25 June - 1 July 1917

Emmeline Pankhurst and Maria Bochkareva with the Women's Death Battalion, June 1917
The lesson of the Russian Revolution is that there is no
escape for the masses from the iron grip of war, famine and enslavement to the
landlords and capitalists, unless they completely break with the
Socialist-Revolutionary and Menshevik parties, unless they clearly recognise
the treacherous role of the latter, unless they renounce all compromise with
the bourgeoisie and decidedly come over to the side of the revolutionary
workers. Only the revolutionary workers, if supported by the poor peasants, can
smash the resistance of the capitalists.
(V.I. Lenin, Lessons of the Revolution, The Russian Revolution
by V.I. Lenin and Joseph Stalin, London 1938)
25 June
Letter to working women from Maria Kutsko, a worker at the
Petrograd Munitions Work
Comrade Women workers! Not long ago we won higher wages for
women at the Munitions Works, and this ought to show us how great is the
strength and significance of organization. What would we have achieved if we
acted alone, by ourselves? Absolutely nothing! Until 7 June we women workers
got only four roubles [a day], which … was hard for many to live on, especially
for working women with families whose husbands were in the war … The general
meeting went very well. Only one comrade expressed an idea that it is
completely impossible to agree with. He said that women will work in the
factories only until the end of the war, but after the war is over, they will
in all likelihood quit the factories. But we are sure, comrades, that this will
not be the case. Where can those women workers go whose husbands, fathers and
brothers return home as cripples, unfit for labour? Who will support their
helpless families and children if not we working women? Further, this comrade
said that we women workers should not do dirty work in the factories, that we
ought to ‘beautify the lives of men’ … But, comrade workers, one can beautify your
life not only at home by the stove but also at the factory. We women workers
can beautify your life at the workbench, working hand in hand with you to
improve our common working lives, to make this life more beautiful, pure and
bright for ourselves, for our children, and for the whole working class. This,
it seems to me, is the real beauty and meaning of life.
(Mark D. Steinberg, Voices of Revolution, 1917
, New Haven and London 2001)
26 June
Diary entry of Nicholas II
Gave Alexei a geography lesson. We cut down a huge pine tree
not far from the orangerie fence. The sentries even wanted to help us. In the
evening I finished reading
The Count of
Monte-Cristo .
(Sergei Mironenko, A Lifelong Passion
, London 1996)
27 June
Diary entry of Nicholas II
I forgot to write that on the 26 June our troops made
another breakthrough and captured: 131 officers, 7000 lower ranks and 48
cannons, including 12 heavy ones. In the morning all the girls went out to
collect the mown grass. I went for my usual walk
.
(Sergei Mironenko, A Lifelong Passion
, London 1996)
After all his urgent and frenetic interventions, Lenin was
exhausted to the point of illness. His family were concerned. His comrades
persuaded him that he needed to take a rest. On the 27th, accompanied by his
sister Maria, he left Petrograd. They travelled together across the border to
the Finnish village of Neivola, where his comrade Bonch-Bruevich had a country
cottage. There they spent the days relaxing, swimming in a lake, strolling in
the sun.
(China Miéville, October: The Story of the Russian Revolution
, London 2017)
Report on an American Mission to Russia
The Mission has accomplished what it came here to do, and we
are greatly encouraged. We found no organic or incurable malady in the Russian
Democracy … The solid admirable traits in the Russian character will pull the
nation through the present crisis. Natural love of law and order and capacity
for local self-government have been demonstrated every day since the
Revolution.
