International children’s Week
Krupskaya
The Executive Committee of the Young Communist International has fixed the Third International Children’s Week for July 24-30. The children’s movement in Russia is in its infancy and the Children’s Week, there- fore, is being used to propagandize it.
Some comrades may question the necessity for a children’s movement or a children’s organization. “Let them grow up,” they may say, “become more mature, and they will join the Young Communist League. What do they understand now? Let them play and go to school.”
The Young Pioneer movement—that is the way the children’s communist organization calls itself—is open to all boys and girls of eleven and over.
The Young Pioneer organization instills in its members collective instincts and accustoms them to share joy and grief, teaches them to make the interests of the collective their own, to regard themselves as members of the collective. It develops collective habits, i.e., the ability to work and act collectively and in an organized manner by subordinating their will to the will of the collective, displaying their initiative through the collective and teaching them to respect the opinion of the collective. Lastly, it enhances children’s communist consciousness by helping them to realize that they are members of the working class, which is fighting for mankind’s happiness, members of the huge army of the international proletariat.
The very formation of these tasks proves that the sooner children and drawn into this movement, the better. Very often one hears workers’ children say, “We never see Father; he works in the day and goes to meetings in the evening.” Mother, too, either works or is too busy with household chores or the baby. And so, workers’ children are left to themselves—they either stay at home without seeing anything or indulge in pranks from sheer boredom or fall under the influence of street urchins. The children’s organization will afford them many happy moments, promote their activity and give them food for thought.
A Young Pioneer organization, naturally, should not be run like an adult one. It would be bad indeed if it were a carbon copy of one. But it must be imbued with the spirit of communism.
First of all, it should afford entertainment. Chorus signing, games, swimming, outings, campfire talks, visits to factories, participation in proletarian holidays—all that will leave an indelible impression and give children an excellent picture of an organization, a collective. Participation in proletarian holidays and visits to workers’ clubs, factories and meetings will make for closer ties between children and the working class, and these ties should be encouraged in every possible way. Young Pioneers should be patronized by women’s departments, party organizations and trade unions, which should do everything to enhance class solidarity among children.
During the children’s movement week, workers’ organizations should take charge of Young Pioneers, arrange excursions for them and acquaint them with their work. Specially chosen men and women workers should tell them of their own childhood, of the struggle they had to wage. In brief, the working class should “adopt” the Young Pioneers for the duration of the International Children’s Week.
Children are children. That is why the Young Pioneer organization concentrates so much attention on games, for games, after all, are absolutely necessary for children’s physique. They develop physical strength, make children’s hands stronger, their bodies more flexible, their eyes sharper; they develop their ingenuity, resourcefulness and initiative. More, they promote children’s organizational capacity, self-control, endurance, ability to gauge the situation, and so on. There are, of course, good games and bad. There are games that make children cruel and rude, fan hatred for other nations, affect children’s nervous system, arouse gambling instincts and vanity. And there are games that are highly educational, that strengthen children’s willpower, develop their feeling of justice and teach them to help people in need. There are games that make beasts out of children and there are games that make them Communists. It is this last task that the Young Pioneer organization undertakes to fulfill. And here they are assisted by the Young Communist League.
But it is not only games that the Young Pioneers indulge in. The children of today have seen and heard too much and they desire to participate in the struggle for human happiness, for the new life. Perhaps their part in this will not be very big: collecting medicinal herbs, clearing up and planting flowers in the gardens in front of factories, sewing clothes for creches, delivering invitations to meetings, decorating workers’ clubs, etc. But these collective tasks will make a Young Pioneer realize that he is a useful member of society and will stimulate him to other creative activity.
Soviet institutions should show attention to Young Pioneers and give them opportunities to be useful.
The children’s movement is of special value for the school, for it develops habits which can help to promote children’s “self-government,” creates possibilities for applying new teaching methods and heightens children’s interest in studies and their thirst for knowledge. Progressive teachers should hail the Young Pioneer organization. During the International Children’s Week the schools should throw their doors wide open to Young Pioneers. The latter should wholeheartedly help teachers build up a new school and form the core of this school.
During this week, between July 24 and 30, we should lay a solid foundation for the children’s movement in the RSFSR.
The young pioneer Movement as A pedagogical problem
uChiTeLskaYa gazeLa, No. 15, April 8, 1927
We have said time and again that the school and the Young Pioneer movement pursue one and the same aim: to bring children up as fighters for and builders of a new system. The goal of the Young Pioneer movement is to bring up a new youth which will achieve socialist, communist construction. To build socialism does not mean to raise labor productivity or develop the economy. A highly developed social economy is only a basis, a foundation that ensures general welfare. The main points of socialist construction are reorganization of the entire social fabric, establishment of a new social order and development of new relationships among people. The life we want to build must not only be plentiful but also happy.
