contradictions.
The first contradiction: contrasting the League as a
"reserve" to the League as an "instrument" of the Party.
What is the League-a reserve or an instrument? Both. This is obvious, and it
was stated by the comrades themselves in their speeches. The Young Communist
League is a reserve, a reserve of peasants and workers from which the Party
augments its ranks. But it is, at the same time, an instrument, an instrument
in the hands of the Party, bringing the masses of the youth under its
influence. More specifically, it could be said that the League is an instrument
of the Party, an auxiliary weapon of the Party, in the sense that the active
League membership is an instrument of the Party for influencing the youth not
organised in the League. These conceptions do not contradict one another, and
cannot be put in contrast to one another.
A second so-called irreconcilable contradiction: some
comrades think that the "class policy of the League is determined not by
its composition, but by the staunchness of the people who stand at its
head." Staunchness is contrasted to composition. This contradiction, too,
is imaginary, because the class policy of the R.Y.C.L. is determined by both
factors-composition and staunchness of the top leadership. If staunch people
are subjected to the influence of a League membership that is alien to them in
spirit, all the League members enjoying equal rights, then a membership of this
kind cannot but leave its imprint on the League's activity and policy. Why does
the Party regulate the composition of its membership? Because it knows that the
composition of the membership influences its activities.
Lastly, one more contradiction, similarly imaginary,
concerning the role of the League and its work among the peasants. Some take
the view that the task of the League is to "consolidate" its influence
among the peasants, but not to extend that influence; others, apparently, want
to "extend the influence," but do not agree with the need for
consolidation. There is an attempt to make this an issue in the discussion. It
is clear that to draw a contrast between these two tasks is artificial, for
everyone understands quite well that League must, at one and the same time,
consolidate and extend its influence in the countryside. True, in one place in
the League Central Committee's theses there is an awkward expression on work
among the peasants. But neither Tarkhanov nor the other representatives of the
League Central Committee majority have insisted on it, and they are prepared to
correct it. That being the case, is it worthwhile disputing over minor points?
But there is one real, not imaginary, contradiction in
the life and work of the Young Communist League about which I would like to say
a few words. I have in mind the existence of two tendencies in the League: the
worker tendency and the peasant tendency. I have in mind the contradiction
between these tendencies, which is making itself felt, and which we cannot
afford to ignore. Discussion of this contradiction has been the weakest point
in the speeches. All the speakers declared that the League must grow by
recruiting workers, but they all stumbled as soon as they turned to the
peasantry, to the question of recruiting peasants. Even those who spoke simply
and straightforwardly stumbled on this point.
Obviously, two problems confront the R.Y.C.L.: the worker
problem and the peasant problem. It is obvious that, since the Y.C.L. is a
workers' and peasants' league, these two tendencies, these contradictions
within the League, will remain in future too. Some will stress the need to
recruit workers, saying nothing about the peasantry; others will stress the
need to recruit peasants, underestimating the importance of the proletarian
element as the leading element in the League. It is this internal
contradiction, inherent in the very nature of the League, which makes the
speakers stumble. In their speeches, some draw a parallel between the Party and
the Y.C.L., but the fact of the matter is that no such parallel can exist,
because our Party is a workers' party, not a workers' and peasants' party,
while the Y.C.L. is a workers' and peasants' league. Therefore the Y.C.L.
cannot be only a workers' league, but must, at one and the same time, be a
workers' and peasants' league. One thing is clear: with the present structure
of the League, internal contradictions and the struggle of tendencies are
inevitable in the future too.
Those who say that the middle-peasant youth should be
recruited into the Party are correct, but we should be careful not to slip into
the conception of a workers' and peasants' party, as even some responsible
functionaries are prone to do at times. Many have loudly demanded: "You
are recruiting workers into the Party, why not recruit peasants on the same
scale? Let us bring in a hundred thousand peasants, or two hundred
thousand." The Central Committee is opposed to this, for our Party must be
a workers' party. The ratio in the Party should be approximately 70 or 80 per
cent workers to 20-25 per cent non-workers. The position is somewhat different
with regard to the Y.C.L. The Young Communist League is a voluntary, free
organisation of the revolutionary elements of the worker and peasant youth.
Without peasants, without the mass of the peasant youth, it will cease to be a
workers' and peasants' league. But its work should be so organised that the
leading role remains with the proletarian element.
Notes
1. On April 3, 1924, a conference was held under the
auspices of the Central Committee of the R.C.P.(B.) to discuss work among the
youth. There were present the members of the Central Committee of the Party,
members and candidate members of the Central Committee of the Russian Young
Communist League and representatives from ten of the largest gubernia
organisations of the R.Y.C.L. The conference summed up the discussion on the
immediate tasks of the Young Communist League that had taken place at the
beginning of 1924. Later, the Central Committee of the R.C.P.(B.) discussed the
results of the conference and instructed the local Party and Y.C.L
organisations to secure unity and harmony in the work of the R.Y.C.L., and to
call upon the leading members of the Y.C.L. to work unanimously to carry out
the tasks set by the Party.
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