Peter Arshinov
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox person Template:Platformism sidebar Peter Andreyevich Arshinov (Template:Langx; 1887–Template:Circa1937), was a Russian anarchist revolutionary and intellectual who chronicled the history of the Makhnovshchina.
Initially a Bolshevik, during the 1905 Revolution, he became active within the Ukrainian anarchist movement, taking part in a number of terrorist attacks against Tsarist officials. He was arrested for his activities and imprisoned in Butyrka prison, where he met Nestor Makhno.
Following the 1917 Revolution, he was released from prison and returned to Ukraine to join Makhno's partisan movement. Arshinov became a leading intellectual figure within the Makhnovist movement, as editor of its main newspaper, and chronicled the development of events as the movement's official historian.
When the movement was suppressed by the Bolsheviks, he went into exile, where he participated in the publication of the Organisational Platform and the debates surrounding it. By the 1930s, he had moved back towards Bolshevism and decided to return to the Soviet Union, where he was executed during the Great Purge.
Biography
[edit]In 1887, Peter Andreyevich Arshinov was born into a working-class family, in a village in Penza Governorate of the Russian Empire. At the age of 17, Arshinov moved to Turkestan, where he worked as a machinist.Template:Sfn
Early revolutionary activities
[edit]With the outbreak of the 1905 Revolution, he joined the Bolshevik faction of the Russian Social Democratic Party and edited its underground newspaper Molot (Template:Langx).Template:Sfnm When Arshinov caught the attention of the police for his revolutionary activity, he moved to the Ukrainian city of Katerynoslav,Template:Sfn where he split with the Bolsheviks over ideological disagreements and became a member of the anarchist movement.Template:Sfnm In December 1906, following the repression of revolutionary elements, Arshinov led the formation of an anarchist terrorist cell in Katerynoslav and organised a series of attacks, including the bombing of a police station and the assassination of a government official.Template:Sfn
On 7 March 1907, Arshinov publicly assassinated a railway boss in Oleksandrivsk.Template:Sfn He was quickly arrested and sentenced to be hanged,Template:Sfnm but his sentence was commuted and he used this time to plan an escape.Template:Sfn He broke out of prison on Easter Sunday,Template:Sfnm and fled first to France then to Austria-Hungary, where he engaged in arms trafficking and the smuggling of anarchist propaganda into the Russian Empire. In 1911, he was arrested again and extradited to Russia,Template:Sfnm where he was sentenced to 20 years in Butyrka prison.Template:Sfnm
With the Makhnovshchina
[edit]In prison, Arshinov was acquainted with the young Ukrainian anarchist Nestor Makhno,Template:Sfnm who he took under his wing as a pupil,Template:Sfnm teaching him Russian language and literature, mathematics, geography, history, economics and politics.Template:Sfnm Following the February Revolution, they were released from prison as part of a general amnesty.Template:Sfnm While Makhno returned home to Ukraine, Arshinov remained behind in Moscow and began organising with the local Anarchist Federation,Template:Sfnm spending most of his time in Moscow publishing the works of Mikhail Bakunin and Peter Kropotkin.Template:Sfn
Following the October Revolution, he quickly became demoralised by the direction of events and lost interest in himself returning to Ukraine.Template:Sfn As a consequence of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, Ukraine was invaded and occupied by the Central Powers, with support from the Ukrainian nobility.Template:Sfnm The peasants reacted by carrying out a campaign of guerrilla warfare against the occupation forces and their Ukrainian collaborators, as part of a war of independence that spread throughout the country.Template:Sfn One of these peasant insurgent bands was led by Nestor Makhno, who defeated the occupation forces at the battle of Dibrivka and captured much of his home region,Template:Sfn becoming the leader of a mass movement of the Ukrainian peasantry which declared him their Bat'ko (Template:Langx).Template:Sfn
In the wake of the anarchist victory, Arshinov joined a number of other Russian anarchist intellectuals in emigrating to Ukraine,Template:Sfnm where they established the Nabat, a confederation of anarchist organisations.Template:Sfnm In April 1919, Arshinov arrived in Huliaipole, where he was reunited with Makhno and joined his movement, becoming a leading ideologue within the Cultural-Educational Department.Template:Sfnm The following month, Arshinov began editing the movement's newspaper The Road to Freedom,Template:Sfnm which published 50 issues in the Katerynoslav region until November 1920.Template:Sfn During this period, Arshinov observed the nascent Makhnovist movement establishing agricultural communes, organised according to the communist principle of "from each according to their ability, to each according to their needs".Template:Sfn
The anarchist region soon came under attack by the White movement, which forced them to negotiate an alliance with the Red Army, which had also invaded Ukraine.Template:Sfn While on their way to meet the Bolshevik delegate Lev Kamenev in Huliaipole, Arshinov witnessed Makhno execute one of his own followers for antisemitism.Template:Sfn He then observed Makhno and Kamenev's meeting, which initially seemed amicable, but which Arshinov later came to question the intent of.Template:Sfnm By May 1919, relations between the Bolsheviks and anarchists had become strained by political divisions and by the collapse of the Donbas front, which Arshinov blamed on Red Army commanders, who he claimed had deliberately deprived the insurgents of weaponry.Template:Sfn Makhno soon resigned his command and, now under attack by both the Reds and the Whites, resolved to retreat into the west.Template:Sfnm
