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Hardcover Lenin in Zurich Book

ISBN: 0374185018

ISBN13: 9780374185015

Lenin in Zurich

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good

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"Turn The Imperialist War Into A Civil War"

This book gives a good view into what sort of man Lenin was really like. Built up by Soviet Communist propaganda as the wisest man in history who devoted his life to bringing a Bolshevik utopia to the world, Solzhenitsyn shows us, during this period when Lenin stuck in Switzerland by the First World War, that he was a man that had little sympathy or empathy for his fellow man, who criticized other emigres for enjoying life in exile from Russia even though he was doing the same thing, a man who never actually worked a day in his life, surviving by living off handouts from relatives and ill-gotten gains by other Marxists, and who had an affair with Inessa Armand while being married to Krupskaya (who went along with the whole thing). This man, who spent the 1905 Revolution on the sidelines, unlike Trotsky and Helphand-Parvus, was actually torn by self-doubts as to whether he could actually do something when the time came for action, also came to despair that the Czarist regime could ever be overthrown, just days before it actually happened. Suddenly, this man, whose biggest ambition was to cause a split in the Swiss Social Democratic Party, suddenly had the option to prove his abilities, and to the sorrow of Russian and world, he found that he did have such talents, first organizing the conspiratorial agreement with Germany's military autocrats which allowed him to travel through Germany in the infamous "sealed train" in order to subvert Russian participation in the war on the side of the Allies. He was also able to counter accusations that he was a Russian traitor working for the Germans, even though that was the way it looked to many people. This book sheds a lot of light on Lenin's relationship with Helphand-Parvus who was instrumental in arranging the passage through Germany. Once a radical revolutionary, he became a wealthy businessman who enjoyed the good life while still working for revolution that preached against all the values he himself came to embody. He even offered to make Lenin a rich man, but Lenin stayed away from that temptation, at least at that theim (After the revolution, Lenin moved into the dachas of the former ruling class in Russia and finally got to enjoy the luxuries he denied to his people, so he ended up succumbing to the same tempations as Parvus). Parvus even ended up sympathizing with the Kaiser's Imperial regime in Germany, opposing a socialist revolution there, while at the same time, working for one in Russia. Thus, we see what kind of values these "revolutionaries" really had...they claimed to want to improve the lot of their people, but really all they cared about was grabbing state power and lining their pockets along the way. It was during his Swiss exile during the War that he coined his infamous phrase "Turn the Imperialist War into A Civil War". Unfortunately, those who sided with the Reds in the wake of his Bolshevik October coup (that's what it was, it was no "revolution") either forget about or we
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