Karl Radek

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Karl Radek
Karl Radek 1.jpg
Radek in 1919
Born
Karol Sobelsohn

(1885-10-31)31 October 1885
Died19 May 1939(1939-05-19) (aged 53)
NationalityPolish
CitizenshipRussian Empire, Soviet Union
OccupationRevolutionary, writer, journalist, publicist, politician, theorist
Years active1904-1939
OrganizationCommunist Party of the Soviet Union
Known forMarxist revolutionary
Political partySocial Democracy of the Kingdom of Poland and Lithuania (SDKPiL), Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD), Communist Party of Germany (KPD), Comintern, Communist Workers' Party of Germany, Communist Party of the Soviet Union
MovementSocial democracy, communism, Bolshevik
Spouse(s)Rosa Mavrikievna Radek, Larisa Mikhailovna Reisner
ChildrenSofia Karlovna Radek

Karl Berngardovich Radek (Russian: Карл Бернгардович Радек; 31 October 1885 – 19 May 1939) was a Marxist active in the Polish[1] and German social democratic movements before World War I and an international Communist leader in the Soviet Union after the Russian Revolution.

Early life[]

Radek was born in Lemberg, Austria-Hungary (now Lviv in Ukraine), as Karol Sobelsohn, to a Jewish Litvak family; his father, Bernhard, worked in the post office and died whilst Karl was young.[2]:2 He took the name Radek from a favourite character, Andrzej Radek, in Syzyfowe prace ('The Labors of Sisyphus', 1897) by Stefan Żeromski.[2]:5

Radek joined the Social Democracy of the Kingdom of Poland and Lithuania (SDKPiL) in 1904 and participated in the 1905 Revolution in Warsaw, where he had responsibility for the party's newspaper Czerwony Sztandar.[3]:635

Germany and "the Radek Affair"[]

In 1907, after his arrest in Poland and his escape from custody, Radek moved to Leipzig in Germany and joined the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD), working on the Party's Leipziger Volkszeitung.[3]:36 He re-located to Bremen, where he worked for Bremer Bürgerzeitung, in 1911, and was one of several who attacked Karl Kautsky's analysis of imperialism in Die Neue Zeit in May 1912.[3]:36–27

In September 1910, Radek was accused by members of the Polish Socialist Party of stealing books, clothes and money from party comrades, as part of an anti-semitic campaign against the SDKPiL. On this occasion, he was vigorously defended by the SDKPiL leaders, Rosa Luxemburg and Leo Jogiches. The following year, however, the SDKPiL changed its course, partly because of a personality clash between Jogiches and Vladimir Lenin, during which younger members of the party, led by Yakov Hanecki, and including Radek, had sided with Lenin. Wanting to make an example of Radek, Jogiches revived the charges of theft, and convened a party commission in December 1911 to investigate. He dissolved the commission in July 1912, after it had failed to come to any conclusion, and in August pushed a decision through the party court expelling Radek. In their written finding, they broke his alias, making it — he claimed — dangerous for him to stay in Russian occupied Poland.[4]:584–586

In 1912 August Thalheimer invited Radek to go to Göppingen (near Stuttgart) to temporarily replace him in control of the local SPD party newspaper Freie Volkszeitung, which had financial difficulties. Radek accused the local party leadership in Württemberg of assisting revisionists to strangle the newspaper due to the paper's hostility to them.[4]:470–1 The 1913 SPD Congress noted Radek's expulsion and then went on to decide in principle that no-one who had been expelled from a sister-party could join another party within the Second International and retrospectively applied this rule to Radek. Within the SPD Anton Pannekoek and Karl Liebknecht opposed this move, as did others in the International such as Leon Trotsky and Vladimir Lenin,[4] some of whom participated in the "Paris Commission" set up by the International.[3]:891

World War I and the Russian Revolution[]

After the outbreak of World War I Radek moved to Switzerland where he worked as a liaison between Lenin and the , with whom he had close links from his time in Germany, introducing him to Paul Levi at this time.[3]:87 He took part in the Zimmerwald Conference in 1915, siding with the left.[3]:892

Karl Radek in 1919

During World War I, Radek engaged in polemics with Vladimir Lenin over the subject of the Irish Easter Rising of 1916; while Lenin was strongly enthusiastic about the Rising, seeing it as a blow to English imperialism, Radek disagreed. Basing his view on Theodore Rothstein (a Jewish emigre from the Russian Empire, living in London), he claimed that, what he called the "Sinn Féin movement" was petit-bourgeois and that the backbone of earlier rebellions in Ireland, the peasant farmer, had been placated at the start of the century by England. In his article The End of a Song, Radek claimed efforts to restore the Irish language to official status were flawed because it was "medieval". Leon Trotsky held a view halfway between Radek and Lenin.