In the case of adults, we have to reeducate them in the spirit of social- ism; in the case of the younger generation, we have to educate them in that spirit. What does that imply? Vladimir Ilyich had a very simple definition of this spirit. Speaking at a non-Party conference of workers and Red Army men, he said: “In the oldz days people said: ‘Each for himself and God for all,’ and look how much grief that brought them. We shall say: ‘One for all, and somehow we shall get along all right without God.’”
Although these words were not uttered in connection with education, I think they give a clear idea of how we should tackle the educational problem in our day. We should bring up our children as collectivists. How is that to be done? Here we have a serious pedagogical problem.
Under the bourgeoisie, workers’ children and the children of the landowners and capitalists are brought up differently. The bourgeoisie tries to make obedient slaves out of the workers’ children and leaders out of the children of the landowners and capitalists. In the case of the first, it tries to kill their individuality and personality; all its educational methods are aimed at depriving children of their individuality, at making them passive; and if these methods fail with certain children, the bourgeoisie pushes them to the front, opposes them to others, converts them into loyal servants of its own. In the case of the children of the ruling classes, the meth- ods of education are quite different. The bourgeoisie brings them up as individualists who oppose the masses and brings them up as individualists who oppose the masses and the collective, and teaches them to lord it over the masses.
The Soviet system of education aims at developing every child’s ability, activity, consciousness, personality and individuality. That is why our educational methods differ from those in bourgeois public schools, and they are radically different from the methods employed in the education of bourgeois children. The bourgeoisie tries to bring up its children as individualists who set their ego above all else, who oppose the masses. Communist education employs other methods. We are for the all-round development of our children—we want to make them strong physically and morally, teach them to be collectivists and not individualists, bring them up not to oppose the collective but on the contrary to constitute its force and raise it to a new level. We believe that a child’s personality can be best and most fully developed only in a collective. For the collective does not destroy a child’s personality, and it improves the quality and content of education.
In this respect, the Young Pioneer movement can do much. What path should it take in educational work? First, the Young Pioneer should be given an opportunity to share other children’s experiences. A child who has no brothers or sisters and who is zealously protected by his mother from “harmful influences” will never be a collectivist.
The Young Pioneer organization should see to it that their members have every opportunity to share one another’s experiences. That does not mean that they should be “entertained,” that they should have special shows and matinees arranged for them. The thing is not to entertain them, but to make their organization’s activities lively and emotional. There are cases, for instance, when the Pioneer leader is late for the rally and the Young Pioneers lounge about waiting for him and when he does appear, he discusses with them such boring things as smoking and discipline, or holds a political study class. Such organizations invariably disintegrate.
The ability to organize chorus singing, interesting and clever games, collective reading, etc., is a very important factor in uniting children, while the joys and woes they share bring them still closer together. There should be less formality and more content. It is important, too, to choose the right games, for some games hamper the development of collectivist instincts, divide children instead of uniting them. Another important thing is what books the children read: individualistic rot or really valuable works.
The second factor making for unity is close friendship, knowledge of how each lives and studies, and mutual assistance. The one who knows more should help the backward in his homework, the one who eats well should share his food with the one who does not, the one who has not got to do any household chores should help the one who has. There should be well-organized comradely mutual aid within the Young Pioneer organizations.
The third factor is collective studies, reading, excursions, wall news- papers, diaries, etc., etc. Here it is especially important not to divide children into active Young Pioneers who do everything, and are therefore over- burdened, and passive who are not allowed to do anything. The problem of collective endeavor, correct division of labor, properly distributed tasks, the combination of children’s personal interests with the aims of the collective—all that should be solved.
The fourth factor is the same problem, only in respect to labor: combination of skillful individual labor with collective labor, development of individual and collective habits in labor, proper coordination of labor, assessment of the work done, mutual control, cooperation in all the spheres of economic activity.
The fifth factor is voluntary discipline within the organization. “A Great Beginning,” Lenin’s article on the communist Subotnik's, in which he counterposes compulsory discipline under capitalism to voluntary and conscious socialist discipline, tells us how to approach the question of discipline and punishment in school and the Young Pioneer organization.
And, lastly, social work and application of the knowledge and habits acquired through collective work for the good of all. The question of choosing social work. The voluntary and conscious character of this choice, collective decisions, collective planning, correct appraisal of capability and capacity. The greater part of Vladimir Ilyich’s speech at the Third Congress of the Young Communist League was devoted to social work, to socially useful labor.
This question is closely connected with the question of how adult workers, men and women, should help in the collective education and self-education of children, as well as with the question of relations between the school and the Young Pioneer movement.
The above-mentioned questions touch upon a number of problems of vast importance, and the leaders of the Young Pioneer movement and pedagogues should deal with them.