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== Great Purge == [[File:Nikolai Bukharin 1931 London UK.jpg|thumb|left|Bukharin in London, 1931]] In February 1936, shortly before the purge started in earnest, Bukharin was sent to Paris by Stalin to negotiate the purchase of the Marx and Engels archives, held by the [[German Social Democratic Party]] (SPD) before its dissolution by Hitler. He was joined by his young wife [[Anna Larina]], which therefore opened the possibility of exile, but he decided against it, saying that he could not live outside the Soviet Union. Bukharin, who had been forced to follow the Party line since 1929, confided to his old friends and former opponents his real view of Stalin and his policy. His conversations with [[Boris Nicolaevsky]], a Menshevik leader who held the manuscripts on behalf of the SPD, formed the basis of "Letter of an Old Bolshevik", which was very influential in contemporary understanding of the period (especially the [[Ryutin Affair]] and the Kirov murder), although there are doubts about its authenticity. According to Nicolaevsky, Bukharin spoke of "the mass annihilation of completely defenseless men, with women and children" under forced collectivization and liquidation of kulaks as a class that dehumanized the Party members with "the profound psychological change in those communists who took part in the campaign. Instead of going mad, they accepted terror as a normal administrative method and regarded obedience to all orders from above as a supreme virtue. ... They are no longer human beings. They have truly become the cogs in a terrible machine."<ref>Nicolaevsky, Boris. ''Power and the Soviet Elite'', New York, 1965, pp. 18β19.</ref> Yet to another Menshevik leader, [[Fyodor Dan]], he confided that Stalin became "the man to whom the Party granted its confidence" and "is a sort of a symbol of the Party" even though he "is not a man, but a devil".<ref>{{Cite book |title=Stalin |last=Radzinsky |first=Edward |author-link=Edward Radzinsky |year=1997 |publisher=Random House |location=New York |isbn=0-385-47954-9 |page=358 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3KTO9ZEsAP8C&q=Edvard%20Radzinsky%20%2BStalin&pg=PP1 |access-date=28 January 2011}}</ref> In Dan's account, Bukharin's acceptance of the Soviet Union's new direction was thus a result of his utter commitment to Party solidarity. To his boyhood friend, [[Ilya Ehrenburg]], he expressed the suspicion that the whole trip was a trap set up by Stalin. Indeed, his contacts with Mensheviks during this trip were to feature prominently in his trial.
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