Arshinov joined the Makhnovists in their westward retreat, during which he witnessed large numbers of people joining the newly constituted Insurgent Army,Template:Sfn was present for the assassination of Nykyfor Hryhoriv,Template:Sfn and at the battle of Peregonovka.Template:Sfnm There the Insurgent Army defeated the Volunteer Army and subsequently captured most of southern Ukraine,Template:Sfnm to which Arshinov himself attributed the defeat of the entire White movement.Template:Sfn Arshinov then observed what he considered to be a failure to establish either political or military control over left-bank Ukraine,Template:Sfnm which he blamed on the outbreak of epidemic typhus within the ranks of the Makhnovshchina.Template:Sfn The Red Army took the opportunity to attack the Makhnovshchina, which Arshinov estimated to have eventually resulted in the execution of almost 200,000 Ukrainian peasants by the Bolsheviks.Template:Sfn
After months of fighting between the Makhnovists and Bolsheviks, a White offensive into Taurida forced them into an agreement, which brought about the brief cessation of hostilities between the two factions.Template:Sfn Arshinov himself justified the pact as a way of bringing them closer together with the mass base that the Bolsheviks had in the proletariat.Template:Sfn But following their combined victory over the Whites in the siege of Perekop, Arshinov witnessed the subsequent Bolshevik offensive against the Makhnovshchina on 26 November,Template:Sfnm in what Arshinov insisted to have been a premeditated attack.Template:Sfnm
He then witnessed the subsequent period of guerrilla warfare against the Red Army,Template:Sfnm documenting their pursuit across the country.Template:Sfn Despite the danger, Arshinov remained with Makhno until the spring of 1921,Template:Sfn when he and his wife clandestinely crossed the border into Poland and then went on to Germany.Template:Sfn
Exile
[edit]In 1922, Arshinov arrived in Berlin,Template:Sfnm where he completed his History of the Makhnovist Movement.Template:Sfnm He then moved on to Paris in 1925, where he established the anarchist journal Delo Truda (Template:Langx).Template:Sfnm Meanwhile, he earned a living by making handmade shoes, as part of a scheme for Russian refugees, which lasted until competition from a French industrial manufacturer made it no longer profitable.Template:Sfnm
On 20 June 1926, Arshinov participated in the publication of the Organisational Platform of the General Union of Anarchists, which lay out a framework for how anarcho-communists could politically organise, through theoretical and tactical unity, collective responsibility and federalism.Template:Sfn This caused an immediate controversy within the anarchist movement,Template:Sfnm with Arshinov being accused of Bolshevism by anarchists such as Alexander Berkman and Volin, the latter of whom claimed Arshinov intended to establish an anarchist political party along bureaucratic and centralist lines.Template:Sfnm
By 1931, Arshinov had broken with the anarchist movement and began openly expressing support for the Soviet government of Joseph Stalin.Template:Sfnm By this time, Arshinov's wife grown weary of life in exile and wanted their family to return to Russia, which the Bolshevik politician Sergo Ordzhonikidze offered to sponsor.Template:Sfn Despite warnings by Volin, who predicted that he would be executed for his anarchist past,Template:Sfn in 1934, Arshinov finally returned to the Soviet Union,Template:Sfnm where he found work as a proofreader.Template:Sfn Only three years later, Arshinov was arrested and shot during the Great Purge,Template:Sfnm on charges of having allegedly propagandised for anarchism upon his return to Russia.Template:Sfnm
Works
[edit]- History of the Makhnovist Movement (1923)
- The Two Octobers (1927)
- Reply to Anarchism's Confusionists (1927)
- The Old and New in Anarchism (1928)
- Elements Old and New in Anarchism (1928)
- Anarchism and the Dictatorship of the Proletariat (1931)
- Anarchism in our age (1933)
References
[edit]Bibliography
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External links
[edit]- 1887 births
- 1937 deaths
- 20th-century anarchists
- Anarchists executed by the Soviet Union
- Anarchists from the Russian Empire
- Anarcho-communists
- Book publishers (people)
- Communists from the Russian Empire
- Communist Party of the Soviet Union members
- Editors from the Russian Empire
- Emigrants from the Russian Empire to Austria-Hungary
- Emigrants from the Russian Empire to France
- Great Purge victims from Russia
- Historians from the Russian Empire
- Immigrants to the Soviet Union
- Inmates of Butyrka prison
- Journalists from the Russian Empire
- Makhnovists
- Newspaper editors from the Russian Empire
- Newspaper founders from the Russian Empire
- Old Bolsheviks
- People from Nizhnelomovsky Uyezd
- People who emigrated to escape Bolshevism
- Politicians from Dnipro
- Prisoners and detainees from the Russian Empire
- Publishers (people) from the Russian Empire
- Revolutionaries of the Russian Revolution
- Revolutionaries of the Russian Revolution of 1905
- Russian Social Democratic Labour Party members
- Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic people
- Soviet anarchists
- Soviet emigrants to France
- Soviet male writers
- Soviet newspaper editors
- Ukrainian anarchists
- Writers from Dnipro