In 1917 Radek was one of the passengers on the sealed train that carried Lenin and other Russian revolutionaries through Germany after the February Revolution in Russia.[3]:87 However, he was refused entry to Russia[3]:892 and went on to Stockholm, where he produced German-language versions of Bolshevik documents and other information translated from Russian, which he published in the journals Russische Korrespondenz-Pravda and Bote der Russischen Revolution.[3]:87

After the October Revolution and the onset of the Russian Civil War, Radek arrived in Petrograd and became Vice-Commissar for Foreign Affairs, taking part in the Brest-Litovsk treaty negotiations, as well as being responsible for distribution of Bolshevik propaganda amongst German troops and prisoners of war.[3]:893 During the discussions around signing the treaty, Radek was one of the advocates of a revolutionary war.[5]:453

Comintern and the German Revolution[]

Karl Radek (3rd from the left) at the 2nd World Congress of the Comintern, Moscow, 1920.

After being refused recognition as an official representative of the Bolshevik regime,[3]:893 Radek and other delegates — Adolph Joffe, Nikolai Bukharin, Christian Rakovsky and Ignatov — traveled to the German Congress of Soviets.[6] After they were turned back at the border, Radek alone crossed the German border illegally in December 1918, arriving in Berlin on 19 or 20 December,[4]:467 where he participated in discussions and conferences leading to foundation of the Communist Party of Germany (KPD).[6] Radek was arrested after the Spartacist uprising on 12 February 1919 and held in until his release in January 1920.[6] While he was in Moabit, attitude of the German authorities towards the Bolsheviks changed. The idea of creating an alliance of nations that had suffered from the Versailles treaty — principally Germany, Russia and Turkey — gained currency in Berlin, as a result of which Radek was allowed to receive a stream of visitors in his prison cell, including Walter Rathenau, Arthur Holitscher, Enver Pasha, and Ruth Fischer.[7][8]

On his return to Russia Radek became the Secretary of the Comintern, taking the main responsibility for German issues. He was removed from this position after he supported the KPD in opposing inviting representatives of the Communist Workers' Party of Germany to attend the 2nd Congress of the Comintern, pitting him against the Comintern's executive and the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.[3]:893–4 It was Radek who took up the slogan of Stuttgart communists of fighting for a united front with other working-class organisations, that later formed the basis for the strategy developed by the Comintern.[9]

In mid-1923, Radek made his controversial speech 'Leo Schlageter: The Wanderer into the Void'[10] at an open session of the Executive Committee of the Communist International (ECCI).[2]:120 In the speech he praised the actions of the German Freikorps officer Leo Schlageter who had been shot whilst engaging in sabotage against French troops occupying the Ruhr area; in doing so Radek sought to explain the reasons why men like Schlageter were drawn towards the far right, and attempted to channel national grievances away from chauvinism and towards support of the working movement and the Communists.[2]:122

Although Radek was not at Chemnitz when the decision to cancel the uprising in November 1923 took place at the KPD Zentrale, he subsequently approved the decision and defended it.[11]:897

At subsequent congresses of the Russian Communist Party and meetings of the ECCI, Radek and Brandler were made the scapegoats for the defeat of the revolution by Zinoviev, with Radek being removed from the ECCI at the Fifth Congress of the Comintern.[2]:128–132

Into the Left Opposition[]

Karl Radek (holding Aleksandr Voronsky's daughter) among the writers of Krasnaya Nov

Radek was part of the Left Opposition from 1923, writing his article 'Leon Trotsky: Organizer of Victory'[12] shortly after Lenin's stroke in January of that year.[2]:127 Later in the year at the Thirteenth Party Congress Radek was removed from the Central Committee.[2]:130

In the summer of 1925, Radek was appointed Provost of the newly established Sun Yat-Sen University[2]:135 in Moscow, where he collected information for the opposition from students about the situation in China and cautiously began to challenge the official Comintern policy.[2]:139–140 However, the terminal illness of Radek's lover, Larisa Reisner, saw Radek lose his inhibitions and he began publicly criticising Stalin, in particular debating Stalin's doctrine of Socialism in One Country at the Communist Academy.[2]:140 Radek was sacked from his post at Sun Yat-Sen University in May 1927.[2]:147

Radek was expelled from the Party in 1927 after helping to organise an independent demonstration on the 10th anniversary of the October Revolution with Grigory Zinoviev in Leningrad.[5]:611In early 1928, when prominent oppositionists were deported to various remote locations within the Soviet Union, Radek was sent to Tobolsk[3] and a few months later moved on to Tomsk.[2]:150

After the Opposition and Show Trials[]

Karl Radek attends the funeral of the Soviet revolutionary leader Larissa Reissner