( Russian-American Relations: March 1917-March 1920
, New York 1920)
Letter to ‘Comrade Patriots’ from soldiers in the trenches
Certain Bolshevik Anarchists from the Petrograd garrison …
are now travelling up and down the front with the following slogans: ‘Down with
the war’, ‘Down with the offensive’. And they are running to the ignorant mass
of soldiers with these false words: ‘You should trust and believe only us and,
generally, all the Bolsheviks and their parties – we alone will save you, we
will lead you out onto the true path without bloodshed or carnage!’ and instead
of leading us out onto the path of salvation, they send us into Anarchy; they
want us to become Anarchists … But no, Comrades! We are not Anarchists or
monarchists, not Nicholas II or Grishka Rasputin … We are position soldiers,
trench rats! We do not recognise Bolshevik Anarchists or their henchmen, but we
have always and only trusted the socialist minister Kerensky and the Soviet of
Workers’, Soldiers’ and Peasants’ Deputies.
(Mark D. Steinberg, Voices of Revolution, 1917
, New Haven and London 2001)
28 June
Diary entry of Louis de Robien, attaché at the French Embassy
Russia is definitely the land of surprise. At the moment
when everybody believed the army to be completely breaking up, every day brings
news of fresh victories … There is something immoral about the victory of this
disorganised, louse-ridden army, led by a petty little socialist lawyer. All
our ideas about discipline … are contradicted by this herd, in which each man
does as he pleases, where officers are murdered, where each company has a
soviet of delegates, and where even the plans of campaign are argued about …
But this can hardly last, and we shall have a terrible awakening when the
tovariches have to face the Germans, with their machine-guns and their heavy
cannon, instead of the Austrians who have decidedly ‘had enough of it’.
(Louis de Robien, The Diary of a Diplomat in Russia 1917-1918
, London 1969)
29 June
Diary entry of Alexander Benois, artist and critic
Went home on foot past the Stock Exchange. The whole area
from the Lunapark to the fortress looked wonderful, it had a magical effect. A
blueish mist outlined separately the
long perspectives and created an unusual richness and variety of forms that I
hadn’t seen before. We talked about the general state of chaos. [Benois’s wife]
Akitsa, as a result of all kinds of domestic trials, has completely ‘moved to the right’ and talks
almost like the common man, complaining about the soldiers and other
‘proletarians who’ve got too big for their boots’.
(Alexander Benois ,
Diary 1916-1918
, Moscow 2006)
30 June
Diary entry of an anonymous Englishman
Woke up at 11 a.m. No one answered my bell. Found hotel
servants on strike, except cooks. Dressed, made my own bed, cleaned my bath,
swept my room. I did the same for a rheumatic old lady in my corridor who was
much upset by the strike … Dinner at Felix Yusupov’s in the room where Rasputin
was killed; sat next to Lady Muriel Paget. Took an izvoschik home; paid him a
rouble for a 40-kopek fare. He called me a Jew!
(The Russian Diary of an Englishman, Petrograd 1915-1917
, New York 1919)
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1 July 2017
Maria Kutsko’s appeal to fellow women to ‘beautify’ their
lives at the workbench as well as the stove, to discover the ‘real beauty and
meaning of life’, was written just days after the legendary Maria Bochkareva,
commander of the Women’s Death Battalion, was honoured by Kerensky and Kornilov
in front of St Isaac’s Cathedral with an officer’s belt, a gold-handled
revolver and a sabre, as a token of the nation’s appreciation. Bochkareva
witnessed the disintegration of the Russian army at the front and created her
own ‘shock battalion’ of women. ‘We will go wherever men refuse to go, we will
fight when they run. The women will lead the men back to the trenches.’ In June
Emmeline Pankhurst was visiting Russia. She described Bochkareva as ‘the
greatest thing in history since Joan of Arc’, but the battalion was often
derided by men, and in particular by their fellow soldiers who felt their
courage was being questioned. And perhaps rightly so, as Pankhurst described in
a telegraph to England: ‘First Women’s Battalion number two hundred and fifty.
Took place of retreating troops. In counter attack made one hundred prisoners
including troops. Only five weeks training. Their leader wounded. Have earned
undying fame, moral effect great. More women soldiers training, also marines.
Pankhurst.’
