Russia October Revolution Centenary.
Vladimir Lenin
would turn in his grave if he knew that Russian state television was
marking the centenary of the Great October Revolution this week with a
historical drama telling how the Bolsheviks seized power with the help
of funds provided by Imperial Germany, Russia’s enemy in the first World War.
In a written tribute, Cai
Guo-Qiang paid tribute to Konstantin Maksimov, the Russian painter who,
dispatched by the Soviet authorities to teach in Beijing as communism
took hold in China in the 1950s, inspired generations of Chinese
artists.
Russian communists carry Soviet red flags and portraits of Vladimir
Lenin and Josef Stalin at a ceremony at Red Square
in Moscow.
The Soviet authorities always denied that Lenin had financial dealings with Alexander Parvus,
a Russian-born Marxist and German intelligence agent, while living in
exile in Europe in the years before the 1917 revolution that gave birth
to the world’s first communist state.
But the first part of the Demon of the Revolution series,
aired by Rossiya 1 TV on Sunday evening, has Lenin – played
sympathetically by Russian actor Yevgeny Mironov – wrestling with his
conscience as the scheming Parvus talks him into accepting “German gold”
in exchange for a promise to pull Russia out of the war against the Kaiser once the revolution was won.
Historians still argue about whether Germany was Lenin’s paymaster, but Mironov told Russian TV last week that Demon of the Revolution was
the product of intensive research and gave a true picture of what the
Bolshevik had done. “It’s obvious”, he said. “He took black money.”
Centenaries are special occasions,
but the Kremlin has largely ignored the 100th anniversary of the
Russian revolution, which falls on Tuesday.
Vladimir Putin,
admired by his supporters for bringing stability to Russia after the
chaotic first decade of capitalism, is allergic to the idea of
revolution and has hardly commented on the centenary.
Demon of the Revolution may
just be made for popular entertainment, but it illustrates the Russian
president’s entrenched belief that western powers out to undermine his
country constantly are forever fomenting political uprisings.
‘Civilised countries’
Russia faced two revolutions in 1917 – the first in February when Tsar Nicholas II,
facing bread riots and growing opposition to the war, gave up the
throne, followed by a second when the Bolsheviks seized power on October
27th (or November 7th according to the Gregorian calendar that Lenin
quickly adopted to bring Russia in line with “all other civilised
countries”).
In Soviet times the anniversary of
“Great October” was a public holiday marked each year with parades and
rallies across the land celebrating the triumphs of socialism. Boris Yeltsin,
who became president of Russia after the USSR collapsed in 1991,
invented the Day of Accord and Reconciliation to replace the politically
sensitive revolution holiday. Putin changed the calendar again,
reinstating the Tsarist-era National Unity Day that, celebrating
Moscow’s liberation from Polish invaders on November 4th, 1612, fits
better with the present-day Kremlin’s positive historic narrative.
It would be wrong to say that
Russia has buried all memories of the 1917 revolution. Wander any
Russian city and an October street or square can almost always be found.
Lenin’s embalmed body still lies on display in the mausoleum on
Moscow’s Red Square, a place of pilgrimage in Soviet times and now a
popular tourist attraction. Every now and then there are calls for the
mummified remains of the Bolshevik leader to be given a proper burial –
the Kremlin, wary of alienating the older generation of Russian
communists, is for the time being not listening.
‘Red day’
The same concern has given the Russian Communist Party
room to proceed with a full week of centenary events, which kicked off
on Saturday with a gala concert in Saint Petersburg’s huge October hall,
where some 4,000 guests rose to their feet to sing the Internationale,
the anthem of the world socialist movement. “The Great October Holiday
is the holiday of the future,” Gennady Zyuganov, the Communist Party
leader, told the crowd. “I am sure the red day in the calendar will be
restored.”
Moscow city authorities have given
permission for communists to rally on Tuesday (November 7th) when the
party faithful will march through the city centre and lay flowers on the
tomb of the unknown soldier in the Kremlin wall. Lenin’s tomb will be
off-limits.
Otherwise the 100th anniversary of
the revolution will pass largely unnoticed; no fireworks, no street
parties, just an ordinary working day. Public opinion polls indicate
that interest in the revolution holiday has fallen steadily in Russia
over the last 10 years. Only 15 per cent of respondents to a survey
conducted last month by the Levada Centre, an independent polling agency
in Moscow, said they would be celebrating Great October this year, down
from 23 per cent in 2016.
But major Russian museums, like their counterparts in Europe, are not letting the centenary go unnoticed.
Saint Petersburg’s Hermitage
Museum, housed in the Tsar’s Winter Palace, is staging a number of
exhibitions that tell the story of both the revolutions of 1917 and the
battle to save the imperial family’s treasures. Photographs of the
tsar’s private apartments taken by a court photographer provide a sense
of the nightmarish drama as Bolshevik supporters rampaged through the
building on the fateful night of November 7th, overturning fine
furniture and puncturing a portrait of Tsar Alexander II with their
bayonets.
Curators at Moscow’s Pushkin State
Museum of Fine Arts have taken a positive approach with an exhibition
of works by Cai Guo-Qiang, China’s most famous contemporary artist, that
highlights the cultural benefits brought about by the revolution.
in Moscow.