On 10 July 1929, Radek, alongside other oppositionists Ivar Smilga and Yevgeni Preobrazhensky, signed a document capitulating to Stalin,[13]:157 with Radek being held in particular disdain by oppositionist circles for his betrayal of Yakov Blumkin, who had been carrying a secret letter from Trotsky, in exile in Turkey, to Radek.[14]:115 However, he was re-admitted in 1930 and was one of the few former oppositionists to retain a prominent place within the party, heading the International Information Bureau of the Russian Communist Party Central Committee[14]:114 as well as giving the address on foreign literature at the First Conference of the Union of Soviet Writers in 1934.[2]:160 In that speech, he denounced Marcel Proust and James Joyce. He said that "in the pages of Proust, the old world, like a mangy dog no longer capable of any action whatever, lies basking in the sun and endlessly licks its sores" and compared Joyce's Ulysses to "a heap of dung, crawling with worms, photographed by a cinema apparatus through a microscope."[15] Later in his life he adopted a position that the soviet government should be close to Germany. In 1934 he was interviewed by a German politician, at which both of them deplored the hostile drift of their respective governments, and Radek made a controversial remark: “There are some fine lads in the SA and SS.[16] In 1936 he congratulated General Ernst Köstring on the day Germany occupied the Rhineland, along with Mikhail Tukhachevsky.[17] He helped to write the 1936 Soviet Constitution but, during the Great Purge of the 1930s, he was accused of treason and confessed, after two and a half months of interrogation,[14]:115 at the Trial of the Seventeen in 1937, the so-called Second Moscow Trial. He was sentenced to 10 years of penal labor.

He was reportedly killed in a labor camp in a fight with another inmate on Stalin’s orders.[18] Radek has been credited with originating a number of political jokes about Joseph Stalin.[19]:185 He was exonerated by the Soviet government in 1988.

Selected works[]

Available in English[]

Available in German[]

References[]

  1. ^ LLC, General Books (2010). Polish Revolutionaries: Felix Dzerzhinsky, Karl Radek, Rosa Luxemburg, Yakov Ganetsky, Wilfrid Michael Voynich, Julian Marchlewski. General Books LLC. ISBN 9781155386140.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m Lerner, Warren Lerner (1970). The Last Internationalist. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0804707220.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m Broué, Pierre (1988). "The Bolshevik-Leninist Faction". Revolutionary History. 9 (4): 137–160.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Nettl, John Peter (1969). Rosa Luxemburg. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0192810403.
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b Trotsky, Leon (1970) [1st pub.: 1929]. My Life: An Attempt at an Autobiography. Pathfinder. ISBN 9780873481441.
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b c "Karl Radek: November (Introduction by E.H. Carr)". www.marxists.org. Retrieved October 14, 2019.
  7. ^ Schüddekopf, Otto-Ernst (1962). "Karl Radek in Berlin : ein Kapitel deutsch-russischer Beziehungen im Jahre 1919" [Karl Radek: a chapter in German-Russian relations in 1919] (PDF). Archiv für Sozialgeschichte (in German). Retrieved 1 May 2019.
  8. ^ Fischer, Ruth (2006) [1948]. Stalin and German Communism: A Study in the Origins of the State Party. Social Science Classics. Transaction Publishers. ISBN 978-0878558223.
  9. ^ Broué, Pierre (1972). "Spartacism, Bolshevism and Ultra-Leftism in the Face of the Problems of the Proletarian Revolution in Germany (1918-1923)". Revolutionary History. 9 (4): 108–118.
  10. ^ "Karl Radek: "Schlageter Speech" (June 1923)". www.marxists.org. Retrieved October 14, 2019.
  11. ^ Broué, Pierre (2006) [1st pub.: 1975]. The German Revolution, 1917-1923. Historical Materialism. Haymarket Books. ISBN 978-1931859325.
  12. ^ "Karl Radek: Leon Trotsky, Organizer of Victory (1923)". www.marxists.org. Retrieved October 14, 2019.
  13. ^ Trotsky, Leon (1981) [1928]. The Challenge of the Left Opposition. Mehring Books. ISBN 0-87348-616-1.
  14. ^ Jump up to: a b c Rogovin, Vadim Zakharovich (1998). 1937: Stalin's Year of Terror. Mehring Books. ISBN 978-0929087771.
  15. ^ McSmith, Andy (2015). Fear and the Muse Kept Watch. New York: The New Press. pp. 118–119. ISBN 978-1-59558-056-6.
  16. ^ "Last of the War Criminals:The Mystery of Erich Koch". Commentary Magazine. 1959-01-01. Retrieved 2020-08-30.
  17. ^ Carsten, F. L. (1974). "New 'Evidence' against Marshal Tukhachevsky". The Slavonic and East European Review. 52 (127): 272–273. ISSN 0037-6795. JSTOR 4206871.
  18. ^ Slezkine, Yuri, 1956-. The House of Government : a saga of the Russian Revolution. Princeton. p. 864. ISBN 978-1-4008-8817-7. OCLC 994221038.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  19. ^ "In spite of his [Radek's] confession and reinstatement, he was bitterly critical of the government, and was credited with inventing most of the anti-government jokes then circulating in Moscow." Poretsky, Elisabeth (1969). Our Own People. University of Michigan Press.

External links[]

Media related to Karl Radek at Wikimedia Commons

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